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3401 Heston-Geneaogy-Rich-Mahan
4th cousin six times removed

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM) REPO: @R01@; ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; ;

Helen Schatvet Ullmann, CG, FASG, "David
Helen Schatvet Ullmann, CG, FASG, "David and Abigail (Winter) Russell of Lexington, Concord, and Littleton, Massachusetts," MASSOG 33 (2009):75-81 at 80. 
Russell, Submit (I312684220306)
 
3402 Hinkle Family History
I have not found this Henry Hinkle in this history as of April 2021, but more research could be done to produce positive results.  
Hinkle, Henry (I312684220928)
 
3403 His cousin William Chandler (same name) is the one who died on Oct 27,1727. This William Chandler's death date is unknown.
.

!Phelps Family, by O.S.Phelps & A.T.Serv
!Phelps Family, by O.S.Phelps & A.T.Servin, pp 1579,1580

This Record Combines Two Separate Williams
This record for William Chandler III - LHYQ-Q6X - currently combines data and sources for two separate Williams. There are A LOT of William Chandlers in this branch.

According to research from:...

"Genealogy of a Branch of the Chandler Family" by Mrs. A.M. Pickford, published in 1903. https://archive.org/stream/chandlerfamilyge00pick#page/n7/mode/2up

The Chandler family. The descendants of William and Annis Chandler who settled in Roxbury, Mass., 1637.
https://archive.org/details/chandlerfamilyde00chan/page/n6

The Chandler Family Association
https://www.chandlerfamilyassociation.org
William Chandler born 1595 Hertfordshire England – known familiarly among Chandler researchers as “the William and Annis line” (Chandler DNA Project Group 9):

...it appears these are two separate Williams with different parents (fathers are brothers) and wives:

Thomas Chandler & Hannah Brewer
*William Chandler b. 28 May 1659, Andover
m. Eleanor Phelps

William Chandler & Mary Dane
*William Chandler b. 31 Jan 1661, Andover
m. Sarah Buckminster

The children of the two couples are correct, but it will take a bit of work to separate the sources properly between this record and the creation of a new William.

Abstract of Deed (as presented in "The C
Abstract of Deed (as presented in "The Chandler Family" of 1883):

I William Chandler of Andover, Husbandman, Sell for 80 pounds land 60 acres, all tha my homestead as described in a deed of my father Chandler to me bearing date ye twelth Day of June 1697 to William Foster of Boxford. Weaver, on 3 Sept. 1697. [ He acknowledged the above 18 Sept. 1697 - his wife Eleanor at the same time resigning her right of Dower.]

! William md. 21 April 1687, Eleanor Phe
! William md. 21 April 1687, Eleanor Phelps, by Rev. Francis Dane, of S. Andover.

!NAME:Family Group Record, Group sheet s
!NAME:Family Group Record, Group sheet submitted by Lillian B. Corry,Lillian Bunker Corey 26 Temple Court, Mesa, Arizona, Chandler Fam. "Geo.Chandler" pt. 1: 11-16 !BIRTH:Family Group Record, Group sheet submitted by Lillian B. Corry,Lillian Bunker Corey 26 Temple Court, Mesa, Arizona, Chandler Fam. "Geo.Chandler" pt. 1: 11-16 !DEATH:Family Group Record, Group sheet submitted by Lillian B. Corry,Lillian Bunker Corey 26 Temple Court, Mesa, Arizona, Chandler Fam. "Geo.Chandler" pt. 1: 11-16

!Norris, Hackett, Prescott and Allied Fa
!Norris, Hackett, Prescott and Allied Families by Hugh A Johnson pgs 78 - 81

1 _IFLAGS 0 AF GHH0-HX merged: Birthda
1 _IFLAGS 0 AF GHH0-HX merged: Birthdate abt 1600 and marriage info AF GHH0-HX merged: Birthdate abt 1600 and marriage info

Twin to Hannah.
Twin to Hannah.

!family research by Sue N. Farrand !IGI
!family research by Sue N. Farrand !IGI 
Chandler, William (I312684222517)
 
3404 History
1808 Family moved from Chittenden County, Vermont to Willsborough, Essex County, New York on the western side of Lake Champlain. Bradley was desirous of finding farming land for his sons to settle on and build homes.
1810 Bradley Wilson in Essex Township, Essex County New York 1810 Census. Essex formed from town of Willsborough April 4, 1805. Moses Wilson (brother of Bradley) in Willsborough Township.
1819 According to article in Deseret News dated October 2, 1895, Bradley and his family found New York "too thickly settled" so family moved some 700 miles to Green Township, Richland County, Ohio (now Ashland County) 1820 Land deed recorded in Loudonville, Green Township, Richland County, Ohio from James L. Priest and Polina Priest of Wayne County, (FHC films #386074 and 386081).
1827 Child #3 , Guy Carlton m. Mary Elizabeth Hunter
1828 Child # 6, Bradley Barlow m. Agnes Hunter (sister of Mary)
1836 In the spring of 1836 two Mormon missionaries, Oliver Granger and George A. Smith (cousin to Prophet Joseph Smith) called on Bradley Wilson and his seven sons and their wives. "Coming into the neighborhood as Mormons, these missionaries were received with coldness, were refused the use of the school house to preach in and were threatened with violence, unless they left the locality. Learning the condition of affairs, and knowing it was the usual custom for other denominational preachers to have the use of the school house, the Wilson boys told the travelers they would constitute themselves a committee of seven to see fair play. Accordingly, notice of a meeting was given out, with the Wilsons on guard, services were held without disturbance. On taking leave of the family the next day, Oliver Granger (the senior missionary) told them they would yet join the Church, but received for answer simply, 'I guess not', from the old gentleman. The preachers had not been on the road many hours, however, before they were overtaken by a man in a wagon with a summons for them to return. Their defenders of the previous night had reconsidered and were ready for baptism." (Deseret News, October 2, 1895)
1837 Sold land in Richland County, Ohio and moved entire family to Missouri, settling at Tenny's Grove, 25 miles from Far West.
1838 Prophet Joseph Smith arrived at Far West in March. Far West was the principal settlement of the Saints in upper Missouri. The area was chosen by John Whitmer and W. W. Phelps in the summer of 1836. At that time the area was nothing but wilderness. By the spring of 1838, the population exceeded 5,000 of which more than 4,900 were Mormons. In October the Governor of the State of Missouri issued an extermination order. By the end of the year several were fleeing to the State of Illinois.
1837 On December 28, 1837 a meeting was held in Rockford Township, Caldwell County, Missouri (3 miles south of Far West) at the school house. The meeting was opened by singing and prayer by Joseph Young. Present for the meeting were Heber C. Kimball and Brigham Young. Brigham Young addressed the meeting on the particular calling of the seventies and the necessity of their going immediately into the vineyard of the Lord to labor therein in righteousness for him.... The following members of the quorum of elders in Far West were recommended by Elders Kimball and Young as worthy of a standing in the seventies if they desired, to wit: Of the 34 names listed, the following Wilson brothers were included: Henry H, George C. Lewis D., Bradley B, Bushrod W. and Whitford G. Wilson. (Journal of History of the Church)
1839 January 26, 1839. Public meeting held to consider means for the removal of Saints from Missouri. Exodus began. (see pg. 15 Bradley Wilson History)
1839 General Conference held at the Presbyterian Campground near Quincy, Adams County, Illinois, May 5, 1839. Elder Brigham Young conducting: "The following presented themselves into the quorum of Seventies and being recommended by different Elders to be worthy of the office were received into the quorum by vote of the Council, namely: Whitford C. Wilson, George C. Wilson, Guy C. Wilson, Henry H. Wilson, Lewis D. Wilson, Bradley B. Wilson, Bushrod W. Wilson. The Council then adjourned to attend General Conference of the Church which commenced on the 4th and was adjourned until this morning at 10 o'clock." #7
1841 Lewis Dunbar Wilson was appointed to the High Council on October 6, 1841 after the organization of the church at Nauvoo. He was ordained by Hyrum Smith. (his journal)
1841 The Church records also show activity by Bradley and his sons and their family. The record of Baptisms for the Dead performed in the Mississippi River show Bradley Wilson performed baptisms for "Grandfather Wilson (Joseph) and for uncle David Wilson and for Grandmother Wilson (Rebecca) Source: Baptisms for the Dead in the Mississippi River 1840-1841.
1842 Nauvoo, Illinois tax assessments indicate references of all Wilson family.
1842 "Tuesday, November 13, 1842, Elder Bradley Wilson died suddenly in his 74th year, at Nauvoo, Illinois. He received the gospel in Ohio, removed his family to Missouri and was driven to Nauvoo in 1839. He left seven sons and 39 grandchildren residing in Nauvoo." History of the Church, Vol. 5, pg. 193.

DEATH: From the History of the Church, written by Joseph Smith (Vol. 5, pg. 193).
"Tuesday, November 15, 1842. Elder Bradley Wilson died suddenly in his 74th year at Nauvoo, Illinois. He received the gospel in Ohio, removed his family to Missouri, and was driven to Nauvoo in 1839. He left seven sons and 39 grandchildren residing in Nauvoo."

And so we have the passing of the partriarch of the Wilson family. When we piece together the fragments of history, we find the story of a determined Mormon pioneer who endured the hardships of a turbulent period of Church history and who remained faithful to the end. Unfortunately, Bradley Wilson did not leave a personal journal, which would have undoubtedly explain the noticeable absence of his wife Polly after the family moved to Ohio. (Bradley Wilson History, pg. 17)

pg. 17 Maid of Iowa story

Three of the seven Wilson brothers (Lewis Dunbar, George Clinton, and Bradley Barlow) settled with their families in an area west of Ogden, Utah in Weber County. The area came to be known as the Wilson Ward. During through Ogden today, travelers will observe the 'Wilson Lane' Exit which is clearly marked on Interstate I-15 and which leads directly west of Ogden City to West Weber. This area of land, west of the Weber River, was purchased by the three Wilson brothers in 1853. The new community was named in honor of the three brothers. Here, the brothers engaged in farming, and constructed the first bridge across the Weber River. In 1874 the Wilson School District was created in the eastern part of West Weber and a one-room adobe school house was constructed. Industries similar to those of other Utah pioneer communities were established in Wilson, but the producing and manufacturing of beet sugar became unusually important in the community.


From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

Bradley Wilson Photo
It is highly doubtful that the supposed photo of Bradley Wilson in the memories section is actually him.
He died in 1842 before photography was really available commonly.

Marriage
I have a book of remembrance that lists Bradley Sr.'s birth as 11 October 1764 and his marriage to Mary Gill as 25 September 1798.

Gen. of Utah R.I. Vital records Early C
Gen. of Utah R.I. Vital records Early Church Records "The Wasp" 3 Dec 1842

! Father: Deliverance Wilson, Mother: S
! Father: Deliverance Wilson, Mother: Sarah Smith. Other birthday
month
recorded as December, same day and year.! Father: Deliverance Wilson,
Mother: Sarah Smith. Other birthday
month
recorded as December, same day and year.

!sources--1770 migration sources 929.1,
!sources--1770 migration sources 929.1, R.I. VR Early church rec "The Wasp" 3 Dec 1842 !rebap. 2 Feb 1877

ordinances - calndar of events
ORDINANCES: Baptized May 23, 1836, Green Twp, Richland, Ohio; Seventy, May 5, 1839, Quincy, Adams, IL; Endowment, February 2, 1877; Sealing 24 April 1943; Sealing to Spouse, February 9, 1877



1808 Family moved from Chittenden County, Vermont to Willsborough, Essex County, New York on the western side of Lake Champlain. Bradley was desirous of finding farming land for his sons to settle on and build homes.
1810 Bradley Wilson in Essex Township, Essex County New York 1810 Census. Essex formed from town of Willsborough April 4, 1805. Moses Wilson (brother of Bradley) in Willsborough Township.
1819 According to article in Deseret News dated October 2, 1895, Bradley and his family found New York "too thickly settled" so family moved some 700 miles to Green Township, Richland County, Ohio (now Ashland County) 1820 Land deed recorded in Loudonville, Green Township, Richland County, Ohio from James L. Priest and Polina Priest of Wayne County, (FHC films #386074 and 386081).
1827 Child #3 , Guy Carlton m. Mary Elizabeth Hunter
1828 Child # 6, Bradley Barlow m. Agnes Hunter (sister of Mary)
1836 In the spring of 1836 two Mormon missionaries, Oliver Granger and George A. Smith (cousin to Prophet Joseph Smith) called on Bradley Wilson and his seven sons and their wives. "Coming into the neighborhood as Mormons, these missionaries were received with coldness, were refused the use of the school house to preach in and were threatened with violence, unless they left the locality. Learning the condition of affairs, and knowing it was the usual custom for other denominational preachers to have the use of the school house, the Wilson boys told the travelers they would constitute themselves a committee of seven to see fair play. Accordingly, notice of a meeting was given out, with the Wilsons on guard, services were held without disturbance. On taking leave of the family the next day, Oliver Granger (the senior missionary) told them they would yet join the Church, but received for answer simply, 'I guess not', from the old gentleman. The preachers had not been on the road many hours, however, before they were overtaken by a man in a wagon with a summons for them to return. Their defenders of the previous night had reconsidered and were ready for baptism." (Deseret News, October 2, 1895)
1837 Sold land in Richland County, Ohio and moved entire family to Missouri, settling at Tenny's Grove, 25 miles from Far West.
1838 Prophet Joseph Smith arrived at Far West in March. Far West was the principal settlement of the Saints in upper Missouri. The area was chosen by John Whitmer and W. W. Phelps in the summer of 1836. At that time the area was nothing but wilderness. By the spring of 1838, the population exceeded 5,000 of which more than 4,900 were Mormons. In October the Governor of the State of Missouri issued an extermination order. By the end of the year several were fleeing to the State of Illinois.
1837 On December 28, 1837 a meeting was held in Rockford Township, Caldwell County, Missouri (3 miles south of Far West) at the school house. The meeting was opened by singing and prayer by Joseph Young. Present for the meeting were Heber C. Kimball and Brigham Young. Brigham Young addressed the meeting on the particular calling of the seventies and the necessity of their going immediately into the vineyard of the Lord to labor therein in righteousness for him.... The following members of the quorum of elders in Far West were recommended by Elders Kimball and Young as worthy of a standing in the seventies if they desired, to wit: Of the 34 names listed, the following Wilson brothers were included: Henry H, George C. Lewis D., Bradley B, Bushrod W. and Whitford G. Wilson. (Journal of History of the Church)
1839 January 26, 1839. Public meeting held to consider means for the removal of Saints from Missouri. Exodus began. (see pg. 15 Bradley Wilson History)
1839 General Conference held at the Presbyterian Campground near Quincy, Adams County, Illinois, May 5, 1839. Elder Brigham Young conducting: "The following presented themselves into the quorum of Seventies and being recommended by different Elders to be worthy of the office were received into the quorum by vote of the Council, namely: Whitford C. Wilson, George C. Wilson, Guy C. Wilson, Henry H. Wilson, Lewis D. Wilson, Bradley B. Wilson, Bushrod W. Wilson. The Council then adjourned to attend General Conference of the Church which commenced on the 4th and was adjourned until this morning at 10 o'clock." #7
1841 Lewis Dunbar Wilson was appointed to the High Council on October 6, 1841 after the organization of the church at Nauvoo. He was ordained by Hyrum Smith. (his journal)
1841 The Church records also show activity by Bradley and his sons and their family. The record of Baptisms for the Dead performed in the Mississippi River show Bradley Wilson performed baptisms for "Grandfather Wilson (Joseph) and for uncle David Wilson and for Grandmother Wilson (Rebecca) Source: Baptisms for the Dead in the Mississippi River 1840-1841.
1842 Nauvoo, Illinois tax assessments indicate references of all Wilson family.
1842 "Tuesday, November 13, 1842, Elder Bradley Wilson died suddenly in his 74th year, at Nauvoo, Illinois. He received the gospel in Ohio, removed his family to Missouri and was driven to Nauvoo in 1839. He left seven sons and 39 grandchildren residing in Nauvoo." History of the Church, Vol. 5, pg. 193.

DEATH: From the History of the Church, written by Joseph Smith (Vol. 5, pg. 193).
"Tuesday, November 15, 1842. Elder Bradley Wilson died suddenly in his 74th year at Nauvoo, Illinois. He received the gospel in Ohio, removed his family to Missouri, and was driven to Nauvoo in 1839. He left seven sons and 39 grandchildren residing in Nauvoo."

And so we have the passing of the partriarch of the Wilson family. When we piece together the fragments of history, we find the story of a determined Mormon pioneer who endured the hardships of a turbulent period of Church history and who remained faithful to the end. Unfortunately, Bradley Wilson did not leave a personal journal, which would have undoubtedly explain the noticeable absence of his wife Polly after the family moved to Ohio. (Bradley Wilson History, pg. 17)

pg. 17 Maid of Iowa story

Three of the seven Wilson brothers (Lewis Dunbar, George Clinton, and Bradley Barlow) settled with their families in an area west of Ogden, Utah in Weber County. The area came to be known as the Wilson Ward. During through Ogden today, travelers will observe the 'Wilson Lane' Exit which is clearly marked on Interstate I-15 and which leads directly west of Ogden City to West Weber. This area of land, west of the Weber River, was purchased by the three Wilson brothers in 1853. The new community was named in honor of the three brothers. Here, the brothers engaged in farming, and constructed the first bridge across the Weber River. In 1874 the Wilson School District was created in the eastern part of West Weber and a one-room adobe school house was constructed. Industries similar to those of other Utah pioneer communities were established in Wilson, but the producing and manufacturing of beet sugar became unusually important in the community.


Incorrect death date?
Mary "Polly" Gill Wilson signed the Mormon Redress Petition on 6 Jan 1840, and stated that she was a widow at the time. This implies that Bradley died prior to 1840:

A Bill of damage

I Polly Wilson A Widow and a mormon so cauld great has been my sufferings on the accoun of mobs while in the state of Mosouri which was a number of years I was driven from Jacson County and from Clay County and from davis County and from Caldwell County and thence out of the state without any provocation except the name mormon $1000

Polly Wilson

All Ordinance Dates Checked, 1992. Seal
All Ordinance Dates Checked, 1992. Seal/Parents, 09 Feb 1877 SG?

Abigail Stevens Young (Abbie Stevens Young) Pedigree Charts. Entered 2005.

! Gen. Soc. of Utah ! R.I. Vital Records
! Gen. Soc. of Utah ! R.I. Vital Records ! Early Church REc. "The Wasp" 3 Dec. 1842 Historical Sketch of Bradley Wilson In 1837 Bradley Wilson, with his family of 7 sons, and their families, all joined the Church of Jesus Christ in a body. Prophet Joseph Smith made notice of this fact in his history. Moving from Vermont in about 1808, the patriarch settled in the state of New York with the intention of locating his family of boys in farms about him. Finding that part of the country too thickly settled for his purpose, however, Bradley Wilson, in about 1825 again took up the line of the course of the empire and found his way with his numerous following into central Ohio, where he settled in Richland County. Here the gospel found the family in the spring of 1837. Oliver Granger and George A. Smith were the bearers of the message, coming into the neighborhood as Mormons. These missionaries were received with coldness and were refused the use of the schoolhouse to preach in. They were threatened with violence unless they left the locality. Learning the condition of affairs and knowing it was the usual custom for other denominational preachers to have the uses of the schoolhouse; the Wilson boys told the elders that they could constitute a voluntary committee of 7 to help them. Accordingly, notice was given out and meetings held with the boys guarding against a disturbance. Next day Oliver Granger told them they would yet join the Church, but received the answer, "I guess not", from the gentlemen. The preachers left, but had not been on the road many hours before a man in a wagon with a summons to return overtook them. Their defenders of the previous night had reconsidered and were ready for baptism. Selling out their farms, the family removed the same year to Missouri where they settled at Tenny's Grove not many miles from Far West. Here the mobbings and drivings of 1838 found them. At Nauvoo, the father, Bradley Wilson, died in 1842, but the other 6 all reached the valleys and all died there faithful to the last with the exception of the youngest who went to San Bernardino and remained there till his death. George Clinton, Lewis Dunbar and Bradley Barlow settled at what is now known as Wilson Ward, west of Ogden. Whitford Gill made his home in Farmington, Davis Co., and Henry Hardy, in what afterward know as Dixie Co. and settled at St. George. So that with the subsequent moving of the members, the family is now scattered from the north to extreme south of the inter-mountain region. Copied from an old Deseret News by Eva Richards The following is found in Documentary History of the Church, Vol. 4, page 408; (Death of Oliver Granger): In the year 1833, he moved to Kirkland, and took a mission to the east with Elder Samuel Newcomb, returned and was ordained a high priest, took another mission in the spring of 1836 to New York with John P. Green, and after his return built up a branch at Hurtsburg (?), Geanga County, Ohio; also a branch at Perry, Richland Co., where he baptized Bradley Wilson and his 7 sons and their wives. Bradley Wilson and family, [1976]. 7 p. Summary: Handwritten account of Bradley Wilson and his seven sons, telling of their conversion to Mormonism; moves to Missouri, Illinois, and Utah; Henry Hardy Wilson's church activities; and Henry Hardy Wilson Jr.'s settlement of southern Utah. Also includes a TLS to Tressie Heileson from LeGrand Baker requesting information about Henry Hardy Wilson and Heileson's handwritten response. Gift of Tressie Y. Heileson, 1976. 1. Wilson, Bradley, d. 1842. 2. Wilson, Henry Hardy. 3. Wilson, Henry Hardy, 1847- I. Baker, LeGrand Liston, 1937- MSS SC 92 ID: UTBV86-A111 In the year 1833 he moved to Kirtland, and then took a mission to the east with Elder Samuel Newcomb; returned and was ordained a High Priest; took another mission in the spring of 1836 to New York with John P. Greene; and after his return built up a branch at Huntsburg, Geauga county, Ohio; also a branch at Perry, Richfield county, where he baptized Bradley Wilson and his seven sons and their wives. When the Church left Kirtland he was appointed to settle the Church business.(letter from Horace H. Hotchkiss) Elder Bradley Wilson died suddenly in his 74th year. He received the gospel in Ohio, removed his family to Missouri, and was driven to Nauvoo in 1839. He has left seven sons and thirty-nine grand-children residing in Nauvoo. History of the Church, Vol.4, Ch.24, p.408 In the year 1833 he moved to Kirtland, and then took a mission to the east with Elder Samuel Newcomb; returned and was ordained a High Priest; took another mission in the spring of 1836 to New York with John P. Greene; and after his return built up a branch at Huntsburg, Geauga county, Ohio; also a branch at Perry, Richfield county, where he baptized Bradley Wilson and his seven sons and their wives. When the Church left Kirtland he was appointed to settle the Church business. History of the Church, Vol.5, Ch.11, p.193 Elder Bradley Wilson died suddenly in his 74th year. He received the gospel in Ohio, removed his family to Missouri, and was driven to Nauvoo in 1839. He has left seven sons and thirty-nine grand-children residing in Nauvoo. ! Gen. Soc. of Utah ! R.I. Vital Records ! Early Church REc. "The Wasp" 3 Dec. 1842 Historical Sketch of Bradley Wilson In 1837 Bradley Wilson, with his family of 7 sons, and their families, all joined the Church of Jesus Christ in a body. Prophet Joseph Smith made notice of this fact in his history. Moving from Vermont in about 1808, the patriarch settled in the state of New York with the intention of locating his family of boys in farms about him. Finding that part of the country too thickly settled for his purpose, however, Bradley Wilson, in about 1825 again took up the line of the course of the empire and found his way with his numerous following into central Ohio, where he settled in Richland County. Here the gospel found the family in the spri ng of 1837. Oliver Granger and George A. Smith were the bearers of the message, coming into the neighborhood as Mormons. These missionaries were received with coldness and were refused the use of the schoolhouse to preach in. They were threatened with violence unless they left the locality. Learning the condition of affairs and knowing it was the usual custom for other denominational preachers to have the uses of the schoolhouse; the Wilson boys told the elders that they could constitute a voluntary committee of 7 to help them. Accordingly, notice was given out and meetings held with the boys guarding against a disturbance. Next day Oliver Granger told them they would yet join the Church, but received the answer, "I guess not", from the gentlemen. The preachers left, but had not been on the road many hours before a man in a wagon with a summons to return overtook them. Their defenders of the previous night had reconsidered and were ready for baptism. Selling out their farms, the family removed the same year to Missouri where they settled at Tenny's Grove not many miles from Far West. Here the mobbings and drivings of 1838 found them. At Nauvoo, the father, Bradley Wilson, died in 1842, but the other 6 all reached the valleys and all died there faithful to the last with the exception of the youngest who went to San Bernardino and remained there till his death. George Clinton, Lewis Dunbar and Bradley Barlow settled at what is now known as Wilson Ward, west of Ogden. Whitford Gill made his home in Farmington, Davis Co., and Henry Hardy, in what afterward know as Dixie Co. and settled at St. George. So that with the subsequent moving of the members, the family is now scattered from the north to extreme south of the inter-mountain region. Copied from an old Deseret News by Eva Richards The following is found in Documentary History of the Church, Vol. 4, page 408; (Death of Oliver Granger): In the year 1833, he moved to Kirkland, and took a mission to the e ast with Elder Samuel Newcomb, returned and was ordained a high priest, took another mission in the spring of 1836 to New York with John P. Green, and after his return built up a branch at Hurtsburg (?), Geanga County, Ohio; also a branch at Perry, Richland Co., where he baptized Bradley Wilson and his 7 sons and their wives. Bradley Wilson and family, [1976]. 7 p. Summary: Handwritten account of Bradley Wilson and his seven sons, telling of their conversion to Mormonism; moves to Missouri, Illinois, and Utah; Henry Hardy Wilson's church activities; and Henry Hardy Wilson Jr.'s settlement of southern Utah. Also includes a TLS to Tressie Heileson from LeGrand Baker requesting information about Henry Hardy Wilson and Heileson's handwritten response. Gift of Tressie Y. Heileson, 1976. 1. Wilson, Bradley, d. 1842. 2. Wilson, Henry Hardy. 3. Wilson, Henry Hardy, 1847- I. Baker, LeGrand Liston, 1937- MSS SC 92 ID: UTBV86-A111 In the year 1833 he moved to Kirtland, and then took a mission to the east with Elder Samuel Newcomb; returned and was ordained a High Priest; took another mission in the spring of 1836 to New York with John P. Greene; and after his return built up a branch at Huntsburg, Geauga county, Ohio; also a branch at Perry, Richfield county, where he baptized Bradley Wilson and his seven sons and their wives. When the Church left Kirtland he was appointed to settle the Church business.(letter from Horace H. Hotchkiss) Elder Bradley Wilson died suddenly in his 74th year. He received the gospel in Ohio, removed his family to Missouri, and was driven to Nauvoo in 1839. He has left seven sons and thirty-nine grand-children residing in Nauvoo. History of the Church, Vol.4, Ch.24, p.408 In the year 1833 he moved to Kirtland, and then took a mission to the east with Elder Samuel Newcomb; returned and was ordained a High Priest; took another mission in the spring of 1836 to New York with John P. Greene; and after his return built up a branch at Huntsburg, Geaug

#12 or 18 Nov 1842
#12 or 18 Nov 1842

Documents on File: 1) 1839 Land Patent
Documents on File: 1) 1839 Land Patent Papers for Bradley B., Bushrod, George, Henry, Lewis and Whitford G. - Wilson Binder 2) 1820 Census Listing - Wilson Binder 3) Life Story - Wilson Binder A map is on file in the Family Document Box - Wilson File - showing the exact place Bradley is buried in the Old Nauvoo Burial Ground. The Burial Ground was opened in 1842 and Bradley is in the first row of graves. There gravesite is lacking a marker. The original markers were of wood and have not held up over the years. Several requests to the Nauvoo Historical Ssocity have failed to give permission to place a marker. My husband and I visitied Nauvoo in 1994 and stood over the grave of this patriarch. It was a humbling and deeply moving experience. It is known that the Wilson family traveled together and lived in close proximity to one another. On 20 Sept 1839 six of Bradley's seven sons went to the Lexington Land Office and purchased patented land in Ray and Caldwell Counties. I do not why Bradley and his son, Guy Carlton, did not purchase land, but it is very safe to surmise that they were all there and all lived on the acreage purchased by the six brothers. Some of the townships in Ohio had numerous pages in the census. Green Top Township had three. 1 _TODO 2 DESC Burial site notice from Nauvoo. 2 DATE 3 JUN 2002 2 REPO R11 2 STAT OPEN 2 PRTY 2

History fo the chuch;volume 5,page 193;
History fo the chuch;volume 5,page 193; Nov.15,1842 Elder Bradley Wilson died suddenly in his 74th year. He received the gospel in Ohio, removed his family to Missouri, and was driven to Nauvoo in 1839. He has left seven sons and thirty-nine grand-children residing in Nauvoo. 
Wilson, Bradley Barlow Sr (I312684222354)
 
3405 history
Soldier in Indian wars under Captain John White in 1727, settled in Lancaster, had large family there (Cutter file, p. 413)

1 _IFLAGS 0
1 _IFLAGS 0

!BIRTH:"Genealogy of Newbury Adams Famil
!BIRTH:"Genealogy of Newbury Adams Family", FHL film 1303262.

dead
dead

Robert married Dorothy.
Robert married Dorothy.

Killed by Indians
Killed by Indians

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

!Archive family group sheet of M. C. Phe
!Archive family group sheet of M. C. Phelps, Mesa, Arizona Phelps Family by O. S. Phelps & A. T. Servin Vol. 1 pp 1580-1589 IGI Bap 13 Dec 1930 End 3 Jun 1931 AZ SP 12 Feb 1972 IF SS Dorothy 28 Nov 1995 BOUNT, 29 Apr 1993 OGDEN 22 Apr 1993 SGEOR, 24 Aug 1993 LVEGA 27 Sep 1994 SLAKE, 12 Nov 1994 SDIEG Md 1 Oct 1729 Dority WRIGHT SS 9 Feb 1973 SL Robert was with Captain John Lovewell in the fight with the Indians in 1725

OUT OF SEQUENCE
OUT OF SEQUENCE

!ORDINANCES: 1988 IGI, Batch # 7034229.4
!ORDINANCES: 1988 IGI, Batch # 7034229.45. Mg. Batch # 7213723.83.

Ancestral File Number:&ltAFN&gt 93V5-XP
Ancestral File Number:&ltAFN&gt 93V5-XP

#14 Dead
#14 Dead

AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latte
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints TITL Ancestral File (TM) PUBL July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996 REPO @R18@

!John was killed at Scarborough by India
!John was killed at Scarborough by Indians

! Sources of Information Book by Savage
! Sources of Information Book by Savage John was killed by the Indians

Line in Record @I0439@ (RIN 889) from GE
Line in Record @I0439@ (RIN 889) from GEDCOM file not recognized: PLAC LOGAN

.../
.../

!SOURCE: Archive Record of father; FHL.
!SOURCE: Archive Record of father; FHL. IGI;ver 2.09;US;FHL. 
Phelps, Robert (I312684222433)
 
3406 History
Thomas Dutton and his wife Susanna were in Reading by the year 1651 when their eldest daughter and second child, Mary, was born. According to a deposition made in 1668 Thomas and family lived in "Reading for the Space of Seven yeares or Thereabouts" before moving to Woburn where they were said to "having lived amongst us in the Towne of Woburne nere the space of tenne yeare." That would put the Dutton's in Woburn by the year 1658 which accords well with the birth records of both Reading and Woburn. The last child of Thomas and Susana born in Reading was in 1656 and the first child in Woburn in 1659. Thomas did not receive an allotment in the 1652 distribution of lots in Reading but he did get a piece of meadow in the 1655 distribution of meadow "downe below the falls".

In Woburn, Thomas rented a "dwelling house Barne orchard together with all the meddow & uppland there unto apertayning". The lease, signed on December 17, 1656, ran for seven years from the following February 15 at £7 per year to be paid in wheat, rye and indian corn. The rent was to be delivered to the house of John Carter who lived next door. Both John Carter's farm and the one leased by Thomas Dutton had originally belonged to Carter's father, Thomas, who, in 1647, divided his property between his son John and his son-in-law William Greene. After Greene's death, his widow married Thomas Browne who soon began complaining of encroachments by Carter upon the property. A neighbor later remembered that "goodwife browne and her husband tould mee that they had thoughts to remove their hows beecose of this desturbance." The overseers of Greene's will, Edward Johnson and John Carter, leased the farm to Dutton in the name of Greene's children and heirs.

By 1658 Thomas Dutton was embroiled in a court case against John Carter, having accused him of moving the boundary stakes between the two properties and building a shed and an extension of his house on the land so gained. Testimony in the case indicates that several neighbors gathered on the disputed property to consider Dutton's charges. He indicated a fence and charged "This tow rayle fence standeth upon the [Greene's] childrens land." Insisting that Dutton's charges were false, John Carter pointed out a boundary marker as proof that the boundary was just asserting "this stake is the towns." The deponent, William Johnson, looked at the stake but was unconvinced: "noe said I this can not bee it for here it is surlee newly [ ] and that it would not be if it had stood soe many years." His father agreed and further noted that "it did not [ ]aing even with the barne and th[at] it shold doe if it were the stake."

Johnson described his next move: "then I having a sticke in my hand serched up and downe upon t[ ] and at last the sticke went in to the ould stake hole as wee all did judge it being couered almost with” dirt.
"I doe bee leve that this is the ould stake hole [ ] even with the barne," exclaimed another neighbor, "and had I not seene him serch up an downe with the sticke and it went in [ ] un awars I shold not have beeleived it: for the ground was hard all about it."
"Then says Thomas Dutton [the other] is here about and serching finds one put upin acorner amongst potts." Another man took the stake from Thomas and "put it into the hole and it filled and fitted it very well." From which evidence they deduced Thomas' charges to be true.

The Duttons in America are of Saxon nativity. The ancient family of Duttons assumed their sirname from the place of their residence- Duntune- now contracted Dutton, a township about five miles east of Frodsham, on the river Wever in Cheshire. The Duttons emigrated to New England about 1630, many of whose descendants settled in Connecticut

1. Susannah Palmer b. Essex Parish Regis
1. Susannah Palmer b. Essex Parish Registers f. John Palmer M. Mary
2. Thomas Dutton & Susannah md 1648, New England
3. Susanna Dutton, b. abt 1626, death 27 Aug 1684, Billerica, Massachusetts, age 58, husband Thomas

!BIRTH: American Families; SLK Gen
!BIRTH: American Families; SLK Gen and Hearldic;AIS of Joseph Smith; Sacramento FHL; Death at age 58ORDINATION: Stamped Archive Sheet; MARRIAGE: New England MarriagesPrior to 1700; Clarence A. Torrey;

Birth Name
Information in her death record indicates that Susannah was born about 1626.

She is often referred to as "Susannah Palmer", but there is no evidence that can support this identification.

The 1650 will of Barbara Palmer of Leicester mentions a cousin "Susanna Dutten" however, it is not certain that this Susanna was born a Palmer, nor even that she was Thomas' wife.

A Susannah married Thomas Dutton possibly in Lynn, Essex County, Massachusetts, around 1647. Susannah died on 27 August 1684 in Billerica, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, at "about" age 58.

A birth date of 1626 strongly suggests that she was born in England and emigrated to New England.

The only cemetery in existance at the time of her death in Billerica was the South Burying Ground, which dates from 1663.

That cemetery is probably where she was buried.

!SOURCE: GSSLC Archives records, History
!SOURCE: GSSLC Archives records, History of Billerica; History of Homes, & Cutter; Gen. of NE; Frances Dittman, 6400 Los Gatos Rd, Atascadero, CA 93422

! Genealogy of New England Vol 1-2nd Ser
! Genealogy of New England Vol 1-2nd Series P 194 Am 14 b Vol 1 pp 194-195 V.R. Reading Massachusets R1 a pt 1 P 71 
Palmer, Susannah (I312684223139)
 
3407 HISTORY AND GENEALOGY OF THE FAMILIES OF
HISTORY AND GENEALOGY OF THE FAMILIES OF OLD FAIRFIELD, compiled and edited by Donald Lines Jacobus, 1930: Will of Ebenezer of Stratford, husbandman, 2 Nov. 1732; daus. Deborah, Elizabeth, Abigail; son Ebenezer, dec'd, mentioning his eldest son Nathaniel; sons Benjamin, Edward.

REFN: 7221
REFN: 7221


Find a Grave: Ebenezer Booth became a Stratford freeman on May 13, 1675.
On September 19, 1692, he was on the grand jury which indicted Mercy Disborough for "familiarity with Satan".

!Archive sheet for Richard E. Booth
!Archive sheet for Richard E. Booth

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

--Other Fields

_UID: 4C015A894BC3274EB7
--Other Fields

_UID: 4C015A894BC3274EB7708084EEE97EB3E657

(21)dead
(21)dead

His will 2 Nov 1732 names dau Deborah,El
His will 2 Nov 1732 names dau Deborah,Elizabeth; son Ebenezer deseased, mentioning the latter's eldest son Nathaniel;sons Benjamin, Edward

!Probate: Will of Ebenezer Booth, Fairfi
!Probate: Will of Ebenezer Booth, Fairfield Probate Records, Vol. 6, 1717-35, p. 191, 193. Mead, Spencer P. Abstract of Probate Records at Fairfield County of Fairfield and State of CT., 1929, Vo. 2., p. 242, LDS film #4197

Sergeant John 2 Booth (Richard 1 ) was b
Sergeant John 2 Booth (Richard 1 ) was born Nov. 6, 1653. His
title of Sergeant was earned in the Pequot War. In 1675 King
Philip incited a general Indian war against the whites, burning
many villages, and killing men, women and children in the colo-
nies of Massachusetts, Plymouth and Connecticut. The colonists
made haste to defend themselves, and raised a thousand men to
be placed under command of Col. Thomas Church for an expedi-
tion against the stronghold of the enemy in the swamps of Rhode
Island, and to make active warfare upon them in their winter
quarters there. The town of Stratford raised one company of
troops for this purpose, among whose volunteers was John
Booth, then but 22 years of age. The march to the seat of war
was made in the winter, on foot, through snow knee-deep, for
nearly 100 miles and through an unsettled country, where thev
found the enemy entrenched in a fortress in a large swamp, diffi-
cult of access, on an island of a few acres in extent, surrounded
by a broad ditch of water, the depth of which would reach to
their armpits. Close alongside of this ditch was a barricade of
logs, ten or twelve feet high, and no entrance was discovered
only at one place, where a large tree lay across the ditch, capable
of allowing only one by one at a time to pass out in single file
between two block houses that guarded the entrance. There


was no course to pursue but to press quickly forward and drive
the Indians from the block house, and obtain possession.
Of the Connecticut troops to cross on the log, the first was
another company from their colony; the Indians sent forth a
murderous fire from their muskets that killed a large number of
that company. The next company close behind them was from
Stratford, headed by their captain, who was shot down as soon
as he began to cross the log, and most of the men next to him.
John Booth, one of the soldiers, was in the center of that com-
pany in crossing the log. He pushed forward, and, while in the
act of raising his low-crowned hat to cheer on the men behind, a
musket ball passed through it, just grazing the top of the scalp,
and would have pierced his skull had the hat been in its usual
place. This hat was preserved in the Booth family for upwards
of half a centum, after which it was unaccountably lost. By
this time they had succeeded in driving the Indians from the
block house, preventing the remainder of the troops from being
obstructed by the fire of their guns in crossing to the fort. The
tide had turned in their favor; for sometime they fought desper-
ately against the Indians, and before the close of the fight a por-
tion of the Massachusetts troops effected an entrance in the
rear — placing the Indians between two fires, killing and wound-
ing numbers of them. The savages were completely routed, and
soon disappeared. Their wigwams were fired, and the women
and children that were in them perished with the structures. It
was hoped that they could have got King Philip, but he escaped
at that time, but was afterwards hunted down and shot dead
in a swamp where he had fled for safety. The tribe having lost
a greater part of their number, were completely broken up in
their winter quarters.


Sgt John Booth
Born November 5, 1653 in Stratford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut
Son of Richard T. Booth Jr and Elizabeth (Hawley) Booth
Brother of Elizabeth (Booth) Mann, Elizabeth (Booth) Miner, Anna Booth, Ephraim Booth, Ebenezer Booth, Joseph Booth SR, Bethiah (Booth) Curtiss, Joanna Booth and Johanna Booth
Husband of Dorothy Hawley — married June 14, 1678 in Stratford, Fairfield, CT
Husband of Hannah Jones — married January 31, 1714 in Stratford, CT
Father of Ephraim Booth, Thomas Booth, Jonathan Booth, Ann (Booth) Thompson and John Booth
Died December 6, 1728 in Stratford, Fairfield, Connecticut

Burial

Burial:
Date: DEC 1728
Place: Stratford, Fairfield, Connecticut, United States
Note

Note: John representd Stratford in the CT General Assembly Oct 1696 (Col Records of CT 4:174)
Marriage

Husband: John Booth
Wife: Dorothy Hawley
Marriage:
Date: 14 JUN 1678
Place: Stratford, CT
Note: Marriage recorded at Stratford, CT.
Children by 1st wife, presumably born in Stratford, CT (the first recorded):
i Thomas b 13 Mar 1679/80; d 1740
ii Jonathon b ca 1682; d 8 Feb 1755
iii Ephraim b ca 1685; d 27 Nov 1733
iv Ann b ca 1688; d Stratford 23 Sept 1774 in 86th yr (grave stone); md 22 May 1707 Ambrose thompson b Stratfor 17 Nov 1682, d there 3 May 1768 in 86th yr (on grave stone) son of Ambrose and Sarah(Welles) Thompson
v Sarah b ca 1690 md Richard Chapman b at Westerly Ri 20 Feb 1687/88 d Stratford between 22 Apr 1741 (date of will) and 7 Juoly 1741 date of probation. Son of Hope Chapman.
vi Mary b ca 1692 d Stratford 2 Nov 1740 in 49th yr on grave stone; md 1) agur Fairchild on 20 Sept 1710. He was b. Stratford 1 Oct 1691, d. there 4 May 1712, son of Zechariah and Hannah (Beach) Fairchild; md 2) 12 March 1712/13, Benjamin Brooks b Stratford 17 Oct 1685 d there 30 Dec 1745 in 61st yr (grave stone) son of John and Sarah(Osborne-Peat) Brooks
vii John b. ca 1694[1]
Husband: John Booth
Wife: Hannah Jones
Marriage:
Date: 31 JAN 1714/15
Place: Stratford, CT
Imported only 31 JAN 1714 from Marriage Date and marked as uncertain.

Sources

WikiTree profile Booth-944 created through the import of patton booth.ged on Mar 24, 2012 by Sara Stevens. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Sara and others.
Source: S24 Abbreviation: Booth Family Genealogy-Jacobus Title: Jacobus, Donald L. comp. The Genealogy of the Booth Family Booth Families of Connecticut for Six or More Generations (Eden C. Booth pub, 1952) Subsequent Source Citation Format: Booth Family Genealogy BIBL Jacobus, Donald L. comp. The Genealogy of the Booth Family Booth Families of Connecticut for Six or More Generations (Eden C. Booth pub, 1952) Note: The compiler of this works appears to be a professional genealogist although he does not cite specific sources except to say "Authorities Aside from Original Sources Consulted". Under this title he lists a number of local histories and other Booth genealogies as well as original town and church records. CONT Vital Records of (CT Towns of) Stratford, Newtown, Fairfield, Woodbury, weston, Berlin, Farmington, Roxbury, etc. CONT Church Records (Congregational & Episcopalian) of Stratford, Hungtington, and Trumbull, Redding, Roxbury, South CONT Britain, Easton, New Britain, Southington. CONT Probate Recrods of Fairfield Stratford, Danbury, Woodbury, Farmington. CONT Land Records Stratford, Newtown, Scattering CONT Cemetery inscriptions, Hale Collection, State Library hartford, many towns CONT Family Records, State Library Hartford, CT CONT CONT In many cases his dates differ from Orcutt's History of New Milford p. 657-58. CONT CONT CONT MSS: Booth Collection, Kate S. Fogarty, Fairfield Historical society\Pattersosn Genealogy, D. Williams Patterson, CT Historical society CONT CONT and numerous printed sources and family histories. see p 115-116 CONT CONT Names, dates and information of this line down to Mead Booth are taken from this book. Quality or Certainty of Data: 2 Page: p5
↑ Source: #S24 Quality or Certainty of Data: 2 Page: p5-6

Biography

Sergeant John BOOTH was born 5 Nov 1653 in Stratford, Fairfield, CT. He married Dorothy HAWLEY on 14 Jun 1678.

Sources

Donald Lines Jacobus, History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield, CD-Local and Family Histories: CT, 1600's - 1800's, (Produced in collaboration with the Genealogical Publishing Company, 2000), vol 1, p 89.
↑ Source: #S24 Quality or Certainty of Data: 2 Page: p5-6
"Pedigree Resource File," database, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.2.1/SRS5-JJG : accessed 2014-10-29), entry for
Richard /Booth/.

Biography

Sources

↑ Source: #S24 Quality or Certainty of Data: 2 Page: p5-6
"Pedigree Resource File," database, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.2.1/SRS5-JJG : accessed 2014-10-29), entry for
Richard /Booth/.



Birth: Nov. 5, 1653
Stratford
Fairfield County
Connecticut, USA
Death: Dec. 6, 1728
Stratford
Fairfield County
Connecticut, USA

The son of my ancestors, RICHARD & ELIZABETH (HAWLEY) BOOTH, he married Dorothy Hawley on June 14, 1678 in Stratford. He married second, widow Hannah Clark on January 31, 1714.

His father gave him the homestead in Stratford on March 15, 1688. He served in the Pequot Indian War.

Family links:
Parents:
Richard Booth (1607 - 1688)
Elizabeth Hawley Booth (1607 - 1689)

Spouse:
Dorothy Hawley Booth (1658 - 1710)

Children:
Mary Booth Brooks (____ - 1740)*
Ann Booth Thompson (1688 - 1774)*
Ephraim Booth (1689 - 1733)*

Siblings:
Ephraim Booth (1648 - 1683)*
Ebenezer Booth (1651 - 1732)*
John Booth (1653 - 1728)
Joseph Booth (1656 - 1703)*
Bethia Boothe Curtiss (1658 - 1699)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Old Congregational Burying Ground
Stratford
Fairfield County
Connecticut, USA
Plot: No tombstone remains


GIVEN NAMES: Also shown as Johanna

BIRTH: Also shown as Born 21 Mar 1661

DEATH: Also shown as Died Deceased



Elizabeth/Jones * 1686
Elizabeth/Jones * 1686

Married Hannah
Married Hannah

AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latte
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints TITL Ancestral File (TM) PUBL June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998 REPO @R01@

!BIR-MAR-DEA: Walter S Booth-Genealogy o
!BIR-MAR-DEA: Walter S Booth-Genealogy of the Booth family in England & U S, pg 13-15. The Family of Richard Booth, pg 25-28-31 Samuel Orcutt, HX of the Old Town of Stratford & City of Bridge- port, CT, V 2, pg 1156. (In Wichita City Library) !NOT: At a special court of oyer & Terminer, held at Fayrefield, 19 Sep 1692. The Grand Jorors impaneled included Ebenezer Booth. This jury presented a bill of indictment againist one mercy Disborough, wife of Thomas, for witchcraft. Being tried by petit jury, she was found guilty & sentence to death, but there is reason to believe the sentence was never carried out. On 13 Jan 1599, " A record of each & eavry particular proprietor's Rights in future commonage in Start- ford" included "Ebenezer Booth 18-1/2 acres". The will of Ebenezer Booth of Stratford, husbandman, 2 Nov 1732, mentioned daus Deborah, Elizabeth & Abigail; son Ebenezer, decd, who had his portion; Also sons Benjamin & Edward. Much in regardfs to the Booth family is found in "Private Controver- ies, CT Archives", in connection with a certian land case. After the death of Richard Jones, father of Ebenezer Booth's 2nd wife, his (Jones') widow married, John Chappel, & with him conveyed in 1674, land which had belonged to Richard Jones. In 1747 the Jones heirs bought suit, questioning the legality of the sale, & all the heirs are specified in the papers relating thereto. Children of 1st marriage recorded at Stratford.

!SOURCE: Automated Archives CD# 100 !SOU
!SOURCE: Automated Archives CD# 100 !SOURCE: Automated Archives CD# 100

LDS LIBRARY SHOWS ANOTHER WIFE - HANNAH,
LDS LIBRARY SHOWS ANOTHER WIFE - HANNAH, b. ABT 1655

Line 2037 from GEDCOM File not recogniza
Line 2037 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: SLGC FAMC @01474288@ Line 2038 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: SOUR @S01@ Line 161 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: SLGC FAMC @01474288@ Line 162 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: SOUR @S01@

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

1) Hannah/ *
1) Hannah/ *

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.  
Booth, Sergeant Ebenezer John (I312684225329)
 
3408 History Channel The Revolution 21 June 2
History Channel The Revolution 21 June 2011

(1746)
(1746) 
Webb, Samual (I312684224854)
 
3409 History of Stonington' by Wheeler.
History of Stonington' by Wheeler.

UPDATE: 27 Jan 1997 !Died young.
UPDATE: 27 Jan 1997 !Died young.

!Hartford Times (June 19, 1943) p. 25;
!Hartford Times (June 19, 1943) p. 25; Savage 929.294, S264 2:36, 4:457-8; Desc. of William Denison (G.B. Denison) p.6; Roxbury V.R. 974.42 R86Dr & R86Ro, p.91 (Drake); Hist. of Harwick 974.42 H27Pa (Paige);

`History of Stonington' by Wheeler.
`History of Stonington' by Wheeler.

!AGI
!AGI 
Denison, Jeremiah (I312684223918)
 
3410 History of the Town of Sunderland, Massachusetts, 1673-1899
!MARRIAGE-PARENT-DEATH: HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF SUNDERLAND,MASSACHUSETTS, 1673-1899,WHICH ORIGINALLY EMBRACED WITHIN ITS LIMITS THE PRESENT TOWNS OF MONTAGUE AND LEVERETT: John Montague Smith, with genealogies by Henry W. Taft and Abbie T. Montague; approximately 1620-1899; E.A. Hall Co., Greenfield, Mass., 1899; pp 431,525; FHL film 0886461; NOTE: from Lancaster or Groton; had probably lived in both town; rem to Northfield ab.1725, and afterwards built a fort on his land, which by change of the line is now in Hinsdale, N.H.; had removed to Sunderland in 1748; homestead lot No. 5, West side originally Luke Smith's. In his will he mentions only children Jemima, Bathsheba and Lucy Children are, Perhaps, not named in order. Note at bottom of page reads "The name of SAWTELLE, which is the true name, is variously written in the records as SARTELL, SERTLE, and SERTWELL. 
Sawtell, Josiah (I312684222492)
 
3411 HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF TOLLAND
Save to my tree
John Sterns in Tolland, Connecticut
HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF TOLLAND
TOLLAND was originally purchased of the native Indians by a number of gentlemen in Windsor. In 1715 it was incorporated by the Assembly, and the settlement of the town was commenced by two families. The progress of the settlement was slow; the number of families in 1720 was but twenty-eight.
About one half of the township, comprising the south part, was claimed by a number of persons who were legatees of Joshua Uncas, sachem of the Mohegans. This proved a source of considerable difficulty, as the legatees commenced suits at law against the settlers. The proprietors holding under the Windsor claimants were obliged, at a dear rate, to purchase quit claims of the legatees of Joshua.
The Rev. Stephen Steel was the first minister of this town. He commenced his labors in 1720, and continued his ministry for about thirty-seven years, greatly beloved and revered by his people. Mr. Steel was from Hadley, Mass.
The first settlers were of the names of Chapman, Stearns, Grant, West, Carpenter, Aborns, Abbot, Lathrop, Nye and Dimock. The Chapmans were from Windsor; they located themselves about 2-1/2 miles westerly from the court house, near the Hartford road, in the vicinity of Snipsic pond or lake.
John Stearns settled about 2 miles eastward of the court house; Zebulon West about 3 miles south; the Grovers, Carpenters and Samuel Aborns, located about 2-1/2 miles north. Ebenezer Grant, from East Windsor, settled on Grant's hill, about 2-1/2 miles south from the court house; Nye and Dimock settled near Willimantic river, about 4 miles east.

Early History of Tolland
Excerpt from “The Early History of Tolland: an address delivered before the Tolland County Historical Society” by Loren Pinckney Waldo, Tolland County Historical Society, on the 22nd day of August and 27 day of September 1861.
It is not know whether any of the family of Shubael Stearns, Senior, remained in Tolland after the year of 1754; it is certain, however that several of them left at that time with Shubael Stearns, Junior, and settled in North Carolina, where their prosperity is now very numerous; and where, as it has been likewise ascertained, within a few years, the Rev. Mr. Stearns left a very desirable reputation as a pulpit orator.
John Stearns was a brother of Shubael Stearns, Sr. This fact is verified as well by tradition as by the copy of a deed from Shulbael to John Dated January 16, 1720, on the town (of Tolland) records, which deed is expressed to be for the consideration of five pounds in money, or its equivalent, in hand, paid by my brother, John Stearns, of Tolland, &c. This deed shows that John Stearns was a resident of Tolland before 1720. He married Elizabeth Barnes of Tolland, December 2, 1733. The following is their record:
· Eleanor Born February 18, 1725, died October 2, 1737
· David Born December 14, 1725, died February 2, 1715-6
· Elizabeth Born May 26, 1728
· Ruth Born July 19, 1730
· Lydia Born July 25, 1732
Elizabeth (Barnes), wife of John Stearns, died April 19, 1737. He married Abigail Diggins, of Windsor, April 19, 1739, she died February 13, 1752; he then married Eunice Miller, July 29 1754. Their children were:
· Daniel Born January 24, 1756, died April 8, 1756
· Eleanor Born August 11, 1757
· Charles Born October 17, 1758
· Mary Born February 8, 1760, died August 15, 1787
· Sarah Born November 6, 1761
John Stearns, the son of John and Elizabeth Stearns , was the Doctor Stearns who married a Miss Wills of Tolland, and was the father of Judge Elisha Stearns, of whom I spoke in my lecture to on the History of Tolland County.

Abigail/Diggins * Eunice/Miller *
Abigail/Diggins * Eunice/Miller *

(21)d.
(21)d.

Date and Location are generated
Date and Location are generated

Abigail/Diggins, 29 Jul 1754 Eunice/Mill
Abigail/Diggins, 29 Jul 1754 Eunice/Miller

Elizabeth/Barnes * Abigail/Diggins *
Elizabeth/Barnes * Abigail/Diggins *

Non-standard gedcom data: 1 _IFLAGS 0
Non-standard gedcom data: 1 _IFLAGS 0

Married Elizabeth Barnes of Tolland on 2
Married Elizabeth Barnes of Tolland on 2 Dec 1723. She died 19 Apr 1737. He married second to Abigail Diggins of Windsor 19 Apr 1739 and she died 13 Feb 1753. He married third to Eunice Miller on 29 Jul 1754. He had a son John by his first marriage who became physician and married a Miss Wills of Tolland. Dr. Stearns was the father of Judge Elisha Stearns of Tolland.

2) Abigail/Diggins 3) Eunice/Miller 29Ju
2) Abigail/Diggins 3) Eunice/Miller 29Jul1754

1) Elizabeth/Barnes 2) Abigail/Diggins
1) Elizabeth/Barnes 2) Abigail/Diggins

2) Abigail/Diggins 3) Eunice/Miller
2) Abigail/Diggins 3) Eunice/Miller

!SOURCES: Barron Family Newsletter, Vol
!SOURCES: Barron Family Newsletter, Vol. 2 No. 6 (Mar 1983)| GS 929.27305 | B278b The Early History of Tolland, Conn. by Loren P. Waldo. Denise Milke, McFarland Wis. (Mar 1983)

1691
1691

Genealogy and Memoirs of Charles and Nathaniel Stearns
Genealogy and Memoirs of Charles and Nathaniel Stearns
Genealogy and Memoirs of Charles and Nathaniel Stearns, and their Descendants, by Mrs. Avis Stearns Van Wagenen, Syracuse, NY, Courier Printing Co., 1901.
The Arabella.
Early in the morning of April 8, 1630, Isaac Stearns (Vol. I, No. I) and family, Sir Richard Saltonstall and family, Rev. George Phillips, Gov. Winthrop and many others embarked at Yarmouth, England, in the good ship Arabella, and arrived at Salem, Mass., on June 12.
The ship Jewel arrived June,13; the ship Ambrose, June 18; the Talbot, July 2.
From the Memorial History of Boston, Mass, by Justin Winsor, Vol. I, page 115 shows a small cut of the Arabella, reproduced from a painting in Salem or Boston.
The Arabella, the admiral of the fleet, was a ship of 350 tons burden, carrying 28 guns and 52 seamen, with Capt. Nathaniel Mellbourne master and part owner.
The accompanying cut of the Arabella is from a reproduction of the painting by William F. Halsall, representing a part of the fleet which brought Winthrop and his company to Salem Harbor.
The Talbot, the vice-admiral, was shown at anchor, while the Jewel, the coplin of the fleet, was the distant vessel on the right.
From the History of Middlesex Co., by SamueI Adams Drake, Vol. I., page 25, we quote, "Isaac Johnson, esteemed the richest of the emigrants, inherited an estate of 20,000 Pounds from his grandfather, Robert Johnson of North Luffingham, in 1584; with his wife Arabella, daughter of Thomas, third Earl of Lincoln, he came over in Winthrop's ship, "The Eagle," which, in his wife's honor, was rechristened "The Arabella."
Lady Arabella died at Salem, Mass., a few weeks after the arrival and her husband, who survived her only a few months, was interred at the upper end of his lot in Boston, in what is now known as "The King's Burying Ground."
The Arabella and her consorts experienced a varied and stormy passage, and, on the 8th of June, there came a wild pigeon into the ship.
They came to anchor on the seventy-sixth day, June 12, 1630, 0.S.
CHARLES STEARNS.
FIRST GENERATION.
"In March, 1628, the Plymouth Company sold to a company of six gentlemen in England, the territory extending from a line three miles north of Merrimack River, to a line three miles south of Charles River, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean.
The number of joint proprietors soon became much enlarged and they assumed the title of "The Massachusetts Bay Company," choosing Matthew Cradock, a wealthy merchant of London, to be governor, and Thomas Goffe, also a merchant of London, to be deputy-governor.
In June, 1628, a company of emigrants was sent over, who landed at Salem and commenced the settlement of that ancient town.
That a large number of settlers accompanied Sir Richard Saltonstall from Salem to Watertown is evident from the following consideration, that about forty men signed the covenant on the 30th of July, while the number of female members is not stated.
Others, having large families, did not then sign the covenant, not being entitled to church membership.
There is no record extant of any municipal transactions of Watertown earlier, in date than 1634, four years after its first settlement.
An important change then took place in the government of the colony and a house of deputies or representative became a constituent part of it.
As the people, from this date, began to be represented in the govemment of the colony, so, the ordering of the civil affairs of the town began to be intrusted to a body of freemen, chosen, annually, for that purpose.
Then originated that peculiar New England municipal body, a board of select-men.
Previous to this date, the civil and ecclesiastical affairs of the town were commingled, without any distinct line between them.
No one had a right to vote, unless he were a church-member; and the church was Congregational wherein its affairs were managed by the votes of the members.
The church officers seem to have taken the lead both in civil and ecclesiastical affairs, and, it is probable that, previous to 1634, the records were kept accordingly.
Whatever those records were, they are lost."
Charles Steams ** was admitted freeman, May 6, 1646.
On Mar. 15, 1648, he purchased of Edward Lamb, of Watertown, a house and eight acres of land, and three other lots.
On the same day, he purchased of John Fiske, six acres of upland.
Isaac Stearns, (First Vol. I), in his will, dated, June 14, 1861, mentioned him as my kinsman, Charles "Sternes," and bequeather him 10 Pounds.
Samuel Hosier also bequeathed to him 10 Pounds, but without stating any relationship.
Jan. 6, 1680-1, he was elected constable, or tax-gatherer, of Watertown, but refused to take the oath; and the same year, he sold his land in Watertown to his son, Samuel **.
It is supposed that soon after this he, with his son Shubael **, moved to that part of Lynn, called Lynn End, now the town of Lynnfield.
His first wife, Hannah, d., June 30, 1651, in Watertown and was buried July 2, 1651.
He md. (2), June 22, 1654, Rebecca Gibson **, dau. of John ** and Rebecca Gibson, of Cambridge.
The births of their first two children are recorded in Cambridge, but she was a member of the Watertown Church, Feb., 1658-9.
(See Camb. Church Gathering, P. 59.)
The following extract from the Essex Registry of Probate shows the number and the names of his children, at least, of those who lived to maturity, or to have families:
"Sept. 9, 1695, Shubael Stearns, of Lynn, petitions for letters of administration on the estate of his brother, Charles **, slain in the King's service.
Balance of his estate after settlement of debts (4 Pounds, 12S. 10d.), to be divided as follows: equally between his brothers, Shubael and John **: the children of brothers Samuel and Isaac; Rebecca Sternes ** alias Traine, and Martha ** Hutchinson, his sisters."
"There is a tradition prevalent in Lynn, Mass., that three brother, names Daniel, Isaac (First Vol. 1) and Shubael Stearns, came from England to America in 1630, and settled near Watertown, Mass.; that Daniel died, unmarried; that Shubael and Isaac each brought their families with them; that, soon after landing, Shubael and wife both died, leaving two sons, named Charles and Nathaniel, eight or ten years of age, who were reared and cared for by their Uncle Isaac; this same account was given by John Peck Stearns; that these sons afterwards married and each, as well as their Uncle Isaac, left a large family, from whom all of the name of Stearns in America are supposed to have descended.
It is noticable that Isaac (First Vol. I.), Charles and Nathaniel all named their sons John, Isaac and Samuel.
There is also a traditional anecdote of the first landing of the Stearns family, as follows: "that on reaching anchorage in America, Isaac, like the spies sent into Canaan, went forward and selected a place of settlement; soon after, an emulation arose between the two boys as to which should step on land first, and, as they sprang from the boat, Charles Stearns missed his footing and fell into the river which was therefore christened the Charles River."
Nevertheless, the historian claims for the name a royal origin.
CHARLES STEARNS, date of birth unknown; md. (I), Hannah , who d., June 30, 1651; md. (2), June 22, 1654, Rebecca Gibson, dau. of John and Rebecca Gibson, of Cambridge; seven children.
SAMUEL STEARNS, b., June 2, 1650, in Watertown, Mass.
SHUBAEL STEARNS, b., Sept. 20, 1655, in Cambridge, Mass.
JOHN STEARNS, b., Jan. 24, 1657, in Cambridge, Mass.
ISAAC STEARNS, b., 1658.
CHARLES STEARNS JR., slain in the King's service, prior to 1695.
REBECCA STEARNS, b., 1661; md., Jan. 25, 1693, Thomas Traine, b., 1653, son of John and Margaret (Dix) Traine, of Watertown, Mass.
She was admitted to full covenant, Aug. 15, 1698, and d., Sept. 23, 1746, aged 85 years.
He was fined 10s. by the Court, Apr. 17, 1674, "for selling strong water."
He d., Jan. 23, 1739, "an aged man."
(a) Benoni Traine, b. and d., Nov., 1693.
(b) Rebecca Traine, b., Apr., d., May, 1696.
(c) Deborah Traine, b., Dec. 16, 1698; d., May 25, 1718.
(d) Rebecca Traine, b., Dec. 1, 1701; md., Dec. 17, 1726, Dea John Bright, who d., Jan. 24, 1754; S. P.; she d., 1736.
MARTHA STEARNS, md. Mr. Hutchinson.
SECOND GENERATION:
SAMUEL STEARNS, b., June 2, 1650, son of Charles and Hannah Stearns, of Watertown, Mass.; md. Mehitable, and settled in Watertown.
The inventory of his estate, (42 Pounds, 12S.), was made June 6, 1694, by John Hastings, William Shattuck, Sr., and William Shattuck Jr., and his estate was settled by his widow, Mehitable, July, 1696.
It appears, by the town records, June 16, 1694, that he left his family so indigent as to need some temporary aid from the selectmen.
It is not known what became of the widow and her two sons.
SAMUEL STEARNS JR., b., Feb. 27, 1686, in Watertown, Mass.; bapt., Aug. 21, 1698, by Rev. Mr. Angier.
JOSEPH STEARNS, bapt., Aug. 7, 1698, by Rev. Mr. Angier.
SHUBAEL STEARNS, b., Sept. 20, 1655, son of Charles and Rebecca (Gibson) Stearns, of Cambridge, Mass.; md. Mary Upton (?) of Reading, Mass., and settled in Lynn, probably near the border of Reading.
He belonged to the Narragansett Expedition.
No record of his marriage has been discovered, but "Mary Upton, of Reading, Mass., md. Shubael Stearns, of Lynn," whether this Shubael or a desendant is unknown.
Testimony of Samuel Trail, aged 95 years and upwards; remembers Shubael Stearns of Lynn, who came from Watertown and was in the army.
Shubael's will is dated, Nov. 19, 1733; proved, Sept. 2, 1734; nine children.
SHUBAEL STEARNS JR., b., Aug. 19, 1638, in Lynn, Mass.
SAMUEL STEARNS, b., Sept. 12, 1685.
HANNAH STEARNS, b., 1687; md., Mar. 21, 1710, at Lynn, Mass., Dr. James Stimson.
About 1716, they moved to Tolland, Conn., where he was the first practicing physician, and where he d., Mar. 10, 1758; six children.
(a) Ichabod Stimson, b.1, Jan. 22, 1713.
(b) Eneas Stimson, b., May 25, 17

Elizabeth/Barnes: Abigail/Diggins
Elizabeth/Barnes: Abigail/Diggins

Abigail/Diggins: Eunice/Miller
Abigail/Diggins: Eunice/Miller

Elizabeth/Barns *; Eunice/Miller *
Elizabeth/Barns *; Eunice/Miller * 
Stearns, John (I312684225111)
 
3412 History of This Town of Haverhill, NH
History of This Town of Haverhill, NH by William Whitcher 1919 Jeremiah Page, eldest son of Benjamin & Mary, born 14 Sept 1667; married 2 June 1696, Deborah Kendrick of Newburyport; lived in Haverhill. Seven children born in Haverhill.

Miscellaneous Source
"Descendants of Thomas Whittier"

!NAME:Book, Hendrick Genealogy, The Hend
!NAME:Book, Hendrick Genealogy, The Hendrick Genealogy: Dan iel Hendrick of Haverhill MA & his descendants, Charles P.H endrick, Rutland VT: Tuttle Co., 1923 !BIRTH:Book, Hendrick Genealogy, The Hendrick Genealogy: Da niel Hendrick of Haverhill MA & his descendants, Charles P. Hendrick, Rutland VT: Tuttle Co., 1923 !DEATH:Book, Hendrick Genealogy, The Hendrick Genealogy: Da niel Hendrick of Haverhill MA & his descendants, Charles P. Hendrick, Rutland VT: Tuttle Co., 1923 
Page, Jeremiah (I312684224905)
 
3413 HISTORY: "Quackenbush Family in America
HISTORY: "Quackenbush Family in America" by Rick Quackenbush p. 9

CHURCH RECORDS: She has been traditionally assumed toa be the daughter of a Jan Post. This assumption is apparently derived from the baptism record of her son Isak, where she and her husband are listed as "Jan Quakkelbosch and Magtelt Janz". It is possible that the "Janz" after her name should have read "Jans" meaning "belonging to Jan" (referring to her husband), rather thgan "daughter of Jan".
If so a good possiblilty for her parents are Captain Adriaen and Claartje (or Clara) Post, who came from The Hague in the Netherlands to Staten Island in 1650 and were among the founders of the Berrgen Colony in 1655. They had also lived for a time in Brazil. If Machteld was their daughter, it is likelyu that
she was born during their stay in Brazil. This theory of the parentage of Machteld Post is supported by the Dutch naming customs, where the first born children are named after their grandparents. If so, Jan and Machteld's son Adriaan was probably born before their son Johannes.

1. "Ancestors of American Presidents," R
1. "Ancestors of American Presidents," Roberts, 1989. 2. Records of John Becker, 75 Roselawn Ave., Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4R1E7, jbecker@interlog.com. 3. IGI. 4. Ancestral File. 
Post, Machteld Jans (I312684219780)
 
3414 HISTORY: "The Quackenbush Family in Ame
HISTORY: "The Quackenbush Family in America" by Rick Quackenbush, p. 13

HISTORY: "The Quackenbush Family in Holland & America", p. 40.

MARRIAGE: Marriage date received 17 Jan 2003 from Don whose e-mail address is: donbarbmikkelsen@netzero.com.

Online records from the Reformed Dutch C


5 Dec 2003, Linda Carol Quackenbush reviewed
1720 Albany County Census:
list for Canastigonie.
Found possibly Helena Clute's Dad and brothers, uncles (?) and her husband Jno. Junior [Johannes QUACKENBOSCH Junior]

"Cluit, Frederick
Cluit, Jacob
Cluit, John"

"Quackenboes, Jno. Junr.
Quacumbus, Jno."

http://www.rootsweb.com/~nyalbany/census/1720.html

________________________________

5 Dec 2003, Linda Carol Quackenbush reviewed
1790 Watervliet Census:

Number Surname First Name FWM 16+ FWM -16 FWF FW Others Slaves
582 Clute Jacob 2 1 4 583 Ramsay Frederick 4 1 2 584 Quackenbuss John 1 3 585 Quackenbuss Frederick 2 2 4 586 Clute John 1 1 3

http://www.rootsweb.com/~nyalbany/census/1790Watervlcen.html

__________________________________

!1. This is the end of the family line
!1. This is the end of the family line as far as I now know it. 
Quackenbosch, Johannes (I312684219885)
 
3415 Holcomb Family History
The Holcomb(e) genealogy; a genealogy, history and directory ... of the Holcomb(e)s of the world, including Holcombe descendants of William the Conqueror and King Henry I, the ancient and modern branch, the American branches ... and others
by Seaver, J. Montgomery (Jesse Montgomery), 1890-
https://archive.org/embed/holcombegenealog00seav 
Holcomb, Joel (I312684223470)
 
3416 http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/use
http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/h/o/l/Randal-H-Holcombe/GENE0001-0006.html

Line 28761 from GEDCOM File not recogniz
Line 28761 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: SLGC DATE 11 OCT 1963 M From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

Invalid seal-to-parents temple code: M.
Invalid seal-to-parents temple code: M.

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM) REPO: @R01@; ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; ;

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

Died in what is now West Virginia.
Died in what is now West Virginia.

[KathyMeansGEDCOM2_29_00.FTW] Buckeye P
[KathyMeansGEDCOM2_29_00.FTW] Buckeye Prairie The History of the Upper Monongahela Valley # 5 Messenger Ancestry 1850 Preston Co. census IGI Family Registry #84674 film # 874,721 Notes for ABNER MESSENGER: Abner enlisted in theRevolutionay War in Simsbury Township, Hartford, CT and served for nine months in 1778 under Captain Amasa Mills. He served in Colonel Enos' regiment for three months in 1779 under Captain Churchill and Col. Meade. In 1782 and 1783, under Captain James Stoddard and Major Elijah Humphrey for twelve months. On November 27 1834, he was granted a pension of $50.00 per year. About 1805, Abner and Abigail, settled on the B. W. Arnold farm, a mile west of Terra Alta. Abner is listed as a head of household in the 1810 Monongalia census. Abner operated a tavern in his home on the Monongalia State Road. In the 1840 Preston County census, Abner is listed as a Revolutionary War Soldier residing with Samuel. Abner is buried in Arnold Cemetery, west of Terra Alta on State Route 7. There is no marker, his grave is to the left of Samuel Messenger's grave which has a marker More About ABNER MESSENGER: Burial: Unknown, Arnold Cemetery, Preston County, WV

!SOURCES--History of Preston Co., W. Va.
!SOURCES--History of Preston Co., W. Va. by Morton Barkhampstead Church Records, Conn IGI--CONN--AS OF APR 1984 GENEALOGICAL HISTORY WITH SHORT SKITCHES AND FAMLY RECORDS OF THE EARLY SETTLERS OF WEST SIMSBURY, NOW CANTON, CONN BY ABIEL BROWN 1810 CENSUS, MONONGALIA CO., VA 1820 CENSUS, PRESTON CO., VA 1830 CENSUS, PRESTON CO., VA 1840 CENSUS, PRESTON CO., VA PENSION RECORD OF ABNER MESSENGER; CONNECTICUT SERVICE S 9022 PRESTON CO.,STATE OF VA HISTORY OF PRESTON COUNTY BY WILEY - PG-406 "Abner Messenger, a Revolutionary Soldier, married Abagail Pike (a sister to Gen. Pike of the war of 1812), and came to the site of the Messenger settlement about 1800. He was the grandfather of James W. and Edmund Messenger. pg 408 - On the old pike by Fairfax's Ferry were three tavern stands. At the Dunkard Bottom, Jacob Mouser kept, succeeded by Squire Wm Price; next Abner Messenger; and third, Aaron Gibbs in the Green Glades." IGI - 1994 Conn - Isaac Messenger b.abt 1827 son of Abner & Mrs Abner Messenger Of Conn. #1553718 -- batch F517634 - sht 34 B: 20 Jul 1990 BOISE; E: 25 Jan 1991 BOISE; SP: 26 Jan 1991 BOISE Possible - Abigail Pike was 2nd Wife - Lidia ? 1st Wife we need to do more research on this family, checking on 1st wife and some of the dates of birth of children have a problem !SOURCES--History of Preston Co., W. Va. by Morton Barkhampstead Church Records, Conn IGI--CONN--AS OF APR 1984 GENEALOGICAL HISTORY WITH SHORT SKITCHES AND FAMLY RECORDS OF THE EARLY SETTLERS OF WEST SIMSBURY, NOW CANTON, CONN BY ABIEL BROWN 1810 CENSUS, MONONGALIA CO., VA 1820 CENSUS, PRESTON CO., VA 1830 CENSUS, PRESTON CO., VA 1840 CENSUS, PRESTON CO., VA PENSION RECORD OF ABNER MESSENGER; CONNECTICUT SERVICE S 9022 PRESTON CO.,STATE OF VA HISTORY OF PRESTON COUNTY BY WILEY - PG-406 "Abner Messenger, a Revolutionary Soldier, married Abagail Pike (a sister to Gen. Pike of the war of 1812), and came to the site of the Messenger settlement about 1800. H e was the grandfather of James W. and Edmund Messenger. pg 408 - On the old pike by Fairfax's Ferry were three tavern stands. At the Dunkard Bottom, Jacob Mouser kept, succeeded by Squire Wm Price; next Abner Messenger; and third, Aaron Gibbs in the Green Glades." IGI - 1994 Conn - Isaac Messenger b.abt 1827 son of Abner & Mrs Abner Messenger Of Conn. #1553718 -- batch F517634 - sht 34 B: 20 Jul 1990 BOISE; E: 25 Jan 1991 BOISE; SP: 26 Jan 1991 BOISE Possible - Abigail Pike was 2nd Wife - Lidia ? 1st Wife we need to do more research on this family, checking on 1st wife and some of the dates of birth of children have a problem

Line 11236 from GEDCOM File not recogniz
Line 11236 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: SLGC DATE 11 OCT 1963 M

marriage-date: 1782 or 1785
marriage-date: 1782 or 1785

[KathyMeansGEDCOM2_29_00.FTW] Buckeye P
[KathyMeansGEDCOM2_29_00.FTW] Buckeye Prairie The History of the Upper Monongahela Valley # 5 Messenger Ancestry 1850 Preston Co. census IGI Family Registry #84674 film # 874,721 
Messenger, Abner (I312684223176)
 
3417 http://www.holcombegenealogy.com/tholcom
http://www.holcombegenealogy.com/tholcomb/d2/i0038950.htm#i38951

Margaret Holcomb married Nathaniel North
Margaret Holcomb married Nathaniel North.

Stiles Henry Reed 'History and Genealogi
Stiles Henry Reed 'History and Genealogies of Ancient Windsor', Book 13,p 162.

Stiles does not list a Margaret, McPhers
Stiles does not list a Margaret, McPherson lists the name but no information, Spear shows the name plus a marriage to a gentleman named North and nothing else. I doubt this Margaret ever existed but record the information for study.

Birth
Birth - Ancestral Fii\le: Margaret Holcombe - Born 1687 - Simsbury Hrtfrd, CT (not is Simsbury Vital records 0002979) Mar - Ancestral File: Spouse: Nathaniel North - Mar: 10 Jun 1708 , Hrtford, CT / Farminton, Hartford, CT. Death - Ancestral File: Died: 19 May 1777 (not in Simsbury) 
Holcombe, Margaret (I312684223274)
 
3418 http://www.noblenet.org/salem/reference/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Genealogical-Dictionary-Vol.-1-Savage.pdf
http://www.noblenet.org/salem/reference/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Genealogical-Dictionary-Vol.-1-Savage.pdf



1693. Mary m. 24 Aug. 1685, Thomas Norwood. THOMAS, Sudbury,
s. of William, m. 1667, Patience Foster, wh. d. Aug. 1706, aged 52. He
m. Mary Phips of Cambridge, wid. of Solomon, jr. d. of dep.-gov. Thom
as Danforth, and he d. 7 .May 1709, was bur. at Boston. He was a
maj. and his d. Mary m. 8 Jan. 1691, Jonathan Willard of Roxbury.
Barry notes that he gave, by his will, prop, in Hedcom and Tenterden in . Kent. THOMAS, Lynn, call. junr. m. 8 Jan. 1678, Hannah Collins, had \ Samuel, b. 8 Dec. 1678 ; and Hannah, 5 Dec. 1680. THOMAS, Stonington, by w. Hannah had Samuel, b. 8 Dec. 1678 ; Hannah, 5 Dec. 1680 ;
... Mary, 26 May 1683 ; Jerusha, Dec. 1687; Sarah, 11 July 1689; Thom
as, 14 Feb. 1692; Eliz. 9 May 1694; Daniel, 9 Oct. 1696; Priscilla, 28 Jan. 1699 ; and Humphrey, 16 Sept. 1701. THOMAS, Concord, s.of Thomas, was town elk. d. 4 Apr. 1718. THOMAS, Hampton, s. of John
of the same, m. Abial, d. of Joseph Shaw, had Thomas, b. 14 Dec. 1686; Joseph, 30 Jan. 1689 ; Sarah, 3 Apr. 1691 ; Eliz. 21 Apr. 1694 ; Ebenezer, 1696; and Josiah, 15 Feb. 1701. His w. d. 21 Dec. 1739,
aged 77 ; and he ,d. 29 June 1744, almost 87 yrs. old. WILLIAM, Bos
ton 1633, in employm. of Gov. Winth. by w. Thomasine had Sarah,
bapt. 11 May 1634. He may have had ano. d. Rebecca, wh. m. 3 Feb.
1653, James Hudson, as sec. w. and d. 14 Nov. foil, J * WILLIAM,
Salem, s. of Francis of Brandon, in Co. Suffk. came, perhaps, in the Love, 1635, aged 26, from London, with w. Mary, of the same age, had
been, it may be prob. a mem. of the Fishmongers Co. His w. it is said, was sis. of Rev. John Youngs, and d. the yr. after land. By sec. w. Sarah, d. as the fam. report says, of Rev. S. Smith of Great Yarmouth,
Eng. but more prob. of Samuel Smith of our Wenham, wh. d. 10 Feb.
1668, he had William, b. 14 Apr. 1639; John, Oct. 1641, d. 1669;
Samuel, 31 July 1644, drown, at 11 yrs. ; Joseph, H. C. 1666, bef. ment. ; Benjamin, 1648, bef. ment. ; Sarah, 23 Dec. 1649, wh. m. 1665, Thomas
Deane; Mary, 16 Jan. 1656, m. Wait Winthrop, and d. 14 June 1690;
and James, 28 Dec. 1658, d. soon. He was freem. 1649, rep. 1654, 9, and 66, Assist. 1680-3, and d. 20 Jan. 1688. His will, made 12 Mar.
preced. with codic. of 19, names of ch. only William, Benjamin, and d. Winth. * WILLIAM, Sudbury, an orig. propr. m. 15 Nov. 1641, Mary,
d. of Thomas Besbeech or Bisby, had Mary, b. 18 May 1643, wh. m. a. 1662, Benjamin Rice ; Thomas, 22 May 1644, bef. ment; William;
Edmund, 27 Nov. 1653, bef. ment. ; Hopestill, 8 July 1656, bef. ment. ; Susanna; and Eliz. 23 July 1659. He was a deac. perhaps br. of Rev. Edmund, freem. 2 June 1641, a capt. and rep. under the new chart. 1692. WILLIAM, Gloucester, a selectman 1644, m. 15 July 1646, Mary,
wid. of the first Abraham Robinson, had Mary, b. 28 July 1649 ; and he
d. 3 May 1662. His will of 29 Apr. bef. names w. and d. Mary, beside========================
s.-in-law Abraham R. WILLIAM, Plymouth, m. 16 July 1G49, Mary
Murcock, had Mary, b. 14 May 1650 ; George, 16 Jan. 1652 ; William,
1 Apr. 1654; and Samuel, early in Mar. 1656; beside John, James,
and Mercy ; yet some of these, perhaps most, were b. at Eastham ; and
d. a. 1694. WILLIAM, Salisbury 1641, br. of George of Haverhill, m. 1645 or 6, Eliz. Munford, had Mary, b. 14 June 1647; William,
24 Feb. 1649, d. young; Ephraim, 24 June 1650; Martha, 5 July
1654; Eliz. 6 Aug. 1656, wh. m. 3 Aug. 1679, Samuel Clough ; and Sarah, 12 Apr. 1658, wh. m. Benjamin Brown of Hampton ; and
he d. 24 Aug. 1706. WILLIAM, Boston, soapboiler, liv. prob. some yrs. at Salem, had James, wh. d. 15 Nov. 1653 ; but perhaps others earlier, possib. at S. and d. 1662, leav. wid. Hannah, and six ch. to ea. of wh.
by will of 1 July 1662, he gave one shil. WILLIAM, Boston, m. 24
Apr. 1655, Eliz. d. of George Ruggles of Braintree, had Mary, b. 16
Mar. foil. ; and Sarah, 8 Jan. 1657. Ano. WILLIAM, Boston, prob. br. of Job, had by w. Lydia, wh. d. 30 July 1680, aged 46, Mary, b. 23
Apr. 1657. Perhaps this is the man, m. by dep.-gov. Bellingham, 11 Apr. 1656 to some fern, in the Geneal. Reg. XL 201, call. William
Parchment. Surely we may presume this to be wanton folly, or in- excusab. carelessness. Was it design, for a sneer at the dep.-gov. ? j WILLIAM, Salem, s. of Hon. William, m. 29 Dec. 1664, Hannah, d. of George Curwin; had William, b. 28 July 1666, d. soon; Hannah, 16 Mar. 1668, d. soon ; Samuel, 8 Oct. 1669 ; William, again, 5 Sept. 1671,
d. very soon; John, 2 Nov. 1672 ; Sarah, 10 Dec. 1674, d. at 14; and
Mary, 22 Aug. 1679. His w. d. 21 Nov. 1692; and he m. 26 Apr.
1694, Rebecca Bayley, was freem. 1665, one of Andros s counc. 1687-9,
and of the counc. of safety, when the usurp, was put down, not nam. by
Increase Mather in the chart, of 1692, but chos. next yr. by a full vote
of the reps, of the people, and d. 23 Feb. 1716. The benefact. to Harv.
Coll. of this gent, of his f. br. and s. are honorab. commemo. by Quincy
in his great work. One of his s. Samuel was rep. couns. and judge, and
d. June 1731, f. of William, H. C. 1727, and of Samuel, H. C. 1727. This last was f. of William, H. C. 1755, a judge of the Sup. Court 1775,
wh. adher. to the crown, and after some yrs. was Gov. of Bermuda, d. 1802. WILLIAM, Charlestown, m. 5 Jan. 1665, Eliz. Downs. WILLIAM,
Salem, liv. I presume, on Marblehead side in 1674, and earlier, by w. Sarah had John, b. 10 Oct. 1669; Joseph, Aug. 1672; and Benjamin,
Aug. 1674. WILLIAM, Sudbury, s. of William, m. 11 Jan. 1676, Mar
garet, d. of deac. John Stone of Cambridge, and d. 1705. WILLIAM,
Charlestown, m. 29 Feb. 1672, Mary Goodwin, wh. d. 28 July 1678,
aged 22 ; and by her had Job, bapt. 3 Oct. 1675. He had sec. w. Mary
Lothrop, m. 21 May 1679, wh. d. 23 Dec. 1713, aged 54. He d. 19 Oct==================
1724, aged 78. Of this name (some with final e, more without it), it seems impossib. to unravel the whole line and lines. It will be seen,
that I have giv. at least, a fair sample. Thirty-six of the name had, in 1834, been gr. at Harv. alone, and Mr. Farmer says fifty-nine others at the various coll. of N. E. N. J. and Union of N. York. Of these, eleven had been clerg. from II. C. and the same number from the others. BROWNELL, GEORGE, Portsmouth, R. I. s. of Thomas of the sam


Non-standard gedcom data: 1 REFN 2VDJ-
Non-standard gedcom data: 1 REFN 2VDJ-WX 2 SOUR LDS Ancestral File, Version 416F

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

Phoebe Brown who was born / christened i
Phoebe Brown who was born / christened in 1620 was a child of William Brown and Jane Burgess. Phoebe Brown who was born / christened in 1601 was from the previous generation and her parents were Joseph Brown and Margery Patching. Please dont combine the two Phoebe's

Line 867 from GEDCOM File not recognizab
Line 867 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: BIRT PLAC England-Providence


ABOVE PHOTO: Current-day view from Rusper, Sussex, England, birthplace of Phoebe.

P3
JOHN, New Haven, prob. s. of Francis of the same, m. 1 Jan. 1661, Mary, d. of John Walker of the same, had Mary, b. 2 May 1664; John, 9 Jan. 1667; Hannah, 7 Aug.
1669 ; and Grace, 9 Jan. 1673. She petitn. for,divorce, and obt. it Oct. 1674. JOHN, Newport, a freem. 1655. JOHN, Cambridge, call, a
Scotchman, m. 24 Apr. 1655, Esther, d. of Thomas Makepeace, and in=====================
her f. s will, eleven yrs. after, is call, of Marlborotigli. He had Joseph,
b. 8 Feb. 1G56, k. casual, at 15 yrs.; Eliz. 26 Mar. 1G57; Sarah, 18
July 1G61 ; Mary, 19 Dec. 1GG2; all at C. and at M. had John, 27 Nov.
1664; Esther, 16G7, d. soon ; Thomas, 1GG9 ; Daniel, 1G71 ; Deborah,
1673 ; Abigail, 9 Mar. 1675 ; and Joseph, 1677; next yr. he rera. to Falmouth, and prob. at the sec. destruct. of that town was driv. away,
and came to Watertown, there dates his will 20 Nov. 1697, in wh. w.
Esther, s. John, Thomas, Daniel, and Joseph, d. Deborah, w. of Jere miah Meacham, and s.-in-law John Gustin, wh. had m. 10 Jan. 1678,
Eliz. ; John Adams, Thomas Darley, or Darby, and John Hartshorn, are ment, JOHN, Providence, wh. sw. alleg. in May 1666, may be the same
as bef. ment, but ano. John of P. sw. alleg. in May 1682. JOHN, Salem,
s. of Elder John, m. 2 June 1658, Hannah, d. of Rev. Peter Hobart of Ilingham, had John, b. 4 Apr. 1659, d. next mo. ; John, again, 21 Feb. 1662; Samuel, 14 Mar. 1663, d. at 9 mos. ; Peter, 1 Mar. 1C64, d. soon; and Abiel, 21 Mar. 1673. *JOHN, Reading, m. 12 or 18 Oct. 1659, Eliz. d. of John Osgood of Andover, had Eliz. b. 5 Oct. 16 GO, d. soon; Eliz. again, 22 Dec. 1661 ; Sarah, 3 Aug. 1664, d. young; Sarah,
again, 19 Nov. 1667, d. young; Mary, 30 May 1671, d. at 2 yrs. ; and
his w. d. 31 July 1673. He was capt. freem. 1679, rep. 1679, 80, 2, and 3 ; d. 1717, aged 81. JOHN, Newbury, m. 20 Feb. 1660, Mary Woodman,
had Judith, b. 5 Dec. 1660; and Mary, 8 Mar. 1662. He was s. of James of Charlestown. JOHN, Reading, eldest s. of Nicholas, m. Ann,
d. of Rev. John Fiske, wh. d. 30 May 1681, had Ann, b. 1678 ; and he m. 1682, sec. w. Eliz. wid. of Rev. Joseph Emerson of Mendon, and she
d. 4 Sept. 1693, aged 55. He m. third w. Rebecca, wid. of lieut. Sam
uel Sprague of Maiden, wh. surv. him, and d. 8 July 1710, aged 76. He, instead of that former John of R. may have been the rep. or capt. or both. JOHN, Providence, s. of Chad, m. Mary, d. of Obadiah Holmes,
the sufferer by the Mass, persecut. had John, b. 18 Mar. 1662 ; James,
1666 ; Obadiah, Martha, and Deborah. JOHN, Hampton, s. of John the
first of the same, had a farm giv. 1666 by his f. at the Falls, and so may
be suppos. to have m. bef. the Ind. war of Philip, in wh. he serv. longer time than any other man of his town ; but no w. or ch. is kn. and he d. 29 Aug. 1683. * JOHN, Salem, m. 27 Jan. but by ano. acco. 30 June
1669, Hannah, d. of Francis Collins, had Priscilla, b. 1 June 1669;
Margaret, 23 Apr. 1671; Joseph, 11 Sept. 1673; William, 1 Dec. 1677; Hannah, 22 July 1678; and Mary, 4 Jan. 1680; but some
confus. evid. appears in rec. of dates of one or two. He was, per
haps, rep. for Marblehead, under the new chart. 1692, and for Salem
1707, 9, and 13 ; may have d. 14 Apr. 1719. JOHN, a passeng. emb. in Eng. 16 May 1679 on the Prudence for Boston, may have
never arr. or soon went home, or sat down in some other town, or====================
(wh. is the least likely), he might have gone home to purchase goods
in Eng. for trade here. JOHN, Duxbury, by w. Ann had Ann, b. 19 Sept. 1673 ; and John, 1675 ; was a capt. JOHN, Swanzey or Rehoboth, a capt. had John, b. 28 Apr. 1675. JOHN, Newbury, s. of sec. Newbury Francis, m. 20 Aug. 1683, Ruth, d. of Abel Huse, had John,
b. 27 Oct. 1683 ; and Isaac, 4 Feb. 1685 ; and perhaps more. He was,
I suppose, the man whose ho. was assail, by the Ind. on 7 Oct. 1695, and
nine persons carr. into captiv. but all by fresh pursuit were retak. tho. some d. of wounds. See Coffin, 161, 2, and strange incidents of the case in Niles, 3 Mass. Hist. Coll. VI. 238. JOHN, York 1680. JOHN,
Billerica, m. 22 Apr. 1682, Eliz. d. of George Policy, had John, b. 27 Mar. 1683, d. next day; John, again, 22 Jan. 1684; Eliz. 6 July 1685,
d. soon ; Eliz. again, 10 Feb. 1687 ; and Hannah, 27 Apr. 1689. JOHN,
Middletown, prob. s. of Nathaniel of the same, m. 1 Apr. 1685, Ann
Porter, had Thomas, b. 1686; Hannah, 1688; John, 1691; Mary,
1693 ; and Abigail, 1701. JOHN, Roxbury, by w. Eliz. had Edmund,
b. 3 Jan. 1686, and Edmund, again, 16 Jan. 1687; is, perhaps, the one wh. d. at Dorchester, 14 May 1725. JOHN, Stonington, m.
Oct. 1692, Eliz. d. of Ephraim Miner, had John, b. July 1693, d. next yr. ; Jonathan, 15 Mar. 1695; Eliz. Mar. 1697; Hepzibah,
Sept. 1699; John, again, Dec. 1701; Ichabod, 12 Mar. 1704; Pru
dence, 28 Apr. 1707; Jedediah, 28 Apr. 1709; Mehitable, Aug.
1712; and Mary, Aug. 1716. JONATHAN, Reading, a man of sub
stance, whose d. Eliz. m. 30 Sept. 1663, Hananiah Parker. JONA
THAN, Watertown, s. of the first Abraham, m. 11 Feb. 1662, Mary, d. of William Shattuck, had Mary, b. 6 Oct. foil.; Eliz. 19 Sept, 1664;
Jonathan, 25 Oct. 1666, d. young ; Patience, 6 Mar. 1669; Abraham,
26 Aug. 1671; Samuel, 21 Oct. 1674; Lydia, 31 Mar. 1677; Ebenezer, 10 Sept. 1679 ; Benjamin, 27 Feb. 1682; and William, 3 Sept.
1684; and d. 1691. His wid. d. 23 Oct. 1732, not quite so old as her
gr.stone at Waltham says. JONATHAN, Salem, m. 28 June 1664, Abi
gail Burrill. JONATHAN, Windsor, s. of Peter of the same, m. 1696,
Mindwell Loomis, had Mindwell, b. 1699. JOSEPH, Concord, made his
will 26 Sept. 1671, wh. was witness, by Rev. Edward Bulkley, but all else is unkn. JOSEPH, Charlestown, s. of Hon. William of Salem, freem. 1673, was a preach, but not ord. tho. unanim. invit. to succeed Shepard
1678, a fellow of the Corp. involv. in the matter of Presid. Hoar ; d. 9 May of that yr. ; his w. Mehitable, d. of Gov. William Brenton, hav. d. 14 Sept. 1676. JOSEPH, Reading, s. of Nicholas of the same, m. 26
May 1674, Eliz. d. of Thomas Bancroft of the same, had Eliz. b. 15
Jan. 1676; Nicholas, 22 Sept. 1677; Joseph, 16 Nov. 1679 ; Thomas,
14 Apr. 1682; Ebenezer, 12 Jan. 1685, d. soon ; Ebenezer, again, 16 June 1688, d. young; Hepzibah, 23 Feb. 1693; and a s. 20 Feb. 1695,===================
d. soon; and the f. d. 16 Oct. 1723. JOSEPH, Lynn, m. 22 Dec. 1680,
Sarah Jones, had Joseph, b. 12 Apr. 1G82, may have been of Ipswich,
when made freem. 1683. JOSEPH, Stamford, s. of Francis of the same,
propr. there in 1 683-1701. JOSEPH, Rehoboth, youngest s. of sec. John of
the same, m. 10 Nov. 1680, Hannah Fitch, had Joseph, b. 21 Nov. 1681;
Hannah, 21 Nov. 1682 ; Jabez, 30 Dec. of unkn. yr. JOSEPH, Watertown, s. of John of Marlborough, m. 15 Nov. 1699, Ruhamah Welling
ton, had Ruhamah, b. 15 July 1701 ; Daniel, 21 Dec. 1703 ; John, 5 May 1706; Joseph, 2 Sept. 1708; rem. 1709 to Lexington, there had
James, Josiah, Benjamin, and William, was deac. and d. 11 Jan. 1766, and his wid. d. 1 July 1772, aged 92. JOSHUA, Newbury., s. of first Newbury Richard, freem. 1673, m. 15 Jan. 1(569, Sarah, d. of William Sawyer, had Joseph, b. 18 Oct. 1669; Joshua, 18 May 1671;
Tristram, 21 Dec. 1672; Sarah, 5 Dec. 1676; Ruth, 29 Oct. 1678;
and Samuel, 4 Sept. 1687, II. C. 1705, wh. was first min. of Abington.
JOSIAH, Marblehead 1668, was prob. s. of Nicholas of Lynn, and m.
1666, as is said, Mary Fellows. NATHANIEL, Hartford 1647, m. 23
Dec. 1647, Eleanor Watts, d. of Richard, rem. to Middletown 1654, thence to Springfield, had Nathaniel, b. 9 June 1649; Thomas, 31
Oct. 1655, both d. young; was mort. wound. 5 Oct. 1675; left Hannah,
the eldest, b. 15 Apr. 1651, wh. m. 5 Nov. 1669, Isaac Lane; Nathan
iel, again, 15 July 1654; John, 15 Apr. 1657, and Benoni, 15 Mar.
1659. NATHANIEL, Ipswich, m. 16 Dec. 1673, Judith Perkins, had
James, b. 1 June 1685; freem. 1685; was, perhaps, of Rowley after wards. * NATHANIEL, Salisbury, eldest s. of Henry, m. 16 Nov. 1666,
Hannah, d. of Samuel Fellows ; had Hannah, b. 3 Apr. 1668 ; may have
liv. few yrs. and perhaps had ch. at Hampton, but back at S. had Abi
gail, 1 Feb. 1676; perhaps Ephraim ; ds. Abra, 20 Nov. 1680; Ruth, 9 Aug. 1685 ; beside Nathaniel, 24 July 1689. He was a capt. freem. 1690, rep. 1691, k. by the Ind. at Andover, 22 Feb. 1698. NATHANIEL,
Middletown, s. of Nathaniel of the same, m. 2 July 1677, Martha Hughes,
d. of Richard of Guilford, had Mary, b. 2 Mar. 1678; Martha, 3 Feb.
1680, d. at 18 yrs.; Eleanor, 30 June 1681; Nathaniel, 18 Sept. 1683;
and d. 9 May 1712. The wid. d. 30 May 1729. NICHOLAS, Exeter,
or that region, d. early in 1648. * NICHOLAS, Lynn 1630, as Lewis
conject. but I think 7 yrs. too early, s. of Edward, of Inkberrow, 8 ms. from Droitwich, Worcestersh. ; freem. 7 Sept. 1638, rep. 1641, rem. to Reading 1644, and d. 5 Apr. 1673. His eldest s. John went in 1660 to Eng. but came back, and was excor. of the will of 29 Mar. l 673, made
by his f. pro. 17 June foil, in wh. w. Eliz. other ch. Josiah ; Edward, b. 15 Aug. 1640; Eliz. and Joseph, 10 Dec. 1647 ; possib. ano. Sarah, 26 June 1650, are ment. This fam. had e final. NICHOLAS, Portsmouth,

Greenfield/Larabee
Greenfield/Larabee

Greenfield/Larabee (2nd husband); James/
Greenfield/Larabee (2nd husband); James/Cornish (3rd husband).

Ancestry.com
Family & Local Histories
A
Ancestry.com
Family & Local Histories
A genealogical history of the Kelley family: descended from Joseph Kelley of Norwich, Connecticut, with much biographical matt

ELIZABETH HYDE, wife of Lieut. Richard Lord, was the first white child born in Norwich (August 1660). The house where the first daughter of Norwich opened her eyes upon the world stood on a declivity sloping to the town street, with higher land in the background, bristling with massive rocks and heavily shadowed by chestnut and oak. This homestead remained in the Hyde family five generations, the last occupant by that name being Elihu Hyde, Esq., mayor of the city. The genealogy of the Hyde family is shown as follows:
I.WILLIAM HYDE (or HIDE) came from England 1633, was in Hartford before 1640 and removed to Saybrook perhaps as early as 1648. His daughter HESTER m. JOHN POST 1652, probably came with her parents from England, but his son SAMUEL was probably a native of Hartford. No other children are known. WILLIAM HYDE died Jan. 6, 1681-2. His age is not known, but he was called "Old Goodman Hyde" in 1679.
II.SAMUEL HYDE was born about 1636 at Hartford. In 1659 he married JANE LEE, daughter of THOMAS LEE, an account of whose family is given below. SAMUEL HYDE seems to have lived with his father at first, after their removal to Norwich, in the newly built habitation, where in 1660 his daughter ELIZABETH was born. He is reckoned among the first proprietors of Norwich, as is likewise his father. He died in 1677, leaving seven children as follows: ELIZABETH (our ancestress), b. 1660, m. Lieut. Richard Lord; PHOEBE, b. Jan. 1663, m. Matthew Griswold of Lyme; SAMUEL, b. 1665, m. Elizabeth Calkins; JOHN, b. 1667, m. Experience Abel; WILLIAM, b. 1670, d. 1759, m. Anne Bushnell; THOMAS, b. 1672, m. Mary Backus; JABEZ, b. 1677, m. Elizabeth Bushnell. The descendants of the five sons of Samuel Hyde in 1779 showed upwards of twenty families of Hydes, comprising 150 persons, in the town plot and western part of Norwich.
It may interest "Mugwump" members of the family to know that our ancestors SAMUEL and JANE (LEE) HYDE are also the ancestors of GROVER CLEVELAND, President of the United States. JOHN HYDE, their eldest son, who married Experience Abel, had a son JAMES, known as Capt. James Hyde, who married Sarah Marshall. They in turn had a daughter, Abiah Hyde, who married Rev. Aaron Cleveland. Their son William Cleveland and his wife Margaret Falley were the parents of Grover Cleveland.

III. ELIZABETH HYDE was b. August 1660; d. 1736; m. Lieut. Richard Lord and had a daughter Elizabeth, Oct. 8, 1683. So thickly the generations crowd upon each other that mother, daughter and granddaughter were born within 45 years.

JANE LEE, wife of Samuel Hyde, was the daughter of THOMAS LEE, a very extended account of whose descendants, including some who went to Virginia, is given by Salisbury.
I.THOMAS LEE sailed from England for America in 1641, and died on the passage. His wife was PHOEBE BROWN, the daughter of Mr. Brown, who came over with her and accompanied her to Saybrook, and removed thence to Providence, R.I., where he founded a numerous family, one of who afterward endowed Brown University. THOMAS LEE's widow after married 2. GREENFIELD LARRABEE and 3. one CORNISH. The children of THOMAS and PHOEBE (BROWN) LEE were PHOEBE, JANE, (our ancestress) and Lieut. THOMAS LEE.
II.JANE LEE, who married SAMUEL HYDE 1659, and, after his death married 2. JOHN BURCHARD.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ancestry.com
Family & Local Histories
A Potter-Richardson memorial: the ancestral lines of William W. Potter of Michigan, and his wife, Margaret (Richardson) Potter
Page 39
PHOEBE BROWN2 (William1), born in England, October 1, 1620, was married there to Thomas Lee. With her parents, husband, and three children, she emigrated in 1646/7. Her husband died of smallpox before reaching New England. She settled in the locality of Saybrook and Lyme, Connecticut. About 1647, she married Greenfield Larrabee1, and by him had several children.* He died in 1660, and in 1662, she married James Cornish1 of Saybrook.* She died in childbirth, December 22, 1664.

Line of descent from Phoebee (Brown) Lee: [Potter/Richardson Line]
Jane Lee m. Samuel Hyde
Thomas Hyde m. Mary Backus
Jacob Hyde m. Hannah Kingsbury
Ruth Hyde m. Ezekiel Ladd
Darius Ladd m. Mary Frink
Sophronia Ladd m. Elias Thompson Potter
Lucien Bonaparte Potter m. Clarinda Louisa Trimmer
William W. Potter m. Margaret Richardson

Page 100 [Potter/Richardson]
THOMAS LEE was born and married in England. His wife was Phoebe Brown2, 1620-1664, daughter of William1 and Jane (Burgess) Brown. In 1646/7 they sailed for New England. Many of the passengers were stricken with smallpox and died; Thomas Lee was one of the dead. His widow and children settled near Lyme and Saybrook, Connecticut. Phoebe (Brown) Lee married in 1647, Greenfield Larrabee1.* 1 Widowed in 1660, she married in 1662, James Cornish1 of Saybrook, and died in childbirth, December 22, 1664.*2
Children:
Jane, 1640-1722/3, m. 1 Samuel Hyde2 (William1) m. 2 John Birchard2 (Thomas1)
Phoebe, 1643, m. John Large
Thomas, 1644-1703, m. 1. Sarah or Ann Kirtland (Nathaniel) m. 2 1676, Mary DeWolf

References:
Snow-Estes Genealogy
Hyde Family Genealogy by Walworth
Parkhurst Mms., Ct. State Library
Cornish Families in America
American Genealogist, v. 13, p. 106; v. 16, p. 228
Diary of Joshua Hempstead

*1 Larrabee children:
Greenfield, 1648, m. Alice Parke3 (Thomas2, Robert1)
John, 1649/50, m. Sarah -----
Elizabeth, 1652/3, m. Joshua Hempstead2 (Robert1)
Joseph, 1655-1657
Sarah, 1658, m. John Fox2 (Thomas1)

*2Cornish Children:
James, 1663-1740, m. 1 Elizabeth Thrall (Timothy) m. 2 Hannah (Hilliard) Humphrey (Andrew Hilliard)


Line in Record @I07412@ (RIN 17026) from
Line in Record @I07412@ (RIN 17026) from GEDCOM file not recognized: BAPM From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

First Company
First Company

!SOURCE: THE COLLINS-CADWELL GENEALOGY,
!SOURCE: THE COLLINS-CADWELL GENEALOGY, 1983 EDITION, PG 298, 305 !SOURCE: IGI

!BIRTH:SPOUSE: MARRIAGE:DEATH: Book: Ne
!BIRTH:SPOUSE: MARRIAGE:DEATH: Book: New England Marriages Prior to 1700:

P1
BROWN, ABRAHAM, Watertown, prob. s. of Thomas of Hawkedon,
Co. Stiff k. near Bury St. Edmunds, freem. 6 Mar. 1632, by w. Lydia
had Lydia, b. 22 Mar. 1633; Jonathan, 15 Oct. 1635; Hannah, 1 Mar.
1639, d. soon; and Abraham, 6 Mar. 1640; beside Sarah, and Mary,
perhaps brot. from Eng. ; was selectman many yrs. and surveyor. The
time of his d. was 1650. His wid. m. 27 Nov. 1659, Andrew Hodges
of Ipswich, but after his d. in Dec. 1665, she came again to Watertown,
and d. 27 Sept. 1686. Sarah m. 16 Dec. 1643, George Parkhurst;
Mary m. 10 Apr. 1650, John Lewis of Charlestown, as sec. w. and,
next, a Cutler; and Lydia m. William Lakin. ABRAHAM, Boston, merch. arr. first time 20 June 1650, ra. 19 Aug. 1653, Jane Skipper,
had Mary, b. 19 Dec. 1654; went home 1654, next yr. was tak. by a Barbary pirate, but soon ransom, and the foil. yr. came again to 13. had
Jane, 9 Aug. 1657; freem. 1664, m. 1 May 1660, Rebecca, d. of Hezekiah Usher, had Hezekiah, b. 22 Aug. 1661 ; Rebecca, 26 Aug.
1663; and Eliz. 17 Nov. 1664, wh. m. Peter Butler, jr. ABRAHAM,
Watertown, s. of Abraham of the same, m. 5 Feb. 1663, Mary, d. of Edward Dix, had Lydia, b. 11 Nov. 1663, wh. m. 30 Dec. 1688, George
Woodward; and Abraham, 1665, d. at 13 yrs. He d. 1667, and his wid. m. next yr. Samuel Rice of Sudbury, and d. 18 June 1678. ABRAHAM, Salisbury, s. of the first Henry of the same, m. 15 June
1675, Eliz. Shepherd, had s. b. 10 Jan. 1676, d. in a wk. ; Sarah, 25
Jan. 1677; Ann, 19 Nov. 1679; Eliz. 29 Mar. 1682; Bethia, July
1684; Hannah, 7 Nov. 1686; Abraham, 16 Mar. 1691; and Samuel,
16 Nov. 1694 ; and d. 26 Mar. 1733. ALEXANDER, Kennebeck 1674. ANDREW, Scarborough 1658, was constable in 1670, and had, in 1663,
five s. of wh. Southgate gives names of four, Andrew, John, Joseph, and
Charles. ARTHUR, Saco 1636. BENJAMIN, Hampton, s. of John of the same, m. Sarah, d. of William Brown of Salisbury, had William, b. 5 June 1680; Sarah, 11 Sept. 1681, d. young; Benjamin, 20 Dec. 1683 ; Eliz. 16 July 1686 ; John, 18 Mar. or May 1688 ; Jacob, 1 Mar. 1691; Stephen, 17 July 1693; Mary, 1696; Thomas, 21 May 1699;
and Jeremiah, 20 Nov. 1701. His w. d. a. 1730; he, a. 1736, very old. J * BENJAMIN, Salem, s. of first Hon. William, m. it is said, Mary, d. of Rev. John Hicks, a nonconform. min. in Eng. wh. d. 26 Aug. 1703, had
only two ds. Sarah, and Mary. He was rep. of his nat. town 1 693 and
9, of the Exec, counc. 1702-5, a liberal benefact. of Harv. Coll. d. 7 Dec. 1708. BENONI, Hartford, youngest s. of Nathaniel of the same, d. 1688, prob. unm. holding some office. BOAZ, Concord, s. of Thomas, m.========================
8 Nov. 1GC4, Mary Winship, had Boaz, b. 31 July 1C65 ; Thomas, 12 May 1G67 ; Mary, 31 Oct. 1G70 ; Edward, 20 Mar. 1672 ; rem. to Stow, was freem. 1673. CHAD, Providence, came first to Boston, in July
1638, in the Martin, as bef. dep.-gov. Dudley, he swore, in support of a nuncup. will of a fellow-passeng. dying on the ocean ; was sett, at the Bapt. ch. 1642 after Roger Williams. It has been thot. by some, that he was earlier on our side of the water, and that imperfect rec. proves it, on p. 14 of the Vol. I. of Col. Rec. of R. I. as to his incorp. in town
fellowsh. with others at Providence, wh. bears date 20 Aug. without a yr. Now the supplying of the numerals for the yr. can admit those wh. the
transcriber used, 1637, by no means ; for that day was Sunday, when no
civil compact could have been enter, into, and bef. that day in the former
yr. the place was kn. as Moshasuck, prob. the sec. use of the designat. of
the mod. city being in the foil. mo. at the bapt. of the s. of Roger Wil
liams, Providence, late in Sept. 1638. Earlier than Aug. 1638 his name,
I suppose, will not be found. He brot. w. Eliz. and s. John, aged a. 8
yrs. prob. other ch. for we kn. not the b. of any of his five s. The other
four were James, Jeremiah, Judah, alias Chad, and Daniel. No connex.
is trac. betw. Chad and Henry, of the oldest proprs. His gr.ch. James
was min. of the same ch. This is the progenit. of the fam. so much
disting. as the patrons of Brown Univ. at P. CHARLES, Rowley 1648. CORNELIUS, Reading, s. of Nicholas of the same, m. 6 Mar. 1665, Sarah
Lamson, had Nicholas, b. 7 Apr. 1666, d. soon ; Cornelius, 3 June 1667 ; Sarah, 23 Dec. 1668; John, 8 Aug. 1671; Abigail, 5 Apr. 1674, d. soon; Samuel, 13 Sept. 1675; Mary, 1 Jan. 1679; and Hannah, 28
Aug. 1680. CHRISTIAN, Salisbury, one of the first sett. 1640, a wid.
brot. prob. three s. and d. 28 Dec. 1641. Her s. were Henry, George,
and William. DANIEL, Providence 1646, m. 25 Dec. 1669, Alice Herenden, prob. d. of Benjamin, had Judah; Sarah, b. 10 Oct. 1677;
Jeremiah ; and perhaps more; and d. bef. 10 Nov. 1710. EBENEZER,
New Haven, s. of Francis, m. 28 Mar. 1667, Hannah, d. of John Vincent
of the same, had Hannah, b. 1 Feb. 1668 ; s. without name, 4 Oct. 1669 ; Ebenezer, 12 Nov. 1670 ; Rebecca, 20 Apr. 1672 ; Mary, 6 Aug. 1674 ; Eliz. 13 May 1679 ; Eunice, 26 Oct. 1681 ; and James, 22 Feb. 1684 ; perhaps more. EDMUND, first min. of Sudbury, came over 1637, freem. 13 May 1640, ord. in Aug. foil. d. 22 June 1677, had w. wh. had been
wid. of John Lovering, as Barry says, but no ch. EDMUND, Dorchester,
s. of deac. William of Sudbury, freem. 1650, by w. Eliz. had John, bapt.
22 Aug. 1652 ; Eliz. b. 1658 ; and Samuel, 1661 ; rem. to Boston, and was a shopkeeper 1694, there, when his sec. or third w. was Eliz. wid. of
Hopestill Foster, and d. soon after. He may be the man, wh. m. 14
Feb. 1654, Eliz. Okley, or Oakley, if we suppose the date of bapt. of VOL. i. -------------------
first ch. too early by 4 yrs. or this not to be the first w. She had Mary,
15 Dec. 1656; John, 9 Oct 1660; and, perhaps, Elisha; for ED
MUND, Boston, by w. Eliz. had Mary, 15 Dec. 1656. EDWARD, Boston, a very early propr. perhaps came in the employm. of William Colbron,
tho. at his adm. of the ch. in June 1634 it is writ. Edmund, freem. 6 May 1635, may have gone to Newport 1639. EDWARD, Salem 1638,
d. a. 1659. EDWARD, Ipswich, freem. 2 June 1641, had w. Faith, and
s. Thomas, wh. d. bef. his f. ; in his will of 9 Feb. 1660 ment. s. Joseph,
and John, and a d. not nam. ELEAZER, New Haven, s. of Francis, sw.
fidel. in 1657, m. Sarah, d. of Thomas Bulkley, had Eleazer, b. 6 Jan. 1663; Gershom, 9 Oct. 1665; and Daniel, 16 Jan. 1668. ELEAZER,
Chelmsford, freem. 1674, was, perhaps, s. of Thomas of Concord. EPHRAIM, Salisbury, s. of William, by w. Sarah had Ephraim, b. 3 Sept.
1680; William, 25 Mar. 1684; Sarah, 5 Mar. 1687; Mary, 22 Jan. 1689; Abner, 28 Feb. 1691; and Jacob, 2 June 1693; and the f. d. five days after. His wid. m. Apr. 1703, Samuel Carter; and next, 5
Oct. 1719, Benjamin Eastman. FRANCIS, New Haven 1639, d. 1668;
by w. Mary had John, bapt. 7 Apr. 1640 ; Eleazer, 16 Oct. 1642, bef. ment.; Samuel, 7 Aug. 1645; Ebenezer, 21 June 1646; Ebenezer,
again, 4 July 1647; and Lydia. He d. 1668, and his will of 13 Apr.
in that yr. names w. Mary, four s. and d. Lydia.
* FRANCIS, Stamford
1660, constable 1663, rep. 1665, 7, and 9. He had been a serv. of Henry
Wolcott of Windsor, and bot. out the residue of his term in 1649, and was a small trader in 1651 ; in Farmington, bot. and sold Ids. 1656 ; at
S. m. Martha, wid. of John Chapman, had s. Joseph, and nothing more
is kn. of him but that in 1683 he gave his s. Id. and does not appear among proprs. of 1687. FRANCIS, Newbury, s. of Francis, b. in Eng.
perhaps neph. of Thomas, d. 1691, aged 59, hav. m. prob. sec. w. 31
Dec. 1679. Coffin, 296. FRANCIS, Newbury, s. of Thomas, b. in Eng.
m. 21 Nov. 1653, Mary Johnson had Eliz. b. 17 Oct. 1654 ; Mary, 15 Apr. 1657, m. 15 Dec. 1675, Nathan Parker; Hannah, 1659, d. soon;
Sarah, 10 May 1663; John, 13 May 1665; Thomas, 1 July 1667, d. aged 22 ; Joseph, 28 Sept. 1670 ; Francis, 17 Mar. 1674 ; and his w. d. 4 Apr. 1679. He had by sec. w. Benjamin, 22 Apr. 1681. GEORGE,
Newbury 1035, a carpenter, br. of Richard, one of the first sett, had come in the Mary and John 1034, freem. L> May 1040, d. 1 Apr. 1042. * GEORGE, Haverhill, prob. s, of Christian, m. 25 June 1645, Ann
Eaton, d. of John of Salisbury; rep. 1672, 5, 80, and 92. He made
his will 26 June 1699. His w. d. 16 Dec. 1683, and 17 Mar. foil. he m. wid. Hannah Hazen; d. 31 Oct. 1699. He had no ch. but gave
est. to Richard H. s. of his w. GEORGE, Stonington 1680, may be the same, whose will, of 14 Sept. 1736, names w. Charity, eldest s. George,
----------------------------
other s. Peter, John, and William, besides eldest d. Eliz. Stanton, d. Sarah Champlin, w. of Joseph C. and d. Ruth B. HENRY, Boston, an early propr. purchas. also, in 1G48 ; prob. went home, was of London
1GC8. HENRY, Salisbury, b. 1615, came with his mo.; an orig. propr. of course in 1639, was br. of George of Haverhill, by w. Abigail had
Nathaniel, b. 30 June 1642; Abigail, 23 Feb. 1644; Jonathan, 25 Nov.
1646, prob. d. young; Philip, Dec. 1648; Abraham, 1 Jan. 1650;
Sarah, 6 Dec. 1654 ; and Henry, 8 Feb. 1659. He was a shoemaker,
d. 6 Aug. 1701; and his wid. d. 23 Aug. 1702. Abigail m. 1 June
1664, Samuel French ; and Sarah m. 12 June 1673, Andrew Greeley.
HENRY, Salisbury, youngest ch. of the preced. m. 17 May 1682, Han
nah Putnam, had John, b. 15 Apr. 1683 ; Rebecca, 1 Oct. 1684; Abra
ham, 4 July 1686 ; Hannah, 20 Mar. 1689, d. young; Eliezer, 18 Feb. 1691; Henry, 17 June 1693; Benjamin, 25 June 1695; Mehitable, 20
Sept. 1698; Nathaniel, 21 Dec. 1700 ; Joseph, bapt. 18 Sept. 1703;
and Hannah, 9 June 1705 ; rem. to Salem, where some of the ch. were
b. and he d. 25 Apr. 1708. His wid. in will of 9 May 1730, speaks of
six s. then liv. and ds. Rebecca and Hannah. HENRY, Providence
1652, sw. alleg. in June 1668, had Richard, Joseph, and prob. Henry
and other ch. In his will of 27 Sept. 1690 ment. w. Hannah. HENRY,
Providence, call. jr. when he took o. of alleg. in May 1682, may have
been s. of the preced. HOPESTILL, Sudbury, s. of deac. William, m.
1686, Abigail Haynes, and for sec. w. had Dorothy, wid. of Rev, and
unhappy Samuel

Line 9098 from GEDCOM File not recogniza
Line 9098 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: BIRT PLAC England-Providence

See the History and Genealogy of the Cor
See the History and Genealogy of the Cornish Families in America by Joseph E. Cornish pub. 1907 in Boston for details of James Cornish and Phoebe Browne. page 10.

Sources: 1. See data from Dave Davis, ne
Sources: 1. See data from Dave Davis, needs verification: 2nd Husband Greenfield Larrabee; 3rd Husband James Cornish; 2. See Walworth, Reuben H. Hyde Genealogy...William Hyde, of Norwich. Albany: J. Munsell, 1864.

!INFORMATION:From "The Family of Auer Wi
!INFORMATION:From "The Family of Auer Winchester Proctor, Vol II", page558. Film #1036367

?? Line 35: (New PAF RIN=1633) 1 BIRT 2
?? Line 35: (New PAF RIN=1633) 1 BIRT 2 PLAC England-Providence New England Marriages. Also AFN 1KLG-QR.

!PROBATE: Early CT Probate Records, vol.
!PROBATE: Early CT Probate Records, vol.I, p.134. Inventory dated 17 Oct 1661. Court record p.164 dated 5 Dec 1661 recognizes James Cornish as having married the widow of Greenfield Laraby. Children mentioned, Greenfield, John, Elizabeth, and Sarah.

P2
HOPESTILL, Sudbury, s. of deac. William, m.
1686, Abigail Haynes, and for sec. w. had Dorothy, wid. of Rev, and
unhappy Samuel Paris, and d. 1729. HUGH, Salem 1628, com. with
Endicott, in opin. of Mr. Felt, sent to relief of the Ind. at Ipswich 1631,
perhaps rem. to Boston. HUGH, Boston (in opin. of Farmer, the same
as the preced. but, in mine, more prob. was his s.), by w. Sarah had Job,
b. 29 Mar. 1651; Hugh, wh. d. 16 July 1652; and Sarah, 16 Aug.
1653, wh. d. 2 Jan. foil, and the improb. rec. in Geneal. Reg. X. 218,
tells, that ano. Sarah d. 3 Apr. 1654. ICHABOD, Cambridge, s. of Thomas of the same, by w. Martha had John, b. 1 Nov. 1696, II. C. 1714, the min. of Haverhill; Martha, 16 June 1699 ; Priseilla, 14 Dec. 1702; Sarah, 26 Sept. 1706; and his w. d. 1 Sept. 1708. He m. 13 June 1709, Margaret Odlin, perhaps youngest d. of Elisha of Boston,
had Abigail, b. 8 May 1710, and d. 1728, the five e,h. and the mo. of the youngest all surv. ISAAC, Newbury, s. of Thomas of the same, m. 22
Aug. 1661, Rebecca, perhaps d. of John Bayley, jr. had Ruth, b. 26
May 1662; Thomas, 15 Sept. 1664; Rebecca, 15 Mar. 1667 ; and he d. 13 May 1674. * JABEZ, Sudbury 1667, prob. s. of Thomas of Concord,
freem. 1680; by w. Hannah had Mary, b. 26 Nov. 1672; and Sarah,
20 May 1680 ; was of Stow, rep. under the new chart. 1692. JACOB,
Billerica, one of the proprs. 1659, m. 16 Oct. 1661, Mary Tapley.
================================
JACOB, Hampton, s. of John of the same, m. Sarah, d. of William
Brookin of Portsmouth, had John; Samuel, b. 4 Nov. 1686; Abraham,
Jan. 1689; Joshua, 1 Apr. 1691; Sarah, 1693; Jacob, 22 Dec. 1695;
Abigail, 3 Mar. 1698; Jonathan, 24 Feb. 1700; and Jeremiah, bapt. with the eight preced. 28 June 1702 ; and he d. 13 Feb. 1740, aged, it is said, 87. || JAMES, Boston 1630, being No. 61 in the ch. list, freem. 4
Mar. 1634, by w. Grace had James, b. 30 Aug. bapt. 7 Sept. 1645, ar.
co. 1643; d. 1651, his will of 9 May, pro. 7 Aug. is abstr. in Geneal. Reg. VII. 335. It gave ho. and Id. to the ch. if his s. d. bef. 21 yrs. of
age, and provid. for w. wh. was extrix. JAMES, Charlestown 1633, adm.
of the ch. 10 Mar. 1634, freem. 25 May 1636, had w. Eliz. and ch. John, bapt. 1 Mar. 1639; and Mary, 3 Mar. 1640. JAMES, Newbury, came with w. 1634, says Coffin, from Southampton, was one of the first
sett. 1635 ; freem. 17 May 1637, a selectman 1638 ; preach, at Portsmouth,
but came back to N. 1656, or earlier. Ano. || JAMES, Charlestown, by
w. Judith had John, b. 4 Jan. 1638 ; James, 20 Feb. 1643, wh. d. young;
James, again, 19 Aug. 1647 ; and Nathaniel, 21 Nov. 1648, ar. co. 1639,
may be the dangerous man, disarm, as a supporter of Wheelwright
1637. Frothingham, 82. JAMES, Newbury, s. of Joseph, a youth of 17, came in the James 1635, from Southampton, arr. at Boston 3 June 1635. But the difficulty of discrim. betw. the many of this name, even by aid of ws. and ch. is insurmount. He, by w. Sarah, d. of capt. John Cutting,
had Samuel, b. 14 Jan. 1657 ; Hannah, bapt. 12 Sept. 1658 ; and Abra
ham, 14 Oct. 1660 ; had, also, Mary, b. 25 May 1663 ; Abigail, 24 Oct. 1665 ; and Martha, 22 Dec. 1667. He was a glazier, rem. to Salem, there
d. 1676. His will of 29 Jan. 1674, names w. Sarah, and ch. John, James,
Samuel, Abraham, Sarah, wh. was m. ; Ann, or Hannah, Mary, Abigail,
and Martha. JAMES, Taunton 1643, s. of John, the Assist, b. in Eng. we may be sure, went with his f. to Swanzey, chos. 1665 an Assist, may
well be presum. the preacher, put by Mather, in his third classis, at S. unless more than usual confidence is felt in his authority, wh. it is believ. inquiry will not justify, for no durat. in office is ment. nor is any reason
kn. for giv. him place in that rather than the sec. classis. He m. Lydia,
d. of John Rowland, and d. 29 Oct. 1710, aged 87, leav. James, wh. d. 1725, at Barrington ; Jabez ; and d. Dorothy Kent. Baylies, IV. 18. JAMES, Salem, s. of Elder John, m. 5 Sept. 1664, Hannah, d. of Henry
Bartholomew, had James, b. 3 Feb. 1666, d. young; Bartholomew, 31 Mar. 1669; Eliz. 26 Jan. 1671; Hannah, 9 Mar. 1673; and James,,
again, 23 May 1675. On 12 Nov. of the last yr. he was found d. in Cecil Co. Maryland, where he was on a trad, voyage, k. by a negro.
JAJVTES^ Salem 1678, s. of James, the glazier, foil, the trade of his f. m.
16 Jan. 1670, Hannah Huse, at Charlestown, there had James, b. 3 Feb.
BROWN. 2C9=========================
1671 ; Samuel, 3 Dec. 1672 ; and at Ipswich, Hannah, 13 Nov. 1676,
d. young; and at S. Sarah, 10 Aug. 1678; and rem. to Newbuiy,
there had Benjamin, 21 Mar. 1681; Abraham, 17 Mar. 1683, d. in few mos. ; Joseph, 19 May 1685 ; and Hannah, 16 Nov. 1687. He d. 27 Feb. 1708, and his wid. d. 18 Nov. 1713. JAMES, Hatfield 1678, m. 7 Jan. 1674, Remembrance Brook, had Mary, b. 1677; Abigail, 8 Sept. 1678; and Thankful, 1 June 1682; rem. to Deerfield, and
had Sarah, 1683; James, 1685; Mindwell, 1686; Hannah, 1688;
Mercy, 1690 ; Eliz. 1693, d. at 5 yrs.j and John, 1695. He rem. after, to Colchester ; and his d. Abigail, prob. was that capt. on the fatal day of 29 Feb. 1704, carr. to Canada, but ret. safe. JAMES, Branford 1679, a landholder, may have rem. and been of Norwalk 1687, had Isaac, b. 1 Mar. 1690 ; and either bef. or aft. James, wh. prob. is the man that m.
1714, Joanna Whitehead. JAMES, Rehoboth, s. of James of the same, by w. Margaret had Margaret, b. 28 June 1682 ; d. 15 Apr. 1718, in his 60th yr. His wid. d. 5 May 1741, aged 84. JOB, Boston 1672, suppos.
to be d. when inv. was tak. by William Brown, 2 Jan. 1675, was, per
haps, s. of Hugh. JOHN, Pemaquid 1625. | JOHN, Salem 1629, a
lawyer from London, one of the purch. of the patent from Sir Henry
Roswell, engag. (being one of the Assist, of the Mass. Co. and sw. a yr. and a half bef. Endicot took the requisite o.) in Mar. of that yr. to emb.
with Samuel his br. in the fleet with Higginson ; came in May, reach. S. in June, and soon after, they wish, to foil, the Episc. form of service, caus. such a schism, that Endicot sent them home in the returning sh. and in Sept. or Oct. they were again at London, and came not to our
country any more. See the candid views of Eliot, Eccl. Hist, of Mass,
in 1 Mass. Hist. Coll. IX. 3 and 4. That JOHN, whose d. 28 Feb. 1687, is ment. in early rec. of New Hampsh.
" aged 98 yrs." may possib. have
gain, such reputa. by his f. hav. done some brave act against the Spanish
enemy even later than the Armada yr.
to wh. wild tradit. refer, the b. of
his s. JOHN, Watertown 1632, arr. 16 Sept. at Boston, from London, in the Lion; freem. 3 Sept. 1634, by w. Dorothy had Hannah, b. 10 Sept.
1634 ; and Mary, 24 Mar. 1637 ; and he was bur. 20 June of that yr. aged 36. By probr geneal. he was s. of John of Hawkedon, Co. Suff k. in that ch. bapt. 11 Oct. 1601, and so neph. of Abraham and Richard.
| JOHN, Plymouth, had acquaint, with the Pilgr. at Leyden bef. 1620, but his yr. of com. is unkn. liv. in 1636 at Duxbury ; in 1643 at Taunton ; Assist, for 17 yrs. from 1636, and serv. as Commissnr. of the Unit.
Col. from 1644 for 12 yrs. had James, above ment. ; and Mary, wh. m.
6 July 1636, Thomas Willet ; perhaps more, certain. John, and d. at Swanzey, near Rehoboth, where he had large est. 10 Apr. 1662. His
will, made three days bef. provides for the five ch. that his s. John left t===================
his care, and names s. James, and w. -Dorothy excors. also names d. Mary
Willet, and gr.d. Martha, w. of John Baffin, d. of Willet. His wid. Dorothy d. at Swanzey, 27 Jan. 1674, aged 90. See Davis, in Morton s Mem. 295-7. JOHN, Salem 1637, freem. 2 May 1638, rul. elder of the
ch. had John, bapt. Sept. 1638 ; and James, June 1640 ; d. 1685. JOHN,
Hampton 1639, d. 28 Feb. 1687, a. 98 yrs. as is said. Much more prob.
is the age set against his name, 40, on his embark. 17 Apr. 1635, at the London custom ho. especially if he be that baker, whose fellow-passeng. were two serv. James Walker, aged 15, and Sarah Walker, 17, the latter of wh. in 1640, bee. his w. as descend, suppose. By what I think
the wrong statement, he was b. 1589, and this maiden was b. 1618. Beside the number and dates of his ch. disprove or make highly improb.
the great age: Sarah; John, b. 1644; Eliz. ; Benjamin; Jacob, 1653;
Mary, 13 Sept. 1655 ; Thomas, 14 July 1657 ; and Stephen, 1659, wh. was k. by the Ind. at Scarborough 29 June 1677. JOHN, Maine 1641,
s. of Richard of Barton Regis. Co. Gloucester, m. Margaret, d. of Francis Hayward of the City of Bristol, as he told Robert Allen of Sheepscot,
for R. A. so swore on 21 Feb. 1659 at Bristol, Eng. (as there rec.) that he kn. for 17 yrs. J. B. of Newharbor, a mason, and that he was in good
health in N. E. June preced. JOHN, Rehoboth, or Swanzey, s. of John
of the same, b. prob. in Eng. m. a d. of William Buckland, had John,
the eldest, Joseph, Nathaniel, Lydia, and Hannah, all of wh. in his will of 31 Mar. 1662, of wh. he made John, his f. the excor. he gave to his
care, and d. soon. Hannah m. 7 Jan. 1676, her cousin Hezekiah Willet. JOHN, Ipswich 1641, may have come in the Elizabeth, 1635, aged 40,
from London, or have been the tailor from Badstow, in Essex, near
Chelmsford, in the Defence, from London, 1635, aged 27. But which
ever sh. he came in, he had w. Sarah, and by her the ch. Sarah ; John ; Benjamin ; and Eliz. ; prob. b. there ; and at Hampton had Jacob, b. 1653; Mary, 13 Sept. 1655; Thomas, 14 July 1657; and Stephen,
1659, k. by the Ind. 29 June 1677 at Scarborough. Sarah m. 13 Mar.
1661, John Poor; and Eliz. m. 23 Dec. 1669, Isaac Marston. JOHN,
Taimton 1643, s. of Hon. John, may be the John of Providence 1646, and
after. JOHN, Milford 1648, had John ; Mary ; and Esther ; all bapt, 16
Dec. 1649 ; Joseph, 1652 ; Mary, 1653 ; John, again, b; 12 July 1655 ; Hannah, bapt. not 3, as the perpetual blunders of Davenport s ch. has it, but 2 May 1658 at New Haven ; and Phebe, 1660. His w. was Mary,
and he prob. rem. to Newark, N. J. JOHN, New Haven, prob. s. of Francis of the same, m. 1 Jan. 1661, Mar


These records are a work in progress.

These records are a work in progress. I keep finding errors as I learn more about our ancestors. Please let me know of any errors you find so I can make these records as accurate as possible for all to share

These records are a work in progress. I keep finding errors as I learn more about our ancestors. Please let me know of any errors you find so I can make these records as accurate as possible for all to share

Thomas/Lee *; Greenfield/Larraboy *
Thomas/Lee *; Greenfield/Larraboy *

!DEATH: Clarence A. Torrey; NEW ENGLAND
!DEATH: Clarence A. Torrey; NEW ENGLAND MARRIAGES, Prior to 1700;974 V2t

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

P4
R. I. a freem. 1655. PETER, Plymouth, came in the Mayflower, 1620, m. two ws. and had two ch. by ea. says Gov. Bradford, after his com.
here, and both of those by the first w. had been m. and one of them had
two ch. when the Gov. wrote in 1650. For his first w. conject. assigns
him the wid. Ford wh. had come in the Fortune 1621 ; but, of course, this must have been after the land div. in 1 624 ; and he, at the div. of cattle, 1627, has assoc. with him Martha and Mary, perhaps w. and d. He is somewhere call. br. of John of P. and both liv. on Duxbury side. He
d. 1633, and Standish and Brewster took his inv. 10 Oct. of that yr. PETER, New Haven 1639, had Mercy, bapt. 6 Apr. 1645; and Eliz. 1 Aug. 1647 ; rem. to Stamford, where his w. Eliz. d. 21 Sept. 1657 ; and
he m. 27 July 1658, Unity, wid. of Clement Buxton, and d. 22 of
the mo. foil. His s. Ebenezer had d. the day preced. but he may have
also had Thomas, and Hackaliah, by the first w. both of wh. rem. to Rye. His wid. m. 9 Mar. foil. Nicholas Knapp. PETER, Plymouth, I
suppose, s. of Peter of the same, b. after- 1627, as his name does not appear in the div. of cattle that yr. He was with Gov. Bradford and
thirty others among the first purch. of Dartmouth in 1652. PETER,
Windsor, m. 15 July 1658, Mary, d. of Jonathan Gillett, had Mary, b. 2 May 1659 ; Hannah, 29 Sept. 1660; Abigail, 8 Aug. 1662 ; Hepzibah,
19 Nov. 1664; Peter, 2 Mar. 1667; John, 8 Jan. 1669; Jonathan, 30
Mar. 1670; Cornelius, 30 July 1672; Esther, 22 May 1673; Eliz. 9 June 1676; Deborah, 2 Feb. 1679; and Sarah, 20 Aug. 1681 ; the twelve were nam. at his d. 9 Mar. 1692, as all liv. Hannah was m. to one not kn. ; Abigail m. 1683, Samuel Fowler; Esther m. 1700, Wil
liam Barber; and Deborah m. 1696, John Hosford. PETER, Windsor,
s. of the preced. m. 1696, Mary Barber, d. prob. of the sec. Thomas of
the same. PHILIP, Salisbury, s. of Henry of the same, m. 24 June
1669, Mary, d. of the first Isaac Buswell, had Susanna, b. 8 Mar.
1670 ; Mary, 23 Feb. 1672, d. in few mos. ; a P. 1 Apr. 1673, d. in few
days; Abigail, 4 June 1675; Mary, 1676; Sarah, 18 Mar. 1678;
George, 1 July 1680 ; Phebe, 2 Oct. 1681, wh. d. at 19 yrs. ; and Han
nah, 5 Feb. 1683. His w. d. 27 Nov. foil, and he d. 21 July 1729.
* RICHARD, Watertown 1630, prob. br. of first Abraham, came in the
fleet with Winth. freem. 18 May 1631, hav. req. the privilege 19 Oct. preced. was rul. eld. as he had been in a London ch. rep. at the first gen. ct. of delegates 1634, and every time to 1639, and again 1647-55,
exc. 1653 ; rem. to Charlestown, and d. betw. Aug. 1659 and Mar. 1661,
the dates of mak. and prob. of his will. That instr. of wh. wid. Eliz. was extrix. nam. s. Thomas, and gr.s. Richard, and George ; but the est. was not adequate, it is thot. to tempt either over the ocean. Winth. I. 58. His wid. m. 12 May 1662, Richard Jackson of Cambridge. RICH-=================
ARD, Ipswich, bef. 1638 rem. to Newbury, was br. of George, and with him came in the Mary and John, 1G34, freem. 6 May 1G35, d. 26 Apr.
1661; by w. Edith, wh. d. Apr. 1647, had Joseph, wh. d. young;
Joshua, b. 10 Apr. 1642 ; Caleb, 7 May 1645 ; and by sec. w. Eliz. wid. of Giles Badger, m. 16 Feb. 1648, had Eliz. 20 Mar. 1649 ; Richard,
18 Feb. 1651; Edmund, 17 July 1654; Sarah, 7 Sept. 1657; and
Mary, 10 Apr. 1660. RICHARD, Hingham, m. Nov. 1648, at Weymouth, Eliz. Marsh. RICHARD, Charlestown, call, old in 1658, d. Oct. 1660. Highly prob. is it, that he is the same as the rul. Eld. of Watertown. His will, of 16 Aug. 1659, names w. Eliz. made extrix. s. Thomas ; gr.s. Richard, and George ; beside apprent. Jonathan Simpson.
RICHARD, Southold, L. I. made freem. of Conn. 1662. RICHARD,
Newbury, s. of Richard of the same, ni. 7 May 1674, Mary Jaques, had
on[y~s. Richard, b. 12 Sept. 1675, II. C. 1697, min. of Reading, wh. m.
22 Apr. 1703, Martha Whipole, had sev. ch. (of wh. one was John, b. 2 Mar. 1706 ; and ano. was Martha, m. 12 Mar. 1730, Rev. Samuel
Wigglesworth, as his sec. w.) and d. 20 or 29 Oct. 1732. RICHARD,
Providence, s. of Henry of the same, by w. Mary had Malachi, b. 1 Feb. 1698; Mercy, 12 Dec. 1703; William, 3 June 1705; and Rich
ard, 28 Feb. 1712. This last liv. over one hundred yrs. of wh. very many he serv. as proprs. elk. Judge Staples remembers him, as seat, in his doorway within two yrs. of the latest. Gathering at his ho. on the hundredth birthday, rumor went, that his friends made him dance ; but, at least, what was then done " shortened his days." I hope not much.
ROBERT, Cambridge, came in the Truelove, 1635, aged 24, m. 8 May
1649, Barbara Eden, freem. 1649, d. 23 Nov. 1690, aged only 70, ace.
inscript. on gr.stone, as giv. in Cambridge Epit. by wh. his wid. wh. d. 1 June 1693, is said to be aged 80. We may therefore doubt, that here must be error in that very correct work, as we kn. there is, when it marks him freem. 1639. This custom ho. date is inconsist. with the
gr.stone ; and no Robert B. is among freem. for many yrs. bef. or after. Mitchell s Reg. in Cambr. ch. Gathering, gives him no ch. SAMUEL,
Salem 1629, br. of first John, and one of the patentees, nam. (tho. not an Assist, as his br. was), of the counc. to Endicott, 30 Apr. but never
qualif. by tak.^the oath as requir. and both by him sent back the same summer of their com. SAMUEL, Wallingford, was liv. at New Ha
ven 1670, s. of Francis of the same, m. 2 May 1667, Mercy, d. of William Tuttle of the same, had Abigail, b. 11 Mar. 1669; Sarah, 8
Aug. 1672 ; Rachel, 14 Apr, 1677 ; Francis, 7 Oct. 1679 ; after wh. he
rem. to W. there had Samuel, wh. was k. by his mo. 20 June 1691, with an axe, and she was convict. 1 Oct. foil, of murder ; but the court had
sense eno. to set aside the verdict, as it was clearly a case of insanity.==================
The f. d. in that yr. but, after the trial, sent an effective petitn. to the Court. Only three ch. were then liv. Sarah, w. of Joseph Doolittle, Rachel, and Francis ; the wid. still liv. in 1C95. * SAMUEL, Salem, per haps br. of Hon. William, may be he, wh. m. at Boston, 9 July 1661,
Mary, d. of James Mattock ; rep. 1675. SAMUEL, Eastham, m. 19 Feb.
1683, Martha Harding, had Bethia, b. 22 Jan. 1684, d. next yr. ; Bethia
again, 9 Sept. 1685 ; Martha, 24 June 1688, d. young; and Samuel, 7 Nov. 1690; d. 3 Dec. 1691, aged 31. STEPHEN, Newbury, in his will of 3 Aug. 1656, names w. Sarah, ch. Sarah, w. of Ordway ; Abigail, w.
of Rogers; Ann; Mary; John; and Stephen. THOMAS, Newbury, a
weaver, of Malford, in Wilts, came from Southampton 1635, by the James, in employm. of Thomas Antram, reach. Boston 3 June, bring, w. Mary, wh. d. 2 June 1655 ; freem. 22 May 1639 ; had Mary, b. 1635,
the first Eng. ch. of the town ; Isaac ; and Francis ; may have been of Ipswich 1641 ; d. by a fall 8 Jan. 1687, aged 80. Malford is a parish in the hundr. of North Damenham, a. 6 ms. from Malmsbury, and 5 from
Chippenham, in Co. Wilts, on the map of that sh. in Camden s Britannia,
call. Christian Malford, perhaps too long a name for modern maps. In
this geogr. detail I am more full, bee. (tho. print, by me, in 1843, 3 Hist.
Coll. VIII. 319), a descend, sent lately to Eng. to explore- the seat of his ancestors, and his agent s ansr. was " finds no such place in Eng. as Mal
ford." In despair, the inquir. accept. Walford, in Wales for the derivat. of his anc. as if, in those early days, from that distant principality, a weaver would travel with his w. so far as Southampton to embark, when
Bristol and other ports would have been so much nearer. Mary m.
13 May 1656, Peter Godfrey, and d. 16 Apr. 1716. THOMAS, Concord
1 638, perhaps br. of Rev. Edmund, being among orig. proprs. of Sudbury 1637, freem. 14 Mar. 1639, by w. Bridget had Boaz, b. 14 Feb.
1642 ; perhaps Jabez, 1644 ; Mary, 26 Mar. 1646 ; Eleazer, July 1649 ; and Thomas, 1651. His w. d. 5 Jan. 1681, and he rem. prob. to Cam
bridge, d. 3 Nov. 1688. THOMAS, Cambridge, m. 7 Oct. 1656, Martha,
wid. of Richard Oldham, had Mary, b. 28 Apr. 1658, d. young; Mehitable, 13 May 1661 ; Mary, again, 1 Nov. 1663, prob. d. young; Ebenezer, 15 June 1665 ; Ichabod, 5 Sept. 1666 ; and Martha, 19 Oct. 1668;
and d. Dec. 1690. His will of 23 Nov. preced. ment. the w. and
four ch. THOMAS, Lynn (not, prob. s. of Nicholas, as Lewis inf. Farmer), by w. Mary had Mary, b. 10 Feb. 1656, d. young; Sarah, 20
Sept. 1657, d. young; Joseph, 16 Jan. 1659; Sarah, again, b. 13 Oct. 1660, d. young; Jonathan, wh. d. 12 Sept. 1666; Mary, again, b. 28
Aug. 1666; Jonathan, again, 24 Jan. 1669; Eleazur, 4 Aug. 1670;
Ebenezer, 16 Apr. 1672; Daniel, 29 Nov. 1673 ; Ann, and Grace, tw. 4
Jan. 1675, d. in few days; and Daniel, again, 1 Feb. 1677 ; d. 28 Aug.==============

PHEBE BROWNE MARRIED FIRST THOMAS LEE, A
PHEBE BROWNE MARRIED FIRST THOMAS LEE, AND SHE WAS SEALED TO HIM 3 APR 1951 AT ST. GEORGE. SHE MARRIED SECOND GREENFIELD LARRABY, AND THIRD JAMES CORNISH HER CHILDRED WERE SEALED TO THOMAS LEE AND HERSELF 19 OCT 1955 AT SALT LAKE WE NEED TO GET HER SEALED TO HER OTHER HUSBANDS. HER FATHER, WILLIAM BROWNE DIED 1650 ON LONG ISLAND, NY

3 Apr 1951/SG
3 Apr 1951/SG

!BESP: !SS: Batch 6010798; Sheet 12
!BESP: !SS: Batch 6010798; Sheet 12 
Browne, Phoebe (I312684223456)
 
3419 http://www.schenectadyhistory.org/famili
http://www.schenectadyhistory.org/families/firstsettlers/he_mcg.html
Kleyn
JOHANNES, m. a dau. of Lodovicus Cobes, Secretary of Schenectady. In 1684, in company with his father-in-law, he bought the fourth flat on the north side of the Mohawk river. Ch. bp. in Albany: Weyntje, Jan. 23, 1684; Bata, April 2, 1686, m. Willem Marinus; Clara.
*****************************************************
http://www.schenectadyhistory.org/resources/patent/kleyn.html
Kleyn had five daughters, - Weyntje; Baata or Baafie who married Willem Marinus; Clara; Anna, wife of Pieter Clement; and Catrina, wife of Thomas Davie.

Name also appears as Baatje and Bata.
Name also appears as Baatje and Bata. 
Klein, Mrs Baatje (I312684219915)
 
3420 http://www.schenectadyhistory.org/resour
http://www.schenectadyhistory.org/resources/patent/marinus.html
Citizen of Schenectady before 1684 (Information on his family fromt Settlers of the Patent and City of Schenectady from 1662 to 1800.

He married Rachel Hanse and had several children baptized in the church.
On the 4th Nov., 1676, the magistrates of Schenectady; - Sander Glen, Sweer Teunise Van Velsen, Jan Van Eps, Daniel Janse Van Antwerpen and Teunis Cornelise Swart - conveyed to him a piece of woodland at the end of the valley by the "Stone flats," in Glenville. (128-2)

In 1740 David Marinus (perhaps son of the above) bought of the town 36 morgens of land at Poopendaal [Beukendaal]. (128-3)
Notes
(128-2) Deeds, V, 75. In 1664 one David Maries [perhaps Marinus] was in Beverwyck - Albany Co. Rec., 64.
(128-3) Groote Schuldt-boek. 
Toll, Rachel Hanse (I312684219870)
 
3421 http://www.schenectadyhistory.org/resour
http://www.schenectadyhistory.org/resources/patent/marinus.html
Citizen of Schenectady before 1684 (Information on his family fromt Settlers of the Patent and City of Schenectady from 1662 to 1800.

In 1740 David Marinus (perhaps son of the above) bought of the town 36 morgens of land at Poopendaal [Beukendaal]. (128-3)

Notes

(128-3) Groote Schuldt-boek. 
Marinus, David (I312684219895)
 
3422 http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Manning-2530
Hannah Manning
Born March 28, 1675 in Billerica, Middlesex, Massachusetts, USAmap
Daughter of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Wife of Ebenezer King — married December 7, 1699 in Billerica, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United Statesmap
Mother of Ebenezer King, Samuel King, William King, Mary King, Hannah King and Benjamin King
Died March 15, 1715 in Cambrdige, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United Statesmap
Profile manager: Scott Raymond private message [send private message]
Last modified 20 December 2014.
This page has been accessed 49 times. 
Manning, Hannah (I312684223776)
 
3423 https://www.holcombegenealogy.com/g0/p95.htm#i4740
Four Generations of Descendants of Thomas Holcombe
Jonathan Barber was born in 1717 at probably Simsbury, CT. He was the son of Samuel Barber and Sarah Holcombe. Jonathan Barber married Jemima Cornish, daughter of Deacon James Cornish and Hannah Hillyer, on 28 May 1740 at Simsbury, Hartford Co., CT. Jonathan Barber died in 1745.
Children of Jonathan Barber and Jemima Cornish
Jemima Barber+ b. 31 Mar 1741
Mary Barber b. 1742
Jonathan Barber b. 1743, d. 1762
Bildad Barber+ b. 1745, d. 1816
Citations
[S169] M.D. Donald S. Barber, Thomas Barber 1st Ed, Page 27/Item 23.

!1. Information source: Barber Genealo
!1. Information source: Barber Genealogy by John Barber White published 1909. 2. Child # 1 md Joseph MESSENGER

Jonathan Barber fought in the French and
Jonathan Barber fought in the French and indian Wars. He was killed at the seige of Lewisbury, in Nova Scotia.

( Louisburg, Nova Scotia, Canada )

!doc: Descendents of Thomas Barber of Wi
!doc: Descendents of Thomas Barber of Windsor, Conn. by John W. Barber pg.54 One record shows he died in Simsbury, Conn. and another shows Louisburg, Conn. These towns might be close together.

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

!BIRTH: 1717 Jonathon Barber source "Des
!BIRTH: 1717 Jonathon Barber source "Desc. of Thomas Barber" of Windser, Conn. by John W. Barber.

A place name search for Louisburg, Conne
A place name search for Louisburg, Connecticut found no place with this name in the state of Connecticut. (www.familysearch.org, library catalog, www.expedia.com, maps)

1745 - King George's War
Louisburg is a town (1991 pop. 1, Item261), on E Cape Breton Island, N.S., Canada. The town, an ice-free port, is near the site of the great fortress of Louisbourg, built (1720-40) by France as its Gibraltar in America. Plans were drawn by the great French engineer Vauban, but the work was poorly done, and the garrison was inadequately supplied and at odds with the civilian population. French privateers, using the harbor as a base, preyed on New England fishermen working the Grand Banks, until 1745, when a small force of New Englanders under William Pepperrell, supported by a fleet of merchant men commanded by Sir Peter Warren, attacked Louisbourg and forced its surrender. Three years later it was returned to France by the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, in exchange for Madras, India, but it fell (1758) to a British land and sea attack led by Gen. Jeffrey Amherst and Admiral Boscawen, which reduced it to ruins. The site is a national historic park, and reconstruction of a portion of the fortified town is completed. (website: www.colonialwarsct.org/1745.htm)

Jonathan Barber died in early life (1745), at the siege and capture of Louisburg. (website: history.rays-place.com/ct/canton-1886.htm)

Death place: Louisburg, Nova Scotia, Canada

Line 43509 from GEDCOM File not recogniz
Line 43509 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: CHIL SLGC 6 DEC'61 SG

!killed in French war 1745.
!killed in French war 1745.

!Information from Dr. Gerald McDonald.
!Information from Dr. Gerald McDonald. 
Barber, Jonathan (I312684223627)
 
3424 Husband's last name is different in a book
In the Book entitled "History of Stonington", it lists Grace's husband as Richard Oler married in 1714.

dead
dead

COMMENT: SOURCE document references are
COMMENT: SOURCE document references are detailed at the end of notes

BIRTH-MARRIAGE:
[SOURCE CH089] pg 439
"2. Grace, b. Jan. 13, 1670-1, m., Nov. 2, 1714, Richard Otis. of Charlestown."

BIRTH:
[SOURCE CH079] pg 32-33
"1670."
"Grace Smith daughter of Danill and Mary smith borne the 13 11mo"
[Julian date 13 11mo 1670 converts to 13 Jan 1670/1671 Gregorian date]

[SOURCE CH131]
Ancestry File PIERCE1.GED acquired 7-14-94 AFN:
Name:Grace SMITH Sex:F ID No:FZPN-ZC
Birth:13 Jan 1671 Place:Watertown,,Massachusetts
[SOURCE CH079 Watertown MA vital records give Grace's birth as 13 Jan 1670/71]
[This is evidently same person as Grace listed as born 13 Jan 1671 ]
Marr: 2 Nov 1714 Spouse:Richard OTIS-FZPP-6J
Bap: 7 Oct 1879 Temple:SG
Endow: 7 Feb 1894 Temple:
Seal P:24 Jan 1945 Temple:SG
Father:Daniel SMITH-CXZ9-B8 Mother:Mary GRANT-7BZZ-0W
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Husband:Richard OTIS-FZPP-6J
Wife:Grace SMITH-FZPN-ZC
Marriage: 2 Nov 1714 Place:Watertown,,Massachusetts
Sealing: Temple:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Apparent duplicate below merged with Grace SMITH-FZPN-ZC in this record:
[SOURCE CH131]
Ancestry File PIERCE1.GED acquired 7-14-94 AFN:
Name:Grace SMITH Sex:F ID No:NTKB-ZJ
Birth:13 Jan 1770/1771 Place:Watertown,Middlesex,Massachusetts
[SOURCE CH079 Watertown MA vital records give Grace's birth as 13 Jan 1670/71]
[This is evidently same person as Grace listed as born 13 Jan 1671 ]
Marr: 2 Nov 1714 Spouse:Richard OTIS-NTKB-XC
Bap: 7 Oct 1879 Temple:
Endow: 7 Feb 1894 Temple:
Seal P:24 Jan 1945 Temple:
Father:Daniel SMITH-CXZ9-B8 Mother:Mary GRANT-7BZZ-0W
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Husband:Richard OTIS-NTKB-XC
Wife:Grace SMITH-NTKB-ZJ
Marriage: 2 Nov 1714 Place:
Sealing: Temple:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

SOURCES:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
[SOURCE CH089] "Genealogies of the Families and Descendants of the
Early Settlers of Watertown Mass. Incl. Waltham and Weston" with early town
history Pub: 1855 SL GEN LIB: 974.44, D2b, Vol.1974.44, D2b, Vol.1

BIRTH:
[SOURCE CH079] pg 33 "Watertown Records ... First and Second Books ... & the
First Book and Supplement of Births Deaths and Marriages" Pub 1894
SL GEN LIB: 974.44, W5, N2h, Vol. 1

[SOURCE CH131]
Information acquired from LDS Ancestry File on 7-14-94. GED of ancestors of
Jonas PIERCE b. 20 Dec 1705, Watertown, Middlesex, MA

AFN # FZPN-ZC; NTKB-ZJ AFN # FZPN-ZC; NT
AFN # FZPN-ZC; NTKB-ZJ AFN # FZPN-ZC; NTKB-ZJ

Line in Record @I0733@ (RIN 1171) from G
Line in Record @I0733@ (RIN 1171) from GEDCOM file not recognized: PLAC SGEOR Line in Record @I0733@ (RIN 1171) from GEDCOM file not recognized: PLAC SGEOR 
Smith, Grace (I312684222750)
 
3425 I only have a record of two children, Ga
I only have a record of two children, Gabriel and James, no Elizabeth or male child. My source is The History and Genealogy of the Cornish Families in America by Joseph Cornish published 1907. Could I be contacted with the sources for Elizabeth and the male child as children for James Cornish born in 1612 and Unknown Spouse and Phoebe Larrabee spouse.

!INFORMATION: From the Ancestral File.
!INFORMATION: From the Ancestral File.

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA 
Cornish, Elizabeth (I312684223540)
 
3426 If the spelling Robin was more than casu
If the spelling Robin was more than casual it could mean she was from Quebec. Or she could be Mary Robbins of Massachusetts; more than one possiblility there, one Mary daughter of George Robbins and Mary Maxwell was born 1 Sep 1667 at Chelmsford 
Robbins, Mary (I312684223171)
 
3427 IGI
IGI

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

SOURCE: Weaver Gen. B11 D13, Gen. Lib. A
SOURCE: Weaver Gen. B11 D13, Gen. Lib. Ancestry of Jeremy Clarke-Dungan Gen. by Justice; Dungan Ancestry by Howard O. Folker; Bucks Co, Pa Rec.; Par. Reg. of Ensley, Yorkshire, Eng., Gen. Dict. of R.I. by Austin. FGS submitted by: Bertha S. Powell, Sandy, Utah.

!SOURCES: 1. Archives, Clement Weaver. (
!SOURCES: 1. Archives, Clement Weaver. (BES). NOTES: 1. Ancestral File #9JVW-XM.

!BIRTH: From Weaver Genealogy. Signed
!BIRTH: From Weaver Genealogy. Signed deed of Mar 6, 1664. !DEATH: Did NOT sign with bros. a deed to uncle Gideon Freeborn Jan 15, 1676.

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

!SOURCE: LDS Ancestral File.
!SOURCE: LDS Ancestral File.

!Source: Book Written by L. Don Bercht
!Source: Book Written by L. Don Berchtold, "History of Don Merlin Grover and Jennette Morris Grover, Ancestors and Descendants, FHL Call No. US and Can, Book Area 929.273, G919Bδ. The Ancestral File and The LDS Options Files have been used to collect statistical data and reference to it can be found in the individual sheet ID box. 
Weaver, William (I312684224617)
 
3428 IGI has another marriage for a Henry Bar
IGI has another marriage for a Henry Barns: to Sarah Beale, 11 JAN 1796 Whittington, Worcester, England. Check out both marriages

!Birth: FHL #291647 Kington Parish Regi
!Birth: FHL #291647 Kington Parish Register Marriage: FHL #465282 Grafton Flavel Parish Register Death: Baptism: archive sheet Endowment: archive sheet Sealing Spouse: archive sheet Sealing Parents: archive sheet 
Barnes, Henry (I312684221856)
 
3429 IGI shows Dority WRIGHT marrying Robert
IGI shows Dority WRIGHT marrying Robert PHELPS

AFN # VR48-F7; FZPF-9X; 187V-81G Father:
AFN # VR48-F7; FZPF-9X; 187V-81G Father: Samuel Wright Mother: Mary Stevens AFN # VR48-F7; FZPF-9X; 187V-81G Father: Samuel Wright Mother: Mary Stevens 
Wright, Mrs Dorothy (I312684222511)
 
3430 IGI shows sealed to parents dates 30 Oct
IGI shows sealed to parents dates 30 Oct 1969,SLAKE,call #537943; 25 Jun 1926,SGEOR,call #170588 1000 30014.

!Sealed to (2) Joseph Stanford SMITH on
!Sealed to (2) Joseph Stanford SMITH on 15 Apr 1891.

Joseph Stanford/Smith 15 Apr 1891
Joseph Stanford/Smith 15 Apr 1891 
Eardley, Agnes Ann (I312684224690)
 
3431 Immigrated from England.


New Eng. Hist. & Gen. Reg. vol 42 p 258-
New Eng. Hist. & Gen. Reg. vol 42 p 258-9 Am. Pub. House

Children
mother of ten children

Children: 1.X Barrett, Jonathan - Birth
Children: 1.X Barrett, Jonathan - Birth/Chris: ABT 1651 @ MA 2. Barrett, John - Birth/Chris: 6 May 1655 @ MA 3. Barrett, Lydia - Birth/Chris: 22 Sep 1659 @ MA 4. Barrett, Samuel - Birth/Chris: 16 Jun 1660 @ MA 5. Barrett, Mary - Birth/Chris: 13 Mar 1662 @ MA 6. Barrett, Margaret - Birth/Chris: 10 Nov 1667 @ MA 7. Barrett, Joseph - Birth/Chris: 1669 @ MA 8. Barrett, Sarah - Birth/Chris: 1671 @ MA

!Ref NEHGR Vol 42 pp 257-264
!Ref NEHGR Vol 42 pp 257-264 
Bate, Sarah (I312684224866)
 
3432 Immigration Source
U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s

Name Johannes Empey
Arrival Year 1710
Arrival Place New York, New York
Primary Immigrant Empey, Johann Ernest
Family Members Wife Empey, Margretha Winter; Child Empey, Johannes; Child Empey, Johann Adam
Source Publication Code 3620.1
Annotation Date and port of arrival or date and place of mention in the New World. A few are date of intent to emigrate. Number on the Hunter Lists, birth dates, family relationships, and places of origin may also be provided. Exhaustive information on more than 500
Source Bibliography JONES, HENRY Z., JR. The Palatine Families of New York: A Study of the German Immigrants Who Arrived in Colonial New York in 1710, Volume I. Universal City, CA: Author, PO Box 8341, Universal City, CA, 1985. 624p.
Household members
Name Age
Johann Ernest Empey
Johannes Empey
Margretha Winter Empey
Johann Adam Empey

This person's information was combined w
This person's information was combined while in Ancestral File. The following submitters of the information may or may not agree with the combining of the information: JUDITH M./WHITE/ (2210942) J. KIMBERLY/PHILLABAUM/ (2258668) CAROL J/HOFFMAN/ (2279031) HARRY JAMES/DIVINS/ (2346999) JAMES NORMAN/CRUM/ (2678536)

!Married Elizabeth Krantz, 18 Dec 1711,S
!Married Elizabeth Krantz, 18 Dec 1711,Schoharie Valley, NY

Johannes Emmerich & Anna Margaretha (Depes?)
The family of Johannes Emmerich & Anna Margaretha (Depes?) has been documented by Henry Z. Jones, Jr.
See: Jones, Henry Z., Jr. The Palatine Families of New York: A Study of the German Immigrants Who Arrived in Colonial New York in 1710. In Two Volumes. Rockland. Maine: Picton Press, 1985. pp. 206 - 208.

last name might have been spelled EMMER
last name might have been spelled EMMERICH also

Was his surname really Emichen ?
Was his surname really Emichen ?

Person note
Surrname also: Empey; Empie; Emige; Emchen;
Family search, IGI, Family Ordinance Record; Pedigree Resource File #66;
Parents: Johannes Ernst Emichen, (b. abt 1675/80, Worms, Pfalz, Bayern, Germany, d. aft 1760,
Schoharie, NY) PRF #127, (b. 4feb94LA, e:19feb94LA); & 1) Maria Ursula Rosenbach, (b. abt
1670/98/1700, d. aft 1760, NY); PRF #91, #58, #127, #129, #132, (b. 30jan93AZ, 2nov94SG,
e: 19nov94SG); or 2) Anna Christina Empey, (b. abt 1709/17, d. aft 1760, NY);


Notes on Johan Part 2
BIOGRAPHICAL:

Johannes emigrated with his family to London in June of 1709, where he appears on the May 6, 1709, London Lists with his father "Ernst Emichen" as "a son, age 6." Unlike his two younger brothers, Paulus and Ludovicus, and his mother, Maria, Johannes survived the terrible living conditions of both the 7 month stay in London and the 6 months on shipboard (3 months in harbor just waiting to sail) arriving in New York in June of 1710 and first appearing on the Hunter Lists of 1 Jul 1710, listed with his family as one of "2 persons under age 10." In October of 1710, the family was sent with the other Palatines of their group up the Hudson to Livingston Manor, a tract of land where the labor of the emigrants was going to be used to produce tar and pitch for the English
fleet.





The family of Johan Ernst Emichen was assigned to West Camp, where they remainded under stressful conditions until the tar project failed and they were free to go elsewhere.
According to Henry Z. Jones, by 13 March 1715/1716, Johannes had been naturalized (Albany Nats.).

From DKM: "Johannes Empie was one of the original Patentees at Stone Arabia in 1723, originally receiving lots #6 and #46. When additional land was laid out he was 19th on the list and was allotted Lots 3, 12, 4, 16, 18 and 2, First Division, according to Helen Abel Empie Failing. She spoke of this on my visit with her 29 May 1998.

As told to HWW: Helen didn't know when he disposed of these and got Lots 86 and 88 of the Second Allotment. Helen and her husband still own the property, lots 86 and 88, Second Allotment. Part of the original house is incorporated into the present 2 story, frame dwelling. No parts of the old barns remain. We sat in the house kitchen looking out the picture window, looking north and viewing the fertile, rolling fields. Helen and her husband are
retired and do not work the land, but it is rented to an adjacent farmer, keeping the fields into agricultural production, usually field corn.

Church records at Stone Arabia show that Johannes Empey and Elizabeth Snell Empey were still living there (Rev. Sommers Lutheran Cong. List) by 1744 when their daughter, Anna Maria, was baptized (Jan 8, 1744) and he was chosen elder and installed (Aug. 12, 1744).
His family appeared on Pastor Sommer's list of his congregation at Stone Arabia and Cani-Schohare in 1744, and Johannes ("Hannis his HE mark Empie") was among those signing the release for the division of the church lot (Lot 20 of the First Division) at Stone Arabia between the Lutheran and Reformed congregations, again confirming this division 29 Dec 1770 with others, (this time signed "Johannes Emge") representing the Stone Arabia Trinity Lutheran Church. (DKM) By this time Johannes had acquired Lots 86 and 88 of the Stone Arabia Patent, Second Division.

The 1763 list of Freeholders of the City and County of Albany made to provide jurymen for the Provincial courts, includes at Stonerabie: Johannes Empie and Philip Empie. Only those with a certain value of property were placed on this list (Nat'l Genealogical Soc. Quart., Dec 1860, 48:171. The last record of Johannes is a land transfer of Stone Arabia lot 86 of 198 acres in the Stone Arabia Patent, Second Division, from him to his son Jacob Empie date June 7, 1771. (Note that this same son, Jacob was killed at Oriskany, August 6, 1777.) Since all of his children were born after 1723, they were born in Stone Arabia.
DEATH: Stone Arabia, Palatine, Montgomery Co., NY.

- From "The Descendants of Johan Ernst Emichen : Volume II - The Loyalist Canadian Empey Family" - http://www.magma.ca/~ekipp/

JOHAN ERNST AND EMPIE FAMILY HISTORY
1700's

From Germany to the British Colonies

This article describes the birth, marriages, births of children, arrival (London and the colonies), naturalization, and descendent family history of Johan Ernst Empie.

from ancestry.com - susanfurtah66 originally shared this on 11 Dec 2015


This person's information was combined w
This person's information was combined while in Ancestral File. The following submitters of the information may or may not agree with the combining of the information: HELEN/MCELRAVY/ (2405203) GARY/MCKINNEY/ (2414349)

Obituary
Johan immigrated to the United States on 5-5-1709, coming through Nutten Island (Governor's Island), Kings Co. New York. He was among the first of the Paltinates to come to this country. According to the 'London Lists of Palatine Immigrants', Ernst was 55, his sons were 9, 6, 5 & 1 1/2. He was a Lutheran husbandman and vinedresser.

(His first wife had died in England). He owned property by 1723.

He married Margaretha Winter, daughter of Hans Carl Winter, on 8-21-1709. Then he also married Anna Christiana.

The German spelling was 'Emichen'. The name was also spelled 'Empey' by some of his family.

Michael arrived as a young man with his
Michael arrived as a young man with his Mother from Germany in 1709, and settled in Schoharie, where he married Elizabeth. In 1723, they joined a group of German settlers in a migration from the Schoharie area to the Berks Co. region of Pennsylvania. Beginning in 1713, the Rieths and others searched for a better location for permanent settlement. In that year, George Rieth visited Tulpehocken Valley in Pennsylvania and in 1719 several Rieths led scouting parties through great hazard and hardship into unsettled parts of Penn's great domain. In 1722, when visiting Albany, Gov. Keith of Pennsylvania invited the Schoharie Palatines to move to his province. Early in 1723, 15 families of about 50-60 people cut a trail from Schoharie about 40 miles to the headwaters of the Susquehanna River. There they made canoes dug out of chestnut logs and rafts and shoved off on their hard, exciting journey. They travelled past arrow-shooting Indians to the mouth of Swatara Creek, where Middletown now stands below Harrisburg then up that creek and a trek across a gravel ridge into the Tulpehocken Valley, then in Lancaster County and later in Berks County. Their horses and cattle were driven by a shorter overland route, (too difficult for women and children), down the Delaware River and then across to Tulpehocken. After reaching there, 12 horses ran away and many months later, ten of them reached their old homes in Schoharie, N. Y. The Book of Names - Kocheathal Records (Page 43) Marriage performed by Joshua Kocherthal, in the year 1709, Dec. 18th. Johann Michael Eraerich of Delkenheim commune Epstein Darmstadt and Elizabetha Krantz, widow of the late Conrad Krantz of the commune of Zigeaheim in Hessia. (The Evangelical Church of Ziegmhain Germany say they have no record of a marriage of Conrad Krantz.) The Last Will and Testament of Johann Michael Emerich Tulpehocken the 10 of June 1743 In the name of God, Amen. Whereas I am yet in good health and perfect understanding. Considering I am a moral man will therefore put my house in order as it shall be alter I am dead. First, I recommend my soul to my God and Maker and my body to the earth to a happy resurrection. My will is that my wife Elizabeth Emerich and Michael Rith with Herman Walbom shall be my Executors to execute what is herein written. The same power I have had over what was mine the same power I give to my wife Elizabeth to do with as I have done as long as she continues unmarried but if she marries again she shall have her third part and no division shall be made till my youngest child is of age and then shall my wife have her third part if she continues a widow. And I will that all my children shall have equal share except my deceased daughters child Catrina Leitner, I give her ten pounds because they took the child to them. If one of the children should be disobedient to the mother against the law of nature and the country, then the mother shall have the power to take that child's share and divide it among the rest. And my youngest son shall take possession of the plantation if he is able to pay the rest of the children and the mother their share and if the mother should like it to live with the son that has the plantation then she shall take her seat in the house and my two youngest sons shall have four pounds each more than the rest because the eldest had their assistance m improving their plantations. This is my last will and testament which I have sidled and with my seal do certify. Johann Michael Emerich (Seal) Also signed by witnesses Michael Sheller, Johannes Forer, Johann Philip Meurer In Tulpehocken in Lancaster County July 31, t 744 personally appeared Michael Sheffer and Johan Philip Meurer witnesses to the foregoing will of Johann Michael Emerich and upon their oath did say that they saw and heard the said Johann Michael Emerich sign and seal and declare the foregoing will as his last will and testament and that the doing thereof he was of sound mind memory and understan ding to the best of their knowledge. Before me Conrad Weiser The executors to the foregoing will are sworn before me July 1744 Conrad Weiser A true translation of the original (in German) by Conrad Weiser.

*See Book"By the Name of Emerich etc" by
*See Book"By the Name of Emerich etc" by K.D.Haines Death and Will on pg. 13,10 & 12 Marriage and children on pg. 16 & 17. *Dates 1709 Dec.25th departed Prussia; 1710 Jun 14th arrived in N.Y. 1712 winter to Schoairie Valley,N.Y. 1723 to Tulpehocken Twp.,Berks Co.,Pa. *See also letter from K.D.Haines to Carol Hoffman about the parentage of Johann Michael Emerich. *Deed Book 2A pg 241 at Reading, Berks Co.,Pa. * Johann Michael Emerich & Elizabeth Krantz were married by Joshua Kocherthal on the 18 Dec. 1709 (Livingston Manor,N.Y.) (Kocherthal Records Page 43) (Families on west side of Hudson River,N.Y.) *Tulpehocken Valley or Twp.(Changed to Lancaster Co. & later to Berks Co.)

!Empey was spelled Emichen. Records from
!Empey was spelled Emichen. Records from Worms, Germany. Some data based on speculation on age and age of sons by wife #2. Arrived London, England 5/6/1709 age 55. Had 2 other wives: Margaretha Winter m. 8/21/1709 in Savoy, London, England. Anna Christina ? by 1717 in Schoharia Co.,NY. Children of this marriage: Elizabeth 10/1/1716 Christina 1718 Margaretha Anna Eva 1722 Two youngest sons by first wife died 1709/1710 in London or crossing Atlantic.

Notes on Johan Part 1
[1024] SOURCES: "The Empey Family," E. Keith Fitzgerald, gen. Revised Jan 1984.
"The Palatine Families of NY," Henry Z. Jones, p. 201.
"London Churchbooks and the German Emigration of 1709," John P. Dern.


NAME AND ORIGINS: Dr. Fitzgerald writes to Hank Jones, 10 Nov 1984, that at the baptism in Worms of Johannes, Johan Ernst is described as "Beisass", a word not known today. He writes: "Even on the 'phone the professor didn't know it as it was really old German. "As you can see he has come through for me." (We assume from the next paragraph that the translation had to do with being a "a foreign neighbor of fugitive.) He continues, "Another thought - with the name Empey being Irish Huguenot (and therefore French) - and thus this German info saying the Emichs were 'Foreign Neighbors' and possibly 'fugitives from a foreign country' - it makes me wonder if somewhere back in time they were not all from the same roots." He (the professor) has also found that the names Emig/Emich/ Ehmig (and I guess all those other variants) are the same name - and that is a short for for Emmerich."
The London Churchbook records state that Johan Ernst was of K�nigsberg, more recently Worms, Germany.


BIRTH: Recorded: London Churchbooks, P 39: "Emichen, Ernst, age 55." This was his age on June of 1709 when he arrived in London, making him born abt 1654.

BAPTISM: Hank Jones writes Dr. Fitzgerald, 20 November 1984: "I found Johannes Emmerich bpt 13 Nov 1664 at Bleichenbach near Hanau: his father was Johannes E., Sr., d. 23 Nov 1688, aged 74 years (Selters Chbk.)"


Does this mean he was born closer to 1664 instead of about 1654 as formerly thought?; The 1654 date was derived from the age given in the London Churchbooks in 1709. Could his age then have been 45, a more likely age of a father of young sons, or was he baptized at age 10?;

MARRIAGES:

First wife was Maria Ursula Rosenbachin, by whom he had 4 children, Adam, Johannes, Ludovicus and Paulus. Maria and the 2 younger children died soon after they reached London.

On 21 August 1709, in London Johan Ernst married Margaretha Winter, with whom he and his two remaining sons emigrated to New York in July of 1710. They were settled in West Camp on the west side of the Hudson River, where Adam was confirmed 30 April 1711. By 1713, they had moved to Schoharie where "Joh. Emerich and wife Margaretha" were sponsors at a baptism for Anna Eva, daughter of Johannes Hess and Catarina Lilofin. Sometime between 1713 and 1715, his second wife died.


By 1715 he had married Anna Christina __?;__ by whom he had 2 children, Elizabeth, born 1 Oct 1716, and Christina, born about 1718. NOTE: David Kendall Martin believes that "the age of Johan Ernst Emichen in 1709, compared with the ages of his children, indicates that likely he had at least one wife before his wife of that year, Maria Rosenbachin.

BIOGRAPHICAL: Origins per Henry Jones:
"Johan Ernst Emick, widower of Konigsberg more recently Worms, Germany, md. Margaretha d/o Hans Carl Winter of Bach in Wurtembergschen, 21 Aug 1709 (London Chbks. and the German Emigration of 1709, by John P. Dern, p. 25). "Emick's ancestral origins then were at 6520 Worms and possibly 6301 Konigsberg near Wetzler. "Ernst Emichen aged 55, his wife, sons aged 9, 6, 5, and 1 1/2, Lutheran, husbandman and vinedresser, were in the 1st arrivals in 1709 (London Lists)". (HJ)

Ernst Emichen made his first appearance on the Hunter Lists #162, 1 July 1710 with 2 pers. over 10 yrs of age and 2 pers. under 10 yrs; the numbers changed to 3 pers. over 10 yrs and 1 pers. under 10 on 4 Oct 1710, and the last entries for the family in 1712 noted 4 pers. over 10 yrs of age. An old manuscript dated 1711 recorded that 1 lb of butter was given for Joh: Ernst Emichen (NY Col Mss., Vol 55, p. 29e).

Johan Ernest Emigen was nat. 13 March 1715/1716 (Albany Nats.). Johan Ernst Eingen and Anna Christiana with 2 children were at Neu-Heessberg, ca. 1716/17 (Simmendinger Register), per HJ, p 201. Fitzgerald notes that Lutheran Church records 1673-1735 rec'd from Worms, Germany, state that 3 children were born to Johan Ernst Emichen and Maria Ursula Rosenbachin; Johannes, 1702, Joh. Ludovicus, 1704, Joh. Paulus, 1707. Another son, Adam, was born in 1700. Adam and Johannes became patentees at Stone Arabia, Montgomery Co., NY, in 1723, when the family moved to that area.


DEATH: David Kendal Martin writes to EKF: "Johan Ernst Emichen was a Stone Arabia Patentee in 1723, but was dead by 1744, as he was not on the Sommer's list of the Lutheran congregation." We don't know exactly where he died. If Johan Ernst Emichen and not his 21 year old son, Johannes, was the patentee, "J. Empie" (as listed on map) or "Johannes Emigen" (as written on list) who claimed Lots 6 and 46 in the Stone Arabia Patent, then it is likely he died in Stone Arabia. If his son made the claim, it is likely that his father moved from Schoharie to Stone Arabia to live with one of his sons, and died there.


NOTE: (BEG) There were 4 K�nigsbergs located all over Germany and also in what is now Poland. Hank Jones' researcher (at EKF's request) narrowed the field down to the one just north of Frankfort, Germany. His baptism record (recited) shows he was baptized at "Bleichenbach near Hanau". Hanau is just west of Frankfort so this probably the right K�nigsberg. The family moved to Worms later but weren't there long enough to leave any records except the children's baptisms.

- From "The Descendants of Johan Ernst Emichen : Volume II - The Loyalist Canadian Empey Family" - http://www.magma.ca/~ekipp/



[1025] SOURCES: "The Empey Family", genealogy chart, E. Keith Fitzgerald, rev. 1984.
"Palatine Families of NY", Henry Z. Jones, 1985, page 201.
Article: "Historic Stone Arabia", Enterprise and News
newspaper), St. Johnsville, NY, February 4, 1931, page 26.
"First Settlers of Schenectady", Pearson.


BIRTH: Born 1700 in Germany per age record given in London Churchbooks. We have no
church record of his birth as we do of the other 3 children.


BIOGRAPHICAL: Adam traveled to London with his parents at the age of 9, appearing on the
London Churchbooks, p 39, as "son age 9". Unlike his two youngest brothers, he survived the trials of both the stay in London and the voyage to America, where the family arrived in New York City in 1710. Here, Adam first appeared on the Hunter Lists of 1 July 1710 as one of "2
pers under 10 years." By Oct of 1710, he must have had a birthday, since the list of 4 Oct 1710
notes "3 persons over 10, and 1 under 10."


After staying about 3 months in New York on Nutten Island (now Governor's Island), in Oct
of 1710 the family was moved with the rest of the Palatines, who had arrived about the same
time, up the Hudson River to Livingston Manor, a large tract of land, upon which were
established many camps, where the Palatine families were expected to labor to produce tar and pitch for the English Navy.

Adam's family was sent to West Camp, where it remained until the Tar Camps were closed and the family left for Schoharie in 1712/1713. When circumstances forced the family from Schoharie, it moved to the Mohawk Valley, where the two sons, now age 23 and 21 were given land in the new Stone Arabia Patent, granted in 1723. Adam received lots 11 and 14.
Henry Jones says: "Johan Adam, conf. 30 Apr 1711, at the new German colony (West Camp
Luth. Chbk.) Jerg Adam Oemich sp. Joh: Martin Seibert in 1716 (West Camp Chbk.)


Adam Empie was a patentee at Stone Arabia in 1723 (Stone Arabia Patent). He md.
Catharina Barbara Schmidt, d/o Adam Smit, 5 Feb 1727." Pearson's "First Settlers of
Schenectady" gives children - Maria, Anna, Johannes, Adam, Heinrich.

MARRIAGE: Dutch Reformed Church, Schenectady, Schenectady Co., NY USA. "Adam
Aemke, jm and Catrina Barber Smit, jd". No witnesses listed. Surname given as "Aemtgen" in
baptismal record of his first child, Maria.
From "Genealogy of the First Settlers of Schenectady", pg 65 reads:
EMPIE, Adam, m. first Catrina Barber, dau. of Adam Smit(?;), Feb 5, 1727.

- From "The Descendants of Johan Ernst Emichen : Volume II - The Loyalist Canadian Empey Family" - http://www.magma.ca/~ekipp/



[1023] SOURCES: "The Empey Family" researched by E.K. Fitzgerald, M.D., Rev. 1964.
"Empey Family", compiled by Edith Van Heusen Becker from various church and civil records.
"American Ancestry", Vol 2:36.
"Ancestors of Mary Anne Fox", compiled by George D. Finkbinder, Dewitt, NY.
"The Eighteenth Century Snell Family of the Mohawk Valley", by David K. Martin.
The Palatine Families of NY," Henry Z. Jones, 1985, p 201-202.
Lutheran Church Records - 1673-1735, Worms, Germany. Henry Z. Jones.
BIRTH: "Probably born in K�nigsberg near Wetzlar, Germany, between March and June of 1702, based on the Hunter's ration list wherein child changes from under ten to over ten." (DKM letter to EKF 13 Mar 1982).

BAPTISM: Johannes was born 11 Oct 1702 at Worms, Germany. He was baptized on 15 Oct 1702, Lutheran Church at Worms per Worms Lutheran Church Records, 1673-1735 (EKF).
Record reads: #162, 1702 Oct 11, Oct 15: Johannes.

Parents: "Johann Ernst Emichen, beisa� and day laborer Maria Ursula, born Rosenbachin. Godf: "Johannes Hainlein, citizen and carpenter."
CONFIRMATION: Johannes was confirmed in 1720 at Tschoghari in the so called Fuchsen-dorp (N.Y. City Luth.
Chbk.)



Michael arrived as a young man with his
Michael arrived as a young man with his Mother from Germany in 1709, and settled in Schoharie, where he married Elizabeth. In 1723, they joined a group of German settlers in a migration from the Schoharie area to the Berks Co. region of Pennsylvania. Beginning in 1713, the Rieths and others searched for a better location for permanent settlement. In that year, George Rieth visited Tulpehocken Valley in Pennsylvania and in 1719 several Rieths led scouting parties through great hazard and hardship into unsettled parts of Penn's great domain. In 1722, when visiting Albany, Gov. Keith of Pennsylvania invited the Schoharie Palatines to move to his province. Early in 1723, 15 families of about 50-60 people cut a trail from Schoharie about 40 miles to the headwaters of the Susquehanna River. There they made canoes dug out of chestnut logs and rafts and shoved off on their hard, exciting journey. They travelled past arrow-shooting Indians to the mouth of Swatara Creek, where Middletown now stands below Harrisburg then up that creek and a trek across a gravel ridge into the Tulpehocken Valley, then in Lancaster County and later in Berks County. Their horses and cattle were driven by a shorter overland route, (too difficult for women and children), down the Delaware River and then across to Tulpehocken. After reaching there, 12 horses ran away and many months later, ten of them reached their old homes in Schoharie, N. Y.

Palatine Project Germans to England 1709 including Ernst Emichen
website
http://www.genesearch.com/genealogy-records/1709palatines/may.html

The Last Will & Testament of Johann Mich
The Last Will & Testament of Johann Michael Emerich of Tulpehocken 10th of June 1743 In the name of God, Amen. Whereas I am yet in good health andperfect understanding. C onsidering I am a mortal man will therefore putmy house in order as it shall be after I am d ead. First, I recommend my soul to my God and Maker and my body to the earthto a happy resurrecti on. My will is that my wife Elizabeth Emerich andMichael Rith with Herman Walborn shall b e my Executors to execute whatis herein written. The same power I have had over what was mine the same power I giveto my wife Elizabet h to do with as I have done as long as she continuesunmarried but if she marries again she s hall have her third part and nodivision shall be made til my youngest child is of age and th en shall mywife have her third part if she continues a widow. And I will that allmy childr en shall have equal share except my deceased daughter's childCatrina Leitner, I give her te n pounds because they took the child tothem. if one of the children should be disobedient t o the motheragainst the law of nature and the country, then the mother shall have thepowe r to take that child's share and divide it among the rest. And myyoungest son shall take pos session of the plantation if he is able topay the rest of the children and the mother tdhei r share and if themother should like it to live with the son that has the plantation thensh e shall take her seat in the house and my two youngest sons shall havefour pounds each mor e than the rest because the eldest had theirassistance in improving their plantations. Thi s is my last will andtestament which I have signed and with my seal do certify. Johann Michael Emerich (seal) Also signed by witnesses Michael Sheffer Johannes Forer Johann Philip Meurer In Tulpehocken in Lancaster County July 31, 1744 personally appearedMichael Sheffer and Joha n Philip Meurer, witnesses to the foregoing willof Johann Michael Emerich and upon their oat h did say that they saw andheard the said Johann Michael Emerich sign and seal and declare t heforegoing will as his last will and testament and that the doing thereofhe was of sound m ind, memory and understanding to the best of theirknowledge. Before me, Conrad Weiser A true translation of the original (in German) by Conrad Weiser The Indenture covering the settlement of the property of JohannMichael Emerich was date d October 10, 1752. According law, the eldestson, John Jacob, received two sevenths, and Ba lthaser, Leonhard, CatrinaMMMargred Creitser, wife to Andrew Creitser, John Adam and John re ceivedone-seventh. According to the terms of the will the property settlementwas to be mad e when John, the youngest, became of age. 
Empie, Johan Ernst (I312684220452)
 
3433 Important research on Samuel Thompson
The St. Philip Parish records in Birmingham, England, show that Samuel, son of Benjamin and Ann Thompson was baptized on 7 June 1811. The baptism record does not show which Benjamin and Ann Thompson were the parents, and does not give a birth date for Samuel, and does not list a mother's maiden name.

Descendants of Benjamin and Ann Lewis Thompson have an early family note which reads, "Joseph Lewis Thompson was born in Birmingham, Warwick, England, on February 8, 1815. He was the son of Benjamin Thompson and Ann Lewis ... Very little is known of the family or his brothers and sisters; however, the following is known: His father had two brothers. Their names were Samuel and John. One of them went to Australia and the other to New Zealand. His brother [Joseph's brother], Benjamin died as a child."

Because of that note, descendants of Benjamin and Ann Lewis have searched for a birth record of a Samuel Thompson to a Benjamin and Ann Thompson. This record has been thought to be the son of Ann Lewis and Benjamin Thompson, but it is also clear that there are many Benjamin and Ann Thompsons living in Birmingham at this time, and that not all baptism records have been indexed at this time.

Please understand that this Samuel Thompson may not be the son of Ann Lewis and Benjamin Thompson.  
Thompson, Samuel (I312684222183)
 
3434 In 1773, moved to Moreau, New York.
In 1773, moved to Moreau, New York. 
Parke, Rhoda (I312684221286)
 
3435 In Cayuga County (probably Scipio), New
In Cayuga County (probably Scipio), New York in 1800 census.
In Ontario County, New York in 1810 census.
Probably moved to Ontario County in late 1809 or 1810 following the birth of Jerusha in Scipio in 1809.
In Athens, Athens, Ohio in 1820and 1830 census records.
Moved to Warsaw, Hancock, Illinois before 1840.
Moved to Lancaster, Schuyler, Missouri before 1844.

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R); ; Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

1786
1786

Probably buried in Old Pioneer Cemetery
Probably buried in Old Pioneer Cemetery of Lancaster, Schyler Co., MO. with wife, but not head stones 
Parke, Rev Benjamin Marvin (I312684221253)
 
3436 In HW Cushman genealogy book page .
In HW Cushman genealogy book page .

!Unmarried. Died of scarlet fever. !Unm
!Unmarried. Died of scarlet fever. !Unmarried. Died of scarlet fever. 
Hawkes, Anna (I312684223699)
 
3437 In HW Cushman genealogy book.
In HW Cushman genealogy book.

!Called Marey in Lynn VR, but signed Mer
!Called Marey in Lynn VR, but signed Mercy in probate records. !Called Marey in Lynn VR, but signed Mercy in probate records.

Mercy or Mary Hawkes was also baptized 1
Mercy or Mary Hawkes was also baptized 14 Jul 1931 Logan, Endowed 8 October 1931 Sgeor, and sealed to parents 12 Sep 1971 Lange, and 10 Nov 1967 Arizo.

Mercy Hawkes Goodhue's cause of death
Mercy Hawkes Goodhue died in 1721 at the age of 46 years old from smallpox which swept the area in the fall of 1721 from August to November. 
Hawkes, Mercy (I312684223717)
 
3438 In HW Cushman genealogy book.
In HW Cushman genealogy book.

!Unmarried. Died of scarlet fever. !Unm
!Unmarried. Died of scarlet fever. !Unmarried. Died of scarlet fever.

5 years
5 years

(6) died before born
(6) died before born

Died at age 5
 
Hawkes, Rebecca (I312684223706)
 
3439 In HW Cushman's genealogy book page .
In HW Cushman's genealogy book page .

No issue; no other record found on Eliza
No issue; no other record found on Elizabeth Cole; mrs. John Smith Hawkes, genealogists. Aug 1966 
Hawkes, John (I312684223723)
 
3440 In the Vail Family genealogy, Anne is N
In the Vail Family genealogy, Anne is NOT the mother of Jeremiah's children; she married him after Benjamin's death in 1690; Elston states that her father gave a deed to daughter Anne and husband Benjamin Moore in 1671 which indicates Vail children may be stepchildren

!BIR-MAR-DEA: The family of John booth o
!BIR-MAR-DEA: The family of John booth of shelter Island, NY, Lucy D Akerly, pg 237.

Still Living.
Still Living.

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

Sarah (Moore) Glover was the daughter of
Sarah (Moore) Glover was the daughter of Thomas Moore of Southold, Long Island

This ged-com file contains the genealogical research of Joanne (Todd) Rabun from 1993 to 2002. It was compiled from many sources and may, in some cases, not be accurate. Whenever possible, the original source of information has been referenced.

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

Jeremiah/Vail 2 Jeremiah/Vail 1691
Jeremiah/Vail 2 Jeremiah/Vail 1691

FGS (Husband-Jeremiah Vail abt 1670) sub
FGS (Husband-Jeremiah Vail abt 1670) submitted by Zada Terry Jones states "Wid-of Benj Moore"

!Source: LDS Ancestral File.
!Source: LDS Ancestral File.

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. 
Hampton, Anna (I312684223333)
 
3441 incorrect death date
the image attached as evidence for a death date of 1740 shows a Hannah Gutterson, wife of John Gutterson. Not Hannah (Foster, Austin) Hendricks. 
Foster, Mrs. Hannah (I312684224880)
 
3442 Incorrect Entry Possibility
Could this be a deceased twin of Bathsheba or was it an incorrect entry of “male” in Massachusetts Births and Christenings 1639-1915???
 
Wentworth (I312684221251)
 
3443 inf from Sister Wilson wife of driver fr
inf from Sister Wilson wife of driver from Bishop's Storehouse in Etobicoke

aged 36 1851 census
death inf from Ed Simons

1851 census South mountain, ON Farmer, born in Canada, W. Methodist
1861 census South Mountain, Dundas, ON aged 46 farmere born in Upper canada, W. Methodist

1816
1816 
Brown, Robert (I312684220206)
 
3444 Info from IGI
Info from IGI

!Birth information from the book "Mattes
!Birth information from the book "Mattesons In America" by Porter Matteson.

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

SOURCE: Weaver Genealogy p. 69, Austin's
SOURCE: Weaver Genealogy p. 69, Austin's R.I. Dist. B 11 D 13. FGS submitted by: Mrs. D.A. Lamoreaux, R. 2 Box 399, Orem, Utah. MARRIAGE: 21 Nov 1723, Joseph Weaver

Extracted birth East Greenwich, Kent, Rh
Extracted birth East Greenwich, Kent, Rhode Island Batch C501921, Film#0908269 It 1 Parents Henry Matteson & Judea Weaver. Rhode Island Vital Records, East Greenwich, Kent, Rhode Island, Vol 1 P.6

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

!SOURCE: NAME AND BIRTHDATE - MATTESONS
!SOURCE: NAME AND BIRTHDATE - MATTESONS IN AMERICA 
Matteson, Mary (I312684224594)
 
3445 INFO: THIS PERSON ADDED TO FGRA BY MARGI
INFO: THIS PERSON ADDED TO FGRA BY MARGIE F. KROTH, 924 SAGE AVE, GRANTS, NEW MEXICO, JUL 1960 ----------------------------------------------------------------- Conflicting information exists on Lewis Gholson....Another death date given is 1779; another marriage date given is 19th of Dec., 1771. (Info from Jan 96:) PAUL GILBERT 6304 CENTRAL DR. MUKILTEO, WA Phone: 353-0534INFO: THIS PERSON ADDED TO FGRA BY MARGIE F. KROTH, 924 SAGE AVE, GRANTS, NEW MEXICO, JUL 1960 ----------------------------------------------------------------- Conflicting information exists on Lewis Gholson....Another death date given is 1779; another marriage date given is 19th of Dec., 1771. (Info from Jan 96:) PAUL GILBERT 6304 CENTRAL DR. MUKILTEO, WA Phone: 353-0534 Searched the following but found nothing: 6125452 - VA Marriage Bonds

Renaissance European Child-Naming Customs
Traditional European culture included child-naming customs (which persisted among Germanic immigrants to Pennsylvania until the late 19th century). As part of these customs, parents would give their children a first given name that was the spiritual name of a saint (which was often shared by all children in a family of the same gender), and a second given name that was used for secular purposes called a "rufnamen," which is what that person would be commonly called by everyone. This rufanem sometimes was chosen according to a traditional pattern, in which the first son would share the rufanem of his paternal grandfather, the second son would share the rufanem of his maternal grandfather, the third son would share the rufanem of his father, and so forth, with any duplicate combinations being skipped; and similarly for daughters---and, whenever a son died in infancy, his name would perhaps be passed along to the next surviving son; ditto with daughters. This pattern was sometimes reset after remarriage. Sometimes, in place of this pattern, children would share the rufanem of one of their respective christening/baptismal sponsors. To the extent that people strictly followed this pattern, their children's names provide excellent clues about their family history. By the way, a Germanic surname suffixed with "er" (or "ner") denoted either an origin or an occupation, while women's surnames were traditionally appended with "in." Here's a webpage that presents more detailed information about such customs.

http://www.kerchner.com/germname.htm

Disproven excerpt from the "Golson/Gholson/Gholston Families in America"
"FAMILY OF (MAJOR) LEWIS GOLSAN AND ELIZABETH STEHLEY (STALEY). Those who are descended from the Golsan (Golson) family of South Carolina will trace back to (Major) Lewis Golsan, who resided in Orangeburg District, South Carolina, where he is found by 1752 and where he passed his life away as a prominent citizen and planter. &ltThe following is unsupported. MAJOR LEWIS GOLSAN, was born (according to descendants) in 1730. &ltAll the following is disproven&gt He was likely born in America and was probably born in Virginia, though no proof has been found. It seems very likely that he could have been the eldest son of WILLIAM GHOLSON AND SUSANNA COLLINS of Spotsylvania and Orange Counties in Virginia... The pronunciation of the names, whether "GHOLSON" or "GOLSAN", "GOLSON", is the same, and in many instances the South Carolina family has used the "Gholson" spelling and the Virginia family the "Golson" spelling.

!Birth: Research records from Alecia Ti
!Birth: Research records from Alecia Tipton, Peggy Chapman, and Jeffrey Martin !Death: Ditto !Marriage: Ditto 
Golson, Major Ernst Ludwig "Lewis" (I312684220984)
 
3446 Information for Elisha was obtained from
Information for Elisha was obtained from the following: Federal Census for 1810, 1820 and 1840. Personal communication with Evelyn Resciniti.

! m. Lucretia Matson ! m. Lucretia Matso
! m. Lucretia Matson ! m. Lucretia Matson

BIRTH-MAR: Letter from Evelyn Messenger
BIRTH-MAR: Letter from Evelyn Messenger Rescinti; IGI files confirm information

1 BIRT 2 DATE 1758 2 PLAC Simsbury, H
1 BIRT 2 DATE 1758 2 PLAC Simsbury, Hartford, Conn. !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM) REPO: @R01@; ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; ; !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM) REPO: @R01@; ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; ;

Line 28742 from GEDCOM File not recogniz
Line 28742 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: SLGC DATE 11 OCT 1963 M From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

Line 11218 from GEDCOM File not recogniz
Line 11218 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: SLGC DATE 11 OCT 1963 M

!BIRTH-MAR: Letter from Evelyn Messenger
!BIRTH-MAR: Letter from Evelyn Messenger Rescinti; MARRIAGE: _____ Hays; parents of Henry Hays Messenger, David, and William C. are both listed on the IGI files. IGI files confirm information

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

Line 11198 from GEDCOM File not recogniz
Line 11198 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: SLGC DATE 11 OCT 1963 M

Invalid seal-to-parents temple code: M.
Invalid seal-to-parents temple code: M. 
Messenger, Elisha (I312684223183)
 
3447 Information found on " Roots Web " 22 Ma
Information found on " Roots Web " 22 May 2008 --
" Descendants of Seventh Day Baptist, William Davis ( 1663-1745 ) Wales " Family Trees

And, also on familysearch,.org Monday 6th Feb 2012

Joyce Arbuckle
bowling_camping@yahoo.com

dead
dead

1821
1821 
Wentworth, Lorenzo Dow (I312684220991)
 
3448 information from 1850 Census Caledonia ,Boone Illinois,United States film 0007671
I sent in the 1860 census film # 0803157. Now this is the 1850 one stating William Huard 3o M England , Marion 30 England Robert 12 M Canada, Euphena 9 F,Canada, William 4 M Ill, Elena 2 F IllF,Francis Hewrd 22 M England

dead
dead

(DEAD)
(DEAD)

laboror !sources--Ellen Alley researcher
laboror !sources--Ellen Alley researcher by corr from North Dalton and Kirby Parish 14424 f Yorks, 3 pt 9; film on Kirby Grindalythe Parish, Yorks, Engl; Husb and Wife death certs in poss of Heward fam  
Heward, William Sr (I312684224054)
 
3449 Information from W. F. Lonsinger, uncle
Information from W. F. Lonsinger, uncle to Ann gold

!Family History Library archival record
!Family History Library archival record !Riederich parish records, by correspondence (Rudolph A. Noss) 
Lonsinger, Maria Katharina (I312684217898)
 
3450 Information from W. F. Lonsinger, uncle
Information from W. F. Lonsinger, uncle to Ann gold

!Riederich parish records, by correspond
!Riederich parish records, by correspondence (Rudolph A. Noss) 
Lonsinger, Anna (I312684218360)
 

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