Haven Hubbard's grandfather was Jonathon Hubbard, who settled of Terre Coupee
prairie roughly to the north-east of
New Carlisle, Indiana that he had bought in 1836 from a Samuel Harwood. He built the family homestead there, and with his son Ransom Hubbard enlarged it to roughly . Both Jonathon and Ransom had come from
Oneida County, New York, where Ransom had been born in 1817. Jonathon
platted the town of "Hubbard Town" on the prairie, originally going to be named Terre Coupee town, which was later renamed the village of Hamilton. Ransom's son Haven, by his wife Mary (née Mary Davis), was born on 1853-12-04; with Jonathon then dying in 1861. Haven was educated at
Notre Dame University and the
University of Michigan and married Arminia Hoffman in 1909, who inherited the estate from him in 1916. Arminia had come to the United States from
Leipzig in 1891, where she had been born on 1865-05-09. In 1920, finally furthering her late husband's wish during his lifetime to minister to the elderly, Arminia Hubbard deeded the farm to a local church, which built the Haven Hubbard Memorial Old People's Home in 1922 and formally dedicated it on 1923-05-05. The Old People's Home remained a working farm, with residents encouraged to help with tending to crops, and comprised a chapel on the second floor, to be later remodelled in 1950 and named the Arminia Hubbard Memorial Chapel, administrative offices, sun parlours, a dining hall, guest rooms, and open-air
verandahs. Haven's elder brother was Lucius, born in 1844 and educated in the same places as Haven, who married a Martha Davis and in turn had a son Arthur Lucius Hubbard, who was to become a prominent banker and attorney in nearby
South Bend, Indiana, forming a law partnership with Samuel Pettengill. ==References==