Notes
Matches 3,851 to 3,900 of 4,286
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3851 | Parents !Parents: Nathan Paine and Patty Hovey. | Paine, Lois (I312684223797)
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3852 | Parents Samuel Houghton & Mary Parents Samuel Houghton & Mary | Houghton, George (I312684221833)
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3853 | Parents are a total guess Last name brown, ages seem right, right town. | Brown, Diantha (I312684220216)
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3854 | Parents Unknown Please see his wikitree profile at Parks-1052. Richard, born about 1626, was not the son of Richard Parke, the immigrant, and Margery Crane. There is no source which connects him with the couple, and yDNA evidence has shown their lines to be genetically distinct. | Parke, Richard (I312684224961)
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3855 | Parents: Julius Selander or Jons Mortin Parents: Julius Selander or Jons Mortinsson & Clara Anderson Walquist Father could also have been "Jons Mortin Father could also have been "Jons Mortinsson." Birth and death dates from headstone in Birth and death dates from headstone in St. George, Utah. The headstoneofWilliam Henry Thomp son lists her as one of four wives. She is buriednextto him. | Selander, Hannah Matilda (I312684222216)
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3856 | Parents: Lars Magnussen Larsen & Hannah Parents: Lars Magnussen Larsen & Hannah Monsen or Johanna Mogensen Joseph Lewis Thompson Family (Correction Joseph Lewis Thompson Family (Corrections) 8 Apr 1982 Name Christina LARSEN (POULINE KIRSTINE)/ No more children Kirstine's husband died young. There were no more children. I am her great granddaughter. | Larsdatter, Pouline Kirstine (I312684222285)
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3857 | Parents: Daniel Hendrick & Mary Stockbri Parents: Daniel Hendrick & Mary Stockbridge. (21) dead (21) dead On 4 Jun 1682 Samuel married Sarah Hendrick, daughter of Daniel Hendrick (ca 1610-) & Mary [Stockbridge] (-aft 1695). Born on 8 Aug 1661 at Haverhill, MA.180 dead dead !NAME:Book, Genealogy & History of the I !NAME:Book, Genealogy & History of the Ingalls Family in Am erica, The Genealogy & History of the Ingalls Family in Ame rica, giving the descendants of Edmund Ingalls who settle d at Lynn, Charles Burleigh, Baltimore MD: Gateway Press, 1 984 !BIRTH:Book, Hendrick Genealogy, The Hendrick Genealogy: Da niel Hendrick of Haverhill MA & his descendants, Charles P. Hendrick, Rutland VT: Tuttle Co., 1923 !BIRTH:Book, Pioneers of Massachusetts, Pioneers of Massach usetts, A Descriptive List, Drawn from Records of the Colon ies, Towns, and Churches, and other Contemporaneous Documen ts, Charles Henry Pope, (Bowlie MD, Heritage Books, Inc., 1 991), facsimile reprint, 226 Another source says b in Andover. Another source says b in Andover. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. Sources: Birth: Death: Marriage: (4) p2 Sources: Birth: Death: Marriage: (4) p25 & (187) p193 Birth: Vital Records, Haverhill, Essex, Birth: Vital Records, Haverhill, Essex, Mass.,(BYU PS #86). | Hendrick, Sarah (I312684224820)
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3858 | PARKE FAMILIES OF MASSACHUSETTS, P.34, 3 PARKE FAMILIES OF MASSACHUSETTS, P.34, 36; | Parks, John (I312684224941)
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3859 | PARKE FAMILIES OF MASSACHUSETTS, P.36; PARKE FAMILIES OF MASSACHUSETTS, P.36; | Parke, Mary (I312684224965)
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3860 | PARKE FAMILIES OF MASSACHUSETTS, P.36; PARKE FAMILIES OF MASSACHUSETTS, P.36; | Parkes, Deliverance (I312684224975)
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3861 | Part II Samuel Boreman of Wethersfield a Part II Samuel Boreman of Wethersfield and his dexcendants, Third Generation, p.229-30 1 _TAG 1 _TAG ch. kn. ch. kn. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.From AncestralFile (TM), data as o f 2 J a nuary 1996. !BIRTH: "Vital Records of Oxford, Massa !BIRTH: "Vital Records of Oxford, Massachusetts to the end of the year 1849"; FHL film 369745 (Mary, daughter of Jonathan Tillitson and his wife Rebecka) | Tillotson, Mary Jane (I312684224869)
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3862 | Pasco III- Father is Pasco Jr, Grandfather is Pasco Sr - Pasco III some sources say he had 2 wives- kdm Pasco Whitford Also Known As:"Pasque Whitford" Birthdate:1700 (88) Birthplace:North Kingstown, Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Death:1788 (88) North Kingstown, Washington County, Rhode Island, United States Immediate Family: Son of Pasco Whitford, Jr. and Mary Whitford Husband of Hannah Whitford; Hannah Whitford and Elizabeth Whitford Father of Nicholas Whitford; Job Whitford; Thomas Whitford; Daughter Whitford; Soloman Whitford and 5 others Brother of John Whitford and Daniel Whitford Half brother of John Whitford; Alice Whitford; Joseph Whitford; Ezekiel Whitford; Nicholas Whitford and 2 others | Whitford, Pasco Jr (I312684222504)
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3863 | Pearson page 42 Pearson page 42 | De Wandelaar, Alida (I312684220147)
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3864 | Pedigree Resource File Disk: 66 PIN: 75 Pedigree Resource File Disk: 66 PIN: 758838 Vernon Hugh EATON, 2159668-0303103153511 , 3 Mar 2003, 125 W. Mesquite St. Gilbert , Ariz., U.S.A., 480-892-3799. ________________________________________________________________________________ Children 1. Johannes SNELL b: Abt 1716 Children 1. Johannes SNELL b: Abt 1716 in Schoharie,New York,New England 2. Frederick [SCHNELL] SNELL b: Abt 1718 in Schoharie,New York,New England 3. Maria Catharina SNELL b: Abt 1720 4. Nicholas Jost SNELL b: Abt 1722 in Schoharie,New York,New England 5. Elizabeth SNELL b: Abt 1724 in Schoharie,New York,New England 6. Suffrenus SNELL b: Abt 1726 7. Joost "Joseph" SNELL b: Abt 1728 in Schoharie,New York,New England 8. Peter SNELL b: 24 Jun 1730 in Schoharie,New York,New England 9. George SNELL b: Abt 1732 in Schoharie,New York,New England 10. Jacob SNELL 11. Anna Maria SNELL b: Abt 1735/1736 in Schoharie,New York,New England 12. Adam SNELL b: May 1737 in Schoharie,New York,New England 3 cards- see Maria Catherine Kraft; Graf 3 cards- see Maria Catherine Kraft; Graft; Gresterin 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. U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 How does Landgrast =Kraft? Are you sure this is the right record for this couple? Many German families had all son's first names as Johan/Johannes, then the second name was what they were called. (Also with females, IE having 'Elizabetha' as 1st name & a different 2nd name). Also for this record, birth years are off | Kraft, Maria Catherina (I312684220472)
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3865 | per EAGER by Grace Olive Chapman 1942 per EAGER by Grace Olive Chapman 1942 Family Group Record - Ms Violet MacPhee Family Group Record - Ms Violet MacPhee 2615 Dekalb Pike Apt 416 Norristown, PA 19401-1831 | Manning, Isaac (I312684223784)
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3866 | Per Mr. Irgang's research. Per Mr. Irgang's research. Person note Her last name is listed as 'Ernst' in book: Johann Conrad Dieffenbach of Tulpehocken by Ray J Dieffenbach and George L. Irgang. She went by Elizabeth. Newhouse Family Genealogy says she was born 8 July, 1705. Baptized 8 July 1705 at the Reformed Church in Wiesloch, Baden, Germany. She left Wiesloch for America weith her family on 15 May 1709. She was one of the three children with the family in the 4th party on Capt. John Sewell's ship in Rotterdam in 1709, and she was the 4 year old daughter with her family among the 4th arrivals in London that same year. She was the one person under 10 in the household of her father in New York on 1 July 1710; and the one person under 10 on 4 October 1710 and on 25 March 1712, still in New York. Finally, she was one of the family recorded by Ulrich Simmendinger at the Palatine village of New-Ansberg up the Hudson River in 1716/17. She and her family lived along the Schoharie River in New York; and in 1724, they moved from th Schoharie, by way of the Susquehanna River and the Swatara, to their final destination, Tulpehocken Creek, in what then was Chester County, Pennsylvania. "Johann Michael Ernst Hoerner and His Harness Children; What the Documents Say" by John L. Tevebaugh (look in sources) explains the differences in the last names. Elisabetha's last name is Ernst. Her children's last names are Harness - due to record keeping and spelling (or, I should say, bad record keeping and spelling). Michael and Elizabeth always went by "Ernst", but their children went by "Harness". Had 13 children-Ancestry.com Lost 3 or 4 to Indian attacks during her middle years (Source: Johann Michael Ernst Hoerner and His Harness Children; What the Docuements Say) After Michael's death, she was listed as "Widow Harness'. aka Deffenbach aka Deffenbach Please send new information to kearney@ Please send new information to kearney@tampabay.rr.com KEARNEY SHEIRICH Person note Her last name is listed as 'Ernst' in book: Johann Conrad Dieffenbach of Tulpehocken by Ray J Dieffenbach and George L. Irgang. "Johann Michael Ernst Hoerner and His Harness Children; What the Documents Say" by John L. Tevebaugh (look in sources) explains the differences in the last names. Elisabetha's last name is Ernst. Her children's last names are Harness - due to record keeping and spelling (or, I should say, bad record keeping and spelling). Had 13 children-Ancestry.com Newhouse Family Genealogy says she was born 8 July, 1705. BORN IN INDIA ?. NEEDS TO BE CHECKED OU BORN IN INDIA ?. NEEDS TO BE CHECKED OUT. | Dieffenbach, Maria Elisabetha (I312684220573)
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3867 | Person note One of the old families, the Stevens lived on Clapboard Hills on Old Stamford Road. | Stephens, Henry (I312684224506)
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3868 | Person note Familysearch Family Trees, 2013; Parents: Johannes Krembs (1680-1724) & Anna Christina Appolonia ___; !Krembis or Krembs !Krembis or Krembs !Marriage: listed as parent/spouse on ba !Marriage: listed as parent/spouse on babtismal records on Film # 0533497 ST.Johnsville Church 1739-1912. | Krembs, Maria Margaretha (I312684220212)
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3869 | Person note married: David Russell; Archive record; !SOURCE: History of Cambridge; by B !SOURCE: History of Cambridge; by B Lucius R Paige; Supp & Index;C2e; BIRTH: Cambridge Farms, later known as Lexington is 5 mifrom watertown Heston-Genealogy-Rich-Mahan 3rd cousin seven times removed !SOURCE: History of Cambridge; by B !SOURCE: History of Cambridge; by B Lucius R Paige; Supp & Index;C2e; BIRTH: Cambridge Farms, later known as Lexington is 5 mifrom watertown married: David Russell; Archive record; | Winter, Abigail (I312684220217)
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3870 | Person note see father's notes; Mar. Sarah Wilson, 4 Aug 1736, Newton, MA; Compiled by Thom Danicki (danickit@home. Compiled by Thom Danicki (danickit@home.com) from a variety of sources. Given*** Surname indicates people of renown. | Healy, Benjamin (I312684222352)
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3871 | Person note see spouse notes; Family search, IGI 2002; Parents: Nathaniel Wilson & Martha Newhall; | Wilson, Sarah (I312684222112)
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3872 | Person note !Merged PC80-C6 Citation: "Massachusetts Births and Christenings, 1639-1915," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/FZDP-47L : 4 December 2014), Sarah Converse, 11 Jul 1647; citing WOBURN,MIDDLESEX,MASSACHUSETTS, ; FHL microfilm 0873672 IT 2-3. ! 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 | Convers, Mrs Sarah (I312684223155)
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3873 | Person note 1. Burdick Genealogy - He enlisted in 1761 in Capt. Russell's Company, of Col. John Whiting's Regiment of Rhode Island troops which, under Gen. Monckton's American Provincials, cooperated with the British Regulars in Lord Albemarle's expedition to Cuba. Oliver Burdick died of wounds received 13 Apr 1762, in the attack which resulted in tthe capture of Havana. His will was executed 12 Apr 1762, the day before he was wounded, was probated in Westerly on 27 Dec 1762. It mentions his wife Susanna, son Stanton, daughter Mary, and his brother Peter, whom he appoints executor and to whose care he commends his family. He leaves to his wife all tthe estate she received from her father, Capt. Edwrd Wilcox, so long as she remains a widow. The inventory was presented 13 Dec 1762. The two children were taken by their grandfather, Peter Burdick, Sr., then living in Stonington, Connecticut, who as their guardian gave a receipt 30 May 1771, to his son Peter for the portion of the estate inherited by them. The receipt was witnessed by Content and Elisha Burdick. The next day Jesse and Susannah Clarke gave a receipt to Peter Burdick, Jr., executor of the estate of Oliver Burdick. Evidently Susannah Burdick had married Jesse Clarke. Will note 1. RIVR, NS Vol. 4 - His will dated 12 Apr 1762 was proved at Westerly on 27 Dec 1762. Do not combine Oliver Burdicks There are several Oliver Burdicks in this the Burdick family. Two of them were born about the same time in Rhode Island. 1. Oliver Burdick LHCT-XYF BIRTH 27 MARCH 1735 • Westerly, Kings, Rhode Island DEATH 18 OCTOBER 1803 • Westerly, Washington, Rhode Island; married Lydia Elderton 19 October 1758; parents- Jonathan Burdick and Judith Clarke 2. Oliver Burdick GSQM-SHN BIRTH 8 JUNE 1737 • Westerly, Washington, Rhode Island DEATH 22 AUGUST 1762• Habana, Ciego de Avila, Cuba; married Susanne Wilcox 1759; parents Peter Burdick and Desire Renolds These Olivers were merged in June 2019 and it was a mess to sort it out and add all of the original sources. Of course the legacy sources were lost. | Burdick, Oliver (I312684221135)
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3874 | Person note 1. Burdick Genealogy - He was of Charlestown, Rhode Island. Title Captain 1798 1798 AFN # 9N0R-WH; P42K-1P; PXR0-3J AFN # 9N0R-WH; P42K-1P; PXR0-3J From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. BIRTH: 1. James N. Arnold, Vital Record BIRTH: 1. James N. Arnold, Vital Record of RI 1636-1850, Vol. 5 Westerly Part IV (Providence, RI: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co.); p. 144: Joseph WILCOX, of Edward and Dinah, born 27 Aug 1730. MARRIAGE: 1. James N. Arnold, Vital Record of RI 1636-1850, Vol. 5 Charlestown Part V (Providence, RI: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co., 1894): Joseph WILCOX and Mary BURDICK, both of Charlestown, married by William Hern, Justice, 28 Jul 1748. (1798) (1798) !MARRIED MARY BURDICK 28 JULY 1748. (S !MARRIED MARY BURDICK 28 JULY 1748. (SEE BURDICK GEN.) 1708 1708 (1730) (1730) 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. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | ~Blank from interrupted sync. Next FTM sync will remove it. (I312684221086)
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3875 | Person note 1. Burdick Genealogy - She was of Westerly and Charlestown, Rhode Island. | Burdick, Mary (I312684221146)
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3876 | Person note 1. Tillinghasts in America - Her father, referring to her as his daughter "Mary Whitford," left her a one hundred and seventy-five acre farm and $100 in hid will drawn in 1800. Rose C. Tillinghast reported that they had: Sarah, Pardon, Hannah, Mary, and Anne. The Children mentioned in Amos's will dated 17 Apr 1823, some of whom may have been from his first marriage were sons John, Pardon, Amos, and Samuel, and daughters Mary Wells wife of John Wells deceased, and Hannah Whitford single. Identified as offspring of Amos and Mary on gravestones in the family burial plot are: Hannah Whitford (1781-1857), Pardon Whitford (1781-1840), and Anna Whitford (1787-1815). The order of distribution in the estate of her brother Pardon identified the heirs of Mary as of 25 Mar 1832 as: Pardon Whitford, Hannah Whitford, Amos Whitford, Jr., and Samuel Whitford. | Tillinghast, Mary (I312684222518)
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3877 | Person note 1. Warwick Rhode Island Historical Cemeteries - He was a veteran of the Colonial War. | Waterman, John Sr. (I312684223077)
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3878 | Person note PAFA says "Deborah Smith b. 7 Mar 1676, p. John Smith & Jael Packard, m. Joseph Benson 17 Apr 1699". IGI says "Deborah Smith m. Joseph Benson 17 Apr 1699 Sandwich, Barnstable Co MA or Taunton, Bristol Co MA". !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 | Smith, Deborah (I312684222867)
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3879 | Person note QUACKENBUSH The name QUACKENBUSH has had various spellings, such as; Quackenbosch, Quackenbos, Quakkenbosch, sometimes, Kwakkenbosh, until it eventually settled into QUACKENBUSH. The name is supposed to have been derived from Quail or quack and bos, or bush a forest. Sometimes the meaning is given insuch a way as to suggest a quaken-aspen forest and "van" meaning "from" would literally mean Peter, from the Quaking or quail forest. Among the Dutch "se" added to a child's name means "child of". An eg. Pieterse means son of Pieter. Neeltje Pieterse Quackenbush would be daughte of Pieter Quackenbush. There is a great deal of conflict and confusion in tbe early Dutch Records of New York—very few dates and what dates there are do not always agree. -19 We have hired Miss Allie Van Heusen, a Dutch genealogist from Amsterdam, N. Y. to help us get the records correct. She has the same Van Heusen line we have. She says several years ago, she went to the original Dutch records and copied the first Quackenbush families. She says the reason for so much trouble is because the records have been copied and compiled by New Englanders, who did not understand the Dutch way of keeping records, and have neglected many things that are so important in understanding them. They have neglected to add the letters "se" to a name where it should be and have omitted the initials j.m. after a man's, name-, meaning a young man and j. d. after the girl's name in the marriage records meaning that neither had been married before. Pieter Quackenbush, the immigrant as near as is known was from Oestgeest in the vicinity of Leyden, Holland, and studied at Leyden, and it is thought that he was the son of Pieter Van Quackenbush. He was a brick and tile maker. All records agree that he and his wife Maritie and infant son, Reynier, came to Albany when he was 21 years of age, but an error has been made in the year he came, most records giving it as 1660. In 1686-7 a contract was made and Pieter Quackenbush sold and exchanged his house and brick yard in the colony of Rensselaerwyck, with Jacob Van Vorst for his house situated in Albany. Quackenbush agrees to deliver everything "that is fastened thereto by earth and nail, nothing in the world, excepted but the burnt brick which at present are in the kiln shall belong to Quackenbush." Apparently this pantile and brick yard is the same as that belonging to Johade Hulter, which was occupied by Peter Bont as early as .1657 and which was sold to him 21 July 1668 by Adrian Van Ilpendam. Pantile was connected with tile making. This contract is signed Peter Bont otherwise called Quackenbush. The signing of this contract furnishes positive proof that Peter Bont and Peter Quackenbush were the same person. It also proves that the statement that Peter Quackenbush came in 1660 is not correct as Peter Bont was at Beverwyck as early as 165U, where we find his name as Beit in the Court Minutes of Ft. Orange and Beverwych and find the name of Mari tie the wife of Peter Bont or Peter Quackenbush. The name seems to be used interchangeably. N. Y. A2c Vol. 1. It is not unlikely that Peter came over with Johan de Hutler, a partner in the colony of Rensselaerwyck, who sailed in 1653 with his family in the ship "Graft", taking with him "a goodly number of free persons among them some artisans especially a very good brick maker and many others mentioned in detail in the list to settle either in the said colony or elsewhere and assist in the cultivation of the soil there." Although Early Records of Albany Vol. 1 is not in the Library Miss Van Heusen quotes the above and it is also given in the "Documents Relating to Colonial History of New York, N. Y. Ill* Vol. ll* pg 202. What little information Simms gives in his History of Schorarie Co. is entirely wrong. In the Dutch Settlers of Albany Yearbook Mrs. George Myers Miller who claims her right to belong to the Society, thru Peter Quackenbush gives the date of his arrival in New York as 165U. • Quoting from Miss Van Heusen's letter: "A great deal of later information garnered from old ^aoers etc., that the Dutch Settlers Society of Albany has been going through, has come to light of late years." The Peter Quackenbush who married Neeltje Marinus has generally been fiven as the son of Peter, the immigrant, but Miss Van Huesen gives him as Peter Johannese Quackenbush, which means that he was the son of Johannes Peterse Quackenbush who was the son of Peter the immigrant. Aastin A. Yates in his history of Schenectady Co. (N. Y. Sh) gives him as Peter Johannese Quackenbush and (rives his marriage to Neeltje Marinus as 1 November 1701. Yates says this Peter moved into Montgomery Co. and is the ancestor of numerous Quackenbush families west of Schenectady. "The History and Early Settlers of Schenectady" by Sanders N. Y. S5 pg. 137, gives this Pieter as the son of Johannes Pieterse Quackenbush who was son of the immigrant. Sanders and Yates are the only compilers who give his father as Johannes Pieterse. The History of the early New York Dutch Settlers gives the marriage of Johannes Pieterse Quackenbush first to Magtel Post and second to Anna Clute. Miss Van Huesen shows that this second marriage is not correct, for the Johannes who married Anna Clute at the time of his marriage is marked j.m. and Johannes Pieterse Quackenbush and Magtel Post were the sponsors at the christening of his first child. It is errors like the above which have made it so hard to arrange the family groups correctly. Most compilers give the marriage date of Johannes and Magtel Post at 1683 which I am inclined to think is an approximated date. .According to Miss Van Heusen the sixth child was christened 1684—no dates before that. But with the coming of Peter (Bont) Quackenbush seven years earlier than we thought there is a chance to approximate more correctly the births of the first five children. Peter Quackenbush brought a younger sister with him, Maritje who married about 1662, Marten Cornelissen Van Buren,, they were ancestors of President Van Buren. Genealogies of the First Settlers of the Genealogies of the First Settlers of the Ancient County of Albany, 974.742, D2p Myths & Misunderstandings of Pieter Quackenbush Latest research indicates that Pieter may have had a different surname of Bont before emigrating. See 'Myths and Misunderstandings of the Quackenbush Family' at <https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Quackenbush_Myths> for more information. In addition, the portrait posted here has been identified as his descendant Peter Quackenbush, b. 1807, not the original emigrant. Canastogione is present day "Niskayuna, Canastogione is present day "Niskayuna, Albany Co., NY" HISTORY: "The Quackenbush Family in Ame HISTORY: "The Quackenbush Family in America" by Rick Quackenbush, p. 9. HISTORY: "The Quackenbush Family in Holland & America", p. 29. CHURCH RECORDS: Johannes and his wife, Machteld Post, were listed as members of the Reformed Dutch Church of Albany in 1683. Not long thereafter, Johannes, along with his brother, Reynier, settled at Canastagione on the north bank of the Mohawk River. This settlement was made by seven men and their families: Johannes & Reynier Quackenbosch; Jean Forte, a Frenchman; Jean Rosie, another Frenchman often employed as an interpreter on the missions to Canada; Dirck Arentse Bratt; and the brothers Gerrit Ryckse & Maas Ryuckse Van Vranken. Carved out of the wilderness, the seven farms were located in a row along the river, each having about the same frontage. The nearest neighbors were across the river, some three miles distant, and at Half Moon on the same side, about five miles to the east. HISTORY: "Early Records of Albany", 2:363. HISTORY: "Colonial New York-Philip Schuyler and his Family (1885)", Vol. II, p. 370. HISTORY: "List of Inhabitants of Colonial New York" (1979), pp.20-21. He and his brother Reynier owned farms o He and his brother Reynier owned farms on the north side of the Mohawk River. | Quackenbosch, Johannes Pieterse (I312684219822)
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3880 | Person note sources Early Families of Herkimer County, NY, by William H. Barker, p 45, (FHL 974.761/D2b); Married: abt 1743, Christian Emige (b. abt 1718, d. 22 Aug 1796); dau. of John Emige; 9 Children: Barbara, abt 1744; Maria Elisabeth, b. abt 1750; Margaret, chr. 29 Dec 1751; JohnHenrich, b. 2 May 1753; Ann Eva, chr. 9 Jul 1756; John Peter, b. 29 June 1758; Anna, chr. 19 Mar 1763; Catharine, b. 15 Dec 1764; Christina H., b. abt 1760; Surname also: Crim; Krembs; Krems; Name also: Johan Henrik; Parents: Johnnes Krembs (Crim) b. 1688, Leeheim, Germany; & Appolonia (Anna) Lorentz, b. 12 Dec 1692, Bellheim, Pfalz, Germany, dau. of Johannes Lorentz & Anna Margaretha Heiliger; see Pedigree Resource File, disc 66, Shirley Stanford, Southaven, MS; | Krems, Johann Henrich (I312684220386)
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3881 | Person note sources IGI 2000; Genealogies of the 1st Settlers of Schenectady, NY; Father: Jeremiah/Jeremia Thickstone; | Thickstone, Debora (I312684219938)
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3882 | Person note sources IGI 2005; Surname also: Emichen; Empie; Empey; Early Families of Herkimer County, NY, by William H. Barker, p 45, (FHL 974.761/D2b); Married: abt 1743,of Christian Emige (b. abt 1718, d. 22 Aug 1796); dau. of John Emige, to Heinrich Crim/Krembs/Krems; Parents: Johannes Ernst Emige/Emichen/Empie & Anna Christina ___; Family search, IGI, Family Ordinance Record; Pedigree Resource Files; 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); | Empie, Christina (I312684220430)
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3883 | personal history John G. Wilson was the first son of Bradley Barlow and Agnes Hunter Wilson. They were baptized May 13, 1836 in Green Township, Richland County, Ohio. They resided there until August 30, 1837 when they imigrated with the Saints to Caldwell County, Missouri, arriving there the 28th day of October 1837. On February 8, 1838 they left with the Saints expelled from Missouri. They stayed in Adams County one year before continuing their journey to Commerce (later to be named Nauvoo), arriving there in the year 1839. The lived in the same town as the Prophet Joseph Smith for nearly seven years. In a life sketch written of John Gill many interesting incidents which occured at that time are related. On one occurence, "while he and his brother Henry were driving the cows to a pasture they met the prophet. They had with them a little dog. The prophet began throwing rocks at the dog to tease it. The dog became very angry and barked at the prophet. John began to call the dog back so that it would not bite the prophet (and afterwards John said that if it had been anyone but the Prophet Joseph, he would have sent the dog after him for teasing). After a while the prophet turned to the boys saying, "You have a very plucky little dog, boys, he will stand up for his rights." John Gill heard the Prophet Joseph speak a number of times. He related an incident of the prophet meeting Gilbert Belnap. " He sized him up and then challenged him to wrestle. The prophet learned to love Belnap from that day on. He practically took him into the family. Later when the mob was making plans to take the prophet, he asked Belnap to join the mob pretending to be one of them, and gain their confidence, then take their plans to the prophet. He acted his part well and was selected as a secretary to the group, but they found out what Belnap was up to, and as the mob pursued him, he placed his hands on the horse and prayed that it would get him safely to the prophet. His prayers were answered and he revealed the plans to Joseph Smith." When the Prophet Joseph Smith gave his last address to the Nauvoo Legion, John G. was one of the congregation. This was the time the prophet unsheathed his sword and said, 'I will call God and the angels to witness that I have unsheathed my sword with a firm and unalterable determination that this people shall have their legal rights and be protected from mob violence or my blood shall be spilt upon the group like water and my body consigned to the silent tomb.' A few days later his blood was shed and his body and his brother Hyrum lay in state in the mansion house. John G., who was then 15 years of age, was among the thousands who passed through the house and viewed the bodies." When the family left Nauvoo for Zion, they spent their first year at Bonaparte on the DesMoines River. While the family resided in Bonaparte, John G. worked six months on a steamboat on the Mississippi River. He was only 16 years of age then and was often abused and mistreated by the rough sailors. He later related that they were the roughest company of men he had ever been in his life, because of their swearing and taking oaths. He soon learned when to speak and when to keep silent. From his life sketch, the following incident is recorded. Some of the Wilson boys were eating dinner aboard the steamboat. On the table were some potatoes boiled with the skins on. One of the sailors while passing turned the steam on the boys, the Wilson blood boiled up and one of the boys threw a soft potato, hitting the sailor in the back. He came back swearing and threatened to kill the one who did it. But the boys would not tell which one of them had thrown the potato." In 1847 the Wilson family moved on to Garden Grove where they resided until 1851, and then on to Council Bluffs, Iowa. At winter quarters just across the river the saints were making preparation for coming to Utah. There was plenty of time near at hand and grass for the cattle. In the winter of 1851-1852 Ezra Taft Benson was sent from Salt Lake City to rally the saints and preach immigration. He traveled from settlement to settlement preaching and planning the work. The meeting house was turned into a carpenter shop where work was provided for all the men and some of the boys in making wagons and other necessary things for the journey. Father Bradley Barlow Wilson was a cooper and wheelright by trade. Hiis son, John Gill. worked with him in this wagon shop. Here he met and courted Lucy Benson, daughter of Alva Benson and Cynthia Vail. They were married June 6, 1852 by Elder Levi Bracken and on June 28, 1852 started west crossing the Missouri River on the 29th. John G. Wilson was the first of the Wilsons to come to Utah. He came with Alva Benson. They had two light wagons, two yoke of oxen and two cows. John and Lucy had but one cow and a few articles of personal clothing. There were twelve of the Benson family in those two wagons -- traveling in Uriah Curtis' Company. Everything went well until July 12 when many in the camp were stricken with cholera. Brother Bracken and Sister Matthews died before they arrived in Pacific Springs. James Benson (sister to Lucy) and others came to meet the imigrants with provisions for the company, which were gladly received. They arrived in Salt Lake Valley September 29, 1852, all in good spirits. They then traveled south to Springville, Utah County, Utah where they were received by other relatives and friends, Clark Judy and wife, James Benson and Ira Allen. John G. Wilson built a little cabin in Springville. The door was to the north, a window to the south and a chimney and fireplace in the east. He and his wife moved into it in December 1852. The furniture was very crude, consisting of stools made of blocks of woods, a bedstead built of poles driven into the ground and fastened to the wall. And an old chest or box which served for a table. Later, other and better furniture was added. On March 28, 1853 their first son, John Barlow as born. During the spring of 1853 a large garden was planted. Everything was going well until July when an Indian war broke out. An Indian was whipping his squaw, and a white man came to her rescue striking and killing the Indian with a shovel. This resulted in a war betrween the Indians and the pioneers. John G. and others stood guard at night and worked during the day. At one time he was called to Spanish Fork to stand guard. When harvest time came the houses were pulled into a fort. The men carrried their rifles with them out to the fields to protect themselves from the Indians. John G. used to tell a story of a white man who was working in his field in Springville at the time. Suddenly an Indian jumped up in front of him. After a short talk between them, the white man explained to the Indian that men couldn't go to the canyon to get wood and the Indian pointed out an oxen with a long crooked horn and told the white man that if he would drive the oxen and wear a straw hat he could go to the canyon to get wood and the Indians did not harm him." (Life Sketch of John G. Wilson", written & received from Jim Wilson 7/9/93) | Wilson, John Gill (I312684222074)
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3884 | Phebe or Phoebe Cornish in my records is Phebe or Phoebe Cornish in my records is a female who married Shubal Griswold. If I am mistaken please let me know. Birth -Archive Record (not in Windsor 00 Birth -Archive Record (not in Windsor 0002983 or Simsbury 0002979) Marr -Windsor Vital Records 0002983 Death -Archive Record (not in Simsbury 002979 or Windsor 0002983) bapt - IGI-28 Jan 1933, 9 Sep 1982 JRIVE end - IGI- 29 Sep 1982 JRIVE sld/p -IGI-27 Sep 1954, 22 Jul 1963 SLAKE, 5 Nov 1982 JRIVE sld/s -IGI-6 Mar 1941, 9 May 1956 SLAKE, 1 Jul 1971 LOGAN, 17 Feb 1982 JRIVE | Cornish, Phebe (I312684223537)
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3885 | Photo by Elsie Scharpf Saar | Parke, Smith Sr (I312684221272)
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3886 | Pieter Terwilligen Notes General Notes: Bapt. record in the Old Dutch Church: parents Jan Evertse and Sydje van Etten, witnesses Pieter van Etten and Eva de Hoges. Same church, marriage record, lists him as Petrus Terwilligen, j.m., born in Savengonk*, the bridegroom residing in Savengonk*. Noted events in his life were: • He was baptized on 3 Sep 1704 in Recorded At (Old) Reformed Dutch Church, Kingston, Ulster County, New York. (Source: Terwilliger Genealogy Disk, 2007) | Terwilliger, Petrus Matheuse (I312684220000)
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3887 | Pittiwood/Pettibone No record of any man named Jacob Pittiwood has been found. No record of Rosetta marrying anyone other than Jacob Pettibone Jr. has been documented. Due to the closeness of name and birth information, and lack of any records or documentation, I believe this man is Jacob Pettibone Jr. He had 4 children. He had 4 children. | Pettibone, Captain Jacob Jr (I312684223460)
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3888 | Place of birth also seen as Washington, Place of birth also seen as Washington, Litchfield, Connecticut Last name possibly spelled Lemmons possibly sealed to parents 6 Jun 1944 Also seen baptism as 10 Dec 1934 & endowed 6 Feb 1935 Death date also seen as 8 Apr 1835 and in Woodbridge, Connecticut [JENSEN.FTW] [kkged.FTW] CRA [JENSEN.FTW] [kkged.FTW] CRA From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. DATA FROM RECORDS OF VIOLA FOLGELBERG AL DATA FROM RECORDS OF VIOLA FOLGELBERG ALLEN Findagrave link..... https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/32264617/mary-nola-allen See Temple Archives File For Correction See Temple Archives File For Correction | Lemmon, Mary (I312684225193)
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3889 | Place of Death - Stroudsburg, PA. 1. An Place of Death - Stroudsburg, PA. 1. Ancestral File. !BIRTH MAY BE 7 JUN 1736 !BIRTH MAY BE 7 JUN 1736 [QUILICI.FBK.FTW] [v10t1751.FTW] Died w [QUILICI.FBK.FTW] [v10t1751.FTW] Died while fleeing from the massacre at Wyoming Valley. Possible 11th child noted, Ebenezer who died in childhood. No dates or definitive records. Abraham Clark, 2nd cousin of Deborah, wa Abraham Clark, 2nd cousin of Deborah, was one of the signers of theDEclaration of Independence, representative of New Jersey. Clement Clark mOORE, another 2nd cousin of Deborah, wrote the famousstory, "The Night Before Christmas". Died during the flight from the Forty Fort Battle and Massacre in theWyoming Valley, Pennsylvania. Source: S.J. Cary | Clark, Deborah (I312684224125)
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3890 | Please correct the name of Joshua's first wife. The info RideoutMackHallman1 has provided is correct! Her name was Mary, please remove Anne's picture and correct her name. She was not Mary Emma Johnson! First wife of Joshua Terry. Indian name First wife of Joshua Terry. Indian name Mamoose Known as Mary. Died not having children. First wife of Joshua Terry. Indian name First wife of Joshua Terry. Indian name Mamoose. Died from eating poison root. No children by this marriage. | Mary or Mamoots (I312684224334)
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3891 | Please do not combine this individual wi Please do not combine this individual with Elizabeth (Betty) Swift. They were sisters-in-law. This Elizabeth was married to John Heward. Elizabeth (Betty) Swift was married to his brother William Heward. Illegitimate child of Mary Taylor Please don't merge without being VERY SURE... Please don't merge without being VERY SURE... - I've just spent a long time unpicking many many merges of John and Elizabeth and Mary Hewards and Howards and Hewitts and I am very confident this family never lived in London or Coventry or Norfolk or even in another part of Yorkshire. - Elizabeth is very unusual in moving so far from where she was born and she only moved 30 miles. - John and Elizabeth and Mary nd Hewards and Howards and Hewitts are very common names, and everyone used a limited range of first names, so you can expect to find multiple people with these names even in the same area. Gap between marriage and first child Unusual but she was young when married (c. 17 - she married with consent of parents). No missing children as some baptisms have child order. | Taylor, Elizabeth Allison (I312684224103)
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3892 | Please do not merge this Ann Collins with anyone not this Ann Collins Brice Collins thought his daughter Ann to be living when he made his will 12 December 1817. Please do not merge her with anyone who died before that date without sound evidence her father was mistaken. Please do not merge this Ann Collins with anyone not this Ann Collins Ann Collins was an infant when included in the will of her grandfather John Collins. She is the eldest of four daughters of Brice Collins and his wife Martha. Her sisters are Catharine, Sarah, and Mary. She has three elder brothers, John, William, and Daniel. Please do not merge her with anyone ten years or more older. | Collins, Ann (I312684222747)
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3893 | Please don't merge without being VERY SURE... Please don't merge without being VERY SURE... - I've just spent a long time unpicking many many merges of John and Elizabeth and Mary Hewards and Howards and Hewitts and I am very confident this family never lived in London or Coventry or Norfolk or even in another part of Yorkshire. - Elizabeth is very unusual in moving so far from where she was born and she only moved 30 miles. - John and Elizabeth and Mary and Hewards and Howards and Hewitts are very common names, and everyone used a limited range of first names, so you can expect to find multiple people with these names even in the same area. | Heward, John (I312684224005)
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3894 | PLEASE READ before making changes There are two Jeremiah Vails: 1) Born 1670 who married a Mary, last name unknown of Southold. Children: Jeremiah, Henry, Gamaliel, Peter Source: Genealogy of Some of the Vail Family FS Film #0924829 p.35 2) Born 1675 who married Mary Lillington Swan of North Carolina. Children: Moseley, Mary, Jeremiah, Edward, Martha, John, Sarah (FS Id# 9N4N-GZT) Source: Order of First Families of North Carolina, Ancestor Biographies, Vol I, p.216 | Vail,, Jeremiah III (I312684223588)
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3895 | Please read notes and sources before making changes to any family relationships. Sarah is the granddaughter of a Mayflower passenger. As such, her spouse and children have been extensively researched and well-documented (insofar as surviving documents allow). The definitive Silver Book on the Billington line, published by the Mayflower Society should be consulted before making changes to any of her family relationships. | Sabin, Sarah (I312684222748)
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3896 | Please see paper in documents for update on sources Thomas Lee, sources My search sourcing the sources ANCESTRAL REGISTER of HALSTED WATKINS HU ANCESTRAL REGISTER of HALSTED WATKINS HULL-Compiled by Algot G. Steinberg-Hartford CT 1934-Connecticut State Library. Barbour Vital Records - CT State Library. Savage. Non-standard gedcom data: 1 PEDI birth !FATHER:SPOUSE:CHILDREN:DEATH:Genealogic !FATHER:SPOUSE:CHILDREN:DEATH:Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers (Source: Descendants of John Porter of W (Source: Descendants of John Porter of Windsor, CT, 1635-9, by HenryPorter Andrews, Vol 1, G. W. Ball, Book and Job Printer, 1893, p. 409). TRAINBAND He was an Ensign of the trainband in 1676 Date and Location are generated Date and Location are generated ESSAYS ON THE LEE FAMILY by Wilbur Beckwith ESSAYS ON THE LEE FAMILY by Wilbur Beckwith The First Lee in America Thomas Lee II Ensign Thomas Lee II was born in 1639 and baptized September 29, 1644 in Rusper, Sussex County, England. He was the son of Thomas Lee I and his wife Phoebe Brown Lee. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lee and their three children Jane, Sarah, and Thomas II left England in 1645 for America together with Phoebe’s father William Brown. The senior Thomas Lee died of smallpox during the crossing. The widow Phoebe married two more times. First to Greenleaf Larabee and was the mother of five children: Greenfield, John, Elizabeth, Joseph, and Sarah Larabee. Sarah, the half sister of Thomas II, was the grandmother of the diarist Joshua Hempstead. Phoebe married again to a man named Cornish and had two more children, James Cornish and a stillborn. She died in childbirth at Northampton, Massachusetts in 1664. William Brown, his daughter the widow Phoebe Lee, and her children arrived in Saybrook in 1645. According to Glimpses of Saybrook in Colonial Days, by Harriet Chapman Chesebrough “Their afflicted and distressed condition commended to the sympathies of those at the fort and Thomas II was particularly cared for by Matthew Griswold, and followed him to Lyme, where years later he became a prominent citizen and received on arriving his majority a grant of land on the east side of the river”. At Saybrook 1650 division of land lists Thomas Lee (then about age 11) as a grantee. No documentation of the grant details has been found. A close relationship between the Lee and the Griswold families continued throughout the colonial period. About 1670, Thomas Lee II married Sarah Kirtland, daughter of Nathaniel Kirtland of Lynn, Massachusetts. It is probable that the first stage of the Lee house was built at this time. Thomas and Sarah were the parents of three children, John, who wrote the “Dying Charge”, Thomas III (Mr. Justice Lee), and Sarah. His wife Sarah died May 21, 1676 leaving him with three young children. He soon married a second time on July 13, 1676 to Marah Dewolfe. There were eleven more children, four of whom died in childhood. Over the years, during the distribution of Lyme’s common lands, Lee acquired large tracts of upland and salt meadow throughout town. It has been said that he owned one-eight of the town. Records show that Lee was involved in two disputes over land ownership. A dispute between Thomas Lee II and Matthew Griswold Senior (his mentor) over 20 acres of calf pasture land was settled in favor of Lee at a town meeting on November 27, 1675. A town meeting on July 2, 1684 relates a controversy between Mr. Christophers and Thomas Lee over a parcel of land at Black Point. From the records of the October 1685 session of the Connecticut Assembly it is recorded in answer to the petition of Thomas Lee the court declared that the county clerk should handle his execution against Mr. Christophers. In 1686, at New London County Court, Lee lost a jury trial and relinquished his claim. Throughout his life Lee was active in town affairs filling numerous offices. In 1685, he was a deputy from Lyme in the Assembly, recorder of town records, surveyor, collector of the minister rate, meat packer-sealer (officer appointed to examine and test weights and measures), Hayward (an officer appointed to keep cattle from breaking through from a town common into enclosed fields, keeper of towns common herd of cattle), lister (assessor), and Ensign of the train band (local militia). Lee’s will was dated June 1703. He left property “Where I now live” to his youngest son Benjamin (age 10). His vast holdings throughout Lyme were left to his three sons, William, Joseph, and Stephen. The two oldest sons, John and Thomas III had already been given their share. His wife Mary was given one-third of his moveable estate. The daughters were left money. His eldest sons John and Thomas III and his wife were named executors of his will. He died on January 5 1704/5. No gravestone has been found. He was likely buried in one of the old cemeteries in present day Old Lyme. Benjamin to whom the homestead was left must have died before he came of age as no further record of him has been found, nor has any record of Thomas Lee III of gaining possession of the homestead. On May 28, 1705 [LLR 2:236] the executors of the estate, the widow and sons John and Thomas III leased the homestead to son William (age 21 and unmarried) for a period of nine years starting March 1, 1705. At that time Benjamin would have been age 21. Benjamin must have died sometime during the lease period. It would appear that William was left head of the household of his widowed mother and younger siblings. Thomas Lee III (AKA Mr. Justice Lee) Thomas Lee III, also known as Mr. Justice Lee, was the son of Ensign Thomas Lee II and his first wife, Sarah Kirtland. He was born December 10, 1672, presumably in the Lee House. He married Elizabeth Graham on January 24, 1695. They were the parents of seven children: Mary, b. 1698; Elizabeth, b. 1701; Ester, b. 1703; Thomas IV, b. 1705; Samuel, b. 1708; Eunice, b. 1711; and Elisha, b. 1714. It is uncertain how he obtained possession of the Lee House. When his father died January 5, 1704/5 his will left the house to his youngest son, Benjamin, then eleven years old. Benjamin apparently died young, though no record of his death has been found. Shortly after Ensign Lee’s death, the farm was leased by his widow Mary and their two adult children, John and Thomas, to their brother William, age 21, for a period of nine years. No record has been found of the property being transferred to Thomas Lee III. The Lyme records of 1703 record “An indenture of Danele Smith to Thomas Lee Junar (Jr)”. The indenture was declared “ful fild” on May 4, 1713, at which date Smith had become age 21. Thomas Lee II and Joshua Hempstead, the diarist, were first cousins through their common grandmother, Phoebe Brown Lee Larabee. Joshua makes frequent mention of Thomas Lee and family, referring to him as “Cuzn Thos Lee”. The diary records visits to and lodging at the Lee House, as well as births, marriages, and deaths of family members. Lee’s will was written by Joshua. Lee was active in civic affairs throughout his life. He served as deputy from Lyme in the Assembly from 1713 to 1725, and was appointed Justice of the Peace by the Assembly from 1736 to 1746. As such, he was known as “Mr. Justice Lee”. His name appears as a witness on numerous legal documents, such as wills, deeds, and estate inventories. In January 1726/7, Thomas, his brother Stephen and nephew John Lee, were granted permission to dam Bride Brook and erect a sawmill. The dam embankment can be seen near the Bride Brook Memorial boulder, just west of the Lee House. Lee was among those who petitioned the Assembly in 1719 to establish a new ecclesiastical society in the eastern part of Lyme. A new church was established, known as the Second Society or East Society. This church is the ancestor of the present-day Niantic Community Church. A large burying ground was established near the old church and is maintained by the Community Church. Lee was very active in the affairs of the early church, serving as committeeman, moderator of meetings, and various other duties. Lee was active in the affairs of the local Niantic Indians. Upon the Memorial of the Indians to the May 1728 session of the Assembly, Captain Stephen Prentiss of New London and Mr. Thomas Lee of Lyme were appointed overseers of the Indians with full power to take care of their planting grounds and to see the same is well fenced and secured. The May 1734 Assembly appointed John Griswold and Thomas Lee to lay out the bounds of the Indian lands. The October 1734 session of the Assembly approved their layout of 300 acres. The layout comprised the general area of present-day Crescent Beach, Oak Grove Beach, Attawan Beach, and Black Point Road. From the May 1736 session: “And wheras this Assembly now informed that the said Nahantick Indians desire their children may be instructed, “Thereupon it is resolved, that the Colony Treasurer do pay out of the publick treasury unto Messrs. Thomas Lee of Lyme, and Stephen Prentiss of New London, the sum of fifteen pounds; who are appointed to receive the same, therewith they shall hire some suitable person to instruct the said children to read, and also the prinicipals of the Christian religion, and also render an account to this Assembly of their disbursement of the money aforesaid.” On August 8, 1752, Joshua Hempstead wrote “Yesterday morning died my kinsman Deacon Thomas Lee Esq of East Society in a good old age.” His gravestone in the Old Stone Church Cemetery reads: “Thomas Lee died August 9, 1752”. At this writing (2008), the redstone is shelled and no longer legible. The stone for his wife Elizabeth, standing next to his, reads: “Mrs. Elizabeth Lee wife of Deacon Thomas Lee died September 3, 1757 age 84. His last will was written January 1749/50, about three and a half years before his death. Lee’s three sons had died before him. His large holdings were left to his three grandsons, with provisions for his wife and daughter Mary. His grandson Elisha received the house. His three grandsons received the Sabbath-day house. The dictionary definition of a Sabbath-day house: “A house formerly built (as in Connecticut) near a church heated on winter Sundays as a place for worshipers living at a distance to warm themselves and eat between morning and afternoon services in an unheated church.” Lisa_Vallier originally shared this http://www.eastlymehistoricalsociety.org/index_files/Page337.htm Saybrook, 1645. Representative. !FATHER: Saybrook, 1645. Representative. !FATHER:SPOUSE:CHILDREN:DEATH:Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England: James Savage: 1860: Vol 3, Pg 73. !Death: Will dated 19 Jun 1703. !INFORM !Death: Will dated 19 Jun 1703. !INFORMATION:From "The Family of Auer Winchester Proctor, Vol II", page559. Film #1036367 The short book titled "The old Lee House The short book titled "The old Lee House, East Lyme, Connecticut" contains some good information and history of the client's ancestors. A copy of this book ws make and is contained in Documents 22-29. This book reveals tht the family originated from Kenilworth, England. The original emigrants were Thomas Lee and his wife Phoebe, and their three children, Thomas, Phoebe, and Jane. The father, Thomas died on the voyage over. His widow and children settled on land inConnecticut, which their husband and father had evidently settled on a previous trip which he had made to America. United Ancestries Experts in Genealogy Research Report Perkins (15000450.2A) August 1989 Hyde genealogy; or, The descendants,in the female as well as in the male lines, from William Hyde, of Norwich .. Page -47- [This Capt. Stephen Lee was the ft)urth son of Thomas Lee the first of Lyme by his second wife, Mary De Wolf, and was nephew of Jane Lee, who married the first Samuel Hyde (2) of Norwich. The first wife of Thomas Lee the first of Lyme was Sarah Kirtland of Saybrook, by whom he had five children : 1. John, b. in 1670, who m. Elizabeth Smith of Lyme. 2, Mary, twin of John, m. Thomas Lord the first of Lyme. 3. Thomas, b. in 1672, m. Elizaljeth Graham of Hartford. 4. Sarah, b. 1674, who m. Daniel Buckiugliam of Saybrook. And 5. Phcbe, b. 1676, m. Capt. Reinold Marvin of Lyme. By liis 34 HYDE GENEALOGY. Page -64- [This Thomas Lee, who was born in England, was one of the first settlers in Lyme, and had large possessions there. His first wife was Sarah Kirtland of Saybrook, by whom he had five children : John, b. 21 Sept., 1670, who m. 8 Feb., 1693, Elizabeth Smith of Lyme ; Thomas, b. 1672, who m. Elizabeth Graham of Hartford; Mcny, twin of John, m. Thomas Lord of Lyme; Sarah, who m. Daniel Buckingham of Saybrook; and Phebe, b. in 1677, who was the first wife of Lyme's captain. Deacon Reinold Marvin. His second wife was Mary De Wolf of Lyme, by whom he had nine children: Elizabeth, b. in 1681, who m. Samuel Peck of Lyme; William, b. in 1684, who m. Mary Griffin of Long Island; Stephen, b. in 1686, who d. in 1694; Joseph, b. in 1688, who died at the age of 16 years; Benjamin, b. in 1690, and d. in 1692; Benjamin 2d, b. in 1692; Hannah, b. in 1695, who m. John Griswold (73); Stephen 2d, b. in 1698, who m. Abigail Lord (71); and Lydia, b. in 1701, who died unm. at Lyme. And this Thomas Lee, who, in the record, is called "Ensign Thomas Lee," d. 5 Dec, 1704, at Lyme.] Page -66- After the death of his first wife, the Rev. George Griswold (74) m. 20 July, 1736, his second cousin, Elizabeth Lee, b. 8 April, 1701, the second daughter of Thomas Lee the second, and Elizabeth Graham, of Lyme, and granddaughter of Thomas Lee the first of Lyme and his first wife, Sarah Kirtland. {See No. 71.) He d. 14 Oct., | Lee, Thomas (I312684223654)
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3897 | Plymouth Colony - My 1st cousin thirteen times removed Plymouth Colony - My 1st cousin thirteen times removed ch. known ch. known !History of Roxford 1645-1880 by Perley. !History of Roxford 1645-1880 by Perley. Mass B 22a; Essex Antiquarian vol 3 p.114. !New England Marriages prior to 1700 Clarance Allen Torrey, pub 1985 by Gen Pub Co, Baltimore Archive record. American Pub. C.V. 67, Archive record. American Pub. C.V. 67, p. 511. Boston Transcript Vol. 33 p.2. Probate record Mass. E18 Vol.2. IGI, May 2001. Marriage record says that he was married in colonies not England 1. Ancestral File. 1. Ancestral File. !SOURCE: IGI and AF !SOURCE: IGI and AF Am. Pub. C.V.67 Pg 511 Boston Transcript Am. Pub. C.V.67 Pg 511 Boston Transcript Vol 33 Pg. 2 Mass. B.22 b. A 4B 26 Probate Rec. Mass. E18 Vol 2 Mass. Sl A Vol. 3 Mass. 740 Vol 1 Essex Autiquarian The Andrews Family Family Rep. Rebecca Stout 3348 So. West Temple Salt Lake City, Utah Person note Said to have been born in Boxford, England but I find this very weak. Robert Andrews chr. in Boxford, Berks 1609 seems to be a fabrication. The date doesn't exist in the records. It may exist in England but not on film at the FHL. No Andrews were found in the early to mid 1600s. I only found one Andrews will (Bryant Lake alias Andrews) at the correct time to help but it didn't relate to Robert Andrews. ESTATE OF ROBERT ANDREWS OF ROWLEY VILLAGE, (Boxford). "In the name of god amen Know all Christian people this may or shall concearne yt I Robart Andrews of Rowley village in the County of Esex being verey sick & weack of body but blesed he god in prfect cence & memorey doe mack this my last will & testiment reuocking all other former wills wtsoeuer Impr I bequeath my soule to Allmighty god yt gaue it me in whome I trust through the merits of Jesus Christ to be receaiued into Eternall happiness foreuer and my body to ye earth from whence it came to be deciently burned in ye burring place of Topsfeeld according as my wife and Children shall see meet It I glue & bequeath vnto my eldest sonn Thomas Andrews the house yt I now Lille in and ninecore Ackers of Land being upland & Medow & yt Land yt I bought of Zacheus Gould only my well beloued wife is to haue duering her life time the Kiching and hall & Kiching Chamber & halfe the seller & the new feeld & the eight Acker peeice & halfe the orchard & if ther be not Land enufe for her to manner then my sd sonn with ye help of my son Robart is to breack her vp three Ackers more or let her haue three Ackers yt is allready broacken vp and the same to inioy duering her life without the Lett hinderanc or molestation of my sd sonn or aney other prson vnder him and my sonn Thomas is to shingle the house and at my wiues deceas the said land orchard and rooms is to retur-ne to my son Thomas & his haires foreuer my said sonn Paying vnto my three youngest daughters Rebeckah Sarah & Ruth twenty pound pr each when she shall be twenty yeares of Age and if eaither of them shall die before 34 time then yt prt shall be equaly devided between the other two and allso he is to pay vnto my Daughter Mary the wife of Isack Comins flue pounds three years after my deceas & for the new whip saw and all other Carpenters tools shall be for the vse of my wife sonn Thomas & Robart "It I giue and bequeath vnto vnto my sonn Robart Andrews eightcore Ackers of Land from Piebroock to ye clay pits and ye fatti medow and the fishing broock medow & becaus my sonn Thomas & Robart should not wrong one another in wood I desier ther Land may be ped by them selues & two other honest men and Robart is to pay vnto my Daughter Elizebeth the wife of Samuell Symons flue pounds three years aftter my deceas and to my Daughte Hanah Pebody flue pounds fouer years aftter my deceas It I giue vnto my sonn John the Lot comonly called the seller Lott and the Medow belonging vnto it but the medow shall be for the vse of my wife & Thomas vntell my sonn John shall be one and twenty years of Age and then to returne to him without aney further truble he paying to my seauen Grandchildren twenty shillings pr each when the shall come to the age of fourteen years It I giue vnto my sonn Joseph yt Land in Topsfeeld yt I bought of John Wilds Senr with all the preuiledgs therunto belonging It I giue vnto my well beloued wife all my Cattell & other moueable goods and the Do-ung that is now in ye yard & halfe the barne & Lintos and my sonn Thomas the other halfe and he and his brother Robart is to set vp the other Lintoos & to Lay in for the vse of ther mother eauery year duering her Life twelue Loads of hay and if eaither of my sonns should die before they are married then yt Land yt is giuen to them to be equally deuided amongst the Suruiuers Leaueing my said wife hole Exsectetrix and in testimony hearof I haue hearvnto Set my hand and Seale this Sixteenth day of May in the yeare of our Lord one thousand Six hundred Sixty & eight." Robart (his / mark) Andrews, Senr (SEAL) Witness: Robert (his U mark) Smith, James Hanscombe. Proved in Salem court 2: 5 in: 1668 by the witnesses. Es- sex County Probate Files, Docket 709. Inventory of the estate of Robart Andrews, Sr., of Rowley, taken by Frances Pabody, Isack Comings and Edman (his 0 mark) Towne: Three beds & beding, 17li; two dusen & three napkins, 2li.; sheets, table Cloaths & pillow beres, 8li.; mares and colts, 16li.; fouer Cowes, 16li.; fouer young Cattell, 7li.; fouer steares, 18li.; Cart and wheeles, 2li.; Grinding stone, 6s.; yoacks, Chaines & plows, 3li. 15s.; Harrow, beetell, wedges, sives & sickells, 2li.; sheepe, Lambs & one Caulie, 2li. 10s.; twenti ackers of Come upon the ground, 25li.; his wearing Cloaths, 8li.; worcking tooles, 3li. 5s.; Chests, boxes & one trunck, 1li. 10s.; two musckets, & rest, 2li. 10s.; Chairs, tubs & trays, 2li. 10s.; one peice of new Cloath, 1li. 4s.; one parsell of Land bought of John Wilds, 45li.; the housen & two hundered ackers of Land upland & medow, 350li.; Eighteene ackers of upland & medow, 100li.; one parcell of Land more Lieing in topsfeeld, 60li.; eighteene bushells of wheat, seaven bushells of rye, 5li. 18s.; twelve bushells of malt, 1li. 16s.; thirty bushells of Indian come, 4li.; pewter, bras and Iron pots, 5li.; two tables, 3li. 1s. debts due to the estate, 5li.; Rugg, 10li.; the estate debtor, 23li. Attested 1: 5m: 1668 by Grace Andrewes wife of the deceased. Essex County Quarterly Court Files, vol. 13, leaf 67. A Porter pedigree; being an account of the ancestry and descendants of Samuel and Martha (Perley) Porter of Chester, N.H., who were descendants of John Porter, of Salem, Mass., and of Allan Perley, of Ipswich, Mass online. The Andrews Family. (Andreas, Andrewes, Andros, Andrus, Adduse.) Several persons bearing this name eariy settled in New England, among them being Daniel Andrew of Salem, who married one of John^ Porter's daughters; John Andrews of Ipswich; Nicholas i\jidrews of Rowley; and Robert Andrews, also of Rowley. A genealogy of this family has been published in the Essex Antiquarian, Vol. III. 228. ROBERT ^ANDREWS, Bom in England; died in Rowley Village, 29 May 1G68. Married GRACE . r- ., who came from England with him; died 4 Jan. 1702. Both are buried in Topsficld. Robert Andrews lived in what is now Boxford, but so near the Topsfield line, that he was always identified with the Topsfield people. 1661, he bought 200 acres of land on the west side of Pye Brook, and on it, built his first house, which was destioyed. He built a second one -which he bequeathed to his eldest son. He also bought land on Fish Brook, and in Rowley Village, and in Topsfield. He was a farmer and carpenter. His will is much defaced by time, and is preserved between sheets of silk tissue. In it he e;ives his eldest son, Thomas, the homestead and the land bought from Zaccheus Gould; son Robert, eight score acres of land:' John, the Seller Lott; Joseph, the land in Topsfield, bought of John Wild's son; and he mentions his daugh- ters Mary, "wife of Isaac Cummings; Elizabeth, wife of Samuel Symonds; Hannah, wife of John Peabody; and his unmarried daughters, Rebekah, Sarah and Ruth. Passenger Lists 1600-1700: Found Elizabe Passenger Lists 1600-1700: Found Elizabeth Andrews p 60; Jane Andrews p 60 and Samuel Andrews p 60. Borthers and Sisters? (21) The Prophet (21) The Prophet | Andrews, Robert (I312684222547)
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3898 | Polly/Olive Eliza Elvira's mother's first name in 1870 Census says "Olive." Her mother was called Polly. Is Polly a nickname for Olive? !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 *Family records of Fred H. Benson LDS Ea *Family records of Fred H. Benson LDS Early Curch Membership Records Book: Mormoms and their neighbors by Marvin Wiggins !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 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; ; ; | Benson, Polly (I312684222774)
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3899 | Possible birth date and place: 1683, Rie Possible birth date and place: 1683, Riederich, Schwarzwald, Wuerttemberg (IGI (International Genealogical Index)) Possible death date: 16 Jun 1760 (IGI (International Genealogical Index)) !Grossbettlingen parish records, by corr !Grossbettlingen parish records, by correspondence (Rudolph A. Noss) | Kuonwirth, Anna Maria (I312684218637)
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3900 | Possible birth date and place: 1699, Bem Possible birth date and place: 1699, Bempflingen, Schwarzwald, Wuerttemberg (IGI (International Genealogical Index)) Possible death date: 13 Nov 1772 (IGI (International Genealogical Index)) !Bempflingen parish records, by correspo !Bempflingen parish records, by correspondence (Rudolph A. Noss) | Eberle, Maria Margaretha (I312684218229)
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