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Living
Bonny
1919
Ross
Fredrick
Bonny
Ross's autobiography is in several separate binders which are separate. Ross narrowly escaped death twice during WWII, once when his group was not sent to Bataan and another time in time, after D-Day, when his room was hit with a cannon shell. Though he was offered the chance to become an officer during the war, Ross refused, perhaps because he was afraid of not doing a good job. He says the reason is because he didn't want the responsibility. His work was not especially lucrative but it did provide for a nice home in West Houston and work for sons Alan and Kevin and for daughter-in-law Jane after Braniff Int'l went out of business.
1920
Amy
Belle
McLain
Amy was always a hard charging kind of a person and very imaginative. She sent son Ricky to a masquerade party at Jane's house as the boy with green hair. She was working when she met Ross near Camp Rucker and continued to work while he went overseas during WWII and even during Ricky's early years. When she unexpectedly became pregnant with Alan and then Kevin she stayed home with the boys. Later she went to work in Ross's office. The glimmer left the marriage sometime in the 70's when both drank too much. While it was Ross who went to the dry out hospitals several times, it was Amy who died of cirrhosis of the liver. In 1933, Sallie remarried, this time to a distant in-law, Curtis Pennington, the brother of her deceased husband's brother's wife, Lillian Pennington. Since Curt moved into the house Sallie and the girls had purchased with the Carnation Settlement money, there can be little denial that Curt benefited from marrying a woman with a home and some modest means, especially during the Depression. Melba seems never to have harbored any kind of grudge in that regard but Amy did. The settlement had established a trust for each of the girls to do with as they wished at the appropriate time. Amy used hers to attend Blue Mountain College and Mississippi State and to purchase a car at the appropriate time. In due course, the car was purchased and Curt took a liking to it and, in Amy's view, gave short shrift to the driving training Curt was to give them, hustling them out of the driver's seat in short order so that he could take of the driving of the beloved car. In 1936, Tupelo was hit by a tornado which old-timers still refer to as the Great Tornado of '36. Magazine Street, where they lived, is only one block south of Main Street (Now Highway 278) on which ever object appears completely flattened in the panoramic photo taken by the Memphis Commercial Appeal. The tornado destroyed the house Sallie had built on the hill and carried Amy away. Sallie and Melba were convinced that she had been killed when another relative announced that he had just left the train station where numerous victims had been boarded onto a train for Memphis and treatment. Fortunately, he recognized Amy and passed the information on. Amy's injuries included a thumb, which many thought she would lose, but the doctors felt that a thumb was so vital that muscles were transferred from other fingers to her thumb, even though the movement would be somewhat unusual, awkward and noticeable even to the untrained. Infection and dangerous swelling were prevented by applying leeches to her wounds. Throughout the rest of her life her thumb movement, instead of being an out and in movement, was one which brought her thumb toward the fingers from under her palm.[AmyMcLain.FTW] In 1933, Sallie remarried, this time to a distant in-law, Curtis Pennington, the brother of her deceased husband's brother's wife, Lillian Pennington. Since Curt moved into the house Sallie and the girls had purchased with the Carnation Settlement money, there can be little denial that Curt benefited from marrying a woman with a home and some modest means, especially during the Depression. Melba seems never to have harbored any kind of grudge in that regard but Amy did. The settlement had established a trust for each of the girls to do with as they wished at the appropriate time. Amy used hers to attend Blue Mountain College and Mississippi State and to purchase a car at the appropriate time. In due course, the car was purchased and Curt took a liking to it and, in Amy's view, gave short shrift to the driving training Curt was to give them, hustling them out of the driver's seat in short order so that he could take of the driving of the beloved car. In 1936, Tupelo was hit by a tornado which old-timers still refer to as the Great Tornado of '36. It destroyed the house Sallie had built on the hill and carried Amy away. Sallie and Melba were convinced that she had been killed when another relative announced that he had just left the train station where numerous victims had been boarded onto a train for Memphis and treatment. Fortunately, he recognized Amy and passed the information on. Amy's injuries included a thumb, which many thought she would lose, but the doctors felt that a thumb was so vital that muscles were transferred from other fingers to her thumb, even though the movement would be somewhat unusual, awkward and noticeable even to the untrained. Infection and dangerous swelling were prevented by applying leeches to her wounds. Throughout the rest of her life her thumb movement, instead of being an out and in movement, was one which brought her thumb toward the fingers from under her palm. After she graduated from Mississippi State, Amy went on for more advanced training at the Norwood Hospital in Birmingham, Alabama. From there she went to Enterprise, Alabama to work in the Gibson's Hospital. A gregarious and dramatic person, Amy was popular with fellow staff members.
Phillip
Sherman
John
Almy
John
Butts
1850
Adelia
Wing
Living
Spencer
Elizabeth
Murray
Thomas
Swann
1856
Maggie
Wing
~1851
Jane
Porter
~1856
Marvey
Porter
~1858
Mary
Porter
~1860
Verona
Porter
~1864
Ann
Porter
~1866
Ellise
Porter
~1868 - ~1889
Judson
Porter
21
21
~1837
John
W.
Morton
~1842
Frances
Graves
~1859
Mary
Morton
~1865
William
C.
Morton
~1870
Thomas
R.
Morton
Unknown
Green
~1877
Nancy
E.
Morton
~1742
Anne
Kirstine
Jacobsen
~1721
Andreas
Celnistensen
1724
Maren
Urbansen
~1695
Christian
Thomsen
9 MAR 1681/82
Anne
Pedersen
~1683
Urban
Jensen
1782 - 1844
Joseph
Wing
61
61
Taken from "Descendants of Rev. John Wing" on Internet: ( as told to Alice E. Wing by her Grandfather, Ezra D. Wing, in 1933-34. ) Notes for JOSEPH WING: Joseph Wing...1782 to 1844 (Descendant in 6th generation from Stephen Wing, one of the founders of Sandwich, Mass., in 1637). Joseph Wing, son of Giles and Mary (Cornell) Wing, was born Feb. 28, 1782. When 22 years of age and his bride but 16, he married Amy Pettis, who was born Dec. 23, 1788, the marriage date being June 24, 1804. Soon afterward he left his father's home in Vermont and lived for a while in Locke, Cayuga Co., N.Y., but in 1826 he removed to Trumbull County, Ohio. In 1836, the family settled in Pike County, Illinois. He died Feb. 12, 1844 while on a visit to his son Stephen in Trumbull Co., Ohio. His widow died Dec. 22, 1864, in her 74th year and is buried in the Stephen Pettis burial grounds, Newburgh, Pike County, Illinois. The following was told by Ezra D. Wing to his granddaughter Alice E. Wing...a student in Clayton High School in 1933-1934. Joseph Wing was born in Danby, in the state of Vermont, Feb. 23, 1782. In 1826 he, with his family, emigrated from the state of New York to Ohio and settled in the township of Mecca, Trumbull co., where he lived an industrious, honest and enterprising citizen and a much respected life. In 1835 when the tide of emigration to the western states influenced him to dispose of his property and move with his family (except one son...Stephen) to Pike county, Illinois where by his industry he was able to purchase a tract of land and settle his family comfortably around him. In the autumn of 1843, he and his wife returned to Mecca, Ohio to visit their son, Stephen, who had remained in Mecca and their former friends there. After having spent a few weeks among them death called him to his reward. He died in peace at the home of his son, Stephen on Feb. 12, 1844 at the age of 62, after an illness of nine days with pneumonia. He joined the Baptist Church when he was 24 years old. He had an amiable disposition and honesty of heart. Children of JOSEPH WING and AMY PETTIS are: + 308 i. JOSEPH SMITH10 WING, born September 18, 1830 in Mecca, Trumbull Co., Ohio; died November 03, 1906 in Junction, Piute Co., Utah. 309 ii. Phebe Wing, born April 16, 1805. She married Samuel Parker. + 310 iii. Elizabeth Wing, born March 23, 1807 in Cayuga Lake, Tomkins Co. New York; died January 15, 1881. 311 iv. Stephen Wing, born May 29, 1810. He married Olive Rice. + 312 v. Matthias Wing, born November 28, 1813; died August 22, 1896. 313 vi. Giles Joseph Wing, born January 27, 1816. 314 vii. Charles Wing, born January 24, 1829. He married Helen Foreman. 315 viii. Benjamin Franklin Wing, born August 16, 1833.
1788
Amy
Pettis
From Toni Nash's Web Site "Descendants of Rev. John Wing: Descendants of REV. JOHN WING Joseph Wing, son of Giles and Mary (Cornell) Wing, was born Feb. 28, 1782. When 22 years of age and his bride but 16, he married Amy Pettis, who was born Dec. 23, 1788, the marriage date being June 24, 1804. Soon afterward he left his father's home in Vermont and lived for a while in Locke, Cayuga Co., N.Y., but in 1826 he removed to Trumbull County, Ohio. In 1836, the family settled in Pike County, Illinois. Notes for AMY PETTIS: Letter written by Amy Pettis to her son Joseph Smith Wing, Feb. 22, 1862; Clayton, Illinois Dear Child, I received your letter the last day of Dec. and was very glad to hear from you and that you and your family are well contented. "A contented mind is a continual fortune." I also received at the same time a letter from Betsy and Charles, they are well. Phebe has lost her oldest child. We had a letter from Benjamin a few days ago, he is well and talks of coming down next summer. We had a letter from Minnesota recently and they are well. You have heard, no doubt, of the great massacre of the people in Minn. by the Indians. They killed some 800 whites and there has been hung some 37 of them at one time. There has been several deaths in Pike Co., this fall, among them granny Davis, old Billy Johnson, Tom Smith and his wife, Tom Wiggins and George Taylor also. You request me to send you a list of your dead friends, I have sent you the whole pedigree at your request. My great grand mother married a Warner. Their children were Anna who married Thomas Brown and had 6 children: Thomas Jr., Cyrus, John, Mary, Martha and Anna. Mary Brown married Matthias Button and they had 11 children: John, Matthias, Benjamin, Peter, Nathan, Molly, Anna, Martha, Eliza, Thankful and Amy. My grandfather William Pettis married Mary Kinion. Their children were: Stephen (married Amy Button), Joseph (married Mary Chapman), then there were Sarah, Elsa, Mercy, Hannah, Mary and Lucy. Your great grandfather Wing was Matthew. His children were Giles, Matthew, Ruth and Molly. Giles married Mary Cornell. His children were Samuel, John, Elizabeth, Katherine, Joseph and Giles Jr. Stephen Pettis and Amy Button's children were Amy, Sally, Stephen, William and Nathan. Joseph Wing married Amy Pettis, you know the rest. We are well as common, Byron has the whooping cough. Sarah is at home with us: William is in the army. Her child has the cough. I sent you a tract, the title "The Christian's Only Hope". I want you should read and consider it well. I think if you knew all the doctrine of our faith you would respect it more than you do now. It is trouble some times now, and I think the winding up of the dispensation is close at hand. We have had a very open winter only about 3 inches of snow at any one time and weather mild. Wheat looks bad, but not dead. The letter I wrote last fall I presume you have not received. I should have written sooner, but I meant to send my likeness and the roads have been so bad I could not go to have it taken. I will send it when I get it. Tell Sam and John they must write to me. Norman wrote me a letter a few days ago; they are all well. You must write oftener. From your affectionate mother, Amy (Pettis) Wing --------------------------------------------------------------- Toni's notes.... When this letter was written Amy Pettis had been a widow for some 18 years. There had obviously been some disagreement between her and her son Joseph Smith Wing about religion...either her scorn of his Mormonism or his scorn of her faith...either way the fact that she sent him a tract of religious views indicates that they both were determined to adhere to their own religious beliefs. She mentions Betsy and Charles and that they are doing well. Charles was another one of her sons. She mentions Phebe and that Phebe has lost her oldest child. Phebe would be the daughter of Amy Pettis Wing. (Phebe was the oldest child). When she mentions the deaths in Pike Co., She wonders if Granny Davis is not Rebecca Davis's mother or grandmother. Rebecca Davis was Joseph Smith Wing's first wife...and her (Toni's) great-great grandmother. When she mentions that Byron has the whooping cough she is referring to Joseph Smith Wing's oldest son...and her great grandfather. She doesn't know yet who Sarah and William are, but guesses that one of them was her grandchild as well. When she tells Joseph Smith Wing to tell Sam and John that they must write her she is referring to her grandsons by her son Matthias...they both went to Utah with Joseph Smith Wing. Norman is their other brother...another son of Matthias Wing. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The 1860 Pike County, Illinois shows "Anny Pettis," age 61, living with Charles and Ellen Wing (ages 26 and 24), probably her son and daughter-in-law, and their children. Nearly on the census is Stephen Pettis, age 73, his wife(?) Catherine, age 47, children Harlow, Daniel, Laura and Maria. In the Pettis Cemetery, among the many Pettises, are Col. Stephen Pettis (War of 1812) and Amy Pettis, wife of Joseph Wing.
Gershom
Mott
1760 - 1840
Richard
Cornell
80
80
1755 - 1790
Mary
Jane
Cornell
35
35
1746
John
Cornell
Rachel
Mosher
20 FEB 1689/90
Joseph
Wing
1763 - 1813
Matthew
Wing
50
50
Ruth
Wing
Molly
Wing
Samuel
Wing
1777
John
Wing
~1790
Elizabeth
Wing
Katherine
Wing
1754 - 1817
Thomas
Cornell
63
63
Joseph
Wing
1751
Stephen
Pettis
26 JAN 1745/46
Amy
Button
1722 - 1794
William
M.
Pettys
71
71
1721
Mary
Kinion
FHL Film 1309870, Item #2, Marriage Index: Connecticut 1635-1860 Shows a Mary Kinion marrying a Samuel Smith 31 March 1740. If so, then Samuel may have died and Mary may have remarried in 1745.
Jeremiah
Smith
Sarah
Pettis
Elsa
Pettis
Mercy
Pettis
Hannah
Pettis
Mary
Pettis
Lucy
Pettis
Mercy
Almy
16 JAN 1691/92
Matthias
Button
1708
Mary
Brown
John
Button
Matthias
Button
Benjamin
Button
Peter
Button
Nathan
Button
Molly
Button
Anna
Button
Martha
Button
Eliza
Button
Thankful
Button
Button
~1675
Thomas
Brown
~1675
Anna
Warner
Thomas
Brown
Cyrus
Brown
John
Brown
Martha
Brown
Anna
Brown
Sally
Pettis
1777 - 1855
Stephen
Pettis
77
77
William
Pettis
Nathan
Pettis
~1717
William
Sisson
1719
Thomas
Sisson
1720
Peleg
Sisson
1722
Rebecca
Sisson
1723
Rachel
Sisson
James
Sisson
Jane
Sisson
1725
Judith
Sisson
1727
John
Sisson
1729
Constant
Sisson
Hugh
Mosher
1781 - 1858
Thomas
Cornell
76
76
Richard
Cornell
Patience
White
D. >1633
Mary
Wood
An
Ashwood
1686 - 1775
Thomas
Lawton
Sisson
88
88
1648
Caleb
Allen
Elizabeth
Hathaway
1 JAN 1675/76
Mary
Brayton
Timothy
Mosher
~1589
Thomas
Salisbury
1592
Mrs.
Salisbury
D. 1717
Abigail
Mumford
1610 - 1692
Mary
Freeman
82
82
William
Mosher
Mary
Perry
Deliverance
Gifford
1598
Samuel
Batchelder
Mercy
Bowman
Widow
Mary
Wyman
Elizabeth
F
1622 - ~1654
Stephen
Sanborne
32
32
1830 - 1886
Svend
Larson
56
56
Philip
Bachilder
Anne
Flanders
Phebe
Hewlett
Roger
Mosher
1725
Mercy
Cole
Sisson
Joane
Newman
James
Mosher
Jonathan
Davol
Elizabeth
Patten
Richard
Cornell
Sarah
1
Mary
1
Harding
Nehemiah
Palmer
1689
James
Allen
John
McLain
Denis
Browne
John
Lake
Ephraim
Mosher
Elizabeth
B
Elihue
Allen
Mary
Wing
Mary
Mosher
1702
Thomas
Sisson
1760 - 1854
Daniel
Cornell
94
94
Mary
Cornell
Elizabeth
Redman
~1645 - 1688
Samuel
Briggs
43
43
~1662 - 1723
Daniel
Fish
61
61
John
Smith
Rachel
Catherine
Mary
2
Anne
Fowler
1698
Thomas
Sisson
John
Mott
1617
Issabel
Strange
Jane
Pelham
Samuel
Cranston
Mary
Mosher
1830 - 1906
Joseph
Smith
Wing
76
76
According to notes from Ross Bonny, Sr., Joseph was one of the Mormon pioneers who pushed a hand cart all the way from Ohio to Utah. He was given property by Brigham Young in Springville, 60 miles south of Salt Lake City. He was the doctor there. I believe that this is a mistake. Joseph was probably prosperous enough to afford a wagon train whereas Joseph Smith Bohne as a youth traveled with his (widowed?) mother to America and probably pushed a hand cart. Descendants of REV. JOHN WING (Web Site of Toni Nash) Generation No. 8 308. JOSEPH SMITH10 WING (JOSEPH9, GILES8, MATTHEW7, JOSEPH6, MATTHEW5, STEPHEN4, REV. JOHN3, MATTHEW2, GODFRIEDUS1 WYNGE) was born September 18, 1830 in Mecca, Trumbull Co., Ohio, and died November 03, 1906 in Junction, Piute Co., Utah. He married (1) Frances. He married (2) unknown. He married (3) Ellen Larsen. He married (4) Elizabeth Marshall. He married (5) Signa Anderson. He married (6) Amelia Hendricksen. He married (7) REBECCA P. DAVIS June 08, 1848 in Pike Co., Illinois, daughter of ISSAC DAVIS and MARGARET ROBIDOUX. He married (8) Sarah Adelia Wright August 08, 1863. He married (9) Mary Josephine Allen December 17, 1864. He married (10) Sophia Anena Bohne February 17, 1866 in Salt Lake City, Utah. He married (11) Frances McGuray (McCurdy?) 1876. Notes for JOSEPH SMITH WING: Information rec'd from knewdirk@@pacifer.com (Kathryn Graham). Her information came from "Owl, Vol 23, #3, June 1922, pg. 2193; LDS Family sheet, Hugh W. Law; LDS Ancestral Files, 1990) (Joseph Smith Wing) (Descendant in 7th generation from Stephen Wing, one of the founders of Sandwich, Mass., in 1637) Joseph Smith Wing, son of Joseph and Amy (Pettis) Wing (Giles, Matthew, Joseph, Matthew, Stephen) was born Sept. 18, 1830. at Mecca, Trumbull Co., Ohio. In 1903, the following account of his career was given in a letter to the Owl; "I am a self-made man; got what little schooling I ever had in a log school-house, sitting upon a slab bench and but three months after I was twelve year of age. Six years after I was born my parents removed to Pike County, Ill. Both places were new and I have ever been on the frontier marching westward, until I reached Utah and in the mountains in the mining camps. i was the first discoverer of gold in Mary's Vale, Pinto County, in 1865, and returned to that county again in 1898. I am very busy in the practice of medicine which I began in 1857." Dr. Wing furnished the Owl with much of the information relative to his grandfather, Giles. Dr. Wing was first married in Illinois to Rebecca Davis, by whom he had 3 children, Byron, Adelia and Margaret, born in Pike County, Illinois. He later went to Black River Falls, Wisconsin and engaged with his brother, Benjamin, in the lumber and mercantile business. They were burned out and Dr. Wing returned to Illinois. While living in Black River Falls he married Sarah Adelia Wright and they had five children...Elizabeth, May, Joseph, Benjamin, and Amanda. He remained in Illinois a year or so and then, in 1862 left for Utah with his nephew John William Wing; he was supposed to have taken his daughter Adelia with him. (Toni's notes; In fact he did take his daughter Adelia with him...he took her from her mother's home when her mother was gone). (Toni's notes; Dr. Wing was accompanied by Sarah Adelia Wright on his trek to Utah. He met Sarah Adelia Wright during his stay in Wisconsin. She eventually bore him six children). In Utah he married Mary Josephine Allen and by her had four sons...Charles, Orville, John and George. The youngest of these sons gave the following account in 1922 regarding his father's career; "His first wife was the mother of two children, Byron and Adelia, born in Pike County, Illinois. When he set out for Utah in 1862 with his nephew John William Wing, he was supposed to have taken his daughter Adelia with him. In Utah he married Mary Josphine Allen and by her had four sons. He afterward married a Frances A. (Frank) McCURDY) by whom there were no children." In another account of Dr. Joseph Smith Wing, written by a nephew, John W. Wing, before 1916, the following is given; "Dr. Wing was a successful physician and also a miner. He discovered the famous Flagstaff mines in Cottonwood Canyon, Utah, from which he realized a considerable fortune." From another account it was reported that Dr. Wing also married a Sophia Anna Bonny (or Bohne) and by her had a son named Hugh. And in an old letter written by Dr. Wing himself, many years before his death, is the following; " I bought city lots and the best of land in and around Springville, Utah, and built my families, four in number, good new houses, bought them stock and house furnishings amounting to over twenty thousand dollars." In a Utah newspaper the following account is given of Dr. Wing's death; "Junction, Piute County, Utah, Nov. 4, 1906: Dr. J. S. Wing died yesterday at Kingston at the age of 86 years. He left a will which was probated yesterday, his heirs being 13 children. R. Allen is named executor of the will. His property is valued from $1500 to $1800. Dr. Wing was a highly respected citizen of Piute County and a great friend of the poor. He had lived in Kingston about eight years. He was a public spirited man, always leading out and assisting in public matters. Funeral services will be held today under the auspices of the Kingston bishopric." From information available, it appears that the first two of the listed children were born in Illinois, the mother being Rebecca (Davis) Wing; that the next four listed were born in Utah by the wife, Mary Josephine (Allen) Wing; that the next five were born in Wisconsin by the wife Sarah Adelia (Wright) Wing; and that the two last listed were born in Utah as children of Sophia Anna (Bohne) Wing. (7846-a) Byron b. Aug. 16, 1853, (7846-b) Adelia, (7846-B) Charles b. June 2, 1866, (7846-d) Orvile Allen, b. Feb. 14, 1868, (7846-e) John Ethan Allen b. 1873, d. 1889, (7846-f) George Francis b. April 21, 1875, (7846-g) Elizabeth, (7846-h) May, (7846-i) Joseph, (7846-j) Benjamin, (7846-k) Amanda, (7846-l) Hugh b. March 14, 1873, (7846-m) Signa Sophia In the earliest census Toni could find, Joseph Smith Wing was 19 years old, a cooper (made barrels) and was born in Ohio. Rebecca Wing was born in Canada and she was 19 years old also. I'm not sure what Census this was. 1860 Census ...Mary Wing is listed in Springville, Utah where she says she kept house. She was 20 years old at the time and there were 5 people in the house. She was born in Iowa. (This was Joseph Smith Wings wife...Mary Josephine Allen.) This census was taken in Utah. (My note: if this is the case, he must have left Illinois before 1862, the date given above.) [Janes's Note: I do not find Joseph Smith Wing in either Utah or Illinois in 1860 1870 Census...Springville Utah. Joseph Smith Wing is listed in a different household. He says he is 39 years old and a physician. and there were 8 in that household. The line immediately following lists Mary J., age 20, from Iowa ( plus Charles age 3, born in Utah, and Arvil, age 2, born in Utah ), and Anena (Bohne, I assume), age 18, from Denmark ( plus Zena, age 2, female, born in Utah). 1870 Census...Little Cottonwood, Utah, Joseph Smith Wing says he is 40 years old and that he is a physician and that there are 4 in that particular household. Notes for REBECCA P. DAVIS: Source; Marriage Index for Il, In, Ky, Oh, Tn 1720-1926, CD # 2 (Family Tree Maker) Mrs. Rebecca P. Wing married Jacob T. Cheek on June 8, 1856 in Pike Co., Il. On this same web site there is a copy of a letter written to him by his mother chastising him for not following the ( Baptist? ) faith. Children of JOSEPH WING and unknown are: 316 i. Miland Smith11 (Wing). 317 ii. Homer Smith (Wing). Child of JOSEPH WING and Amelia Hendricksen is: + 318 i. Henry11 Wing, born May 22, 1873 in Springville, Utah, Utah; died December 12, 1933 in San Bernardino, California. Children of JOSEPH WING and REBECCA DAVIS are: + 319 i. BYRON11 WING, born August 16, 1853 in Milton, Pike Co., Illinois; died February 05, 1942 in Illinois. + 320 ii. Adelia Wing, born June 20, 1850 in Detroit, Pike Co., Illinois; died July 31, 1909 in Fairview, San Pete, Utah. 321 iii. Margaret Wing, born 1856. Children of JOSEPH WING and Sarah Wright are: + 322 i. Elizabeth Jane11 Wing, born November 27, 1858 in Black River Falls, Jackson, Wisconsin; died Abt. 1890. + 323 ii. Mary Arminta Wing, born May 26, 1862 in Sweet Water, American Plains, Wyoming. + 324 iii. Joseph Smith Wing Jr., born November 02, 1864 in Springville, Utah, Utah. + 325 iv. Sarah Adelia Wing, born February 04, 1867. + 326 v. Benjamin Franklin Wing, born November 20, 1869. + 327 vi. Amy Amanda Wing, born July 20, 1872. Children of JOSEPH WING and Mary Allen are: 328 i. Charles11 Wing, born June 02, 1866. He married Angelina Biggs. + 329 ii. Orville Allen Wing, born February 15, 1868 in Fairview, San Pete, Utah; died December 10, 1931 in Phoenix, Maricopa, Arizona. 330 iii. John Ethan Allen Wing, born August 15, 1873 in Springville, Utah, Utah; died June 12, 1889 in Utah. 331 iv. George Francis Wing, born April 21, 1875 in Fairview, San Pete, Utah. Children of JOSEPH WING and Sophia Bohne are: + 332 i. Signa Sophia11 Wing, born June 05, 1867 in Spring City, San Pete, Utah; died May 25, 1940 in Springville, Utah, Utah. + 333 ii. Frederick William Wing, born June 25, 1870 in Springville, Utah, Utah; died October 31, 1940 in Provo, Utah. + 334 iii. Hugh Bohne Wing, born March 15, 1873 in Springville, Utah, Utah; died April 12, 1947 in Provo, Utah. From Research in Black River Falls, Wisconsin and in Pittsfield, IL and conversation with Toni Nash: In 1852, or thereabouts, Joseph left to go to Wisconsin for a short period but remained gone for about two years. During this period, according to his own admission in letters written to Rebecca Davis and subsequently added to his divorce records, he married Frances E. Jarrad in Iowa. He blames Rebecca for his behavior, saying that he had never, despite his fervent pleadings, abandoned her family. In her divorce petition, Rebecca alludes to another woman, Sarah Jones, saying he had committed adultery with her. Family rumor had it that he had fathered other children with at least one of these women. Furthermore, the absence of a marriage record for Joseph and Sarah Adelia Wright, while not universal at that time, and while there is a records for Joseph's nephew and Sarah Adelia's sister, seems to lend some credence to the rumor that Joseph and Adelia were not legally married, though Joseph had led Sarah Adelia to believe that they were. Sarah Adelia may have begun to have her doubts about Joseph when he kidnapped his daughter Adelia and left for Utah. Sarah may have had enough of Joseph by 1868 and moved out. She later lived with her children in Idaho. By the time Joseph died, few family members were speaking to him and he had parted ways with the Mormons because he was forced to chose one wife. Many of his wives married other men after the law was changed. [22 June 2000: Letter sent to Green County, Wisconsin requesting copy of marriage record of JOSEPH SMITH, On Nov 19, 1855. Based on preliminary results of search of Archives in Madison, Wisconsin.]
1851
Sophia
Anena
Bohne
John
Maxson
Grace
Bailey
1608
John
Lawton
<1645
William
Willet
Samuel
Cornell
~1560
Mary
Unknown
Rose
Knowles
Laughton
D. 1680
Ann
Capon
1755 - 1778
John
Cornell
22
22
1698
Hannah
Sisson
Sarah
Hatchet
1702
John
Sisson
D. 1654
Oseah
Dillingham
Jonathan
Mosher
Anna
Ewer
1609
Sarah
Lawton
Dary
Davol
Daniel
Mosher
27 FEB 1612/13
Bennett
Lawton
1668
John
Tripp
John
Harndell
Rachel
Dennis
Sarah
Cornell
George
Cornell
D. 7 MAR 1566/67
Susan
Casse
Wing
1669 - 1731
Elisha
Wing
61
61
[.] Stephen (or Elisha)5 Wing (STEPHEN4, REV. JOHN3, MATTHEW2, GODFRIEDUS1 WYNGE) was born September 02, 1656, and died 1675. He married Mehitable Butler. Notes for Stephen (or Elisha) Wing: Stephen was the first of the Wing family to lose his life for this country. He was killed in King Phillips War in 1675. Child of Stephen Wing and Mehitable Butler is: 42 i. Elizabeth6 Wing. She married Benjamin Wing. 15. Elisha5 Wing (STEPHEN4, REV. JOHN3, MATTHEW2, GODFRIEDUS1 WYNGE) was born December 02, 1668 in Sandwich, Massachusetts. He married Mehitable Butler December 01, 1689, daughter of Thomas Butler and Dorothy Howes. Children of Elisha Wing and Mehitable Butler are: + 56 i. Jedediah6 Wing, born January 29, 1696/97. 57 ii. Elizabeth Wing, born March 21, 1697/98. 58 iii. Judah Wing, born Abt. 1700. 59 iv. Sarah Wing, born Abt. 1701. 60 v. Butler Wing, born September 17, 1702. 61 vi. Mehitable Wing, born August 04, 1705. 62 vii. Abigail Wing, born April 30, 1708.
Mehitable
Butler
1621 - 1710
Stephen
Wing
89
89
Traveled to America on the same ship as his mother, grandfather and the Dillinghams. In 1657, "the people called Quakers" made their first appearance in Sandwich. In Bowden's "History of the Society of Friends in America," it is mentioned that two English Friends, named Christopher Holden and John Copeland, came to Sandwich on the 20th of 6th month, 1657, and had a number of meetings, and that their arrival was hailed with feelings of satisfaction by many who had long been burdened with a lifeless ministry and dead forms in religion. But the town had its advocates of religious intolerance and no small commotion ensued." The governor issued a warrant for their arrest, but when a copy of the warrant was asked for by Wm. Newland, at whose house the meetings had been held, it was refused, and its execution was resisted. A severe rebuke and a fine was then inflicted upon them. The two prisoners were sentenced to be whipped, but the selectmen of the town declined to act in the case, and the marshal was obliged to take them to Barnstable to find a magistrate willing to comply with the order. Tradition reports that many meetings were held at a secluded spot in the woods, which from the preacher's Christian name, was afterward known as "Christopher's Hollow." Numerous complaints were made against divers persons in Sandwich for meetings at private houses and inveighing against magistrates, and several men and women were publicly whipped for disturbing public worship, for abusing the ministers, for encouraging others in holding meetings, for entertaining the preachers and for unworthy speeches. Daniel Wing, with three others, was arrested for tumultuous carriage at a meeting of Quakers and severely fined, though there is no evidence that a single Quaker, besides the preachers, was present, and it is certain that neither of these persons professed at that time any adherence to the new sect. Daniel and Stephen Wing refused to take the oath of fidelity, not on the ground that they declined all oaths, but because this particular oath pledged them to assist in the execution of an intolerant enactment. Indeed, so generally were the laws against free worship condemned in Sandwich, that the constable was "unable to discharge his duty by reason of many disturbent persons there residing," and it was enacted that a marshal be chosen for such service in Sandwich, Barnstable and Yarmouth. In 1658 a list was made out by the governor and other magistrates of certain persons who refused to take the oath of fidelity, and for that reason had no legal right to act as inhabitants. They were, therefore, each fined five pounds to the colony's use, and it was ordered that each and every one of them should henceforth have no power to act in any town meeting till better evidence appeared of their legal admittance, nor to claim title or interest in any town privileges as townsmen, and that no man should henceforth be admitted an inhabitant of Sandwich, or enjoy the privileges thereof, without the approbation of the church and of Mr. Thomas Prince (the governor), or of the assistants whom they shall choose. Many were summoned to Plymouth to account for nonattendance upon public worship and distraints were exacted from these recusants in Sandwich to satisfy for fines to the amount of six hundred and sixty pounds. Of these fines Daniel Wing paid not less than twelve pounds. Up to this time Daniel Wing, with others who acted with him, appear simply as friends of toleration and resisters of an oppressive law. But it was not long before he and most of these sympathizers became active converts to the persecuted sect. In 1658 no less than eighteen families in Sandwich recorded their names in one of the documents of the society. Writers of that period (1658-60) say, "We have two strong places in this land, the one at Newport and the other at Sandwich; almost the whole town of Sandwich is adhering towards them," and the records of Monthly Meetings of Friends show that the Sandwich Monthly Meeting was the first established in America." Its records extend as far Page 89 Page 90 back as 1672, which is earlier than any other known in this country. It was not until the accession of King Charles the Second (about 1660) that these proceedings against the Quakers were discontinued by the royal order, and the most obnoxious laws were repealed in the colony of Plymouth, when we are told that "the Quakers became the most peaceful, industrious and moral of all the religious sects." In the fervor of religious zeal, and while smarting under severe injuries, they doubtless, at this early period, provoked the authorities by indiscretions which none of their successors in the faith would attempt to justify, and yet every descendant of the Puritans must regret that those who had themselves suffered so much for their conscientious convictions should have inflicted such severities upon dissenters from their own views. In 1658 the true bounds of every inhabitant's lands were laid out and ordered by the general court, so that the lands might be brought to record. There were fifty-five such owners whose names are recorded, among whom Daniel and Stephen Wing are mentioned. According to some records Daniel died in the year 1664, but Freeman and Savage make his death five years earlier (1659). His will was dated May 3, 1659, but as one of his children was born in 1660, and another later in the year 1664, we agree with the Plymouth records in placing his death near the latter date. He married 9th month, 5, 1641, Hannah, a daughter of John Swift. est. 64 years. The descendants of Daniel and Stephen Wing have nearly all been connected with the society calling themselves Friends. The place in Sandwich where they have from the first worshiped, is near Spring Hill, about three miles eastward from the central village. From Toni Nash's Web site: STEPHEN4 WING (REV. JOHN3, MATTHEW2, GODFRIEDUS1 WYNGE) was born Abt. 1621 in probably Holland, and died Bef. December 02, 1700 in Sandwich, Mass. Buried at Springhill Burial Ground. He married (1) SARAH BRIGGS. He married (2) Oseah (or Oziah) Dillingham 1646. He married (3) SARAH BRIGGS November 07, 1673 in Sandwich, Massachusetts, daughter of John Briggs and Catherine. Notes for STEPHEN WING: See John Wing Jr. notes for sources for information. Like his brothers, John and Daniel, Stephen became a Quaker in Sandwich, following a stormy Puritan-Quaker struggle. Stephen lived on what is now called Spring Hill Road at the edge of the Shawme Marsh in East Sandwich. The house, built in 1641, is still in Wing family hands. It is the site of the annual Wing family reunion; headquarters of the Wing Family of America, Inc., and editorial office of the O.W.L (OUR WING LINEAGE), the Wing family periodical. STEPHEN WING...1621 to 1710 (One of the four sons brought to New England by their widowed mother in 1632, from England to Saugus, Mass.) A biographical sketch based on records compiled by Col. George W. Wing (1856-1924) who was the first president of the Wing Family of America. Between 1913 and 1924 he published the results of more than twenty-five years of research. Stephen Wing, youngest of the sons of the Rev. John and Deborah (Bachellor) Wing to leave descendants in America, was born in England in 1621. We are fortunate in knowing the age of Stephen and that he was three years old in 1624, when his mother embarked from England with him and his older sister Deborah for Holland. Stephen, like his brothers, spent the first years of his life at Flushing, and at the Hague; came to New England with his mother when nine years old. We can imagine that his impressionable years were affected by the strange, new life in the woods of America which were so full of interest and adventure. Barely sixteen years of age when the family settled at Sandwich in the spring of 1637, it is not probable that the adventure seemed serious to him at the time. The woods and streams were full of game, the maidens of the party were doubtless pleasant to look upon, and to a youth of Stephen's years, it must all have seemed a lark of splendid proportions. And was not Oseah Dillingham of the party. Perhaps she lived just across the clearing over and beyond Old Trap Neck, and that a far cry across the waters of the Lake Shawme would reach her home where the "old pear tree" still was standing sentinel when, in 1903, Col. George W. Wing visited the site of that home. It is believed that Edward Dillingham was a fellow passenger on the good ship William and Francis, with the widow Deborah and her four sons...it is known that they lived at Saugus (where that group on the William and Francis first landed and lived) and that they made the settlement in the same party at Sandwich; and that they lived close neighbors and friends for many years. Stephen and Oseah must have had a romance of their own for they evidently loved well but not wisely. Living in a time when the strict code of morals devised and punished with the Scarlet letter, Stephen was before the court on March 2, 1647, and fined because of the fact that a child was born to his wife at "an unseasonable time after their marriage" which had been the preceding fall. Indiscretions and trivial offenses were taken note of by the rigorous laws of the Pilgrims. At different times many of the leading men of the colony were before the Court charged with irregularities. The rich, the poor, high and low, stood alike before the stern mandates at Plymouth. So no particular shame or chagrin should be felt by Stephen's descendants because of the following official entry in the Court records following a setting forth of the charge: "The said Wing, coming into the face of the Court, freely acknowledging, he was, according to the order of the Court, fined and discharged." (Governor Bradford signed the record.) It is generally believed that immediately following the marriage of Stephen and Oseah in the fall of 1646, they located in the "Old Fort House" near Spring Hill. Deborah and her son, John, (and possibly Matthew) were living upon their first homestead. Daniel had purchased the Hallett farm, and it was left to Stephen to establish himself, which he was well able to do, being then over twenty-five years of age. In the days of the first settlements upon the Cape, the pioneers had at various times and places built substantial stone and brick enclosures as defenses against possible Indian attacks. However, they came to know that the Cape Indians were inclined to be peaceable and friendly and that the block houses or forts were unnecessary. It seems probable that, through the influence of his father-in-law and brothers, the town of Sandwich sold or assigned the old fort and its surrounding acres to Stephen. Anyway, he seems to have lived there from the very first. During the several reunions of the Wing Family at Sandwich, hundreds of Wings have visited and enjoyed the hospitality of this remarkable old home, now the property of the society to be kept as a memorial. The historian Swift, in his "History of Barnstable Families" says of the "Old Fort House: "All of the old houses of Spring Hill have undergone similar transformations. The Wing house, probably the oldest house in Massachusetts, built before 1643 as a fortification, has been altered so often that little of the original remains." Col. George W. Wing first visited in 1901 and says he examined it later many times. Its walls, like those of the majority of the old Cape Cod houses, are shingled. Deep embrasures for the windows show the thickness of the stone walls encased, and the old oaken rafters overhead indicate the size of the original building. A great fireplace occupies almost the entire end of a 15 by 18 living room. A quaint. narrow stairway leads to the second floor, and the entire ensemble impresses one with its self-evident antiquity. The Board of Directors of the Wing Family of America, Inc., in 1941, after careful consideration, voted to authorize the purchase of the "Old Fort House" at the terms offered by Miss Cora Wing, namely: purchase price of $5,000.00, with cash payment of at least $3,000.00 at the time of taking over the property, balance to be carried as a first mortgage at the prevailing rate of interest. The building is now the Wing Memorial Museum. The value of such an undertaking is easily understood when one reads the following description given by Col. Wing in 1914: "The attick of the "Old Fort House" is one of the most interesting places for all Wings in America. Carefully preserved by the successive generations of the family who have lived here, are accumulations of household furniture and utensils dating back probably to the time of Stephen and Oseah. Here are warming pans, leather lanterns, spinning wheels, kitchen utensils, candle-sticks, flint-lock guns, and other retired household effects in quantities. The collection is scarcely surpassed by that of the Plymouth Memorial Hall. The old home and its contents is a veritable Mecca for the Wings of America." The building nestles at the foot of a hill, just across the old road leading up to Spring Hill Meeting House. a full panoramic sweep of the bay is presented and a five-minute walk brings one to the beach itself. Another description, given after a visit in the "eighties" by a descendant, reads in part: "We had the pleasure of inspecting the old Stpehen Wing dwelling house, a portion of which is supposed to have been one of the several block houses which the Colonial government had caused to be erected as a protection against the Indians. At the time of the visit it was occupied by Presbury Wing, a highly respected preacher of the Society of Friends, who kindly gave us an account of the building and showed us the different apartments, even taking us into the unfinished attic where some of the original timbers are exposed to view. The building as it stands now, is in that part of town known as Spring Hill, near the Friends' Meeting House, is an enlargement of the block house by additions upon two sides, made a great many years ago...The building is what is called in that section a "double house"; i.e., it has a room on each side of the front door." In 1943 the very desk once used by Stephen Wing at the "Old Fort House" became the property of the society and was placed again in the old home (museum). It came as a gift from a direct descendant. Edwin Wing and his sister Elsie. Their father was Daniel B. Wing of the 8th generation from Matthew Wing of Banbury, England, and the 6 th generation from Stephen Wing, the subject of this sketch. Their line runs: Matthew (1), Rev. John (2), Stephen (3), Ebenezer (4), Stephen (5), John (6), Daniel (7), Daniel (8), Edwin (9) and Elsie (9). They also donated to the society many valuable papers, among which was the original will of Stephen Wing (5), grandson of the original Stephen21 Wing, and the one who had, in that will, left the desk to his son John (6), in 1765. Being one of the younger men of the Sandwich settlement, there is little mention made up to the time of his wife's death, April 9, 1654. Left with infant children upon him for support, it became incumbent upon Stephen to find himself another housekeeper. This he did, by marrying Sarah Briggs, the orphaned daughter of John Briggs, who was one of the first sixty settlers of Sandwich. It is believed that Nathaniel Wing was the only child of Stephen and Oseah Wing to survive childhood. Although it is known that Nathaniel had three sons, most of the descendants of Stephen Wing carrying the Wing surname are through sons by his second wife, whom he married in November, 1654. Stephen Jr., the oldest of those sons, was killed in action at the age of twenty. It is said that he was the first Wing to give his life in defense of his country, being one of forty-six unfortunate men who fell in an ambush suffered while Capt. Michael Pearse's Plymouth County Company was engaged in the defense of the colonies during the King Phillip War, March 26, 1676. But there were four other sons, all of whom raised families. Col. George W. Wing once said that if he were called upon to classify the three Wing brothers who settled at Sandwich, he would term them: "John, the fearless, practical pioneer; Daniel, the idealist and religionist; and Stephen, the scholar and man of affairs." At any rate, Stephen was prominent in the affairs of the colony after 1654. On January 8, 1655, he was appointed the Constable of Sandwich by the Plymouth Court, and a year later served on the jury at Plymouth. It appears that during that same time of court he sued Jonathan Fish and attached some of his property in an action to recover 13 pounds. The wording of the judgment of the Court may be of interest to his descendants, and reads as follows: "Jan. 5, 1756. Upon a sight of a letter of attorney showed in Court, whereby it appeered that Mr. Edward Dillingham who authorized to answere a suite commenced against Jonathan Fish by Stephen Winge of Sandwidge, in an action of the case, to the damage of twelve pounds, the said Edward Dillingham came into the Court and acknowledge a judgement of six pounds in behalf of the said Jonathan Fish, whereupon the said Stephen Wing rested satisfied; the attachment that was lay upon a mare belonging to the said Fish resting upon the same for the space of two months. The judgement above said to be paid for the quality, as well as quantities, according to the term of the bill of said Stephen Winge hath unto the hand of said Jonathan Fish." It will have been noticed by the reader that in the records of those days, spelling was not always perfect even in the official Court records. It may also have been noticed on some occasions the name is spelled Wing and at other times given as Winge. It even appears both ways in the same Court order quoted above. The name of Green appears in some mysterious way to be closely connected with the Wings at Sandwich. Joan Newman, wife of Matthew Wing, the youngest of the Wing brothers (who returned to England) committed the care of Matthew Wing's estate in New England to her brother-in-law James Green of Malden. Here again, in a court record at Plymouth, happening the same day and date of the Fish lawsuit, Stephen Wing appears as the attorney of a John Green, as evidenced by the following decree: "And whereas it doth appear alsoe that the said Edward Dillingham was authorized as an attorney in the behalfe of the above said Jonathan Fish to answere a complaint made by John Green, in an action of the case, to the damage of 1 pound 13 shillings, the said Edward Dillingham acknowledge a judgment of 1 pound 13 shillings, whereupon Stephen Winge, as attorney of the said John Green, rested satisfied." Then came on the Quaker persecutions of 1657. Stephen Wing had been one of the first to unite with the Friends' movement at Sandwich. According to the Preface to Priskin's Perry-Long Genealogy, 1647-1976, "Stephen Wing was one of the growing faction of Sandwich settlers who were unsettled in their church relations, who were doubtful of the propriety of stated preaching. So, when Christopher Holden and John Copeland came to the town from Rhode Island in 1657 Stephen hearkened to them. When they called upon him to 'quake at the word of the Lord, he quaked. And within the year seventeen other families joined him in his new faith...'There were more Quaker troubles in Sandwich than in any other town in the Colony - not because Sandwich was more cruel, but because there were more Quakers there.' " The very first record we find in the Plymouth Court records relative to the legal proceedings against the Sandwich Quakers was on March 2, 1657-8, when Peter Gaunt, Daniel Wing, Ralph and William Allen were brought before the Plymouth Court and admonished for their "tumultuous carriage at a Quaker meeting," and finally fined twenty shillings apiece for the Court with their hats on. On the same day also appears the following: "Lieut. Ellis, Stephen Winge and Thomas Butler, being summoned to answer for tumultuous carriage as aforesaid, being examined, and not found so faulty as was supposed, were admonished and cleared." Notwithstanding the fact that Stephen Wing had been an official of the town the previous year, in 1658, with eight others, denied the "Privledges of townsmen" and it was declared that "they had no power to act in town meeting until better evidence appears of their legal admittance." Stephen was fined on many occasions for refusing to take the oath of Fidelity, a result, of course, of the peculiar belief of the Quakers that it is a sin to take an oath for any purpose. After the persecutions ceased in 1661, Stpehen seems to have speedily resumed his former place in the affairs of the community and colony. March 2, 1662, he served on a jury at Plymouth for the trial of a case between John Thomson and Richard Church, as plaintiffs, against Captain Willit, defendant. At other times he was appointed as Surveyor of Highways, and also served on the Grand Inquest. He must have served several years as Town Clerk for the records kept between 1669 and 1674 are known to be in his hand-writing. Furthermore, a record under date of Dec. 5, 1674, shows that a contract was made by the town with Joseph Birge and Nehemiah Besse to build a town pound and the town directed that "Stephen Wing shall asyne the letter of attorney in the town's behalfe...he being the Towne Clark." And again, in the matter of a boundary dispute the records show that Stephen Wing being the Townes Clark shall asine the letter of attorney that this three men shall precure as in the townes behalfe." (spelled clark both times instead of clerk.) Under date of Jan. 27, 1681, the records cite that "the towne hath made choice of Benjamin Hammon, Stephen Skiffe and Stephen Wing to make "saille" of the whale that is lately cast on shore in ye most that can of it in the towne's behalfe, and for ye towne's use." For the subsequent thirty years of Stephen's life there is little to be found concerning his public life. He was probably one of the last, if not the very last, of the original settlers of Sandwich to survive. He lived sixty-three years in Sandwich after the date of its first settlement in 1637. His wife Sarah died in 1689, leaving him a widower for the second time. The society has possession of an ancient deed executed by Stephen Wing on Dec. 2, 1700. It was executed while he was a widower and upwards of eighty years of age. It conveys the "Old Fort House" and all of his landed possessions in the town of Sandwich to his sons Ebenezer and Matthew. Matthew was living at that time in Darmouth and in possession there of an estate of his own...so just why he was selected as a grantee in the deed of the old homestead is not quite clear. On the same day that Stephen executed his deed to his sons Ebenezer and Matthew, he also executed his will, and the two papers were presumably drawn by the same person...Stephen Skiff. This will was probated in Barnstable County, July 13, 1710, and a complete copy of the will was published in the "Owl" issued March 1915. The Spring Hill records show that Stephen Wing died on April 24, 1710. a tablet to his memory was placed upon the lawn of the "Old Fort House" and dedicated by the society during its 1910 reunion at New Bedford, Mass. The principle address was delivered by G. Myron Allen and the tablet was unveiled by Mrs. Allen, both of whom were lineal descendants of Stephen Wing. The tablet reads: STEPHEN WING "SON OF THE REV. JOHN AND DEBORAH WING, CAME TO BOSTON IN 1632 WITH HIS MOTHER AND BROTHERS JOHN, DANIEL, AND MATTHEW, WITH WHOM HE SETTLED IN SANDWICH IN 1637. HE LIVED UPON THIS LAND AND BUILT HIS HOME IN 1641. HE WAS AN ORIGINAL MEMBER OF THE FIRST FRIENDS' MEETING IN AMERICA ESTABLISHED AT SPRING HILL IN 1658 AND SUFFERED GREAT PERSECUTION AT THE HANDS OF THE PLYMOUTH GOVERNMENT IN THE CAUSE OF RELIGIOUS LIBERTY. HE DIED IN 1710 AND LIES BURIED AT SPRING HILL. ERECTED IN 1910 BY THE WING FAMILY OF AMERICA, INCORPORATED." Wooden tools, the oldest houses of Cope Cod hove weathered storms and time A sampling of historic houses shows that behind their charm lies careful planning and practicality. Dating from 1641, the Wing Fort House in East Sandwich stands as the oldest house in New England continuously inhabited by members of one family -- in this case, for three centuries. Built by Quaker Stephen Wing, one of the Cape's first settlers, this house started out as a one-room homestead with a loft, similar to those the Pilgrims built Constructed with double walls, the "fort" was secured against Indian attacks, which never came from the friendly natives Stephen's grandson and namesake built his own saltbox next to the Fort House The two homes were combined during the lath century, with each home losing its original chimney and gaining the peaked roof that blanketed both dwellings In the attic, however, the rakers from the Fort House's original peaked roof can be seen, now incorporated into one of the house's gables. All 12 rooms are filled with Wing furniture and antiques. Located on Spring Hill Road, near Route 6A in East Sandwich, the Wing Fort House is open l O AM to 4 PM , Monday--Friday Tours given by caretakers Will of Stephen Wing; I, Stephen Wing of the Town of Sandwich in the County of Barnstable in New England, being aged and weak of body yet through ye mercy of God of Disposing mind and memory and calling to mind ye...uncertainly of this Transitory Life I am Desirous according to my Duty to set things in order before God shall Call me thence. And therefore Do make this my Last Will and Testament hereby Revoking and Depannelling all former Will and Wills by word or writing heretofore by me made and Do hereby Constitute and Declare this to be my Last Will and Testament in manner and form following viz; my Desire is to commit my Soul to God in Jesus Christ who gave it and my body to Decent Burial at our Friends Burying place at Spring Hill when God shall please to call me Hence: And as Touching my Worldly Estate which God hath beyond my Deserts bestowed on my my Will is to Dispose of it as followeth; My Will is that all my Debts in Right or Conscience to any man Due Together with my funeral Charges shall be first Discharged by my Executors hereafter named in Convenient Time out of my estate. Item. I Will and bequeath unto my Son Nathaniel Wing Ten pounds Item. I will and bequeath unto my son Elisha Wing Ten pounds Item. I will and bequeath unto my daughter Sarah Gifford fifty shilling Item. I will and bequeath unto my daughter Abigail Twenty Shilling Item. I will and bequeath unto my son John Wing my great Dripping pan and spitl. Item. I will and bequeath unto my Grandson Jeremiah Gifford Twenty Shillings and each Legacy to be paid in Two years after my Decease. Finally my will is and I do hereby Constitute and appoint my Two sons viz: Ebenezer Wing and Matthew Wing joint Execrs to this my last will and Testament to administer upon my said Estate and to pay my Debts and Legacus according to this my will. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this Second day of December Anna Dom 1700....Stephen Wing Signed Sealed and declared to be his last will and testament in presence of STEPHE SKIFF, DANIEL ALLEN, JASHUB WING, WM BASSETT. I Children of STEPHEN WING and Oseah Dillingham are: 7 i. Deborah5 Wing, born October 10, 1648. + 8 ii. Ephraim (or Nathaniel) Wing, born April 02, 1649 in Sandwich, Barnstable, MA; died 1722. 9 iii. Mercy Wing, born November 13, 1650. Children of STEPHEN WING and SARAH BRIGGS are: + 10 i. MATTHEW WING, born January 01, 1673/74 in Sandwich, Mass.. + 11 ii. Stephen (or Elisha) Wing, born September 02, 1656; died 1675. + 12 iii. Sarah Wing, born February 05, 1657/58; died August 26, 1724 in Dartmouth, Massachusetts. + 13 iv. John Wing, born September 25, 1661 in Sandwich, Barnstable, MA; died September 21, 1728 in Sandwich, Barnstable, MA. 14 v. Abigail Wing, born May 06, 1664. + 15 vi. Elisha Wing, born December 02, 1668 in Sandwich, Massachusetts. + 16 vii. Ebenezer Wing, born November 05, 1671. 17 viii. Joseph Wing, born February 20, 1676/77. 18 ix. Benjamin Wing, born July 01, 1678.
1700
Rebecca
Sisson
12 JAN 1583/84 - 1629
John
Wing
"John Wing, third son and sixthe child of Matthew and Mary, was born at Banbury, England, and christened in the ancient Church of St. Mary's, January 12, 1584, in the 26th year of the reighn of Queen Elizabeth. Elizabeth ruled England with an iron hand. The Puritans were in a majority in the House of Commons, but the severe reprimands they had met with from the throne deterred them from enacting any religious laws. The prelates of the Church of England were still in the haughty exercise of all religious prerogatives. So that when Matthew, or perchance, Mary carried the infant John in her arms up the stately aisles of old St. Mary's to the Saxon baptismal font, he was baptized with the parents and attendants kneeling at the sacrament, which was sealed by the sign of the cross. Every question of ceremony was regulated by Queen Elizabeth. Even the size and height of the ruff about Mathew's neck was determined by the Queen's edict. The very year of John's birth, Elizabeth consigned the religious life of England into the keeping of forty-four commissioners, who were empowered by all means and ways they could devise, by juries, by the rack, by torture, by inquisition, by imprisonment, to reform all heresies and schism, and to punish all breaches of uniformity of worship, so we may well imagine that John was christened by his parents with strict regard to the country's laws. Mathew and Mary were not permitted to invite their neighbors to read and discuss the scriptures. All such gatherings, without the Queen's special permission, were unlawful. And if, perchance, Matthew (who was a tailor) in his business sold a suit of clothes to a nobleman, he was obliged to wait that gentleman's knightly pleasure or payment. If he sued to recover the price, he was liable to imprison himself It was only during the succeeding generations that the noble principles of liberty took root. Executions took place for robbery, theft and felonies; whippings and burnings in the hand were legal modes of punishment of lesser crimes. In fact, the "Merrie England" of the days of Matthew and the boyhood of John affords us no reason to be in love with the picture of the absolute monarchy or with the government of "good Queen Bess." The boyhood of John was spent in Banbury. The square about the old Banbury cross was undoubtedly a playground, and time and again he must have passed and entered the old Reindeer Inn. The schools of the day were known as grammar schools, and undoubtedly John made good use of them, for he was also to matriculate at Oxford when but fifteen years of age. We cannot doubt that he was a regular Sunday attendant at St. Mary's. His deeply spiritual nature was a surety of that. The sermons in the English churches at that time were mere homilies prepared by the prelates and given the vicars to read, exhorting their congregations to obey the Queen and extolling her goodness. In John's fourteenth year, all England was aflame with the approach of the great Spanish Armada. His father at that time was forty-eight years of age, and his brothers, Fulk and Thomas, twenty-four and twenty-two respectively. Unquestionably they were enrolled among the nations's defenders. The year following the excitement attending the Armada, John Wing entered Oxford University. The school was only twenty-three miles from his home. The matriculation entry is as follows: 'John Wynge of Oxon, pleb. St. St. Alban's Hall, 15 October, 1599, aged 14.' On 12 February, 1603, Queen's College invested him with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. During the days of John's schooling there, Oxford was particularly active in the literary movement of the day, and undoubtedly the youth became acquainted there with many of the great lights who dazzled the world with their writings in the generation following." "Of the peers of the realm during Elizabeth's reign only about sixty knew their letters. In the rural districts, to read and write were considered rare accomplishments, and even among the gentry below the first degree there was little difference in literary accomplishments between master and the boorish attendants. As we descend a step lower we reach a class wholly illiterate. Shakespeare's father was High Bailiff of Stratford, but he could neither read nor write. Of nineteen aldermen at Stratford only six could write their names. Nor was the ignorance confined to the laymen. In 1578, according to Neal, on one hundred and forty clergymen in Cornwall belonging to the established Church, not one was capable of preaching, and throughout the kingdom, those who could preach were in the proportion of one to four. The time of the induction of John into the holy order is conjectural. Oxford at the time of his graduation was, under Elizabeth's reign, the fountainhead of English church theology. His parents were members of the established church, and it was quite likely that the young Oxford graduate secured a position in some country village as a curate or assistant to the vicar of some parish and,while acting in that capacity, met Deborah Bachiler, daughter of the Vicar of Wherwell in Hampton." John was almost assuredly influenced, if not intimidated, by Stephen Bachiler, who was wee-known for his strong opinions, and had already refused to allow his daughter, Theodate, to marry Christopher Hussey unless they agreed to move to the New World. John and Deborah married around 1608-1610, aged about 25 and 18. Their first child, Deborah, was born in 1611. "On 19 June, 1620, he had been ordained as pastor of the churches of Flushing and Middleburg (in Holland) under the direction of Mr. John Paget of Amsterdam, assisted by two Dutch clergymen, and in the presence of the burgomaster and other magistrates... "The fact that the Dutch government recognized and materially aided the Rev. John Wing in his ministrations at the Hague and in his induction into the Pastorate at Middleburg, leads to the belief that he was a Presbyterian in his beliefs and teachings. He was the first settled English pastor English pastor as the Hague, being admitted 11 May, 1627. The states of Holland allowed him a subsidy of 300 pounds per year, which, by a decree of 1628, was augmented to 500 pounds. A subscription of 100 pounds was raised by the English, and expended in repairing and beautifying the chapel. The church, or chapel, was much frequented by the royal family, and especially by Elizabeth, daughter of King James, wife of the King of Bohemia." Many of his sermons remain and, while rambling, "reveal to us a man of strong spirituality, classic learning, masterful character, ready wit, fierce invective, a facile pen and a ready tongue. He lived in an age of cant and on-winded sermons, and at time his preachings take on the color of the age, but through them all gleams the effort to be of sincere use to his fellowmen." After some fifteen years of exile in Holland, John, Deborah and their children returned to London where John fell ill and died. Whether he had previously planned to move to America or not is not known but, in any case, Deborah and the four sons and her father moved to America. With some repetition, notes from Toni Nash's Web site: See John Wing Jr. notes for sources of information. John Wing, born in England in the latter 1500's. Died about 1629, The Hague, Holland or 1630 in England. Married probably about 1610 to Deborah Bachiler. They probably were married in Holland. Like his father-in-law, Stephen Bachiler, John Wing was an English minister who moved to Holland and became a Puritan pastor there, most likely for similar reasons. He had been residing at Sandwich, County Kent, England on the Strait of Dover and then at Hanbury before migrating to Holland. There he became pastor of an English Puritan Congregation in Flushing, Province of Zealand. It is likely that he was associated in some way in Holland with Stephen Bachiler, as he married Stephen's daughter. Pope, in PIONEERS ON MASSACHUSETTS, states that John Wing died in the Hague, Holland in 1629. Lovell, in SANDWICH: A CAPE COD TOWN, states that he died in England in 1630. An early Wing family genealogist, writing in 1881, stated that John came to America and settled in Sandwich. But more recent research proves that the writer must have confused John Wing with John Wing, Jr., his son, who did accompany his widowed mother, brothers, and Stephen Bachiler to America in 1632, and settled first in Lynn, and later in Sandwich. Rev. John Wing and Deborah Bachiler Wing had at least four sons. JOHN WING....1584 to 1630...(of England & Holland) (Father of four sons brought to New England in 1632 by their widowed mother, from England to Saugus, Mass.) (*) Serial No. 2 in published genealogy Condensed from a biographical sketch compiled about 1914 by Col. George W. Wing (1856-1924), first president of the Wing Family of America. John Wing, third son and sixth child of Matthew and Mary, was born at Banbury, England, and christened in the ancient Church of St. Mary's., January 12, 1584, in the 26th year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth. Elizabeth ruled England with an iron hand. The Puritans were in a majority in the House of Commons, but the severe reprimands they had met with from the throne deterred them from enacting any religious laws. The prelates of the Church of England were still in the haughty exercise of all religious prerogatives. So that when Matthew, or perchance Mary, carried the infant John in their arms up the stately aisles of old St. Mary's to the Saxon baptismal font, he was baptized with the parents and attendants kneeling at the sacrament, which was sealed by the sign of the cross. Every question of ceremony was regulated by Queen Elizabeth. Even the size and height of the ruff about Matthew's neck was determined by the Queen's edict. The very year of John's birth, Elizabeth consigned the religious life of England into the keeping of forty-four commissioners, who were empowered by all means and ways they could devise, by juries, by the rack, by torture, by inquisition, by imprisonment, to reform all heresies and schism, and to punish all breaches of uniformity of worship. so we may well imagine that John was christened by his parents with strict regard to the country's laws. Matthew and Mary were not permitted to invite their neighbors to read and discuss the scriptures. all such gatherings, without the Queen's special permission, were unlawful. And if, perchance, Matthew (who was a tailor) in his business sold a suit of clothes to a nobleman, he was obliged to wait that gentleman's knightly pleasure for payment. If he sued to recover the price, he was liable to imprisonment himself. It was only during the succeeding generations that the noble principles of liberty took root. Executions took place for robbery, theft and felonies; whippings and burnings in the hand hand were legal modes of punishment for lesser crimes. In fact, the "Merrie England" of the days of Matthew and the boyhood of John affords us no reason to be in love with the picture of the absolute monarchy or with the government of "good Queen Bess." The boyhood of John was spent in Banbury. The square about the old Banbury cross was undoubtedly a playground, and time and again he must have passed and entered the old Reindeer Inn. The schools of the day were known as grammar schools, and undoubtedly John made good use of them, for he was able to matriculate at Oxford when but fifteen years of age. We cannot doubt that he was a regular Sunday attendant at St. Mary's. His deeply spiritual nature was a surety of that. The sermons in the English churches at that time were merely homilies prepared by the prelates and given the vicars to read, exhorting their congregations to obey the Queen and extolling her goodness. In John's fourteenth year, all England was aflame with the approach of the great Spanish Armada. His father at that time was forty-eight years of age, and his brothers, Fulk and Thomas, twenty-four and twenty-two respectively. Unquestionably they were enrolled among the nation's defenders. The year following the excitement attending the Armada, John Wing entered Oxford University. The school was only twenty-three miles from his home. The matriculation entry is as follows: "John Wynge of Oxon, pleb. St. Alban's Hall, 15 October, 1599, aged 14." On 12 February, 1603, Queen's College invested him with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. During the days of John's schooling there, Oxford was particularly active in the literary movement of that day, and undoubtedly the youth became acquainted there with many of the great lights who dazzled the world with their writings in the generation following. That we may better appreciate the scholarly attainments of young John Wing, B.A., nineteen years of age, when he left the shadows of Queen's College in 1603, a review of the times may prove interesting. Of the peers of the realm during Elizabeth's reign only about sixty knew their letters. In the rural districts, to read and write were considered rare accomplishments, and even among the gentry below the first degree there was little difference in literary accomplishments between master and the boorish attendants. As we descend a step lower we reach a class wholly illiterate. Shakespeare's father was High Bailiff of Stratford, but he could neither read nor write. Of nineteen aldermen of Stratford only six could write their names. Nor was the ignorance confined to the laymen. In1578, according to Neal, of one hundred and forty clergymen in Cornwall belonging to the established church, not one was capable of preaching, and throughout the kingdom, those who could preach were in the proportion of one to four. The time of the induction of John into the holy order is conjectural. Oxford at the time of his graduation was, under Elizabeth's reighn, the fountain head of English church theology. His parents were members of the established church, and it was quite likely with a view of taking the orders that he pursued his studies at the University. It is most likely that the young Oxford graduate secured a position in some country village as a curate or assistant to the vicar of some parish and, while acting in that capacity, met Deborah Bachiler, daughter of the Vicar of Wherwell in Hampton. Stephen Bachiler, the Vicar of Wherwell, had gained considerable reputation among his clerical brethren for learning and ability. A man of willful independent and forceful character, he had refused conformity with the requirements of his superiors in the church and in 1605 was deprived of his living at Wherwell. He immediately secured another following in the vicinity of Wherwell and continued to preach the gospel as a Presbyterian. It was an age of fierce religious controversy, and it was during the period immediately following Bachiler's expulsion from his living at Wherwell that the young Oxford graduate met and courted Deborah. It will not for an instant be believed by those who have studied Bachiler's dominating and forceful character that he would permit his daughter to marry a clergyman of the Church of England. Tradition says that he refused to give his youngest daughter, Theodate, in marriage to young Christopher Hussey until the latter would promise to take her to New England, where he himself proposed to settle. The influence of the courtship and the marriage of John and Deborah, and the subsequent associations with the father of the latter, may have had much to do with the breaking of the young man's relations with the mother church. John Wing and Deborah Bachiler were married about the year 1609-10. It may be conjectured that because John's brother named a daughter Deborah, born to him in 1608, that the marriage occurred even earlier. At the time of his marriage, John was about twenty-five years of age and Deborah barely eighteen. The oldest child, Deborah was born in 1611. John, the second child, is said by some student of family history to have been born at Yarmouth. He is mentioned in his grandfather's will made in 1614, so that it is probably that his birth occurred in 1613. In 1617, John Wing is found preaching to the famous society of Merchant Adventurers of England in Hanover, Germany, and it is known definitely that he was in charge of a congregation at the old Roman Cinque port of Sandwich in Kent at some period prior to 1620. The proof of this is contained in the dedication of his first book, "The Crown Conjugall", printed in November, 1620. He thus inscribed it: "To The Right Worshipfull Master Matthew Peke Esquire, Mayor of the Towne and Port of Sandwich, and to the Worshipfull, the Jurates of his brethren, the Common Counsell and whole Corporation of the same JOHN WING, doth with Grace and Peace and all good form from the living God through the love of our Lord Jesus Christ, by the worke of the Holy Ghost, (our former favours, and the abundant fruits of your love Right Worshipfull and well beloved in the Lord) which I have from time to time experienced ever since it pleased the Lord to cast affliction upon mine external state, doe daily provoke and deeply challenge from me, the manifestation of a thankfull hart unto you all to whose kindness I stand a Debtor much engaged to this day." Mr. Stevens, in his "History of Presbyterianism" thus makes mention of our ancestor: "Mr. Wing, a pious man, and edifying preacher, was first at Sandwich, but had latterly been chaplain to the Merchants Adventurers of England residing at Hamburg. He exerted himself much for the good of his people her (Flushing) until he removed to the Hague in 1627." On 19 June, 1620, he had been ordained as pastor of the churches of Flushing and Middleburg (in Holland) under the direction of Mr. John Paget of Amsterdam, assisted by two Dutch clergymen, and in the presence of the burgomaster and other magistrates. There are many theories as to the exact religious beliefs of the Rev. John Wing. Robert Browne, the founder of English Congregationalism, as early as 1581, had emigrated to Middleburg, in Zealand, with his followers, and it was from here that he published his several works. His followers became distracted and divided on matters of discipline and were finally disbanded. It may have been remnants of Brown's old congregation at Middleburg that John Wing preached to in 1620. The fact that the Dutch government recognized and materially aided the Rev. John Wing in his ministrations at the Hague and in his induction into the Pastorate at Middleburg, leads to the belief that he was a Presbyterian in his belief and teachings. He was the first settled English pastor at the Hague, being admitted 11 May, 1627. The states of Holland allowed him a subsidy of 300 pounds year, which, by a decree of 1628, was augmented to 500 pounds. A subscription of 100 pounds was raised by the English, and expended in repairing and beautifying the chapel. This church, or chapel, was much frequented by the royal family, and especially by Elizabeth, daughter of King James, wife of the ex-King of Bohemia. It was here that Mr. Wing preached 18 May, 1624, his sermon "The Saint's Advantage, or the Wellfare of the Faithfull in the Worst Times" before Queen Elizabeth. The sermon was given at the Hague while Mr. Wing was still in the pastorate at Middleburg. It was printed in London, in 1624, by John Dawson for John Bellamie, and was sold at his shop the the Three Golden Lions, near the Royal Exchange. A number of the sermons of the Rev. John Wing were published. Samuel Austin Allibone, in his "Dictionary of Authors" mentions some of the publications: "1. The Crowne Conjugall, or the Spouse Royall, Middleburg, 1620 2. Jacob's Staffe to Beare up the Faithful and Beat Down the Profane, Flushing, 1621 3. The Best Merchandis, 1622" To those should be added "Abel's Offering" and "The Saint's Advantage." The former was printed in 1622 and is dedicated "To the Right Worshipfull and worthy fellowship of Merchants Adventurers of England, residents of Delft, in Holland." It had been preached in Middleburg, in Zealand. The book contains 138 pages. The latter sermon preached at Hamburg in November 1617, and was printed at Flushing in October of 1621. Five of the volumes of John Wing's publications are held by the British Museum and have been seen and examined there by several members of the Wing Family of America. At least one copy of each of the five publications is now in America. a Copy of the "Crown Conjugall" was secured by the late Col. George W. Wing, first president of the Wing Family of America, having been purchased in a London bookstore in 1903. A copy of the book "The Saint's Advantage" is part of the John Adams collection in the Boston Public Library, carefully guarded under lock and key. On the title page of this copy is the following notation placed by Mr. Thomas Prince who owned the book at one time: "This Wing was Pastor of ye English Puritan Chh. at Middleborough in Zeeland, wh. wido bro't her children to Sandwich in New England who afterwards turned Quaker and frm whm ye Wings at Sandwich, Wareham, Rochester and Dartmouth are descended." In September, 1908, Mr. George Wing Sisson, at that time Vice President of the Wing Family of America, received from Miss Miriam H. L. wing, of Coventry, England, a bound volume containing "Jacob's Staffe," "The Best Merchandise", and "Abel's Offering", bound within the same covers. Miss Wing was the daughter of an English Clergyman and stated that the volume had been purchased by her father from a London bookseller merely because the author bore his surname. The religious views and teachings of the Rev. John Wing are not conjectural to his descendants. Over 800 pages of his writings or preachings are accessible to those of his posterity living today. They reveal to us a man of strong spirituality, classic learning, masterful character, ready wit, fierce invective, a facile pen and a ready tongue. He lived in an age of cant and long-winded sermons, and at times his preachings take on the color of the age, but through them all gleams the effort to be of sincere use to his fellowmen. Fully fifteen years of the lives of John Wing and his wife Deborah were spent in Germany and Holland as practical exiles from their native England. Hamburg and The Hague were cities of note and cosmopolitan beyond their contemporaries in Europe. Their associates, and the members of their congregations, were people of note and keen enterprise. The salary of 500 pounds a year while at The Hague afforded him the means of living in affluence. Reckoned for its purchasing power at that time, it would equal the modern salary of $10,000 given to favored ministers of the gospel, and speaks for itself of the value placed upon his services. What changes of fortune brought him and his family to London before his death we are unable to determine. Perhaps it was a fatal illness: possibly the growing power of the Puritan movement: perhaps he too had caught the fever to emigrate to America. He sickened and died in London in 1630, probably during the summer, in his forty-sixth year, and his wife, Deborah, at thirty-eight was left a widow with five children. No picture comes down to us through the ages of the Rev. John Wing. The Puritan and Presbyterian clergy of that period affected a small chin beard with mustaches, hair rather long and flowing, high hats with rather broad trims, black clothes and cloak, with knee breeches and silver- buckled shoes. The office of the clergy carried with it a great dignity and sternness of bearing. The Rev. John at all times felt the responsibilities of his mission. The English records contain this synopsis of his will: "John Winge, late of the Hague in Holland, clerk, now living in St. Mary Aldermary, London, 2 November, 1629, proved Aug. 4, 1630. Certain lands (freehold) in Crickston and Stroud, Kent, shall be sold as conveniently may be and the money thereof arising shall be with all other goods, etc, divided into equal parts, the one to be had, received and enjoyed unto by my loving wife, Debora, and the other part or moiety to be equally and indifferently had, parted, divided and enjoyed unto amongst all my children, share and share alike, except unto and by my daughter Debora whom I have already advanced in marriage. Wife Debora to be executrix and Edward Foord of London, merchant, and Andrew Blake of Stroud, in Kent, yeomen, overseers." It is not unusual circumstance for the Rev. John Wing to be styled a "clerk" in his will. His father-in-law, also a minister, was so designated in at least three conveyances made by him about the same time. The term evidently had a broader meaning than is now ascribed to it, and was used to designate a scholarly gentleman. A brief review of the family and surroundings of the widow Deborah Wing and her children at this period may bring the situation nearer home to us. Deborah herself was still a young woman of thirty-eight. Her only daughter, Deborah, aged about nineteen, had but recently married. Her eldest son, John, was but seventeen, her son Daniel a year or two younger than John, Stephen but nine and Matthew still younger. Her younger sister, Ann Sanborn, also widowed with a family , was living on the strand in London and her brothers, Samuel and Nathaniel, probably living in Holland. The freehold estate mentioned by Rev. John Wing in his will was located at Crickston and Stroud in Kent, a few miles distant from Sandwich. There is a tradition among the New England members of the family that Matthew Wing, Deborah's youngest son, "went back to England to look after some property left behind." We have positive knowledge that Matthew Wing returned to Stroud, married, lived and died there. The size, importance and value of the estate left by John to his wife and sons is not known; but it appears probable that they were provided with some means when they set out for America in the spring of 1632. Will of Rev. John Wing ------------------------------------------------------------------------ In the name of God Amen, the second daie of November one thousand sixe hundred twenty nine And in the fifth yeare of the reigne of our Soveraigne Lord Kinge Charles etc. I John Winge late of the Hague in Holland, clarke, now living in the pish (parish) of St. Mary Aldermary London and being sicke in bodie but of good and perfect minde and memory praised bee Almightie God, Doe make and ordaine this my last will and testament in manner and forme following First and principallie I commend my soule into the hands of Almightie God my maker trusting and assuredly believing to have full and free remission of all my sinnes by and through the only marritte and righteousness of Jesus Christ my alone Savior and my bodie I committ to the earth of which it came to bee decently buried where it shall please the Lord to direct. And as touching my wordly estate and substance whereof I am now possessed, I give and bequeath the same as followeth. First whereas I am now possessed and interested of an in certayne lands being freehold with appurtenances lying and beinge in the parish of Crickston and Stroud in the county of Kent or elsewhere, I will and desire and my minde and meaning is that the same be sold as soon as conveniently maye bee by my Executrix herein after named to the best profitt and advantage, and that the money thereof arisinge shall bee (with all and singular of, my other goods chattels and estate etc. whatsoever) divided into two equal pts and porcons (parts and portions), the one moietty whereof to be had received and enioyed unto and by my loving wife Deborah and the other pte or moytie to bee equallie and indifferently had, parted, divided and enioyed unto and amongst all my children share and share like, except unto and by my daughter Deborah whom I have allready advanced in marriage. And therefore I will that what I have allready given as her marriage porcon shall be accepted as pte of her dividend and proporcon of my estate given amongst my children by this will. And my will and meaning is, and I doe hereby appoint that ye said legacies and porcons shall be paid unto my sonnes at their severall ages of one and twentie years and unto my daughters unmarried at their like several ages of one and twentie years or severall daites of marriage wen of them shall first happen. And if any of my child or children happen to die or depart this life before the said legacies shall become due to be paid unto them or any of them in and by this my will then I will that the survivor or survivors of him, her, or them that shall soe happen to die in the mean tyme, shall have, receive and enjoye the legacie and bequest of him, her, or them soe dying as in aforesaid equallie to and amongst all the said survivor or survivors. And I hereby will that my said wife shall have and enjoye the benefitt and profitt of my childrens porcon herein by my will bequeathed towards their educacon and maintenance until their said porcon shall become due and payable to them severallie and respectively according to this my present will. Item, I will that all such debts as I owe in right or in conscience, together with my funeral charges shall be first paid, deducted, and allowed out of all my estate. An . d I doe hereby name, nominate and appoint my loving wife Deborah my Executrix of this my last will & testament and my loving friends Edward Foorde of London mercht and Andrew Blake of Stroud in the Countie of
~1592 - 31 JAN 1691/92
Deborah
Batcheldor
"A great and noble woman, widow of the Reverand John Wing of England and Holland, built a house and reared her sons, John, Daniel, Stephen and Mathew from whom the family in America descended. She came in the ship William and Francis with her father, the Reverand Stephen Bachiler, landing in Boston, Jan 5, 1632. Her posterity believe she named the town in honor of Sandwich, England, where her husband had received signal favors, and to which he dedicated one of his books. This tablet was erected by the Wing Family of America, Incorporated, A.D. 1903." None of the original settlers in Sandwich came from Sanwich, Kent, England, though at least one appears to have spent a few years there. The name seems, instead to be taken from strong geographic parallels, namely: "A shallow harbor with wide marshes. A bay running southwest/northeast called Kent Buzzers Reach or Buzzers Belly, here Buzzards Bay. A record of Dutch trade connections; in Kent from weavers and refugees, here from the Aptucxet Trading Post visited by New Amsterdam Secretary Isaac de Rasieres in 1727." From the Preface to VITAL RECORDS OF SANDWICH MASSACHUSETTS TO 1885: (PG. XV) "Sandwich was the first town in Plymouth Colony, settled in 1637. Like Taunton, also settled in 1637, its first families came from Massachusetts Bay colony, then overflowing with new arrivals who were establishing new settlements in Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Long Island and Plymouth colony." (pg. xvi-xvii): "The ship Abigail, Richard Hackwell Master, arrived at Boston in October 1635 with passengers Edmund Freeman 34, wife Elizabeth 35, children Alice 17, Edmund 15, Elizabeth 12, and John 8; plus the William Almy family and single men Benjamin Nye, Thomas Tupper, Thomas Landers and Thomas Greenfield. All these persons are found in the subsequent settlement at Sandwich...Sandwich settlers mentioned in Massachusetts Bay Colony Records include, Edward Dillingham, Thomas Dexter, Richard Chadwell, John Carman, William Wood, Henry Feake, and Rev. William Leveridge... "On April 3, 1637 the Plymouth Colony court allowed: " 'It is also agreed by the court that those tenn men of Saugust, vis Edmond Freeman, Henry Freake, Thomas Dexter, Edward Dillingham, William Wood, John Carman, Richard Chadwell, William Almey, Thomas Tupper & George Knott shall have liberty to view a place to sitt down & have sufficient lands for three score famylies, upon the conditions propounded to them by the Governor and Mr. Winslowe.' "The removal of the main body of settlers from Saugus to Sandwich doubtless occurred during 1637. The first appearance of the word 'Sandwich' in Plymouth Colony Records occurs January 2, 1637/8 when a suit brought by Michael Turner of Sandwich against John Davis of Weymouth was heard in Plymouth, alleging failure of Davis to deliver goods by ship to Sandwich; the intended shipment obviously had been planned for 1637. Winthrop's History of New England states in a 1637 section: " ' Another plantation was begun (and called Sandwich) about fifteen miles beyound Plimouth, towards Cape Cod, by many families, which removed from Sagus otherwise Lynn.' "Massacusetts Bay Records for November 20, 1637 read 'Saugust is called Lin.' " Of her sons, John moved further east on the Cape, Matthew returned to England, Daniel established himself where the Heritage Plantation is now and Stephen remained in Sandwich. His mother probably lived with him there. Her daughter, also named Deborah, having recently married, remained in England. Matthew returned to England later, where he lived the remainder of his life."
1611 - 1680
Deborah
Wing
69
69
1613 - 1699
John
Wing
86
86
[.] . John4 Wing (REV. JOHN3, MATTHEW2, GODFRIEDUS1 WYNGE) was born Abt. 1613 in probably Holland, and died Abt. 1699 in Massachusetts. He married Elizabeth Dillingham. Notes for John Wing: The following information was taken from the book "SCHWARZRAUBER, STEWART AND RELATED FAMILIES." by Sayre Archie Schwartrauber. The references given in that book for information are; Austin, John D. MAYFLOWER FAMILIES THROUGH FIVE GENERATIONS, Vol. VI. Stephen Hopkins. Plymouth, Mass.: General Society of MAYFLOWER Descendants, 1992. Lovell, R.A., Jr. SANDWICH, A CAPE COD TOWN. N.E.H.G.R Vol. XVIII, pp. 266-7. Numerous references. O.W.L Magazine. Journal of the Wing Family of America, Inc., Sandwich, Mass. Pope, Charles Henry. PIONEERS OF MASSACHUSETTS. Torrey, Clarence Almon. NEW ENGLAND MARRIAGES PRIOR TO 1700. Wing, Rev. Conway P. DD. A HISTORY AND GENEALOGICAL REGISTER OF JOHN WING OF SANDWICH. MA 1662-1881. John Wing Jr., was married to Elizabeth Dillingham and Miriam Dean. Miriam survived him. Her will was probated Jan. 8, 1702/3. John Wing Jr. lived near or in the same house as his mother, Deborah, in Sandwich, Mass. In 1657, in a bold move with John Dillingham (perhaps his brother-in-law), he resettled in Brewster, then wilderness. Both founded large families and became Quaker supporters. John Wing had at least 5 children. Child of John Wing and Elizabeth Dillingham is: + 19 i. Ananias5 Wing, born 1652 in Sandwich, Massachusetts; died August 30, 1718 in Sandwich, Massachusetts.
1627 - 1680
Matthew
Wing
53
53
1631 - 1631
Fulk
Wing
1613 - 1624
Thomas
Wing
11
11
22 JAN 1577/78 - 22 FEB 1577/78
Sibill
Wing
20 MAR 1578/79 - 1579
Elizabeth
Wing
1 FEB 1586/87
James
Wing
1659
Nathaniel
Wing
~1661
Deborah
Wing
~1663
Ephrian
Wing
~1665
Mercy
Wing
1661 - 1728
John
Wing
66
66
1664 - >1700
Abigail
Wing
36
36
1671 - 24 FEB 1737/38
Ebenezer
Wing
1 JAN 1673/74 - 1722
Matthew
Wing
MATTHEW5 WING (STEPHEN4, REV. JOHN3, MATTHEW2, GODFRIEDUS1 WYNGE) was born January 01, 1673/74 in Sandwich, Mass.. He married ELIZABETH ( RICKETSON) MOTT April 09, 1696 in Dartmouth, Mass., daughter of ADAM MOTT and MARY LOTT. Notes for MATTHEW WING: Co- executor of fathers will. Matthew Wing...1674 to 1724. (son of Stephen Wing, one of founders of Sandwich, Mass., in 1637) Matthew Wing, youngest son and child of Stephen Wing and Sarah (Briggs) Wing, was born at Sandwich"1st month 1, 1674." He received the name of his paternal great-grandfather. His mother died when Matthew was but fifteen years of age. In December, 1700, his father conveyed his homestead and other lands in Sandwich to Matthew and his older brother, Ebenezer; but previous to that date Matthew appears to have settled in the extreme western part of Dartmouth, where he married," 9th month 4, 1696," the widow Ricketson. At the time of his marriage Matthew was but twenty-two years of age. His wife was much older and had six children, the oldest of whom was fifteen years old and the youngest a son six years old. Just how Matthew found his way from Sandwich to Dartmouth is not difficult to surmise. His brother, Elisha, lived at Wareham, about half way, and his sister had married Robert Gifford and lived in Dartmouth. After the death of his mother, young Matthew may have made his home with his sister, Sarah, and thus have been acquainted in the Ricketson neighborhood. At the Sandwich reunion in 1905, Mr. William Arthur Wing of New Bedford, a descendant of Matthew and Elizabeth (Mott-Ricketson) Wing, read a paper entitled "Some Wings of Darmouth and Their Homes," in which was the following: "In ye town of Dartmouth on ye 25th day of ye sd month (called April), 1704, a meeting was appointed on purpose at ye house of Matthew Wing'. So reads the worn marriage certificate signed by Matthew Wing and others - - for the 'purpose' was the marriage of his step-daughter, Rebecca Ricketson, to John Russell - 'there being nothing to hinder and their intentions being duly published.' "The house of Matthew Wing, built about ten years after King Phillip's war - when, as Increase Mather wrote, 'Dartmouth did they burn with fire and barbarously murder both men and women' - stands on the east side of Acoxet or Westport River. Facing south on the upland, it commands a fine sweep of it commands a fine sweep of river, bay, and good old New England country. The sunset softens the time-worn shingles and the crumbling stone of the massive chimney, with its crude pilasters. Within, in spite of its pathetic desolation, the brave old beams and fine wood work bespeak an early New England craftsman at his best. The wedding room with its attractive corner buffet and great fireplace, in the simplicity of its appointments, was in accord with the assembled Friends, and if the sun streamed through the many-paned windows on that spring day - 200 years ago- it must have been a rare, quaint picture. Up winding stairs, in the great chamber above, was a chimney piece (now in the rooms of the Old Dartmouth Historical society at New Bedford) called by experts the finest of its time extant in Massachusetts. Clamboring up to the loft to watch the last rays of the setting sun upon the hills, the river and the far-off islands, you feel your ancestor, William Ricketson, builded well. Elizabeth (Mott) Ricketson, his widow, came from Portsmouth, R.I., where her parents were well known Friends. Her grandparents, first comers of the Motts, had been members in Roxbury of the church of Rev. John Eliot, the apostle to the Indians. In 1694, Mrs. Elizabeth Ricketson was one of the two women named in the confirmatory deed to the proprietors of Dartmouth. Matthew Wing received his first mention in the Dartmouth town meeting records in 1710, when chosen one of the two grand jurymen for the superior court of Bristol, then Dartmouth's county seat. It is interesting to find that he held several quaint offices, such as 'receiver of blackbirds' (those who killed them to have a penny a piece) and also 'fence viewer." Probably when the oldest Ricketson son married, a few years after his sister Rebecca, Matthew Wing bought the house and 100 acres at Shinuet, just north of the Ricketson homestead. "This house was a great two-storied double one, of the lean-to type, rare in Dartmouth, and faced south - as well-behaved colonial houses should. Family tradition says that it was begun by one Landers of Sandwich, and left unfinished. When Matthew bought it the floor timbers had sprouted and small trees were growing up toward the second story. in the stone wall, near the front of the house, is a large flat stone serving as a stile. In it is a deeply-cut 'B.W - 1771', none other than Benjamin Wing, who with Joseph, were Matthew's only two sons. It is the home which Benjamin Crane, the old Dartmouth surveyor, means when in his quaint journal about 1720, he writes: 'steyed one night at Matthew Wing's.' Like most in old Dartmouth, with its many Friends, Matthew Wing seems to have lived a life that 'glided on like rivers that water the woodland.' The Indian troubles were now fireside tales. The greatest excitements were those of town meetings, when the Friends and their affiliates made determined and repeated opposition to war, slavery and 'hireling Ministers." A slight glimpse within this old house may be seen by selections from its master's inventory in 1724: "My bible, 19 chairs, a round table and another table, one grate table and 17 napkins, 12 pewter plates, 10 platters, 4 porringers, one tankard, 13 silver spoons, knives and forks, a case of drawers, 5 feather beds with furniture well completed, 7 pairs of good linen chests, a cradle and a spinning wheel." The old house was torn down some years ago. Just in the rear is the old family burying ground where, as from the house, are beautiful views. Here, when the nearby orchard is in full bloom, the wind from the river below sometimes scatters the petals over the graves of Elizabeth and Matthew Wing. Captain Franklin Howland, historian of the Howland Family, wrote this in the "OWL" in December 1906, concerning the building of the old Apponegansett Meeting House, erected in 1689-9 and still standing: " It was just previous to these interesting events that the above Matthew Wing became a resident of Dartmouth and a member of the meeting. Of the romance that brought this about probably no man living knows. It is safe to presume, however, that young Matthew and the caring, winsome Elizabeth, grand-daughter of Adam Mott, formerly of Portsmouth, R.I., then of Dartmouth, met at one of the large meetings at Apponeganseet or at a Monthly Meeting at Spring Hill. It was no unusual occurrence for members of these meetings to exchange visits on the occasions. The distance is about 28 miles as the crow flies; the way was over winding Indian trails which increased the distance considerably, and the mode of conveyance was wholly on horse-back. But these men and women of granite nerve and muscle considered such as this no impediment to love and duty. However, in due time Matthew and Elizabeth plighted their troth and were married after the simple quaker manner; established a family home at Dartmouth and a church home with the flourishing Apponegansett Meeting. The marriage was in 1696. These and other interesting facts indicate that Matthew was a man of New England grit, gumption and good common sense; and that he personally aided building the meeting house and in establishing the Monthly Meeting with the encouragement of good-wife Wing there is no doubt. Matthew and Elizabeth Wing were prominent and useful members of the Meeting which was the religious home of nearly all their hundred of descendants of the century succeeding the marriage, many of their names appearing on the meeting records of births, marriages and deaths." Matthew Wing appears to have been quite prominent in the affairs at Dartmouth. His marriage, and also the births of his three children, appear in the town records. He seems to have taken an active interest in town affairs. At a town meeting held at Dartmouth at the house of Philip Sherman "August the 22 day 1700, John Jene and Matthew Wing were chosen Grand juremem for the Superior Court at Bristol and Robert Remens, Joseph Earl and Jonathan Talman were chosen jureman for trialls." And here is a quaint record in the proceedings of a town meeting held in Darmouth the 24th day of January, 1704-5; "It is also ordered at sd meeting that every householder being a planter shall kill 12 blackbirds between the first day of January and the middle of May yearly on pain of forfeiting three half-pence for every bird they shall neglect killing of sd number sd forfeture to be added to each defective person's town rate yearly to be paid into the town stock and farther it is ordered that every blackbird that shall be killed within the town within the time limited more the number of 12 to each planter as above shall be paid 1 penny out of the town stock or be abated out of the rate in the next town rate it is also ordered that each crow that shall be killed within sd time yearly shall be reckoned for three blackbirds it is also ordered that Joseph Tripp, Matthew Wing, Nathan Howland, John Russel, Jsn Spooner be the persons to take account yearly to the selectmen so that the penalty may be laid on such as are negligent and money may be raised to pay them that present more than their number." At a town meeting held March 20, 1704-5, Matthew Wing, Nathaniel Howland and Thomas Tabor Jr., were chosen constables. On January 28, 1709, Matthew was chosen a surveyor of highways and held the office for three successive terms. He was a "fence viewer" in 1721 and 1722. Among the brass memorial tablets in the rooms of the old Dartmouth Historical Society at New Bedford, is one to the memory of Matthew Wing. From William Arthur Wing's Some Wings of Old Dartmouth, Matthew Wing's home in Dartmouth, called "the old fort house," was built in 1645, is or was owned by Alvin Wing, and at the time of his writing was one of the oldest homes in New England still in possession of descendants. "This house was a great two-storied double one, of the lean-to type, and faced south - as well-behaved colonial houses should. Family tradition says that it was begun by one Landers of Sandwich, and left unfinished so when Matthew Wing bought it, the floor timbers had sprouted and small trees were growing up toward the second story. In the stone wall, near the front of the house, is a large flat stone serving as a stile. In it is a deeply cut B. W. - 1711, none other than Benjamin Wing, who with Joseph, were his only sons. It is this house which Benjamin Crane, the old Dartmouth surveyor, means when, in 1720, he writes, "stayed one night at Matthew Wing's." "Like most in old Dartmouth, with its many Friends, Matthew seems to have lived the simple life. The Indian troubles were now fireside tales. The greatest excitements were those of the town-meetings, when the Friends and their affiliates made determined and repeated opposition against War, Slavery and 'hireling ministers.'" From The Owl December 1906, Captain Frankline Howland's discussion: "...young Matthew and the charming, winsome Elizabeth, granddaughter of Adam Mot, formerly of Portsmouth, R.I., then of Dartsmouth, met at Apponegansett, or at a Monthly meeting at Spring Hill. It was no unusual occurrence for members of these meetings to exchange visits on these occasions. The distance is about 28 miles as the crow flies; the way was over the winding Indian trails which increased the distance considerably, and the mode of conveyance was wholly on horseback. But these men and women of granite nerve and muscle considered such as this no impediment to love and duty. However, in due time Matthew and Elizabeth plighted their troth and were married after the simple Quaker manner; established a family home at Dartmouth and a church home with the flourishing Apponegansett Meeting. The marriage was in 1696. These and other interesting facts indicate that Matthew was a man of New England grit, gumption and good common sense; and that he personally aided building the meeting house and in establishing the Monthly meeting with the encouragement of good-wife Wing there is no doubt. Matthew and Elizabeth Wing were prominent and useful members of this meeting which was the religious home of nearly all their hundreds of descendants of the century succeeding the marriage, many of their names appearing on the meeting records of births, marriages and deaths."
~1675
Sarah
Wing
Richard
Kirby
1813 - 1896
Matthias
Wing
82
82
Elizabeth
M.
Chenoweth
Grace
Parsons
Mary
Josephine
Allen
Mary
Sherman
William
Ricketson
Sarah
Sherman
Margaret
1805 - <1850
Phebe
Wing
45
45
1807 - 1881
Elizabeth
Wing
73
73
1810 - 1896
Stephen
Wing
86
86
1816
Giles
Joseph
Wing
1821 - 1921
Amy
Wing
99
99
1829
Charles
Wing
1833 - 1911
Benjamin
Franklin
Wing
77
77
[.] [JSWingJan99.FTW] A HISTORY OF THE BLACK RIVER FALLS, WISCONSIN BUSINESS DISTRICT 1839 - 1977: (pg. 49) 1858 B. F. Wing & J. W. Smith build 3-story building on #34, 35, 36 & 37 ( Knapp & Williamson Plat Block 10 Lot 6 E1/2 Historical Society Map Block 4 Lot 34) 1860 Wing Block burned March 18, 1860
Jeremiah
Clarke
John
VAUGHAN
(VAHAN)
20 FEB 1687/88
William
Ricketson
Rebecca
P.
Davis
Frances
Mccurdy
Signa
Anderson
Elizabeth
Marshall
1754 - 1858
Giles
Wing
104
104
GILES8 WING (MATTHEW7, JOSEPH6, MATTHEW5, STEPHEN4, REV. JOHN3, MATTHEW2, GODFRIEDUS1 WYNGE) was born Abt. 1750 in South Darmouth, Mass., and died in St. Lawerence Co., N.Y. He married MARY JANE CORNELL, daughter of DANIEL CORNELL and ELIZABETH ALLEN. Notes for GILES WING: Giles Wing...dates of birth and death not available) (Descendant in 5th generation from Stephen Wing, one of the founders of Sandwich, in 1637.) Giles Wing, son of Matthew and Elizabeth (Sisson) Wing, was born in S. Dartmouth, Mass., and went with his father about the year 1775 to Danby, Rutland Co., Vermont, although it is probable that Giles was married at this time and may have lived in Batemantown, Duchess Co., N.Y., a few years before the migration of the family to Danby. Giles married Mary Cornell, daughter of Daniel and Elizabeth Cornell. (Some of his descendants have the name as CORNWELL). By this first marriage he had John, Samuel, Joseph, Giles, Matthew, Catherine and Elizabeth. By a second wife, Beaulah Button, Giles had Abigail, Hyrum, Orange, Margaret and Delorum. It is also said that he had a third wife, Phoebe Dunham. Giles Wing was a selectman of Danby for two years, 1785-5. One of his grandsons made the following report: "My grandfather seems to have been a very strong man and was seldom "outlifted" at logging bees. He lived to be 103 years of age, and, at that advanced age, took great delight in breaking the hand-spikes left over after a logging bee, as it seems was the custom in these times." In the "History of Danby" it is said the Giles Wing married four times, that he settled first as Mt. Tabor and then at Danby, and lived there several years; that he died in St. Lawrence Co., N.Y. (Did he inherit the property deeded to his grandfather from Samuel Cornell's estate?) The statements in this report come from several different sources, giving some apparent discrepancies. Dr. Joseph Smith Wing wrote to the Wing Society that his grandfather was married but twice, so far as he ever heard, and that his second wife was referred to as "Granny Buly", evidently a contraction for Beaulah.
1668
Experience
Wing
Beulah
Button
1721 - 1810
Matthew
Wing
89
89
[.] MATTHEW7 WING (JOSEPH6, MATTHEW5, STEPHEN4, REV. JOHN3, MATTHEW2, GODFRIEDUS1 WYNGE) was born September 26, 1721 in Dartmouth, Mass., and died 1810 in Dartmouth, Mass.. He married ELIZABETH SISSON July 24, 1740 in Danby, Rutland Co., Vermont, daughter of JOHN SISSON and REBECCA LAWTON. Notes for MATTHEW WING: Matthew Wing...1721 to 1810 (Descendant if 4th generation from Stephen Wing, one of the founders of Sandwich, Mass., in 1637.) Matthew Wing, son of Joseph and Catherine (Cornell) Wing, was born in Dartmouth 9th month, 26, 1721. He is mentioned in the Dartmouth town records as "Nathan say Matthew" and the word "blind" is added. The town records also report that he was married to Elizabeth Sisson of Tiverton July 24, 1740. It seems that Matthew removed with his family to Batemantown, Duchess Co., N.Y., where he was living in 1773, and that he again moved in 1775, going to Danbury, Vermont. The history of Danbury says that "Joseph's Matthew came from Dartmouth in 1775 and that he died in 1810 at the age of 90 years and that he had Giles, Matthew, Ruth, Elizabeth and Mary. According to this history, he and his son Giles settled on a farm owned in 1869 by A. A. Mathewson in Danby. Matthew is mentioned in his father's will, made in 1778, and also in the U.S. Census of 1790, when he was reported in Danby with a family of one male over 16, two males under 16, and one female.
Constant
Mosher
1654
Sarah
Crandall
>1730 - ~1809
Catherine
?
Cornell
79
79
Among the many Cornell deeds in the old records of Dartmouth, Massachusetts, in 1739, there is a deed from Samuel Cornell, Paul Cornell, George Thomas and his wife Grizel Cornell, Elizabeth cornell, Deborah Cornell and Zilpah Cornell, all in Crumwell's Precinct, in the County of Duchess, New York, to Joseph Wing, the homestead which belonged to their late father, Samuel Cornell. (John Cornell's Cornell Genealogy). While Rev. Cornell does not list a possible Catherine among Samuel's children, the supposition is that she must be one. Further, the name Catherine is quite uncommon though is does appear elsewhere in the Cornell line.
~1779
Samuel
Wing
~1784
Giles
Wing
~1786
Matthew
Wing
~1788
Catherine
Wing
~1765
Ruth
Wing
1767
Elizabeth
Wing
1769
Mary
Wing
1 FEB 1697/98 - 1752
Benjamin
Wing
20 FEB 1701/02 - 1792
Abigail
Wing
20 MAR 1717/18
Ruth
Wing
23 MAR 1718/19
Edward
Wing
1731
John
Wing
1734
Daniel
Wing
1607 - 1693
George
Lawton
86
86
Peleg
Gifford
Robert
Gifford
~1596 - 1649
Theodate
BACHELOR
(BACHILER)
53
53
1696 - 1767
Stephen
Cornell
71
71
1689 - <1767
Ruth
Pierce
78
78
1602
Richard
Maxson
Oct. 2 1634. Admitted to the church, along with wife, Rebecca. (See Descendants of Richard Maxson:) Ann Hutchinson and her party came to Boston on the ship "Griffin" in 1634 and there is a possibility that Richard and Rebecca were aboard the same ship. Feb. 7, 1639. "Richard Maxson, upon complaints made against him, was accordingly detected for his oppression in the way of his trade, who being convinced thereof, promised amendments and satisfaction." Note: According to Fischer in Albion's Seed, it was not unusual to be so charged even if all you did was try to recoup your losses after the sinking of your ship, the Puritan thinking being that it was God's will. April 30,1639. With 28 others signs compact founding Poasset (Portsmouth): " We whose names are underwritten, do acknowledge ourselves the legal subjects of his majesty King Charles, and in his name do hereby bind ourselves into a civil body politicke, unto his laws according to matters of justice." Of the 29 signers, only 13, including Richard, signed their own names. May 16, 1639. Newport, Rhode Island laid out. Richard was invited to join then and his name appears in the list of Freeman of the town. 03-06-1640. 36 Acres Recorded. His land was located on the northwestern shore of the island, within the limits of what is now Lehigh Hill Park. Rebecca later deeded away the land. In 1644 Rebecca was paid by William Roulston for the property Richard sold him in 1642. According to family tradition, he and his son Richard were killed by Indians at Throggs Neck, afterwards Maxson's Point. According to Web Site (http://webuser.anet-stl.com) Richard and Rebecca had followed Anne Hutchinson, whose husband had died, from Rhode Island to what is now Pelham Bay, on Long Island in 1642, where all went well until the Pequot Wars. From "Descendants of Richard Maxson": "Around December, 1639 the Indians stopped trading with Richard Maxson but said that if he would tie up his dogs they would trade again. Richard did tie up his dogs, and the Indians raided the place. Richard escaped but returned the next day with a group of other men to get food and supplies for those who were marooned in a boat, and all were massacred by the Indians. Thus, our Richard and his son met a heroic death seeking food for his family and friends. His wife, Rebecca, together with those who remained in the boat, escaped. After many hardships and harrowing experiences they reached Newport, Rhode Island, where they found sanctuary and where John Maxson was born, the first white child born in the State of Rhode Island." (Anne Hutchinson and all but one of her family were massacred during this uprising). See also Thomas Cornell during this same period of time.
Thomas
Mosher
1639 - 1720
John
Maxson
81
81
[.] 1639-1644. Birth. According to Descendants of Richard Maxson, John was the first white child born in Rhode Island and was born AFTER his father and brother were killed by Indians at Throggs Neck. According to Web Site (http://webusers.anet-stl.com), he was born BEFORE the massacre and was with his mother safe aboard one of the boats where they had taken refuge. John Austin's Dictionary of Rhode Island Genealogy gives a birth date of 1639. March 22, 1661. Signed certain articles in regard to Misquamicut (Westerly) lands. Oct. 20, 1668. Freman in Westerly. May 18, 1669. List of inhabitants, Westerly. 1670-80-90-1705. Deputy. Oct. 24, 1677. Excused from jury duty because his mother and his mother-in-law were both sick. 1687. Overseer of the Poor. Chosen this year, with another, to present petition to Sir Edmond Andros for a town charter. 1687-89. Grand Jury. Sept. 16, 1690. He and two other appointed by the Assembly to proportion a rate for Westerly. March 28, 1692. Grant of 50 Acres near Captain Joseph Davol's. March 11, 1694. Sold above to Edward Larkin. March 4, 1694. One of the proprietors in common lands at Newport. June 25, 1707. Deeds to son Jonathan 22 acres. Sept. 20, 1708. Elder of Seventh Day Baptist Church. "Our beloved brother John Maxson, Sr., was ordained to the office of an elder to the congregation in and about Westerly." Jan. 22, 1716. Will, proved February 16, 1721. Inventory: mare, colt, bonds, wearing apparel, bible, books, including "Doolittle on Sacrament," feather beds, warming pan, pewter, etc. Buried in the Clarke burying ground near the Paytucket River where, on a slate stone is inscribed, "Here lieth the body of John Maxson, died Dec. 17, 1720 in the 82nd year of his life."
1670 - 1754
Joseph
Mosher
84
84
1673 - >1743
Lydia
Taber
70
70
1671
Jonathan
Tripp
6 FEB 1636/37 - >1707
Rebecca
Maxson
Step daughter of John Harndell. (Chamberlain & Clarenbach, Descendants of Hugh Mosher and Rebecca Maxson). Possibly followed death of father and brother Richards at Throgg's Neck by Indians.
James
Mosher
Elizabeth
Mosher
1604 - 1777
Rebecca
173
173
1666 - 1747
Nicholas
Mosher
81
81
[.] The only records in John Austin's Rhode Island Genealogy is March 11, 1747 Will. Made at Dartmouth, proved in Tiverton. Inventory: 372L, 4s., 4d., viz.: books, pewter, beds, 2 cows, swine, bonds, warming pan, stillyards.
1668 - 1739
John
Mosher
71
71
1691 - 1748
Mary
Mosher
57
57
1673 - AFT. 23 JAN 1716/17
Hannah
Mosher
Ann
Wortman
1678 - BET. JUL - AUG 1751
Daniel
Mosher
~1680 - >1746
Rebecca
Mosher
66
66
~1625 - 1638
Richard
Maxson
13
13
Edward
Thurston
1694 - 1694
Elizabeth
Mott
1820 - <1824
Susannah
Cornell
4
4
1680
Giles
Slocum
1607 - 1640
Nicholas
Mosher
33
33
Sam Behling (samcasey@@aol.com) shows this person as Nicholas Mosher. Others refer to him as Ezekial.
~1647
Elizabeth
Willet
1561
Ann
Bate
1594 - 1680
Stephen
Bachiler
86
86
D. >1625
Samuel BACHILER
(BACHELOR)
(BATCHELDER)
1603
Frances
Bachiler
1605
John
Bachiler
1607
William
Bachiler
Henry
Bachiler
Hester
Mercer
Helena
Masom
Mary
Magdalene
Beedle
2 FEB 1657/58 - 1720
Sarah
Wing
Patience
Mosher
Mary
Russell
Content
Tucker
25 JAN 1645/46 - 1 JAN 1709/10
Giles
Slocum
11 FEB 1707/08
Content
Brownell
William
Sanford
1674 - 1752
Hope
Sisson
77
77
1649 - 1719
Rebecca
Mott
70
70
1644 - 1703
Ann
Lawton
59
59
1637 - 16 MAR 1719/20
Elizabeth
Lawton
28 JAN 1700/01 - 1761
Richard
Cornell
1641 - 2 FEB 1717/18
Mary
Mosher
<1623 - 1703
Sarah
1
Cornell
80
80
1691 - 1766
Lydia
Cole
74
74
~1650
Mehitable
Fish
1688 - 1784
John
Sisson
96
96
1690
Jane
Peabody
BEF. 29 FEB 1635/36
John
Hussey
1748
Ferris
Cornell
BET. 1548 - 1549 - 1614
Matthew
WING
(WYNGE)
1552 - 1631
Mary
79
79
1574 - 1631
Fulke
Wing
57
57
1576 - 1624
Thomas
Wing
48
48
1581 - 1630
Elizabeth
Wing
49
49
27 FEB 1585/86
Matthias
Wing
19 JAN 1588/89 - 1604
Sarah
Wing
1592 - 1602
Joan
Wing
10
10
1 JAN 1663/64 - 10 MAR 1697/98
Hannah
Swift
1581 - 1641
George
Lawton
60
60
1585
Isbell
Smith
1550
Thomas
Lawton
1603 - 11 MAR 1693/94
Samuel
Corning
1603 - 1688
Elizabeth
85
85
~1565 - 1631
Richard
Cornell
66
66
1567
Mary
1591
Daniel
Cornell
24 MAR 1593/94 - 8 FEB 1655/56
Thomas
Cornell
From Rev. John Cornell's Genealogy of the Cornell Family (Newberry Library, call no. E 7 C809): "Thomas Cornell came to America about 1638, with his wife and most, if not all. of his children. He is first found in Boston, where by a vote of the Town Meetings, Aug. 20, 1638, he is permitted to buy 'William Baulstone's house, yard, and garden, backside of Mr. Coddington, and to become an inhabitant This property was situated in Washington Street, between Summer and Milk Streets. He sold it in 1643 to Edward Tyng, who had a warehouse and brew house, and constructed a dial there. Sept.. 6, 1638, 'Thomas Cornhill was licensed upon tryal to keepe an inn in the room of Will Baulstone till the next General Court June 4, 1639, he 'was fined 30 Pounds for several offences selling wine without license and beare at 2d. a quart Two days later he was abated 10 Pounds of his fine, and allowed a month 'to sell off his ware which is upon his hand, and then to cease from keeping intertainment, and the town to furnish another. "The Antinomians were great disturbers of the religious peace of the people of Boston, and in 1637 Ann Hutchinson and her adherents were expelled from the Colony. Among them we do not find the name of Thomas Cornell, whose vocation as an innkeeper perhaps saved him from doctrinal errors, but among the obnoxious ones were his neighbors, Baulstone and Coddington, and his brother-in-law John Briggs. By the advice of Roger Williams, then settled at Providence, the exiles purchased, March 28, 1638, from the Indians Canonicus and Miantonomi, the island on which Newport now stands, and on the north end of that island they began a settlement to which they gave the name of Portsmouth. Thomas Cornell arrived two years later and was admitted freeman of Portsmouth, Aug. 6, 1640. Feb. 4, 1641, 'a piece of meadow,' was granted him to be fenced in at his own cost. The same year he was made constable, and the following year ensign (name spelt Cornhill). At the same time Richard Morris was elected captain, and Mr.. Baulstone lieutenant. Some suppose this last office to have been held by his son Thomas, as the father may have been in New Amsterdam at that time. (Note-would have been only about 17 at the time) "In the autumn, 1642, he went to New Amsterdam, and it has been supposed that Roger Williams and John Throckmorton went with him, and for this reason: the fugitives from Boston, who joined Roger Williams, had formed a sort of colony in Rhode Island, but it was only a self-created government, or squatter sovereignty that they had, and it was thought best by them in 1642, that Roger Wiliams should go to England to obtain a royal charter for his colony. He could not sail from Boston (which would be the nearest port) because he was banished from Massachusetts, so he went to New Amsterdam for that purpose, as the Dutch were more tolerant. There was not (as today) many steamers departing every week for England from that port, and he did not embark until June, 1643. We know, moreover, that he went to England then, and obtained a charter for his colony and returned. Roger Williams, Throckmorton and Cornell seem to have been much associated together and friends, and this has led to the supposition that they may have come from England in the same ship; at any rate, we know that Roger Williams and Throckmorton did. (Footnote: Ship Lyon, departed Briston Dec. 1, 1630, arrived Nantasket, Feb 5, 1630 with Williams, his wife, Throckmorton and about 18 others.) About a year after Thomas Cornell's' arrival in New Amsterdam, Governor Winthrop reports, 'Mr. Throckmorton and Mr. Cornell' established, with buildings, etc., on neighboring plantations under the Dutch. (See also Thomas C. Cornell's Adam and Ann Mott). On Oct. 2, 1642, the local Dutch government granted him permission with his associates (thirty-five families), to settle 'within the limits of the jurisdiction of their High Mightiness to reside there in peace.' (this was about eleven miles from New Amsterdam). After this general license to settle, Cornell and Throckmorton made examination of the territory, procured a survey and map, and on July 6, 1643, Gov. Kieft granted to John Throckmorton, for himself and his associated, a tract of land is what is now the town of Westchester. A serious Indian war, though of short duration, was caused by Gov. Kieft's unwise attack upon the two neighboring camps of Indians on the night between Feb 25 and 26, 1643, and in retaliation the Indians, within the following month or two destroyed many of the white settlers outside the city; and many others, who escaped fled panic stricken to New Amsterdam (se also Thomas C. Cornell) Roger Williams says,'Mine eyes saw the flames of these towns, the flights and hurrying of men, women and children, and the present removal of all that could to Holland.' (Quoted from Winthrop, R.I. Hist. Coll III, 156, New England, II, 117). Gov. Winthrop says: 'By the mediation of Mr. Williams who was then there to go in a Dutch ship to England, the Indians were pacified and peace re-established between the Dutch and them.' Cornell and Throckmorton and who were probably in New Amsterdam City at that time escaped, but Mrs. Hutchinson whose residence was near Throckmorton's was killed. For, days Gov. Winthrop of this event, under the date of Sept., 1643, 'The Indians set upon the English who dwelt among the Dutch They came to Mrs. Hutchinson in way of friendly neighborhood as they had been accustomed to, and taking their opportunity they killed her and Mr. Collins her son-in-law, and all of her family and such of Mr. Throckmorton's and Mr. Cornell's families as were at home, in all sixteen, and put their cattle into their barns and burned them;' then he also adds, 'These people had cast off ordinances and churches, and now at last their own people, and for larger accommodation had subjected themselves to the Dutch and dwelt scatteringly near a mile asunder. Some that escaped the Indian attack went back to Rhode Island. Thomas Cornell it appears during these troublous times, returned to Portsmouth, R. I., and secured a grant of land from that town, Aug. 29, 1644, in company with Mr. Brenton and Mr. Baulstone, 'Butting on Mr. Porter's round meadow,' and on Feb 4, 1646, a grant of 100 acres was made to Thomas Cornell by the town of Portsmouth, 'on the south side of the Wading River and so as to run from the river towards the land that was laid out to Edward Hutchinson' (a son of Ann Hutchinson). This may be considered the original Homestead of the Cornell family. Previous grants were made to him in company with other parties and as we will see the grant of Cornell's Neck was later. This land or the part on which the house and burial plot are situated has never been out of the family." "After the restoration of peace in New Netherland, brought about by the mediation of Roger Williams, Thomas Cornell returned to the Dutch Colony, but not, it seems, to restore and rebuild what had been destroyed of his property on Throgg's Neck. But he asked for a tract adjacent, fronting on the south and west of that of Throckmorton, from which it was separated on the shore by the mouth of Westchester Creek, and extending thence about two miles on the Long Island Sound to the Bronx River and extending back two miles or more from the sound to the westerly edge of the present village of Westchester, formerly and even now known as Cornell's Neck; this estate was granted by Governor William Kieft to Thomas Cornell by patent, dated July 25, 1646. This was only the third private grant of land of which there is any record in Westchester County. Jonas Bronck in 1637, and Throckmorton in 1642, being previous, and possibly Adrian Van der Donk in 1646, and this grant of Cornell; Neck was four years after Thomas Cornell's first settlement in Westchester Co., in 1642. Thus he was there four years prior to Adrian Van der Dock in 1646. Thirty-five years before Governor Andros permission to make his first purchase of lands from the Indians in Westchester Co., nearly forty years earlier than the first acquisition of Westchester lands by Frederick Phillips within the present towns of Greenburgh and Mt. Pleasant in 1681, and thirty years before his first interest in Yonkers, in 1672, and fifteen years before the great-grand-father of the illustrious George Washington first settled in Virginia in 1657. "Cornell's Neck was within the limits of Greater New York. After the death of Mr. Cornell, Thomas Pell set up a counter claim to the land, and litigation ensued between him and Sarah Bridges, in the course of which it appeared in evidence that Thomas Cornell had been at considerable charge in building, manuring and planting, that he was after several years driven off by the barbarous violence of the Indians, who burned his house and destroyed his cattle, that the widow Cornell, sole executrix of the last will and testament of her husband (although neither the will nor a copy was produced), conveyed the land to Sarah Bridges and her sister. The litigation established the validity of the Cornell title and Sarah Bridges was put in possession of the land. A new patent was issued April 15, 1667, for Cornell's Neck, setting forth the fact that Thomas Cornell's interest devolved long since on Sarah Bridges, one of the daughters of Thomas Cornell, deceased, and that said Sarah had conveyed her interest by deed to William Willett, her eldest son, to whom the new patent was issued. (Taken from the history of the grant and the litigation in Bolton's History of Westchester County)." "Thus we infer that after several years residence at 'Cornell's Neck,' perhaps nine years, Thomas Cornell was again driven by the Indians from his property in New Netherland, and returned to his homestead at Portsmouth, where he lived, and died, and was buried...a record of him serving on a coroner's jury in 1653, and in 1654...one of the commissioners on 'ye foure-towns upon ye re-uniting of ye Colonie of Providence Plantations' He probably died the following year. An old memorandum made by Stephen B. Cornell of Portsmouth about the beginning of the last century, and still preserved by the family, states that Thomas Cornell, by will dated De. 5, 1651, gave to his wife Rebecca all his real estate; also that Rebecca, by will dated Sept. 2, 1664, gave to her son Thomas all her land lying on the west side of Rhode Island, and lying between the farms of Thomas Hazard and John Coggeshall. Neither of these wills is known to be now in existence, nor any copy of them. The records of the Society of Friends at Portsmouth, R.I., have numerous entries respecting Thomas and Rebecca Cornell and their descendants."
1667 - 1748
John
Maxson
81
81
[.] Extensive landholder in Westerly.
1690 - >1758
Jane
Freeman
68
68
Thomas
Lawton
1647 - 1718
Sarah
Lawton
71
71
1669 - 1752
Elizabeth
Sisson
83
83
1670 - 1698
Mary
Sisson
27
27
1672 - 19 MAR 1748/49
Ann
Sisson
1676 - 1752
Richard
Sisson
76
76
1680
Ruth
Sisson
23 MAR 1682/83 - 1775
George
Sisson
23 MAR 1684/85 - 1720
Abigail
Sisson
1690 - 1776
James
Sisson
85
85
~1701
Rebecca
Lawton
Sam Behling gives birth date as abt. 1699 in Cranfield, Bedfordshire, England. Also gives "Of Tiverton, Newport, RI."
Richard
Tew
1683 - 5 MAR 1717/18
William
Tew
1608 - 26 FEB 1683/84
Richard
Sisson
May 17, 1653. Freeman Portsmouth, RI. Aug. 2, 1653. On a jury that found in the case of Thomas Bradley who was discovered dead on the highway, "that by extremity of heat the said Thomas was overcome and so perished by himself in the wilderness." July 6, 1658. Bought from William Hall 1/300 part of Conanicut (sic) and Dutch Islands, and two years later sold same, along with another 1/300 part bought from Thomas Manchester to Peleg Sanford. June 5, 1667. Grand Jury in Dartmouth. May 27, 1668. Gave testimony, calling himself 60 years of age or thereabouts, saying, "John Archer being at my house did speak as followeth, and said the deed of gift made by Namumpam to John Sanford and himself was a cheat, and the intent thereof was to deceive Namumpam, squaw Sachem, of her land; and they were to have both corn and peage to secure her land, from Wamsutta or Peter Tallman, was to resign up the deed at her demand.' " "And I, Mary Sisson, do testify that I heard the same words at the same time, and further, when my husband was gone out of the house, I heard both say they were troubled in conscience they had concealed it so long, and did refuse to take part of the gratification." June 5, 1671. Surveyor of Highways. Oct. 18, 1683. Will, proved Feb. 26, 1684, Executor son James. Typical allocation of chattel, funds, land. "To son James, all my housing and land in Dartmouth, excepting land near Pogansett Pond, and the reservation aforesaid for wife...To son John, all my house and land in Portsmouth." Inventory, 600L,29s., viz: house and lands at Dartmouth 240L, house and lands at Rhode Island 60L, cattle and horsekind 118L, 15s., swine 30L, sheep 14L, 10s., beds, &tc, 50L, new cloth, wool yarn, hemp and flax 13L, negro servant 28L, one Indian servant 10L, money 12L. April 15, 1690. Will, proved Dec. 1, 1692. Inventory 190L, in silver money, twenty-nine cheeses, &tc.
Arthur
Hathaway
Hannah
\\
Thomas
Lawton
John
Tripp
1662 - 1714
Lydia
Hathaway
52
52
1614 - 1681
Thomas
Lawton
67
67
[from: Lawton, Elva, The Descendants of Geroge Lawton of Portsmouth, Rhode Island, 1977; Lawton, Frederick T., Thomas Lawton, Immigrant 1638, Aquidneck (Rhode) Island, 1950] Thomas and George Lawton Thomas and George Lawton were brothers, and the sons of George Lawton and Isbell Smith, who emigrated from Cranfield Parish, (on the western side of and on a range of hills in) Befordshire, England to Aquidneck around 1638-1655. Thomas brought with him his wife Elizabeth Salsburie and his infant daughter Elizabeth. George was not married. Between 1635 and 1638, Bedfordshire, which was strongly Puritan, was assessed 3000 pounds by the king, without a Parliament, for ship-money and required to furnish 200men for the campaign against Scotland. The call to America was strong. The fact that the first records of the Lawtons in America were in Aquidneck, indicates that they were not Puritans. They were planters and yeomen. During this same period of time Roger Williams was banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony due to his opposition to the government. Within nine months, however, Anne Hutchinson and her followers revolted against Coddington and Williams and established another settlement in Newport. Amon the 32 men who signed the compact with Hutchinson were George and Thomas Lawton (who signed his name then as he did all through his life with the letter T). George Lawton was admitted an inhabitant if 1638 and Thomas probably at the same time. George served as deputy for six years and as Assistant for nine years besides serving on numerous committees; his land was granted on the Wading River and on the opposite side of the road from his mill, the first in Lawton's Valley. Beginning in 1649, Thomas served in several capacities, Deputy for one year, Overseer of the Poor, and Commissioner for four years. He was made Freeman in 1655. Thomas's land grant was near Quaker Hill and south of Union Street; in addition, he acquired much land south of Union Street which he called "Hunting Swamp Farm." A description of Quaker Hill, which stand 285 feet high, a few hundred yards southwest of the Thomas's farm, was made by Frederick MacKenzie, a British officer in 1776, saying: "There is a hill about 7 miles from Newport, and on the eastern side of the island, called Quaker Hill (from there being a Quakers' meeting house on it) from whence there is a very fine view of all of the North part of the island, and of the adjacent islands. And the Continent for many miles. The many fine and cultivated Islands and the beautiful bays and inlets, with the distant view of the towns, farms and cultivated lands intermixed with woods, together with the many fine views of the adjacent waters, contribute to make this (even at this bleak season of the year) the finest, most diversified, and extensive prospect I have seen in America." Thomas eventually bought several parcels of land, in addition to the original allotment of three acres near the Town Pond and that near Quaker Hill, Hunting Swamp Farm and Long Swamp Farm in the southerly part of Portsmouth, 600 acres on the southwest end of Warwick on the mainland, five parcels forming a farm on Puncatest Neck lying across Sakonnet River east of Rhode Island, a house and lot on Martha's Vinyard, land in Dartmouth, Massachusetts and in Shrewsbury, New Jersey. The present location of the grants are located as follows: At the junction of the West Main Road or Kings High Road and the U.S. Naval Reservation on Naragansett Bay is the 240 acre grant of George Lawton. Thomas's son Isaac had a farm of about 40 acres on the easterly side of the road in later years. About a mile and a half further south is the Wading River where George built his grist mill. Just east and north of the town line of Portsmouth was Hunting Swamp Farm. Continuing eastward to the Newport path then south to Braman Lane then east to Wapping Road is the Long Swamp Farm of Thomas Lawton on the west side of the road. Returning to the East Main Road and continuing north about two miles, one comes to Quaker Hill and then to the present Portsmouth Town Hall. If their first abodes were like those of other early settlers they consisted of dugouts or rough shelter made of twigs woven together, with thatch roofs, followed by a 400 square foot one-room, four-foot tall log cabin. Their diet consisted of fish and oysters obtained from the Indians, wild grapes, eels (the skin of which was also braided into rope), black ducks, deer meat, rabbits, partridges, squirrels, raccoons, bear meat, turnips, red peppers and dried berries. Corn was bought from the Indians and later grown this was pounded and made into coarse bread or boiled, pounded and baked into Johnny cake. The clothing consisted often of doe skin or buck skin. Safety was an early concern and many families had a large dog. In 1639, it was ordered "that in regard of the many incursions that the Island is subject unto and that an Alarum for the securing the place is necessary therefor it is thought meet for the present that an Alarum be appointed to give notice to all who inhabit the place that they may forthwith repair and gather together at the Howse of the Judge for the defending of the Island or quelling any Insolences that shall be tumuously raysed within the Plantation; therefore the Alarum that we appoynt shall be this Three Musketts to be discharged distinctly and a Herauld appointed to goe speedily throw the Towne and crye Alarm Alarm Upon which all are to repair immediatley to the place aforesaid." And it was not just Indians or trespassers from the mainland which caused concern; there were wild bears and boars as well. In 1655, Thomas's wife Elizabeth died. Shortly before he made his will, June 5, 1674, Thomas married the widow Grace Parsons Bailey. It was not a marriage made in heaven. It appears that Thomas Lawton may have committed adultery with Grace and later have charged her with committing adultery. [from Fiske, Jane Fletcher, Records of the General Court of Trials, Boxford, Massachusetts, 1998] In 1671, " Upon an Indictment by the Grand Jury against Grace Lawton the wife of Thomas Lawton formerly the wife of William Baily ffor comitting Adultrie with Thomas Lawton. The said Grace being Mandamassed, Enters Traverce pleads Not Guilty and Referrs her selfe for Tryall to god and the cuntry. The Jurrys Verdict is Not Guilty. "The Court doe declare them selves wholy dissatisfyed with that Verdict and therefore cannot cleere her, The Aturney declareinge there was a failer in the Testimony he depended on or otherwise he had produced other Testimony." Then, in 1673, "Upon an Indictment by the Genrl Aturney against Grace the wife of Thomas Lawton of Portsmouth for com[m]ittinge Adultry with James Murfie she enters Traverce, pleads Not Guilty and referrs for Tyall to God and the Cuntry. The Jurrys Verdict, Not Guilty of Adultry.The said Grace Lawton is by order of Court cleered by proclamation payinge ffees." In Frederick T. Lawton's work, he says that a descendant of Thomas stated that he found it more difficult to get along with his second wife that with the Indians. It is his belief that misunderstanding and disagreement may have come through the use of some of Thomas Lawton's land by William and Grace Parson Bailey, pursuant to an unusual deed which was executed August 13, 1661. "Thomas Laiton has agreed that William Baily shall have three score acres of his land at his farme at Huntinge Swamp - said William Bally is to have the same land for his own life time and if his wife Grace Bally keepe herself a widowe after her husband's death then she also is to enjoy in the full term of Thomas Laitons life time and three years afterwards - agreed that William Bally shall nott lett nor sell the same land for his time to any others, but if the said William shall be minded to leave it, he shall return it to afore said Thomas Laiton againe, the said Thomas Laiton painge for it accordinge as two or three indifferent men shall judge." Later, "Upon an action of the case for non performance of covinnat, commenced by Grace the wife of Thomas Lawton of the town of Portsmouth plaintiff against Daniel Lawton defendant, beareing date the 23 of August 1675. Damage 40L Sterll. Upon a long debate of the case the court order that the action shall fall; and it is ordered by this court for the time past and for the future Daniell Lawton shall allow and pay to said Grace Lawton the sum of four shillings a week paid monthly, to be paid to her or he signes in silver New-England mony in liew of the use of a horse and fire-wood, the sum of twenty shillings yearly, and this act to be in force untill further care either by her husband or this to court to be taken in the premises, and the same to be paid out of his father Thomas Lawtons estate, and ordered that the said Grace Lawton shall give unto the said Daniell Lawton a true inventory of all the partickular estate she hath in her hands, and that the said Daniell Lawton shall forth-with pay the said Grace Lawton the sum of twenty shillings in mony over and above what is afore ordered." In the Proceedings of the General Assembly of Rhode Island are many entires regarding Grace and her welfare: "June 14, 1676. His wife Grace, having presented her many grievances to the town often, and to the Assembly several times, for due and sufficient maintenance, she being much neglected in her husband's absence, it was therefore ordered by the Assembly that 6 shillings per week in silver be paid her or her order, during her life, or until her husband, Thomas Lawton, shall come himself to maintain her. During his absence or neglect, the said sum of 6 shillings per week shall be paid by his agent, Daniel Lawton, which inventory Daniel Lawton shall have, Grace to have the privileges of chamber she is now possessed of, and use of necessary moveables; and the rights of herself or any of her children now or in future to any estate, are not cut off." "Apr. 31, 1677 (Apr 13?). Thomas Lawton made an agreement for his step-son John Bailey, to give Grace, his mother, 10 pounds per year, and his daughter, Elizabeth Sherman, 3 pounds per year (40 shilling sin money and another 20 s. in good merchantable sheep's wool at 12 pence per pound), in return for a lease of a dwelling house, selling him the household goods, but reserving a bed, settle, chairs, etc." "Apr. 22, 1677. Grace accepted the 10 pounds per year in silver provided for by her husband, and acquitted him of all 'dower, thirds, portions or legacies, bills, bonds or grants whatsoever.'" Thomas's will mentions his property and his children, sons Daniel and Isaac, daughter Eilzabeth Sherman, wife of Peleg Sherman, daughter Anne Slocum, daughter Sarah Sisson, son-in-law George Sisson, and wife Grace.
1616 - 1654
Elizabeth
Salisbury
38
38
FTM Genealogy Site: Ancestors of Barbara Elaine Shelley: Parents of Elizabeth Salsburie, wife of Thomas Lawton, are John Salsburie and Margaret Crowley.
1853
Byron
Wing
Unknown
May
1611
Mary
Lawton
1616
Isaac
Lawton
20 FEB 1620/21 - 1621
Nicholas
Lawton
1623
Elizabeth
Lawton
Sylvanus
Hussey
<1634 - 1704
John
Cornell
70
70
[.] From Rev. John Cornell's Genealogy of the Cornell Family, listed as one of Thomas cornell's nine children. Here it also says that he lived at Cow Neck, L.I.
Unknown
1610 - 1698
George
Wolsey
87
87
31 JAN 1628/29 - 5 FEB 1712/13
Rebecca
Cornell
[.] Rev. John Cornell's Genealogy of the Cornell Family lists Rebecca one of Thomas cornell's nine children.
Phebe
Mosher
Ann
Gregory
Elizabeth
Rathburne
Elizabeth
Backhouse
1659 - 1723
Elizabeth
Mott
64
64
From William Arthur Wing's, Some Wings of Old Dartmouth, "her grandparents, first comers of the Motts, had been members, in Roxbury, of the church of John Eliot, the apostle to the Indians." From will of father, Adam, left new cotton and linen sheets.
Levina
Fletcher
1624 - 1694
Richard
Cornell
70
70
Daniel
Mosher
1600 - 8 FEB 1672/73
Rebecca
Briggs
Maiden name might not be Briggs. See article which discusses the matter. Since John Briggs identified himself as her brother during court hearings, Briggs seems a fair assumption to me. In 1657, Dec. 10, Rebecca Cornell was granted 10 acres in lieu of 10 acres granted her husband. In 1659, she deeded these 10 acres to her son and daughter Kent. April 30, 1661 sold Thomas Hart for 30 Pounds two parcels of land containing 8 acres with house, fruit trees, etc.; confirmed by her son Thomas in 1663. October 25, 1663, conveys to her son Joshua 1/6th of a share of land at Coshena and Acookset (part of Dartmouth) in Plymouth Jurisdiction (This he conveyed on Nov. 21, 1664, to his brother Samuel along with 20 acres of land he bought from William Earle (brother of Sarah Earle?). July 27, she deeded to Thomas all her housing, orchard, land and fencing in Portsmouth, the 100 Pound bond to which she held at her death, eight years later. In 1669, she conveys to son Samuel land in Dartmouth, one-sixth of a share. (Footnote in Cornell's Genealogy of the Cornell Family: It appears Rebecca had three-sixths of a share; she conveyed to Samuel 1/6th, to Joshua 1/6th, perhaps 1/6th to John, who lived in Dartmouth. To Thomas she gave land in Portsmouth. Her other son, Richard, had gone to Long Island in 1656 and had probably received his patrimony). On February 8, 1773, she died strangely in Portsmouth in her own dwelling house. On May 23, her son Thomas was charged with murder, tried and executed. See Thomas for more. Witnesses in the trial were: Her brother John Briggs Mary, wife of John Cornell, her son Thomas's sons: Thomas, Stephen, Edward & John Her daughter, Rebecca Woolsey
21 JAN 1619/20 - 1693
Adam
Mott
Feb. 24, 1711. Will, proved Sept. 8, 1712. Widow Mary. Executrix daughter Sarah Tripp. To daughters Sarah Tripp, widow, and Bethia Abbott, widow, 12 acres laid out to me by townsmen of Portsmouth. To Elizabeth, see Elizabeth. Same to daughter Abigail Hefferland. To his maid Dinah Stephens, bed, and a good ewe sheep. To daughters Sarah Tripp and Bethiah Abbott, the rest of movables.
Samuel
Parker
Edward
Hatch
Olive
Rice
Helen
Forman
Christina
Knudsen
1644 - 1715
Samuel
Cornell
71
71
One of the nine children of Thomas Cornell listed in Rev. John Cornell's Genealogy of the Cornell Family. This is the son whom Rebecca hopes to live with instead of with her other son, Thomas. From John Cornell's' Genealogy: On November 21, 1664, brother Joshua conveyed to Samuel, both living in "Accookset in New Plimouth," for 24L, two adjacent parcels of land there, one parcel being that which was given to him by his mother, Rebecca Cornell, the other a parcel which he purchased from William Earle. On March 21, 1669, "Rebecca Cornell, widow to the late deceased Mr. Thomas Cornell of Portsmouth on Rhoad Island, to my loving sonn Samuel Cornell, now an inhabitant in the town of Dartmouth (across the bay from Portsmouth, purchased originally from Wesamequen or Messasoit and his son Wamsutta on November 29, 16520, in New Plimouth, do freely willingly and of my own voluntary mind really and fully give grant enfeoff and confirm unto my said sonn Samuel Cornell, a certain parcel or tract of land (by me purchased since the decease of my aforesaid husband) conteyning the one-sixth part of a lot or share or portion of land within the aforesaid town of Dartmouth, part whereof is already laid out at the place commonly called Cookset, and now in the possession of my said son Samuel." Witnessed by Joshua Coggeshall, Thomas Cornell and Philip Allin. May 29, 1670, in the census of Dartmouth, Massachusetts and in 1682 was the constable there. In 1685, Samuel and his nephew, Thomas, son of his brother Thomas, reached an agreement as to the boundary line between them, there having been "a great difference between us." May 3, 1699, will written and dated. Proved on April 5, 1715. Dartmouth. He left to Thomas, his oldest son, his dwelling and land, "with all my meadows upon three little Islands, with six acres at the point called 'Pottoswatuxet,' " all in Dartmouth. Samuel received land lying between James Sisson and James Tripp, with 50 acres of undivided lands. To his son Thomas, a chest and a box and a small Bible which belonged to his mother, a feather bed and andirons. To his daughter Comfort 40L when she became 18 and 5L each year thereafter until paid. The executors were Thomas Cornell, nephew (son of his brother Thomas) and his cousin George Cadman of Dartmouth. Daughter Catherine had already died.
Thomas
Butts
~1581
Stephen
Mosher
Sam Behling shows: John Moger/Mosher (d before 01/15/1611/12) married first Denis Brown ( 08 Sept. 1566) and they had Agnes Mary John married second Edith Cross on 16 Oct 1576 and they had Hugh Tristam Edith-1 John-1 Robert-1 Robert-2 John-2 Edith-2 Nicholas who married Lydia Maxson and they had Hugh* Mary John Daniel
Joe
Vincent
Elizabeth
Audley
Experience
Kirby
Joseph
Rathburne
1670
Stephen
Cornell
SUPPOSED CHILDREN: Edward, John, Richard.
Peter
Lee
Mary
3
Adam
Lawton
1689
Mary
Tripp
Robert
Chamborlayne
John
Tripp
1599
Jeffrey
Fish
1657 - 9 MAR 1686/87
Sarah
Mott
Peleg
Sherman
Ann
Card
Mercy
Mrs
Sisson
1692 - >1750
Deborah
Cook
58
58
1641
Rebecca
Lawton
Gershom
Mott
1589
Nathaniel
Bachiler
D. 1632
Ann
Bachelder
Morton
Andersen
Bohne
Englebret
Lott
1684
Elizabeth
Ricketson
Jesse
Jr.
Irish
~1743
Ruth
Wing
Mary
Eddy
1713
George
Cornell
<1627 - 1673
Thomas
Cornell
45
45
From Rev. John Cornell's Genealogy of the Cornell Family: March 17, 1655, Portsmouth, called Thomas Cornell, Jr., he is chosen, along with three other to "prize" land and buildings of John Wood, deceased. Dec. 10, 1657, granted 10 acres. August 24, 1663, confirmed deed he made made 2 years earlier to Richard Hart. 1664-1672, several times Deputy to the General Assembly of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. May 4, 1670, he and three others appointed to audit Colonies' accounts. June 7, 1671, his bill to Assembly for further encouragement of a troop of horses referred to next Assembly; no further record of the bill. At the same meeting, ordered that Thomas Cornell be desired to be a messenger from this court to carry a letter to the Governor of Plymouth and that he be supplied with 20 shillings in silver by the treasurer, John Coggeshall, for that purpose. {This section from Fiske, Jane Fletcher, Rhode Island General Court of Trials 1671-1704, pub1998 Boxford, Massachusetts:] June 15th 1571, "Upon an indictment by the Gen'r'l Aturny against Wickhopash, an Indian by the English called Harry for Grand Larceny, for ffellonious taeking away goods from Thomas Cornell of Portsmouth. "The said Indian being brought into Court and Examined ownes him selfe Guilty of the Charge, only pleads that he was Drunk when he did it; the pertickulars stolne being one Rapier, and two yards of Tradeing cloth, The Courts sentance is that the daid Indian Wickhopash shal forthwith be sevearly whipt with therty stripes, and the said Indian shall pay unto Mr Thomas Cornell (he haveing Received his Rapier) the sum of ffower pownds and pay Court ffees which is one pownd seven shillings eight pence, which sum[m]s shall be paid within a Months time after this Court which if the said Indian wihin that time doe not pay he shall according to law be sold for a slave." April 2, 1672, "Voted that some persons be employed by this Assembly to goe over to Narragansett and take a view of such places there or thereabouts that are fit for plantations and make inquirie of English and Indians who are the owners of, or who 'laie claim' to such lands and signify unto them that the colony doeth intend such lands be improved by peoplinge the same, and that the personds doe make return of what they doe therein to the next General Assembly." On this committee Thomas Cornell was appointed for Portsmouth (Records of the Colony of Rhode Island, vol. ii, pp. 442, 486) From the research of Dave Acker, 4 Gray Burch. E. Sandwich, MA 02537 (06/20/99): "From New England Hist. and Gen. Reg. v.9, p. 46 1855: Excerpt from Bradstreet's Journal (Rev. Simon Bradstreet): 1673: " A man was hanged at Road Island for killing his mother." (This would be Thomas, Jr.) #237: (Rev.John Cornell, Genealogy of the Cornell Family) According to Friends Records of 2/8/1773: "Rebecca Cornell, widow, was killed strangely at Portsmouth in her own dwelling house, was twice viewed by the Coroner's Inquest, digged up and buried again by her husband's grave in their own land." On May 23 her son Thomas was charged with murder, after a trial that now reads like a farce, was convicted and executed. Among the witnesses of this trial were John Briggs (brother of Rebecca), Mary wife of John Cornell (his son), Thomas, Stephen, Edward, and John, sons of Thomas. Rebecca Woolsey, (his daughter), etc. It appears that the old lady having been sitting by the fire smoking a pipe, a coal had fallen from the fire or her pipe, and that she was burned to death. But on the strength of a vision which her brother John had, in which she appeared to him after death and said, "See how I was burned with fire," it was inferred she was set fire to, and that her son who was last with her did it, and principally on this evidence Thomas Cornell was tried, convicted and hung for her murder. Late legal opinion was "there was no evidence." Thomas was convicted on the basis of spectral evidence, gossip and hearsay and superstition. The chief superstition concerns what happens to a body after death. It is worthwhile to review Malleus Malleficarum by [Cotton] Mather: "THE MALLEUS MALEFICARUM <http://www.malleusmaleficarum.org/part_I/mm01_02c.html> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PART I. QUESTION II. - CONTINUED -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- We have already treated of this fascination. And now with reference to the second point, namely, that blood will flow from a corpse in the presence of a murderer. According to the Speculum naturale of Vincent of Beauvis, c. 13, the wound is, as it were, influenced by the mind of the murderer, and that wound receives a certain atmosphere which has been impressed by and is permeated with his violence and hatred, and when the murderer draws near, the blood wells up and gushes forth from the corpse. For it would seem that this atmosphere, which was cause and as it were entered the wound owing to the murderer, at his presence is disturbed and greatly moved, and it is owing to this movement that the blood streams out of the dead body. There are some who declared that it is due to some other causes, and they say that this gushing forth of blood is the voice of the blood crying from the earth against the murderer who is present, and that this is on account of the curse pronounced against the murderer Cain. And with regard to that horror which a person feels when he is passing near the corpse of a man who has been murdered, although he may not be in any way cognizant of the vicinity of a dead body, this horror is psychic, it infects the atmosphere and conveys a thrill of fear to the mind. But all these explanations, be it noted, do not in any way affect the truth of the evil wrought by witches, since they are all perfectly natural and arise from natural causes." From Cornell's' Genealogy of the Cornell Family: "1674, March 7. 'Ordered by the Assembly, whereas, Thomas Cornell of Portsmouth, who was lately executed for murthering his mother, Mrs. Rebecca Cornell. whereupon according to law, this court of Tryalls have made seizure of his estate. This Assembly (in consideration of the matter, and for the supply of the wife and children of the said Thomas), doe see cause to release the said seizure and empowere the council of the town of Portsmouth to take care and order that just debts and other charges be first paid and discharged, and that then his wife and children be supplyed and relieved and to that end do order and appoint an executor or executors for the true performance thereof, and that this Towne Council doe make a will according to law, divide the estate to this wife and children of the said Thomas.' July 4, a writing was presented to the court of Plymouth by William Earle (Sarah's brother?), of Dartmouth, which was by some termed the will of Thomas Cornell of Rhode Island, late deceased, in which is mentioned the disposal of some estate in our colony. The court deferred accepting it for the present and appointed William Earle, and John Cornell, brother of the deceased, to take care of the estate that it be not squandered. On Oct. 29, the court ordered that such part of estate as deceased left in Plymouth colony, should be divided as follows: to widow and three children he had by her, one-half; to four eldest children of said Cornell, the other half, which they were to have in lands, being sons. The right of widow Sarah for life, in the lands, was to be paid her out of the personal, if she require it. Inventory, 77Pds, 19s, 6d. of real and personal estate in Dartmouth, viz.: 8 mares, 4 geldings, 2 years, 3 colts, 4 heffers, 4 steers, 5 yearlings, house and land, 41 Pds, gun, pair of old wheels, scythe, pair of bandoleers,&tc. (*An inventory of his estate in Portsmouth was made by John Albro and John Sandford, amounting to 452 Pds.18.5. Inventory, 22 acres land, 100 sheep, cattle, horses, &tc). 1679, Jan. 4, differences having arisen between Thomas Cornell, eldest son of Thomas Cornell, deceased, and David Lake of Nunaquaquit (a Neck in New Plymouth), now husband to Sarah, late widow to Thomas Cornell of Portsmouth, concerning right of dower belonging to said Sarah in estate of late husband, and more especially in farm said Thomas possesseth, the said differences being in a friendly manner compromised a full discharge is now given by said Lake except a bill of 20 Pounds." The Records of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantation in New England, vol. II, 1664-1677, (John Russell Bartlett, editor, 1857), the General Assembly records that frineds of Thomas Cornell, especially his brother-in-law William Earll, requested that his body be buried next to that of hismother following his execution. The request was denied but, in respect to Thomas Cornell, they were given permission to bury his body on his land, which was to be returned to his widow. The General Recorder and the executioner were paid for their services. [The Indian Punneau (Indian John) was apparently executed at the same time, fir the vicious rape and murder of Lottira Bulgar.] From Rev. John Cornell's' Genealogy of the Cornell Family: Daughter Innocent was possibly named as a protest against her father's unjust execution. Ancestral Quest also lists Elizabeth (b. 1644) and Samuel (b. 1657) as children.
<1635
Ann
Cornell
[.] Rev. John Cornell's Genealogy of the Cornell Family lists Ann as one of Thomas cornell's nine children.
John
Briggs
~1712
Mary
Sisson
George
Mosher
Henry
Atkinson
<1625 - 7 JAN 1627/28
William
#1
Cornell
15 JAN 1636/37 - ~1708
Elizabeth
Cornell
[.] Listed as one of Thomas Cornell's nine children in Rev. John Cornell's Genealogy of the Cornell Family.
~1645
Mary
Cornell
Margaret
D. 1647
Thomas
Willett
William
Tosh
1723
John
Sisson
1715
Abigail
Tew
~1623
John
Lawrence
1670 - 1736
Anne
Tripp
66
66
Hannah
Quinby
<1632
William
#2
Cornell
Mary
~1628
Elizabeth
Hazard
Esther
Underhill
Elizabeth
Woodman
1658 - 1717
John
Wing
58
58
Jane
Hulet Or
Hewlet
Sarah
5
Elizabeth
Dillingham
1600
Richard
Lawton
1602
Annis
Lawton
27 FEB 1617/18 - 1623
Bennett
Lawton
1650 - 1676
Adam
Mott
26
26
1660 - 1730
Abigail
Mott
70
70
1661
Phebe
Mott
Dorcas
Wing
1 JAN 1670/71
Mary
Mott
1 JAN 1670/71
John
Mott
1600 - 1634
Elizabeth
Creel
34
34
1617
Infant
Mott
1618
John
Mott
1604 - 1661
Sarah
Jennings
57
57
David
Durfee
Kirsten
Svendsen
Benjamin
Haviland
Robert
Mosher
Ann \\
1694 - <1734
Content
Sisson
40
40
1570 - 1656
John
Mott
86
86
1653 - 1714
Thomas
Cornell
61
61
[.] Witness at Father's trial in 1673. Dec. 13, 1683 Thomas and four others refuse to take oath in court when called upon to do so, all returned by the sheriff to serve on the grand jury and fined 6 shillings and 8 pence. In 1688 Thomas and Susannah convey to R. Cadman (who married Sarah Almy, daughter of Christopher Almy) land in Dartmouth joining Samuel and Stephen Cornell. Samuel of Dartmouth and "my cousin (nephew) Thomas of Rhode Island," settled boundary disputes. In 1696, Thomas and Susannah convey to son George "two parsells of land" in Portsmouth, one being 28 acres called the Surkit or Circuit, the other 12 acres joining the ocean. May 5, at the General Assembly for the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, held at Newport, Thomas Cornell, Jr., admitted freeman of the colony by vote of the Assembly. (Records of the Colony of Rhode Island, Vol. III, p. 121, 311) May 2, 1705 Chosen Justice-of-the-Peace for Portsmouth.
Mary
Quinby
~1675 - >1721
Ann
Mosher
46
46
Elizabeth
Edwards
1596 - 1661
Adam
Mott
65
65
From Austin's Dictionary of Rhode Island Genealogy: July 2, 1635. Was a passenger aboard the ship Defence, along with his wife, the widow Sarah Lott. With them they had, her child from her first marriage, Mary, and his children from his first marriage, John, Adam, Jonathan,and Elizabeth. Before embarking, he "brought testimony from the Justice of the Peace, and minister in Cambridge, of his conformity to the orders and discipline of the Church of England. He hath taken the oath of allegiance and supremacy." May 25, 1636. Admitted Freeman in Roxbury, Massachusetts. He and his wife were members of the First Church of Roxbury. Shortly thereafter moved to Hinham, where he had a grant of land. 1638. He and others were admitted inhabitants of the Island of Aquidneck, having submitted themselves to the government that is or shall be established. June 23, 1638. Grant of land on the west side of the spring (now Spring Street?). Sept. 6, 1638. The Massachusetts authorities directed the constable of Hingham to attach him and bring him before the Governor or some one of the Council but the order was too late to have any consequence. Jan. 12, 1640. Chosen with others to lay out lands at Portsmouth. Mar. 16, 1641. Freeman. 1642. Clerk of the Military Company. May 27, 1644. Granted an addition to his lot. Sept. 20, 1652. Deeded 12 acres to son Adam. 1655. Freeman. April 2, 1661. Will, proved August 31, 1661, Executrix wife Sarah. The will appears somewhat dubious.
Elizabeth
C
John
Wing
~1559
Francis
Smith
~1524
Laughton
William
Sanborn
David
Mosher
Hannah
Lynch
1526 - 1597
Godfredus
Wing
(Wynge)
71
71
1530 - 1562
Levina
32
32
Ruth
Allen
1751 - 1834
Zebulon
Cornell
82
82
[.] From Cornell Web site: Was called Zebedee or Zeb. Lived at White Creek, Washington County, NY. Stood seven feet tall, was a Quaker, farmer, lawyer, Justice of the Peace and a Freemason.
1764 - 1765
Joseph
Cornell
1m
1m
1684
Mehitable
Fish
The Mehitable Fish whom William Cornell married MAY have actually been the first cousin to this Mehitable Fish, namely the child of Thomas's brother John and his wife Joanna (Unknown). In Rev. John Cornell's CORNELL FAMILY, he states that in 1773 in his will Thomas Fish of Dartmouth gives 20L to his daughter Mehitable Cornell, wife of William. When I look at Austin's DICTIONARY OF RHODE ISLAND GENEALOGY, it appears to me that it is John, Thomas's brother, giving the same amount to HIS daughter in 1737.
1727 - 1799
Daniel
Cornell
71
71
From Rev. John Cornell's Genealogy of the Cornell Family: "He was a Quaker Preacher." 1774 Deed of Daniel to Zebulon and Zebulon to White. 1804 James, Thomas and wife, Mary, all of Cambridge, Washington Co., N.Y. to Anthony. Paul and Zebulon settled at White Creek and James and Thomas at Easton, all in Washington Co., N.Y. All farmers and Hixite Quakers.
1711 - 1764
Benjamin
Cornell
53
53
1733
Rachel
Cornell
~1696
James
Allen
~1700
Mary
1722 - 1767
Elizabeth
Allen
44
44
Daniel
Smith
1744
Rebecca
Cornell
1753 - 1828
James
Cornell
75
75
Thankful
Briggs
James
Starbuck
1757
Content
Cornell
1759
Paul
Cornell
Elizabeth
Soule
1761 - 1828
Thomas
Cornell
66
66
Mary
Briggs
Levi
Tripp
1763
Abigail
Cornell
1695 - 1775
William
Cornell
80
80
1697 - 1754
Edward
Cornell
57
57
~1703
Elizabeth
Cornell
~1705
James
Cornell
24 MAR 1715/16 - 1756
Caleb
Cornell
Jeremiah
Mosher
Joseph
Rathburne
Hannah
Rathburne
1720 - 1801
Joseph
Cornell
81
81
Deborah
Allen
14 MAR 1725/26 - 1811
Alse
Cornell
Isaac
Gifford
Elizabeth
Angevin
Zebedee
Maccumber
25 JAN 1735/36
Elizabeth
Cornell
Mary
1644
Elizabeth
Cornell
1658 - 1708
Edward
Cornell
50
50
~1657
Samuel
Cornell
[.] Rev. John Cornell's Book makes no mention of a Samuel who in Thomas 2's son. There is a Samuel who is a brother to Thomas 2,however. Information taken from LDS file.
1685 - 1763
Thomas
Cornell
78
78
1678 - 1763
Catharine
Potter
85
85
Joshua
Cornell
Deborah
3
John
Mosher
Mercy
Ann
Warren
Mary
Slocum
George
Allen
Julia
Schooley
1626
Jonathan
Mott
John
Mosher
1 JAN 1655/56
Mary
Mott
Isaac
Lawton
John
Hefferlund
Mary
Rathburne
Miriam
Dean
John
Nycholes
Richard
Gullins
John
Nicols
5 JAN 1656/57 - 1676
Stephen
Wing
1677
Joseph
Wing
1678
Benjamin
Wing
1609 - 1690
John
Briggs
81
81
[.] From Cornell web site which references "A Cornell Family History": "John and Sarah Briggs became followers of Ann Hutchinson...who was banished from the Bay Colony by Gov. Winthrop. The Briggs followed to RI where Roger Williams had sought sanctuary. They founded Portsmouth on Aquindeck Island in Narraganset Bay. On the advice of Williams, they purchased their land from the Indians. John Briggs was a signer of the 'Compact' and one of the founders of Portsmouth and he became a special Commissioner to the General Assembly; of RI. (Raymond V. Nelson, 700 N. Forest St.., Bellingham, WA 98225)" Compact states: (from Osborne's Genealogical Dictionary) "We, whose names are underwritten, do acknowledge ourselves the legal subjects of his Majesty, King Charles, and in his name do hereby bind ourselves into a civil body politicke, unto his laws, according to matters of justice." From John Austin's Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island: March 16, 1641 Freeman. October 5, 1643, Directed to go to every house to see what arms were defective. 1648. Assistant. 1649. Licensed to keep an ordinary. August 31, 1654. Commissioner for uniting the four towns. 1654-55-56-59-61-62-63. Commissioner. 1655. Freeman. May 25, 1655. On a committee to build a cage and stocks. 1656 Juryman. October 6, 1662. Bough a share in Dartmouth for 42L from John Dunham, Sr. and Abigail of Plimouth. 1664-65-66-68-69. Deputy. Feb. 20, 1673. Calling himself 64 years of age, or thereabouts, testified in the trial of Thomas Cornell. He had a dream a saw a woman at his bedside, "whereat he was much affrighted and cryed out, in the name of God, what art thou?" The apparition answered, "I am your sister Cornell," and twice said, "see how I was burnt with fire." March 11, 1679. Deeded to second son Thomas and his wife Mary," for love, &c., one quarter of a share in Dartmouth (35 acres), and if Thomas die, his wife Mary to enjoy same, if she continues his widow." October 14, 1679. Deeded to oldest son, John, of Portsmouth, "one half of a share in Dartmouth, and if his wife Hannah survive him, she to enjoy same while widow. If she marry again, then to my grandson John, the second son of my son John, and if he die without issue, then to my son John's next younger son, &c. In case of failure of all, then to son John's eldest son Edward, he paying to daughters of son John, L20." April 19, 1690. Will proved. Executor son Enoch. "To son Enoch, all and every part of lands and personal estate, goods, chattels, debts and monies, he paying legacies, &c. To eldest son John, son Thomas, son William and daughter Susannah Northway, 1s. each, these four children having 'long since received their portions and are gone from me.' To son Job, three ewes, to wether lambs and two heifers." From Sam. Briggs, A Partial Record of the Descendants of Walter Briggs of Westchester, N.Y.: He concludes that John Briggs "must have been a busy person in governmental affairs, given the number of times his name appears in the records, and a person of some fortune, as would appear from purchases of land made by him at various times." NOT THE SAME JOHN BRIGGS OF SANDWICH, WHOSE DAUGHTER SARAH MARRIED STPHEN WING.
Lavinia
Storms
~1643
Kent
Cornell
[.] Probably the same person who married Ann Cornell, i.e. Thomas Kent.
10 JAN 1671/72
Catherine
Tosh
Daniel
Cornell
~1642
Grissell
Strange
William
Richards
1596
Mary
Batchelder
~1566 - 2 JAN 1609/10
Elizabeth
Mrs
Mott
Benjamin
Fish
Grace
Mott
Deborah
Cornell
Elizabeth
Richbell
~1673 - 1751
Job
Tripp
78
78
1679
Preserved
Fish
Anna
Tilson
Christian
Weare
1862
Caroline
Matilda
Larson
Rebecca
Harndell
[.] I suspect that this is the same person as Rebecca Maxson since the marriage dates seem to coincide.
1644 - 1700
John
Harding
56
56
~1574
Luke
Wing
Bathsheba
Phillip
Wheedon
Rebecca
Cook
Mary
5
1718
Zerviah
Wing
Rebecca
4 MAR 1728/29 - 1816
Jemima
Shepherd
Lydai
Shepherd
1691
Comfort
Cornell
1670
Stephen
Cornell
Hannah
11 JAN 1687/88 - 1740
Samuel
Cornell
Rebecca
\\
1722
Mary
Sisson
Josiah
Abbott
1664 - 1711
Bethiah
Mott
47
47
1767
Samuel
Cornell
20 MAR 1682/83
Caleb
Allen
~1500 - ~1565
Thomas
Lawton
65
65
~1508
Joan
Wheeler
Ancestors of Barbara Elaine Shelley has birth date of Joan Wheeler abt. 1534, Thomas Lawton abt. 1527. Children: Joan Lawton born abt. 1553 Marian born abt. 1555 Thomas born abt. 1558 in Cranfield, Bedfordshire, England; married Marry Unk. abt 1580 & Annis Unk. before 1600. These children and dates seem too late for a match with what I have.
Mary
Paine
Edward
Samborne
Elizabeth
Lane
~1577
Hugh
Mosher
~1535
(BATCHELDER)
Elizabeth
Blackmore
1648
Deborah
Wing
Roda
Rogers
Mary
Potter
Mary
Bannister
Ford
1772
Daniel
Cornell
~1690 - 1762
John
Cornell
72
72
1687
Jabez
Tripp
Mary
Sarah F
Lawton
John
Margaret
Rathburne
James
Haight
Mary
Carter
Joseph
Mosher
1561 - 1660
Stephen
BACHILER
(BACHELDER)
99
99
From Batchelder, Batcheller Genealogy compiled by Frederick Clifton Pierce in 1898: "From tradition and the characteristics of his descendants, it is probable that he was tall and sinewy, with prominent features, especially the nose; a very dark complexion; black, coarse hair in early days, white in age, mouth large and firm, eyes black as sloes; features long rather than broad; a strong, clear voice; rather slow of motion and speech; simple in dress, wearing in Lynn a suit of liste which he brought from England; obstinate and tenacious of his opinions to a marked degree; a powerful preacher, drawing largely from the scripture and impressing his hearers with the uncommon power and sanctity of his sermons; strong in his friendships and his hates." From John Greenleaf Whittier, a descendant, "The tradition is that Mr. Bachiler was a man of remarkable personal presence, and was particularly noticeable on account of his wonderful eyes; they were dark and deep set, under broad arches, and could throw lightning glances upon occasion. For more than a century the Batcheler eye has been proverbial and in Essex county, Massachusetts, the striking feature has been steadily maintained. The resemblance between Whittier and Daniel Webster were long ago observed by those who were unaware of any relationship. Though unlike in many respects, there appeared to be a marked similarity in their broad and massive brows, swarthy complexions and expressive eyes. The characteristic of the eyes were in the looks of inscrutable depth, the power of shooting out sudden gleams, and the power of tender and lovable expression as well. It is now known that not only Whittier, Webster, but W. Pitt Fessenden, Caleb Cushing, William B. Green and other prominent men inherited their fine features, penetrating eyes and gravity of manner from the same ancestor, Rev. Stephen Bachiler. The majestic bearing and the presence of Webster were everywhere known. The keen glances of Cushing, the eminent scholar and diplomat; the deep looks of Col. Green were well remembered in Massachusetts. " REV. STEPHEN BACHILER, OF LYNN. (From the History of Lynn.) Among the early settlers of Lynn were some persons of high reputation, and most of them appeared to have been men of good character and of comfortable property. There is no evidence that any of them had abandoned the church, or been persecuted for their opinions, with the exception of the Rev. Stephen Bachiler, and the few persons in his connection. Governor Winthrop, who came over with them, begins his journal on "Easter Monday," which Mr. Savage says was "duly honored;" and it is not until nearly five years after, that we catch a glimpse of his Puritanism, which he begins to date on "eleventh month." If all the inhabitants of Lynn, excepting Mr. Bachiler and his six adherents, were Episcopalians, how happened it that they at once zealously lent him their aid in forming the church here? Good churchmen would as soon have thought of fraternizing with Hugh Peters as Mr. Bachiler. His ardent temperament and remembered wrongs led him to manifest such envenomed opposition to the church that it is not clearly seen how her devout children could have been attracted to his fold. 1632. For the first three years the people of Lynn had no minister, but some of them attended church at Salem, and others had meetings for prayer and exhortation. The Rev. Stephen Bachiler, with his family, arrived at Boston on Thursday, 5 June, after tedious passage of eighty-eight days. He came in the ship William and Francis, Capt. Thomas, which sailed from London, 9 March. He immediately came to Lynn, where his daughter Theodate, wife of Christopher Hussey, resided. He was seventy-one years of age. In his company were six persons who had belonged to a church with him in England; and of these he constituted a church at Lynn, to which he admitted such as desired to become members, and commenced the exercise of public ministrations on Sunday, 8 June, without installation. He baptized four children, born before his arrival; two of whom, Thomas Newhall and Stephen Hussey, were born the same week. Thomas, being the first white child born in Lynn, was first presented, but Mr. Bachiler put him aside, saying, "I will baptize my own child first," meaning his daughter's. Mr. Bachiler had been in the performance of his pastoral about four months, when a complaint was made of some irregularities in his conduct. He was arraigned before the court at Boston, on the 3rd of October, when the following order was passed: "Mr. Bachiler is required to forbear exercising his giftes as a pastor or teacher publiquely in our pattent, unlesse it be to those he brought with him, for his contempt of authority, and until some scandal be removed." This was the commencement of a series of difficulties which agitated the unhappy church for several years.(*) In the course of a few months, Mr. Bachiler had so far succeeded in regaining the esteem of the people that the court, on the 4th March, removed their injunction that he should not preach in the colony, and left him at liberty to resume the performance of his public services. 1636. Mr. Bachiler had been readily dismissed from his pastoral charge, in expectation that he would desist from its exercise, or remove from the town; instead of which, he renewed his covenant with the persons who came with him from England, intending to continue his ministration. The people opposed this design, as its tendency would be to frustrate their intention of settling another minister; they therefore complained to the magistrates, who forbade his proceeding. Finding that he disregarded their injunction, and refused to appear before them, they sent the marshal to compel him. He was brought before the Court of Assistants, at Boston, in January, and was discharged on engaging to leave the town within three months. Whoever has attentively read the lives of the early ministers of New England, as written by the Rev. Cotten Mather, must have noticed that they are all represented to have been men of uncommon learning, piety and worth. This may be imputed partly to the embellishments of his pen, and partly to the fact that they (*)This was the second church in Essex Co.--[Essex Antiquarian.] Page 99 Page 100 were born and educated in the bosom of the church, and the best universities of Europe. We are greatly indebted to Mr. Mather for his account of those ministers; but we should have been far more grateful to him, if he had been more particular with regard to dates and facts respecting the subjects of his biography, instead of devoting so much time and space to the worthies of Greece and Rome; for we could easily have presumed his acquaintance with ancient history and the classics, without so ostentatious a display of it. In his life of Mr. Cobbet, he has given us but one date with certainty--the rest had been supplied by my laborious research. Mr. Bachiler he did not notice, and the following short sketch of his life is the first which has ever been offered to the public. The Rev. Stephen Bachiler was born in England, in the year 1561, and received orders in the established church. In the early part of his life he enjoyed a good reputation, but being dissatisfied with some of the ceremonies of the church, and refusing to continue his conformity, he was deprived of his permission to perform her services. The church has been much censured for her severity, and all uncharitableness and persecutions are to be deprecated; but in simply ejecting her ministers for nonconformity, after they had approved her mode of worship, and in the most solemn manner possible engaged themselves in her service, the church is no more censurable than all other communities, with whom the same practice is common. On leaving England, Mr. Bachiler went with his family to Holland, where he resided several years. He then returned to London, from which place he sailed, on the 9th of March, 1632, for New England. He arrived at Lynn on the 6th of June, having in his company six persons, his relatives and friends, who had belonged to his church in Holland. With them, and the few who united with them, he constituted a little church at Lynn, without any of the ceremonies usual on such occasions. He continued his ministrations here for about three years, with repeated interruptions, but he never had the support or the affections of the great body of the people. He was admitted a freeman on the 6th of May, 1635, and removed from Lynn in February, 1636. He went first to Ipswich, where he received a grant of fifty acres of land, and had the prospect of a settlement; but some difficulty having arisen, he left the place. In the very cold winter of 1637, he went on foot with some of his friends to Yarmouth, a distance of about one hundred miles. There he intended to plant a town and establish a church, but finding the difficulties great, and "his company being all poor men," he relinquished the design. He then went to Newbury, where, on the 6th of July, 1638, the town made him a grant of land. On the 6th of September, the general court granted him permission to settle a town at Hampton. In 1639, the inhabitants of Ipswich voted to give him sixty acres of upland and twenty acres of meadow, if he would reside there three years; but he did not accept their invitation. On the 5th of July, he and Christopher Hussey sold their houses and lands in Newbury for six score pounds and removed to Hampton. There a town was planted and a church gathered, of which Mr. Bachiler became the minister. The town granted him three hundred acres of land, and he presented them with a bell for the meeting house in 1640. Here he was treated with respect, and in 1641 he was appointed umpire in a case of real estate between George Cleves and John Winter. Dissensions. however, soon commenced, and the people were divided between him and his colleague, Rev. Timothy Dalton. He was accused of irregular conduct, which is thus related by Governor Winthrop. "Mr. Bachiler, the pastor of the church at Hampton, who had suffered much at the hands of the bishops in England, being about eighty years of age, complained to the magistrates against a woman and her husband for slandering him. Soon after, his house took fire and was consumed, with nearly all his property. In 1643 he was restored to the communion, but not to the office of minister. In 1644, the people of Exeter invited to settle with them, but the court laid their injunction. In 1647, he was at Portsmouth, where he resided three years. In 1650, being then eighty-nine years of age, and his second wife, Helen, being dead, he married his third wife, Mary; and in May was fined ten pounds for not publishing the marriage according to law, half of which fine was remitted in October." Soon after this, Mr. Bachiler left the country and returned to England. His wife in Hampton petitioned the court, in the following words, to free her from her husband: "To the Honored Governor, Deputy Governor, with the Magistrates and Deputies at the General Court at Boston: "The humble petition of Mary Bachiler, Sheweth--Whereas your petitioner, having formerly lived with Mr. Stephen Bachiler, a minister of this Collany, as his lawful wife, and not unknown to divers of you, as I conceive, and the said Mr. Page 100 Page 101 Bachiler, upon some pretended ends of his owne, hath transported himself into ould England, for many years since, and betaken himself to another wife, as your petitioner hath often been credibly informed, and there continueth, whereby your petitioner is left destitute, not only of a guide to her and her children, but also made uncapable thereby of disposing of herselfe in the way of marriage to any other, without a lawful permission; and having now two children upon her hands, there are chargeable unto her, in regard to a disease God hath has been pleased to lay upon them both, which is not easily curable, and so weakening her estate in prosecuting the means of cure, that she is not able longer to subsist, without utter ruining her estate, or exposing herself to the common charity of other which your petitioner is loth to put herself upon, if it may be lawfully avoided, as is well known to all, or most part of her neighbors. And were she free from her engagement to Mr. Bachiler, might probable soe dispose of herselfe, as that she might obtain a meet-helpe to assist her to procure such means for her livelyhood and the recovery of her childrens health, as might keep them from perishing; which your petitioner, to her grief, is much afraid of, if not timely prevented. "Your petitioner's humble request thereof is, that this Honored Court would be pleased seriously to consider her condition, for matter of her relief in her freedom from the said Mr. Bachiler, and that she may be at liberty to dispose of herselfe in respect of any engagement to him, as in your wisdome shall see most expedient; and your petitioner shall humble pray.--Mary Bachiler." No record appears that the court took any order on this petition; nor are we informed whether the lady succeeded to "Dispose of herselfe," in the manner which she seems to have had so much at heart. It is to be hoped, however, that her request was granted, for the woman had undoubtedly suffered enough for her lapses, as the reader will probably agree when he shall have read the sentence, which may serve to clear up at least one of the mysteries in this strangest of all the lives of our early ministers. In the records of York, on the 15th of October, 1651, is the following entry. "We do present George Rogers and Mary Batcheller, the wife of Mr. Stephen Bachiler, minister, for adultry. It is ordered that Mrs. Batcheller, for adultry, shall receive forty stripes, save one, at the first town meeting held at Kittery, 6 weeks after her delivery, and be branded with the letter A." In the horrible barbarity of this sentence we blush for the severity of the punishment, rather than for the crime. The husband and his erring wife have long since gone to their last account, and their errors and follies must be left to the adjustment of that tribunal which we hope is more merciful than the decisions of men. Mr. Bachiler had, undoubtedly, many virtues, or he would not have had many friends, and they would not have continued with him through all the changes of his varied life. Mr. Prince says that he was "a man of fame in his day, a gentleman of learning and ingenuity, and wrote a fine and curious hand." It was on his separation from the church at Lynn, with its subsequent misfortune, that Edward Johnson wrote. (In Morgan's Sphere of Gentry, printed in 1661, may be found Mr. Bachiler's coat of arms. It consists of a plough, beneath which is a rising sun; or, to use the technical language of heraldry, vert a plough in fesse, and in base the sun rising, or. The author calls it the coat of "Cain, Adam's son," and says it "did appertain to Stephen Bachelor, the first pastor of the church of Ligonia, in New England; which bearing was answerable to his profession in plowing up fallow ground of their hearts, and the sun appearing in that part of the world, symbolically alluded to his motto, 'sol justiti' exoritur.'" Does not "the church of Ligonia," mean the church of Lynn--an attempt being made to Latinize the name of the town? Another work on heraldry gives the name Lavonia, but this is, no doubt, a misspelling. Where the witty old author speaks of the plow as answering to Mr. Bachiler's profession in breaking up the fallow grounds of their hearts, he might have passed on to the sun's office of warming and rendering fruitfully the broken ground. The author takes occasion to note, here and there, a comforting fact that seems to have become suddenly established in his mind, with or without connection with the matter in hand. Witness the following, which appears as a marginal note: "Women have soules." And this seems to have been proved to his satisfaction by the first temptation, for he says, "Had she not had precious and rational soul the Devil would never have attempted her." This is plausible, but it might be argued that he only operated on her as an instrument for the destruction of her husband and he seems inclined to give the evil one more credit for his sagacity than Eve for her integrity, by asking, "Indeed, how could she withstand such temptation that did entice her to curiosity and pride, the common sin of all their sex to this day?" Page 101 Page 102 (The reader's attention is here solicited for a moment to the singular spectacle brought to view in the affairs of Mr. Bachiler. While pastor of the church at Hampton, he is charged with unbecoming conduct, yet the church at Exeter, knowing the fact, invite him to settle over them. Did they discredit the charges, or consider the offense not worth weighing? In 1650 he married a woman who proves to be an adulteress, leaves her, and petitions for a divorce. This the government refuses, and going further, orders that they "shall lye together as man and wife." Now what is to be thought of a government that compels a thing so revolting and so unnecessarily cruel? From all the circumstances I am led that the whole truth does not appear; that extenuating facts are concealed; that there was a settled determination to make his continuance here uncomfortable, to say the least. The truth is, he had ventured to question the right of the civil authorities' supremacy in spiritual affairs. And that was enough to excite their indignation. The proof of his delinquencies, however, seems sufficient. It would be a bold step to attempt to discredit Winthrop; though it may not be unreasonable to suggest that, considering his ire towards those who were inclined to anything like active opposition to the ruling powers, he might have been examined with sufficient severity the slanders which Mr. Bachiler's enemies put in circulation. Not only did Mr. Bachiler oppose the incipient union of church and state, but he also espoused the interests of New Hampshire, when they clashed with the assumptions of the Bay Colony. And that was enough to bring a heavy load of fuel to the fire. And, furthermore, as is well known, his colleague at Hampton, Mr. Dalton, was strongly set in the Massachusetts interest and virulently opposed to his associate. Mr. Bachiler was evidently an opponent not easily overcome, was well educated; an adept in controversy; strong will. He was greatly sinned against. And he probably had little more sympathy in the colonial councils than Williams, Hutchinson or Wheelwright.) Thomas Newhall, the subject of this sketch, was born in 1630, and was baptized by Rev. Bachiler, the first minister of Lynn, on the first Sunday after his arrival, being June 8, 1632. A rather comical scene occurred at the baptism. Christopher Hussey, who was a son-in-law of Mr. Bachiler, and who probably induced the Rev. gentleman to come here, had a child, named Stephen, to be baptized at the same time; and Mr. Bachiler, as Thomas was first presented for the holy rite, unceremoniously put him aside, declaring that he should baptize Stephen, who appears to have been named for his Rev. grandfather, first. Mr. Lewis seems to have thought a sort of family pride induced this movement, which struck him as an indignity toward Thomas, but it should, perhaps, be viewed in the light of a compliment. It may have been that Stephen was noisy and turbulent, insomuch that the old gentleman was ashamed of him and anxious to hurry him out of sight, while Thomas was quiet and well behaved. But it is not important to pursue the inquiry. Page 102 REV. STEPHEN BACHILER AT HAMPTON. (History of Hampton, N. H.) The ancient town of Hampton, New Hampshire, embraced a large territory lying along the coast between Salisbury, Massachusetts, on the south, and Portsmouth, or the lower Piscataqua settlement on the north; and extending from the Atlantic Ocean westward, about six miles to Squamscott Patent (Stratham) and Exeter, and along the southerly side of the latter town, ten or twelve miles farther; the westerly line running thence southerly to the boundary between Salisbury (now Amesbury) and Haverhill, Massachusetts. The whole area is not less than one hundred square miles. In the autumn of 1638, Winnacunnet (Hampton) remaining still unsettled, and the time allowed to the inhabitants of Newbury for removal hither having nearly expired, a petition, signed by Stephen Bachiler and others, was presented to the General Court, asking leave to settle here. Their prayer was granted. The record stands thus: "The Court grants that the petitioners, Mr. Steven Bachiler, Christo: Hussey, Mary Hussey, Vidua, Thom: Cromwell, Samuel Skullard, John Osgood, John Crosse, Samu: Greenfield, John Molton, Tho: Molton, Willi: Estow, Willi: Palmer, Willi: Sergant, Richrd Swayne, Willi: Sanders, Robrt Tucke, wth divers others, shall have liberty to begin a plantation at Winnacunnet and Mr. Bradstreete, Mr. Winthrop, Jr., and Mr. Rawson, or some two of them, are to assist in setting out Page 103 not known. It is also doubtful where he was educated; very possibly at Cambridge, where many with whom he appears to have been intimate, were known to have been. If the historians of Lynn are correct, he was of (so called) gentle blood; for Newhall, in his edition of Lewis' history of that town, states that, in Morgan's "Sphere of Gentry" (1661) is figured the coat-of-arms of Rev. Stephen Bachiler, as follows: "Vert, a plough in fesse, and in base, the sun rising, or." This gives a possible clew to the interpretation of a letter written by him, in 1643, to the church in Boston, which will be noted presently. Mr. Bachiler received orders in the established church, but being a reformer, and having the courage of his convictions, he refused to conform to some of the ceremonials of the church, and therefore "suffered much at the hands of the bishops." He became a Dissenter, and, as a Dissenter went, with friends and followers to Holland. Now, if the historian may be permitted to "read between the lines" of the letter above mentioned, this would be the story of what immediately followed: A company was formed, of which Mr. Bachiler was the acknowledged leader, called, in his honor, The Company of the Plough, intending to come to New England in 1630, and settle in New Town (Cambridge). Mr. Bachiler to "Sit down with them," "not as a planter only but as a Pastor also." The church was organized and began its existence in Holland; and plans were so far perfected, that a ship was chartered and freighted; but "upon the disaster which happened to the goods of the company, by the false dealing of those entrusted by us with the Plough's ship and our goods therein," perhaps instigated by the persecuting bishops, all was lost and the emigration delayed. And so it happened that the pastor's family returned to England, while his daughter, Theodate, and her husband, Christopher Hussey, both young and ardent, crossed the ocean to prepare a resting place for her aged father and his church. This they found, as they fondly hoped, in Saugus (Lynn). The above narrative, though not infallible history, is highly probable; but what follows is matter of record. Accompanied by some of his family, Mr. Bachiler sailed from London on the 9th of March, 1632, in the William and Francis, and arrived at Boston on the 5th of June. He went immediately to Lynn, where his son-in-law, Christopher Hussey, was already resident. There he began his ministry in New England, his church, organized in Holland, uniting with others previously at Lynn, without asking permission, and without ceremony. Now, it must be premised, that many of the Puritans, persecuted in England, fled to these western shores, where they became in turn persecutors, as intolerant as their enemies across the sea. The ministers and magistrates formed a religious aristocracy, bigoted and domineering. Mr. Bachiler, a liberal Puritan, zealous for popular rights, and possibly too independent in maintaining them, soon became odious to this persecuting power. They sought a quarrel against him, and found it in the manner of establishing his church. And now the magistrates of the colony required him "to forbeare exercising his gifts as a pastor or teacher publiquely," in Massachusetts, "unless it be to those he brought with him; for his contempt of authority, & till some scandals be removed." The term scandal has been wrongly supposed to imply immoral conduct in Mr. Bachiler. It was probably nothing more than petty quarrels, growing partly out of his partiality, in baptizing his own grandson before another child, born a week earlier. This injunction was openly and strongly condemned by the liberal party, which was no inconsiderable one in the colony, and five months later the magistrates felt compelled to rescind it, though it does not appear that the victim had, in the meantime, made any acknowledgment of fault to prepare the way for such an act. Mr. Bachiler remained pastor of the church at Lynn till about the close of 1635. The church at that time had been considerably enlarged, and a controversy had arisen between him and a majority of the members. The grounds of this controversy are not stated; but as Mr. Bachiler was an old man, it is possible that his church may have been desirous of obtaining a younger or a more popular minister. The account given by Governor Winthrop seems to afford some ground for this supposition. Mr. Bachiler asked a dismission for himself and his first members, six or seven in number, who had come from England with him; and the church granted it, supposing that they would leave the town, for so it was reported, Mr. Bachiler had intimated. On being dismissed, however, he and his brethren immediately renewed their old covenant, intending to raise another church there. At this "the most and chief of the town" were offended, for, as Governor Winthrop says, "it would cross their intentions of calling Mr. Peter, or some other minister." They Page 106 Page 107 He then complained to the magistrate, by whom he was forbidden "to proceed in any such church way until the cause were considered by the other ministers, etc." But Mr. Bachiler refused to desist, probably regarding the course of the magistrates as an unjustifiable interference with his affairs; and this independence, both in thinking and acting, may give a clew to the difficulties that arose from time to time between him and the government. In this case, the magistrates "sent for him, and upon his delay, day after day, the marshall was sent" to convey him to Boston. Being thus taken into custody, he submitted to the civil authority and gave a "promise to remove out of the town within three months." He was thereupon discharged. This account of Mr. Bachiler's connection with the church and people of Lynn is given, partly for the purpose of showing that some of the charges made against him may not have been well founded, having originated in the enmity of those who made them; and partly because here, in the renewal of the church covenant at Lynn, near the close of the year 1635, we find the organization of the Hampton church. From Lynn, Mr. Bachiler removed to Ipswich. In 1637, he and his company undertook to form a settlement at Mattakeese (Yarmouth) on Cape Cod. Governor Winthrop says that he was then "about 76 years of age; yet he went thither on foot in a very hard season," the distance from Ipswich being nearly one hundred miles. This enterprise was relinquished on account of the poverty of the company, and the difficulties that they had to encounter. In 1638, Mr. Bachiler and some or all of his company were at Newbury, and in the fall of that year settled at Winnacunnet. According to tradition, a meeting house was built by those who formed the settlement, as soon as they had provided log cabins for themselves. Like their houses, it was undoubtedly made of logs, but of its form and dimensions we have no knowledge. It was built on the green--near where the Academy afterwards stood--a site occupied by a successions of meeting houses, till the early part of the present century. The people were called together for public worship by the ringing of a bell, as appears from the following vote, passed at the second town meeting, November 27, 1639: "Wm. Samborne (wth his consent) is appointed to ring the bell before the meetings on the Lord's dayes & other dayes, for which he is to have 6d pr lott of Evry one having a lott within the town." The bell, which was a present from the pastor, was probably hung on a frame in the open air, or suspended from some tree, till another house was built, which was furnished with a tower. In the spring of 1639, Mr. Timothy Dalton was associated with Mr. Bachiler in the work of his ministry, the latter holding the office of pastor, and the former that of teacher. The great age of the pastor was probably the reason for employing another minister. But the connection was not an harmonious one. Both of the ministers were orthodox in sentiment, but they differed widely in practice, Mr. Bachiler being open and independent, and Mr. Dalton, in accord with the magistrates and elders. Mr. Bachiler was charged with a morality, but whether justly or unjustly is "not proven." He was excommunicated in 1641, and restored to the church in 1643, but not to the pastoral office. That he committed some imprudences is admitted, but as to anything worse, it is likelier that the old persecutions followed him. He himself, in the letter before mentioned, to the church in Boston, complains bitterly of Mr. Dalton, in the following words: "I see not how I can depart hence till I have (or (I mean) God for me More from the book is in File Genealogy\Batchelor\BatchelorHistories
~1700 - >1774
James
Sisson
74
74
Daniel
Stillwell
1708 - 1781
Caleb
Cornell
73
73
<1724
Jacob
Cornell
Eleazor
Mott
1525
Gulliver
1675 - 1719
Thomas
Cornell
43
43
1770 - ~1852
Richard
Cornell
82
82
Helen
Maury
Perry
~1646
Hulda
Hussey
~1635 - 2 FEB 1717/18
Stephen
Hussey
William
Hallett
Newton
Ursula
Drusilla
Beulah
Wing
1691
Philip
Sisson
1679 - 1756
Mary
Harvey
77
77
Elizabeth
E
1722
Benjamin
Sisson
Edith
Cross
~1669
Mary
Cornell
~1671
William
Cornell
1713
William
Tew
~1667
Richard
Jr.
Cornell
~1669
Sarah
Cornell
Elizabeth
Curtis
1664
Higgins
Sarah
Miller
Sarah
Mosher
Hannah
Raymond
1647
Lydia
Wing
~1667
Jacob
Woolsey
Richard
Thomas
Cornell
Thomas
Page
James
Kettle
Jemima
Rea
D. >1711
Mary
Flint
Mary
Hardy
~1625 - ~1662
Jane
Godfrey
37
37
1681 - 8 JAN 1735/36
Bethiah
Raymond
~1671
Sarah
Tripp
Ruth
Clark
Edward
Coburn
Abigail
Bethia
Shaw
Mercy
Wing
Dachwood
Mosher
1673
Peleg
Tripp
1657 - 1716
Josiah
Starr
59
59
1678 - 1728
George
Allen
50
50
Phebe
Titus
Haight
~1670
Rebecca
Archer
1660
Hannah
Smith
1667 - 12 MAR 1736/37
Mary
Balch
~1620 - ~1658
George
Bunker
38
38
Agnes
Mosher
1657
John
Washburn
1657
Sarah
Cornell
1656 - 1725
Richard
Cornell
69
69
1659 - 13 MAR 1664/65
Thomas
Cornell
1661
Elizabeth
Cornell
1664
Joshua
Cornell
1 FEB 1666/67 - 1743
William
Cornell
1669 - 1758
Jacob
Cornell
89
89
1673
Samuel
Cornell
1739 - 1807
Richardus
Cornell
68
68
1676
Rebecca
(Twin)
Cornell
1676
Mary
(Twin)
Cornell
~1642 - 1713
John
Briggs
71
71
1673
Susanna
Knowlton
1662 - 5 FEB 1709/10
Joseph
Flint
1667 - >1708
Abigail
Howard
41
41
1644 - 17 FEB 1716/17
Hannah
Batchelder
~1662
Hester
Gaines
1672 - 1754
Abiel
Gaines
82
82
~1670
Samuel
Stone
1642 - 1720
Nathaniel
Hayward
78
78
1659 - 1736
Hannah
Cook
77
77
1653 - 1716
Elizabeth
Cook
63
63
1665
Deborah
Cook
1650 - 1716
William
Briggs
66
66
~1710
Jane
Sisson
1690 - 1755
Nathaniel
Hayward
64
64
Hepzibah
Alden
1670 - 1741
Edward
Colburn
71
71
1671
Sarah
Heyward
Blaine
Bonny
~1642 - 1727
Hannah
Fisher
85
85
1667 - 1718
Zacheus
Butts
51
51
~1672
Sarah
Cornell
[.] Since this information came from an LDS Ancestral File, I am not at all certain of its authenticity.
James
Cornell
~1645 - 1697
Frances
Fisher
52
52
20 FEB 1660/61 - 1736
John
Stone
5 FEB 1665/66
Sarah
Gale
1631 - 8 MAR 1716/17
Nathaniel
Stone
1668 - >1736
Mehitable
Tripp
68
68
24 MAR 1658/59
Elizabeth
Stone
1663 - 23 FEB 1740/41
Nathaniel
Stone
Rebecca
Mosher
D. 1756
Phebe
Stone
D. 1717
Mary
Stone
Rebecca
Stone
D. 20 JAN 1711/12
Daniel
Stone
~1636 - 1713
Samuel
Corning
77
77
1643 - 1730
Elizabeth
Corning
87
87
1643
Sarah
Corning
Jacob
Mott
1676 - <1728
Samuel
Corning
52
52
1671 - 1732
Richard
Borden
60
60
<1638
Mary
Hussey
1761 - 1794
Ebenezer
Cornell
33
33
1655 - 1730
Thomas
Wolsey
75
75
1660 - 1739
Ruth
Bailey
79
79
1650 - 1727
Sarah (Sara)
Wolsey
(Wolsij)
77
77
1652 - 19 JAN 1739/40
George Or
Joris Wolsey
Or Wolsij
13 FEB 1658/59
Rebecca
Wolsey
Or Wolsij
16 JAN 1660/61 - 1729
John Or
Johannes
Wolsey Or Wolsij
19 MAR 1663/64 - 1678
Mary Or
Marritie Wolsey
Or Wolsij
1667 - 1700
Richard
Durfee
33
33
1653
Isaac
Arnald
~1656
Sarah
~1661
John
Lawrence
~1667
Elizabeth
Smith
~1667
Jane
Whitehead
~1669
Hester
Paine
Ruth
Slocum
William
Jr
Creed
~1676
Richard
Betts
Rachel
Webster
1662 - 1708
Sarah
Almy
46
46
1667
Ann
Almy
1684
Rebecca
Woodbury
1679 - 1823
Joseph
Corning
143
143
D. 1829
William
Hallett
~1662
George
Lawrance
~1668
Hester
1638 - 1704
William
Palmer
66
66
1660 - 1714
Ruth
Bayless
54
54
1713
Hopestill
Sisson
26 JAN 1677/78 - 1757
Richard
Cornell
Benjamin
Palmer
1663
John 1
Cornell
1683 - ~1734
Caleb
Cornell
51
51
1685
Rebecca
Cornell
1796
Jesse
Cornell
Benjamin
Mosher
19 MAR 1618/19 - >1687
John
Strange
From John Austin's Dictionary of Rhode Island Genealogy: He was a hatter. Aug. 31, 1669. Bought 30 acres in Portsmouth from John Parker of Shrewsbury, NJ or 34L. Oct. 31. 1677. He and 47 others were granted 5,000 acres to be called East Greenwich. He never went there to settle. 1680. Taxed 8s., 3d. Oct. 21, 1681. Bought from Increase Robinson and Sarah, for 13L, a parcel if land down Taunton River, "both turf and twig." Oct. 27, 1683. " He, brother of Lot Strange, who died leaving no child to inherit his land and houses and being his only brother and so next of blood, for divers considerations sd. sum of money paid by sister-in-law Alice Strange, widow of Lot, confirms to her all said lands and houses, &tc., and Alice Strange, wife of John, joins in deed to Alice Strange, widow of Lot and sister-in-law of John Strange." Dec. 15, 1684. Deeded son Lot, land bought from Increase Robinson. Oct. 15, 1687. "He, 'John Strange Sen.,' for sufficient maintenance of me and his beloved mother, in meat and drink during our natural lives, 'fit for ancient people as we are to have, and he is able to give' - freely and absolutely confirms to son John 20 acres, with now dwelling house and all moveables."
~1685
John
Starr
Benjamin
Rathburne
1730
Gilbert
Sisson
1711
Sarah
Tew
Deborah
Wing
1655
Hannah
Van
Zandt
Benjamin
Wing
1661
Abigail
Stevenson
Mary
Molineaux
~1657 - <1695
Richard
Cadman
38
38
1672 - 1744
John
Cornell
71
71
~1672
Letitia
Printz
Mehitable
Austin
Edith
Mosher
~1835 - 1690
John
Northaway
145
145
1651 - 1704
Susannah
Briggs
53
53
~1703
Jens
Hjetting
~1738 - ~1813
John
Cornell
75
75
Cornell
Henry
Mosher
1677 - 1768
Joshua
2
Cornell
91
91
~1669 - ~1694
Richard
Cornwell
25
25
William
Mosher
1665 - 1739
Rebecca
Cornwell
74
74
Mabel
Mosher
1764 - 1844
Haviland
Cornell
79
79
1812
Phebe
Ann
Cornell
~1669
Priscilla
Tripp
~1677 - 1753
Elizebeth
76
76
1753
Mary
Cornell
Abigel
Waldron
Mercy
Rathburne
1689 - 1775
Jonathan
Sisson
86
86
1644 - 1720
Thomas
Briggs
76
76
~1654 - 1733
Job
Briggs
79
79
D. 1734
Enoch
Briggs
D. 1717
Mary
Fisher
1646 - 1723
Thomas
Willet
77
77
D. 1704
Helena
Stoothoff
1662
John
Cornell
[.] Witness at his father's trial. Seems unlikely, then, to have been born in 1669 since he would have been only 3 years old.
1673
Innocent
Cornell
1666
Elizabeth
Hayward
1669
Nathaniel
Hayward
1670 - 1756
Nehemiah
Hayward
86
86
1673
Jonathan
Hayward
1675 - 1748
Nicholas
Hayward
73
73
1678 - 1748
Samuel
Hayward
70
70
1680
Hannah
Hayward
1684 - 1762
Stephen
Hayward
77
77
Mary
Cornell
1655 - 1695
Lewis
Morris
40
40
~1706
Hannah
Sisson
1663 - 1712
Elizabeth
Almy
49
49
1669
Christopher
Jr.
Almy
Job
Almy
26 JAN 1670/71 - 24 FEB 1702/03
Rebecca
Almy
>1670
Hope
Borden
14 MAR 1649/50
Martha
Silver
Phebe
Cornell
[.] Never Married.
~1632 - 1689
Sarah
Briggs
57
57
From The OWL, winter 1973-74, page 4185: Sarah Briggs was the orphaned daughter of John Briggs, who "came over from England in 1635 when he was twenty years of age. He was named among the first sixty settlers of Sandwich in 1637. On the 14th of the 4th month, 1640 (July ?), in an assignment of meadow lands, John Briggs was given 7 1/2 acres. He died in 1641, in his 26th year, and his widow Catherine is said to have died during the same year. John and Catherine had two children, viz.: Samuel and Sarah, the latter of whom was born the same year as her parents' death. The records show that the estate of John Briggs was probated at Plymouth on the 5th day of the 10th month, 1641, and an inventory of his property, showing 155L, 2s., was 'exhibited on oath of his widow Catherine, who was apt adminstratrix. And the said Catherine Briggs doth promise and give unto her two children, two cows, viz.: the younger white cow to her son Samuel, and the brown heifer to d. Sarah, to be kept for them, and increase of stock to be theirs from this time forward."
1655
Stephen
Briggs
~1683
Richard
Tripp
1869
Benjamin
Franklin
Wing
William
Clark
Caleb
Willis
Daniel
Lariom
1680
Hannah
Woodbury
Joseph
Maxson
Hubbard
Burdick
D. 1712
Charity
Stevenson
Edward
Dillingham
28 JAN 1663/64
Daniel
Wing
Abigail
Jane
Stacey
~1683
Elisabeth
Hagner Or
Hayner
Philip
Mosher
~1662 - ~1701
Jonathan
Merrihew
Merchew
39
39
~1655 - ~1695
John
Morris
40
40
~1661 - ~1711
John
Leonard
50
50
~1665
Benjamin
Jefferson
~1666
Thomas
Townsend
~1622 - ~1658
Elizabeth
??
36
36
From Rhode Genealogies #1, Genealogies of R.I. Families, Volume I, Cornell Family, page 275: "In many of the genealogical records of the Cornell Family it has been assumed that Thomas Cornell, son of Thomas of Portsmouth, R.I., married for his first wife Elizabeth Fiscock. Although this statement has several times appeared in print, it might not of itself be a matter of great importance, except that thereupon is based the belief that the family originated in Hertfordshire, where fruitless efforts have been made to trace it. This belief..is founded on certain entries in the Records of the Reformed Dutch Church of New Amsterdam, where among the Marriages we find: 'Nov. 2, 1642, Thomas Cornelis, j. m. Uyt de Provincie Van Hertfort en Elizabeth Fiscock, j. d. Van Pleymouth in Engelt (N.Y. Gen. Record, VI., 35). Among the Baptisms in the same church are those of Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Corenwell, Jan. 12, 1644; Sara, daughter of Thomas Carrnwell, Feb. 21, 1646; Johannes, aged 3 years, and Maria 10 weeks, children of Thomas Carrnwell, Aug. 14, 1650 (Ib. V, 34, 87, 94). If these records referred to Thomas Cornell of R.I. we should naturally expect to find among the sponsors at some of these baptisms, his sisters Sarah Willett and Rebecca Wolsey, who were married and living in New Amsterdam, and who were present as parents or sponsors at no less than ten baptisms between 1643 and 1650. Instead of these sisters we find among the witnesses to the baptisms Eduart Fiscock, Jan Haes, who married in 1645 Edwart Fiscock's widow, Susanna Breser, probably sister of Henry Bresner, who married a daughter of Smauel Spicer of Gravesend, and Sara Cornelis, who evidently was not the Sarah Cornell who married Thomas Willett, three years before. She apparently belonged to a Dutch Cornelis family then somewhat numerous in New Amsterdam. ...I have found nothing to indicate that Thomas 2nd of R.I. was ever in New Amsterdam. That he was twice married is certain, but he had no children answering to the above (a description of of Elizabeth F's marriage and the children). No. 9 East 54th Street, New York Charles B. Curtis)"
John
Townsend
~1675
Charity
Doughty
Hicks
26 FEB 1683/84
Sarah
Sisson
1682
Mary
Frothingham
1698
Jonathan
Corning
1712
James
Corning
1715
Stephen
Corning
1693
Samuel
Corning
Mary
Dodge
Nicholas
Groves
1695
Hannah
Corning
1699 - 1762
John
Pride
62
62
20 JAN 1701/02
Abigail
Corning
David
Stone
11 MAR 1706/07
Elizabeth
Corning
Herbert
Pride
1710
Lydia
Corning
1717
James
Sisson
Mary
Sisson
1685
Elizabeth
Allen
~1697
Hannah
Cornell
Thorne
1635 - 4 JAN 1697/98
Elizabeth
Jessup
1731
Lydia
Sisson
Kezia
Willett
Thorne
~1688
Elizabeth
Cornell
~1690
Mary
Cornell
~1694
Richard
Cornell
D. 1759
Anne
Gilpin
1723
John
Hayward
[.] Mabe the same person as other sibling John. Information came from different Ancestral Files.
1720 - <1721
Hepzebeth
Hayward
1
1
Elisabeth
Nott
19 FEB 1698/99 - 1780
Matthew
Franklin
1705 - 1772
Deborah
Cornell
67
67
Ruth Maiden
Name Hallett
~1707 - 1755
Judith
Howard
48
48
Mary
Hinchman
Keziah
Horne
Richard
Willett
Ebenezer
Nichols
1774 - 1829
Nancy
Cornell
55
55
1696 - 1769
Mary
Tallman
73
73
1754 - 1784
Samuel
Cornell
30
30
John ?
Maxson
Samuel
Cary
1678
William
Woolsey
1695 - >1713
Hannah
Swinnerton
18
18
1690 - 1716
Samuel
Haskins
26
26
1689
Hannah
Hayward
15 MAR 1691/92
Nathaniel
Hayward
1694
Ebenezer
Hayward
1696
Elizabeth
Hayward
19 FEB 1701/02
Diadem
Hayward
1705
Paul
Hayward
1708
Mehitable
Hayward
D. 26 JAN 1718/19
Mary
Hayward
Jonathan
Hayward
George
Hussey
Abigail
Hayward
James
Hayward
Ruth
Hayward
1709
Nehemiah
Hayward
1712
Josiah
Hayward
1714
Jabez
Hayward
1717
Eunice
Hayward
1719
Andrew
Hayward
1722
Rose
Hayward
Gideon
Hayward
1642
Hannah
Wing
Sarah
1673 - 1731
Richard
Allen
58
58
James
Mosher
Mary
Pearsall
Daniel
Mosher
29 FEB 1675/76
Mary
Allen
David
Cindrick
~1702
Gretye
1684
John
Cornell
1686
Elizabeth
Cornell
1691
Edward
Cornell
Deborah
1 JAN 1694/95 - 1767
Samuel
Flint
Vickery
1724
Catharine
Cornell
~1714
Recompense
Kirby
9 MAR 1717/18
Rebekah
Cornell
1726
Joshua
Cornell
1730
Susannah
Gifford
22 JAN 1704/05 - 1746
Hannah
Pride
~1641 - ~1690
Sarah
Earle
49
49
1683
John
Washburn
1687 - <1719
Hannah
Hallett
32
32
1685 - 1753
Susanna
Washburn
68
68
1687
Mary
Washburn
1693 - 1727
Jacob
Anthony
33
33
1704 - 1733
Elias
Merithew
29
29
24 JAN 1708/09 - 1731
Hannah
Shearman
1698 - 1753
Benjamin
Roundy
54
54
1665 - 1730
Daniel
Briggs
65
65
12 FEB 1670/71 - 1757
James
Briggs
~1673 - 1755
Sarah
Wickes
82
82
1688 - 1766
Nathaniel
Sr.
Flint
77
77
2 JAN 1691/92 - 1726
Sarah
Cutler
12 JAN 1689/90 - >1716
Abigail
Flint
1691 - >1713
Jonathan
Flint
22
22
1693 - ~1750
Anna
Flint
57
57
1698 - >1723
Lucy
Flint
25
25
1700 - >1726
Elizabeth
Flint
26
26
5 MAR 1702/03 - 1723
Sarah
Flint
1705 - >1740
Ruth
Flint
35
35
~1708 - >1730
Eunice
Flint
22
22
1666 - 1717
Elizabeth
Richmond
51
51
D. >1708
Mary
Richmond
Jonathan
Mosher
1665 - 1747
William
Almy
81
81
~1666 - 1736
Stephen
Wilcox
70
70
1664 - 1751
Sarah
Wilcox
87
87
1700 - 1747
Charity
Stone
47
47
1721 - 24 JAN 1742/43
Jonathan
Alden
1719 - 1809
Experience
Hayward
90
90
1731
John
Hayward
1729
Mary
Hayward
1728
Elizabeth
Hayward
Hannah
Adley
1721
Nathaniel
Hayward
Jonathan
Maxson
14 MAR 1671/72 - 1719
Sussanah
Briggs
19 FEB 1664/65 - 1718
Edward
Briggs
1723
Mary
Russell
1719 - ~1782
Peleg
Cornell
63
63
1680
Susannah
Spencer
29 JAN 1663/64 - 1736
Thomas
Briggs
1656 - 1734
James
Sisson
78
78
1677 - 5 JAN 1729/30
Robert
Dennis
1681 - 1744
Susanna
Briggs
62
62
1695 - 1749
Benjamin
Brayton
53
53
~1697
Mary
Butts
1697 - 1777
Richard
Woolsey
80
80
~1668
Martha
Briggs
25 JAN 1667/68 - 1747
John
Briggs
26 FEB 1672/73
Frances
Briggs
1 FEB 1674/75
Richard
Briggs
1678 - >1782
Robert
Briggs
104
104
1681
Mary
Briggs
1683 - 1683
Ann
Briggs
7d
7d
1678 - 1752
Hannah
North
74
74
1699 - 1779
Jonathan
Cole
79
79
1695 - 1779
Miriam
Stone
83
83
1690 - 1764
Priscilla
Stone
74
74
Jeremiah
Gifford
1693
Sarah
Stone
1696
Eunice
Stone
1698 - 1 MAR 1716/17
Ambrose
Stone
1702 - 1751
Susanna
Stone
49
49
1704 - 1763
Remember
Stone
59
59
1657
Elizabeth
Mott
Sarah
Stone
Joseph
Tripp
1630 - 1712
Mary
Lott
82
82
1672 - 1718
Henry
Howland
45
45
1674 - 1712
Deborah
Briggs
38
38
1705 - 1752
David
Corning
46
46
1707 - 1790
Priscilla
Thissell
Thistle
82
82
9 JAN 1675/76 - 1724
Samuel
Wightman
D. 1756
Sarah
Thorne
1698 - 1770
Sarah
Fowler
72
72
1684 - 1731
Thomas
Wolsey
47
47
1685 - 1716
Abigail
Wolsey
31
31
30 JAN 1686/87 - 1771
William
Wolsey
1691 - 1751
John
Wolsey
60
60
1695 - 1754
Jonathan
Wolsey
59
59
~1689
Derica
Williamson
1707 - 1788
Joseph
Corning
81
81
1685 - 1748
Elnathan
Stevenson
63
63
~1696
Sarah
Cornell
Nathaniel
Thorn
1688 - 1749
William
Cornell
61
61
1693 - 1728
Esek
Carr
35
35
~1685 - >1716
Robert
Russell
31
31
~1695 - >1723
Thomas
Elliot
28
28
1701 - >1726
Samuel
Marsh
25
25
1708 - >1730
Thomas
Goldthwaite
22
22
1665 - 1753
John
Palmer
88
88
D. 1746
William
Palmer
D. 1774
John
Aspinwall
~1688 - 22 FEB 1727/28
Mary
Davis
1702 - 1771
Mercy
Abbee
69
69
1862
Mary
Arminta
Wing
In Utah 1870 Census, Mary Arminta's birthplace is shown to be Nebraska and her age is 8 years.
~1705 - >1740
Archelaus
Putnam
35
35
1685 - 1757
Sarah
Briggs
71
71
1694 - 1694
Sarah
Borden
1d
1d
1689 - 1762
Robert
Hazard
72
72
3 MAR 1684/85 - Deceased
Hope
Borden
D. 1747
Moses
Northrup
1691
Abigail
Cornwall
1675 - 1730
Rebecca
Hallett
54
54
~1669 - 1727
Lydia
58
58
25 FEB 1681/82 - 9 MAR 1733/34
John
Jr.
Woodman
1689 - 1763
Elizabeth
Briggs
73
73
1685 - 21 JAN 1711/12
John
Briggs
11 JAN 1687/88 - 1673
William
Briggs
1693 - 23 MAR 1715/16
Thomas
Briggs
1693 - 1773
Deborah
Briggs
80
80
1696 - 4 MAR 1726/27
Job
Briggs
~1687
Thomas
Hicks
5 MAR 1688/89 - 1771
Mercy
Abbe
1693
Mary
Rodman
1715
George
Sisson
~1696
Joshua
Jr.
Cornell
Charity
Haight
~1698
John
Cornell
1702 - 1768
Samuel
Cornell
66
66
~1704
Sarah
Cornell
1720
Elizabeth
Cornell
~1700 - 1777
Hannah
Carman
77
77
1715 - <1757
Phebe
Cornell
42
42
1676
Richard
Sisson
~1632
Thomas
Kent
Hannah
Hewlett
1709
Dorcas
Tew
1681 - ~1731
Thomas
Woolsey
50
50
1683 - ~1717
Abigail
Woolsey
34
34
1655
Thomas
Wiggins
~1691
John
Woolsey
1677 - 1761
Peleg
Tripp
84
84
Phebe
Babcock
1697
Thomas
Merithew
Sarah
Ann
Williamson
1706
Grace
Merithew
Patience
Cory
~1698
Gloriana
Cornell
1671 - 1748
Martha
Freeborn
77
77
1697 - 1758
Holder
Slocum
60
60
1693
William
Farnum
1709
Peleg
Almy
1664 - 21 MAR 1745/46
Joseph
Cook
MAR 1671/72 - <1742
Susanna
Briggs
1687
Richard
Durfee
1689
Mary
Almy
1692
John
Almy
1696 - 1777
Job
Almy
81
81
1701
Samuel
Almy
1703
Deborah
Almy
1704 - 1773
Rebecca
Almy
69
69
1707
William
Almy
1707
Joseph
Almy
13 FEB 1702/03 - 1780
Ruth
Putnam
~1685 - 1769
Samuel
Conkling
84
84
Mary
Ferris
1708 - ~1758
Richard
Cornell
50
50
1676 - 1752
George
Cornell
76
76
1678 - 1732
Deliverance
Clark
54
54
Hugh
Mosher
1682 - 1766
Sarah
Blood
84
84
JAN 1696/97 - 1732
Deborah
Church
1702 - 1744
Randall
Preston
41
41
1691 - <1732
Edmund
Stone
41
41
John
Patch
Ebenezer
Cleaves
1690 - <1722
Samuel
Haskins
32
32
1692 - ~1739
John
Allen
47
47
Benjamin
Allen
Judith
Clarke
Marye
Mosher
Ruth
Mosher
~1692
Sarah
Cornwell
~1697
Rebecca
Cornell
~1699
Deborah
Cornell
~1701
Hannah
Cornell
1663 - 1753
John 3
Cornwell
90
90
Joseph
Smith
~1690
Mary
Cornwell
Abiah
Wheeler
~1695
John
Cornell
Ruth
Lydia
Mosher
1680
Hannah
Allen
Mercy
Dickinson
1716
Patience
Burgess
Phebe
F.
Carpenter
12 JAN 1676/77
James
Tripp
1708
Jonathan
Merethew
1710
Samuel
Merethew
1712
Mary
Merethew
14 MAR 1713/14
Roger
Merrithew
24 MAR 1716/17
Job
Merethew
1721
Susannah
Merethew
1723
Dinah
Merethew
14 MAR 1713/14
Jeremiah
Merethew
Sarah
Hudson
Benjamin
Wickam
2 MAR 1718/19
Desire
Merethew
~1697 - 1774
Mary
Green
77
77
1699 - 1714
John
Corning
15
15
1703 - 1764
Joshua
Corning
61
61
22 MAR 1704/05
Ezera
Corning
11 MAR 1711/12
Nathan
Corning
1715
Andrew
Corning
1701
Benjamin
Corning
Judith
Rayment
1706
Malachi
Corning
Eunice
Leach
1719
Robert
Corning
Mary
Yabsley
26 FEB 1684/85
Mary
Sisson
1671
Mary
Briggs
1676
Hannah
Briggs
1678
John
Briggs
1684 - 1766
Thomas
Briggs
82
82
1692 - 1744
Jacob
Blackwell
52
52
1687 - 1743
Mary
Hallett
55
55
4 MAR 1677/78 - 1750
Joseph
Hallett
Lydia
Blackwell
Jonathan
Strange
Ruth
1703 - 1703
Elizabeth
Holt
~1700
Samuel
Coburn
19 FEB 1680/81 - 1744
Richard
Sisson
John
Sisson
Thomas
Everitt
1759 - 1775
Charity
Cornell
16
16
John
Cannon
Joseph
Sutton
1705 - 1766
Sarah
Sands
61
61
1710 - 1775
John
Sands
65
65
~1712
Mary
Sands
Hannah
Harrison
~1714
Bathsheba
Sands
~1716
Jerusha
Sands
1708 - 1769
Abijah
Sands
61
61
Hannah
Warren
Jane
Haviland
1702 - 1770
James
Sands
68
68
Rebecca
Bailey
1699 - 1757
Othniel
Sands
58
58
Susannah
Lang
1712 - 1775
Catharine
Greiner
Or Grine
63
63
Barak
Cornell
~1705 - 1798
Hannah
Trow
93
93
1692
Mary
Porter
1680
Lewis
Jr.
Morris
1685
Thomas
Morris
1690 - 1763
Richard
Morris
73
73
1697
Rebecca
Morris
12 JAN 1694/95 - 1767
John
Morris
1656 - ~1744
Martha
Bunker
87
87
1709
Elizabeth
Sisson
1700 - 1774
Lydia
Tillinghast
74
74
1689
Elizabeth
Jackman
24 FEB 1668/69
Martha
Willett
22 FEB 1670/71
Francis
Willett
29 JAN 1671/72 - 1693
Sara
Willett
1674
Joseph
Willett
1676
Johannah
Willett
1678
Willett
12 FEB 1679/80
William
Willett
1682
Thomas
Willett
1685
Hannah
Willett
1687
John
Willett
D. 30 JAN 1744/45
George
Northway
Lydia
Unknown
1682
Mary
Allen
1677 - 1729
Mary
Tripp
52
52
Sarah
Briggs
1733
Gideon
Sisson
~1671 - 1751
William
Briggs
80
80
1683
Elizabeth
Fobes
1674 - 1728
Thomas
Cornell
53
53
Samuel
Cranston
1699 - 19 FEB 1749/50
Elizabeth
Cornell
Job
Rathburne
1694 - 1733
Amy
Bowne
39
39
1686 - 1730
James
Jackson
43
43
~1692
Hope
Durfee
1685 - 1723
John
Moon
38
38
<1694
Abigail
Briggs
Ruth
Unkn
1664 - 1739
George
Philips
74
74
19 MAR 1672/73
Sarah
Hallett
Mary
Lawrence
19 JAN 1680/81 - 1708
Moses
Hallett
Unkn
Fitch
1683
George
Hallett
Precilla
Allen
Samuel
Moore
16 MAR 1684/85
Charity
Hallett
John
Fish
1689
Elizabeth
Hallett
1691 - 1769
Richard
Hallett
77
77
Amy
Browne
D. 1746
John
Akin
Sarah
15 MAR 1697/98 - 1760
Zebulon
Webb
D. 1749
Ebenezer
Haviland
~1669
Job
Briggs
Sarah
Judith
Briggs
1687 - 1717
Benjamin
Head
30
30
22 JAN 1677/78 - 29 FEB 1747/48
William
Hartshorne
1705 - 1781
William
Cornell
76
76
~1698
Charity
Doughty
John
Borden
1685
Renewed
1696
Edward
Coburn
1704
Robert
Coburn
1719
Hepsiah
Hayward
Ebenezer
Cushman
Hazard
1729 - 30 JAN 1747/48
Elizabeth
Cornell
1725 - >1796
Richard
Gifford
70
70
1722
Susanna
Cornell
1 FEB 1689/90
Sarah
Stone
1691
Josiah
Stone
Joseph
Mosher
1693
Nathaniel
1
Stone
1696
Benjamin
Stone
1699
Ruth
Stone
1702
Hannah
Stone
1703
Phebe
Stone
1706
David
Stone
1708
Abigail
Stone
Mehitable
Fish
12 JAN 1705/06
Peter
Corning
1712 - 1712
Infant
Corning
?
1714
Martha
Corning
1709 - 1760
Josiah
Corning
50
50
1703
Hannah
Corning
Mary
Richards
1717 - 1797
Nehemiah
Corning
80
80
D. 1809
Freeborn
Bliss
26 JAN 1715/16 - 1803
Jane
Andrus
Anna
Field
1668
William
Willet
~1670
Sarah
Willett
1672 - 1724
Thomas
Willett
52
52
1674 - <1701
Mary
Willett
27
27
1676
Elbert
Willett
1678
Charles
Willett
1680 - 1715
Helena
Willett
34
34
Ananias
Wing
1675
Philadelphia
Eustis
1675
Abigail
Sisson
~1691
Mary
Durfee
~1693
Thomas
Durfee
~1695
Ann
Durfee
~1699
Amey
Durfee
Hannah
Haviland
1701
Mary
Sands
Aaron
Smith
~1714
Zerviah
Sands
1 JAN 1707/08 - 1760
John
Sands
1711 - 1793
Elisabeth
Cornell
81
81
Theodata
Hussey
Daniel
Lewis
~1685 - >1760
Amy Amey
Almy
Cadman
75
75
~1683 - ~1760
William
Cadman
77
77
~1688
Elizabeth
Cadman
~1690
Rebecca
Rebekah
Cadman
~1686 - 1716
Christopher
Cadman
30
30
~1690
Mary
Cadman
14 MAR 1694/95 - 1742
John
Merrihew
Hugh
D.
Webster
1702
Timothy
Merrihew
1675
Ebenezer
Tripp
Joanna
Jacquemynte
White
6 MAR 1714/15
Thorne
Phebe
Cornell
1667 - 1728
Joseph
Palmer
61
61
1690 - 1774
John
Willets
84
84
~1670
Sarah
Hinchman
~1640
Amy
Bull
Sarah
1731
Abigail
Sisson
~1733 - ~1771
Mercy\
Marcy
Sisson
38
38
1713
Barnet
Sisson
1714
Joseph
Sisson
1716
George
Sisson
1720
James
Sisson
1722
Lydia
Sisson
Living
Bonny
Living
Smith
1886 - 1952
Fredrick
Fritz
Bonny
65
65
Fritz is listed in the 1910 and 1920 Salt Lake City Directories. In 1910, he is called Fritz,works as a Brakeman at the D & RG and lives at 3 Brown's Court. In 1920, he is called Fred, works as a conductor for the D & RG and lives at 1936 Edison. In between the two, Fritz and Amelia lived at 238 Burno Avenue in Salt Lake City; this is the address he used on his WWI Draft Registration. [See FHL 1983914, cpoy of page in possession of Jane Bonny] Family lore has always held that Fritz worked for the Union Pacific Railroad. The Denver and Rio Grande is not shown as part of the Union Pacific in the short history in my possession. I have received a copy of Fritz's employment record from the Railroad Retirement Board. The record shows that he was "dismissed" July 7th 1931, right in the middle of the Depression, and "reinstated" 13 July 1936, resuming service on August 3rd as a Brakeman. Fritz never had enough time to make up for the depression and the dismissal; he returned as a Brakeman and reamined a Brakeman until his retirment. Joe says that the dismissal came from being caught at a normal practice of the trains crews. There was a freight run to the south which took the train through a farm where all the trains used to stop so the crews could buy eggs from the farmer. Someone turned them in and the entire crew was fired. During those 5 years Fritz worked as a Custodian at the Continental Bank at the corner of 6th and Main. (It was a job he got through the contact of his brother-in-law Joe Vincent, who was a wealthy, influential man, a restauranteur with gambling and bootlegging on the side. Fritz and Amelia named their last child after Joe Vincent.) During that time, Fritz also studied railroad laws to return to his job, there apparently being some sort of test required in order to return. He studied every day with one of his friends. He was eventuall reinstated as a brakeman and was promoted to conductor. During the period as bank custodian, Fritz one night caught a bank robber. Fritz was unarmed dwhen he encountered the robber so he bluffed the man into thinking that one of his keys was actually a gun. He held the man for the authorities. Fritz and Amelia were living at 1070 South 5th Street, East in Salt Lake City, when he retired at age 55 on 17 September 1946. The reason stated for retirement was disability. The place of resisdence 8 years later when Fritz died was145 South 3rd East. Frtiz died of a heart attack, myocardial infarction due to arterioscleratic heart disease and myxedema, eight hours after onset. He was bureid in the Salt Lke City Cemetery.
1780
Oke
Pahlsson
1787
Bengta
Johnson
1855 - 1917
Joseph
Smith
Bohne
61
61
As a child Joseph traveled with his mother, and possibly his aunt, from Denmark to America and then probably on a Pushcart Expedition, to Utah. Given the probable date of 1857 and the fact that only the expeditions for 1857-8 are missing people's names and their names do not appear on any other lists, it seems probable that they were on the one arriving in 1857. Also, the marriage of his mother in 1858 in Utah seems to add to the theory. If so, the expedition, while certainly arduous, was fortunate to have the U.S. Army traveling a parallel route to Utah at the same time for the Army donated an ox which had been crippled by a wagon wheel to the hungry travelers. In the journal of this expedition, the second offering of food, from a fellow journeyer, was not so welcome for this fellow was somewhat aged, required a cane and had lost his sense of smell. Spying a small, apparently edible creature on the prairie, he cornered it and lambasted it with his cane until it was dead. Then he threw the small. black and white, striped animal over his shoulder and headed back to the cart train, there to be repelled by his otherwise congenial fellow travelers. (See Notes for Helsienne Hjetting, the information for whom confirms this theory) In the 1900 Census, he is shown as being 45 years of age, a widower with three children at home, Winne who is 16 and does not attend school, Phosa who is 14 and attends school, and Fritz who is 12 and attends school. The Month on birth for each of the children is different from what I have. The Census shows Winnie as Nov. 1883, Phosa Nov. 1885, and Fritz as October 1887. The Census also shows Joseph as having been out of the work for the previous 6 months. Joseph's obituary (12 February 1917 in the Salt Lake City Tribune) states that he was a carpenter and a member of the Masons. Where were the other children, gone from home? Who was Phosa?
1858 - 1888
Elizabeth
Jane
Wing
29
29
In the 1870 Utah Census Elizabeth Jane's age is 10 years and her place of birth is Illinois. Her cemetery record from the Springville Cemetery states that she was born in Colhown County, Illinois. This same record indicates that her father was Joseph S. Bonney (actually her husband) and Sarah Wing (Sarh Adelia Wright Wing).
1814 - ~1852
Jens Carl
Fredrick
Bohne
38
38
From Pioeer Woemn of Faith and Fortitude in the LDS Family History Library in Salt Lake City (979 D36 v 2, page 1717): "Magnus made his living by the sea [This is confirmed by the 1845 Census of Denmark in which he is listed as a Styrman, Ship's Pilot]. The waters of the North Sea are treacherous. Magnus was drowned at sea and left Helsine with five children to raise."
1818 - 1890
Helsienne
Hjetting
71
71
Helsine was the young mother of five and the wife of a seaman when her husband was drowned at sea, Her circumstances were immediately reduced. In 1845, she, her husband and one child were living in a single family dwelling. In 1855, she and the children are living in what appears to be an apartment or other communal dwelling. [From Pioneer Women of Faith and Fortitude:] "Svend Larsen and his family had been baptized members of the L.D.S. Church. He was a wealthy sea captain who owned his own boat. He used it to assist the missionaries in getting about to further the work of the Lord in Scandinavia. In 1853, he, his wife, and their six children left Norway and came to America. As they were coming up the Mississippi River on a steamboat, Cholera broke out and took many lives. His wife and four children were among those who died. Svend went back to his homeland as a missionary and among his converts were some widows who had lost their husbands to the sea. Helsine Hjetting Bohn was one of those widows. After arriving in Utah in the fall of 1857, he followed the advice of President Brigham Young to marry the widows and provide care for them and their children. He married two widows and was sealed to his first wife on January 11, 1858. (There is IGI information to indicate that Helsienne married Sven Larsen in January, 1858.) In 1861, Sven also married Helsine's sister, Mette Marie, who gave birth to a daughter and died when her daughter was one year old. Helsine took care of her. She also had two children by Sven." (This report lends some support to the possibility that Sven was the father of the last child, Joseph.) Helsienne Bohna, her children, Hendrik Morten (11), Jens Carl J. (13), Joseph Smith (2), Sophus Morten (8) and Anna Sophia (5), and her sister are listed as passengers on the Westmoreland which left Liverpool on April 25, 1857. The spelling of the last name does end in "A". (The ages do do exactly match those given later in Pioneer Women.) From "Immigration Narratives" http://www.vii.com/~nelsonb/enarrative.htm#1857) and from "Handcarts to Zion," the following information is available. On Friday, April 18, 1857, a company of emigrating Scandinavian Mormons, numbering 536 people, bound for Utah, sailed from Copenhagen on the steamer "L.N. Hvidt." The ship arrived at Grimsby, England, April 21, 1857, in the afternoon. The journey continued from there by rail to Liverpool where they boarded the Westmoreland, which sailed on the 25th of April. During the voyage, "The emigrants went to bed between 9 and 10 o'clock in the evening and arose about 5 o'clock in the morning. Prayers were held morning and evening and, as far as possible, also at noon. The Sundays were occupied with fasting, prayers and preaching. Schools were also organized in each district (4) for the purpose of giving the Scandinavian Saints instructions in English. A musical company was organized and the Saints frequently enjoyed themselves in the dance and other innocent diversions." The voyage lasted 36 days, arriving in Philadelphia on May 31, 1857. On June 2, 1857, the group continued by rail from Philadelphia to Iowa City by way of Baltimore and Wheeling. They arrived in Iowa City on June 9, 1857, where they emigrants were normally outfitted for the journey west. "Upon arrival at Iowa City on June 9, the emigrants were taken to the camp grounds, about three miles from town. Here large round tents, held up by a center pole, and capable of holding about twenty persons, awaited them." They were divided into two groups, ox-cart expedition and hand cart expedition. The passenger list for the Westmoreland indicates that Helsienne and the rest of her party would be part of the hand cart expedition. Unfortunately for the immigrants, when in Denmark, they had been led to believe that they would be allowed fifteen pounds of clothes per person. In Iowa City, however, they learned that the fifteen pounds included everything. Three days were allowed for disposing of beds, dishes, books and clothing. On June 15,both groups left Iowa City. The (Seventh) Hand Cart Expedition arrived in Florence, Nebraska on July 3, 1857. Many were sick due to the change of food and climate, as well as overexertion. Despite that, the group voted unanimously to continue without the sick. Thus, on July 7, 1857, 330 people, with 68 handcarts, 3 wagons and 10 mules continued westbound. They arrived at the same time as the ox-cart expedition, September 13, 1857. Among the problems on the expedition was the fact that the leader was a Scotsman, James Park, who spoke no Danish. Ultimately, he was replaced by Elder Christiansen who consented to leave the wagon train in order to assist. The daily routine was much the same as aboard the ship, rising at 5 o'clock to a whistle for breakfast and an assembly for song, prayer and instructions. "On reaching the Loup Fork, July 16, some Indians familiar with the river crossing, were hired to help the company ford the stream. Provisions and goods were hauled across in the wagon, pulled by double teams. The emptied handcarts were then taken across by the strongest men; some women rode on horseback, clinging to the almost naked Indians who guided the horses" "The caravan reached Fort Laramie on August 9. Approaching now the country known as the Black Hills, they found the road more rough and hilly, wood more abundant, and the nights cool. But their supply of food dwindled, and had to be rationed. One bit of food came from an unexpected quarter. A detachment of the 'Utah Expedition,' the army going west to discipline the Saints, was traveling near the Danish handcart train. An ox, belonging to the soldiers, was disabled when a heavy wagon ran over and crushed its foot. The military captain came over to the hungry emigrants and said, 'You may have the ox, I guess you need it.' The fresh meat was gratefully devoured." The next offer, however, was not. "An old man devoid of a sense of smell was walking some distance from the handcarts, when he saw an animal that might be suitable for food. Creeping cautiously upon it, he proceeded to lambaste it with his cane until it was lifeless. Then he threw the little striped animal over his shoulder and headed for the handcart caravan. As he approached, his friends retreated. The gift was vociferously declined, and even the giver was considered unbearable. With no change of clothing available, the kind man was ostracized. Happily, the company soon reached Deer Creek Station, where the emigrant's son was located." "As the emigrants neared South Pass, the great divide between the Atlantic and the Pacific drainage, they met wagons loaded with flour. By giving promises or some handcart equipment as security, they were able to purchase enough for their needs. At Fort Bridger further supplies were procured. And some miles out from Salt Lake City, they were met by friends laden with fresh bread, cake, and fruits. The final stages of the journey furnished a test between the endurance of men and mules, both groups having been on short rations through miles of heat and sand. Feed on the trail was especially scant this year for mules. Some 50,000 cattle were being driven to California along this route, besides the oxen of the huge freight trains of Johnston's army." One of every ten of the mules died; many were helped up the mountain by the emigrants. In anticipation of the arrival of "The Utah Expedition," Brigham Young sent out a band to burn down Fort Bridger so the mention of supplies there is interesting. 1857 was the same year as The Mountain Meadow Massacre of numerous westward bound non-Mormons by a band of Mormons dressed as Indians. Helsienne died in January 1890. While there was no obtiuary for her, it is ironic that the news of the days was not about the Mormons but whether the death of a young woman under the care of Christian Science practitioners was the result of crime or faulty science.
1774
Hendrich
Mortenesen
Bohne
~1778
Anne Frisline
Hansdatter
Holme
~1789 - 1832
Jens
Jensen
Hjetting
43
43
~1791
Karen
Sophie
Solesbeck
~1918
Melba
McLain
7 MAR 1687/88
Jonathan
Ricketson
Mary
??
John
Rathburne
1654
Hepzibah
Wing
1898
Louis
James
Bonny
1715
Giles
Sisson
Micah
Mosher
Living
Marcella
Ralph
Earle
Living
Bonny
Daniel
Fish
Grace
Rathburne
Rebecca
Rathburne
1849 - 1912
Olina
Anna
Andersen
62
62
On her Death Certificate, which was signed by daughter Amelia, her name was Annie. The name a the top of the Death Certificate is Olena A. Paulson. I assume that the A is for Annie or Anderson (no middle name according to Martha A Johnson). The Certificate also states that the names of the Parents are James O. Paulson and Annie Anderson; I think that possibly the young Amelia was distraught and gave information regarding her own parents rather than those of her mother's parents. It would be more than remarkable if Olena's parents' names were the same as her own and her husband's. In the Salt Lake County Census of 1900, Olena (spelled Ilena) is widowed and supporting herself and her three daughters as a laundress. In the 1900 Census, Olena also indicates that she arrived in the United States in 1871. In a letter written to Blaine Bonny, Martha Johnson (cousin, aunt? in Stewartville, Minnesota) says that Olena came to America with her parents from Hedemarker, Norway and that she had 12 brothers and sisters. It is possible that it was Olena's mother who had 12 brothers and sisters. The family first settled in Chicago for a short time then moved to Minnesota and stayed with Martha's family. Olena attended school at Adams [Mowers County in southeast Minnesota]. It appears they were not there long, though the brothers were apparently not far away nor were their uncles. She mentions siblings Altena, Willard, Blanche and her husband Milton. In 1880, Olena is in Freeborn County and her parents are perhaps in Mower County. There is no record of marriage of Olena to James in either Mower or Freeborn County. Did Olena just decide one day to take the new train to the west. Did James decide to go out of state in search of a new wife? In the late 19th century 60 per cent of all daughters left the country and farm for the city. Perhaps Olena met James in Minnesota if he served as a Scandinavian missionary there. Swedish missionary Mad Anderson was known to have worked in southern Minnesota; he may have convinced Olena to leave for Utah.
Andrew
Anderson
Anders and Anne possibly arrived in the United States in 1871. According to a letter written to Darrel Bonny, they stayed for a while in Chicago. If so, they arrived during the cleanup following the massive Chicago Fire of 1871. The 1880 Census shows and Andrew Anderson, age 56 from Norway, and wife Annie, age 60, also from Norway, living in Lodi, Mower County, Minnesota, which agrees with the letter written to Darrell Bonny regarding living in Adams, Mower County. In the next county to the west, Freeborn, there is an Olena Anderson living in the household of Christopher Johnson (possible relative?). Anders, Anne and the children arrived in Minnesota during good times. The Civil War was over, the weather was good, production was good, land was relatively cheap. By 1873 when the big Panic struck, many people were giving up on their farms and the railroads had stopped building through the state of Minnesota, many having gone bankrupt. Soddies were the common form of habitat in the 1870's and 1880s, gradually being replaced by tar paper houses. By the 1880s the weather was good again, only to be followed by a severe drought in the mid-1890s. Many young people left the farm for the city; this was especially true for girls for whom the future on the plains seemed especially bleak. By 1910 the estimated cost of starting a farm was $1500 ($20,000 in 1995 dollars). Freeborn and Mower Counties have death records which may match those of Anders and Annie or Anna early in the 20th century. The Barc Pera arrived on Grosse Ile, Quebec, Canada in 1871, the only ship from Norway to North America with names which seem to match the Andersons. Gross Ile was Quebec's Quarantine Station. Here immigrants were separated into healthy and unhealthy groups and quarantined if necessary. Even the healthy had to stay a while and wash their clothes at "The Old Wash House." The Andersons probably traveled to Chicago or Duluth as soon as they could and from there to Minnesota but there are no border crossing records to confirm this. They may have also traveled entirely overland from Quebec to northern Minnesota. In Freeborn County, there is an 1875 Naturalization Record for an Anders Anderson who says he filed his Letters of Intent in Mower County. If the date and person are correct. Anders arrived before the rest of his family or the five year rule was overlooked or this is not our Anders. There is an Anders living in Northwest Mower County, not far from Freeborn County and from its county seat of Albert Lea. There is no BLM record of an Anders Anderson purchasing land in Mower County but there is an Anders Anderson purchasing land in Freeborn County (5th Meridian, Township 104N, 19W, in August on 1875. According to Letter from Martha Johnson to Blaine and Helen Bonny, dated 12-27-1970, in response to notification of the death of Amelia Paulson, James Paulson and wife Olena lived briefly in Chicago with her family, in the fall, before moving on to Utah.
Anna
Pederson
Anna had 12 brothers and sisters, none with a middle name, according to a Letter from Martha Johnson to Blaine and Helen Bonny. Anna and her daughters went to visit all of her brothers and sisters in Minnesota before the family left for Utah. Letter: 12/27/1970. Among the names were Altena and Blanche. Martha Johnson? A cousin, perhaps. A sibling of or a child of a sibling of Bengta Johnson?
1724
Mary
Sisson
1729
James
Sisson
1671 - 22 MAR 1728/29
Thomas
Thurston
1696
Edward
Thurston
~1705
Thomas
Thurston
Peleg
Thurston
Jonathan
Thurston
Samuel
Thurston
John
Thurston
Ruth
Thurston
Elizabeth
Thurston
Anne
Thurston
Mehitable
Thurston
Mary
Thurston
Nathaniel
Thurston
Unknown
Job
Tripp
Mehitable
Tripp
Isaac
Tripp
Benoni
Tripp
Ann
Tripp
Mary
Tripp
Phebe
Tripp
William
Tripp
Abigail
Tripp
Abiel
Tripp
1675 - >1779
Elizabeth
Sweet
104
104
Mary
Gardiner
Caleb
Tripp
Mary
Tripp
1889 - 1970
Amelia
Olina
Paulson
81
81
The recollection of some of the grandchildren is that Amelia was quite stern and a bit forbidding, not soft, tender or forgiving. Ricky, however, remebers her differently, as being always concerned that he got whatever he wanted or needed when he was visiting. Some time after Fritz died, Amelai moved to 145 South 3rd Street in Salt Lake City. That is the address she used for her application for Widow's Insurance AnnuitY. While a tea-totaler while Fritz was alive, after his death Amelica, perhaps out of loneliness, took to drink, often to excess.
1826 - 1898
James
O.
Poulson
71
71
A search by Danielle Batson, Certified Genealogist, Salt Lake City, has resulted in James Poulson's "High Priest Genealogy" Document. He was ordained a High Priest in March 1876. [High Priest Genalogies, Salt Lake Stake Of Zion, Film 924617, Item #4] A search of Poulsons in Utah Cemeteries reveals the following four Poulsons buried in spots A, 27, 1 through A. 27, 4: Sophia E. Poulson 4 August 1887 - 23 December 1887 James O. Poulson 27 June 1826 - 21 April 1898 Ellen A. Poulson 20 May 1828 - 4 October 1891 Olina A. Poulson 3 December 1849 - 18 May 1912 It appears that Ellen A., as well as Olina A. Anderson, was a wife of James O. Paulson, while Sophia was a child. Since Ellen was approaching the age of 60 at the time of Sophia's death, it is possible that Sophia was the child of Olina. The 1880 Census shows James and Ellen Poulsen living in West Jordan, Salt Lake County, Utah. There are no children in the household. From the Bureau of Land Management, there is a record in 1870 of a James Poulson purchasing 80 acres of land in Cache County, Utah [Township 11N, 1E, Section 21, W 1/2NE] I have discovered that Salt Lake County did not keep marriage records until around 1887. The Church probably kept records but when you look up the film number, you get a message saying that the records are not available unless you can prove a familial relationship and have a letter from your bishop. Is any chance that Michael Bonny can get the records? Volume 17, pages 88-95, of Our Pioneer Heritage has an account of a man who was imprisoned in 1886 for having more than one wife. He was imprisoned with several other men, also held on the same charge. The Governor came to them in May 1886 and offered amnesty if only they would give up all of their wives except one. They unanimously declined and their statement to that effect and why was signed by all of the men, including a James O. Poulson. The statement reads: "To His Excellency, Caleb W. West, Governor of Utah Sir: On the 13inst you honored the inmates of the Penitentiary with a visit and offered to intercede for the pardon of all those enduring imprisonment on conviction under the Edmunds Law if they would but promise obedience to it in the future as interpreted by the courts. Gratitude for the interest manifested in our behalf claims from us a reply. We trust, however,that this will not be construed as defiance, as our silence already has been. We have no desire to occupy a defiant attitude towards the Government or to be in conflict with the nation's laws. We have never been even accused of violating any other law than the one under which we were convicted, and that was enacted purposely to oppose a tenet of our religion. We conscientiously believe in the doctrine of plural marriage and practiced it from a pure conviction of its being a divine requirement. Of the forty-none Elders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints now imprisoned in this Penitentiary for alleged violation of the Edmunds Law all but four had plural wives from the time of its passage to thirty-five years thereto. We were united to our wives for Time and Eternity by the most sacred covenants, and in many instances numerous children have been born as a result of our union who are endeared to us by the strongest parental ties. What the promise asked of us implied, you declined to explain, just as the courts have done when appeals have been made to therm for an explicitly and permanent definition of what must be done to comply with the law. The ruling of the courts under the law have been too varied and conflicting heretofore for us to know what may be their future interpretations. The simple status of plural marriage is now made, under the law, material evidence in securing conviction of unlawful cohabitation, this independent of our acts, ruthlessly trespassing upon the sacred domain of our religious belief. So far as compliance with your proposition it requires the sacrifice of honor and manhood, the repudiation of our wives and children, the violation of sacred covenants; Heaven forbid that we should be guilty of such perfidy; perpetual imprisonment with which we are all threatened, or even death itself would be preferable. Our wives desire no separation from us, and were we to comply with your request they would regard our action as most cruel, inhuman and monstrous; our children would blush with shame and should deserve the scorn and contempt of all just and honorable men. The proposition you made, though prompted doubtless by a kind feeling, was not new, for we could all have avoided imprisonment by making the same promise to the courts. In fact, the penalties we are now enduring are for declining to promise, rather than for acts committed in the past. Had you offered us unconditional amnesty, it would have been gladly accepted; but dearly as we prize the greatest boon of Liberty, we cannot afford to obtain it by proving untrue to our conscience, our religion and our God. As loyal citizens of this great Republic, whose constitution we revere, we not only ask for, but claim our rights as free men, as if from neither local nor national authority we are to receive equity and mercy, we will make our appeal to the Great Arbiter of all human interest, who in due time will grant us the justice hitherto denied. That you may as the Governor of our important but afflicted Territory aid us is securing every right to which the loyal and peaceable are entitled, and find happiness in so doing, we will ever pray. And witness our hands: Lorenzo Snow... James O. Poulson (#10 of 49)..." [Our Pioneer Heritage, Vol. 17, pages 194-195] James O. Paulson, his wives, Ellen and Olina, and four children appear in the Early Church Records. Put together with the birth and death dates of children and wife #1, plus the IGI Records at the FamilySearch.Org web site showing a marriage date between James and Olina in 1883, seem to indicate that James was, indeed married to Ellen and Olina at the same time, so he could have been the James O. Paulson who was jailed in 1886 for having more than one wife, the devoted wife who came with him from Sweden, and the younger wife with whom he had four children. Research by Danielle Batson, Accredited Genealogist, has confirmed this supposition with he following information: From "Church Chronology : A Record of Important Events Pertaining to the History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints [Film 599327, Item 2], xxxvi, 259, 32, 204, James O. Poulson was, indeed, arrested on charges of "u.c." (unlawful cohabitation) Ms. Batson also included Newspaper Clippings of the Deseret News January 30, 1886, February 15, 1886, March 1, 1886 and September 4, 1886, all pertaining to the polygamy charges, James's arrest, imprisonment and release. In order the articles read: "Jan 30, 1886 Within the past few days, J. W. Snell, S. F. Ball. Isaac Laughton, Hyrum Goff, Wm. J. Jenkins, Charles Livingston and J. O. Poulson were notified to be at the Federal Court Room at 9:30 sharp this morning, to be arraigned on indictments found against them by the grand jury. They were on hand at the appointed time, and after being kept in waiting for an hour and a half the court was opened... J. O. Poulson was also indicted three times and pleaded not guilty. Bail $3000." February 15, 1886 The case [of the United States] against James O. Poulsen, of West Jordan, was taken up, and the jury in the Ball case retained to try it. The indictment in this case charged the offense to have been committed in 1884, the wives of the defendant being Ellen Poulson and Olina Andersen Poulsen. The defendant went on the stand as a witness, acknowledged his wives, and stated that he had lived with them in 1884. A verdict of guilty was given by the jury, and the two other the defendant continued. Sentence will be passed March 1st." "March 1, 1886 James O. Poulsen, of West Jordan, came next. He preferred to obey the law of God and meet the consequences, rather than crawfish, and was sentenced to the full term, with fine and costs appended." "September 4, 1886 Releasing Prisoners.--This morning Brother Samuel F. Ball, who has served a six months' term in the penitentiary and 30 days' additional for the fine, for living with and acknowledging his wives, was released from custody. He took the required oath before Commissioner McKay previous to being set at liberty. He is enjoying good health and is in the best of spirits. Two others, James O. Poulsen, of West Jordan, and O.F. Due, of this city, should have been released to-day, but were not brought in from the penitentiary, and will have to remain in custody until Monday at least-two days longer than required by the law. The cause of this is that the Commissioner and his associates propose to change the order of business. In future instead of prisoners being brought in for examination the day after their imprisonment for the fees expire, they must remain at the penitentiary and make application to be released, when the Commissioner will set a day for the hearing. The reason assigned for following this method is that the Commissioner has been crowded as, for instance this week, when six were brought before him in one day, and only three being released, two days were spent on the habeas corpus proceedings for the others. Under this rule it seems probable that a delay will occur in most cases where those imprisoned are unable to pay the fine assessed against them." "September 7, 1886 More Habeas Corpus Proceedings, Necessary.--Today Brothers Hyrum Goff, Wm. J. Jenkins and Jas. O. Poulsen were brought in form the penitentiary and taken before Commissioner McKay. The two latter were subjected to a rigid examination, but being possessed of a very small amount of property, which was invested in real estate, they were discharged in taking the required oath. They have each served six months' imprisonment." James and Ellen, his brother Paul and wife Catherine probably came to America in 1875 or later. All were baptized or confirmed in about 1875. Usually this was done prior to emigration. Daughter Betsy was born in Sweden in 1861 so they could not have left there prior to that date. She was also re-baptized in 1876. In the Springville, Utah Cemetery Records, there is a Daughter "Polsen" born 9 July 1889 and died the same day. The parents are listed as "Jacob and Lena Polsen." The names are possibly misspelled and the dates do not work out with the birth dates of the other children. There is no obituary for James in the Salt Lake City Herald. The news of the week is full of speculation on relations with Spain which has severed its relations with the United States and the Utah 24th Infantry has left for New Orleans from Rio Grande Depot. There is an obituary in The Deseret News of April 23, 1898. It reads: "Died. POLSON--At his home, East Jordan ward, on Thursday, April 32, 1898, James O, Polson, born at Malma, Sweden, July 7, 1828. Deceased was aged 71 years, 9 months and 14 days; and he died as he had lived, a true Latter-day Saint. Funeral from East Jordan meeting house, Sunday, April 24. Friends invited." Danielle Batson, A.G., has searched the Naturalization Index and Court Minutes for Salt Lake and the only James Paulson which she has found who seems to match my data was naturalized on Saturday, February 25, 1878. She has provided me with a copy of the index and the Court Minutes of Vol. D, Page 709. No information on place or date of birth is given.
Mercy
Mosher
1652
Samuel
Batchelder
Wing
1900
Winnie
V.
Bonny
1717
Edward
Tew
1723 - UNKNOWN
Elizabeth
Sisson
Lydia
Tripp
Tabitha
Tripp
1667 - 1729
Deliverance
Smith
62
62
John
Smith
Deborah
Smith
Ann
Smith
Alice
Smith
Peleg
Smith
Joseph
Cornell
1660
Deborah
Wing
Thomas
Borden
1769 - 1849
John
Cornell
80
80
Catherine
Dean
1681
Thomas
Brayton
1595
William
Fish
Patience
Fish
1590
Austin
Fish
Samuel
Cranston
Deborah
Smith
D. 1809
Mary
Cornell
~1600
Deborah
Bachiler
Henry
ATKINSON
1620
Hanna
Strange
~1655
Lot
Strange
~1855
Mary
Wright
John
Williams
D. 1847
John
Cornell
~1684
Rebecca
Ricketson
1540
Bate
1543
Bate
Joshua
Cornell
Elizabeth
ELLIS
Josiah
Quinby
Alice
Knowles
1751 - 1812
Richard
Cornell
61
61
Sarah
Cooke
1757 - 1799
William
Jr.
Cornell
41
41
1714 - 1780
Mary
Cornell
66
66
1775
Daniel
Cornell
1645 - 1727
William
Knowles
82
82
1753 - ~1839
James
Cornell
86
86
Mary
Fish
Benjamin
Mosher
~1655 - ~1734
Alice
Fish
79
79
Susannah
Wilcox
WING
1716
John
Cornell
Wood
Ruth
Fish
1805
Lydia
Cornell
John
Pierce
1837 - 1923
Sarah
Adelia
Wright
85
85
According to information from Jean Anderson, who wrote The History of Black River Falls and also Wrightsville, Sarah was, like her husband, probably also a physician, or more properly, an herbalist. She married James Jesse Strang, as did her cousin Phoebe, as a young girl, honored to be chosen. See The History of Black River Falls and Wisconsin Pioneers. After Strang's death, she married Joseph Wing and moved to Utah where she apparently became disenchanted with polygamy and moved to Idaho. I have requested information on her death certificate from Boise. I have searched for a record of divorce in Salt Lake City and find none in the records 1852-1856 or 1877-1885. There are no records for 1857-1876. There is also no record of marriage in Black River Falls although there is a record of Joseph's nephew marrying Sarah's sister Elizabeth Jane Wright. (Copy of record in my possession). 6/12/99 I have now received a copy of Sarah Adelia's Death Certificate. She is shown as being Widowed, a Housewife. Death from Myocarditis and Nephritis resultant from senility. Her address was: 373 S. 5th, Boise, Idaho.[PhineasWright.FTW] Sarah was the third polygamous wife of James Jesse Strang. Although her father opposed the polygamous marriage, Sarah (and her cousin Phoebe) was proud (and possibly more than a little naive) to be one of "King Strang's" wives. She wrote to Milo Quaife in 1920: "You ask if we all lived in the same house. We did, but we had separate rooms and all met in prayer and ate at the same table. He (Strang) was a very mild-spoken kind man to his family, although his word was law. We were all honest in our religion and made things as pleasant as possible. There were four of us living in the same house." After Strang's assassination on June 16, 1856, it appears that both she and her cousin Phoebe returned to Black River Falls, where James Phineas was born. Perhaps it was in Black River Falls that Sarah met Joseph Smith Wing. In any case, they "married" and had children together. Eventually, however, Sarah, became disenchanted with Mormonism and even more so with polygamy and left Joseph to live with her daughter in Idaho. She supported herself as a medical practitioner, having, apparently, learned the trade from Joseph. Polygamous wife of James Jesse Strang, After his death married Joseph Smith Wing and traveled with him to Utah in the Lewis Bronson ox train of 1862. At the time of her death in 1923, she was living with her daughter, Amanda, in Boise, Idaho. She had previously lived in Springville, Utah.[PhineasWright.FTW] Sarah was the third polygamous wife of James Jesse Strang. Although her father opposed the polygamous marriage, Sarah (and her cousin Phoebe) was proud (and possibly more than a little naive) to be one of "King Strang's" wives. She wrote to Milo Quaife in 1920: "You ask if we all lived in the same house. We did, but we had separate rooms and all met in prayer and ate at the same table. He (Strang) was a very mild-spoken kind man to his family, although his word was law. We were all honest in our religion and made things as pleasant as possible. There were four of us living in the same house." After Strang's assassination on June 16, 1856, it appears that both she and her cousin Phoebe returned to Black River Falls, where James Phineas was born. Perhaps it was in Black River Falls that Sarah met Joseph Smith Wing. In any case, they "married" and had children together. Eventually, however, Sarah, became disenchanted with Mormonism and even more so with polygamy and left Joseph to live with her daughter in Idaho. She supported herself as a medical practitioner, having, apparently, learned the trade from Joseph. Polygamous wife of James Jesse Strang, After his death married Joseph Smith Wing and traveled with him to Utah in the Lewis Bronson ox train of 1862. At the time of her death in 1923, she was living with her daughter, Amanda, in Boise, Idaho. She had previously lived in Springville, Utah.
Addie
Eliza
Carter
1775 - 1777
Hannah
Cornell
2
2
Elizabeth
Cornell
1858
Jens
Hjetting
Larson
1633 - 1713
Hugh
Mosher
80
80
Hugh first appears in The records of Rhode Island on June 29, 1660, when he and five other from Newport purchase land at Misquamicut (Westerly) from the Indian Socho, which had been given to same by Canonicus and Miantonomi for driving off the Pequots in 1637. 1657. Uncle Hugh Mosher leaves to him "House called Cookes House." Sept. 9, 1661. Has a share of land in Westerly apportioned to him but probably never lived there. 1664. Admitted freeman in Portsmouth. July 8, 1668. Purchases land from Thomas Lawton, and the two agree to maintain a good fence line. August 24, 1676. Member of the Court Martial,held at Newport for the trial of several Indians charged with being engaged in King Philip's designs. Several were sentenced to be executed. 1684. Ordained pastor of the First Baptist Church of Dartmouth at its organization. The church soon encompasses Tiverton and Little Compton. April 16, 1690. John Walley of Bristol county writes to Thomas Hinckley, Governor of Plymouth Colony that, "He is a substantial man...whatsoever Mosier doth, he doth publicly, and makes account he can in law answer anything he hat said of done." Nov. 7, 1691. Sold to Joseph Braman his share of Westquadnoid. Oct. 12, 1709. Will, proved Dec. 7, 1709.
1685
Joseph
Tripp
Joe
Bonny
1667
John
Tripp
~1644
Joseph
Tripp
~1654 - 1742
John
Fish
88
88
Lars
Christian
Lambertsen
Robert
Beachman
1683
Mehitable
Tripp
1807
John
H.
Cornell
1799
William
Cornell
1762 - 1810
Sarah
Cornell
48
48
John
Knowles
Darrell
Bonny
1790
Joel
Cornell
Isaac
Cornell
~1617 - 16 MAR 1697/98
Daniel
Wing
[.] Daniel4 Wing (REV. JOHN3, MATTHEW2, GODFRIEDUS1 WYNGE) was born Abt. 1617 in Probably Holland, and died March 10, 1696/97 in Sandwich, Massachusetts. He married (1) Hannah Swift, daughter of William Swift and Joan Sisson. He married (2) Anna Ewer June 02, 1666 in Sandwich, Massachusetts. Notes for Daniel Wing: Tradition has it that he was the eldest son of John and Deborah (Bachiler) Wing. However, it is not known when Matthew was born. If Matthew was old enough to have remained in England in 1632 when his family emigrated, then Matthew may have been the eldest and Daniel would then be the eldest of the three American immigrant brothers. After living in Saugus (Lynn) five years, he , his brothers and mother were among the first Sandwich settlers in 1637. By 1641 Daniel had acquired enough personal and real property to marry and start his independent life. See John Wing Jr. notes for sources of information. Daniel became active in the fishing business on the Herring River, now the Cape Cod Canal. He also participated in financing a town mill. His house was located near the center of the present Sandwich village in what is referred to as the heritage area. By 1655 Daniel and other prominent citizens were involved in serious religious dissension, opposing the church authorities in Plymouth. Daniel was fined for supporting newly arrived Quakers. He refused to take a loyalty oath aimed against Quaker sympathizers. The scenario became ugly with public whippings and brandings. Disgusted, Daniel left the Puritan denomination of his father and grandfather, which had become as intolerant of others as the Church of England had been towards Puritans and Separatists themselves. He joined the Quakers who in 1658 established a Friends meeting at Spring Hill in Sandwich, the first in America. His brothers, John Jr. and Stephen followed later. Daniel and Hannah both died about the time their youngest child was born, leaving many orphans to the care of extended family. They had eleven children. ------------------------------ OWL Page 4696: Daniel Wing was apparently married twice. First to Hannah Swift and then to Anna Ewer. Children of Daniel Wing and Hannah Swift are: 20 i. Hannah5 Wing, born July 28, 1642. 21 ii. Lydia Wing, born May 23, 1647. 22 iii. Deborah Wing, born October 10, 1648. + 23 iv. Samuel Wing, born August 28, 1652. 24 v. Hepzibah Wing, born September 07, 1654. + 25 vi. John Wing, born November 14, 1658 in Sandwich, Massachusetts; died August 01, 1717 in Rochester, Mass.. + 26 vii. Beulah Wing, born November 16, 1658 in Sandwich, Massachusetts. 27 viii. Deborah Wing, born September 1660. + 28 ix. Daniel Wing, born January 28, 1663/64. Children of Daniel Wing and Anna Ewer are: 29 i. Experience5 Wing, born August 04, 1668. 30 ii. Bachelor Wing, born June 1671. 31 iii. Jashub Wing, born June 1674. Jane's Question: How could Daniel die and then remarry?
~1617 - ~1687
Thomas
Fish
70
70
From Austin's Dictionary of Rhode Island Genealogy, pg. 78: March 20, 1660. He had a deed of house and land from Henry and Ann Ayres, in consideration of fencing 2 acres, but said Henry and Ann were to enjoy said land for their lives without paying rent. 1665. Bought 2 parcels of land from James Babcock, including land, dwelling house, barn and orchard for 50L. Chosen Constable for the year. 1665. Sold two acres to Thomas Lawton. Made freeman, indicating he was also a member of a church, probably the Quaker Church or possibly the new-formed Baptist Church of Providence or Newport. 1674. Town Council. May 2, 1684. Deeded grandson, Preserved Fish, son of Thomas, deceased.., dwelling house and 15 acres where Thomas Fish, Jr. had lived and said grandson to possess it in the year 1700. March 1, 1679. Chosen to be on the Grand Jury the next Court of Trials. Sept 12, 1685. Appointed to Coroners Jury for an Inquest into the hanging of a Scotsman named John Crage. February 9, 1887. Will proved, Wife, Mary is executor. To son, John, the land bought from James Babcock. To son Robert 20s., like amount to daughters, Mehitable, Mary and Alice. To Grandson Preserved, 5s. To wife, remainder of estate. Inventory 49L, 10s. Will is signed in bold, legible hand-writing. September 9, 1697. Codicil to Will. Slight changes. Inventory 130L, 2s. Thomas, the eldest son of Robert and Alice Fish, left England at about the age of 24 and settled in the newly formed Providence Plantations in New England, receiving his first land grant in 1643 ,"at the first Brooke," and here he became the progenitor of the Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Vermont branches of the family. One of the earliest Town Meetings, held on 13 March 1638 recorded: "none shall be received as inhabitants or freemen...but such as be received in by the consent of the Bodye and do submit to the Government that is or shall be established according to the Word of God. :...every inhabitant of this Island shall be always provided one musket, one pound of powder, 20 bullets, and two fademe of match with sword and rest and Bandeliers, all completely furnished. "...the swine that are upon the Island shall be sent away from the plantation six miles up the Island or into some Islands adjacent, by the 10th of February, 1639, or else be shutt up so that they may be inoffensive to the towne "...Ordered that the wolf catcher be payed out of the Treasurie. Also ordered that there shall be noe shooting of deere from May 1st to 1st of Nov Forfeit to be 5 pounds."
~1856
Silas
Wright
1686
David
Brayton
Josiah
Quinby
1749 - 1827
Quinby
Cornell
78
78
1810
Egbert
Cornell
Mary
Fish
1621
Grissegon
Strange
Thomas
Cranston
~1782
Solomon
Cornell
Daniel
Wing
Moses
Quinby
~1761
Ellen
Margaretha
Star
Catherine
\\
William
Cornell
1721
William
Cornell
Henry
ATKINSON
Joan
Wheeler
1711
Hannah
Cornell
~1577 - <1662
Mary
Hinckes
85
85
Living
Diamond
Rebecca
Haight
Letitia
Field
Annis
Unknown
William
Knowles
Francis
Brayton
John
Russell
Mary
\\
Mrs.
Stephen
BACHILER
Patience
Mosher
John
KIRBY
(KERBY)
~1726 - 1775
Joshua
III
Cornell
49
49
Martha
Knowles
William
SANBORN
1728
Mary
Cornell
1772 - 1842
Elizabeth
Cornell
70
70
James
Allen
Mary
Jane
Quinby
Abigail
Stevenson
1615
Appiah
Strange
1680
Idido
Butts
9 MAR 1717/18
Rebecca
CORNELL
1612
Jonathan
Strange
1671
Bachelor
Wing
Stephen
Cornell
1618 - 1620
Joyce
Briggs
2
2
Mordecai
Reynolds
Ann
Van
Nostrand
1636 - 1718
George
Sisson
82
82
From John Austin's Dictionary of Rhode Island Genealogy: June 5, 1671. Grand Jury. He and other appointed to view the damage done to the Indians by horses and hogs. April 7, 1677. Portsmouth. Sold Peleg Trip 32 acres in Portsmouth with houses, orchards, fencing &tc, for 3/8 of a share in Dartmouth. May 19, 1683. Sold Isaac Lawton, for 100L, a quarter share in Dartmouth. Aug. 16, 1684. On a jury whose verdict was that an Indian "murdered himself." 1687. Constable. 1688. Grand Jury. 1690-1702-5-7. Deputy. 1703. Justice of the Peace. Aug. 20, 1718. Will, proved Sept. 20, 1718. Executor son Richard. Typical, largest portion to son Richard, who also receives "old negro man Abraham and Lucy his wife." Inventory: 44L, 18s., 8d. (with subsequent additions of 10L, 5s.). Wearing apparel 8L, 11s., armor 2L, plate at 8s per oz., 8L, 12s., 2d., silver money 13L, 12s.,6d., Bills of Public Credit 69L, 7s., 6d., books, 4 cows, half of 5 steers, 3 yearlings, and 2 calves, 2 mares, colt, 93 sheep and lambs, half of 4 swine and 4 shoats, geese, turkeys and fowls, small table, 12 chairs, woolen wheel, cradle, churn, cheese motes, pewter, iron and brass ware, &tc."
Christopher
Fish
Mary
Cornell
1726 - 1759
Martha
Cornell
33
33
Mercy
Cornell
5 MAR 1675/76
Hope
Fish
1660 - 1713
Anne
Sisson
53
53
Miss
HEFFERLAND
Mrs
Grace
MOTT
Miss
BOWNE
~1690 - 1762
John
Cornell
72
72
~1675 - ~1768
James
Mosher
93
93
Ruth
Fish
~1836
Phineas
Wright
1639 - 1674
Mary
Sisson
35
35
Ebenezer
Fish
17 MAR 1683/84
Francis
Brayton
1845
Hendrik
Morten
Bohne
1718
Zerviah
WING
John
Mott
1638. Admitted inhabitant, Rhode Island. Aug. 29, 1644. It was ordered by Assembly that Mr. Baulstone shall have 9L a year for "Ould John Mott's" washing and diet, and what bedding he shall want to be furnished by the town.
1706 - 10 JAN 1731/32
Richardson
Cornell
Bowne
Phebe
Smith
Elizabeth
??
Mary
Chapman
1811 - 1874
Phineas
Wright
62
62
Notes from Reed, George, "Black River Falls, Early History, 1818-1860," The Badger Banner, January-may 1869 ( transcribed by Helen E. Brieske): The earliest settlers, in about 1838, "were over one hundred miles from any white settlement...a the vast country around them...a wilderness...surrounded by treacherous natives on every side, who would look upon them with jealous eyes, as intruders upon their choicest hunting grounds...beyond the verge of civilization...the life before them one of toil, hardship, danger and privation." During the year of 1842, the lumbermen of Black River Falls were joined by delegations of Mormons from Nauvoo, Illinois who had come to get material for the Temple. According to Reed's account, the Mormons proceeded to harvest logs from off of Spaulding's claim. saying that "the wilderness was the Lord's, and that no Gentile claim would be respected by the Saints." A confrontation between the Mormons and Spaulding and his armed men resulted in a retreat by the Mormons, a return with armed men and, finally, a legal judgement against the Mormons. Not deterred, the Elder claimed he "would cut timber wherever he could find it." Spaulding then made a surprise visit on the Saints and, backed by an armed band, vowed, "Now, I'll give you ten minutes to get out of this, and if not within that time, there may be more Saints in Heaven, but I know there will be fewer in Earth." The Mormons went upstream, "groaning in bitterness...and doubting if the Lord reigned that high up Black River." Further, they made no more threats of force, "but were in all respects peaceable and well disposed citizens." Payment was made to Spaulding for interest in the lumbering business. "The new occupants of the Falls property, were, in their way, very devout in all the outward observances of their peculiar religion, had preaching regularly as the Sabbath came, at which every Saint was present, as a matter of course, that lived anywhere near it, and among their congregations were frequently to be seen outsiders, whose curiosity prompted their presence at the Mormon tabernacle." Following the June 7, 1844 assassination of Joseph Smith by a mob in Carthage, Illinois, the shocked Mormons sold out their business in the Falls area and departed to avenge the death of their leader. "Samuel and Benjamin Wright, well known citizens in their time, arrived on the river in 1842." "During the year the Mormons were in possession of the Falls property, they had improved it by finishing up the larger saw mill and leaving it in complete running order. They had erected a commodious warehouse on the present site of the house occupied by P. Roddy, and also erected some half dozen dwelling houses on the property." This same series of articles includes stories of C.R. Johnson, former school teacher, Justice of the Peace and Clerk and some of the marriage ceremonies which he performed. The marriage record in 1860 of daughter Elizabeth Wright and Samuel Wing is signed by B. F. Johnson. Notes from "Wrightsville, Then and Now, 1871-1965," by Georginia Bouley in 1965: "James Jessie Strang declared himself the successor of Mormon leader Joseph Smith in 1844, thus beginning the Strangite Mormon group of which the Wright family were prominent members. The Strang followers established their church at Voree, Wisconsin, near Burlington where Strang had been a lawyer. In 1847 Prophet Strang moved his Kingdom to Beaver Island, on the northwestern end of Lake Michigan. In the early 1850's. Phineas Wright, James Strang and numerous others of the Strangites on Beaver Island were arrested and transported to Detroit aboard the first steel hulled steamship, Michigan. There was much descension in the church when Strang declared his polygamy intention, and eventually resulted in many of the Saints breaking away from the church. (Strang had one legal wife and four plural wives.) Among the plural wives were Sarah and Pheobe Wright, who were cousins, and whom Strang married in 1855, Sarah on July 15, and Phoebe on October 27. Sarah's father, Phineas, was one of the twelve apostles of the church but he did not approve of polygamy, and stated that he would rather see her buried than to be married in polygamy. Phoebe's father was Benjamin Wright, also as apostle of the church, and was in charge of the Law of the Lord when the Saints fled from Beaver Island in 1856. Prophet Strang was shot by a mob of angry Gentiles in June, 1856 at Beaver Island and the Saints of the church were driven from the island. They fled back to Voree where they remained until Stran died of his would in July. At the death of King James the Saints or followers of Strang, dispersed with the Wright family settling in the area of Hall's Creek and Wrightsville was named after these first settlers. The Wirght Brothers established a saw mill on Hall's Creek and the other Saints engaged in farming. The Wright family broke away from the Strangite believers and a Church of Latter Day Saints was organized in Wrightsville by member of the sect. This group was law abiding and didn't practice polygamy after coming to Jackson County. They were respectable, influential members of the community and were always on friendly terms with their neighbors. Just a few years later the group scattered. Uncle Ben Wright settled on a tract of wild land several miles upstream from Hall's settlement, a mile east of Highway 12 near the James Reichenbach garage. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wright and their fives sons, Mose, George, Benjamin, William, Theodore and Mrs. and Mrs. Joseph Reichenbach were next to come to Wrightsville in the year of 1862." "Morris and George Wright, nephews of Uncle Ben Wright, built and operated the first two sawmills on Hall's Creek. These sawmills operated in 1867-68. when the nearest railroad was at Sparta. The railroad reached Black River Falls in December 1868 and the following year, 1869, to Merrillan." A depot was built in Wrightsville but the track from Green Bay by-passed Wrightsville in favor Merillan and Wrightsville soon died and, by 1890 was little more than a memory." [Note: Search of Madison Historical Society Library and Archives has a record of the death of a person who appears to be Phineas's brother Benjamin. It records the following: Name: Benjamin Gil Wright Color: White Sex: Male Occupation: None Age: 91 years, 5 months, 19 days Father: Don't Know Mother: Don't Know Birth Place: Toronto, Canada Wife: Margaret Date of Birth: 1798 Widowed Date of Death: July 25, 1900 Place of Death: George Wright's Burial: Wrightsville Undertaker: Ed Pierce][PhineasWright.FTW] BANNER-JOURNAL NEWSPAPER 03/28/1874 Obituary: Phinehas Wright, one of the old settlers of this region died at Coral City, Trempeleau County, March 20, at the age of 62 years,leaving 7 or 8 children. His body was brought to Wrightsville for burial with the Masons and the silver cornet band being present. [By deduction from the newspaper article, his birth date in 1811 must have been after March 11.] Marriage to Rebecca Wagener - Certified Copy from Register of Deeds, Walworth County, Elkhorn Wisconsin, in possession of Norma Jean Herzman Dresbin. From "The King Strang Story" by Doyle C. Fitspatrick, it appears that Phineas and his brothers were early followers of James Jesse Strang, having probably met him in or around Voree or Black River Falls. Since Phineas was opposed to polygamy, he probably became a follower of Strang's and a believer in Strang's right of prophetic succession after the assassination of Joseph Smith in 1844 because he too opposed polygamy. In the strife within the Mormon community in Voree, James Strang was the loser and Brigham Young was the winner. Strang and his followers, including, purportedly, Phineas as his right-hand man, left for Beaver Island in 1847. Though they were poor, the Mormon community there prospered. One of the other differences between the Beaver Island sect and their mainland counterparts was that it was not communistic but relied on tithing to support the congregation. While tithing remained, however, Strang, for whatever reason, be it revelation or sexual appetite, James Jesse Strang converted to polygamy, marrying first (legally) Mary Perce, then Elvira Eliza Field, Sarah Adelia Wright and Phoebe Wright. Between April 11, 1851 and June 23, 1851, Phineas and 98 other Mormon men on Beaver Island arrested and taken from the island to Detroit to face federal charges. They were brought there aboard the Steamship Michigan. [Web site: Rearview Mirror: The King of Beaver Island]: "By 1850 Strang and his followers controlled all the political offices of Mackinac Island, to which Beaver Island and its neighboring islands were attached for judicial and elective purposes. Governor Bingham and state legislators were careful to cultivate the 700 votes of Strang's followers. "The unrest in the area and the unhappiness of those opposed to Strang's followers did not go unnoticed, however. Stephen A. Douglas advised President Millard Fillmore to instruct the attorney general to issue orders to the U.S. district attorney of Michigan to begin prosecution of Strang for offenses punishable in the federal court, such as delaying the mail, cutting timber from public lands, tax irregularities, counterfeiting and so on. "The United States Steamer Michigan was ordered to proceed dully armed to Beaver Island. The ship carried a U.S. marshal and deputies and the district attorney who were to bring Strang and the other indicted followers to Detroit for trial. "Strang's followers were lured to the ship by a ruse to prevent bloodshed and eventually arrived at Detroit in May of 1851. Nearly a hundred strong, they were marched up Woodward to Gratiot and over to the old jail which stood at the corner of Gratiot and Farmer. A day in June was set for the start of the trial. The defendants were let out of bail on Strang's word and a pledge that they would all appear when needed. It was agreed that the deputy clerk of the United States District Court should go with the district attorney and officers back to Beaver Island and take depositions of all witnesses" While the men were exonerated, few people were left on the island to tend the crops, many other having been taken away to testify. The women did all of the work in the absence of the majority of the men and some of the women. The records of the trial are in the National Archives in Chicago. Copies of some of the pages are in the photos section here.
1821 - 1848
Amanda
Finch
26
26
Twin with brother John. On January 1, 1848, following a 5-day illness, Amanda died, at the age of twenty-six. The next day, she became the first person to be buried in the new Mormon Cemetery in Voree, Wisconsin. James Strang, her son-in-law, described her as "one of the best of God's creatures." The children were only 2, 6, 8, and 10 years old, Sarah being the oldest and very likely the one charged with the responsibility of caring for her siblings. Death and Burial in Voree, meaning the Garden of Peace, the first in the Strangite Cemetery in Voree (now Burlington) Wisconsin.
1842 - 1877
Elizabeth
Jane
Wright
35
35
1788
George
Wright
[PhineasWright.FTW] According to Lita Barrie at the National Library of Canada, Land Grant for Sons and Daughters of American Loyalists appears in Order of Council of May 19, 1812 (pg. 336 of William Reid's Loyalists in Ontario). According to Canadian Genealogist Doris Bourrie via Norma Jean Herzman, "He was listed as a private in a flank company of Lennox militia. He received a free military grant of 100 acres." From FTM CD204, The Ontario Register, 17802-1870s Marriage Notices of Ontario, Christian Guardian, Torinto, 1830, Dec 1831-Nov 1835, there is a record of a George Wright marrying Elizabeth Aikens on 25 February 1835; both were from Toronto Twonship in Peel County. From the same CD records, there is a Sarah Wright, second daughter of G. H. Wright of Stamford Township marrying James Garner on 27 November 1852 in G.H. Wrights' home.
1790
Phoebe
Whitley
1872
Amanda
Amy
WING
1823
Abigail
Finch
~1786 - ~1827
Unlnown
Finch
41
41
1790
Elizabeth
Pierce
Charles
Finch
Abigail
Strong
Ephraim
Pierce
Abigail
Brooks
1815 - 1869
Cullen
Dillard
53
53
Elvira
Malissa
Wing
~1854
Amanda
Wright
John
Russell
Dorothy
2
Thomas
Underhill
James
Sands
John
Sanborne
[.] In some references this is William Sanborn.
Anna
Crandall
Philip
Flagler
Sarah
Butts
D. 1854
James
Hallett
1720
Richard
Cornell
1675
Hepzibah
Butts
10 MAR 1584/85
Thomas
Fish
Alice
Fish
~1540 - ~1601
Thomas
Fish
61
61
~1674
Daughter
Cornell
1760
Josiah
Cornell
Ann
Reynolds
1620 - 1692
John
Sanborne
72
72
Henry
ATKINSON
1882
Winnie
Bonny
Ruth
Hewlett
Aaron
Palmer
1716
Rebecca
Cornell
~1755 - ~1828
Henry
Cornell
73
73
1678
Sarah
Lake
~1880
James
Bonny
Hans
Goffredsen
~1655
Robert
Fish
Elizabeth
Lake
Phebe
Titus
[.] Is this the same person as Phebe Titus Haight ?
Elizabeth
Embree
Margaret
Mosher
1675
Henry
Knowles
BET. 1666 - 1671
John
Cornell
<1735
Sarah
Cornell
Catheroine
Thorne
Ellen
Margareta
Larson
1560 - 1630
Margaret
Cradock?
70
70
1773
John
Cornell
1695
Benjamin
Brayton
~1657
John
Fish
~1652 - 1747
Mary
Fish
95
95
Thomas
Appleby
Henry
Young
Caroline
Matilda
Andersen
Ephraim
Mosher
1642 - 13 JAN 1713/14
Peleg
Tripp
BEF. 18 FEB 1598/99 - ABT. 7 MAR 1685/86
Christopher
HUSSEY
[.] "Signed his deeds and will. Inventory includes 'one Bible' valued 5s and 'one book' valued at 5s." First child baptized by Stephen Bachelor.
1802 - 1823
James
Cornell
20
20
1670
Thomas
Tripp
~1884
Ross
Bonny
[.] IGI has Ross Milton Bonny born 23 September 1880, Sanpete, Mount Pleasant
11 FEB 1682/83
John
Ricketson
Elizabeth
Chadeayne
8 JAN 1680/81
Abiel
Tripp
Eleanor
Hunt
Daniel
Knowles
Phebe
Ferris
Mary
Hall
1718
Susannah
Cornell
1597
Alice
Fyshe
Robert
Knowles
12 JAN 1692/93
Mehitable
Brayton
John
Fish
2 MAR 1626/27
Comfort
Strange
1772
Elizabeth
Cornell
1673
Moses
Butts
Elizabeth
Cornell
~1655
John
Strange
1768
Phebe
Cornell
Samuel
Titus
~1759
Frederick
Anderson
Saelsbeck
Hannah
Mary
Earle
Possible sister to Sarah Earle.
Elizabeth
Tallman
1879 - 1879
Joseph
Bonny
Matte
Marie
Hjetting
Mary
\?\
1673
Grissel
Fish
25 FEB 1727/28 - 1808
Margaret
Cornell
David
Lake
Nancy
Purdy
~1618
Anna
Sanborne
1765 - 1825
Joshua
Cornell
59
59
[.] From the Cornell Web site: Joshua, Rebecca and children Lydia, John, Samuel P., Phebe and Mary moved to Norwalk, Canada in 1824.
Shinott
D. 30 JAN 1717/18
Francis
Brayton
D. ~1850
Joshua
Cornell
Nicholas
Mosher
Sarah
Fish
Housenfare
Johnston
William
SANBORN
Aaron
Quinby
1716
John
Cornell
Mary
Wiggin
D. 1687
Mary
6
Henry
Knowles
1691
Daniel
Tripp
Hanna
Fish
William
Earle
Joshua
Cornell
Aaron
Cornell
1630
Joshua
Cornell
[.] His mother conveyed to him, Oct. 21, 1664, land in Plymouth, Massachusetts, which he conveyed on Nov. 21, 1664, to Samuel Cornell. There is no further account of Joshua.
1671
Alice
Fish
~1631 - 1632
Kelame'
Cornell
1
1
~1615
John
Briggs
NOT THE SAME JOHN BRIGGS WHO TESTIFIED AT THE TRIAL OF THOMAS CORNELL IN PORTSMOUTH, RI. See notes on Sarah for information on parents.
John
Fyshe
William
Cromwell
1658 - 1687
John
Sisson
29
29
Tabitha
Fish
1650 - 1740
Elizabeth
Sisson
90
90
D. 1744
Joanna
1761
Samuel
Cornell
Unknown
Sarah
Birdsall
1623
Lott
Strange
1728 - 1799
William
Cornell
70
70
1776
Mary
Cornell
Elizabeth
Birdsall
BET. 1843 - 1849
Jens Carl
Jacob
Bonny
The 1845 Census for Rander, Denmark, shows a two-year-old Jens in the household of Magnus Bone and Elsine Hietting. In the passage in Pioneer Women of Faith and Fortitude, however, his birth date is shon as 1849, no month or day. Whether the writer didn't know the age or whether they may have been another Jens is not certain. On the list of passengers aboard the Westmoreland, his age is given as 13, which would make his birth year approximatley 1844.
Martha
Hewlett
Japheth
Cornell
John
Cornell
1 FEB 1678/79
Alice
Tripp
1656 - 1716
Sarah
Butcher
60
60
Mary
\\
Charles
White
Elizabeth
Fish
John
Willis
Joshua
Cornell
Living
Bonny
Nathan
Fish
D. 1782
Comfort
Cornell
Rebecca
Mosher
1574 - 1625
Henrie
Briggs
51
51
Hannah
Thorne
1818 - 1883
Hepzibah
Cornell
65
65
1686
Daniell
Corning
~1600 - ~1663
Joan
Sisson
63
63
Mary
Knowles
John
Thorne
Dorothy
Bowne
1665 - 1739
Rebecca
CORNELL
74
74
[.] Is this the same person who is married to John Starr but was born abt. 10 years apart?
1820
Thomas
Cornell
Mercy
Mosher
Philip
Taber
Mehitable
Fish
Thomas
Mosher
Elizabeth
Butts
1678 - 1756
Hannah
Thorn
77
77
1640
Remember
Corning
Samuel
Joseph
Wing
~1732 - 1767
Peter
Cornell
35
35
Sarah
Sherman
Audrey
Barlowe
Mary
Sisson
Anne
Cornell
1662 - 1732
James
Sands
70
70
George
Sisson
1731
Rebecca
Cornell
William
Almy
Joseph
Almy
~1589 - ~1643
William
Swift
54
54
Mary
Maria
White
Joseph
Fish
4 JAN 1711/12 - ~1770
Joseph
Cornell
Patience
Gifford
~1744
Margareta
Henrecksen
~1725 - ~1800
Barak
Cornell
75
75
Abigail
Tripp
Joshua
Franklin
1751 - 1829
James
Cornell
77
77
Edward
Sands
Nathan
Palmer
1675 - 28 FEB 1733/34
John
CORNING
1676
Eliashib
Butts
Susanna
Fish
1780 - 1848
Deborah
Cornell
68
68
Susan
Pettit
William
ALMY
1776
Mary
Cornell
Mary
Gale
1810
Samuel
P.
Cornell
Tacy
Burdick
Hannah
Maxson
Charles
White
John or
Hugh
Mosher
~1724
John
Cornell
1770
Benjamin
Cornell
Hope
Fish
~1585
John
Strange
1864
Joseph
Smith
Wing
1726 - 1800
Joshua
Cornell
74
74
20 MAR 1719/20 - ~1795
Elizabeth
Cornell
Ebenezer
Haviland
John
Hicks
~1612 - 2 FEB 1717/18
Lydia
Maxson
Hanna
Strange
Mary
Clark
Unknown
~1619 - <1662
Sarah
Cornell
43
43
Elizabeth
Cornell
1816
Albert
Cornell
D. <1633
John
Hussey
1663
John
Cornell
Charity
Cornell
Benjamin
Woolsey
Henry
Franklin
Sarah
Coe
B. H.
Brinkerhoff
Abigail
Mosher
Chloe
Sherman
Henry
Lake
Thomasina
??
Abigail
Butts
Hannah
Underhill
[.] Is Hannah Underhill related to Esther Underhill, brother William's wife?
Content
Rogers
1867
Sarah
Adelia
Wing
~1665 - >1736
Martha
71
71
~1668
Mrs
Martha
BRIGGS
Mary
Maxson
22 JAN 1689/90
Timothy
Ricketson
Sarah
Haviland
Thomas
Mumford
Lavinia
Cornell
1691 - 1751
John
WOLSEY
60
60
D. 1648
Alice
??
[.] Tried and executed for witchcraft.
1650
Isaac
Lawton
1674
Jashub
Wing
~1681
Mary
Starr
~1649 - 1684
Thomas
Fish
35
35
Thomas married Grizzel Strange (aka Grissigon Strange) in 1668. What is unusual about the marriage is the record in which it states; "Thomas Fish of the Town of Portsmouth, junior, was married unto Grisigon Strange, daughter of John of the said Portsmouth on the 16th of Dec. 1668. The birth of the said Thomas and Grizzigon fishes children are as follows: Alice fish was born 15 Sept, 1671, Grizzel, 12 April 1673, Hope 5 March 1675, Preserved 12 Aug. 1679, Mehitable 22 July, 1684." Within nine months of the settlement of Portsmouth, followers of Anne Hutchinson broke away and formed a new settlement which they called Newport. Almost immediatley, a government of the two settlements was established and Thomas Fish was appointed deputy to the general assembly at Newport.
~1637 - 30 JAN 1712/13
Christopher
Almy
[.] Governor of Massachusetts (?), from Some Wings of Old Dartmouth by William Arthur Wing.
~1623
Charles
Bridges
[.] English Secretary for the Province under Governor Stuyvesant in 1652; was in the Governor's council, Military Commissary in 1660; patentee of Flushing and Gravesend; lived in Pearl Street, New York. Sarah carried on a small trade in merchandise adjoining City Hall, Wall Street, head of Broad, and had a house on State Street. Inherited /2 of Cornell's Neck, with sister Rebecca, who conveyed her share to Sarah.
~1749 - 1785
Joseph
Pettis
36
36
1787 - 1864
George
Cornell
77
77
~1691
Mrs John
(Sarah)
WOOLSEY
Abigail
Fish
John
Mosher
Dorothy
Maxson
~1732
Charity
Cornell
~1663
Mary
Starr
Sands
Henry
Franklin
1703 - 1762
Mary
Cornell
58
58
1679
Mary
Cornell
Joanna
Fish
1670 - 24 JAN 1707/08
William
HALLETT
1723 - 1771
Benjamin
Cornell
47
47
Edward
Burling
James
McLess
Hannah
Cornell
Thomas
White
Thomas
Burtis
Elizabeth
Purdy
~1650
Grissel
Strange
Margaret
Knowles
D. 1579
Augustine
Fyshe
Mary
Cornell
Joseph
Clarke
~1620 - >1687
Alice
Ferre
67
67
Elizabeth
Doty
<1742
Letitia
Cornell
D. ~1699
Mary
Sherman
Sept. 9, 1697, Mary adds a codicil to her will. The will was proved July 12, 1699; Daniel was the Executor. In it she mentions children: Daniel - all the outward movables John - 5L Robert - 5L and a cow Mehitable Tripp - 5L, brass chaffing dish, pewter platter, three porringers, chest, pewter platter Mary Brayton - 5L, table, basin, pewter platter, long cups and plates Alice Knowles - 5L, two feather pillows, basin, pewter platters, pewter candlestick and plate Mehitable, Mary, Alice -all wearing apparel both linen and woolen Grandchildren: Preserved, Mehitable, children of Thomas, deceased Comfort, Ruth, Thomas, children of Daniel Mary, daughter of John Robert, son of Robert The value of the estate was 130L, 2s. Both Mary and Thomas were survivors of King Philip's War.
George
Smith
Hope
Smith
Humphrey
Smith
Mary
Smith
Abigail
Smith
~1678
Thomas
Rogers
Peleg
Rogers
Job
Rogers
Anna
Rogers
Mary
Rogers
Elizabeth
Rogers
Sarah
Rogers
Ruth
Rogers
Leah
Rogers
Priscilla
Rogers
Rebecca
Rogers
Penelope
Rogers
~1670
Hannah
Butler
~1699
Daniel
Allen
1687 - ~1750
Hannah
Wooley
63
63
William
Allen
Matthew
Allen
Lydia
Allen
Mary
Allen
Abigail
Allen
Daniel
Allen
Richard
Allen
Matthew
Allen
Joseph
Allen
James
Allen
1684 - 1775
Mehitable
Fish
91
91
Susannah
Sisson
Richard
Sisson
Thomas
Sisson
George
Sisson
Lydia
Sisson
James
Sisson
Avis
Sisson
Lemuel
Sisson
William
Davol
Jonathon
Davol
Hannah
Audley
Phebe
Davol
Joshua
Davol
Lydia
Davol
Hannah
Davol
Sarah
Davol
William
Davol
David
Davol
6 FEB 1701/02 - <1751
Mary
Wood
Jonathan
Sisson
Mary
Sisson
Content
Sisson
James
Sisson
John
Sisson
Lydia
Sisson
Desire
Sisson
Stephen
Sisson
Hannah
Sisson
1705 - 1740
Bathsheba
Cook
35
35
Gideon
Sisson
Elizabeth
Sisson
Robert
Sisson
James
Sisson
John
Sisson
Lewis
Sisson
~1692
Stephen
Peckham
1630 - 1691
John
Cooke
61
61
13 JAN 1632/33 - 1690
Mary
Borden
Richard
Borden
Joan
Fowle
Thomas
Cooke
Mary
Mary
Cooke
Hannah
Cooke
Elizabeth
Cooke
Sarah
Cooke
Joseph
Cooke
Martha
Cooke
Amey
Cooke
Samuel
Cooke
Deborah
Cooke
Thomas
Cooke
Daniel
Wilcox
D. 1702
Edward
Wilcox
unknown
1679
David
Lake
25 FEB 1682/83
Mary
Wilcox
1671
Elizabeth
Slocum
Meribah
Parker
1674
Ann
Slocum
31 JAN 1674/75
Mary
Slocum
1 MAR 1677/78
Sarah
Slocum
1682
John
Slocum
ABT. 21 JAN 1620/21
John
Fish
~1622
Ruth
Fish
1626
Joseph
Fish
ABT. 7 MAR 1629/30
Nathan
Fish
1630
Tabitha
Fish
~1633
Hanna
Fish
~1637
Christian
Fish
1639
Benjamin
Fish
BET. 1618 - 1639
Mary
Fish
Lawton
~1583
Thomas
Lawton
~1585
Mary
Lawton
~1587
Joan
Lawton
Augustine
Male
Fyshe
Augustine
Female
Fyshe
1623 - 1692
William
Samborne
Sanborne
69
69
D. <1671
Mary
Tuck
Margaret
Page
<1507
Robert
Tuck
Johanna
Bachilder
~1499
Richard
Lawton
Unknown
Purrier
Thomas
Wheeler
Ellen
Unknown
~1553
Joan
Lawton
~1523
Alice
Lawton
John
Sugar
~1525
Elizabeth
Lawton
~1527
Thomas
Lawton
Margery
Lawton
~1535
Margery
Lawton
Robert
Fuller
~1537 - BET. 1540 - 1600
Katherine
Lawton
1678 - 1720
Joshua
Sherman
42
42
1644 - 1734
John
Sherman
89
89
1653
Sarah
Spooner
1711
Jonathan
Sherman
Charles
Sherman
Weston
Sherman
Abraham
Sherman
Susanna
Butler
1738
Butler
Sherman
Sarah
Sherman
1741
Paul
Sherman
1743
Daniel
Sherman
1745
Jonathan
Sherman
1748
Joanna
Sherman
1750
Susanna
Sherman
1752
Susanna
Sherman
1757
Humphrey
Sherman
Leah
Merrihew
William
Spooner
Hannah
Pratt
Philip
Sherman
Sarah
Odding
Philip
Sherman
1680
Abigail
Sherman
1682
Hannah
Sherman
1684
Isaac
Sherman
1689
Ephraim
Sherman
John
Tripp
Mary
Paine
Unknown
Potter
Ann
Hull
Mary
Fish
Joseph
Fish
Nathan
Fish
Tabitha
Fish
Hanna
Fish
Christopher
Fish
Benjamin
Fish
John
Fish
Deborah
Cornell
Zilpah
Cornell
20 JAN 1713/14
Samuel
Cornell
1716
John
Cornell
23 MAR 1718/19
George
Cornell
29 JAN 1720/21
Grizel
Cornell
1723
Job
Cornell
1724
Phebe
Cornell
1726
Paul
Cornell
1729
Elizabeth
Cornell
1660 - 1726
Peter
Button
66
66
21 FEB 1696/97 - 1778
Joseph
Wing
JOSEPH6 WING (MATTHEW5, STEPHEN4, REV. JOHN3, MATTHEW2, GODFRIEDUS1 WYNGE) was born February 20, 1696/97 in Dartmouth, Mass., and died 1778 in Massachusetts. He married CATHERINE CORNELL, daughter of SAMUEL CORNELL and DEBORAH unknown). Notes for JOSEPH WING: Joseph Wing...1697 to 1778 (Grandson of Stephen Wing, one of the founders of Sandwich, Mass., in 1637.) Joseph Wing, son of Matthew and Elizabeth (Mott-Ricketson) Wing was born in Dartmouth, probably in the old Ricketson house, Feb. 20, 1697. His birth is a matter of town record. In 1626, Joseph is mentioned in the town records as a "petty juryman," and as a "grand juryman of Superior court." Sept. 7, 1731. He was chosen moderator and also thingman, one of his duties being to use his rod of office during church services to keep church-goers awake and to punish offending hands. About the year 1717, when barely twenty years of age, Joseph married a wife named Catherine. Her surname has never been definitely ascertained, but from data at hand, we believe that she was a member of the Cornell family. Probably about the year 1724, Joseph, as the oldest son, came into possession of the house and lands whereon the father dwelt. This was up the hill across the road from the great lean-to house of his brother, Benjamin's, the site now being occupied by the Major Allen house. An aged descendant now living (in 1916) remembers the house which was torn down many years ago, because of its great stone chimney and its being the only house she ever saw with diamond-paned windows. Joseph Wing made his will in 1778 and styled himself "Joseph Wing, Gentleman." He gave to his wife Catherine and to his son Edward the farm and lot he bought of William Ricketson; mentions his sons Matthew and Daniel; his grandson John (if he should die without issue), and his daughter Ruth Howland, and her son Thomas; his grand-daughter Elizabeth Salsbury; grand-daughters Catherine Briggs and Dorcus Allen. In 1739 there is a deed from Samuel and Paul Cornell, George Thomas and wife Grizel (Cornell), and Elizabeth, Deborah and Zilpha Cornell, all of Crumwell Precinct, County of Duchess, New York, to Joseph Wing, of the homestead which belonged to their late father, Samuel Cornell. This appeared to have been a conveyance by the heirs of the homestead of Samuel Cornell in Dartmouth. Thomas Cornell was a brother of Samuel Cornell and his wife's name was Catherine Potter. Their daughter, Rebecca, married Edward Wing. Thus we find the name Catherine rather uncommon at that time, in the Cornell family, and Joseph Wing taking over from the heirs the homestead of Samuel Cornell. From these inferences, we draw the conclusion that the wife of Joseph Wing was Catherine Cornell, daughter of Samuel. From William Arthur Wing's, Some Wings of Old Dartmouth, was given the house and hill upon which he dwelled, across the road from the lean-to home of Matthew Wing, the site now occupied by the Major Allen house.
~1609 - 1676
John
Crandall
67
67
John Crandall was probably from Shropshire, near Wales. It is not certain when he arrived in the colonies, there being another John Crandall living in Massachusetts at or about the same time. It seems fairly certain that he was the John Crandall in question in 1651 (July 21) who, along with John Clarke and Obediah Holmes, "being the representatives of the Church of Newport, upon the request of William Witter (daughter's father-in-law), of Lynn, arrived there, he being a brother in the Church, who by reason of his advanced age, could not undertake so great a journey to visit the church. William Witter lived about two miles out of Lynn and the next day being Sunday, they spent in religious services at his house, and were there apprehended by two constables at the instance of the Massachusetts authorities, while Mr. Clarke was preaching, and the next morning they were sent to prison in Boston. For the dire offense of holding this little meeting, and on other frivolous pretexts Obediah Holmes was fined, imprisoned and whipped." John Crandall was sentenced to pay a fine of L5 or be publicly whipped then released from prison upon his promise to appear at the next court. There is little wonder then that in many ways John Crandall's history is the history of Rhode Island. Rhode Island was a colony founded on religious and political freedom, ideals which were abhorred by neighboring colonies. In the conflict between Rhode Island and her neighbors regarding her borders, Rhode Island's freedoms were very likely a consideration in the actions taken. [Park, Alice Crandall, One Crandall Family, 1651-1996, Gateway Press, Inc., Baltimore , MD, 1996] "Soon after Rhode Island's charter was openly read, the Court of 1659 ordered that John Crandall and three other men be appointed to "marke out the westward bownds of our colony as our charter bowndeth it." They were instructed to finish their work within the year and to report any intruders. In August of 1661 a petition was presented to the Court, asking first, for its approval of the previous purchase from the Indian owner by 'adventurers' of the colony, a tract of land in a remote area on which to establish a plantation. Intruders were now confronting the colonists, so they were asking the Court for help against the 'adversaries of the colony.'" One of the nine adventurers and the signer for all was John Crandall. By not later than 1665, John and his family had moved to the new settlement of Westerly, which he had helped to establish on the mainland, still part of the Providence and Rhode Island Plantations, and part of the land of the 1661 petition. Difficulties arose immediately for the settlers of Westerly for the land was also claimed by Stonington, Connecticut. [John Cortland Crandall, Elder John Crandall...] "A claim was made in 1662 by Connecticut of land reaching beyond Misquamicutt to Narragansett Bay. On October 17, 1667 a letter was sent by the Connecticut authorities to those of Rhode Island, complaining that John Crandall had taken possession of about a square mile of land, which he had laid out to his son, on the west side of the Pawcatuck River. On Nov. 18, 1669, Connecticut again sent a letter of complaint to him regarding appropriation of land by him and several others in Stonington Township. On March 11, 1669/70, John Crandall and Tobia Saunders answered on behalf of Westerly, denying any guilt in the matter. A few months later, on June 19, 1670, as Conservator of the Peace of Westerly, he, John, wrote a letter to the Governor of Rhode Island, informing him "of an entrance made into our jurisdiction by some of Connecticut, and of their carrying away some inhabitants prisoners." (John Cortland Crandall) On August 2, 1670, John buried his first wife, Mary. On October, John wrote his will. On 14 June 1670 the General Assembly, in an attempt to settle the boundary issue ordered issued "horses, boats or any other things conducing to the comfortable accommodation and speedy dispatch of Mr. John Crandall and Joseph Torrey, Jr. in the voyage to Connecticut, " but in the next year, the men of Westerly were told to ignore orders from officers of Connecticut, and to "faithfully adhere to the officers...Mr John Crandall and Mr. Tobias Sanders, Conservators of the Peace." In the fall, Connecticut sent a letter to the Governor of Rhode Island, Benedict Arnold, stating their disregard of Rhode Island claims east of the Pawcatuck River and simultaneously, in Hartford, in the Connecticut Assembly determined to take action, "in answer to the petition of Mr. John Crandall...in behalf of the people on the east side of Pawcatuck River within the bounds of Stonington. The disputes, altercations, fights, clubbings, arrests with fines and kidnappings continued, not only not diminished but possibly escalating. John and his son were specifically noted as threatening, clubbing or opposing and encouraging other residents to do likewise as well as chopping down boundary trees in Stonington. In 1671, John Crandall himself, and others, were carried off and imprisoned in Hartford, the charges being contempt of authority, sedition and rebellion. On May 2, 1671, the Rhode Island Assembly advised him not to yield to Connecticut's claims and assured him of its support and willingness to support his financial losses during or as the result of his incarceration. On May 6, he was allowed 20 shillings to bear his charge in Connecticut. [Minutes of The Record of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations in New England, vol II, 1664-1677:May 3rd 1671, "Whereas, Mr. John Crandall, of the towne of Westerlye, hath been, as is asserted, apprehended, and now is in durance, by the Collony of Connecticut, and for no other cause than for endeavoring to maintain the authority of his Majestye granted to this Collony; and having by Mr. Tobias Saunders desired the advice of the Governour and others in this Collony, whether to give in bond to the authority of Connecticut or to abide imprisonment. This Assembly doe advise the said Mr. John Crandall, that in any matter relating to his actings for the maintaining his Majestyes authority in this Collony, he give no bond. And also the Assembly do promise, that if he be forced to imprisonment for the premises, this Collony will bear his charges thereby, and endeavor to justify his actings therein." Having survived the many disputes and encounters with the settlers of Stonington, John and his second wife, Hannah Gaylord, moved to Newport sometime before 1675 in order to escape King Philip's Indian War. It was there that he died November 29, 1676, of "the ague and fever." [Letter from Ruth Burdick, mother of Deborah Burdick who married Joseph Crandall, quoted in John Courtland Crandall's Elder John Crandall of Rhode Island and His Descendants]
D. 1670
Mary
Opp
Matthias
Button
~1615 - 4 FEB 1661/62
Ann
Lettyce
Teagle
1691 - <1747
William
Petty
55
55
~1695 - <1748
Mary
Petty
53
53
1663 - BEF. 13 MAR 1711/12
James
Petty
1607 - >1713
Mary
Lawton
106
106
John
Lawton
Benedick
Lawton
Joan
Cook
<1623 - 1683
Giles
Slocum
60
60
John
Petty
Ann
Canning
John
Brown
22 FEB 1633/34
Daniel
Button
23 FEB 1633/34 - 1665
Mary
Button
1645 - 1667
Elizabeth
Button
22
22
~1650
Sarah
Button
1652
Hannah
Button
17 MAR 1659/60 - ~1725
Matthias
Button
Thomas
French
Edward
Yeomans
6 JAN 1672/73
James
Kingsbury
Thomas
Busten
Mary
Neff
Mary
Lampere
~1692
Maren
Michelsen
Samuel
Wright
Benjamin
Wright
There are no records for Phineas Wright in Wisconsin but the state does have the following record fir Benjamin : Name Benjamin Gile Wright Color White Sex Male Occupation None Age 91 Years, 5 Months, 19 Days Father Don't Know Mother Don't Know Birthplace Toronto Canada Wife Margaret Date of Birth 1798 Widowed Date of Death July 25, 1900 Place of Death George Wright's Burial Wrightsville Undertaker Ed Pierce
Elizabeth
Gerrard
This is the person Joseph confesses to bigamy with in his letters to Rebecca in 1854.
John
Whitley
1788
Mary
Whitley
Jenny
Whitley
Sally
Whitley
~1808
Abigail
Whitley
1800 - 1841
James
Whitley
40
40
1803
Samuel
Whitley
Benjamin
Huntley
George
Sheppard
Peter
Seeley
1918
Grace
Melba
McLain
[AmyMcLain.FTW] See Sallie and Amy for information on death of Gray, the Tornado of 1936. Melba's trust gave her money to do with as she pleased at the appropriate time. She spent some of it to attend Blue Mountain College for one year, after which she married Tommie Caldwell and used the money to build the house in which she and Tommie lived throughout their married life and, for her, even after the death of Tommie in 1991.
~1916 - 1991
John
Thomas
Caldwell
75
75
Living
Caldwell
Living
Caldwell
Living
Caldwell
Living
Caldwell
Living
Grisham
Living
Caldwell
Living
Hendershot
Living
Hendershot
Living
Tutor
Living
Tutor
Living
Tutor
Living
Tutor
Living
Brand
Living
Caldwell
Living
Caldwell
Living
Rogers
Living
Rogers
Living
Rogers
Elizabeth
Hix
1885
Phosa
Bonny
1901 - 1972
Curtis
Edgar
Pennington
70
70
Lillian
Pennington
1899
John
Lee
McLain
[AmyMcLain.FTW] In his youth, John was known to be a prankster. As a young man, he was good friends with Reed Porter and the two of them delighted in playing tricks on many, but especially on John's father Erastus, the judge, whom they called out late one night to perform a wedding for a couple of young elopers. Of course, no one showed up and the judge staid outside in he dark and wet all night long. His many letters home were filled with humorous stories. Johnnie Lee and his wife, Lillian, never got along and lived in separate houses.
1883
Daisy
McLain
Living
Bonny
Living
Bonny
1899 - 1979
Sallie
Belle
Porter
80
80
As a young girl, Sallie was probably curious and a little enchanted by the wild McLain boys and when her own sister, Roxie, married Grover McLain, it must have seemed right for her to fall in love with Grover's younger brother, Gray. Neither relationship was encouraged by Sallie's and Roxie's parents but that of the even younger lovers, Gray and Sallie, was even more strongly discouraged. Gray and Sallie resorted to leaving love notes to each other in their secret tree in the woods and meeting in secret. Finally, they eloped. They were certain that Sallies' father, Nathaniel Berry Porter, would come after them. When he, in fact,did, they hid in the preacher's home until he left. They managed to keep their marriage a secret for only a week. I could not find the marriage records in Mississippi. Whether they married out of state or the records were lost in the tornado of 1936 or whether they were never recorded by the preacher will probably never be known. The honeymoon ended in 1930 when Gray was tragically killed in an industrial accident at the Carnation Milk Company. While the company never admitted any culpability, they did agree to an out of court settlement. Court records reveal that the settlement was $15000 [using a formula of $1000 in 1930 = $10,309, that would equate to $154,639 in 2000 dollars], of which the lawyers received half [$77,319]. After that, the remaining money went into a trust and every cent spent was both approved by the Court and unentered into a ledger, which, court records indicate, were lost during the tornado of 1936. Early on Sallie loaned money out to assorted people. While this appears initially to be poor judgement on Sallie's part, she did at least earn interest on her money (assuming the loans were ever paid back) at a time when many were losing everything in the stock market. Despite, having a small sum of money, Sallie was forced to take in boarders, one of whom was Curtis Pennington, the brother of her deceased husband's brothers's (Johhnie Lee McLain) wife, Lillian Pennington. In 1933, Sallie, still a young woman of 33, remarried, this time to Curtis Pennington, also 33, the marriage ceremony performed by Gray's father, James E. McLain. Cousin Edna Earl McLain recalls that Melba and Amy were quite distraught by the marriage and ran over to Uncle Grover and Aunt Roxie's house and just cried their eyes out. The consensus among family members was that Sallie could probably have done better than Curt yet Curt was religious and tithed regularly at 10%. Since Curt moved into the house Sallie and the girls had purchased with the Carnation Settlement money, there can be little denial that Curt benefited from marrying a woman with a home and some modest means, especially during the Depression. Melba seems never to have harbored any kind of grudge in that regard but Amy did. The settlement had established a trust for each of the girls to do with as they wished at the appropriate time. Amy used hers to attend Blue Mountain College and Mississippi State and to purchase a car at the appropriate time. In due course, the car was purchased and Curt took a liking to it and, in Amy's view, gave short shrift to the driving training Curt was to give them, hustling them out of the driver's seat in short order so that he could take of the driving of the beloved car. In 1936, Tupelo was hit by a tornado which old-timers still refer to as the Great Tornado of '36. It destroyed the house Sallie had built on the hill and carried Amy away. When Uncle Grover, Aunt Roxie and cousins Ruby, Sybil, Edna Earl and Jewel came to check on the family, they found that the house was not only destroyed but completely gone. Sallie, Melba and Curt were all in different locations and Amy was nowhere to be found. Sallie and Melba were convinced that she had been killed when another relative announced that he had just left the train station where numerous victims had been boarded onto a train for Memphis and treatment. Fortunately, he recognized Amy and passed the information on. Amy's injuries included a thumb, which many thought she would lose, but the doctors felt that a thumb was so vital that muscles were transferred from other fingers to her thumb, even though the movement would be somewhat unusual, awkward and noticeable even to the untrained. Infection and dangerous swelling were prevented by applying maggots to her wounds. Throughout the rest of her life her thumb movement, instead of being an out and in movement, was one which brought her thumb toward the fingers from under her palm.[AmyMcLain.FTW] Sallie and Curt managed to get the house put back together and, in time, it became a place where all of the grandchildren liked to go. Years later, Diane and Linda recalled the back steps, the glass panels at the front door and, especially, the great pecan tree in the front yard, the home of many squirrels which had, over a long period of time, become sufficiently tame that as soon as Curt would shake or tap on the tree, they would scurry down to eat pecans out of his hand. Until young Ricky brought his cap gun and fired it every time they came down the tree. For this infraction the cousins never quite forgave Ricky, who seems to have some of the McLain Prankster blood in him. The neighborhood in which the house was located was unique. From the street, all the houses were middle class nice but down one of the alleys, hidden from view from the street, was an all-black shanty town where Sallie took the grandchildren to get treats, play with the black children and go with her to buy snuff. In the early 1950's, Sallie went to Houston, Texas and stayed with her daughter, Amy, and her family while she underwent shock therapy. Edna seems to think that Sallie had had trouble coping even prior to this point in time and may have come by that tendency by heredity. [See notes on Easie, Curtis, Reed's and Roxie's children or grandchildren] Still, for a person who had a difficult time coping, twenty years after becoming a young widow until undergoing therapy is along time. [See Facts for Court Minutes regarding Estate of Melba and Amy and authorization to spend, invest and repay. Copies of all transactions from Chancery Court Minutes in Lee County Courthouse, in possession of Jane Bonny. Numbers in facts refer to Chancery Court Minutes Vol No. and page number. The Case Number Regarding the Settlement is 6536.]
1865 - 1956
James
Erastus
McLain
91
91
In his obituary, it is stated that Jas. McLain was one of fifteen children, the last surviving. James Erastus McLain came from Hartsville, Alabama, according to Edna Earl McLain Dolland, and has 13 siblings, one of whom was named Felix. James was always somewhat mysterious, and probably eccentric, according to Edna Earl Dolland. He was, perhaps, according to family lore, raised by his grandmother. A review of the 1880 census, however, reveals that James or Erastus was living with his mother and the other two youngest children and that his grandmother is, apparently, no longer living. In 1900 Census,he is identified as James P. McLain, possibly the result of some confusion over his initials and his job, J.D. or J. E. vs. J.P. First two children born in Alabama, last two in Mississippi. Birth dates of children taken from 1900 Census, except for John L. It appears that the family must have moved to Mississippi between 1892 and 1897. His obituary states that he was member of the Old Enterprise Baptist Church at Double Springs, Alabama and that James and Idella moved to Pontotoc County in 1895, specifically the Longview Community, where they farmed. Buried with Idella Morton, Mammy Clain, in Pontotoc City Cemetery. Known to all of the kids and grand kids as Daddy Clain. Melba's recollections indicate that he was something of the black sheep of the family, especially following his marriage to Idella (Jane's note: at age 16. Janes Note: this is probably an error; Melba probably meant Mattie, his mistress and second wife). After reviewing Mary McLain's will of 1888, perhaps Melba was right after all since James's name is conspicuously absent from his mother will. Nita's recollections indicate that he was a Justice of the Peace and easy prey for the tricks of his son John and John's good friend, Reed Porter. James, as Justice of the Peace, and possibly also as a sign of good will, performed the marriage ceremony when his son Gray's wife, Sallie, married Curtis Pennington in 1933. His obituary states that James served five terms as Justice of the Peace in Pontotoc County, 1911-1935. After retiring from that position, he worked as a night watchman at the local compress. After Idella died, Erastus remarried, this time to his wife's brother Clark's widow, Mattie. In his will, written 4 October 1946, he states: "I give, devise and bequeath unto my beloved wife Mattie A. McLain, my homestead, consisting of house and lot situated in the town of Pontotoc, State of Mississippi, and described as Lot No. 1, Block No. 12 of the Knox Subdivision of Section 5 in Township 10 of Range 3, East, for and during the term of her natural life or widowhood, with remainder over to my four living children, to wit: Mrs. Daisy McLain McCord, Grover Wesley McLain, Johnnie Lee McLain, and James Claude McLain, and to my two granddaughters, children of Allen Gray McLain, deceased, to wit: Melba McLain Caldwell and Amie Bell McLain, I do hereby give and bequeath the sum of One Dollar each. In the event I should leave any cash money at my home or on deposit, it is my will that same be equally divided among my widow and my said above four living children." By the time this will was written Melba and Amy were grown and, though he may not have been aware of it, Amy was also married. It is probable that they were each left One Dollar to make it obvious that he had not inadvertently left them out of his will. In any case, he must have felt that they were well taken care of at this point in their lives. James died in the home of his son, James Claude, in Jackson, Mississippi, after an illness from cancer of two years.
~1864 - 1930
Idella
J.
Morton
66
66
Edna Dolland believes that Mammy Clain may have been diabetic; she had a 'sweet-sour" smell about her. She may have died shortly after Gray, her son, died, in 1930. Everyone believed she died of a "broken heart." Idella's Death Certificate says that she died of myocarditis, with Bright's Disease a contributor. Her tombstone is apparently in error. Nita remembers that Idella let the grand children pretty much play anywhere and was a good grandparent. Along with the rest of her family (husband and children), Idella was musically inclined. While the other mostly played the violin or fiddle, Idella played the organ. Edna Earl McLain had such fond memories of Idella playing the organ, that when one just like became available at an auction, she bought it and took it home. It was there that great-grandson, Ross F. Bonny, Jr., played it, to Edna's and his own wife's great delight. (2001) Idella's brother had a wife named Mattie. After Clark died, Mattie lived in a small shack at the back of the Old Miller Place, where, it was said, she was James McLain's mistress. Mattie was much more formidable looking than Idella and the grandchildren and great-grandchildren remember her coffee-can-spittoon and the snuff drool at the corner of her mouth.
1862 - 1949
Nathan
Berry
Porter
87
87
Nathan was always a kindly, generous and devoted father, husband and friend. As land owners, however, there was one area in which he was not tolerant. He did not want his daughters seeing, much less marrying, the McLain boys, whose family worked as share croppers and lived in the Old Miller Place, about a mile down the road from the Porter-Sibley Farm. Even after Roxie and Grover ran off to get married and had a child, he refused to acknowledge the child for many years. It is possible that Nathan had some kind of drinking problem. Nathan Berry Porter appears to have died without a will. All of his estate, however, appears to have passed to his wife Lula Mary (aka Mary Lula) so it is possible that he left a will but for some reason it is not indexed or otherwise found in the record books of Pontotoc County. Buried, along with wife, Lula Mary Sibley, and daughter, Lillian are buried in the Oak Hill Cemetery. Nathan Berry Porter was all his life called Jack until he had grandchildren. They called him Pap. Pap had a stroke about five years before he died and was confined to the wheelchair for the remainder of his days. He couldn't always talk after the stroke but he did understand what was said to him. I need a photo of his tombstone.
1874 - 1962
Lula
Mary
Sibley
87
87
Following her marriage to Nathaniel Berry Porter, there is no further records found of Lula Sibley until she made out her will in 1950. Lula, known an "Mo[n]~" to the grandchildren, had very fine, thin, hair, which she combed with a fine-toothed comb, almost like a lice comb, and pulled back tight into a bun. Her obituary staes that she was a lifelong resident of Bankhead. In it she reveals much about her love for her husband and his lingering illness as well as her own. She states: "I give devise and bequeath unto my two daughters, Lillian Porter and Anita Baldwin, the old home place, consisting of 58 acres, described as 40 acres, the northeast quarter of the section of Section 31 in Township 9, South of Range 4 East, except on heretofore conveyed to my son, Jack Porter, Jr. also two acres, the north half of the east half of the west half of the northwest quarter of Section 31, in Township 9 South of Range 4 East, except one acre heretofore conveyed to my son Jack Porter, Jr., I do this because my to above named daughters faithfully and loyally nursed their father throughout his long illness and are now taking care and nursing me in my failing health, and the other of my children are self sustaining and provided for." Her obituary states that she died of an illness of one month. "The Old Home Place" referred to above is, in 2001, still in the possession of Anita Bladwin and her husband Theron. Amon the furnishings are two prized rockers which belonged to Lula and her mother before her. Anita states that her baby picture was taken in one of the rockers and even at that time Lula was fearful that it would come apart while Anita sat in it. "The Old Home" is more than "home" to Nita and Theron; it is HOME. It is where Nita, her siblings and all of her own children were born. The children of the next generation, during its working days, regarded it as a truly wonderful place, full of barnyard animals (much like a petting zoo), woods and springs. I need to scan in the photo of her tombstone.
1893 - 1978
Aurelia
Porter
85
85
Easie and Big Jack lived in Pyland, Mississippi. Big Jack died long before Easie did. They never had any children.
William
Elias
Eddington
~1894
Roxie
Porter
1892
Grover
Wesley
McLain
Grover seems likely to have been named after President Grover Cleveland, a Democrat when the South voted heavily Democrat. Grover was like his brothers Gray and Johnnie Lee, a prankster. All four boys were charming, friendly, tall and slender and handsome. While Gray was helpful and reliable, Claude was of a serious nature, and Johnnie Lee was the one who could spin a good tale, Gray was the charmer and the ladies' man. The McLain boys were a wild and mischievous lot, known far and wide for the pranks, which ranged from the innocent to the dangerous, including putting at least once snake onto their victim's bed. Many wondered if they would ever amount to anything at all. Although seemed to always find work, even during the Depression, including construction on the new dam being built in Muscle Schoals and ship building in Rhode Island, in other regards Grover fulfilled community expectations, eventually leaving his wife, Roxie while working in Rhode Island. The discovery was both shocking and surprising to Roxie who had brought the children to visit their father only to realize that the friendly downstairs neighbor was Grover's paramour.
Sybil
McLain
Jewel
McLain
Ruby
McLain
1898 - 1958
William
Curtis
Porter
60
60
A twin. The bigger and, apparently, more robust of the two, died, while Curt survived.
1902
Lillian
Porter
Lillian was a nurse. She was, in fact, on duty in the hospital when Gray McLain died. She worked some 25 years in the Community Hospital in Tupelo, leaving there to work as an industrial nurse at the Futorian plant in New Albany. Never married. Died of malignant brain tumor.
1907 - 1959
Reed
Byron
Porter
51
51
1911
Jackson
Miller
Porter
1914
Anita
Porter
[AmyMcLain.FTW] Nita's recollections and notes, along with Sallie Bell's Bible and the tombstones in the Oak Hill Cemetery and Pontotoc Cemetery, are the source of the information on the Porters and Sibleys and what information there is on the Dillards, Carlocks, Perrys and Greens. Nits has many fond memories of growing up in Mississippi and of her grandparents. To this day she lives in the old Sibley homestead, though it is much changed from when George Sibley built it.
Theron
Baldwin
~1831 - ~1870
Thomas
O.
Porter
39
39
Church records indicate that Thomas and Nancy Green Porter came from Greenvile, South Carolina, as were the Greens and Dillards. There are no Porter who are listed in North or South Carolina Cemeteries who appear to be of an appropriate age to be Thomas Porter's parents [http://rfci.net/wdfloyd/, which has a list of all the cemeteries in North and South Carolina]. Thomas and Nancy Green Porter are shown in the Census of 1860 and 1870 in Mississippi and in the 1850 Census in the Spartanburg District, (probably on the North Fork of the Picolet River), in South Carolina. Living with them are Catherine (age 18), Smith (age 15), Mary (age 13), Runyan (age 9), Matilda (age 7), and Elizabeth (age 3). Since Thomas is only 21 and Nancy is only 16, and there being no other Porters in the area, it seems likely that these others are Thomas's siblings. In 1840, in Spartanburg, there is a Robert S. Porter on the Census in a household of 8 people. On either side of young Thomas and Nancy are William Green, who appears to be widowed or divorced. and B. Green. In addition, there are Dillards, possibly cousins or aunt and uncles on her mother's side, in near proximity. It appears that all left South Carolina and came to Mississippi together. According to Nita Porter, shortly after the birth of his last child, which would have been on or about 09 November 1870, while his wife was still confined to the bed, Tom rode off on an errand and never returned. The consensus among family members is that he must have been murdered and then dumped somewhere for he was content at home and had little reason to abandon his family. His son Nathan always felt that his father had been murdered by his uncle King Dillard (husband to his mother's sister Mary). Why he felt this way is not known. The times were dangerous. Rustlers were known to be active in those parts as well as any number of other lawless sorts. In the Oak Hill Cemetery there is a monument where he would have been buried. On it it says, "Thomas Porter in Memory 1 Regt Miss Inf CSA 1831 Escaped Ft. Donelson Also 3rd Miss Cav Fate Unknown" Nearby is the grave of his wife Nancy and the grave of Infant, who died in the same year that Tom disappeared. Civil War Record Physical Description: 5'9", eyes black, hair black, complexion dark, occupation Farming. He is shown to have enlisted in the Confederate Mississippi Company C, 1st Miss Volunteers, in Isaka (?), Miss. He is shown as sick in the hospital in Clinton, Miss Aug. 1, 1862. On or about February 5, 1863 (notation at bottom of company Muster Roll says "+Roll Reed A.&I. So. Feb, 1863): Shown "Absent" and "Escaped, Donelson." This date of February 5 is prior to the taking of Fort Donelson so the notes must have been taken after Donelson fell. About 100-1500 men escaped from Fort Donelson with Nathan Bedford Forrest and his cavalry and Generals Pillow and Floyd. The escape was daring and took the escapees to Nashville. When Forts Henry and Donelson fell to the Union Army, the Ohio and Cumberland Rivers were in the hands of the North. Nashville, Shiloh and Vicksburg were to follow, though Vicksburg did not fall until July 1863. Though Thomas Porter was obviously in the middle of one losing battle after another in Tennessee and the Mississippi, Ohio and Cumberland River Valleys, he continued to reenlist until the end of the war. There are also Civil War Confederate records showing him in the 1st Mississippi Cavalry rather than the 3rd. Names of 7 children (all except Nathaniel Berry) taken from 1870 Mississippi Census, Pontotoc County. Jane was the only child born in South Carolina. Thomas and Nancy, therefore, must have moved to Mississippi between 1851 and 1856. The date of 1851-2 is confirmed by church records, copies of which are in the hands of Edna Earl McLain Dolland in Galion, Ohio. There are several Porter wills in Union County, South Carolina but the connection, if any, is not certain.
1835 - 1903
Nancy
Green
68
68
6/12/1999 Have received copy of Thomas Porter's Infantry and Cavalry Records. Nancy did not apply for pension. Need to check 1880 census to see where Nancy was living and how she supported herself. Nancy Green Porter and Thomas Porter were both born in South Carolina. Since their daughter Jane was born there, in 1851, they probably married around 1850. The first child to be born in Mississippi was Mary M., born about 1858. They probably came to Mississippi between 1857 and 1858. The Oak Hill Church records show them as transferring from the Corinth Church, Union District, South Carolina, 16 July 1859. Thomas and Nancy Green Porter are shown in the Census of 1860 and 1870 in Mississippi and in the 1850 Census in the Spartanburg District, (probably on the North Fork of the Picolet River), in South Carolina. Living with them are Catherine (age 18), Smith (age 15), Mary (age 13), Runyan (age 9), Matilda (age 7), and Elizabeth (age 3). Since Thomas is only 21 and Nancy is only 16, and there being no other Porters in the area, it seems likely that these others are Thomas's siblings. In 1840, in Spartanburg, there is a Robert S. Porter on the Census in a household of 8 people. An alternative to the suggestion that the children living with Thomas and Nancy are his sibling is that they are Nancy's siblings since she has siblings with the same names. On either side of young Thomas and Nancy are William Green, who appears to be widowed or divorced and B. Green. In addition, there are Dillards, possibly cousins or aunt and uncles on her mother's side, in near proximity. It appears that all left South Carolina and came to Mississippi together. [A search for marriage records in South Carolina reveals no Thomas Porter and Nancy Green, using Langdon's Spartanburg County Marriages 1785-1911 and Marriages Notices in the Charleston Courier 1803-1808 and GenWeb. A search of LDS records is next.] According to Nita Porter Baldwin, Nathan Berry Porter had 9 siblings: Nerve [Marvery?], Ronnie {Verona?], Mollie {Mary?], Ella [Ellise}, Jane, Judson (who died young and is buried in Oak Hill Cemetery), Ann and Emma. The last two I had not previously entered (as of 02/14/01). I now enter them but should check against the censuses.
~1845
Matilda
Green
Bill
Stepp
~1849
Elizabeth
Green
Ulysses
Martin
1840 - 1884
Mary
Green
44
44
~1818
Colden
Dillard
Katy
Green
Jim
Clayton
Sallie
Green
William
Campbell
William
Smith
Green
Calloway
Green
1842 - 1861
Winsberry
Green
19
19
[AmyMcLain.FTW] Killed in Kentucky during the Civil War. Tombstone says: Berry Green 1 Miss Vols 01-09-1842 10-24-1861 Benefits collected by father W. M. Green. The last name of Green was provided by Nita Porter. The initials W.M. are surmised from the nearby location of the grave of W.M. Green, and the grace of SELA Green, wife of William Green. Information taken from National Archives Copy of Veterans Records: Six feet tall, fair complexion, red hair, blue eyes and by profession a farmer. Place of Death also taken from these papers. Cause of death not given. Father William Green signed the Form of Application for Money Due Deceased Soldiers.
1802 - 1889
William
M.
Green
86
86
William and Sela Green were members of the Brushy Creek Baptist Church in Greenville County, South Carolina from about 1832. William preached there on several occasions and two of his slaves, Nathaniel and Matilda, were admitted into membership in 1832 as well. A Nancy Green was accepted into membership in 1842, based on experience, so it seems unlikely to be William and Sela's daughter. The Green Family Cemetery is located in Greenville County, off of Brushy Creek Road, on Quincy Road (104 Quincy Drive). In this cemetery are buried John (June 13, 1782-June 27, 1852) and Mary Green (December 4, 1795-November 12, 1855), John P Green (Aug 31, 1830-January 7, 1850), Amanda Green (Aug 3, 1850-July 11, 1862, d/o W B & Nancy Green) and Lemuel Green (Dec 25, 1814-August 29, 1852) plus 8 other unreadable [http://rfci.net/wdfloyd/greengrn/htmlGreenville County, SC Cemeteries]. John Green is just old enough to be the father of William M. Green but his wife Mary is probably not old enough so either this is William's brother and his wife or perhaps his father and second wife. Some of the others may be grandchildren. There is another William Green buried in Rutherford County, NC in the Bostic Brickyard Cemetery, who died November 6, 1832, at the age of 81 years. The relationship to Willaim and Sela is unknown. In the New Prospect Baptist Cemetery in Spartanburg County, SC, is buried Mar Agnes Greene 33y, 9m,15d, W/o SA Greene d/o W A Cantrell. Nita Porter says that William Green, father of Winsberry (aka Berry) received his Confederate Soldier's Pay, which she believes was his first and only paycheck. From National Archives Order for Copies of Veterans Records, William Green did, indeed, sign the Application for Money Due Deceased Soldiers. The amount received was $38.50, of which $25 was for his uniform. In 1860, William and Seely Greene are living in Poplar Springs, Pontotoc County, Mississippi. They are living within two residences of Thomas and Nancy Greene Porter and next door to Cullen and Nancy Dillard, who are next door to Colden and Manah Dillard. Six residences away are James and Sarah Green. Another six residences down the road are possibly Joshua and Elizabeth Dillard. In 1850, William Green was living next door to Thomas and Nancy but appears not to have a wife and two children are living with him, as is a 45-year-old female whose name might be Christian, though it is difficult to read the name. Nearby is a Berry Green, age 38, who seems to be of an age to be William's brothers, after whom his son was named.
1808 - 1882
Sela
Dillard
74
74
While Sela Dillard Green appears in the 1860 Mississippi with her husband William, she does not appear with him in the 1850 South Carolina Census, unless she is entered out of sequence and her is the illegible name second from the last of the list of people in the household. There are other Dillards who married Greens in Spartanburg, South Carolina: Unknown Dillard m. Adaline Green, dtr. of James Green, probate in 1889; J. A. Dillard m. Eliza Ferguson, probate in 1855. In addition, there severa Dillards bureid in Spartanburg, South Carolina but all appear to have been born in 1850 or later and would, therefore, not be ancestors of Sela Dillard.
Elvin
L.
Jernigan
1848 - 1925
Sarah
Ann
Perry
76
76
Nita Porter and Edna McLain Dolland both recall Sarah or Sally as Sally Ann, though she never really heard her called by any other name than that which her husband, George W. Sibley, called her, namely "Sally Honey." Even though she died before the Depression, Sally was secretive with her money. Everyone knew she kept it hidden but no one knew quite where. She was, however, generous with the grandchildren, paying them for their chores of collecting bark and the like, out of her secret stash. Nita recalls stories of "Yankees" being camped around the Sibley House, a source of some concern and fright for Sally. To ease her mind when he was away, George allowed one of the male slaves to sleep in the attic of the master house to protect her. This must have been during the Civil War if they still had slaves. If it was during Reconstruction, then the "Slave" was more likely a servant or former slave. Sallie left a will, dated 13th June 1924. It is handwritten into the Record of Wills in Pontotoc County, Mississippi. The writing is in a different style from the entry below it so it is possible that the entire entry is in her hand. She alludes to her last illness and further states, "...having considered thoughtfully the financial condition of all my children and desiring to do the fair and just thing by all of them, I hereby will, devise and bequeath to my daughter, Mrs. Nettie Floyd all the real estate that I now own consisting of 320 acres of land and described as the N. 1/2 of Section 21, T. 10, R2 East in Pontotoc County, Mississippi, and I will devise and bequeath to my daughter Mrs. Bonnie Jernigan, the sum of Three Hundred Dollars; and I will devise and bequeath to my daughter Mrs. Lula Porter, the new house we built just South of her house and $30.00 in money." The only question is when the 320 acres passed to Lula. Keats Baldwin has the record of all of the transactions.
\\
Perry
[AmyMcLain.FTW] Buried in New Hope but the markers are down.
\\
Simpson
1812 - 1905
William
Clay
Sibley
92
92
Came to Mississippi after the Civil War. Possibly from Georgia, since his wife is buried there. In the Obituary of Hartwell Sibley, it states that he was born in Milledgeville, Georgia so it is possible that they were still in Georgia in that year. There is a William Clay Sibley who served with the Confederacy, 9th Georgia Regiment. This William Clay Sibley mustered out 15 May 1862. It also says that his Paternal Grandmother was the sister of Henry Clay, not his Maternal Grandmother. Buried at the back of Oak Hill Cemetery. "W.C. Sibley".
1835
James
B.
Sibley
1855 - 1947
Joe
Louis
Sibley
92
92
John
Worford
1836 - 1922
John
Sibley
86
86
1842
William
Capers
Sibley
Mattie
Sibley
1857 - 1948
Sarah
Emma
Sibley
91
91
After the death of her husband, Emma and her son and daughter went to live with her brother George Washington Sibley. [From the recollections of Anita Porter Baldwin:] "She lost her mind as Grandpa carried her to the asylum. They were on the train [when] a man came through selling apples. Aunt Emma took the basket and poured them all in hr lap. I don't remember how long she stayed. The children I guess were old enough to look after themselves. The boy is buried at Oak Hill. Aunt Emma in later years married a Johnson and he died before Aunt Emma."
Charles
Edward
1852
Laura
Sibley
1902 - 1989
Lillie
Mae
Hollaway
86
86
1900 - 1983
Bessie
Lee
Catledge
82
82
Living
Baldwin
Living
Baldwin
Bessie
Will
Porter
Bessie always thought she was unwanted. When children were growing up, she always seemed to be oblivious to their behavior.
D. 2001
Samuel
Edwin
Porter
Living
Aston
Living
Aston
Living
Aston
Living
??
Living
Rogers
Bonnie
Bell
Sibley
Watt
Jernigan
Nettie
Sibley
After the death of George W. Sibley, his wife, Sarh Ann Perry, lived with Nettie. Nettie then felt that all the estate from George W. Sibley's will should go to her alone. As a result, attorneys were hired by Nettie on the one side, and by her sisters on the other side and the attorneys ended up with everything.
Luther
Floyd
Jim
Fishburn
Living
Fishburn
Living
Fishburn
Clyde
Webster
Living
Webster
Hulon
Edwards
Living
Edwards
Living
Edwards
Living
Edwards
Edna
Earl
McLain
Joe
Dolland
Joe's father came to America as a stow-away at the age of 12 from Czechoslovakia. His name was actually Dolezal but when his mother remarried after her first husband was killed in the coal mines, her second Husband name was Kaularich. The names became merged into Dolerich. After the Second World War, Joe decided to take a name which was less confusing. He chose one close to that of a man he admired, Dolland (Pronounced Do-land)
1949 - 1952
Joseph
Frank
Dolland
2
2
Oldest of the children, charming little Jeff died first, a drowning accident in a swift creek in New Britain, Connecticut, when he was 2 years and 3 months old.
Living
Dolland
Living
Dolland
Living
Dolland
Living
Dolland
1924 - BET. 1930 - 1931
Grover
Wesley
McLain
[AmyMcLain.FTW] Youngest of the children. Died at about 6 years of age. He and Joseph Frank Dolland, Jr. are buried in Pontotoc Cemetery with Roxie and Ruby.
Living
Porter
??
Spencer
Living
Porter
Living
Parker
Living
Porter
Living
Anderson
Living
Porter
Living
Porter
Joseph
Jarvis
Margaret
Finch
1815
Eudosia
Finch
Sarah
Finch
Theodosia
Finch
1817
Rebecca
Finch
Living
Hendershot
Living
Hendershot
1897 - 1930
Allen
Gray
McLain
32
32
The McLain boys were a wild and mischievous lot, known far and wide for the pranks, which ranged from the Innocent to the dangerous, including putting at least once snake onto their victim's bed. Many wondered if they would ever amount to anything at all. While Grover lived up to community expectations, eventually leaving his wife, Roxie, young Gray, found employment in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, on the new dam being built there, and eventually as an employee of the Carnation Milk Company. The best of Gray seemed to come out after marring Sallie Porter. His young sister-in-law, Nita Porter used to like to come over the Gray's and Sallie's place to play with Melba and Amy. One day Gray complained half-heartedly that all the neighbor kids in the house were eating him out of house and home. Young Nita heard this and from that moment forward was afraid to be around Gray. When Sallie related this to Gray, he was sadly disappointed and vowed that he would never again do anything to make any child afraid of him. Eventually Gray was employed as a mechanic on milk processing equipment, a job which took him at least as far from home as Schulenburg, Texas. It was while lubricating some of the large equipment on the inside of a sterilizing machine at the new Carnation Milk Company Processing Plant that Gray was accidentally killed when his supervisor, who had emotional problems due to the loss of his wife, turned on the equipment. The Carnation Milk Company eventually settled with Sallie Bell, who used the money to purchase a new home up on the hill in Tupelo. She and the girls were living there when the great Tupelo tornado of 1936 struck, destroying the house and carrying Amy away and leaving Sallie under the roof. The first ten days of February, 1930, cotton prices were down, the Carnation Milk Company had filed suit to recover $1500 embezzled by a former employee, Sioux survivors of Little Big Horn testified that Custer deliberately provoked them in a suit for $600,000 for lost land, Communists attempted to stage a demonstration before the textile mills in New Bedford, Massachusetts, The Pontotoc Progress was running a serialized version of The Scarlet Pimpernel, and The Tupelo Journal was running Gunman's Bluff. Although the stock market had crashed three months earlier, the newspapers were both reporting reason for optimism and looking for signs of a recovering economy. On the front page of both papers, however [Pontotoc Progress February 13, 1930 and Tupelo Journal, February 11, 1930], was news that made all the other reports pale for the young McLain family. The Tupelo Journal, which almost assuredly got most of its information from the Carnation Milk manager, is the more complete; it reads: MAN CRUSHED TO DEATH IN LOCAL PLANT Sterilizer Reel Catches A. G. McLain, Car- nation Employee Funeral services were held today at Pontotoc for A. G. McLain, thirty- two, Willis Heights, who was fatal- ly crushed when caught in the reel of a sterilizing tank at the Carna- tion Milk Products Company plant early yesterday afternoon. The services were held at the Methodist Church in Pontotoc and interment followed immediately in that city. The accident came when Carl Radke, plant engineer, and Mr. Mc- Lain, a plant employe, were prepar- ing the sterilizer for operation. Un- known to the engineer. Mr. McLain leaned into the sterilizer to oil some parts. The motor was started and the machinery, on a partial turn, caught Mr. McLain. The motor stopped almost instant- ly and at the same time the engi- neer heard Mr. McLain cry out. Hurt as badly as he was, he was able to push himself out of the sterilizer. He collapsed on the floor. Mr. Radke and other workmen went to his assistance, and Watson Powell, local dairyman, rushed him to Tupelo Hospital in an automobile. Dies in Short Time He died less than a half hour aft- er his arrival, and before physicians could render him any material aid. He was conscious until three min- utes before death occurred, and turn- ed to Dr. R. D. Kirk and murmured: "I can't make it." Dr, Kirk said the man's chest was thoroughly crushed on both sides, that practically every bone of the chest wall was broken, that at least his right lung, and probably his left, was punctured and that other organs might have been ruptured. In a statement to the Tupelo Journal, E.A. Newman, manager of the Carnation plant, said that Mr. Radke and Mr. McLain were assign- ed to the work of oiling the steril- izer, that McLain was sent after a can of oil to oil the rollers, that Radke then went to the opposite end of the sterilizer to regulate the movement of the interior machinery so that McLain could oil the parts without exposing himself to danger. Accident Described. McLain, Newman said, had leaned into the sterilizer without Radke knowing anything about it and Radke started the machinery on a partial turn to make the rollers accessible. When the reel caught McLain, Mr. Newman said, the ma- chinery stopped almost instantly, but not before he was crushed. Mr. Newman said the sterilizer is a large iron tank, in which are iron cages on a reel. Milk is placed in cans in these cages and the reel is set to whirling, while steam is in- jected into the tank to complete the process of sterilization. "The accident was not Radle's fault," Mr. Newman said. Mr. McLain was a native of Pon- totoc. He is survived by his wife and two little girls. The body was taken to Pontotoc this afternoon by John Reed Pegues. According to Edna Dolland, Gray died in the arms of his sister-in-law, Lillian Porter, who was a nurse in the Tupelo Hospital where Gray was taken. Gray left no will. The settlement with the Carnation Milk Products Company put all of the money into a trust for Amy and Melba and Sallie was made their Guardian and Administrator of the trust. [See facts on Sallie Porter regarding the authorizations for spending, loaning and repaying the estate.]
Living
Porter
Living
Porter
1821
John
Finch
1823
William
Finch
1826
Julia
Finch
Hannah
Kelsey
1845
Sela
Dillard
1847
Lucinda
Dillard
On Census, name appears to be Grecinds. Spelling changed to match Oak Hill Church and Cemetery records.
~1752
Phineas
Wright
[PhineasWright.FTW] Norma Jean Herzman has his Revolutionary Service Record on file. When Daughter Eunice was 12 (abt. 1805), family moved to Canada.
Zilpha
Downer
[PhineasWright.FTW] Zilpha gave birth to 17 children but only 6 lived to adulthood. [Norma Jean Herzman] Described by grandson, Benjamin Guyal Wright, as "A black eyed Yankee woman' and "an educated midwife whose father was a physician."
Charles
Clay
1761 - 1838
John
Whitley
76
76
1809 - 1900
Benjamin
Guyal
Wright
91
91
1814 - 1877
Samuel
C.
Wright
63
63
[PhineasWright.FTW] Marriage witnessed by Gerge and Phineas Wright.
Abigail
James
~1818
Nancy
Thompson
Nancy Thompson appears to have married an unknown Green and, perhaps later, Cullen or Curlin Dillard. The children may have been adopted by the second father.
1813 - 1856
James
Jesse
Strang
43
43
[PhineasWright.FTW] Baptized February 1844 by Joseph Smith at Nauvoo, Illinois. Excommunicated after Joseph Smith's death by Brigham Young.[PhineasWright.FTW] Baptized February 1844 by Joseph Smith at Nauvoo, Illinois. Excommunicated after Joseph Smith's death by Brigham Young.
Clement
Strang
1777
Lucy
Wright
Unknown
Jacobs
1856 - 1937
James
Phineas
Strang
80
80
Lydia
Houtz
Betsy
McNutt
Elvira
Eliza
Field
Mary
Perce
1838 - 1926
Zenas
Hovey
Wright
87
87
[PhineasWright.FTW] Cause of Death: Either infirmities of old age or brain tumor which caused his head to increase in size. Their home was on a farm in Garden Valley, Wisconsin for 34 years, from 1877 to 1911. They then moved to the City Point area, north of the Bills Farm. His early childhood was spent on Beaver Island, Michigan. In September, 1856, his father brought the family to Black River Falls, Wisconsin.[PhineasWright.FTW] Cause of Death: Either infirmities of old age or brain tumor which caused his head to increase in size. Their home was on a farm in Garden Valley, Wisconsin for 34 years, from 1877 to 1911. They then moved to the City Point area, north of the Bills Farm. His early childhood was spent on Beaver Island, Michigan. In September, 1856, his father brought the family to Black River Falls, Wisconsin.
1846
Phineas
Wright
[PhineasWright.FTW] Place of Birth from 1880 Census.
Mary
Jane
Nott
Charlotte
Brush
Rebecca
Wagener
~1821
Mary
Carpenter
1843
James
Dillard
~1865
Edgar
Wright
1771 - 1845
Margaret
Hagerman
74
74
Phoebe
Wright
1781
Charlotta
Wright
William
Wright
Phineas
Wright
Joseph
Wright
1793 - 1847
Eunice
Wright
54
54
[PhineasWright.FTW] Went to Canada at the age of 12, Died in Elizabethtown of smallpox. Predeceased by 11 children who died in infancy and by one daughter who died in 1843 at age 19; survived by her husband and 5 children.
Henry
Elliott
John
Hagerman
Phoebe
Ferguson
Mary
Tucker
1785
John
Whitley
1792
John
Whitley
1794
Jane
Whitley
1798
Sarah
Whitley
~1805
Henry
Whitley
Nancy
Walker
Eliza
Watson
Etta
Tracherbury
W. N.
Dillard
~1852
Marg
Dillard
1854
Philip
A.
Dillard
~1810
Martha
Mariah
Unknown
~1842
George
Washington
Dillard
~1845
Sarah
Frances
Dillard
~1848
James
Dixon
Dillard
~1555 - 9 FEB 1621/22
John
Fish
D. BET. 1630 - 1632
Margaret
Craddock
<1578
Augustine
Fyshe
BEF. 9 MAR 1580/81
William
Fyshe
<1582
Kathryn
Fyshe
<1584
Thomas
Fyshe
<1586
Sara
Fyshe
<1588
Amborse
Fyshe
<1589
May
Fyshe
<1591
Elizabeth
Fyshe
<1593
Francis
Fyshe
<1597
Anne
Fyshe
<1599
Mary
Fyshe
BEF. 26 JAN 1601/02
John
Fyshe
Edward
Fishe
1640 - 1685
Josiah
Witter
45
45
D. 1672
Elizabeth
Wheeler
Thomas
Wheeler
Hannah
Gaylord
William
Witter
Hannah
Unknown
Hannah
Witter
Thomas
Barden
1 JAN 1687/88
Peter
Button
1593 - 1639
Robert
Fish
46
46
May have been a relative of John Fish, father to his daughter-in-law, Alice Fyshe. Died at the early age of about 46. As result of this untimely death or perhaps due to business reversals, the young family was split up and forced upon its own resources, Thomas going to Rhode Island, John to Connecticut and Joseph perhaps also to Connecticut.
<1597
Alice
Fyshe
1689
Mary
Button
1694
Eliphal
Button
Jedediah
Button
Samuel
Button
Cyrus
Button
Joseph
Button
Elizabeth
Button
11 MAR 1677/78
John
Witter
7 FEB 1678/79
Sarah
Witter
1681
Hannah
Witter
1684
Abigail
Witter
1885
Mary
Altina
Paulson
1892
Anna
Larenda
Paulson
1870 - 1870
Infant
Porter
6d
6d
James
Claude
McLain
Mary
J.
Eaves
William
A.
Sibley
Mary
Elizabeth
Perry
Silas
Moffett
Addie
Perry
Dollie
Perry
Frank
Perry
Bill
Perry
Lynn
Franks
Sulee
Goggans
Jim
Fields
Ann
Porter
Nan
Porter
1760 - 1832
Elijah
Sibley
72
72
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] LDS IGI Record Film Number: 2034644 Revolutionary War Soldiers & Sailors, Disk 2, Volume XIV Sibley, Elijah, Jr., Private, Capt Jonathan Woodbury's Co., Col. Jacob Davis's regt; marched July 30, 1780; discharged Aug 7, 1780; service, 12 days, on an alarm at Rhode Island, including 4 days (72 miles) travel home. Roll dated Sutton. [Sibley, James Scarborough, The Sibley Family in America]: "Elijah Sibley bough 500 acres of land on Waxhaw Creek and Richardson's Creek in Mecklenburg Co., N.C., (now Jackson Township of Union County) in 1811 which made him the owner of 700 acres in the area a short distance from the birth places of Andrew Jackson and James Knox Polk. He had disposed of all but about 184 acres of his land before his death and this 184 acres was acquired by his son, Elijah M. Sibley, in 1841."
Sarah
Robertson
Lester
1728 - 1810
Robert
Sibley
82
82
Much of the information regarding Robert Sibley was tekn by James Scarborough Sibley, author of The Sibley Family in America 1629-1972, was taken from Census Records and the Diary of John Osborne, a resident of Mecklenburg County, North Carolina and a neighbor of John Sibley. It appears that Robert Sibley was born in Mecklenburg but moved toHalifax County Virginia, where his grandfather lived, around 1754. In 1755, he married Jerusha Chandler, whose family appears to have been as numerous there at the time as the Sibleys were. All of Robert and Jerusha's chil;dren were born in Halifax County Virginia. Around 1782, Robert and Jerusha moved to Charlotte County Virginia. Around 1802, Robert moved back to Mecklenburg, probably to be near his ailing father who died shortly thereafter. In 1804, Robert sold 200 Acres of Land in Mecklenburg County to his son Elijah. Robert's Will was probated in Mecklenburg County in 1809. The Diary kept by Robert's father's neighbor, John Osborne, indicates that (1) John was Robert's father, (2) Robert's brother was Elijah, (3) Robert lived in Virginia and came to North Carolina to "visit his people in Mecklenburg," and (4) he owned, bought and sold slaves.
Living
Parker
1793
Coleman
Sibley
1638 - 1686
Charles
Clay
48
48
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] Charles Clay lived in that part of Henrico County (now Chesterfield), not far from "The Old Settlement," opposite the site of present-day Petersburg. Charles Clay was a soldier in "The Great Rebellion of 1676;" one of those "good housekeepers, well-armed" that followed the gallant Bacon in his effort to free Virginia. Records are retained in Henrico County Court house; depositions were made regarding the confiscation and killing of cattle by General Bacon's soldiers. Charles Clay's name is on the list of soldiers. Also in the records is the Marke which was given to him by his mother for marking his livestock, "a flower de luce, on ye left ear of his hogs or cattle, and a crop and a hole on ye right ear." (Henrico County, Xber I, 1687, page 472). [LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Charles fought under Bacon in Bacon's Rebellion in Virginia in 1673, at about the age of thirty-five. Charles died at the age of about forty-eight, without ever having made a will. His wife Hannah was appointed administrator of his estate. Her inventory is the source of the names of the children.
Hannah
Wilson
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Hannah was the administrator of her husband's estate. In her own will, she left to each of her sons, "John, Thomas and Henry, each of them, one well-fixed gun," certainly a commentary on the times and the people.
Mary
Ellen
Sibley
Robert
Bell
1558 - 1632
John
Clay
74
74
Mrs.
~1532
Clay
~1702
John
Sibley
Little is known of John Sibley, except that he began to acquire several hundred acres on Waxhaw and Richard's Creek around 1790 through both Purchase and Grant. His relationship to John Sr. and Robert is surmised from Censuses and the Diary of John Osborne of Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.
D. 1750
John
Sibley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] "John was the only son of Captain John Sibley, the eldest son of John Sibley who came to Salem , Massachusetts in 1629. Robert was born in 1728 during a return visit of his mother, Mary to Leicester, England. Robert was then raised in the Beverly and Manchester, Massachusetts, area. He moved to Virginia in 1754. Unfortunately, Franklin L Sibley left no bibliography, and I have located no documentation to establish the lineage suggested. The only son of Captain John Sibley was John3, born September 7, 1680. No other record of John3 has been found . A diary kept by John Osborne shows that Robert Sibley's father was, indeed, a John Sibley . This John Sibley resided in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina in 1802. It is unlikely that John Sibley was still living in1802. It is possible, of course, that there was a John4, son of John3. Osborne reported in his diary that Robert Sibley came to his home near Waxhaw, North Carolina , in the vicinity of Richardson's Creek, "for a visit and to sell a negro lad. Said he was in a hurry to sell and get home to Virgina for he and his wife only came out of Virgina to pay a visit to his people". There is no identification of "his people", but it is presumed that he was kin to the John Sibley who lived nearby. Robert Sibley could have been the brother of John, a nephew or his son. Osborne's diary also mentions Elijah and Robert Sibley as being sons of John Sibley and that Robert lived in Virginia. Census records show John Sibley as ahead of family in Virgina in 1790. In August 1802 Osborne wrote of going to a Methodist meeting and meeting "Esquire John Sibley who invited him to go home with him and have dinner with him and his son, Robert. Whether this is the Robert Sibley who was trying to sell a negro lad in June 1802 or another Robert Sibley is not known. Another John Sibley died in Fairfax County, Virginia, in 1850. His Will lists children, William, John, Robert, Isaac, Mary Ellen and Caroline. This John Sibley could have been John3, b . 7 Sept 1680. But, again,there is no documentation to confirm this supposition. Another John Sibley married Sally Huey, daughter of Hercules Huey, Jr.,and Isabella Smith. H e moved to Macon County, Alabama, and nothing further is known of him. Hercules Huey, Sr., d . 1775, age 50, and his wife Catherine, d. 18 Nov 1808, age 80, are buried at the old Waxhaw Pr esbyterian Church near Lancaster, SC. Very old records in Virginia, undated, name a John Sibley in the Lower Norfolk area, probably about 1630. This John Sibley could also have been the ancestor of the Fairfax County John or of John of Mecklenburg County, or of both. As stated, documentation is not available to establish a connection between the John Sibley of Mecklenburg County, NC and the John Sibley of Salem, Massachusetts. Neither is documentation n available to tie John Sibley of Fairfax County, Virginia, to John Sibley of Salem, Massachusetts, or John Sibley of Mecklenburg County, NC. The confusion concerning the origin of this John is as great as that associated with the origin of the "first" John in Massachusetts. There are some circumstances, however, that lead one to believe there might be a close connection ton between the Fairfax County Sibleys and the Mecklenburg County family. I suggest that John Sibley of Mecklenburg County was the son of John Sibley of Fairfax county. The proximity of the two areas, the diary references to kinship between Virginia and North Carolina Sibleys and the coincidence of the names William, John and Robert carried through several generations provides some indication of this connection. I further suggest that Robert Sibley lived in Virginia until sometime after 1802 when he moved to North Carolina to live with or near his father , who must have died shortly thereafter at a very advanced age. Franklin L Sibley wrote that Robert Sibley moved to Virginia in 1754 and married Jerusha Chandler in 1755 in Halifax County and that all their children were born there. I have not located the marriage record, but the Chandler family was well represented in the area at that time , as was the Sibley family, some of whom live there today. Land records show that John Sibley acquired several hundred acres on Waxhaw and Richard's Creek through purchase and State Grants beginning about 1790. Tax records locate Robert Sibley in Charlotte County, Virginia, in 1782 and land records show that he sold 200 acres in Mecklenbu rg County, NC, in 1804 to Elijah Sibley, probably his son. Robert Sibley's Will is filed in Mecklenburg County, NC dated 4 Sep1809. It names his children en. The combination of land and tax records in Mecklenburg County, NC, Halifax County, VA and Anson County, NC showing Sibleys owning large tracts of land before 1800 dove-tail with census data and names listed in the Wills of several Sibleys. This has allowed a reconstruction of f portions of the genealogy of this branch of the family with reasonable reliability. Wills of Robert, Elijah and Elijah M. Sibley have been examined. Each Will mentions the names of several children."
SIBLEY
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Excerpt from "The Sibley Family in America" by James Scarborough Sibley ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE SIBLEY FAMILY "Among the many families worthy of mention in the discussion of the development of the nation is one called Sibley. The Sibley family can certainly be considered to be one of the "old " families in this country, and those of us who bear the name today have much for which we can be justly proud. It behooves all of us to examine our own standards, mores and goals to ensure that we are living up to the fine tranditions established and passed on to us by our forefathers. John and Richard Sibley came to Salem, Massachusetts in 1629 in Winthrop's Fleet. These two men are original settlers whose families have spread across the entire country. John Sibley of Virginia was also one of the earliest Sibleys in North America whose descendents are now spread from coast to coast. At various times since 1629 other Sibleys whose connections with John & Richard Sibley are unknown have come directly from England to the United States or through Jamaica and Canada. The migrations of the population westward and southward from NewEngland and Virginia as the continent was opened for settlement resulted in the separation of new families from their established home areas. Meager records in some places make it extremely difficult to identify living representatives of some branches of the family with the original settlers. There are also people named Sibley in the United States whose ancestors brought other names from Europe. A Polish immigrant named Cibulskis changed his name to Sibley as did a Swiss named Zubli. Yet another named Bogues adopted the name Sibley after having been saved from drowning in the St Lawrence River by a man named Sibley. A Dutch immigrant changed his name from Sibelink to Sibley. A Yugoslav immigrant changed his name from Serblin to Sibley. The Sibleys are believed to be descendents of Scotch-English ancestors who brought the name to America with them. Those from England probably have a common ancestor somewhere in the archives of Great Britain. The kinship of all Sibleys in America has been alleged by various members of the family, but no one has demonstrated its validity through research in original sources in Great Brittain. John Langdon Sibley conducted extensive research into the origin of the Sibley family and included much of his work in his book, History of the Town of Union, Main, published in 1851. Thi s book contains a great amount of information concerning the descendents of Richard Sibley of Salem, Massachusetts and was the primary source for the data on this branch of the family. The following information is John John Langdon Sibley analysis of the name Sibley. "The name SIBLEY may be compounded of the words SIB and LEA. The former means relationship or alliance; or, in earlier times, peace; and the latter, a field. Hence the words combined may mean kinsman's land. Perhaps several kinsmen lived together in the same place, or on the same lea. If the earlier meaning of the word SIB be adopted, the meaning maybe peace-lea, or land of peace; perhaps because of the harmony of the people, or because the place was exempt from war. This explanation of the origin of the word, however, is merely conjectural. The description of the SYBLY arms, in Burke's General Armory, is 'perpale azure and gules a griffin passant between three crescents argent'. In heraldry, the griffin, which is an imaginary animal, half eagle and half lion, denotes strength and swiftness. The close agreement of the armorial bearing of the families of SILEBY and of SYBLY seems to show that one of the names is a variation of the other, -- the latter probably being a corruption of the former. But it is certain that SIBLEY is of considerable antiquity, as it is found in the Rotuli Hundredorum of the reighn of Edward I (1272-1307, in the counties of Huntington, Kent,Oxford, and Suffolk, where it is spelt SYBELI, SIBELI, SIBELY, SIBILI,SIBILIE, SIBLI; and where the name SILEBY does not seem to occur. The Public Records published by the Record Commission spell it SIBILLE , in the reign Richard II (1377-1399); and SIBYLE in that of Henry V(1413-1422); and in that of Elizabeth (1558-1603), it is SYBLEY, SIBLEY,and SIBLY; and once (with an alias) SYBERY . A very similar name of about the same antiquity is FILIUS SIBILLAE, or FITZ-SYBL, which may have been the original of the name in some cases; in other cases it may have been derived from the parish of Hingham Sibyl, or Sible, or Sibleys, in Essex. From Felt's Annals of Salem, i. 172, it seems that the first of the Sibleys in this country ca me to Salem in the fleet of 1629. It is said that they were from the north part of England o r South part of Scotland,or that they came from Northamptonshire. In Willis's Cathedrals, i i.172, it is stated that 'John Sibeley collated 1459,' succeeded Roger Mersham as Prebendary of Lincoln. In Rymer's Foedera, xxi. 348, is recorded 'Pro Johanne Sibley. Rex, vicesimo sext o die maii (1631 or1632) concessit Johanni Sibley et aliia Officium Clerici et Clericorumomni um et singulorum brevium et processuum in Curia Camere Stellate,durante vits. P(rivato) S(igi llo); ' meaning Clerk of the Court of the Starre Chamber for life. In Dugdale's Warwickshire , Knightlow Hundred,Marton, i.327, under the patronage of 'Rob. Fysher miles and Bar.,' is found 'Thom. Sybley Cler. in Art. Magr. svii. Oct 1623 (v.p.m. Ric. Sealeult. Incumb.): In the same volume, Birdingsbury, p. 325 is '(Tho. SibleyCler. ii Julii 1633).' In Besse's Suffer ings of the Quakers, i. 638-644,Thomas Sibley, a blacksmith, is 'sent to gaol' and fined -- though he was afterward released and the fine remitted--' for being at an unlawful Meeting or Conventicle, in the parish of Crewkherne, 'in Somersetshire,on the fourth of June 1684. In the same volume, page 345, William Sibley is named as a prisoner in 1685, in Leicester, -- the town where Higgerson was settled before he came to Massachusetts, in 1629. Possibly some of the Sibleys were related to the early settlers in New England." It is evident from this information that the Sibley family has been in existence for a long time. Another source connects the family all the way back to the Norman Conquest in 1066 in a similar analysis. The Sibley family has been in American for more than 350 years." The Sibley family motto is found in Bolton's American Armory and translates, "To be and not to seem". It is also the motto of the State of North Carolina.
1730 - 1790
James
Clay
60
60
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] James inherited the homestead at the death of his mother (Ancestor of Governor Clay of Alabama).
Anne
Clay
Hannah
Clay
1794 - 1818
Mary
Sibley
24
24
1795 - 1828
Sarah
Sibley
33
33
1797 - 1854
Gabriel
Sibley
57
57
1799 - 1873
John
H
Sibley
74
74
1803 - 1838
Alexander
B
Sibley
35
35
1805 - 1850
Elijah
M
Sibley
45
45
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Elijah was a well known planter and slave owner in NC. He also found the first all girls college in NC. Will: Anson County, NC Elijah M. Sibley dated 25 Feb 1850
1808 - 1876
Abigail
Moses
68
68
Jeremiah
Wentz
1815 - <1866
Sarah
Ellen
Carlock
51
51
Buried in Georgia. Nita Porter Baldwin's notes also indicate that her name may have been Elizabeth Carlock.
Mary
Hewlett
1848 - 1929
Matilda
Elizabeth
Huey
80
80
~1870
Edward
L.
Sibley
Eva
Unknown
Living
Kane
Living
Fowler
1830 - 1888
Laura
B
58
58
Margaret
Hunt
Living
Jaerger
1847 - 1906
Sarah
Elizabeth
Allen
58
58
Meredith
Edwards
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Related to Homer Edwards and Effie Stanley
1851 - 1854
George
Washington
Allen
2
2
1854 - 1924
Mary
Lucretia
Allen
70
70
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Charity Ella Dilley's sister Hester Ann, married Coleman Keys a brother of John Keys, making t he Keys family related to both Allens and Dilleys.
John
G.
Keys
John
G.
Keys
1897 - 1953
Chris
Pearson
56
56
1925 - 1983
Beverly
Jean
Pearson
58
58
Living
Patsy
Living
Croskey
Living
Pearson
Living
Alspaw
Living
Alspaw
Living
Alspaw
Living
Alspaw
Living
Carolyn
Living
Alspaw
Living
Gillen
Living
Gillen
Living
Sibley
Living
Campbell
Living
Gates
Living
Johnson
D. 1983
Dorothy
Benge
D. 1980
Merle
Gunther
Living
Gunther
Living
Gunther
Living
Gunther
Living
Fiske
Living
Fiske
Living
Sibley
Living
Fiske
Living
Peggy
Peggy
Ovie
Patty
Gunther
Micky
Gunther
1919 - 1993
Frank
Marion
Allen
74
74
Dorothy
Frank
Gunther
Living
Hall
Nancy
Jane
Sibley
Living
Hotchkiss
Living
Hotchkiss
Living
Hildebrecht
1940 - 1998
Paul
Jay
Hildebrecht
58
58
1916 - 1944
Richard
Eugene
Hotchkiss
28
28
Living
Umberger
1918 - 1973
John
Lee
Allen
55
55
1921 - 1988
E
Louise
Brooks
67
67
Living
Allen
Living
Allen
Living
Sibley
Living
Allen
Living
Allen
1922 - 1987
Albert
Merle
Allen
65
65
Living
Janson
Living
Allen
Living
Allen
Living
Allen
Living
Menefee
Living
Allen
Living
Allen
Living
Sibley
Living
Nelson
Living
Spiegel
Living
Nelson
Living
Liming
Living
Cain
Living
Nelson
Living
Nelson
Living
Nelson
Living
Shoop
Living
Nelson
Living
Anderson
Living
Nelson
Living
Nelson
Living
Nelson
Living
Doherty
Living
Nelson
Living
Mead
Living
Knechtel
Living
Knechtel
Living
Knechtel
Living
Knechtel
1900 - 1973
John
Woodward
Taylor
72
72
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] 1 _FA1 2 PLAC John was a well known Builder in Dallas TX
Living
Knechtel
Living
Knechtel
1919 - 1993
Maurine
Nelson
73
73
1919 - 1991
Harold
Glenn
Norris
72
72
Living
Norris
Living
Harris
Living
Harris
Living
Harris
Living
Norris
Living
Klingeman
Living
Taylor
Living
Holden
Living
Norris
1923 - 1924
Douglas
Udell
Nelson
9m
9m
1904 - 1963
Earl
Hotchkiss
59
59
Living
Pena
Living
Wesolowski
Living
Wesolowski
Living
Wesolowski
Elizabeth
Ackland
1771
Henry
Dilley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Soon after moving to Pocahontas County, West Virginia, Henry Dilley married Margaret Sharp and they settled on Thorny Creek, where he built a home and Dilley's Mill, which was considered one of the best of its kind in that day and still stands as a monument to its builder. His will is dated 1851.
Living
Kane
Living
Taylor
Margaret
Sharp
John
Sharp
1826 - 1903
Joseph
Dilley
76
76
Mary
Ann
Friel
Joseph
Friel
Thomas
Dilley
Peachy
Van
Reenan
1822
Ralph
Dilley
1824
Mary
Jane
Moore
William
Moore
Living
Beckham
Daniel
Dilley
Ms.
Moore
Dr.
Addison
Moore
1821
William
Dilley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] William settled in Huntersville, W VA and was the village blacksmith. He was also an excellent carpenter. He was the father of 14 children.
Mary
Friel
Jeremiah
Friel
Elizabeth
Baker
1845
Anne
Deppard
John
Dilley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] John was a mechanic.
Eleanor
Friel
Nancy
Ed
Frances
Dilley
Lt Henry
M.
Poage
Sallie
Woods
Poage
Mr.
Berry
1872 - 1957
Byron
Deppard
Dilley
84
84
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Byron spent his life as a woodsman and reaper.
Eva
Waugh
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Eva was the great grand daughter of Jeremiah Freil.
Friel
Arnold
Dilley
1872 - 1950
Tipton
Kohan
Dilley
78
78
Stephen
Dilley
1920 - 1972
Robert
David
Windrow
52
52
D. 1902
Allie G
Barlow
Nathan
Barlow
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Nathan was a former recorder of Pocahontas County.
James
Dilley
Mr.
Thornton
John
Dilley
Sr.
Dilley
John
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] It is unclear whether the below mentioned John Dille is the same as John Dille Sr since the d dates are clearly 100 years prior to when this John should have been born. However, it is lik ely that this John Dille Sr is a descendant of the John Dille mentioned below but the links h ave not been connected. Excerpt from "The Dille Family Three Hundred Years in America": John was apprenticed out to a friend in Salem, where he is mentioned in 1659 court records . Also, Essex County, Massachusetts, records show that John Dille made a deposition, "aged a bout twenty-one years", in 1664. John left Essex County, Massachusetts, in 1664 and moved to Staten Island, New York, with oth er settlers from Massachusetts. There they lived among a number of French Huguenots. State n Island was quite a "melting pot" during this period, being inhabited by the Dutch, French , Walloons (Belgian Protestants), and English. John was a charter member of the Puritan Colony that founded Woodbridge, New Jersey, in 1669. In the autumn of 1665, Sir Philip Carteret, who had been appointed Governor of New Jersey i n 1664, published the "Concessions and Agreements of the Lords' Proprietors" which established d freedom of religion in the new colony. This was the motivating cause for the establishment t of the permanent settlements of Piscataway, Woodbridge, and Elizabethtown. A single result t of the distribution of copies of "The Concession" in New England was the arrival in new Jer sey of John Pike, Daniel Pierce, and seven associates from Newbury, Massachusetts. They ente red into an agreement on December 11, 1666 whereby on December 3, 1667 they received from Gov ernor Carteret and some of the Elizabethtown associates a grant of land, embracing what is no w the township of Woodbridge, New Jersey. They, as the representatives of 57 families, on Ju ne 1, 1669, were granted a charter creating a township covering six miles square, named after r their pastor, the Presbyterian John Woodbridge, of Newbury. Most of the settlers were from Newbury and Haverhill, both in Essex County, Massachusetts, bu t a few families had come here with Governor carteret by the ship "Philip" which had arrive d July 29, 1665. The aforementioned John Pike was the ancestor of General Zebulon Montgomery y Pike (1179-1813), who discovered Pike's Peak, Colorado, and who was killed in the War of 18 12. The 57 Woodbridge freeholders drew for the town lots in 1669. The land had previously been l aid off, and the lots varied in area from 15 to 448 acres. Some of it was upland and some me adow (bottom). At the drawing for town lots John Dille drew a 94 acre lot on Papiack Creek . As the record states, "John Dilly with the two Pierces and several others occupied lots ac ross the Papiack on the Upland beyond the meadows". The Pierces were prominent men in the Col ony. In the above quotation John's name is given first, indicating that he had considerable e standing in the community, though only 24 years old. In 1670 Papiack was a sizeable stream, but has dwindled to a brook. The first highway ran do wn by the kirk green over the Papiack. The Presbyterian meeting house was built on the gree n in 1675. It is not known exactly when John married his wife, Sarah, but it was before 1673. John an d Sarah Dille were Presbyterians, and their descendants for several generations were of the s same faith. This may tie in with a family tradition that the Dilles were originally from Scot land, a country where this Calvinist faith was widespread. The New Jersey Archives contain the record of a number of transactions involving John Dille y between 1669 and 1683. The surname is spelled variously, Dille, Dilly, Dilley, and Dillie . Genealogists all know that this is typical for the records of this period. Law clerks an d others spelled phonetically and not too well. The Shenandoah Co land records show John & Catherine Dilley with about 400 acres acquired i n 1773. Three sales of land occurred in 1778 and 1780, but not all the land was sold.
Catherine
Himpin
Christian
Dilley
Mary
Hevelar
Martin
Dilley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Chronicles of the Scotch-Irish Settlement of Virginia, Vol 2 pp 200-209 by Lyman Chalkley George Poage vs. Dilley - O.S. 271; N.S. 95--Bill, 1812. On 19th November, 1782, orator made two entries in Augusta (now Bath) on head brown's Creek, one for 100 acres and one for 140 a acres; surveys on 15th December, 1785, and patents 25th July, 1800, for 140 acres. martin Dil ly had a conflicting claim under an older patent to Moses Moore. Answer by Martin Dilly, 9th June, 1813; On 3d April, 1809, he bought 120 acres from John Moore in Bath, part of 400 acres. Patented to Moses Moore 16th August, 1787, between Naps Creek and Thorny Creek at a place called Richlands. This patent was in right of settlement by certificate 15th June, 1782 . John Moore, Sr., is father-in-law of Martin Dilly. Samuel Waugh deposes, Moses Moore claims by the headright of Joseph Gregory. John McCutchan petitions, he purchased the land fro m William Moore, nephew of Moses Moore. Settlement creticate dated 15th June, 1782, for 40 0 acres settled by Joseph Gregory before 1st January, 1778, for 400 acres settled by Joseph Gregory before 1st January, 1778, signed by Commissioners, viz: Wm. McKee, Robt. Davis, Thomas Adams, Saml. Vance. Levi Moore deposes, in Bath, October 1817, has known the place called the Richlands 44 years; is said to be distantly related to Moses Moore's family, but does not know how. John Moore, Jr., deposes, in Bath, 13th October, 1817, has known Gregory's improvement 40 years. George Poage has been living there 35 years. Deponent is son of Moses Moore.
Living
Windrow
Hannah
Moore
Abraham
Dilley
Issac
Dilley
Jacob
Dilley
1854
Elizabeth
Markin
1857
Daniel
Markin
1760 - 1833
Charles
W I
Markin
73
73
Lucinda
Dechard
Warren
Golden
Hetty
Fletcher
1885 - 1947
Thomas
Anagnos
61
61
1823
Warren
Markin
1830
Golden
Markin
1832
Charles
L
Markin
1834 - 1858
Samuel
Markin
24
24
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] "MARKIN, SAMUEL I.R. JUL. 01, 1858 Died on June 14th, at the residence of Thomas Markin, in this county, Samuel Markin, in the 23rd year of his age. (This notice was given wrong last week, through fault of the person who sent it to us.)"
1836
Sylvester
Markin
1827 - 1904
Christopher
Richard
Markin
76
76
1830
Oliver
Hazard
Perry Markin
1825 - 1915
Eliza
Markin
90
90
1823 - 1902
Lucinda
D
Markin
78
78
1818 - 1845
Mary
Markin
27
27
Living
Anagnos
1839 - 1870
Sarah
Ann
Markin
31
31
1840 - 1918
Thomas
Jefferson
Markin
77
77
Lucinda
Shannon
Jacob
Rainsbriger
John
Gilkerson
Thomas
Moore
1825
Lucinda
Gilkerson
1830
Martha
Gilkerson
1832
Elizabeth
Gilkerson
Martha
Irvin
Living
Bull
1827 - 1864
Charles
Markin
37
37
Eunice
Gilkerson
John
Gilkerson
Mary
Ann
Done
1821 - 1891
Thomas
Markin
70
70
1829
Melinda
Markin
1834
Cornelius
Markin
1839
Eliza
Markin
Daniel
D
Markin
Franklin
Markin
Living
Bull
James
F
Markin
Mary
Jane
Markin
1838 - 1883
Lucinda
Markin
45
45
1841
Catherine
Markin
1844
Charles
Markin
1846
Benjamin
R
Markin
1849
Laura
Ann
Markin
1850
Susan
Markin
1856
Thomas
B
Markin
D. 1881
Joseph
Blair
Living
Bull
1846 - 1925
Martha
Blair
79
79
1834 - 1896
Andrew
T Blair
61
61
Martha
Bowman
Mary
Willis
Elizabeth
Gilkerson
1835
Jane
Markin
1836
George
Markin
1839
Cynthia
Markin
1842
Charles
Markin
1844
Eliza
Markin
Living
Floyd
1915 - 1954
James
Willard
Jordan
39
39
1847
Lucinda
Markin
Elizabeth
Blair
1832 - 1921
Joseph
Lee
Markin
89
89
1834
Charles
W
Markin
1835 - 1913
John
Blair
Markin
78
78
1842
Thomas
J
Markin
Mary
Markin
Norton
Markin
Isabella
1842 - 1892
John
Wesley
Markin
50
50
Living
Jordan
1843
Mary
(Polly)
Markin
1845
Caroline
Markin
1847
Anna
Markin
1848
Sarah
Ann
Markin
Amos
Webb
1848 - 1925
Emaline
(Molly)
Markin
77
77
1850
James
M.
Markin
1852
Daniel
W
Markin
1854 - 1936
Martha
Markin
82
82
1857 - 1936
Nancy
Arena
Markin
79
79
1830 - 1901
James
Alexander
Sibley
70
70
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] James A. Sibley paid $1,000 to E.G. Knight in 1858 for 200 acres of land on the head waters of Buffalo Creek in Anson County, North Carolina. He built a house and moved his family there. H e enrolled in the Confederate States Army at Wadesborough, North Carolina, 10 May 1862 and joined Captain L.. A. Johnson's Company of the 4th North Carolina Cavalry, 59th State Troops, at Camp Vance, near Kittrell's, North Carolina. He was furloughed home in July and August 1864. It is possible that his first wife died at this time. The circumstances of her death are not documented, but he, in later life, claimed she had been murdered by a rebellious slave. After the war James returned to home to find his livestock gone and his buildings burned, except for the house. Wheeler's Cavalry had passed through the area requisitioning all food stuffs and livestock, followed closely by Sherman's army which destroyed everything else of value to an army. James married his second wife, a school teacher and widow, after the war,but for reasons no t clear to his descendants, he left his family in North Carolina and went to Texas where he apparently intended to obtain land and begin a new life. He never communicated with his family again and they assumed that he had died. The Federal Census in 1880 lists Jane Sibley as "widowed" and in 1909 she applied for a widow's pension on the service of James A. Sibley in the Confederate States Army. In fact, he arrived safely in Texas, acquired land in Lee County and lived there the rest of his life, marrying for a third time and raising a third family. He is buried at Sam Smith Springs Cemetery near Beaukiss, Texas, now called Lawhon Springs. The inscription on his gravestone reads, "Farewell my wife and children all/ From you a father Christ doth call".
1859 - 1938
George
S
Markin
79
79
1861
Amos
Markin
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Index for Lawrence County Prisoners Incarcerated at the Ohio Penitentiary April 1844-June 1889 Markin, Amos 1-1/2 years horse stealing
1866 - 1942
William
Sherman
Markin
75
75
1868
Benjamin
F
Markin
Sarah
V.
Fillinger
Henry
Fillinger
Elizabeth
Ferril
1840
Elizabeth
Markin
1845 - 1930
Nancy
Susan
Markin
85
85
1847 - 1916
Jefferson
Taylor
Markin
68
68
1849 - 1931
Willena
Ara
Pharr
82
82
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] James Alexander had three wives. The First was Ellen George. The second wife was Jane Jordan Knight born in Montgomery County, North Carolina in 1842. The third was Willena Ara Pharr born in New Dublin, Kentucky in 1849.
1849
Sarah
Markin
1850
Miranda
S
Markin
Delitha
Jacks
Ivan
Jacks
Aletha
Macomber
1847 - 1925
Ebenezer
Markin
78
78
1850
Thomas
G
Markin
1855 - 1936
George
Washington
Markin
81
81
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Burial: Sunset Hills Cemetery, Block 32, Lot 163 or 164
1857 - 1934
John
Henry
Markin
77
77
1860 - 1956
Alexander
Markin
96
96
1872 - 1937
Henry
Clay
Sibley
65
65
1864 - 1913
Charles
Markin
48
48
Mary
Ann
Fasnaut
1839
Louisa
J
Markin
1845 - 1870
Thomas
Taylor
Markin
25
25
1850
Elizabeth
Markin
1854 - 1931
Warren
Fletcher
Markin
77
77
1855
Rebecca
Ellen
Markin
1858
John
William
Markin
1861
Mary
Alice
Markin
1864
Charles
Ullysis S
Grant Markin
1874 - 1948
Frank
Johnson
Sibley
74
74
1867
James
Logan
Markin
Sarah
Douglas
Joel C.
Matney
Hannah
Ratlif
1853
William
H
Markin
1855
Francis
Markin
1857
Mary
A
Markin
Mr.
Hackworth
1879
Nathaniel
Hackworth
1850
Catherine
1876 - 1952
Minnie
Ida
Sibley
75
75
Sianna
Taylor
1868
Isaac
Markin
1870 - 1938
Arthur
W
Markin
68
68
Priscilla
Alice
Kneff
1873
Cecilla
Markin
1874
James
E
Markin
1878
Laurie
E
Markin
1870 - 1940
Eliza
Jane
Markin
69
69
Thomas
Langdon
1835
Elizabeth
Langdon
1882 - 1970
Mary
Addie
Sibley
88
88
James
Roberts
1837 - 1860
John
Langdon
23
23
1840
Henry
H
Langdon
1841 - 1907
George
Washington
Langdon
65
65
Aaron
R
Shannon
Amon
Shannon
Lucreid
Runes
1849 - 1916
Emily
E
Shannon
66
66
1847
Thomas
M
Shannon
1852
Gideon
G W
Shannon
1884
Emerson
Scarborough
Sibley
1854 - 1855
Mary
M
Shannon
10m
10m
1857
Eliza
Amanda
Shannon
1861 - 1862
Henry
Jefferson
Shannon
7m
7m
1863
Francis
Elizabeth
Shannon
John
Henry
Blount
Andrew
Blount
Sarah
Warren
1842 - 1892
George
Warren
Blount
50
50
1843
Sarah
Frances
Blount
1846 - 1918
Mary
Etta
Blount
72
72
1886 - 1887
James
A
Sibley
5m
5m
1848 - 1932
Lorenzo
W
Blount
84
84
1850 - 1920
Rachel
Blount
70
70
1852 - 1915
Thomas
Blount
63
63
1859 - 1937
Nancy
Elizabeth
Blount
78
78
1862 - 1915
John
M
Blount
53
53
A E C
Shannon
Roswell
Jackson
Henry
Downhour
Ellen
Jane
Chandler
Rueben
Lewis
Living
Sibley
1888 - 1978
Araminta
Myrtle
Sibley
89
89
Cyrus
Lewis
Mary
Wiseman
1852 - 1868
Dorothea
Markin
16
16
1853 - 1875
Charles
Markin
22
22
1854 - 1899
Frances
Markin
44
44
1856 - 1934
Thomas
Markin
78
78
1857 - 1875
Elias
Markin
17
17
1859 - 1878
Lewis
Markin
19
19
1862 - 1881
Sarah
Markin
19
19
1865 - 1936
Albert
Markin
70
70
1890 - 1980
Lillie
Belle
Sibley
89
89
1868 - 1921
Andrew
Markin
53
53
1871
Mary
Markin
Nancy
Ann
Fuller
1852
William
T
Markin
1854
Martha
E
Markin
1856
James
R
Markin
Savilia
McIntosh
D. 1861
Elmira
Hencrick
1860
Sarah
Jane
Markin
1854
George
S
Markin
Ida
Sibley
Lucinda
Spears
Serepta
Daily
Martin
1852
Charles
Markin
1853
Elizabeth
Markin
1856
Warren
W
Markin
1858
Lucinda
Markin
1859
Peter
Markin
1867
Son
Markin
1870
John
Markin
1876
Margaret
Markin
Addie
Sibley
1876
Martha
Markin
1879
Josephus
Markin
1881 - 1970
William
S
Markin
88
88
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] SSN #276-09-0766
1888
Josephine
Markin
Simon
Hadley
Isaac
W
Cooper
1852 - 1892
Sarah
Anna
Cooper
40
40
Infant
Cooper
Steven
Guiles
Mary Jane
(Kate)
Guiles
Minta
Sibley
Alexander
Jacks
Ivan
Jacks
Aletha
Macomber
1870
Martha
Jacks
1873
Jr.
Jacks
Alexander
1875
Jay
Willard
Jacks
Charles
Rook
1883
Fridolin
Rook
Ebenezer
W
Markin
Chales
W.
Markin
Lillie
Sibley
Delitha
Jacks
1867
Charles
W.
Markin
1867
Orville
Markin
1868
Sarah
L
Markin
1869
Lu
Meta
Markin
1871
Singleton
Markin
1872
Minnie
Markin
1874
George
W.
Markin
1879
Albert
N.
Markin
Elliot
Webb
1856 - 1926
Allen
Brown
Waggoner
69
69
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Allen & Mary had 8 children all girls. One died at a very young age.Other names unknown. Lee County History Book names A B Waggoner as a trustee of Liberty School (west of Lexington) .
1874
Sarah
M
Webb
Mary
Elizabeth
Hilderbrand
1866
Lucinda
Alice
Markin
1868 - 1954
Andrew
Markin
86
86
1870
Charles
Wesley
Markin
1871
Martha
Elizabeth
Markin
1874
Rebecca
Ellen
Markin
1876
Melvina
Jane
Markin
1878 - 1965
William
Isaac
Markin
87
87
1881
Ella
Garfield
Markin
1857 - 1945
Mary
Elizabeth
87
87
1883 - 1935
Phillip
Henry
Markin
52
52
1885
Ruth
Hannah
Markin
1898
Jesse Lee
Wyman
Markin
Wallace
Edgington
Louisa
Purtue
Nellie
McDaniels
Robert
Boyd
Watson
Cook
Edward
White
Andrew
Jackson
Walker
Lillian
Waggoner
Florence
Beaumont
Walter
Living
Waters
Mary
Jane
Brownlee
1875 - 1935
Arminta
May
Markin
60
60
Martha
Mary Emily
Glandon
John
Glandon
Theodocia
Runyan
1864 - 1939
Cornelia
Jane
Markin
74
74
1866 - 1867
Sarah
Ann
Markin
1
1
1888
Willie
Waggoner
1869 - 1950
Lorenzo
Dow
Markin
81
81
1871 - 1946
John
Andrew
Markin
74
74
1874 - 1875
Charles
Edward
Markin
1
1
1876 - 1938
Lewis
Erna
Markin
62
62
1878 - 1974
Della
Mae
Markin
95
95
1866 - 1951
Dempsey
Ellen
Markin
85
85
1867 - 1869
Loudon
Francisco
Markin
1
1
1870 - 1936
Mary
Alice
Markin
66
66
1872 - 1946
Minnie
Ivan
Markin
73
73
1874 - 1955
Joseph
Jackson
Markin
80
80
Living
Floyd
1892
Hattie
Waggoner
1876 - 1878
Myrtle
Dell
Markin
1
1
1879 - 1960
Annie
Hestella
E Markin
80
80
1881 - 1960
James Alfred
Garfield
Markin
78
78
1884 - 1972
Chloe
Lucretia
Markin
87
87
1886 - 1886
Baby
Girl
Markin
James
Cartwright
Seth
Hezekiah
Collins
1869
John
William
Collins
1878
William
Pearl
Collins
1874
Mary
Isabella
Collins
1880
Florence
Waggoner
1881
Thomas
Jefferson
Collins
1884
Rosa
Ann
Collins
1886
George
Washington
Collins
1891
Alva
Sherman
Collins
Rhoda
Long
1873
James
Markin
Zackery
Brundage
1880
Daisy
Violet
Brundage
Francis
Marion
Bail
1880
Wiona
Bail
1882
Charles
M Bail
1884
Mary
Ellen
Bail
1885
Elizabeth
E Bail
1886
Noah
Bail
1891
Arthur
Bail
Edna May
McDonald
Bail
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Illegitimate child of Charles Bail and Laura McDonald
Nellie
Bail
Bail
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Illegitimate child of Charles Bail and Laura McDonald
Charles
McDonald
James
England
Opal
McCarthrine
Eliza K
Ingram
Mary
Markin
Manring
Perry
Mary
Hartman
Louden
Markin
Maggie
Markin
Bessie
Markin
Emmit
Markin
Living
Markin
Wheeler
Brothers
John
Brothers
Susan
Samantha
Sibley
Susan
Groves
1867
Augustus
Brothers
1870
John
W
Brothers
1873
Electa
May
Brothers
Isabelle
Ruth
Boggs
1881
John
Quincy
Markin
Clifford
Markin
Wheeler
Markin
Ruth
Markin
Rena
Markin
1842
Eliza
Sibley
Flora
Ann
Walters
Sally
Ann
Hughes
1892
Elmer
Lamar
Markin
1893
Bessie
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
1909 - 1978
Ebenezer
(Ebbie)
Markin
69
69
Lena
Helen
Daenner
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Burial: Sunset Hills Cemetery, Block 32, Lot 163 or 164
1839
Julia
Sibley
John
Daenner
Katherine
Kremser
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
1908 - 1944
Charles
Frederick
Markin
35
35
Living
Carr
Estella
Cornell
1884
John
Markin
1887
Frankie
B
Markin
1829 - 1893
Mary
Adeline
Sibley
64
64
1890
Jesse
C
Markin
1893
Bullea
Markin
1898
Romulus
Johnson
Markin
Blaine
Mays
Elma
Large
Solomon
Large
Sarah
Wade
1884
Lusetta
Markin
1885
Nora
Markin
1885
Carrie
Markin
Winifred
Jane
Sibley
1886
George
Markin
1889
Maggie
Markin
1889
Charles
Edward
Markin
1891
Myrtle
Markin
1894
Nellie
Blanche
Markin
1895
Cleora
Ethel
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Lucretia
Hattie
Large
Patrick
Gallagher
Solomon
Large
Sarah
Wade
1886
Bertha
Markin
1888
Waltie
Markin
1891
Asic
(Asa)
Markin
1894
Ivie
Markin
1897
Lif
(Leff)
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Brunnemer
1837
George
Dunlap
Sibley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] George served as a 3rd Lieutenant and later as a 1st Lieutenant in the4th North Carolina Cava lry, 59th State Troops. After the War he moved to Arkansas and settled at the mouth of the Wh ite River on what was known as Sibley Island, a few miles up the Mississippi River from Rosed ale,Miss. He later moved to Montgomery Point across the Sibley Shoot from the Island. About t 1901 or 1902 he moved to White haven, Tenn. In 1905he married a widow, Jennie Cook. The y had no children, but a nephew,George Menard Sibley, son of Hartwell Spane Sibley, lived wit h them after his father died about 1890.
James
Morgan
Benjamin
Franklin
Justice
Theodore
Comer
Lucy
B
Clarke
1886
Mary
Markin
William
Holly
Keeton
1888
Rebecca
Markin
1889
Oscar
Markin
1890
Sherman
Markin
1892
Clarence
Markin
1839
Jeremiah
B
Sibley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Jeremiah was a color sergeant in the 14th north Carolina Infantry at the battle of Malvern Hil l. He was wounded five times in the chest, arm and shoulder while charging a stone wall at th e head of his unit. He died at Chimborzao Army Hospital at Richmond, Va., as a result of these e wounds.
1893
Clara
Etta
Markin
1895 - 1977
Homer
Markin
81
81
Mae
Williams
1897
Nora
Markin
Clayton
Tackett
1898
Hattie
Markin
Ike
Compston
Living
Markin
Emery
Caudill
Cora
1840
Hartwell
Spane
Sibley
1889
Thomas
Markin
1890
Charles
Markin
1893
Lovey
Markin
1897
Chester
Markin
Living
Markin
William
Henry
Canter
1890
Fred
Arthur
Canter
Living
Canter
John
Tipton
Elizabeth
Canter
1841
Henry
Clay
Sibley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Henry enlisted in the 4th North Carolina Cavalry at Wadesboro, NC, 22 April 1861 and was mustered in at Weldon 30 April 1861. He was discharged 28 December 1861 with an inguinal hernia, but he enlisted again in the 14th North Carolina Infantry; and he enlisted at Halifax, NC, 1 February 1864 in Captain LA Johnson's Company of the 4th North Carolina Cavalry, the same unit to which he had belonged at the beginning of the War. He was a prisoner of war, paroled 16 May 1865. He visited briefly in Texas and finally settled in Arkansas County, Arkansas, where he was listed as a physician in the 1880 Federal Census. He married later in life and had one daughter.
William
Goheen
Marie
Canter
Boyd
Lydie
Earthy
Canter
1893
Jesse
Canter
Elizabeth
Howell
1852
James
U
Langdon
1854
Mary
E
Langdon
Sarah
Ann
Simonton
David
Simonton
1848
Sarah
Pines
Sibley
Manerva
Kain
Mary C
(Willis)
Andrews
1868
David
Marion
Langdon
1870
Mary
Elizabeth
Langdon
1881
Rolvin
Warren
Langdon
1883
Ada
Florence
Langdon
Zacharish
T
Heminger
Andrew
Heminger
Nancy
McElroy
1885 - 1961
Florence
Emily
Heminger
76
76
Reform
Burch
Nancy Ann
Drake-
Wilson
1863
Wilbur
Blount
Clara
Yingling
1866
Edie
Blount
Blount
1867
Ora
Blount
1868
Ollie
Blount
William
W.
Trullender
1871
Artie
Blount
1882 - 1952
Ethel
Minnie
Blount
69
69
Rachel
Jane
Jessup
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Rachel is buried in Lot 12, Ironton Cemetery, Ironton, Wisconsin
William
Jessop
Sarah
Keith
1893
Lewis
Levi
Markin
1895
Charles
Elmer
Markin
Helen
Goodell
1897
Della
Elizabeth
Markin
Archie
Osborne
1898
Nina
Jane
Markin
Heppel
Costerison
1899 - 1969
Pearl
Markin
70
70
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Pearl is buried in Lot 12, Ironton Cemetery, Ironton, Wisconsin SSN 277037810
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Cahoon
1743 - 1822
John
Russell
78
78
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Resided in Mecklenburg County, Virginia as late as 1789 then moved to Lawrence, Ohio. 10-29-1839: Francis Russell adms of Manoah B. Russell, dec'd vs. Samuel Russell, William Rus sell, Sanders Russell, Thomas Russell, James Russell, George Irvin and his wife, Elizabeth, William Nelson and Jane, his wife, Abner Dilley and Anneida his wife, Elizabeth Jane infant heir of John and Anne Compton representative of said Anne deceased, Virginia infant heir of Jeremiah Russell, dec'd representative of Jeremiah, John Russell, Lawrence Russell, Rachel Robuck, Elizabeth Robuck and Esther Russell. In Chancery. That William, John, Lawrence, Rachel , Elizabeth and Esther are half blood brothers and sisters of intestate and the residue are whole blood brothers and sister of said intestate, all children of John Russell, dec'd. Suite filed to deliver deed. (546)
Elizabeth
Jemima
Russell
1812 - 1904
Ginsey
Jane
Russell
91
91
D. <1839
Anna
Russell
1801 - 1871
James
Samuel
Russell
70
70
1814 - 1866
Francis(Frank)
Russell
51
51
1807 - 1871
Sanders
Russell
64
64
1808 - 1871
Thomas
Jefferson
Russell
62
62
1619 - 1654
George
Dille
35
35
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Moved to Salem, Massachusetts in 1639. George became a seafaring man, and made several voyages between England and the Colonies. H e became master of his own ship, the "Goodfellow" around 1645. He became a freeman, or citizen en of Massachusetts, in 1651. He died at sea in 1654, on a voyage to Ireland.
George
Irvin
1810
William
Nelson
John
Compton
1811 - 1845
Barthasheba
Smith
34
34
1822 - 1889
Mary
Brammer
67
67
1773 - 1852
Hannah
"Patience"
Rankin
79
79
1722 - 1800
Jeffrey
Russell
78
78
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Date of Will on 28 Feb 1800 in Mecklenburg County, Virginia. Will proven on 9 Jun 1800 in Mecklenburg County, Virginia. Will proven by Charles Ogburn, John Ogburn, and Tabitha Puckett. Per 1790 Census wife was Elizabeth Wood.
1790 - 1876
James
Brammer
86
86
Sarah
Henderson
Simmons
1849 - 1849
Sarah
Jane
Russell
10m
10m
1850 - 1909
John
Calvin
Russell
58
58
1852 - 1884
Rosina
Russell
32
32
1853 - 1885
Virginia
Russell
31
31
1856
Martha
Ellen
Russell
1863
Ida
May
Russell
Living
Keihn
1800 - 1854
Sarah
Billups
54
54
1839 - 1901
Rachel
Russell
61
61
1866 - 1930
William
Alonzo
Russell
64
64
1766 - 1822
Edward
(Edmund)
Brammer
56
56
1773 - 1844
Mary
Ann
Lee
71
71
1744
John
Lee
Sarah
1792 - 1815
Henry
Brammer
23
23
1810
Anna
Brammer
1799 - 1868
Jesse
Brammer
68
68
1801 - 1889
Edmund
Brammer
88
88
1807
Artametta
Brammer
1796
William
Brammer
1788 - 1846
John
Brammer
58
58
1809 - 1882
Richard
Brammer
73
73
John L
Brammer
1725 - 1810
Mary
Burgess
85
85
1700
William
Burgess
Susannah
John
Collier
Ambrose
Collier
Nancy
Adams
1772 - 1840
James
Allen
68
68
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] 1 BIRTH 2 DATE 1772 1810 - Augusta VA Census James Allen 3 1 1 0 1 0 1
1794 - 1842
Anna
Collier
48
48
Coleman
Keys
Living
Gillen
Living
Allen
Living
Allen
Living
Ovie
1921
Warren
Allen
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Warren died during WWII in B-29 crash on flight to Puerto Rico from east coast of United State s. The entire crew and plane disappeared and not a trace of anybody or anything has every bee n found.
Living
Dorothy
1808 - 1853
Nancy
Sibley
44
44
Living
Allen
Isam
Blankenship
Sr.
1862 - 1904
William
H
Alford
41
41
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] ALFORD, WM. H.----- I.R. JUN. 02, 1904 In Memoriam (need to copy) Born in Lawrence Co., Ohio, near the city of Ironton on September 0 6, 1862. Married September 20, 1892 to Miss Anna L. Golden (Do not have end of obit)
1838
Anna
L.
Golden
Don
Dilley
1906 - 1973
Edward
David
Jaerger
67
67
William
Henry
White
Harry
White
Wilbur
Dilley
Lillie
Dilley
1809
Elizabeth
Sibley
Pearl
Dilley
Herbert
Dilley
Frank
Dilley
George
Dilley
Living
Jaerger
Living
Shields
Living
Hopp
Living
Fowler
Living
Hopkins
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Pension
Living
Dilley
Living
Cade
Living
Dilley
Living
Thompson
Living
Martin
Living
Martin
Living
Martin
Living
Johnson
1813 - 1830
James
Sibley
17
17
Living
Johnson
Living
Hotton
Living
McDiffett
Living
McDiffett
Living
Morrissey
Living
McDiffett
Living
McDiffett
Living
McDiffett
Living
Ross
Living
McDiffett
Living
McDiffett
Living
McDiffett
Living
McDiffett
Living
Eshnaur
Living
Eshnaur
Living
Eshnaur
George
Keys
Rosco
Keys
Tracy
Keys
Cora
Keys
~1732
Jerusha
Chandler
Elizabeth
Keys
Lillie
Keys
Louis
Keys
Margaret
Keys
1875 - 1967
Effie
Edwards
92
92
Charity
Edwards
Homer
Edwards
Charles
Edwards
Edward
Stanley
Clara
Stanley
1757 - 1827
John
Sibley
70
70
Clifton
Matney
Ethel
Stanley
Ernest
Bartrum
Ed
Harris
Homer
Harris
Living
Marjorie
Estella
Leighty
George
Harris
Everett
Harris
Wayne
Harris
Living
Brunnemer
1758 - 1832
Leonard
Sibley
74
74
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Leonard was engaged in the freighting business in prince Edward County, Virginia, until 1814. He was crippled in one leg when a wagon passed over it. He moved his family to the Henry-Trimble-Ol dham Co., Ky., area in late1814 and purchased 200 acres of land on corn Creek, near the prese nt town of Bedford, KY., and M and Nancy Tandy. The Deed is dated 16 January 1815 and was recorded 30 July 1815 at the Henry Co Clerk's Office. About1818 he purchased Fairmount Plantation n which consisted of about 600 acres and a huge, eight room log house called Fairmount, located on a promontory overlooking the Little Kentucky River. The house had separate guest rooms at each end of the front porch and massive stone chimneys at each end of the house. This home was built by Colonel William Marshall,Jr., in 1780 on land granted to him for his Revolutionary War service. Fairmount lies about three miles north of Sulphur, Ky., on the west side of the Little Kentucky River. It was owned by Coleman Mayfield Sibley in1975.
Pansy
Living
Edwards
Estella
Leighty
Living
Edwards
Living
Edwards
Living
Edwards
John
Bruce
1903 - 1966
Aloysius
P
Dreiling
63
63
Living
Dreiling
Living
Dreiling
1763
Robert
Sibley
1908 - 1992
Susan
Dreiling
83
83
1910 - 1991
Celestine
Dreiling
81
81
Living
Dreiling
Living
Dreiling
1918 - 1989
Wendelin
Dreiling
71
71
Living
Dreiling
1920 - 1989
Angelus
Dreiling
69
69
Living
Dreiling
1924 - 1925
Maria
Dreiling
1m
1m
1910 - 1928
Elizabeth
18
18
1765
Mary
Sibley
Living
Dreiling
Living
Dreiling
Living
Dreiling
Living
Dinkel
Living
Foos
Living
Thomas
Living
Younker
Living
Logan
Living
Muchaw
Living
Urban
1767 - 1834
Gabriel
Sibley
67
67
Living
Wilson
Living
Meis
Living
Schreiner
Living
Woodruff
Living
Asmussen
Living
Stanley
Living
Annaniantz
Living
Johnson
Living
Kesler
Living
Carroll
D. 1973
Russell
Stone
1894 - 1982
Ralph
Donald
Collier
88
88
Living
Collier
Living
Lowdermilk
Living
Collier
Living
Collier
Living
Collier
Living
Tulley
Living
Collier
Living
Collier
Living
Collier
Living
Stone
Living
Osborne
Living
Collier
Living
Collier
Living
McCobe
Living
Dorris
Living
Burton
Living
Burton
Living
Burton
Living
Burton
Living
Burton
Living
Stone
Living
Burton
Living
Burton
Living
Buxton
Living
Burton
Living
Burton
Living
Burton
Living
Burton
Living
Shields
Living
Shields
Living
Shields
Living
Touchett
Living
JoAnn
Living
Jaerger
Living
Jaerger
Living
Lou
Living
Jaerger
1842 - 1897
Joseph
Dodds
55
55
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Joseph Dodds and his wife Catherine Bel Dodds and their daughter, MaryBell Dodds were origina lly buried in a cemetery in Marietta but in 1925 their bodies were moved to Union Cemetery i n Columbus, Ohio by the H. A. Pletcher Company with the consent of Charles A. Dodds and Margaret Dodds. Joseph Dodds was in the Index to the 1890 Special Schedule of Surviving Soldiers, Sailors, Mar ines and Widows of the Civil War on page 44 State of Ohio, Washington County, Grandview Twp. , Supervisor's District 7,Enumeration District 246, Joseph Dodds can be found on page 2, lin e 19,house 122, family 126, Name: Joseph Dodds, Rank: Private, Company C,Regiment: 2 WVA Ca v., Enrollment date: 1861, Discharged: 4 July 1865,Length of Service: 3 yr 10 mos. 7 days, P ost Office Address: Ward Washington County, Ohio , Disability incurred: Kidney Affliction. NEWSPAPER ARTICLES ABOUT JOSEPH DODDS DEATH THE MARIETTA TIMES Wed. April 21, 1897 Roll#25340 OHS Mr. Joseph Dodds, a prosperous farmer, who lived six miles back ofMatemoras, committed suicide e Sunday morning by hanging himself in his barn. There is no known cause for his act. THE MARIETTA TIMES Wed. April 28, 1897 Roll#25340 OHS The Matemoras Mail gives the details of the suicide of Joseph Dodds,mentioned last week as fo llows: "Joseph Dodds, one of the best known and respected farmers of our township, hanged himself, in a fit of temporary insanity last Sabbath morning. He left the house for the stable as usual, about six o'clock, to attend to his horses. Breakfast being ready, one of his young daughters went to the stable to call her father, and discovered his body hanging from a cross timber in the bedding room of the stable. In answer to the child's screams, three or four men living near, speedily ran to the stable and were horrified to see their neighbor's body hanging with the toes resting on the floor. The litter on the floor was scattered about, giving ev dence of a struggle. The rope was cut immediately and the body lowered to the floor. The body was still warm, showing that life had been extinct but a very short time. All efforts to resuscitate the unfortunate man, however, were unavailing. No cause can be assigned for the deed except that of temporary insanity produced by what is unknown. Mr. Dodds was about 55 years old. He was a member of the Second West Virginia Cavalry during the war, and an honorable , upright Christian man." MARIETTA DAILY LEADER Tuesday April 20, 1897 ROLL #43193 OHS HUNG HIMSELF. One of the Grandview's Best Citizens Dies by His Own Hand. News reached this city Monday morning of the suicide at his home in Grandview township of Mr. Joseph Dodds, one of the most widely known and highly respected citizens of the county. The sad occurrence was shocking in the extreme, and has cast a shadow of sadness over the entire neighborhood. The deed was committed some time Sunday morning. Mr. Dodds' body found hanging at the end o f a rope tied to a rafter in his barn. When he was discovered life was extinct. Written o n a sled which he had been building the day before were the words: "This is the last of me in the barn." No cause whatever can be assigned for the act, though it is thought that it may have been the result of financial matters. Mr. Dodds owned, however, a good farm and was considered prospreous. He was an affectionate man in his family and commanded the very highest respect of all l who knew him. He was about 60 years of age and leaves a wife and three children. WOODSFIELD SPIRIT OF DEMOCRACY May 13, 1897 ROLL#25123 OHS RINARDS MILLS Joseph Woods (Dodds), a very highly respected farmer of Grandview township, Washington County , on Easter Sunday morning hanged himself in his barn. He went to the barn to feed his stock while his wife and daughters were preparing breakfast. He was gone longer than usual. One of the girls went to look for him. On entering the barn she saw her father hanging to a joist dead. He had written on a board in the barn with a pencil "My time has come." They do not know any cause for the rash act.
1869
Christina
Elizabeth
Dodds
1869 - 1902
Charles
A
Dewitt
33
33
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Reverend Charles Devitt died at age 34.
1880 - 1968
Lula
May
Foster
88
88
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Lula and Charles had no children. She lived her final years with her nephew Reed Lee.
1870 - 1945
Charles
A.
Dodds
75
75
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Cause of death - chronic nephritis at Age 74
Living
Kane
1867 - 1889
Mary
Bell
Dodds
21
21
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Mary died when she was 21 years 10 months 14 days old Cause of death was tuberculosis of th e bone. Between 1867 and 1889 she lived in Washington County, Ohio in Grandview Township. The 1880 Census lists her as mamed/invalid. She had a hip disease.
1872 - 1938
Laura
Eleanor
Dodds
66
66
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Laura was possibly an invalid by age 25 when her father died in 1897. Cause of death - diabetes Age 66
1876 - 1956
Margaret
Lillian
Dodds
80
80
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Maggie was the care giver of her sister Eleanor and her mother Catharine. Cause of death was cerebro vascular hemorrhage at age 79.
1882 - 1963
Fannie
Faye
Dodds
81
81
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Fannie was sixteen when she came to live in Columbus Ohio. Cause of Death - Coronary Occlusion due to hypertensive cardio-vascular disease. She had this condition for 15 years, according to her death certificate. Coronary Occlusion is the total obstruction of the blood flow in a coronary artery.
1879 - 1945
Charles
Augustus
Gibson
66
66
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Charles A Gibson was the president and treasurer of the Gibson-Spence Coal Co. which began i n ? and declared bankruptcy between 1932-1933. His partner Paul G. Spence was secretary of the company during the years 1920-21. G S Coal Co was located in rooms 902-03 of the Atlas Building, 8 E. Long St., Columbus, Ohio in 1925 and 1926. It was in bold print during these two yea rs in the directories. Lucy Wolfe found this information in the Columbus city Directories at the Ohio historical Society Library in 1996. In 1925 Philip E. Ebert was the secretary of G-S Coal and by 1929 he worked as a sales agent for Sunday Creek Coal Co., and had moved from 666 Kimball Place to 740 Kimball Place. By 1931 G-S Coal only occupied room 902 in the Atlas Building. By 1932G-S Coal occupied rooms 900-901 in the Atlas Building. By 1933 Charles A Gibson no longer holds the title of president and treasurer of G-S Coal Co. The Gibsons no longer lived at 1890 Tremont Rd Upper Arlington in 1933 (they had lived at 1890 Tremont since 1918) but had moved to 48 E Frambes Ave. Gibson's daughter Catherine still lived at home at this time, according to the Columbus City Directory for the year 1933. Charles died of Angina Pectoris which is a severe spasm of chest pain associated with an insufficient supply of blood to the heart. His official birth record in Guernsey county listed him as Charles Garfield Gibson and listed G. W. Gibson as his father, then crossed out the G and changed it to a C and Rachel Stevens as his mother with his birth date as 12-22-1879. It also listed a Sherman Blain Gibson with a father of G W Gibson and Rachel Stevens as the mother born 12-27-1879. As it turns out, Charles A Gibson had to have his birth record corrected on May 16, 1944 in the probate court in Guernsey County with the case # 2453. He was delivered by a Dr. Hill of Senecaville, Ohio . Lucy Wolfe and Carolyn Nieset were told in June of 1997 that Charles must have needed to correct his birth record in order to apply for Social Security or some other form of government aid or pension.
1907 - 1985
Catherine
Rachel
Gibson
77
77
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Catherine was a music teacher in 1932.
1919 - 1990
Mary
Elizabeth
Gibson
71
71
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] I Lucy A Wolfe consider July 17, 1990 Mary E Gibson-Bing's death datebecause of evidence in her apartment on the morning of July 18, 1990. Roberta Traver-Moore said that her mother never went to bed without rinsing out her ice cream bowl and the bowl had not been rinsed when she arrived at her mother's apartment. Mary was already turning black when Roberta arrived. All death records give July 18, 1990 as her date of death, but I know my grandmother would prefer the 17th because of her Irish ancestry. Mary died from a heart attach. She graduated from Ohio State University with a degree in elementary education. July 23, 1990 she was buried in St Joseph Cemetery in Fremont, Ohio. She was christened at King Ave United Methodist Church in Upper Arlington, Ohio on June 11, 19 21. Mary only had one kidney from birth. She was a recovering alcoholic. She had a pacemaker fo r her heart.
1846 - 1899
Margaret
E. Bell
53
53
1848 - 1929
Theodore
B.
Barnes
81
81
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Theodore B Barnes was a merchant in Grandview Township according to the1880 census for Washin gton County, Ohio.
1874
Louisa
Bell
Barnes
Living
Kane
John
Smith
D. 1906
Hilda
Virginia
Smith
1876 - 1931
Jennie
Leslie
Barnes
55
55
Sam
Clark
Living
Clark
Living
Clark
1848 - 1884
Miranda
Barnes
36
36
1870
Charles
D. Bell
1873
Clarence
E.Bell
1879 - 1957
Anna
Amrine
77
77
Living
Allison
Living
Telfer
Living
Bell
Living
Sanders
Living
Bell
Living
Krueger
Living
Bell
Living
Bell
1875 - 1950
Frank
E. Bell
75
75
Loyella
Living
Bell
1881
Edward
Clyde
Bell
Living
Telfer
1893 - 1934
John
Earnest
Bell
41
41
1889
Lucy
Stout
Keiffer
Living
Bell
Living
Gooding
Living
Bell
Living
Bell
Living
Bell
Living
Bell
Living
Ballard
Living
Bell
Living
Emmons
Living
Bell
Living
Bell
Living
Fuchs
Living
Fuchs
Living
Fuchs
Living
Fuchs
Living
Bell
Living
Clarksen
Living
Bell
Living
Bell
1881 - 1966
Robert
Bernard
Kane
85
85
1895
James
Glenn
Bell
Living
Pegolih
Living
Bell
Living
Brentz
Living
Bell
Living
Bell
Living
Bell
Living
Shelenberger
Living
Shelenberger
1850 - 1928
Mary
Pricilla
Dye
78
78
1889 - 1970
Viola
Ethel
Morrison
81
81
1842 - 1930
Hamilton
Parr
Rinard
87
87
1812 - 1893
James
Rinard
81
81
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Broderbund Family Archive #20, Ed 1, Census Index: OH, Ohio 1880 Census, MONROE CO., OH 188 0 CENSUS, Date of Import: July 16, 1998, Internal Ref #1.20.1.13506.14 Individual: Rinard, James Township: Washington Microfilm: Page 653C Married twice, first to Mary Scott sister of Brothers wife. Second marriage later to: Margaret Whittinton 39 Widow
1816
Rachel
Minney
1816 - 1835
Mary
Scott
19
19
1773 - 1865
Isaac
Rinard
92
92
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] His family was from Germany. He came to Ohio on a raft down river with a STONE to start the first Grist Mill in the area. That stone sits on his grave today. He formed Rinard Mills , and is buried there. He was a strong man, no-nonsense person. Williams: History of Washington County, Ohio gives a clear pictures of this man. Township: Ludlow Microfilm: Page 220A
1791 - 1866
Easter
Elder
75
75
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Easter spoke little English. She was a tiny woman. Her brother James married Isaac's daughter Sarah from his first marriage to Mary Young. Ester's father was John Elder born 1761 Ireland. Her mother was listed as Mother Elder b. 1766 in Ireland died before 1800 in Ireland. Her father died in Washington County, Ohio. No date given.
1777 - 1807
Mary
Young
30
30
1761
John
Elder
1774 - 1850
John
Scott
76
76
Precious
Living
Kane
1742 - 1779
James
Scott
37
37
16 FEB 1739/40 - 1823
Elizabeth
Harrison
1710 - 1784
James
Scott
Sr
74
74
1715 - 1784
Sarah
Brown
69
69
1650 - 1726
John
Scott
76
76
Helen
Grant
1689 - 1762
Gustavus
Brown
73
73
2 FEB 1690/91 - 1744
Frances
Fawke
Mary
Black
1645 - 1689
Gustavus
Brown
Sr
44
44
Living
Kane
1670 - >1689
Jane
(Jean)
Mitchelson
19
19
1610 - 1640
Richard
Brown
30
30
1575
David
Brown
1644
George
Mitchelson
1648
Isabel
Elphinstone
1662 - 20 JAN 1733/34
Gerard
Folkes
(Fowke)
1665 - 1747
Sarah
Burdette
82
82
Mary
Lomax
1606 - 1669
Gerard
Fowke
63
63
1630 - MAR 1702/03
Ann
Thoroughgood
Living
Kane
Ann
Chandler
1598 - 1649
Roger
Fowke
51
51
1590
Mary
Bayley
1572
John
Fowke
1576
Dorothy
Cupper
1530
John
Cupper
1530
Audrey
Peyto
1577
William
(Sir)
Bailey
1604 - 1640
Adam
Thoroughgood
35
35
1609 - 1657
Sarah
Appley
Offley
48
48
Living
Kane
Job
Chandler
1560 - 1625
William
Thorowgood
65
65
1558 - 1609
Anne
Edwards
51
51
Mary
Dodge
Alice
Holbeck
1530 - 1600
John
Thorowgood
70
70
1534
Anne
Luchyn
1508
Thomas
Luchyn
1540
Henry
Edwards
John
Gookin
1874 - 1945
Albert
Newton
Allen
70
70
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] The Bell & Allen Picture: Back Row Left to Right and Then Down: Edward Bell(Uncle) Icy Newsome Bell(Aunt) Grandfathers brothers wife (name unknown) Alexander Bell (Grandfather of Charity) Albert Newton Allen (Father) Glenn Bell (Uncle) Gladys Bell Burton (Aunt) Grandfather Bell's brother (sitting) Unknown Lucy Varner Bell (Grandmother) Ada May Bell Allen (Mother) Albert Allen Osborne(Sister) Campsee Bell Collier (Aunt) Man Unknown Kathryn Naomi Allen McDiffett (sister) Ada Genevieve Allen Eshnaur (Sister) Tina Bell Jaeger (Aunt) Mildred Irene Allen Martin (Sister) The Allen Picture: Left to Right Back Row and Then Down: Dr William Harvey (Charity's Uncle) Harriet Allen Harvey (Aunt) Frank Allen (Uncle) Claudia Allen (Aunt) Frank Hotchkiss (Uncle) Ethan Allen (Uncle) Birdsley Allen Nelson (Aunt) Mattie Allen Mayos (Aunt) Mildred Allen Hotchkiss (Aunt) John Lee Allen (Grandfather) Charity Dilly Allen (Grandmother) Wilma Hotchkiss (Cousin) Alberta Allen Osborne (Sister) Eloise Pearson (Cousin) Alberta Allen Osborne (Sister) Eloise Pearson (Cousin) Genevieve Allen Eshnaur (Sister) Ada May Bell Allen (Mother) Albert Newton Allen (Father) Allen Hotchkiss (Cousin) Mildred Allen Martin (Sister) Reginald Allen (Cousin) Kathryn Allen McDiffett (Sister) Virginia Allen Guntler (Cousin) Grandfather Allen served in the Civil War and was in the Battle of Bull Run. Albert died of ulcers.
Frances
Yeardley
1561 - 1625
Robert
Offley
63
63
1570 - 14 JAN 1652/53
Anne
Osborne
1525 - 1596
Sr
Offley
Robert
71
71
1530 - 1571
Ms.
Bracken
41
41
1475
William
Offley
1484
Elizabeth
Wright
Elizabeth
Dillorne
1450
John
Offley
Margery
Living
Brunnemer
1881 - 1961
Ada
May
Bell
80
80
1425
Richard
Offley
Rogerson
Nicholas
Rose
1530 - 15 FEB 1591/92
Edward
Osborne
1543 - 1585
Anne
Hewett
42
42
Margaret
Chapman
1513 - 1581
Richard
Osborne
68
68
1517 - 1570
Jane
Broughton
53
53
1488
Richard
Osborne
Sr
1491
Elizabeth
Flydane
1901 - 1962
Alberta
Bell
Allen
60
60
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Alberta died of stroke.
1514 - 25 JAN 1565/66
William
Hewett
Elizabeth
Leveson
Alice
Nicholas
Leveson
1469
Edmund
Hewett
1469
Nicholas
Hewett
1438
Nicholas
Hewett
Sr
1636 - 2 MAR 1667/68
Thomas
Burdett
1640 - 1683
Verlinda
Cotton
43
43
1580 - 1643
William
Burdett
63
63
1610 - MAR 1639/40
Frances
Saunders
1909 - 1988
Mildred
Irene
Allen
79
79
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Mildred died of Parkinson's Disease.
1619 - 1640
John or
William
Cotton
21
21
1620 - 1683
Ann Cotton
Eaton
Graves
63
63
Richard
Boughton
1578
Andrew
Cotton
Joanne
Thomas
Burdett
Francis
Doughty
Nathaniel
Eaton
1584 - 1635
Thomas
Graves
51
51
1586 - 1636
Katherine
Crosher
50
50
1910 - 1991
Naomi
Kathryn
Allen
80
80
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Kathryn died of cancer.
1556 - 1637
Thomas
Graves
Sr
81
81
1560
Joan
Blagrove
1534 - 1590
Thomas
Blagrove
56
56
1538
Joan
Bellame
1508
Richard
Blagrove
Ms.
Wyrtt
1512
William
Bellame
1561
Joseph
Crosher
1703 - 1771
Cuthbert
Harrison
68
68
1718
Francis
Osborne
Barnes
Living
Allen
1665 - 1746
Thomas
Harrison
80
80
Anne
Synthia
Elizabeth
Short
1637 - 1706
Burr
Harrison
69
69
Mary
Sarah
Burdeth
11 JAN 1606/07 - 1699
Cuthbert
Esquire
Harrison
Susanna
1840 - 1903
Catherine
M. Bell
62
62
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Catherine died of Metastasis, which is the transmission of disease from an original site to on e or more sites elsewhere in the body, as in cancer. She died at age 62. The 1880 census lists her as mamed/invalid.
1813 - 1873
Christiana
Deter
59
59
Living
Ruddick
1811 - 1867
Alexander
Bell
56
56
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Birth was calculated from death records so it isn't necessarily accurate. He was a Methodist Episcopal Minister. According to the 1860 Census he was born in Ireland an d lived in Washington Township, Graysville, Ohio in Monroe County. 1869 Map of Monroe County, Ohio shows land that Alex Bell owned: Call #G1398 M6N6 1869a ORR He was also found to own land in Monroe County, Independence Township and Grandview Township i n 1875: Call G1398 W3L3 1875a ORR.
1848
Anthony
S. Bell
1861
Edward
F. Bell
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Edward lived with his sister Margaret Bell Barnes in 1880 when the census was taken and he was s a store clerk.
D. 1883
Mary
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Vol 1 p 254 #5563 of the Washington County Ohio Probate Court Death Records.
John
M.
Turinem
O J
Rorem
1894 - 1973
Marie
Dewitt
79
79
1896 - 1945
Glyde
Dewitt
49
49
Cy
Deffenbaugh
Chalres
W.
Gibson
Living
Lenn
Rachel
Stevens
1879
Sherman
Blain
Gibson
1891 - 1982
Max
Emert
Collins
91
91
Living
Collins
Living
Collins
Living
Collins
Living
Collins
Living
Black
Living
McCarthy
Living
Davies
Living
Ruddick
Living
Montcrief
Living
Rowe
Living
Thompson
D. 1977
Joseph
Groat
Living
Temple
Living
Graham
Living
Birney
Living
Kail
Living
Kail
1938 - 1978
Margaret
Sandra
Kail
40
40
Living
Roberts
Living
Duff
Living
Bevington
1915 - 1970
Robert
Edward
Bing
55
55
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Robert was killed in an automobile accident. The truck was owned by Messinger Gravel and was driven by Webster Potts. The accident site was the intersection of Joppa Rd and St Rt 113 i n Florence, Ohio in Erie County east of Milan, Ohio. Robert received an honorable discharge from U S Navy after WWII on September 1945. He was an insurance salesman and an accountant. He built his own house at 1886 Morrison Rd., Fremont , Ohio.
Edwin
Bing
Martha
Smith
Living
Bing
Living
Bing
Living
Bing
Living
Bing
Living
Bing
Living
Kane
Living
Bing
Living
Urben
Living
Good
Living
Howell
Living
Nieset
Living
Plummer
Living
Williams
Living
Lounsberry
Living
Traver
Living
Moore
Living
Floyd
John
William
Kane
1911 - 1965
Jerry
Howard
McDiffett
53
53
D. <1839
Manoah
B.
Russell
William
Russell
D. <1839
Jeremiah
Russell
John
Russell
Lawrence
Russell
Rachel
Russell
Elizabeth
Russell
Esther
Russell
1745 - 1816
Jane
Russell
71
71
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Sources: White81429@@aol.com and Lynnea Dickinson. According to Pat (PJAFLA@@aol.com) "I have been searching Kanawha county for early Russells. I n 1810 there was a Jane Russell, who is head of household with several children. My gg grand father was Samuel Russell, b abt 1810. He says his mother was elizabeth, no last name, no fa ther mentioned. I have found an Elizabeth on the 1824 tax Records of Kanawha and also on th e 1830 Census of Kanawha. I know that Mary Ann Russell is a daughter of John Russell, who was s about 37 or so on the 1850 census and is married to Emmerson Turley, they moved to Lawrence e County, Ohio and died there. I do not know which John Russell was her father, nor who he r mother was, but on the 1850 census of Cabell living with Emmerson Turley and Mary Ann Russe ll there is an Elizabeth Russell who is 67 years old."
1736
Joseph
Talley
Living
McDiffett
1767
George
Washington
Talley
1768 - 1852
Russell
Talley
84
84
BET. 1770 - 1780 - >1830
Grief
Talley
1778
Mary
Ann
Talley
D. 1802
Jeffrey
Russell
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] MILITARY: Revolutionary War: Private & Sergeant in the Virginia Continental & Militia Service; Served under captain Ballord, then Captain Garland; Jeffrey was then drafted in the Lunenburg Militia under Captain Walker; Fought in the Battle of Guilford, North Carolina.
1755
Sarah
Gill
1780
Richard
Russell
1782
Elizabeth
B
Russell
1784
Martha
Russell
1787
Mary
Russell
Living
McDiffett
1792
Sally
Russell
1794
Rebecca
Russell
1760 - 1821
Mark
Russell
61
61
Mary
Puckett
Esther
Dean
John
Wesley
Russell
D. BET. 1848 - 1850
Barbary
Losey
1831
Hetty
Ann
Russell
1836
Eliza P
Russell
1837
Sanders
Russell
Living
Eshnaur
1843
Victoria
Russell
1847
James
F
Russell
1808
Lucinda
Boggs
1831
Sarah
Ann
Russell
1832 - 1894
George
Russell
61
61
1833
William
Hutchinson
Russell
1838
Louisa
P
Russell
1838
Alice
S
Russell
1840
Alcey
Jane
Russell
1842
Susan
Russell
1916 - 1999
Robert
Francis
Kane
82
82
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] OBITUARIES Bob Kane, 82, writer for Life, Parade, public relations specialist OBITUARIES Bob Kane, 82, writer for Life, Parade, public relations specialist BYLINE: Suzanne Gregory, Staff DATE: 05-29-1999 PUBLICATION: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution EDITION: Home SECTION: Local News PAGE: G7 A writer for Life and Parade magazines and owner of a public relations firm, Bob Kane, 82, o f Decatur always had a story to tell. It could be a humorous tale about his ordering from the children's menu at Wendy's restaurant, about his grandsons or a feature on the curve ball . And Mr. Kane, a gregarious man who called into the The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's Ven t every other week and had six items published, knew how to tell it and write it. "He liked telling historical stories," said his son Cameron Kane of Marietta. "He seemed to be the guy who was at every major historical event. Not in the limelight; he was in the wings. " "He was interested in everyone. He would come home from IHOP and know all about the waitress, " said daughter-in-law Ginger Kane of Marietta. "He was absolutely nosy about people. But he did it in a way that people didn't mind," she added. The memorial service for Robert Francis Kane is 1 P.M. today at A.S. Turner & Sons. The body was cremated. He died Wednesday of congestive heart failure at his residence. A 1938 graduate of Kansas State University, Mr. Kane was drafted into the U.S. Army Air Corp s during World War II. He gained his experience in public relations from doing the publicity for "Shot from the Sky, " an exhibition featuring captured German and Japanese military equipment, used to sell war bonds. While at Life magazine, Mr. Kane did investigative reporting, toured the country with Life ph otographers and wrote captions for photos and short articles. He left to write for Parade whe n it was founded, said his son. A 30-year commuter on the Long Island Railroad, Mr. Kane spent 12 years as director of publi c relations for F.H. McGraw Construction Co. A member of the National Association of Railroad Passengers and its Georgia association, Mr. Kane threw a retirement party on the train for a 50-year railroad attendant. The New York Times wrote a story on it, said Alan Yorker of Decatur, president of the Georgia Association of Railroad Passengers. Mr. Kane was a member of the Overseas Press Club. And he created the Golden Mike Award, an award for the best football announcer of the year, for the New York Touchdown Club. "He was always looking for publicity. His mind was always looking on how can I get publicity for this person or that person," said his wife, Aileen Kane. Retiring from Robert Francis Kane and Associates public relations firm in New York in 1988, M r. Kane moved to Decatur. He wrote articles for area newspapers, the KSU alumni magazine and other publications. He was a member of the Aviation Writers Association, the Atlanta Press Club and the WWII Roundtable. Survivors other than his wife and son include another son, Philip Kane of Decatur; two sisters, Marian Nering of El Paso, Texas, and Florence Richey of Birmingham; a brother, Richard Kane of Ponte Vedra, Fla.; and two grandsons. ILLUSTRATIONS/PHOTOS: Bob Kane TYPE: Obituary Copyright 1999,The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, All rights reserved.
1844
Mary
Russell
1845
Ruth
A
Russell
1846
Hanna
(Hermia)
Russell
1848 - 1917
Thomas
E
Russell
69
69
1849
Hannah
E
Russell
1851
Lucinda
T
Russell
D. BET. 1845 - 1850
Mary
Irwin
1829
James
Russell
1830
Susan
Russell
1831
Samuel
F
Russell
1842 - 1884
Robert
Bennent
Kane
42
42
1834
Ellen
Russell
1834
Martha
Russell
1842
John
Russell
1845
William
Russell
1831
Mary
Ann
Nelson
1838
Eliza I.
Nelson
1840
John
Nelson
1843
Armenia
Nelson
1845
Jemima
Nelson
Elizabeth
Jane
Compton
1852 - 1924
Cecilia
Flaherty
72
72
Rebecca
Singer
1834
Virginia
Russell
D. 1845
Mary
Lucy
McDaniel
1791
Sterling
Talley
BET. 1790 - 1794
John
W
Talley
BET. 1790 - 1794
Page
Talley
1796
Rebecca
Talley
1798 - 1876
George
Henderson
Talley
77
77
1798
Nancy
Talley
1800
Jane
Talley
1810
John
Kane
1802 - 1851
Mary
Talley
49
49
1808
Grief
Talley
BET. 1810 - 1815
Robertson
Talley
1777
Elizabeth
Creedle
BET. 1794 - 1804
William
Talley
BET. 1804 - 1810
James
Talley
1807
Joseph
T
Talley
1808 - 1877
Mark
R
Talley
68
68
BET. 1810 - 1820
John
Wesley
Talley
BET. 1771 - 1780
Lucinda
Curtis
1812
Mary
Bennent
Churchill
Curtis
Lucy
1810
Allen
Talley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Allen supposedly left his family to go west with the Mormons. Lynnea Dickensen found no proof of Allen being the son of Grief, except for the1830 Lawrence County, Ohio census. Ida Talley, daughter of Alma, states Allen died in St Louis, MO of typhoid. Married by William Gore, J.P. Marriage found in Book 1-2-3 page 141.
BET. 1811 - 1815
Nancy
Talley
1812
Joseph
Talley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] 1840 Van Buren County, Iowa Census: Joseph Tally 1 Male 20-29 1811-1820 Joseph 1 Female 20-29 1811-1820 Lydia 1 Male 5-9 1831-1835 William 1 Female 5-9 1831-1835 Lucy 1 Male 0-4 1836-1840 John The only 2 other Talley/Tally families, in Iowa in 1840 are John and William. Both are living in adjoining counties to Joseph. As Joseph names his 1st 2 sons William and John, it is assumed they are related in some way. In the 1880 Census, Joseph states that both parents were born in Virginia. Also, in the 1880 census, Elizabeth, listed as wife, is with Joseph. Did Joseph remarry? Elizabeth born about 1815 in Pennsylvania. In an 1881 history of Marion County, Iowa, mention is made of Mr. & M rs.Tally, members of the Methodist Church. In "Pioneers of Marion County",published 1872, Tally's Ford is noted as being the crossing on the Des Moines River. The history tells of their generosity and aid to the early settlers. The history goes on to say that the Tally's present residence is in Decatur County. In the same book, Mr. Alexander May tells of his wife who " borrowed" a meal at Joseph Tally's on the north side of the Des Moines River. In another histo ry, "Proud Mahaska", Joseph Tally was licensed March 11, 1846 to keep a ferry at a point called Tally's Ford. Rates were: 2 horses & wagon 371/2 cents 4 horses & wagon 50 cents 1 man & horse 183/4 cents 1 horse 10 cents cattle, per head 08 cents sheep & hogs, per head 05 cents footman 10 cents This history also states that Joseph Talley was one of the 1st settlers of Mahaska County, arriving shortly after 1843. Joseph filed his claim near river. There is an article on the "Ta ly Raid" involving a George Tally and his probable cousin Bill.
BET. 1816 - 1820 - BET. 1840 - 1843
George
Talley
Edmund
Creedle
1828
John
Brown
1853 - 1926
Mary
Emeline
Phillips
73
73
John
Corn
Flaherty
1831 - 1924
Julia
Ann
Willis
93
93
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Occupation: Laborer
Irad B
Hutcheson
M.G.
Thacker
Elisha
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Book 5 page 183
William
L.
Boynton
1847 - 1875
Electa
A
McElroy
27
27
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] RUSSELL, ELECTA A. I.R. MAY 27, 1875 Died at her residence on Sharp's Creek, Aid Township, on May 18 of erysipelas, the wife of Tho s. E. Russell.
1875
Unknown
Russell
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Headstone reads Infant Russell s/o T.E. & E.A. Aged 1D. Died near Marion, Lawrence County, Oh io May 14, 1875 RUSSELL, INFANT I.R. MAY 27, 1875 Died near Marion, Lawrence county, on May 14, infant son of Thos. E. and E. A. Russell
1856 - 1921
Lydia
A
Unknown
65
65
Mr.
Neal
1870 - 1889
Harriet
Justice
19
19
1876 - 1897
Emory
Justice
20
20
Living
Woodruff
Gallagher
1878
Laura
M.
Keys
1858 - 1937
Mary
Lucy
Johnson
78
78
1820
Levi
Waugh
Diana
Mays
(Maze)
John
Middleton
1806 - 1884
Nancy
Smith
Cypert
77
77
1825
Robinson
Perry
Talley
John
Anderson
Talley
Zachariah
Wilson
Talley
William Grief
Russell
Talley
Anthony
Gallagher
1832 - 1850
Elizabeth
Jane
Talley
17
17
George
Cypert
Talley
1830
Wilson
Talley
1839 - 1860
Tobias
H.
Talley
21
21
1842 - 1845
Francis
James
Talley
3
3
Sarah
Vida Ann
Talley
1849 - 1849
B L M
Talley
4m
4m
Isaac
Collins
Heath
Samuel
Heath
1800 - 1862
Joshua
Holden
62
62
1843 - 1907
Robert
Alexander
Morrison
64
64
1820 - 1852
Willey
Hines
Holden
31
31
1821
George
Richmond
Holden
1823 - 1845
James
H.
Holden
22
22
1824
Hulda
Maria
Holden
1826 - 1907
William
Riley
Holden
81
81
1828
John
R.
Holden
1830
Joshua
E
Holden
1831
Richard
Holden
1833
Elizabeth
Jane
Holden
1839 - 1843
Althena
Angeline
Holden
3
3
1848 - 1925
Laura
Albine
Isaccs
77
77
1843 - 1844
Rebecca
Holden
10m
10m
1846
Unknown
Holden
1810
Elizabeth
"Betsey"
1834 - 1918
Francis
Marion
Talley
84
84
1836
William
Talley
1838
Newton
Talley
1840
Seney
Talley
1842
Elizah
Talley
1843
Nancy
Talley
1845
Franklin
Talley
Andrew
Morrison
1846
Nancy
Talley
1848
John
Talley
Lucinda
Stanfield
Margaret
1824 - 1909
Caroline
C
Pound
84
84
1843
Josephine
"Sophia"
J. Talley
Marshall
J
Talley
1846
Meriman
A
Talley
1857
Emma
A
Talley
1810 - 1880
Katharine
Blair
70
70
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Katharine may have lived in Nauvoo, Illinois with her husband Allen. Allen and Katharine either divorced or Allen died before 1860 on his way to Salt Lake City, Utah. Katharine states in the LDS Temple records her maiden name as Blair. She also lists her father's place of birth as Ireland, which means she was probably aware of her mother's indiscretion with William Blair. Katharine went by the surname of Dilley in her childhood. Katharine may have also lived in Marshall County, Iowa, as son Elisha lists his place of birth there on the birth record of one of his children. He lists it as Illinois in censuses.
Jane
Wilson
Alma
A
Talley
Emma
Talley
Joseph
Talley
Elisha
Talley
David
Moore
1814 - 1872
Lydia
Dickey
57
57
William
Talley
Lucy
Talley
John
A
Talley
Rebecca
Talley
1809 - 1897
George
Washington
Isaccs
88
88
1847 - 1849
Joseph
Andrew
Talley
1
1
1849 - 1853
Zachary
Taylor
Talley
4
4
Nina
Talley
1813
Elizabeth
Simpson
1822
Malinda
Justice
Moses
Marion
Payne
George
Keys
Elizabeth
Waller
Richard
Andrews
Polly
H.
Baily
1824 - 1901
Jane
Ann
Eldridge
77
77
1834 - 1916
Isaac
Daniel
Varner
82
82
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Buried at Towanda, Butler County, Kansas.
1836 - 1875
Sarah
Amelia
Varner
39
39
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Buried at Fairview Cemetery, Butler County, Kansas
~1845
Roxanna
M
Varner
1848 - 1922
Lavosier
Marcello
Varner
73
73
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Lavosier Marcello Varner was short in stature and was "very German(Dutch)." He married young Lucretia Ellen Speake, who was part Indian. About fifteen years after his marriage to Lucretia, the young couple traveled with their five little children from Iowa to Oklahoma to take part in the great land rush. They wintered over in Parkersville, Kansas, waiting to continue their journey until after the birth of little Mary Lucy in 1885. Lavosier was a member of the Brethren Dunkard Church, and Lucretia also became a member. Although Lucretia is sa d to have been a domineering wife, Lavosier Varner loved her deeply as did her children. Lucretia was visiting on of her daughters who lived in Ellis County, when she died. Lucretia' s body was returned to Grandfield, and there she was buried in her Dunkard cap. After her death, Lavosier "died of a broken heart".
~1852
Louania
E
Varner
1852
Molona
E
Varner
Rhoda
Varner
~1856
John
A.
Varner
~1845
Margaret
J.
Hollenbeck
Jacob
Hollenbeck
Unknown
Isaccs
Manda
Bradley
1833 - 1910
Ruth
Amelia
Baker
77
77
1856 - 1877
Lucille
Evaline
Varner
21
21
1858 - 1936
Mary
Elizabeth
Varner
78
78
1859 - 1890
Isadora
Arbella
Varner
31
31
1861 - 1865
James
Nelson
Varner
4
4
1864 - 1943
Susie
Alveretta
Varner
79
79
1866 - 1954
Milton
Emery
Varner
88
88
1866 - 1929
Matilda
Emma
Varner
63
63
1870 - 1955
Dulcie
May
Varner
85
85
Julia
Or'caime
1873 - 1940
Ellis
Arvin
Varner
66
66
1876 - 1972
Franklin
Howard
Varner
96
96
1830 - 1908
David
Milton
Baker
78
78
1855 - 1942
Joseph
Warren
Baker
87
87
James
Willard
Baker
John
Ainsworth
Baker
Jacob
Wilson
Baker
Isaac
Milton
Baker
Lucy
Olive
Baker
Edith
Baker
1892 - 1950
Odie
Artemus
Floyd
57
57
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Odie was ashamed of his name, especially Artemus and liked to be known as O A Floyd. It is assumed that is the reason R A only had initials for a name.
1797 - 1849
William
Eldridge
52
52
1852 - 1922
Lucretia
Ellen
Speake
70
70
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Family lore said that Lucretia was part American Indian She is buried at Grandfield, Tillman County, Oklahoma.
1872 - 1952
Ida
Viola
Varner
79
79
1874 - 1931
Susan
Minetta
Varner
56
56
1878 - 1927
Carl
Raymond
Varner
48
48
1880 - 1955
Fred
Ellis
Varner
75
75
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Fred ran a bakery in Gage, Oklahoma.
1881 - 1951
Thomas
Warren
Varner
69
69
1885 - 1969
Mary
Lucy
Varner
83
83
1887 - 1905
Vesta
Olive
Varner
18
18
1888 - 1981
Cora
Edith
Varner
93
93
1890 - 1979
Myrtle
Elisabeth
Varner
88
88
1800
Harriet
F
Evans
1892
Alva
Albion
Varner
John
Moore
Hannah
Armstrong
~1803
Hannah
Varner
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] It is said that Hannah and John had at least eight children, only six of whom are known.
~1805
Samuel
Varner
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Little is known about Samuel Varner. Physically, he was dark i complection and was definitely German. He married five women in his lifetime, three of whom died young.
1806 - 1880
John
"Johnny"
Varner Jr
74
74
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Johnny Varner was twice married. He and two of his Varner brothers all married Andrews sisters rs. The Andrews were Quakers, a close-knit group of worshipers who were against marrying "co ntrary to discipline," (e.g. outside the church). John's first marriage was to seventeen-yea r-old Irena Andrews in 1827. Irena must have loved Johnny truly, for she paid a high price f or their love. A year and a half later (march 24, 1829) Irena was "disowned" from her church . The young couple settled in Barnsville, Ohio, and raised a large family of twelve children , all born in Barnsville. Before the outbreak fo the civil War, Johnny and Irena moved to Li nn County, Iowa. Johnny served in the Iowa Infantry during the Civil War. Not long after Ire na's death in 1868, Johnny married Julina (last name unknown).
~1808 - 1886
Isaac
Varner
78
78
~1813 - 1886
Daniel
M
Varner
73
73
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Like his two brothers, Daniel married an Andrews girl. The Andrews sisters were the daughter s of strict, Quaker parents. When Malinda married Daniel Varner, she was prohibited from rem aining a member of her church. Daniel and Malinda settled on a farm located on the south sid e of Flag Run. The Copelands and other Varner descendants lived north of Flag Run. The origi nal Varner home was a log cabin on a hill. Later descendants, Howard and Clel, told of seein g panthers and bears in earlier times around the old cabin.
~1818
Sarah
Varner
Joseph
Bomon
Evans
1828 - 1900
Armstrong
M
Varner
72
72
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] After Armstrong's siblings moved to Linn County, Iowa, he remained in Belmont County, Ohio . Although he did own land in neighboring Wayne Township in Monroe County. Armstrong married Lavinia and they lived on the old Varner homestead at Somerset. Armstrong ran a planning mill on the bottom of Flag Run. He built a "mill race" for water to run downhill from the spr ing to the creek. The race was lined with flagstone on the top, bottom and both sides, then covered with soil. The site of the mill had been an Indian campground where Indians came every fall to skin animals, dry the skins, and make jerky and Pemmican for the winter. There was also a salt lick nearby. The Varners let the Indians come in peace. They would exchange ideas about planting corn and other good farming ideas. After Armstrong's death, his bachelor sons, Howard and Clel, and their spinster sister Ruth , lived there in the original home until their deaths. They made a colorful trio. Howard and Clel Varner were very stern old men who wore "old-time Quaker hats," though they belonged o the Church of Christ. Children were afraid of the brothers who kept unwanted visitors out by threatening to shoot anyone who intruded on their property. Old Clel was so tight, he drove a 1912 car for eighteen years then sold it for fifteen dollars.
~1730
Adam
Varner
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Adam Varner and his wife Eve were first discovered in Bucks County, Pennsylvania records. Later they moved to Whitley Township, Green County. In a widely-circulated, old family letter, Isaac Daniel Varner wrote to a grandchild, "Well Now I will try and answer your questions . Your Grandfather Varner's name was Joseph and your Grand Mother's name was Lucy. Her maiden name was Andrews. A Half-sister to Tom Andrews. Your Great Grand Father Varner's name was John, and his wife's name was Sarah. Her maiden name was Moore. Your Great, great Grand Father Varner's name was Adam, and his wife's name was Eve. He lived to be one hundred and one, grandpa was a dutchman from Germany". He signed the letter, "I.D. Varner." According to oral family history, Adam Varner had a brother named, Peter (b. ca. 1734, d. ca . 1833), who died at the age of 99 years. Peter Varner is said to have been a companion of Daniel Boone, the famous explorer. Peter Varner went with Boone and Wetzel (the Indian fighter), and "settled a colony at Booneville." History records that Danie Boone was born in 1734 to a Quaker family and was raised in Berks County, Pennsylvania. In 1750, Boone's father m oved the family to the frontier country along the Yadkin River in North Carolina. In the yea r 1775, Daniel Boone set out with a party of thirty woodsmen, intent on widening the Indian t rail and establishing a route to the Kentucky wilderness so that settlers could move in an in habit the interior. Afterwards, the men built a forth south of the present-day town of Lexington, Kentucky and called it, "Boonesborough." Apparently Peter Varner was one of Boone's thirty woodsmen. AFN: 2TKQ-SP
D. >1850
Eve
Lnu
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] AFN BXTC-PO
Adam
Peter
Varner
~1732 - ~1833
Peter
Varner
101
101
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Family lore says that Peter was a companion of Daniel Boone and helped to establish Booneville e.
~1798 - 1881
John
Schaffer
83
83
~1830
John
Varner
Schaffer
~1833
Joseph
C
Schaffer
~1835
George
S
Schaffer
~1838
Isaac
D.
Schaffer
Wife
~1843
Daniel
W.
Schaffer.
~1846
Phoeba
Ann
Schaffer
Margaret
Lake
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Margaret apparently died very young. There are no known children from this marriage.
~1809 - 1834
Maria
Bonham
25
25
~1817
Mary
Hogue
Miller
Hogue
Tracy
Wilson
Susan
Lnu
Milly J
Lyons
1837
Lucy
Varner
1759 - 1844
John
Eldridge
85
85
1839
Sarah
Varner
1843
William
(possibly
Wilson) Varner
1844 - 1915
Samuel
Varner
Jr
71
71
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Samuel was born in Monroe County, Ohio. When he was a fifteen-year old boy, his family migrated ted to Brooke County (1860 Census) and then to New Martinsville, Wetzel, County, West Virginia a (1861). Civil War vet6 enlisted at age 17 in Co H. WV Infantry. He was captured and imprisoned at Libby y Prison in Richmond VA. After his parole in 1864, he returned to Shenandoah Valley, rejoined d his regiment and fought in the Battle of Winchester. Samuel was mustered out on November 2 6, 1864. After the war, Samuel returned to his boyhood home in Monroe County Ohio and became e a farmer. About 1867 he moved westward to Quenemo, Kansas where he was tax assessor, an d finally to Sonoma County California where he held several political offices.. Occupation: Farmer
1849 - 1919
Margaret
(Call?)
Stoffal
70
70
1867
Thaddeus
Alonzo
Varner
1870 - 1933
Clara
Jane
Varner
63
63
1872
Samuel
Sheridan
Varner
1875
Philip
Edward
Varner
1879
Rose
M
Varner
1881
Frederick
Garfield
Varner
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Fred was the Mayor of St Helena, Napa County, California in 1911.
Rebecca
Edwards
1884
Elsie
Margaret
Varner
1891
James
Blaine
Varner
~1846
Robert
Varner
~1847
Tamar
Varner
Augustus
M.
Kashner
1810 - 1868
Irena
Emma
Andrews
58
58
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] She and her two sisters who married John's brothers came from a strict Quaker family and all three were disowned by their church for their marriages. She is buried in Lafayette, Linn County, Iowa
Richard
Andrews
Polly
Bailey
1830
Barbara
Ellen
Varner
1832 - 1889
Rhoda
Jane
Varner
57
57
Living
O'Byrne
1833 - 1908
Maria
Emily
Varner
74
74
1836 - 1885
Malinda
Elma
Varner
49
49
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Malinda was ill for years with tuberculosis and cancer although she actually died of blood poisoning. Per Don R Varner
1838 - 1839
Richard
Lane
Varner
1
1
1840 - 1910
Axiah
Emily
Varner
69
69
1843 - 1923
John
Nelson
Varner
79
79
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Civil War Vet Co A, 31st Regt, 1st Iowa Vols. He fought under General Sherman from Mississippi i to Georgia in the famous "March to the Sea". John's cousin, Joseph (son of Isaac Varner's) , enlisted with John. John was discharged on June 27, 1865 due to sunstroke and rheumatism . He and his wife moved to Kansas then to Jasper County Missouri and finally to Perry Count y Oklahoma. At the time of his death he lived with his son George.
1845 - 1924
William
Henry
Varner
78
78
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] William Henry Varner was born on a farm near Barnsville, Ohio in 1845. He moved as a young boy with his family to the new frontier, Linn County, Iowa. There, he grew to manhood and fell in love with Nancy Emily Fitzgerrald, the youngest of 13 children. They were married in 18 65, and raised a large family of ten children, five of whom were born in Linn County. When he West opened up in the 1870's, William Henry and Nancy could not resist the call to "go West", so they bundled up their family in a covered wagon and headed for the open country called , Kansas. Their son, Frank Arthur, was born at Eldorado, Kansas. The rest of the children were born in Wichita. William Henry Varner followed the family's occupation of farming in Iowa. When he arrived n Kansas, he saw the need for draying service in the new frontier town of Wichita, a gathering place for immigrants before they settled in the Indian Nation, or in the countryside nearby . William Henry ran the dray service until the railroad connected with the outlying towns . Then, he turned toward building houses, with the help of his sons. It has been told that the Varners worked in constructing the railway station and on several churches. Grandpa Varner was about five feet, five inches tall, slightly stout, dark complexion and medium brown hair. He wore glasses and would seldom venture out without his hat. Grandpa wore boys' size four shoes and would brag about his small feet at family gatherings, saying "It is a sign of high intellect". Grandpa smoked a pipe, but sometimes he would smoke cigars . He played the fiddle for all the "hoe-downs" and harvest dances in nearby communities. Grandma Nancy had a cute sense of humor. When their daughter, Nellie, was being courted by Walt Outfield, he would arrange to be at the Varner house at mealtime. Walt would ask Nancy Varner, "What are you cooking for dinner?" She would always reply, "Beans". She knew Walt hated beans! Grandma nancy would make a dish called "thickened milk" for her family, but today , no one remembers how to prepare this tasty dish. Grandpa Varner liked bacon gravy and biscuits for breakfast, but one of his favorite items would be apple pie. He would say "The best way to start the day is with a piece of pie." Grandpa outlived his wife by almost twenty y ears. He often said that Grandma Nancy was the most wonderful girl in the world. Together Will and Nancy had ten children.
1848 - 1850
Samuel
Colson
Varner
2
2
1850 - 1852
Philip Mason
Thomas
Varner
1
1
1853
Joseph
Wilson
Varner
1828 - 1863
Sarah
Ann
Varner
34
34
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Sarah died at the age of 34, a few weeks after giving birth to their sixth child, John H.. ba by John died three moths after his mother .
Living
Kane
1829 - 1863
James William
Nicholas
Coffland
34
34
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] James served in the Union Army for seven months in 1865. James had enlisted at Steubenville , Ohio, as a sergeant in Co. "K", 186th Regt, Ohio Vol. Inf.
1853
Susan
I
Coffland
1855
Charles
Wesley
Coffland
1856
Francis
Allen
Coffland
1859 - 1910
Mary
Emma
Coffland
51
51
1863 - 1863
John
H.
Coffland
3m
3m
1851 - 1934
Eliza
Eleanor
Coffland
83
83
George
Bailey
Jane
Bailey
Anna
Bailey
Living
Kane
Tom
Bailey
Marion
Bailey
Becka
Bailey
Emma
Bailey
Henry
Thomas
Warrick
1831 - 1897
Andrew
J
Heaney
66
66
1864 - 1888
Louela
M
Heaney
24
24
1868 - 1870
William
R
Heaney
2
2
1871 - 1888
Mary I
Heaney
17
17
1833 - 1911
John
Milton
Coffland
78
78
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Civil War Vet Co A 31st Iowa Infantry. He apparently left his family to adventure in the west sometime after 1883 and had to borrow money to return to his wife's funeral. He could not even afford a headstone for her. He is buried at Idaho Soldiers Cemetery, Ada County, Idaho
Living
Davis
1855 - 1895
Lancelot
Columbus
Coffland
39
39
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] According to oral history Lancelot felt so badly-treated by his father, he was convinced that John considered him "the black sheep of the family." Lancelot told his children that once when he was a boy, his father sent him out in freezing weather to check on the cattle. Lancelot had just sat down in the snow to rest when a neighbor saw him. Fearing the boy would freeze to death, the neighbor yelled at Lancelot and scared him so that he jumped up and ran home. Later, the neighbor had sharp words with John Coffland for sending his boy out in such bad weather.
1859 - 1949
Mary
L
Coffland
89
89
1862
Ross
W
Coffland
1867 - 1941
Charles
Sylvester
Coffland
74
74
1870 - 1870
John
Nelson
Coffland
1870 - 1873
Fedela
Coffland
3
3
1875 - 1931
Ancil
Coffland
56
56
~1839
Roswell
Roger
Ward
Wellington
Ward
Antha
Ward
1898 - 1991
Fairy
Kathleen
Beaty
93
93
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] 1 _FA1 2 PLAC Social Security Number was 454-36-9215 Although Fairy remarried and is buried beside George C Reeves with a REEVES family headstone , she insisted that her marker read Fairy Floyd.
Living
Kane
Ell
Ward
Gene
Ward
Irena
Ward
Gertie
Ward
Ida
Ward
Sadie
Ward
~1874 - 1905
Julia
Ann
Bittle
31
31
1846 - 1889
Mary "Libby"
Elizabeth
Cress
43
43
1893
Ida
Mae
Varner
1895
Leroy
Edward
Varner
Living
Samstag
1900 - 1968
Jay
Dee
Varner
68
68
1849 - 1906
Nancy
Emily
Fitzgarrald
56
56
1866 - 1936
Lorandis
James
Varner
69
69
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Lorandis and Elsie were married in 1894. Eight years later, the young couple moved to Melbourne, Australia, where Lorandis was engaged in seeing after the interest of International Harvester Company. Elsie's health was poor, and she often fought against the depression and melancholy that is so often produced by invalidism. The Varners remained in Melbourne until Elsie had a relapse of illness, causing them to return to the US. They moved to Seattle, WA and lived there until Elsie's death in 1916. Lorandis remained a single widower for the next t welve years, when he married a second time.
1868 - 1879
Charlotte
Irena
Varner
11
11
1870 - 1919
Ancil
Davis
Varner
48
48
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Ancil D. Varner was a Linotype operator. Their religion was Presbyterian. Although Ancil didn't get very far in school, he wanted all his children to have a good education. According to daughter, Helen Varner Hancock, after her father's death, her mother and siblings moved to Oklahoma, where they struggled to make a living. When relatives suggested they migrate west to California, "no flies, no snow and no cold weather...it sounded like Utopia". In 1922 M rs. Ancil Varner and children made along and harrowing car trip through cold, muddy and dangerously narrow roads to Texas and on to California. The day they arrived at the home of Uncle Walt and Aunt Nell's house, it rained! There, the grandchildren became acquainted with Granpa William Henry Varner.
1873 - 1950
Nellie
Alice
Varner
76
76
1876 - 1908
Ora
Elvin
Varner
32
32
1878 - 1932
Frank
Arthur
Varner
53
53
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Frank was born in 1878 in El Dorado, Kansas. When a small boy, he moved with his parents t o Wichita, where he attended school. As a young man, he journeyed to Iowa and went into service with the Milwaukee-St Paul Railway, where he was employed for 25 years. In Marion, Iowa , Frank met Blanche Ethel Klumph. They were married in 1901 and raised four children. Nineteen years later, Frank and Blanche moved with their children to Los Angeles, where Frank went into the plastering contracting business.
1881 - 1957
Clarence
Elze
Varner
76
76
1884 - 1901
Jesse
Addison
Varner
17
17
Living
Kane
1886 - 1960
Lena
May
Varner
73
73
1889 - 1962
Ollie
Ray
Varner
72
72
Sara
Jane
Dennison
Deva
Varner
Edith
Varner
Rita
Varner
Henry
Varner
1818 - 1905
Phoebe
Ann
Clark
87
87
~1834
Hannah
S
Varner
1836 - 1917
Martha
Varner
80
80
Living
Kane
1841
Sarah
Varner
~1842 - 1909
Joseph
Varner
67
67
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Civil War Vet Co A, 31st Regt Iowa Vols. He was wounded several times and lost toes to gangrene. Wounded in the hip in a battle near Greensboro, NC he was taken prisoner. He died at the Solders Home in Marshaltown Iowa.
1844 - 1921
Letitia
Mary
Varner
76
76
~1846
Glafiary
Varner
1852 - 1927
Phoebe
Ann
Varner
75
75
Isaac
Merrill
John
Nutt
L M
Chambers
Samuel
Blaine
John
H.
Haney
Living
Brotkoy
Mary
Isabelle
Blaine
Scott
Phillips
~1847 - ~1895
Lucinda
Jones
48
48
1883 - 1965
Rose
Varner
82
82
1868
Phoebe
C.
Varner
1869
Malinda
Varner
1872
Ida
Jane
Varner
1875 - 1909
Sarah
M
Varner
34
34
1876
Vietta
Varner
1888
Oley
Varner
Living
Nering
~1836
John
Andrews
Zury
Jones
1849 - 1922
Armstrong
L.
Varner
72
72
~1852
Ida R
Wright
Permilla
Snodgrass
1869
Lavina
Kimbro
Rosy
Ann
Varner
1874 - 1965
Isaac
Ogden
Varner
91
91
William
L
Varner
Sellesta
Jane
Varner
Living
Nering
Mary
Agneline
Varner
Maud
May
Varner
Eva
Varner
Mabel
Varner
Delilah
Varner
Wesley
Varner
Leslie
Varner
Goldie
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Nering
Living
Varner
Fnu
Scaggs
~1846
George
F
Wright
Daughter
Wright
Frank
Wright
Charles
Wright
Harry
Wright
Isaiah
Wright
~1814
Malinda
Andrews
Richard
Andrews
Living
Nering
Polly
Baily
~1838 - 1916
Lucy
Campsidel
Varner
78
78
~1840 - >1889
John
S J
Varner
49
49
~1846
Irena
E
Varner
~1849 - 1887
Malinda
Ann E
Varner
38
38
1858 - 1882
Wilson
Varner
24
24
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Died of Typhoid Fever
1836 - 1863
Amos
Sinclair
Byers
27
27
1833
Robert
Copeland
1873 - 1949
John
Tait
Copeland
76
76
1860
Oriel L
Byers
Living
Nering
1862
Amos
Sinclair
Byers Jr
Elizabeth
Lnu
Jonathan
McElroy
Jesse
L
Coulter
1826 - 1913
Lavina
Lnu
87
87
1853
Matilda
A A
Varner
~1857
John
W T
Varner
~1858
Daniel M
Howard
Varner
~1860 - ~1932
Sarah
Ruth
Varner
72
72
~1864
Francis
Varner
1915 - 1982
R A
Floyd
67
67
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] 1 _FA1 2 PLAC Social Security Number was 558-30-6258
Living
Richey
>1870 - ~1945
Marion
McClelland
Varner
75
75
Floyd
Walter
Floyd
Hattie
Floyd
Living
Floyd
1838 - 1919
William
H.
Floyd
81
81
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] William H. Floyd Served in Company F 22nd Tennessee Calvary C.S.A under Captain John Richardson. It is said that he joined the army when he was14 years old. He served 3 years and six months as a private. He was injured while building a bridge at Bridgeport Alabama. He was shot once in the foot and once in the leg and later drew a disability pension from the State of Texas #4526. 1870 (219) Van Zandt County Census and 1880 (313) Wood County Censuses have William Floyd living there.
1841 - 1921
Mary
Elizabeth
Tyson
80
80
Walter
Floyd
Betty
Taylor
1781 - 1847
Susan
Strother
66
66
Living
Richey
1803 - 1877
Joseph
Benjamin
Ingram
73
73
1805 - 1889
Wincy
C.
Ingram
83
83
1815 - 1880
Jeremiah
Ingram
65
65
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Book: Montgomery County Heritage North Carolina Article: The Ingram Family #558 Written by: Winnie Ingram Richter page: 252 Jeremiah, son of William Pines and Susan Strother, was born 14 Feb 1815 and died 9 Dec 1880 . In 1838 Jeremiah married Mary (Polly) Crump, born 25 Aug 1816, died Aug 12, 1892. She was the daughter of Stephen and Sarah Easley Crump. They were the parents of six boys and two girls.
1819 - 1882
Benjamin
F.
Ingram
63
63
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Moved to Eastern Texas before the War Between the States.
Eben
D.
Ingram
Catherine
Ingram
Parr
Julia
Ingram
M. W.
Burroughs
Clementine
Ingram
Living
Richey
William
Pines
Ingram Jr.
Susan
Ingram
John
Ingram
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] The Ingrams immigrated to this country from Wales, and are known to have been in Northumberlan d County, Virginia, before the middle of the seventeenth century. Four generations later Jose ph Ingram (1744-1828)settled in Anson County, North Carolina. He was born in Culpepper County , Virgina, the son of John Ingram and Hannah Pines; tradition says that seven of John Ingram 's sons served in the American Revolution,and of these Joseph was one. 1790 Anson Co.,NC Fayette Census 1790 Census North Carolina Anson County Fayette district 1st # free white males 16 year upwards and head of families 2nd # free white males under 16 years 3rd # free white females and head of families 4th # all other free persons ` 5th # slaves Lampden, Robert...............................1-0-2-0-0 Arthur, John......................................1-3-3-0-0 Searcy, William.................................2-0-2-0-0 Wood, William...................................1-3-2-0-0 Denson, Shadrack..............................1-0-0-0-0 Denson, Jesse...................................1-0-0-0-0 Nayes, & Porter, Mess'rs....................6-0-0-0-2 Ponsey, Godfrey................................1-0-1-0-0 Barnwell, Joseph...............................1-0-0-0-0 Gilbert, Jesse....................................2-2-5-0-6 Yarborough, Humphrey.......................1-1-1-0-0 Yarborough, William...........................1-0-0-0-0 Allman, James...................................3-3-6-0-0 Williams, John...................................2-2-5-0-0 Treddiway, Daniel..............................1-3-4-0-0 Bloodworth, John...............................4-2-3-0-0 Bass, Frederick.................................3-2-3-0-0 Lee, William......................................1-2-2-0-0 Dudney, John....................................1-2-4-0-0 Bylue, Henry.....................................1-3-5-0-0 Soward, Nancy..................................0-1-4-0-0 Stinson, Mary....................................1-2-4-0-0 Proctor, Linney..................................0-2-6-0-0 Jones, Honor.....................................0-2-2-0-0 Odom, Richard..................................1-0-2-0-9 Ricketts, John...................................2-3-3-0-0 Scott, Drury......................................0-0-0-4-0 Scott, Francis...................................0-0-0-1-0 Newton, John....................................2-1-2-0-0 Bailey, Jacob....................................1-0-1-0-0 Murphy, John....................................3-2-3-0-0 Benton, James..................................1-1-5-0-0 Johnston, John..................................1-6-4-0-0 Wade, Thomas..................................5-1-2-0-17 Wright, John jr...................................1-1-1-0-8 Bailey, Mathew.................................1-3-3-0-0 Bailey, Thomas.................................1-2-5-0-0 Arrington, James...............................2-5-2-0-0 Johnston, John jr...............................1-3-1-0-0 Ingram, John.....................................1-5-5-0-0 McRae, Daniel..................................1-3-4-0-0 Bylue, Abraham................................1-0-2-0-0 Duglas, James..................................1-1-1-0-8 German, Robert.................................2-2-2-0-0 Hall, Robert.......................................1-0-0-0-0 Stanfill, Sampson............................1-1-3-0-0 Dabbs, Josiah...................................1-0-3-0-0 May, William.....................................2-4-5-0-7 Threadgill, Randal..............................1-3-1-0-0 Sasser, Joseph.................................2-2-5-0-0 Childs, Elizabeth...............................1-0-2-0-5 Rogers, Job......................................3-1-3-0-0 Hilldreath, David................................1-3-3-0-0 Gould, Daniel....................................1-2-3-0-4 Dejarnet, Mumford(minors).................0-2-0-0-5 Kirby, William...................................1-2-3-0-7 Hinson, John....................................3-3-5-0-3 Boggan, Patrick................................1-2-8-0-7 Lanler, William..................................1-1-2-0-10 Covington, Simon...............................1-1-1-0-0 Johnston, William..............................3-6-6-0-0 Duncan, John....................................2-2-3-0-0 Gordon, Frederick..............................2-2-2-0-1 May, Lewis.......................................1-1-1-0-3 Taylor, Charles..................................2-1-4-0-0 Lindsey, George................................2-2-4-0-1 Candell, Elizabeth..............................1-0-1-0-0 Clinton, Thomas................................1-0-1-0-5 Tarlton, Thomas.................................1-2-2-0-0 Pace, Stephen..................................2-3-5-0-8 Threadgill, John.................................1-5-4-0-0 Lanier, Isaac.....................................1-0-1-0-7 Gathings, Philip................................3-3-3-0-1 Farr, Richard jr..................................1-0-1-0-0 Rushing, William...............................1-4-1-0-0 Hammonds, George..........................1-4-2-0-9 Crawford, Michael..............................2-4-4-0-12 May, William [carpenter]....................1-3-2-0-8 1st # free white males 16 year upwards and head of families 2nd # free white males under 16 years 3rd # free white females and head of families 4th # all other free persons 5th # slaves May, William jr..................................1-1-2-0-0 Lanier, Burwell..................................2-1-5-0-28 McClendon, Ezekiel..........................1-4-3-0-0 Trull, Stephen....................................1-0-0-0-0 Williams, Josiah................................1-0-1-0-0 Bailey, Lydia.....................................2-2-1-0-0 Isgett, Joseph....................................1-5-3-0-0 McAskill, Daniel................................2-0-2-0-0 Franklin, Lawrence jr.........................1-0-1-0-0 Lisles, James...................................1-4-3-0-1 Gulledge, William..............................1-2-4-0-0 Bennet, Neavel..................................1-0-1-0-2 Morris, William..................................1-1-2-0-2 Smith, Edward..................................3-2-4-0-0 Diggs, Marshal..................................5-4-3-0-1 Kindred, Elisha.................................1-1-2-0-2 Ryal, John........................................1-0-0-0-1 Colson, Joseph.................................1-1-2-0-5 West, John.......................................2-3-2-0-0 Wynn, Zachariah...............................0-0-0-1-0 Garrot, James...................................1-0-0-0-0 Lewis, Jeremiah................................1-0-1-0-0 Booth, John......................................1-1-4-0-0 Bird, John.........................................1-3-5-0-6 Richeson, William.............................1-5-3-0-2 Dabbs, Nathaniel..............................2-3-3-0-1 Lewis, Thomas..................................1-4-7-0-3 Osborne, Nathan...............................1-0-3-0-0 Davis, Arthur.....................................1-4-6-0-0 Birmingham, Johua............................1-2-5-0-0 Birmingham, Charles.........................2-0-1-0-0 Ellis, Thomas....................................1-0-4-0-0 McClendon, Benjamin........................1-0-0-0-0 Knotts, John jr..................................1-1-2-0-0 Franklin, Laurence Sr.........................1-0-2-0-0 Wright, John.....................................1-0-2-0-0 Smith, John jr...................................1-1-2-0-0 Demery, Allen..................................0-0-0-7-0 Grissard, Hardy................................1-4-4-0-1 Smith, John Sr..................................2-4-2-0-0 White, Joseph..................................3-0-1-0-5 Burres, Joshua.................................1-4-4-0-3 Davis, Joshua...................................1-3-1-0-0 Brown, Morgan.................................4-1-2-1-5 Tarlton, Britton..................................1-0-1-0-0 Tarlton, John.....................................1-1-1-0-0 Knotts, John Sr.................................1-1-3-0-0 Lambden, Bixley, jr...........................2-1-2-0-0 Nash, Michael...................................2-1-3-0-0 Franklin, Esom.................................1-2-2-0-0 White, Henry....................................1-2-1-0-0 May, William (2nd)............................1-0-1-0-1 Lowe, William...................................1-1-2-0-0 White, George..................................1-1-2-0-0 Hill, John..........................................1-4-1-0-0 Baylor, John.....................................1-3-1-0-0 Ingram, Jesse...................................1-0-0-0-0 Ingram, John jr..................................1-1-4-0-0 Stanfill, John.....................................1-1-3-0-0 White, John......................................1-0-2-0-0 Dixon, John......................................1-1-2-0-0 Rushing, Robert................................2-4-4-0-0 Beachum, Jesse...............................1-0-2-0-0 Kirby, John.......................................1-0-5-0-17 Jackson, Isaac..................................1-1-3-0-2 Jackson, John...................................1-0-2-0-1 Hough, Hezekiah...............................5-0-5-0-6 Adams, Zadock...............................1-0-0-0-0 White, Joseph..................................1-4-2-0-6 Colson, Mary....................................0-3-6-0-17 Howlet, Mary....................................2-1-5-0-0 Ross, Hugh......................................3-0-4-0-1 Ledbetter, Zedekiah...........................1-2-5-0-6 Rarliff, James....................................1-1-2-0-0 Ratliff, Rob't C.................................1-0-0-0-0 Bylue, John.......................................1-0-0-0-0 Long, Nancy.....................................0-0-1-0-0 Bass, Frederick jr.............................0-0-0-3-0 Ratliff, Zacharius...............................1-0-0-0-0 Jackson, Agnes................................1-0-5-0-0 1st # free white males 16 year upwards and head of families 2nd # free white males under 16 years 3rd # free white females and head of families 4th # all other free persons 5th # slaves Hinson, Benjamin..............................2-4-6-0-2 Weatherford, Charles.........................1-5-4-0-0 German, William...............................1-1-1-0-0 Lee, Robert......................................3-1-3-0-1 Ganade, Martin.................................1-2-1-0-6 Threadgill, William.............................1-1-2-0-7 Pursley, Anthony..............................1-3-1-0-0 Atkins, Lewis....................................1-1-5-0-0 Lowry, John......................................1-3-4-0-1 Diggs, Pleasant................................1-1-1-0-0 Bittle, John.......................................1-0-1-0-0 Tatum, Jesse....................................1-0-1-0-0 Plant, Williamson..............................1-1-3-0-0 Temple, Frederick.............................2-3-2-0-1 Mooreman, Benjamin........................1-3-1-0-1 Hinson, Charles................................1-0-1-00 Yarborough, James...........................1-1-3-0-0 Mills, John.......................................1-2-5-0-3 Boggan, James Sr.............................5-4-5-0-0 May, Starling....................................1-2-2-0-0 Nichols, Isaac..................................1-0-3-0-0 Lambden, John.................................1-2-4-0-0 Harrell, James..................................1-1-1-0-0 Davidson, Daniel...............................3-2-4-0-0 Ryal, James.....................................1-3-1-0-0 House, Thomas................................1-0-0-0-0 Brewer, John....................................1-0-3-0-0 Pound, Samuel.................................1-0-0-0-0 Baker, James...................................1-2-2-0-0 Falkner, Arch'd.................................1-0-2-0-0 Culpepper, John................................1-1-3-0-0 Dabbs, John.....................................1-2-2-0-0 Cox, William....................................1-2-2-0-0 Vivon, Charles..................................1-0-2-0-9 Wadkins, Christo'.............................3-1-2-0-1 Boggan, James jr.............................1-0-1-0-1 Wisdom, William..............................2-3-5-0-0 Breler, Elisha...................................1-1-2-0-0 Rushing, Abraham............................3-2-3-0-3 Sparks, Charles................................3-1-1-0-3 Watts, Malachis...............................1-1-5-0-6 Colson, John....................................1-0-1-0-9 Whitlow, Henry.................................1-0-1-0-0 White, John......................................1-0-0-0-0 Mullis, John......................................1-1-1-0-0 Winfield, Peter..................................1-1-4-0-4 Nash, Griffin......................................1-1-1-0-0 Presley, Elias...................................1-3-1-0-0 Rushing, Philip.................................1-3-3-0-0 Harrel, Zachariah..............................1-0-0-0-0 Hamer, Mary....................................3-1-4-0-5 Leonard, Jonas.................................1-0-1-0-0 Loyd, Edward...................................1-0-4-0-0 Griffin, David.....................................2-4-4-0-0 Williams, Roland...............................1-4-5-0-3 Hamer, Frances................................1-2-3-0-9 Melton, Jesse...................................1-0-0-0-0 Melton, John.....................................1-0-5-0-0 Huntly, Thomas Sr.............................2-0-7-0-0 Rushing, Philip jr...............................1-2-2-0-0 Medows, Thomas..............................3-4-4-0-0 Jackson, David..................................1-2-1-0-0 Wilson, Samuel................................2-2-0-0-3 Tison, Jehu......................................1-6-2-0-2 Gaddy, Thomas................................1-4-4-0-0 Dale, John........................................1-0-0-0-0 Ferrell, Charles.................................1-1-5-0-0 Hellems, Betty..................................0-0-1-0-0 Hellems, William...............................1-2-4-0-0 Hellems, John...................................1-0-2-0-0 Hellems, Tillman...............................1-3-2-0-0 Hellmans, David................................1-0-0-0-0 Hellems, Jacob.................................1-1-5-0-0 Head, Olive.......................................1-2-2-0-0 Beachum, William..............................2-1-3-0-1 Beachum, Susannah.........................1-0-2-0-0 Tompkins, Thomas............................1-0-1-0-0 Price, John.......................................1-0-1-0-0 Curtis, Elijah.....................................1-2-3-0-2 Madcalf, William...............................1-3-3-0-1 Transcribed by: Alice Ohlsson Tatum Frendlysky@@aol.com Page Two Back to Anson County NCGenweb Home Page
Hannah
Pines
D. <1818
Jesse
Ingram
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] This information is supplied by: Marilyn Corley 104 Poinsettia Dr Forest, MS 39074 in a letter dated August 05, 1988
~1794 - 1850
Lemuel
Ingram
56
56
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Information provided by: Marilyn Corley, 104 Poinsettia Dr, Forest, MS39074 in a letter date d August 5, 1988. WILL: Located in Russell County, NC Lemuel (Husband)) Book 2, Page 14Book of Wills 1850-1873 Book: "Ingram Family History" by Mary Ruth Stulta of 5800 Swarthmore College Park, Maryland 2 0740
Sophia
Wood
Billingsley
John
Billingsley
Charity
Ford
1813 - 1885
Samuel
Pines
72
72
Living
Richey
1816 - 1887
Benjamin
Ingram
71
71
1818 - 1861
Charity
Ann
Ingram
42
42
1821 - 1878
Presley
N
Ingram
57
57
1823 - 1887
Winifred
Nelms "Wincy"
Ingram
64
64
Martin
Pickett
Myers
1824 - 1860
Sarah
Jane
Ingram
35
35
1827 - 1907
John
Billingsley
Ingram
79
79
Jemima
Louise
Watkins
James
Watkins
Phoebe
1916 - 1999
Aileen
Mitchell
83
83
Eleanor
Covington
Robert
Covington
Mary
Hicks
1814
Phoebe
D
Ingram
1817 - 1848
Eliza
Hawkins
Ingram
31
31
1819 - 1883
Winifred
Pines
Ingram
63
63
John
C
Wadsworth
1826 - 1853
William
R
Ingram
26
26
1827 - 1912
Mary
Hellen
Ingram
84
84
John
Watkins
1946 - 1968
Katherine
Mary Kane
Kane
22
22
1829 - 1893
Joseph
Lemuel
Ingram
64
64
Martha
Young
1831 - 1863
Eben
Nelms
Ingram
32
32
1833
Jeremiah
(James)
Brown Ingram
Sarah
Smith
1835 - 1919
Sarah
Jane
Ingram
83
83
John
W.
Anderson
1838 - 1913
Thomas
Coke
Ingram
75
75
Jr.
Dunlap
George
George
Dunlap
Living
Kane
Nancy
Richardson
1810 - 1880
Benjamin
Ingram
Dunlap
69
69
1812 - 1897
Eliza
Jane
Dunlap
85
85
1815 - 1889
Joseph
Fletcher
Dunlap
74
74
Wincy
Dunlap
Matilda
Wilkins
Rebecca
Allen
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Rebecca Allen info from 1812 War Pension Papers
~1817 - ~1849
Sarah
Ingram
32
32
1820 - 1902
William
Lemuel
Ingram
82
82
Penelope
Ingram
Living
Rucker
Elizabeth
Ingram
Mary
Ingram
Thomas
Ingram
Martha
Mariah
Ingram
Ann
Waddell
Eliza
Ingram
Wall
1826 - 1910
Thomas
J
Ingram
84
84
Arena
C
Funderburk
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Book: East View Cemetery by Anson Historical Society: She is buried section C. There is a slight year difference in the death. In the works received from the North Carolina archives, her death is shown as 1915, but the book on East View Cemetery states it as 1916.
1833 - 1898
Mary
Ingram
64
64
Cameron
Morrison
Kane
Uriah
Staton
1836 - 1909
William
Alexander
Ingram
73
73
1842 - 1905
Edward
Benjamin
Ingram
62
62
D. 1918
Presley
Ingram
Jennie
Ingram
Sr.
Ingram
James
Young
Allen
Abner
Ely
Louis
Smith
Jr.
Pickett
Martin
Living
Kane
Martin
Pickett
Raiford
1832 - 1888
Martha
F
Pickett
56
56
1834 - 1904
W M
Pickett
70
70
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Book: East View Cemetery by Anson county Historical Society: He is buried in section O along with his wife Mary J. He was an attorney at law, a member of both House and State Legislature of NC, and a Col in the War between the States. This data is located on page 11 of section O.
1837 - 1884
Mary
J.
47
47
1816 - 1892
Mary
Crump
75
75
Stephen
Crump
Sarah
Easley
1837 - 1919
Nancy
Ingram
82
82
1839 - 1920
William
Stevens
Ingram
81
81
Living
Floyd
Living
Rucker
1850 - 1936
James
Atlas
Ingram
85
85
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] James Atlas, born 9 Aug 1850 died 6 Mar 1936, was the youngest son of Jeremiah and Polly Crump Ingram. When the war between the North and South was raging, James was a young boy of eleven years. He often told his friends of an incident of a time when a Yankee appeared in the yard and James began firing his gun and the Yankee left hurriedly without searching the premises. In 1869 James west to Missouri with a friend, Thomas Threadgill. A Yankee came to their room and started an argument about the War. Threadgill told James to raise the window and throw the "damn Yankee"out. The Yankee didn't wait to be thrown out - he left hurriedly. James stayed in Missouri four years before returning to his parents home in Anson County, North Carolina . James went to Richmond County to visit his brother, Eben, who lived at the Grassy Islands. There was good farming land and James decided he would stay and become a farmer. There was a small house by the road near the creek where he lived for three years. While living there he met the daughter of Frank and Elizabeth Bruton Baldwin. James Atlas Ingram and Emma Ella Baldwin were married November 7, 1877. They lived at Grassy Island a few years after their first child was born. In the summer the low land became infested with mosquitoes and they would move to the house on the mountain. When they expected their second child, they moved to Mountain Creek in Black Jack Township. Their house was small and as the family grew, four rooms were added. Several years later he bought many acres of land in the surrounding area. Cotton, corn, wheat and all kinds of vegetables were grown. Horses, cows, pigs, chickens, and ducks were raised , and a farm could not be without dogs and cats. There was a big barn where feed for the stock was stored; this was the horses and mule barn. There was a special barn for the cows and stalls to put them in for milking. On the river there was a mill which was powered by an overshop waterwheel. Corn was ground d for meal and feed for the animals. In front of the house was a commissary stocked with staples for the family and the people who worked on the farm. There was a blacksmith shop where shoes were made for the horses and mules and farm tools were repaired.
1853 - 1854
Mary
B
Ingram
1
1
Polly
Ingram
Eben
N.
Ingram
Joseph
Ingram
George
Ingram
Martha
Wall
1849 - 1921
James
Alston
Ingram
72
72
1853 - 1878
Edwin
Wall
Ingram
24
24
William
Thomas
Ingram
1886 - 1970
Icy
Newcomb
84
84
D. 1921
Stephen
Ingram
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] he had three sons and three daughters
Lena
Butterworth
Joseph
E.
Ingram
Benjamin
Ingram
Effie
Muler
Robert
Ingram
Susan
Ingram
Charles
Davis
Henrietta
Ingram
George
A
Davidson
Living
Jaerger
Woodson
Crump
Living
Crump
Living
Crump
Living
Crump
Living
Crump
Living
Crump
Rebecca
Scott
Robert
Scott
Pittman
1842
Ann S
Ingram
1843 - 1921
John
D. Bell
78
78
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] John D Bell was engaged in farming. He owned 78+117 acres in Section 5,Washington Township , Monroe County; this information was taken from pages126 and 128. He also owned 80 acres in Section 35. Taken from Caldwell's Atlas of Monroe County, Ohio 1898 call# G1398, M6C3, 189 8aORR at the Rutherford B Hayes Library, Fremont, Ohio published by Atlas Publishing Company , Mt Vernon, Ohio. John D. Bell served in the 2st Tennessee Infantry (Prov), CSA during the Civil War under Gen Braxton Bragg in Company F and was a Captain.
Rodgers
1844 - 1862
Robert
L
Ingram
17
17
1846 - 1926
Samuel
Pines
80
80
1849 - 1933
William
Presley
Ingram
83
83
Mary
N.
Owens
1850 - 1854
B R
Ingram
3
3
1853 - 1921
Thomas
J
Ingram
67
67
1855
Sallie
Ingram
1857 - 1861
Albert
Ingram
4
4
1860 - 1913
Wilma
Myrtle
Ingram
53
53
Lucy
Varner
Nancy
Jane
Bennett
William
Bennett
Susannah
Dunn
1842 - 1842
William
Lemuel
Ingram
3m
3m
1844 - 1864
Eben
Presly
Ingram
20
20
1846 - 1902
Thomas
Jeremiah
Ingram
56
56
1852 - 1900
Charles
Nelms
Ingram
48
48
Risden
H.
Bennett
William
Bennett
Susannah
Dunn
1852 - 1932
James
Alexander
Graham Bell
80
80
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] James Alexander Bell homesteaded his farm and later donated a corner of his land for the first Pleasant Ridge School. When Grandfather Bell died he left his three older children 80 acres each. Aunt Gladys received 80 acres and the old homestead north of Newton Allens farm. His two younger children recei ved 120 acres. His big house near Council Grove was sold and still stands today.
1836 - 1920
Eugenia
Bennett
84
84
1838 - 1917
Pressley
Lemuel
Bennett
79
79
1844
Wincy
Sophia
Bennett
1846
Wincy
L
Bennett
1850 - 1943
Roland
Risden
Bennett
92
92
Maticia
Orathy
Parker
1862
Lottie
Sophia
Ingram
1870
John
Lemuel
Ingram
1874
Cora
Cornelia
Ingram
1844 - 1933
Mary
France
Horne
88
88
1861 - 1927
Mary
Lucy
Varner
66
66
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Mary Lucy Varner was one of the first teachers in District 58, Pleasant Ridge, Morris County . The school was located at SE34-T14-R8E. The school opened in 1881 and closed in 1950. Sadie Farbridge was the first teacher. The Pleasant Ridge Church is Latitude: 38.4658 N Longitude :096.3005 W. She was 18 years old when she came with her parents to Parkerville Kansas in 1879.
Joel
Horne
Elizabeth
Baldwin
1867 - 1867
Anna
Sophia
Ingram
4m
4m
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Anna is buried in the Horne Family Cemetery located on the Virginia Horne Farm, Stanback Ferry Road, 9 miles from Wadesboro, Anson, NC.
1869 - 1963
Elizabeth
Lilla
Ingram
93
93
1877 - 1963
Mary
Belle
Ingram
85
85
1879
Mary
F
Ingram
Elizabeth
Little
William
Little
Elizabeth
Steele
1839 - 1875
Annie
Elizabeth
Stanback
36
36
1884 - 1888
Joseph
Trim
Bell
4
4
1841 - 1919
Mary
Jennings
Stanback
78
78
Henry
Wall
Ledbetter
1842 - 1864
George
Stanback
22
22
1843 - 1876
Charlotte
Elanor
Stanback
32
32
John
M.
Ross
1845 - 1864
William
Little
Stanback
19
19
1847 - 1914
Thomas
Francis
Stanback
66
66
1849 - 1923
Presley
N
73
73
1851 - 1851
Walter
Phillips
Stanback
6m
6m
1852 - 1927
Jeremiah
Franklin
Stanback
74
74
1841 - 1929
Richard
Ellis
Varner
88
88
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Grandpa Varner was a carpenter by trade and lived in Parkerville, Kansas. He appeared on the census in 1900 in Parker TWP, Morris County, Kansas. 4/17/99 - Interview with Ed Hurt Long Time Citizen of Parkerville, KS -Now 80 Years Old. Mr. Hurt said he remembers both Joe and "Dicky" Varner. Joe ran the livery stable and seemed d to be very personable. Dicky however, was somewhat of a recluse. He remembers when he was young, coming home from school one day and tying his horse up to the post in front of "Dicky' s"house. "Dicky" came out and told him to take the horse away and never tie it there again. Mr. Hurt said that a couple from California purchased the "Dicky" Varner house and has redone it. They have put a lot of work in it he said. He also said that a man from Wichita came in and purchased to old Joe Varner land and stable . Wanted to take the rock blocks and move them to Wichita to build a house. He had the livery stable torn down, but when he found out how much it would cost to move the blocks, he left them piled on the ground where they still remain. Joe Varner's house is boarded up and has been taken by the State for back taxes. AFN VHMM-H#
1854 - 1855
John
Little
Stanback
9m
9m
1856 - 1927
Charles
Stanback
70
70
1859 - 1940
Judith
Steel
Stanback
81
81
Abner
Y
Howell
1820 - 1863
Thomas
J
Howell
43
43
1831 - 1863
Samuel
P
Howell
32
32
1835
Presley
Nelms
Howell
1837
William
Rufus
Howell
1840
Brackett
Owen
Howell
1840
Winifred
Eugenia
Howell
1871 - 1961
Frank
Dilley
Allen
89
89
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Was the rural mail carrier in Seibert, Colorado until he retired.
1843
Eliza N
Howell
Espie
Howlett
1845
Rebecca
Helen
Howell
1849
Margaret
A "Maggie"
Howell
1852
Emma
Dean
Howell
1855
J Alice
Howell
Henry
A
Covington
Thomas
W
Covington
Mary
Ellen
Covington
Louise
J
Covington
1879 - 1952
Walter
Wirt
Sibley
72
72
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] 1 _FA1 2 DATE 15 OCT 1919 2 PLAC Walter was ordained a Baptist minister at Elm Mott Baptist Church. Walter was a baptist minister in Texas. He was considered a very strict,regimented father . He was also known to be very vain and believed himself to be very much the ladies man.
1870 - 1937
Harriett
Elizabeth
Allen
67
67
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Harriett died of a heart attack She was trained as a nurse and also taught school. Their wedding was very large and the other girls said it was so much work they didn't want one like it.
Alex
Winburn
Eliza H
Covington
F M
Emery
1826 - 1853
William
R
Ingram
26
26
Laura
Liles
1852
Therodora
Dimock
Ingram
1838 - 1913
Thomas
Coke
Ingram
75
75
Louise
Robinson
Alexander
Susan
McPherson
1871
Theo
Dora
Ingram
1876 - 1964
Mildred Jane
(Armilda)
Allen
87
87
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Mildred Jane received grade school education in Morris county, KS. and attended State Teachers College at Emporia. Taught several terms of rural school in Morris County. First home after marriage was a farm on Slough Creek between Kelso and Council Grove, KS. In 1908, Edmund, Mildred with Allen and Wilma homesteaded near Siebert, Colorado. Lived 14 months in a one room sod house which they built with sod plowed from the 160 acre homestead. Moved to a farm five miles west of Council Grove for several years then into Council grove and in 1920 to Santa Paula, California for one year. Moved to Manhattan, KS in 1921.
Howell
Taylor
1874
Sarah Eleanor
"Essie"
Ingram
1876
Tommie
Ingram
1879
Bessie
Ingram
J W
Stringer
1883
Joe L
Ingram
Susan
Isabelle
Ingram
Eliza
Ann
Crump
Stephen
Crump
Sarah
Easley
1883 - 1966
Ethan
Lee
Allen
83
83
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Ethan died of a stroke.
1837
Stephen
T
Dunlap
1839
John
Jennings
1841
George
T
1844
Agnes
C
Dunlap
1847
David
Richardson
Dunlap
1849
James
A
Dunlap
1853
Hannah
Pines
Dunlap
Christopher
Watkins
1837
Araninta
Jane
Watkins
1842
Winifred
Watkins
1867 - 1931
Dr. William
T (Doc)
Harvey
64
64
Louise
Watkins
Martha
Burroughs
Bryan
Burroughs
Sarah
P
Dunlap
1838
George
Bryan
Dunlap
1839
Winifred
Dunlap
Columbus
A
Abercrombie
Young
C
Allen
JamesTyson
1848
William
A.
Tyson
1875 - 1943
Edmund
J
Hotchkiss
68
68
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Edmund was one of the first homesteaders in Eastern Colorado near Seibert. Edmund died from ulcers.
Laura
Josephine
Barnhardt
Jacob
Barnhardt
Jane
Melchor
1880
Rena
Ingram
Ella
Jane
Ellerbe
John
Ellerbe
Mary
Strother
Minnie
Ingram
Post
S P
Waddell
1903 - 1995
Ellouise
Allen
91
91
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Died of a heart problem
Living
Waddell
Living
Waddell
Jr.
Ingram
James
Kitty
Ingram
Eugenia
Ingram
Minnie
Ingram
Thomas
Waddell
Kendall
John
Kendall
Winifred
Turner
1848
Robert
A
Kendall
Living
L.
Hildebrecht
1849
Infant
Male
Kendall
1854
Mary
Albert
Kendall
1864
William
Powell
Kendall
1868
A
Pickett
Kendall
P A
Grimsley
Archibald
Caraway
Benton
Maud
Benton
Infant
Female
Benton
William
A
Benton
James
A
Benton
1882 - 1967
Charles
Edward
Bell
85
85
Rena
Benton
1864
Mary
Elizabeth
Benton
Frances
Catherine
Barringer
1865
Lillie G
Ingram
1867
Sarah
Elizabeth
Ingram
1869
Mary
Stevens
Ingram
Martha
Frances
Ingram
William
Franklin
McAulay
1874
Jennie
Alice
Ingram
Charles
Robadean
Crocker
Living
Osborne
Robert
Klutz
1876
Edmund
Jerry
Ingram
1880
William
Franklin
Ingram
Emma
Ella
Baldwin
Frankie
Lentz
Frank
Baldwin
Elizabeth
Bruton
1879
Edgar
Eugene
Ingram
1885
William
Steven
Ingram
1883
Jerry
Franklin
Ingram
1866
Hulda
Riggs
Bessie
Ingram
Jennie
Ingram
1881
Dora
Bayne
Ingram
Winnie
Ingram
Harry
Arichter
Susie
Ingram
Living
Ingram
Clarence
W Kirk
Living
Ingram
Living
Ingram
1882 - 1946
Mable
Alice
Waggoner
64
64
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Mabel died of a liver disorder in 1946. It is believed that she had liver cancer, however, Walter would not allow an autopsy, so the exact cause of her death is uncertain.
Living
Osborne
Fannie
Biggers
1862
Sallie
L
Ingram
1865
Jerry
Addison
Ingram
1866
Stephen
Benton
Ingram
Will
Ingram
Helen
Porter
Mellie
Secrest
1875
Cora
Virginia
Ingram
1876
James
Benjamin
Ingram
1878
Jeremiah
Long
Ingram
Living
Overacre
1879
Martha
Beulah
Ingram
1881
Willie
B
Ingram
1883
Eliza
Bell
Ingram
1885
Henrietta
Ingram
1887
Mary
Eva
Ingram
1890
Alma
George
Ingram
Escar
Ross
Kate
Byrd
1890
James
Eben
Ingram
Sidney
Ingram
Living
Osborne
Wade
C
Wade
C
Scott
McCrary
Jim
Burrow
Hennie
McCrary
Wilma
"Girlie"
McCrary
Perry
Boyce
Ingram
McCrary
Emily
D
Carruthers
Katherine
McCrary
D. 1893
Robert
Dodds
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Robert Dodds was a farmer who was born in Ireland Found in Vol 2 #1285 p. 42 Washington County Probate Death Records.
Mary
Effie
Wall
Mial
Wall
Margaret
McEachin
Mary
Anna
Gamble
Samuel
Gamble
Frances
McCorkle
1892
Benjamin
Wall
Ingram
1893
Margaret
Eachin
Ingram
1894
Thomas
Jeremiah
II Ingram
1897
William
Lemuel
Living
Osborne
1899
Charles
Nelms
Ingram
Alberta
McCorkle
Matthew
McCorkle
Martha
Wilfong
1899
Anna
Locke
Ingram
John
Edwin
John
Hill
Elizabeth
1866
Elizabeth
Ann
Hill
1869
Henry
Pines
Hill
Bell
1872
Benjamin
Risden
1874
John Edwin
Chapman III
Hill
Laura
Bowman
1876 - 1935
William
White
Bennett
58
58
1881 - 1969
Ethel
Dunlap
87
87
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] SS # 239-62-0511
1876
Harriett
Bennett
Ann
Stewart
Living
Minch
Living
Minch
Living
Hussey
Living
Debbie
Living
Brunnemer
~1718 - 1816
William
H.
Talley
98
98
Rachel
Grief
Frederick
Talley
Elizabeth
Wood
Russell
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] U S Land Record Bk 70 #982: Jame Johnson and one older James Johnson m. ? Russell (sister of Jane Russell Talley wife of Joseph Talley) on Meherrin River in Lunenburg/Mecklenburg County, VA 1770.
John Wesley
Russell
Russell
John
Talley
Anna
William
Talley
Living
Shimon
Larkin
Talley
Lodwick
Talley
Peyton
Talley
1827
Mary
Ann
Byers
Garrett
Byers
Nancy
Mann
Josie
Cole
John
Thomas
Coon
Alma
Young
Jennie
Smith
1840 - 1914
Elizabeth
Abagail
Dye
74
74
Burt
Hawkes
Bill ?
Della
Schwenitzer
(Swienger)
Elmer
M.
Ford
Lancelot
Coffland
Eliza
Beckett
1857
Rachel
Ann
Johnson
Malinda
Elma
Varner
Laurinda
Latham
John
Loper
Living
Osborne
Gerlaw
Cerne
D. 1908
James
Webster
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] James was a spinner by occupation. In about 1868, Eliza and James migrated to Warren County , Illinois.
1851
John
Webster
1854
Joseph
Webster
1856
William
Allen
Webster
Edith
May
Unknown
1858 - 1932
Samuel
Nelson
Webster
74
74
Lida
Giles
1860 - 1935
Sarah
Jane
Webster
75
75
Frank
Terrey
Living
Sibley
1840 - 1903
Christina
Bell
63
63
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Page 67 Volume V Monroe County, Ohio Genealogical Records, 1967, Marietta Register: Thursday, May 16, 1872 - Married John M. Turinem of Monroe County to Christina Bell of Washing ton County on May 9, 1872
1863 - 1937
Ella
May
Webster
74
74
William
M.
Haynes
1868 - 1956
Mary
Katherine
Webster
88
88
Thompson
Mary
Bell
Mollie
Larson
Mary
F.
Pangle
John
S.
Coffland
Julia
Ann
Stewart
1880
Harley
Coffland
Living
Osborne
Albert
Thomas
Julia B
Stewart
Laura
L.
Stephens
William
Cress
Jane P
Cumming
1866
John
Alvin
Varner
1867
George
Nelson
Varner
1870 - 1950
Sylvester
Elsworth
Varner
80
80
1872 - 1950
Clarence
Coltson
Varner
77
77
1875 - 1944
William
Arthur
Varner
69
69
1889 - 1980
Glen
Alexander
Bell
91
91
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Married late in life and had no children. The Later Years of Glen Bell as told by James Collier 3/99 Glen Bell had been an alcoholic for many years. So much so that he let his home slowly disintegrate to the point of being unlivable. So Glen moved into East Council Grove into a little apartment. One night late James Collier received a call from the Council Grove Police to come down to the Police Station where they were holding Glen. Apparently for no apparent reason , Glen had decided to run around the streets of Council Grove in the nude. It was suggested by the Police that Glen be committed to the State Hospital for proper care. James and one of his Uncles went to Glen's apartment to see if they could find clothes or money for him. They searched every inch of his apartment and found Glen to be totally broke - not even a dime in the place. Since family had to commit individuals in those days, the Police asked Ada May Bell Allen to sign the papers to have Glen committed - something Glen never forgave her for in his later years. James Collier began working Glen's land and deposited a percentage of the earnings into an account for Glen so that if he got out of the hospital he would at least have some money. While in the hospital, however, Glen met Anna. They apparently fell in love and one day while having one of their day excursions they escaped and ran off and got married. Since the nearest of kin has to sign the papers to keep you committed, and since Glen and Anna were now then nearest of kin to each other, they signed themselves out of the hospital. Some time later, Glen decided to sell his property. His alcoholic ways had not changed. The person who was buying the property tried to get it for a song, so James Collier took him to court to try and get fair market value for Glen. The courts ruled in James favor and gave Glen fair market value. All in all by this time Glen was worth about $80,000.00. Unfortunately, Glen was furious with James for interfering and decided to cut all his relatives out of his will. He and Anna went down and had a new will made up that left all of his money to her bastard son in the Netherlands. After Glen's death, the family urged James to go to court to contest the will for they felt he was due a good share since he had made it all possible for Glen. Although the family did w n, what they received only paid the attorney's fees and gave them about $20.00 each.
1877
Grace
Yourt
1896
Ralph
N.
Varner
1898
Letha
May
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
1892
Gladys
Abagail
Bell
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Daisy
Bass
1896 - 1986
Archibald
Sylvester
Varner
90
90
1898
Lewis
Raymond
Varner
Living
Varner
1898 - 1982
Anna
Belle
Brewer
84
84
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
1895 - 1956
Una
Campseydelle
Bell
60
60
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Swaggart
Living
Fritz
Living
George
Living
Berg
Living
Compton
E D
Compton
Living
Richie
1891 - 1918
Major
Bell
27
27
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Major was his name, not his rank.
Living
Richie
Living
Richie
Living
Richie
Living
Richie
Living
Richie
Living
Richie
1896 - 1948
Alma
Henrietta
Barnett
52
52
James
Barnett
Dicy
Caldonia
Bostick
Living
Varner
1906 - 1996
Tina
Beulah
Bell
90
90
Living
Barnett
Living
Barnett
Living
Colvin
John
Wesley
Colvin
Living
Taylor
Living
Colvin
Living
Colvin
Living
Colvin
Living
Blake
Living
Blake
1890 - 1973
Stella
Heath
82
82
Living
Coleman
Living
Colvin
Living
Colvin
Living
Colvin
Living
Colvin
Living
Raines
Living
Colvin
Living
Colvin
Living
Hooker
Living
Hooker
1881 - 1964
Claudia
Carr
82
82
Living
DeVasier
Living
Colvin
Living
Colvin
Living
Colvin
Living
Webster
Living
Webster
Living
Hankins
Living
Colvin
Living
Colvin
Living
Varner
1878 - 1958
Martha
Louella
Allen
80
80
1925 - 1975
Mary Ann
Elizabeth
Mangold
49
49
George
Athel
Mangold
Living
Dye
Living
Varner
Living
Bradford
Living
Slater
Living
Slater
Living
Wilson
Living
Slater
Living
Varner
1908 - 1978
Earl
Elbert
Sibley
70
70
1873 - 1960
Edward
James
Mayos
87
87
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
1880 - 1972
Anna
Bydrsley
Allen
91
91
Living
Aldridge
Thomas
Jerry
Aldridge
Mary
Susan
Adams
Living
Varner
Living
Harrison
Living
Harrison
Living
King
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
1883 - 1943
Carl
W.
Nelson
59
59
1916 - 1992
Herman
Smith
75
75
Tom
Smith
Tenessee
Graham
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
1922 - 1988
Ancil
Dee
Varner
66
66
Living
Morries
James
Arthur
Morries
1835 - 1923
John
Lee
Allen
87
87
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] He was 87 when he died. He was a Civil War veteran who served as a Corporal in Company K, Fifth Regiment, West Virginia infantry, from November 6, 1861 through November 23, 1864. Later he was promoted to Sergeant. He became sick with typhoid fever at Sperryville, VA He was a member of Wadsworth Post, No 7, Department of Kansas, Grand Army of the Republic. John and Charity Allen lived on Litte Ice Creek, Ironton, Ohio for the first years of their marriage. All 8 children were born in that location. The family came to Kansas in December 1884. The trip was made to Cincinnati, Ohio by river boat, then by train to Parkerville, Kansas. It took three days and nights to make the trip by train. Harriet Dilley Stivers, a sister of Charity lived at Parkerville, a small town a few miles north of Council Grove, Kansas. Here the family of ten lived in two rooms over the post office for several months before moving to a farm owned by Harriet Stivers. Here they had three rooms and a kitchen roof that leaked. On November 28, 1886 William died of typhoid fever.Several other children had the disease but recovered. In the spring o f1904 the family moved to Council Grove (See obituary of John L. Allen and his Civil War records). Cemetery lot for John L. Allen and Charity Ella Allen as listed above,purchased October 1917 , W F Shamleffer, Mayor, H W Craven, City Clerk.Recorded in book 29 of Deeds, page 444. Title: Early memoirs : an interesting narrative of bygone days. Author: Allen, John L. Other Information: Publisher: Ironton Register. Description: p. ; cm. Location: MAIN LIBRARY.... Hamner NonFic * REF 977.188 Al COPIED FROM THE CIVIL WAR RECORD OF JOHN LEE ALLEN Enlisted from Lawrence County, Ohio, on the 6th day of November, 1861, to serve three years or during the war, and was mustered into the United States service at Gauley Bridges, W. Va., as a private of Captain Alfred F. Cumpston's Company "K", Fifth Regiment West Virginia Volunteer Infantry, Colonel John L. Ziegler commanding. The regiment was organized at Ceredo, Virginia, in July and August, 1861,and mustered into service October 18, 1861. Its first service was scouting in the Kanawha Valley, protecting the lines and property of loyal citizens, and driving out the rebels recruiting for the Confederate Army. December 10, it was ordered to Parkersburg, Va., whence most of the regiment was sent to New Creek, Va., and in February 1862 joined the Brigade of Colonel Dunning on his expedition against Harness at Moorefield. April 2, 1862 it left New Creek, and marched in Schenk's Brigade to McDowell, Va., joined Milroy's command May 7th, and fought the advance of Jackson's a Army at McDowell on the 8th, after which the regiment was assigned to Milroy's Brigade. May 25 , 1862, under Freemont,it was ordered to the Shenandoah Valley, and participated in Freemont's operation against Jackson, the pursuit up the valley, and battle of Cross Keys, Va., June 8 , 1862. It was transferred under Sigel to the Army of Virginia, July 10th, and participated i n Pope's campaign in Virginia,including battles of Cedar Mountain, Rappahannock Station, Free man'sFord, Sulphur Springs, Waterloo Bridge, and Second Bull Run, VA. Returned to Western Virginia in October 1862, and remained in the Kanawha Valley engaged in outpost and scout duty until May, 1864, then participated in Crook's Expedition to the Virginia and Tennessee Railroads , and in his advance to Staunton where the command joined Hunter's army, and took part in Hunter's raid on Lynchburg, and battle of Lynchburg, June 18, 1864, marching over the mountains, to the Kanawha, returning to the Shenandoah Valley with Hunter's command, and assigned to Duval's Brigade of the army of West Virginia, under General Crook, later Sheridan and bore a foremost part in the following battles, viz.:Kernston, Halltown, Berryville, Opequan or Winchester , Fisher's Hill, and Cedar Creek and numerous skirmishes. November 9, 1864, consolidated with the 9th W. Va. Infantry and designated the 1st Regiment West Virginia Veteran Infantry, under Colonel I. H. Duval. It was assigned to Hayes(1st) Brigade, Duval's (2nd) Division, Crook 's Department of W. Va., and remained on duty in the Shenandoah Valley until July 21, 1865, then mustered out. The said John L. Allen was promoted to Corporal and to Sergeant of his company. He was taken sick with typhoid fever at Sperryville, Va., then moved to hospital at Culpepper C.H., Va., his illness lasting about six weeks. At all other times he was with his command during its service as outlined above, until his term expired, bore a gallant part in all its engagements, an d rendered faithful and meritorious service. He was mustered out at Wheeling, W. Va., on the 6th of November 1864 by reason of expiration of term of service. He is the son of William Allen and Lucretia Alford-Allen, and was born in Lawrence County, Ohio, on the 5th of November 1835. He was united in marriage to Charity E. Dilley, in Lawrence C County, Ohio, on the 10th of December 1867, from which union were born eight children. The seven living are Harriet E., Frank D., Mildred J., Albert Newton, Mattie L.,Byrdsley, and Ethan L . He is a member of Wadsworth Post, No. 7, Department of Kansas, Grand Army of the Republic. His wife is an active and honored member of Wadsworth Corps, No. 72, W.R.C. Mrs. Allen's brother, Albert Dilley, served in the 91st Ohio. These facts are thus recorded and preserved for the benefit of all those who may be interested. The pension certificate is No. 533711. This article has been copied from the record given to John L. Allen by the SOLDIERS AND SAILOR S HISTORICAL AND BENEVOLENT SOCIETY. Done at Washington, D.C. this 4th day of June, A.D. 1907 and signed by M.Wallingsford (Historian) No. 62403.
Living
Apperson
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
1904 - 1985
Albert
Befort
80
80
Living
McCain
Living
McCain
Living
Shelton
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
1889 - 1937
Edna
Ray
Bowman
48
48
Elmer
Bowman
Mary
Elizabeth
Lamar
1841 - 1927
Charity
Ella
Dilley
85
85
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Schoolteacher and educator, she came from a wealthy family. She was a great bible student . She began teaching at age 18 with a salary of $18/month. She taught for 8 years. Moved to Parkerville Kansas in 1894. Lived in Parkerville in 1899, when she returned to visit t her ailing mother. John and Charity were living with Abner in 1901. Lived in Lawrence Cou nty, Ohio in 1902 & 1903. All of Charity's siblings preceded her in death, except for broth er A N Dilley who is said to have stolen all of Charity's inheritance from Abner. It is sai d that Charity always told her children they had an Uncle but that they were never to speak t o him, presumably because of the theft.
1906 - 1968
Everett
Elsworth
Varner
62
62
1909 - 1975
Leonard
Coltson
Varner
66
66
1912 - 1991
Evelyn
Margaret
Varner
79
79
1916 - 1977
Imogene
Marie
Varner
61
61
1917 - 1973
Delmar
Wayne
Varner
56
56
1876
Clara
A
Bardwell
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Edmund
Hotchkiss
Living
Varner
Davis
Fitzgarrald
Elnor
Henry
1868 - 1916
Elsie
Miller
47
47
Jacob
B
Miller
Sadie
Albaugh
Marion
E
Phillips
1890 - 1949
Allis
Oldfield
58
58
William
Henry
Oldfield
Sarah
Twigg
Living
Hotchkiss
1896 - 1947
Lucille
Varner
51
51
1898 - 1941
Howard
Oldfield
Varner
42
42
Living
Varner
1914 - 1981
Doyle
Ancil
Varner
67
67
1892 - 1969
Harry
Leslie
Wilson
77
77
Living
Wilson
1920 - 1974
David
Elmer
Wilson
54
54
Living
Wilson
Living
Johnson
Living
Johnson
1902 - 1969
Allen
Gerald
Hotchkiss
67
67
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Allen died of Parkinson's Disease
Living
Trask
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
1903 - 1966
Orman
Allen
Hancock
63
63
John
Hancock
Addie
Peal
Living
Hancock
Living
Hancock
Living
Hancock
Living
Wilson
1906 - 1978
Reginald
Carr
Allen
72
72
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Reginald died of multiple sclerosis and alcohol. Reginald served in European area during WWII. Died in veteran's hospital, Denver, CO - buried d in National Cemetery , Ft Logan, Colorado.
Oliver
Wilson
Beulah
Harkins
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
1871 - 1969
Walter
Scott
Oldfield
97
97
1896 - 1972
Mary
Elsie
Oldfield
75
75
1892 - 1968
Lloyd
Emery
Blanpied
75
75
Living
Blanpied
1900 - 1970
Lloyd
William
Blanpied
70
70
Living
Kane
1910 - 1991
Robert
Alton
Sibley
80
80
1908 - 1993
Virginia
Allen
84
84
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Virginia died of cancer.
William
Henry
Oldfield
Sarah
Twigg
1876 - 1950
Blanche
Ethel
Klumph
73
73
Alonzo
Klumph
Martha
Ann
Slaeight
1902 - 1987
Mabel
Lucille
Varner
84
84
1904 - 1982
William
Henry
Varner
77
77
1909 - 1969
Arthur
Edward
Varner
60
60
Living
Varner
1913 - 1989
June
O'Beirne
Bupp
76
76
Living
Johnson
Edmond
Bupp
Luoella
O'Beirne
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Edwin
Ralph
Puckett
Living
Puckett
1889 - 1960
Mate
Westermark
71
71
F
Westermark
Cecelia
Jonathan
Jones
Living
Bybee
Catherine
Milage
William
Dallas
Jones
William
Dallas
Jones
Amanda
Priest
Hiram
Jones
William
Reilly
Jones
Daniel
Jones
Abbigail
Halloway
George
Comstock
Harry
Courtright
Living
Bybee
Abe
Smith
Miss
Besson
Pearl
May
Shaffer
1909 - 1982
Viola
Varner
73
73
Living
Green
Living
Green
Living
Green
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
Living
Bybee
Living
Varner
Living
Varner
John
A
Baker
Susan
Farley
John
Blevins
Andrew
Winkler
John
Milton
Snorf
1881
Arlie
Franklin
Snorf
1883
Milton
Earl
Snorf
Inez
May
Snorf
Living
Bybee
John
Ridgeway
Living
Ridgeway
Living
Ridgeway
Living
Ridgeway
Albert
Torrey
Effie
Delia
Torrey
Mary
Alvira
Torrey
Vesta
Frances
Torrey
Orville
E
Torrey
John
A
Lamb
1919 - 1978
Elinor
Burgger
58
58
John
H
Cook
Nellie
J
McNary
Emma
Lerlie
John
A
Baker
Susie
Farley
1871 - 1938
Harriet
Pollock
67
67
Alexander
Pollock
Orpha
Van
Note
1889 - 1947
Clara Ethyl
Baker
Baker
58
58
1890 - 1891
Cora L
Baker
9m
9m
Living
Whitehill
1892 - 1973
Howard
Vincent
Baker
80
80
1894 - 1904
Orpha
Amelia
Baker
9
9
1896 - 1982
Sylvia
R
Baker
86
86
1900 - 1992
Russell
Pollock
Baker
92
92
Living
Baker
1908 - 1989
Lewis
Warren
Baker
80
80
Richard
Morris
D. 1955
Alva
Stearns
Idell
Mary
Stearns
Lucretia
Ellen
Stearns
Living
Whitehill
D. <1931
Jacob
W
Baker
Julia
Elmina
Blasier
Fanny
Lower
1874 - 1967
Sylvester
Stevens
92
92
Obediah
Stevens
Elizabeth
Sutton
1903 - 1988
Ellis
Stevens
84
84
1905 - 1987
Obediah
Treaux
Stevens
82
82
1907 - 1984
Ruby
Lucretia
Stevens
76
76
Living
Nelson
Living
Stevens
Living
Stevens
Living
Stevens
1921 - 1989
Adrian
Leon
Stevens
68
68
Herman
Bishop
Joel
Marion
Inklebarger
Orvel
Huston
Hoover
Lonie
Lee
Thompson
Garrett
Byers
Nancy
Mann
1902 - 1986
Edna
May
Sibley
83
83
Living
Sakmari
Mary
Ann
Hughes
Isaac
Russell
Sarah
Russell
Hannah
Russell
Elizabeth
Russell
Jemima
Elizabeth
Russell
1801
Samuel
Russell
D. BET. 1845 - 1850
Mary
Irwin
1829
James
Russell
1830
Susan
Russell
Living
Jr
1831
Samuel
F
Russell
1834
Ellen
Russell
1834
Martha
Russell
1842
John
Russell
1845
William
Russell
George
Irvin
1835 - 1845
Jeptha
Vinan
Holden
9
9
1837
Mary
Ann
Holden
Una
Varner
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Una died giving birth to last child.
Living
Keyes
Living
Beckham
Living
Keyes
Living
Keyes
Living
Keyes
Living
Keyes
?
Stroup
Abigail
Hand
John
Hand
1647
Samuel
Dille
1650
Joseph
Dille
1652
Benjamin
Dille
Living
Dyer
Dille
Nathan
Dille
John
Hanneford
Elizabeth
1673
George
Dille
Dilley
Mrs
Martha
Knox
Isam
Blankenship
Anna
Maria
Dilley
Living
Beckham
James
Allen
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Augusta county Court Records Order Book No. III August 27, 1751 (179) Road ordered to be viewed from John Anderson's to co. Ho. by John Poage and James Allen . Augusta County Court Records Order Book No. Iv. August 21, 1754 (255) Saml. Pegg, servant of James Allen; Edwd. Hays, servant of Wm. Robertson; Robert Gaw, s servant of Ro. Renix. Augusta County Court Records Order book No. V March 23, 1756 (63) James Allen, qualified Captain of Foot. Augusta County Court Records Order Book No. XI August 19, 1767 (220) Hugh Allen appointed surveyor of highway from James Given's Mill, by his house, to Ston e Meeting House, and the following to work the road: Saml. Hinds, Robt. Stevenson, Wm. Kerr , John Stewart, John Campbell, James Allen, John Anderson, Hugh Allen, William McClure, Jame s Allen, Saml Bell, Andrew Lockhart, John Burnside, Saml McKeey, James Searight, Thos Storey. Augusta County Court Records Order Book No. XV August 23, 1773 (197) Charles and David Beard, sons of Edward Beard, who fails to bring them up in a Christia nlike manner, to be bound to James Allen, Jr., to learn trade of carpenter and wheelwright. Augusta County Court Records Order Book No. XVI January 17, 1775 (35) Of Hugh Allen, deceased, for a horse proved by brother, James Allen; of John Ladlers, fo r driving pack horses,; of sundry persons for work on the expedition under James Allen and Hu gh Allen -- certified by Andrew Lewis; of Wm Kinkead, for sundreis for Militia; of Ralph Stew art, for provisions for his company of Militia. March 25, 1775 (55) Administration of estate of Hugh Allen, decd., granted to widow Jane and brother James ( Was Hugh killed on the expedition of 1774? See Court of Claims, supra.) Augusta County Court Records Order Book No. XVII September 15, 1778 (358) James Allen, Jr., appointed road surveyor from Middle River to John McMahon's. Augusta County Court Records Order Book No. XX September 18, 1787 (400) James, David and Mary Allen, all over 14, orphans of David Allen, chose Robert Allen th eir guardian. George Anderson, aged 15, chose John Chrisitan guardian. Augusta County Court Records Order Book No. XXI May 18, 1790 (245) Robert Garland, James Allen and James Brooks qualified to practice as attorneys. Augusta County Court Records Order Book No. XXII January 16, 1793 (227) Stophel Mantle and James Allen, agent for John Allen, landowners, to be summoned on a r oad petition. March 25, 1793 (259) James Allen as Lieutenant of company of Infantry in 1st Battalion -- recommended. Augusta county Court Records Order Book No. XXIII September 16, 1794 (160) James Allen recommended Ensign. January 20, 1795 (212) Certified that John Allen has resided 12 months, and is of good demeanor, &c. March 17, 1795 (235) John Allen qualified upon license as Attorney. Augusta County Court Records Order Book No. XXIV December 20, 1796 (93) James Allen recommended Lieutenant in 1st Battalion, 32d Regiment, vice William Young, Resigned June 21, 1797 (171-177) Lieutenant James Allen remonstrated to the Governor versus the recommendation to supply the vacancy occasioned by resignation of William Chambers. The recommendation was made by the Court under the impression that Allen would not accept, and they now apologize and recommend Allen instead of Robert McClenachan. Augusta County Court Judgements - Volume I November, 1757 (A) Maxwell vs Allen -- John Maxwell was Captain of a Company in 1756 and called out Allen, one o f his Company, to go against the Indians, but Allen refused and Maxwell sues Quitam Malcomb Allen. Maxwell denies he ever made out the writ. Allen vs Mathers -- James Allen, Captain, 1756, complains qui tam that William Mathers, a comm on soldier, refused to turn out when called. Process not served, because defendant is on duty in a fort. August, 1757 (A) Allen vs. Rooke -- James Allen, Captain, complains Quitam, because John Rook refused to answer call to go out vs French and Indians, 1756.
Allen
Hugh
Allen
Jane
Living
Befort
D. 1838
Nathanial
Hood
Elizabeth
Bullard
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] AFN 2728-KR
1832
Spencer
Johnson
Persis
Stivers
1889 - 1964
Verne
Leslie
Dilley
74
74
Living
Megredy
1883 - 1963
William
Henry
White
79
79
Sarah
Jane
Hammond
1916 - 1958
Bertha
Madeline
White
41
41
1915 - 1982
John
Edgar
Chandler
67
67
1887 - 1913
Herbert
Edgar
Chandler
26
26
1884 - 1970
Ruth
Naylor
86
86
Edgar
Chandler
Amelia
Franz
Mathes
1857 - 1946
John
W
Naylor
89
89
Emma
Lou
Morris
Living
Beckham
Osburn
Naylor
Mary
Ellen
Jordan
Isaac
Morris
Hannah
Hollingsworth
John
Moore
John
Rogers
Dye
1835
Mary
Esther
Rinard
1839 - 1863
John
M
Rinard
23
23
1840 - 1843
Orillo
Rinard
3
3
1844 - 1922
Jane
Rinard
77
77
Living
Ritchie
1846 - 1926
James
F
Rinard
80
80
1849 - 1928
Rebecca
Rinard
79
79
1851 - 1875
George
W
Rinard
24
24
1853 - 1860
William
H
Rinard
7
7
1855 - 1888
Margaret
Rinard
33
33
1858 - 1942
Victoria
Rinard
84
84
1885 - 1894
Lee
Waggoner
9
9
1895 - 1895
Denolas
Waggoner
11d
11d
1951 - 1951
Barbara
Ann
Windrow
27d
27d
Elizabeth
Isaac
Sibley
Living
McCarthy
Living
McCarthy
Living
Davies
Living
Montcrief
Living
Windrow
Living
Montcrief
Living
Montcrief
Living
Montcrief
Living
Montcrief
Living
Montcrief
Living
Montcrief
1951 - 1975
Joanne
Groat
24
24
Living
Groat
Living
Groat
Living
Groat
1913 - 1989
Lee
Rhett
Sibley
75
75
Living
Francis
Living
Groat
Living
Groat
Living
Groat
Living
Temple
Living
Temple
Living
Temple
Living
Graham
Living
Graham
Living
Bevington
Living
Bevington
Living
Bull
Living
Bing
Living
Bing
Living
Living
Bing
Living
Bing
Living
Bing
Living
Bing
Living
Wodarski
Living
Wodarski
Living
Living
Bull
Living
Wodarski
Living
Wodarski
Living
Good
Living
Good
Living
Nieset
Living
Wolfe
Living
Wolfe
Living
Nieset
Living
Nieset
Living
Nieset
Living
Moore
Living
Bing
Living
Bing
Living
Traver
Living
Traver
Living
Moore
1766 - 1800
Mother
34
34
1798 - 1884
Sarah
Rinard
86
86
1801 - 1844
John
Rinard
42
42
1809 - 1899
Isaac
Rinard
89
89
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Broderbund Family Archive #255, Ed 1, Land Records: AL, AR, FL, LA, MI, MN, OH, WI 1790-1907 , Date of Import: May 30, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.255.1.53385.20 Patentee Name: Richard, Isaac Accession Number: OH0030__-246 State: Ohio Volume: 30 Page:246 Document Number: 1236 Land Office: Marietta Aliquot Part Reference: NENE Section Number: 10 Township: 3 North Range: 6 West Meridian/Survey Area: Ohio River Survey Act/Treaty Authorizing Sale: Sale-Cash Entries Date Signed: April 16, 1833 Acreage: 39.60 Signed: Yes, the document on file at the BLM contains a signature. Broderbund Family Archive #255, Ed. 1, Land Records: AL, AR, FL, LA, MI, MN, OH, WI 1790-190 7, Date of Import: May 30, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.255.1.53385.21 Patentee Name: Rinard, Isaac Accession Number: OH0060__.431 State: Ohio Volume: 60 Page: 431 Document Number: 2934 Land Office: Marietta Aliquot Part Reference: SE SE Section Number: 11 Township: 3 North Range: 6 West Meridian/Survey Area: Ohio River Survey Act/Treaty Authorizing Sale: Sale-Cash Entries Date Signed: Nov 7, 1837 Acreage: 38.56 Signed: Yes, the document on file at the BLM contains a signature. Broderbund Family Archive #255, Ed. 1, Land Records:AL, AR, FL, LA, MI, MN, OH, WI 1790-1907 , Date of Import: May 30, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.255.1.53385.22 Patentee Name: Rinard, Isaac Accession Number: OH0060__.475 State: Ohio Volume: 60 Page: 475 Document Number: 2980 Land Office: Marietta Aliquot Part Reference: W1/2SW Section Number: 6 Township: 3 North Range: 6 West Meridian/Survey Area: Ohio River Survey Act/Treaty Authorizing Sale: Sale-Cash Entries Date Signed: Nov 7, 1837 Acreage: 72.24 Signed: Yes, the document on file at the BLM contains a signature. Broderbund Family Archive #255, Ed. 1, Land Records: AL, AR, FL, LA, MI, MN, OH, WI 1790-190 7, Date of Import: May 30, 1998, Internal Ref. #1.255.1.533.85.23 Patentee Name: Rinard, Isaac Accession Number: OH1100__.459 State: Ohio Volume: 1100 Page: 459 Document Number: 3497 Land Office: Marietta Aliquot Part Reference: NE NW Section Number: 4 Township: 3 North Range: 6 West Meridian/Survey Area: Ohio River Survey Act/Treaty Authorizing Sale: Sale-Cash Entries Date Signed: Aug 21, 1837 Acreage: 40.56 Signed: Yes, the document on file at the BLM contains a signature.
1810 - 1856
Margaret
Rinard
46
46
Living
Jordan
1815 - 1854
Elisabeth
Rinard
39
39
1818 - 1845
Cynthia
Rinard
27
27
1820 - 1850
Mary
Rinard
30
30
1823 - 1897
Nancy
Rinard
74
74
1826
Rebecca
Rinard
1822
Elisha
Lockhart
1798 - 1847
James
Elder
49
49
Basil
Denbow
1816
John E
Elder
1819
Margaret
Elder
Living
Brymer
1822
Mary
Elder
1822
Elisabeth
Elder
1825
Hester
A
Elder
1826
James
Elder
1827
Thomas
Elder
1831
Henry
Elder
1833
Sarah
Elder
1840
Matilda
Elder
1846
Isabella
Elder
1802 - 1884
Nancy
Rea
82
82
Living
Brymer
1825
Isaac
R
Rinard
1826
Samuel
Kelso
Rinard
1828
John
William
Rinard
1829
Mary
Ann
Rinard
1831
Seraph
Dana
Rinard
1833
Hannah
Nesbot
Rinard
1834
Luther
Rinard
1836
David
Murdock
Rinard
1839
William
Nelson
Rinard
1841
Ellenor
Cook
Rinard
Living
Jordan
1842
Theadore
Perry
Rinard
1811 - ~1856
Catherine
Scott
45
45
John
Scott
Preasious
1825 - 1906
Elizabeth
Cline
81
81
Jacoob
Cline
Nancy
Mills
1835 - 1913
James
Scott
Rinard
78
78
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Do not have any information on wife #1. He married Margaret who also was widowed. Buried Rinard Mills, Cemetery, Monroe County, Ohio
1834 - 1914
Elisabeth
Hooper
79
79
1837 - 1917
Henry
Watson
Rinard
79
79
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Henry was a farmer. He and Emily grew up together in Ludlow Township. They lived in the sam e area.
Living
Gilmore
1839 - 1909
Emily
Knowlton
69
69
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Emily loved to sew and tell stories to her grandchildren. Often told the story of her two si sters who were engaged to soldiers fighting on either side of the War. How one would walk mi les to mail her letters so no news from home could reach the wrong side in the war. Both me n returned from the War. The marriages took place and both couples lived on farms adjoining.
1841
Issac
Rinard
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Issac went to War, Civil War 77th Ohio Inf Co C fought under Col Jesse Heldebrand for Genera l Sherman at the Battle of Shiloh. Enlisted as a Private from Ludlow Twp Ohio. 1861
Pricilla
Hooper
1846 - 1910
Richard
Rinard
64
64
Lucinda
Jane
Adams
1848 - 1931
Mary
E
Rinard
82
82
Harve
Edwards
1850 - 1937
Margaret
Ellen
Rinard
86
86
John
Adams
1856 - 1934
Robert
Rinard
77
77
Living
Kierce
Unknown
1858
Nancy
Catherine
Rinard
William
Boston
1860
Cynthia
Ann
Rinard
Arretis
Satterfield
1861
Rosetta
Rinard
Daniel
Mitchell
1867
John
Marshall
Rinard
1806 - 1874
Hamilton
Parr
67
67
1831
Hamilton
George
Parr
1905 - 1987
Mary
Blanche
Sibley
81
81
Living
Britt
1831 - 1901
Nathan
Parr
70
70
1836
Amanda
Parr
1837 - 1893
Isaac
Parr
56
56
1839 - 1925
Isabella
Parr
86
86
1842
Rebecca
Parr
1844 - 1910
Mary
Elisabeth
Parr
66
66
1835
Mary
Esther
Rinard
1839 - 1863
John
M
Rinard
23
23
1840
Orillo
Rinard
1842 - 1930
Hamilton
Parr
Rinard
87
87
Living
Jordan
1812
Elliott
Collins
1838
Minerva
Collins
1841
Elisabet
G
Collins
1843
Lyenrgus
B A
Collins
1846
Rosina
Anna
Collins
1813
Thomas
Minney
1842
Erza
Minney
1844
George
P
Minney
1845
John
Elder
Minney
1823
Isaac
Parker
Living
Jordan
1856
Henry
Parker
1858
Joseph
Parker
Thomas
Tyson
Matilda
Crockett
1852
Pleasant
A
Dilley
Jeremiah
Friel
William
Franklin
Dilley
Mary
E.
Sharp
John
Wallace
Dilley
Eula M
Dilley
Dilley
1836 - 1865
Ellen
George
29
29
Gibson
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Hill
1822
Ralph
Dilley
1824
Mary
Jane
Moore
1855
Armiiinta
Dilley
Amos
Dilley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Amos was Martin Dilley's Grandson.
1858
Margaret
Dilley
1862
James
Dilley
Jesse
George
1865 - 1900
Maggie
A
35
35
Octave
Dilley
William
Dilley
Mary
Sharp
1858
Lillie J
1875
Lillie G
Dilley
1876
Mary
A
Dilley
1878
Clarence
S
Dilley
1879
William
Dilley
Anne
Dilley
1853 - 1920
George
William
Sibley
67
67
1869
Sarah
R
Dilley
Potter
Theodore
Potter
Clifford
Potter
1870 - 1949
John
Ott
Dilley
79
79
D. 1956
Miranda
McNeil
Vernie
Dilley
Harsh
Elizabeth
Dilley
Shuemaker
1854 - 1869
Ella
Sibley
15
15
Living
Dilley
Douglas
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
1855 - 1944
Fannie
Sibley
89
89
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Everette
Kemper
Paul
Shumaker
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
D. 1945
Luey
Hinkle
1875 - 1909
Leven
Dilley
34
34
1876
Lavinda
Dilley
1857
Emma
Sibley
1877 - 1959
Blanche
Dilley
82
82
William
Oscar
Eula
Oscar
Living
Oscar
Living
Oscar
Living
Oscar
Living
Oscar
Living
Oscar
1880 - 1955
Marshall
Dilley
74
74
Bessie
Blake
1860 - 1957
Sallie
Davis
Sibley
96
96
1882 - 1954
Stephen
Dilley
71
71
1876 - 1952
Dorinda
Quintie
Dilley
75
75
Lee
Bussard
Albert
Bussard
Living
Bussard
Living
Bussard
Living
Bussard
Russel
Living
Bowers
Living
Bussard
Living
Sibley
D. 1912
Jane
Jordan
Living
Bussard
Isobel
Dilley
1810 - 1877
John
Dilley
67
67
1819 - 1897
Naomi
McNeil
78
78
Christian
Ackland
aka Eckland
Charles
Cooper
Cooper
1885 - 1944
Lutitia
Ann
Dilley
58
58
1880 - 1954
Tilman
Thoomas
Caraway
74
74
Joseph
Franklin
Caraway
Mariah
Elizabeth
Slater
Nat
Knight
Living
Johannes
M
Weigel
Anna
Maria
Anrhold
1918 - 1973
Florine
Mary
Stang
55
55
Willaim
Stang
Margaret
Saunder
1867
Katherine
Sibley
1868 - 1955
Robert
Lee
Sibley
87
87
1869 - 1938
Thomas
Henry
Sibley
68
68
1775 - >1844
William
Pines
69
69
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] William Pines Ingram was a wealthy planter in Anson County, North Carolina and a descendent o f John Ingram, one of the early settlers in Virginia. Book: Montgomery County Heritage North Carolina Article: The Ingram Family #558 Written by: Winnie Ingram Richter Page: 252 William Pines Ingram, son of Joseph and Winifred, was born on 14 June1775 and died in 1844 . He was married in 1800 to Susan Strother, born1781, died 1847.
1744 - 1828
Joseph
Ingram
84
84
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Joseph was called "Joe Cap" to distinguish him from his nephew of the same name who was called "Joe Red" or "Joseph Ingram, Jr.". He owned a large amount of land on the Pee Dee River where he built a large house.He also built a church on his land which was used by all denominations.He owned a large number of slaves, and in his Will he gave slaves to some of his nieces and nephews on the condition that they teach twenty slaves to read the scriptures, free the slaves at the age of forty and contribute $500 to a book fund, the interest of which was to be used to purchase religious books for distribution to the poor. Membership in the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution can be attained through descent from Joseph Ingram. Voucher Number 2805 issued by the Auditor's office Lower Board Salisbury Distric t5 Nov 1784 for the sum of thirty pounds specie, is accepted as proof of his service as a patriot. This voucher is on file in the North Carolina Department of Archives in Raleigh under Revolutionary Accounts Vol VI, page 23, Folio 1. Article from the North Carolina State Archives in Raleigh, North Carolina Their home was located in the bend of the PEE DEE River, on what is now known as the Lee Little Plantation, and near this home they are buried.The interest of this family in religion, education, and civic justice area attested by Joseph's construction of a church building for the use of all denomination, the activity of members of his family in organizing and conduction the first Sunday-school in this county, liberal contributions to missions and book funds, and by the provision in who would "teach or cause to be taught to read twenty Negroes or other poor children"; and the grant of freedom to their slaves who should prove capable of taking care of themselves. Book: Montgomery County Heritage North Carolina Article: The Ingram Family #558 Written by: Winnie Ingram Richter Page: 252 Joseph, their youngest son, was born in Culpepper County, in 1744. Joseph came to North Carolina na first and settled in Bute County (Now Warren). He married Winfred Nelms in 1774, daughter of Presley Nelms, Srand Elizabeth Routt Nelms. Joseph Ingram acquired a large acreage of land in the bend of the Pee Dee River in Anson County. He built a comfortable home there and, according to tradition, it was in this home that the first Sunday School was organized in Anson County. It was conducted by members of his family for many years. He also erected on his plantation a church building which was available for the use of all denominations. Joseph died in 1828. In the burial plot nearby are the graves of Joseph and Winifred Nelms Ingram.
Winifred
Nelms
Sr
Nelms
Presley
Elizabeth
Routt
Living
King
1778 - 1856
Jeremiah
Ingram
77
77
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Never married.
1781 - 1810
Benjamin
Ingram
29
29
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Benjamin was accidentally killed while hunting with his brother, Ebenezer Nelms Ingram.
1783 - 1828
Lemuel
Ingram
44
44
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] The church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (LDS) IGI records shows they were married on 1 1 January 1812 in Richmond county, NC. The information given by Tammy L Tice says differently . May need to reseal with her data. Church references number A537314 2202.
1785 - 1867
Elizabeth
Ingram
82
82
1787
Samuel
P
Ingram
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Samuel was accidently killed while roofing a house.
1789 - 1869
Thomas
Ingram
79
79
1791 - 1864
Hannah
Pines
Ingram
73
73
George
W
Ingram
Sanders
1805
Caroline
Matilda
Sanders
Living
Floyd
George
Stanback
Thomas
Stanback
Mary
Jennings
1812 - 1891
Presley
N
Stanback
78
78
Jane
Stanback
Martin
Charlotte
Stanback
John
D
Pemberton
Caroline
Stanback
Horne
Living
Floyd
Joseph
Horne
Tyson
James
C
Tyson
Thomas
Tyson
Bettie
Tyson
James
Milton
Knotts
1797 - 1887
Ebenezer
Nelms
Ingram
90
90
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Ebenezer studied medicine for four years in New York City. When he returned to North Carolina, he learned his fiance had married another man. He withdrew from society and spent his time reading, leaving the management of his affairs to his slaves.
Robert
Nash
Frank
Davis
William
Tyson
1919 - 1988
John
William
Kane
69
69
1857
Elijah
JamesTyson
1862
Aaron
Frank
Tyson
1864
George
Sibleyt
Tyson
Winifred
Tyson
Tom
Robinson
George
C
Smith
Mary
Smith
Eben
Smith
Ella
Smith
Nancy
Smith
1918 - 1999
Charity
LaDelle
Allen
80
80
Sydney
Smith
William
Smith
George
Smith
Richard
Smith
Frank
Mabry
Julia
Fry
John
Lowder
Neal
Faust
Sallie
Redwine
Esther
Mae
Sibley
Living
Kane
Living
Kane
J W
Shay
Living
Shay
Living
Shay
Elvis
Spikes
Living
Spikes
1922 - 1970
Fales
Shay
48
48
Living
Spikes
Living
Spikes
Living
Spikes
D. 1952
Wisley
Aton
Allgood
Living
Kane
Living
Allgood
Living
Tharpe
Living
Spikes
Living
Sebern
Living
Spikes
Living
Spikes
Living
Spikes
Living
Sebern
Living
Spikes
Living
Spikes
Living
Kane
Living
Spikes
Living
Spikes
Living
Crumbly
Hales
Leonard
Sibley
1789
John
Sibley
1791
William
Sibley
1793
Robert
Sibley
1795
Henry
Sibley
1797
Charles
Sibley
Living
Befort
1800
Leonard
Sibley
Judith
Booth
William
Booth
Sr
Elizabeth
Sibley
1797
John
Sibley
Sallie
Sibley
1804
Mary Booth
(Polly)
Sibley
1806
Albert
Gallatin
Sibley
Martha
A
Sibley
Pamela
Caroline
Sibley
Living
Jaeger
Judith
Sibley
Harriet
Lavinia
Sibley
William
Tyree
Sibley
Nancy
Sibley
William
Sibley
Isaac
Sibley
Mary
Ellen
Sibley
Caroline
Sibley
Living
Befort
Living
Beardmore
Living
Ann
Living
Beardmore
Living
Barone
Montcreta
Payne
D. 1974
James
Bonds
Living
Graves
Living
Bonds
1854
Robert
Abraham
Beaty
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Robert Abraham Beatty was married twice. He had one child by his first wife. Alice Isabel e was his second wife. Robert worked for Alice's father at Scatterbranch, Texas. Robert left his family in 1919 (ran away with another woman) and went to Alabama. He is buried near Mobile, Alabama. None of his children ever saw him again. Joint Will of Robert A Beaty and Alice Beaty The State of Texas County of Wood KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS: We, Robert A. Beaty and Alice Beaty, husband and wife, of the county of Wood, State of Texas , each being of sound and disposing mind and memory,and being desirous to settle our worldly affairs while we and each of us has strength to do so, do make and publish our last will and testament,hereby revoking all others heretofore made by us or either of us. First: We desire and direct that our bodies be buried in a decent and Christian-like manner , suitable to our circumstances and conditions in life. Second: We desire and direct that all our just debts be paid out of our estate without delay , by the Executor or Executrix to be hereinafter named and appointed. Third: It is the desire and will of each of us, that all of the property, both real and personal, that we may die seized and possessed of, either jointly or separately, after the payment of all our just debts, including those incident to the burial above mentioned,together with all the expenses incident to and connected with the probating of this will, shall pass to and vest in fee simple in the survivor of we two, Robert A. Beaty and Alice Beaty, and after the payment of all the just debts, we, and each of us, give, bequeath and devise to the survivor, the remainder of all the property, both real and personal, we may own either jointly or separately, or be interested in likewise at the time of our death, in fee simple, to manage, sell and dispose of as such survivor may wish or see proper. Fourth: We and each of us hereby constitute and appoint the survivor of we two, Executor or Executrix, as the case may be, and direct that no bond or security be required as such. Fifth: We desire and direct that after the death of both of us, that all property, both real and personal, that might belong to us or either of us be gathered together, together with a l claims that might be owing by our heirs or otherwise, and after the payment of our just debts, the balance or residue then remaining be divided between the following heirs as follows: To Mattie Virginia Beaty, and her heirs, $25.00 in cash or its equal. To Gussie Beaty and Fairy Beaty each and their heirs, a one half of all the property then belonging to our estate. Sixth: We desire and direct that no further action be had in the courts in the administration of our estate or estates than to prove and record this will and to return an inventory and appraisement of our estates and list of claims. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, we and each of us in the presence of each other and in the presence of the subscribing witness, hereto set our hands at Yantis,Texas, this June 29, 1915. Signed by the parties as their last wills and testaments, in presence as attesting witnesses, and I hereto sign as such at their instance.
Living
Bonds
1909 - 1976
Ralph
Martin
67
67
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Ralph died of lung cancer.
1897 - 1967
Raymond
Ernest
Osborne
70
70
Living
Osborne
Living
Joanne
Anna
Roswell
No
children
Harvey
Living
Stone
Living
Emmons
Living
Emmons
1866 - 1951
Alice
Isabelle
Hood
85
85
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Robert & Alice had three other children that all died during their first year of life. Name s are unknown.
Living
Roberts
Living
Mueller
Living
Newman
Frank
Hotchkiss
Eva
Living
Hotchkiss
1906 - 1998
Hazel
Hotchkiss
92
92
1890
Ollie
Laurel
Burton
Living
Burton
Living
Burton
1888 - 1906
Georgia
Beaty
18
18
Living
Burton
Living
Burton
Living
Burton
Living
Adell
Living
Burton
Joseph
Dilley
Living
Jaerger
Living
Osborne
1812 - 1893
William
H.
Allen
81
81
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] William was born in Franklin County, Virginia. Came to Lawrence County,Ohio when about 12 years old, with his parents. Trip was made with one horse which the mother rode, with father and William walking. (Refer to memories by John L. Allen). William died at his home on Ice Creek, Lawrence County, Ohio. He was a member of the Missionary Baptist Church. He is buried in the Allen Cemetery, Deering, Ohio. Land Deeds for William Allen - Certificate No. 5894 - Vol. 12, page 269Signed by President Van Buren, August 5, 1837. Certificate No. 10915,Vol 22, Page 430, Signed by President John Tyler, June 25, 1841. Registered at Land Office, Chillicothe, Ohio, probably now Columbus, Ohio . Information on Land Deeds furnished by Dorothy Dean Ward who has the original deeds. ALLEN, William Jan 4, 1894 Ironton Register aged 81 yrs, died last Wed. Died at son-in-law's home, John G. KEYES. Funeral at Ice Creek Bap tist Church.
Emma
Allen
Gussie
Mae
Beaty
1881
Peter
S.
Dreiling
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] The Dreilling family is a very large German family from Russia who came to the United State s in the 1880's to escape changes in the Soviet Union and settled in Victoria (Herzog), Elli s County, Kansas.
1883 - 1970
Barbara
Mary
Weigel
86
86
Minnie
Langvardt
Christain
Langvardt
Lena
Langvardt
Minnie
Dora
Langvardt
Jr
Langvardt
Christian
Millie
Langvardt
1881 - 1936
Bernard
Walter
McDiffett
55
55
Living
Kane
R A
Beaty
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] R A Beatty was born in Ireland and came to America around late 1700 or early 1800. He was married twice (we are kin by his first marriage). His sons could not get along with their new step mother so Alford, Robert & Johnny ran away and came to Texas. Robert was 14 at the time. Robert saw his father once more when he and his daughter (Fairy Kathleen) went back to see him in 1908. The first RA Beatty was 98 years old when he died at Americus, GA (the county seat of Plains, GA. It is about 10-12miles from Americus. R A Beatty was court clerk there for many years. RA owned 600 acres in Americus GA. Beaty Lineage #298.
Living
McDiffett
W F
McDiffett
Mary
McDiffett
Agnes
McDiffett
Cina
McDiffett
Alice
McDiffett
Annie
McDiffett
Dave
M
McDiffett
James
A
McDiffett
Homer
L
McDiffett
Alfred
Beaty
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Lived at or near Dallas, Texas
Bruce
A
McDiffett
Ray J
McDiffett
Paul
W
McDiffett
McArthur
Craig
Davis
Gormley
1868 - 1886
William
Carr
Allen
18
18
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] William died of typhoid fever at 18 years of age. Lot for William C. Allen - Parkerville, Kansas Lot 1, block 2 containing16 and 20 feet, purchased May 9, 1887. Arrived from Ohio to Parkerville in 1884.
Living
Martin
1814 - 1903
Abner
Dilley
89
89
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Abner's obituary states that at the time of his death, he had "a full set of perfectly sound teeth." According to his obit, Abner was quite wealthy. Lived in Oak Ridge. Since Abner was born after his mother's arrest, I am not certain that John Dilley was his father. Charity's obit states there were 7 children in the family of Abner and Armilda.
Johnny
Beaty
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Went to Houston, Texas
1818 - 1900
Armilda
Russell
82
82
1838
Harriet
Dilley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Lived in Parkerville Kansas in 1890, 1902 & 1903
Randall
Stivers
1839 - 1920
Amissetta
Dilley
80
80
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Widowed in 1900. Lived in Waterloo, Ohio in 1902. Lived in Lawrence County Ohio in 1903.
1836 - 1888
Nathan
J.
Justice
51
51
1844 - 1902
Sorilda
Jane
Dilley
58
58
1838 - 1886
Lorenzo
Dow
Markin
48
48
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Lorenzo was wounded at Winchester VA while in the 5th W VA Vol Inf Regt. Later became the She riff of Lawrence County, Ohio. He is buried in Woodland cemetery Coal Grove Ohio. Lorenzo ha d black eyes, dark hair,fair complexion and was 5'10-1/2". His nick names were "Dave", "Sonn y""Sweenzer D." MARKIN, LORENZO D. I.R. NOV. 02, 1865 Married by Peras R. Polley, J. P., on the 5th day of Oct., 1865, at the Sheridan House in Iron ton, Lorenzo D. Markin and Miss Sarilda J. Dilley. Ironton Register, Thursday, January 16, 1896 CAPT. L. D. MARKIN Submitted by: Sharon Milich Kouns Last Monday night, at 8 o'clock, Capt. Lorenzo Dow Markin died from an attack of pneumonia. H e was taken ill on New Years, and soon was quite sick, but was improving until the last of th e week, when he got worse,and gradually sank to the fatal moment. The deceased was a little over 57 years old. He was born near Willow Wood, Lawrence county, De cember 23, 1838. He always lived in this county.He was a soldier in the civil war, enlisting g as a private and coming out as a Captain. He belonged to the 5th West Va. He was a brave, fa ithfulsoldier. When the war closed, he opened a store at Marion, farmed some,and filled the o office of Justice of the Peace. In 1877, he was elected Sheriff of the county, and since then h as resided in Ironton, being engaged in the grocery or shoe business. At the time of his death h he was administrator of the estate of W. D. Kelly. In 1865 Capt. Markin married Miss Sorild a Dilley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Abner Dilley, of Oak Ridge,who with two daughters and a so n, survives him. In all the relations of life Capt. Markin was a worthy, honorable,high-minded man. His influe nce was always on the side of right; and he was outspoken for what he deemed was just and upri ght. And while he was exact in his ideas of right his nature was generous and sympathetic. Just tat this point, in this sketch, an old and prominent citizen of this place came into the office e, and said: "I want to give you an instance of Capt.Markin's generous heart. I had some prop erty which was forced to sale. It cost me $5000, and Capt. Markin bought it in for $538. He so on come to me and said he had bought that property ridiculously low, and that I might redeem i t at what he paid any time; and he held the proposition open for three years, when I told hi m I was unable to redeem it at what he paid any time; and then he sold it for twice what he pa id for it. I merely tell you this to illustrate what a generous noble character Dow Markin was. " This incident serves better than mere assertion to describe the virtues and views of this lame nted citizen. He was esteemed by all. As a Sheriff,a merchant, a citizen, integrity shone fro m every word and deed. He was a Christian gentleman and did what he could to have love and dut y prevail. The funeral will take place from the residence on Thursday afternoon at 2o'clock. Rev. Geo. H . Geyer will officiate, and at the grave, the G. A.P. will conduct the ceremony. Copyright 1999, Martha J. Kounse, and Sharon M. Kouns All rights reserved. No part of this website may be reproduced, re published, or re transmitted without the expressed written consent of Sharon and/orMartha. Suggestions and/or comments are welcome at Martha J. Kounse or Sharon M. Kouns Last update February 8, 1999 You are visitor: 71 Since 02/6/99
1847
Albert
R.
Dilley
1856 - 1937
Abram
Newton
Dilley(Alva)
81
81
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] He lived in Parkerville, Kansas in 1890, 1902 & 1903. He lived in Council Grove Kansas in 192 7.
1851 - 1916
Hester
Ann
Dilley
64
64
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Hester is buried in Woodland Cemetery, Section 20, Ironton, Lawrence County, Ohio
Mammie
Beaty
1848 - 1926
Coleman
Green
Keyes
78
78
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Coleman is buried in Woodland Cemetery, Ironton, Lawrence County, Ohio Served three years in the regular army 15 December 1866-15 December 1869.
1771 - 1822
Elizabeth
Ackland
aka Eckland
51
51
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Helen Stinson sites in Greenbrier Co., two court records in 1890 and 1810, involving John & Elizabeth Dilley and a William Blair, which hint of domestic problems, It is noted that Wm Bl air left a large family in Greenbrier Co., to move to Lawrence Co., OH where he appeared alone in the 1820 census, and died soon thereafter. The court records imply a liaison between William Blair and Elizabeth. His will was not probated in Lawrence Co for at least twenty years (why?). Ed Riggs of Wheelersburg, VA shared information from the family bible on his ancestor, Peninah (Dilley) Golden, born 25 July 1802, which indicates that the removal of John to Greenbrier C o., OH occurred when she was six weeks old, and that John's children moved to Gallia Co., Ohio o in 1813 and 1814. In 1820, an Elizabeth Dilley married Isham Blankenship Sr.; the census for that year shows 1 5 children in the household, which included a child for each age of her known children. It a appears that this same Mr. Blankenship married again five months later(?).
1774
Jr.
Dilley
John
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Wayland's appendix of German settlers, notes the birth of John Dilley in 1774 to John and Catherine Dilly.
1793 - 1879
Joseph
A
Dilley
86
86
Elizabeth
Matthews
1818
Margaret
Dilley
Benjamin
R
Edwards
1820
John
Franklin
Dilley
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] John Franklin Dilley was in the army in the Minnesota Cavalry during the Civil War. He resided in St Paul Minnesota where he enlisted.
Maria
1822
Minerva
Dilley
Kate
Beaty
Samuel
Atheny
1823
Barney
Dilley
Rachel
E
Clary
1815
Armida
Elizabeth
Dilley
John
Everett
1802 - 1873
Elizabeth
Dilley
71
71
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] DILLEY, ELIZABETH ----- I.R. FEB. 06, 1873 Ironton Newspaper reported death of Elizbeth Dilley as February 6, 1873.
1797 - 1849
Hannah
Dilley
52
52
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Hannah is buried at Rankin Farm, Near Aid, Lawrence, Ohio
Armstrong
Rankin
1818
Mary
Polly
Rankin
Sylvester
Wesley
Drummond
Susan
Beaty
1818
Hiram
Rankin
Susan
Drummond
1821 - 1844
John
Rankin
22
22
1823
Penina
Rankin
Thornton
Lambert
1825
Sarah
Ann
Rankin
Freeman
Middleton
1827
William
J
Rankin
Barbara
Stivers
1829
Asbernia
Rankin
Living
Reed
John
Henry
Lambert
1831
Mahalia
Rankin
Nicholas
Null
1831
Matilda
Rankin
George
Washington
Lane
1834
James
Louden
Rankin
1836
Thompson
Rankin
Susan
1837
Barnett
Rankin
1839
Diana
A
Rankin
Living
Floyd
Andrew
J
Johnson
1801 - 1863
Barnett
Dilley
62
62
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Barnett is buried in Loof Cemetery, Pattonsburg, Daviess, Missouri
1806 - 1879
Minerva
Cooper
72
72
1827
Henry
Dilley
Minerva
1828
Joseph
Dilley
Mary
Rose
Delilah
Rice
1831
Washington
Dilley
Elizabeth
Cain
Living
Holmes
Elizabeth
Ellis
1833
William
Dilley
Phoebe
Rice
1834
John
Dilley
Mary
Ann
Thomas
1836
Margaret
Candace
Dilley
George
W
Rice
1838
Harvey
Dilley
Susan
Ann
Bailey
1841
Delilah
Dilley
Living
Holmes
Thomas
Rolston
1843 - 1906
Willis
Dilley
63
63
1846 - 1922
Margaret
E;;em
McLaughlin
75
75
1847
Rebecca
Dilley
1854
Sarah
Dilley
1801 - 1886
Peninah
Dilley
84
84
Martial
Golden
1824
Lourinda
Golden
Joshua
Hornbuckle
1826
Fletcher
Golden
Living
Befort
Living
Holmes
Harriet
Lionbarger
1828
Charles
Golden
1830
Arvilla
Golden
William
H
Spicer
Lewis
Brewer
1835
William
C
Golden
Mary
R
Roach
1837
Thomas
Golden
Mary
Francis
Richardson
1840 - 1842
Frances
Golden
2
2
1895
Lillian
B
Floyd
1842 - 1842
Harrison
Golden
Mahala
Jane
Golden
Charles
H
Myers
1845
Ann
Elizabeth
Golden
1806
Anna
Dilley
John
Kelley
1827
William
Kelley
Artie
Lane
Emaline
N
Holder
1830
Permina
Kelley
Clebe
Dodgen
Hanibal
Barnett
1830
Lewis
Kelley
Jane
1830
Melvina
Kelley
Henry
Niday
1843
Charles
Kelley
Unmarried
1835
Polly
Kelley
Daniel
Kayler
1837
Minerva
Kelley
Living
Dodger
Norris
T
Allen
1839
Catherine
Kelley
1842
Nancy
Jane
Kelley
Clint
Gallup
Amos
Ratliff
1847
John
Kelley
Ann
Smith
1811
Catherine
Dilley
Allen
Talley
1837
Alma
Talley
Living
Dodger
Susan
Carter
Mary
Belcher
1841
Emma
Talley
Lindsay
Price
William
Puckett
1844
Joseph
Talley
Elizabeth
Woody
Nancy
Leach
1847
Elisha
Talley
Thelma
Price
1899 - 1952
Mattie
Maude
Floyd
53
53
Mary
A
Giles
Peter
Carter
1810
James
Dilley
Delilah
Hall
1830
Washington
Tracy
Dilley
Mary
Ann
Biggerstaff
1830
Mary
Ann
Dilley
George
Pool
1834
Hester
Ann
Dilley
John J
Knox
1905 - 1975
Charlie
James B
(Bo) Floyd
70
70
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] It is said that Charlie James Floyd tried to get into college and was rejected because he was a year too young. So, he left, changed his name to James "Bo" Floyd and went back and sai d he was a year older to get into college. Since he received his teaching degree, he kept the name James "Bo" Floyd for the remainder of his life and was buried under that name. Bo Floyd was very much a horseman. He was the first successful breeder of Tennessee Walking Horses and Shetland Ponies (late named a breed of their own). He also wrote many articles for Quarter Horse Magazine. Bo also did family research and had traced the family line, however, when his farmhouse burned down, all his pictures and records were destroyed.
Mr.
Akers
1837
Sarah
Amanda
Dilley
Simon
Adams
1838
Elizabeth
Dilley
1839
Julia
Ann
Dilley
John
Kelly
1841
Arvilla
Dilley
Eli
Brumbaugh
1843
James
Vinton
Dilley
Sarah
R
Strong
Tempie
Floyd
Susannah
Whittington
1818 - 1885
Diana
Dilley
67
67
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Diana is buried in Powellsville, Scioto, Ohio
D. 1897
William
Fitzer
1840
Sarah
Hannah
Fitzer
Louis
Knapp
1842
James
Henry
Fitzer
Margaret
Smith
1845
William
Harvey
Fitzer
Susan
D
Carter
1846
Louisa
Jane
Fitzer
Living
Floyd
John
Cahia
Trimmer
1849
John
M
Fitzer
1851
Barney
D
Fitzer
Clara
1853
Charles
Fitzer
1855 - 1870
Martha
Ann
Fitzer
15
15
1857
Luella
T
Fitzer
William
H
Trimmer
1860
Mary
Maggie
Fitzer
James
B
Dilley
1906 - 1986
Lera
Moore
79
79
Lucinda
Dilley
William
Dilley
Unknown
Whittington
Mary
Whittington
Charles
Whittington
John
Dilley
Jr.
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] John Dilley of Shenandoah acquired 400 acres of land in 1773 on a site in the valley between t he two branches of the Shenandoah River and a river and a mountain away form Woodstock the cou nty seat of the west.
1770
Jesse
Dilley
Ann
Smallwood
1807
James
Dilley
John
Dilley
Sr.
George
C.
Smith
Living
Floyd
Frederick
Dilley
James
Dilley
1813 - 1871
Luther
Dilley
58
58
Nancy
G K
Williams
Coleman
Green
Wades
1826 - 1858
Margaret
Waller
32
32
Margaret
Thornton
M
Powers
Lena
Justice
M
Hackworth
Living
Floyd
1851
John
W
Dilley
1850
Margaret
S
Dilley
Lena
Justice
Hackworth
Living
Colleen
1846
Susan
J
Dilley
Julia
Lacell
Sylvester
Dilley
John
Dilley
Luther
Dilley
D. 1994
Dianna
Floyd
1845
Nancy
Dilley
Powers
1852 - 1935
James
H
Dilley
83
83
1844 - 1868
Margaret
Jane
Allen
23
23
Mary
Dilley
1855 - 1945
George
Washington
Dilley
90
90
Julia
Lacell
Sylvester
Dilley
John
Dilley
Luther
Dilley
Living
Chrietzberg
Louisa
Unknown
Name
Dilley
Pernina
Ellswich
Hackworth
1866 - 1945
Luther
Clark
Dilley
79
79
Mollie
Humphrey
Luther
Dilley
George
Dilley
William
E
Dilley
1868 - 1949
William
Jefferson
Dilley
80
80
Mary
Reed
Living
Chrietzberg
Wilbur
Dilley
Lillie
Dilley
Pearl
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Dilley
Living
Mannon
1870 - 1944
James
Harrison
Floyd
73
73
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Ella America Lunsford and James Harrison Floyd were first cousins
Living
Crandell
John
Robinson
1907 - 1990
Florina
Dreiling
83
83
Living
Befort
Living
Befort
Living
Befort
Living
Befort
Living
Befort
Living
Befort
1913 - 1984
Raymond
Patrick
Jaeger
71
71
1876 - 1952
Ella
America
Lunsford
76
76
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Ellas father was a school teacher. Betty's husband died at an early age leaving her with small children. James Harrison Floyd w ent to live with his Aunt to help her. This is the way Ella and James began to take notice o f one another. The families didn't seem to care or to be concerned that they were first cous ins. The Lunsford family lived west of Yantis Texas toward Albe, Texas. Betty was married t he first time to a Taylor. Had one child. That child and her husband both died. She then m married Walter Floyd.
1904 - 1981
Delma
Brown
76
76
Living
Jaeger
Living
Jaeger
Living
Jaeger
Living
Jaeger
Living
Jaeger
Living
Roesner
Living
Roesner
Living
Pribenno
Living
Dennis
A.
Lunsford
Living
Dennis
Living
Hopp
1864
Joseph
E.
Varner
1865
Olive
Varner
Perry
Hutchison
1870
Serepta
Varner
P W
Good
1871
Edwin
Rufus
Hotchkiss
1854 - 1930
Mahala
Ann
Gardner
76
76
Jack
Cranford
Betty
Taylor
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Dee's husband died at an early age leaving her with small children. James Harrison Floyd went to live with his Aunt to help her. This is the way Ella and James began to take notice of one another. The families didn't seem to care or to be concerned that they were first cousins . The Lunsford family lived west of Yantis Texas toward Albe, Texas. Betty was married the first time to a Taylor. Had one child. That child and her husband both died. She then married Walter Floyd.
Mary
Magaline
Hood
1846 - 1890
W C
McDaniel
43
43
Mr.
Hall
Mr.
Pugh
Mr.
Cranford
Living
Reep
Living
Holmes
Living
Bookout
Living
Holmes
Betty
Lunsford
Maude
M
Lunsford
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Maud was married twice first to Monterate, then to Payne
J H
Floyd
1893 - 1895
Ruthie
May
Beaty
1
1
1895
Lee
Beaty
1907 - 1908
Ivey
Estell
Beaty
1
1
Annie
Jones
Dee
Taylor
Mr.
Lunsford
Alva
Roe
J T
Adams
Charles
Hall
Living
Brunnemer
Dee
Lunsford
Charles
Hall
Phendonia
Ann
Hood
John
Pugh
1894 - 1986
George
Columbus
Reeves
91
91
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] SS # 457-01-4883
D. 1998
Wylma
Living
Sibley
1887
William
A.
Hood
George
Lester
Brunnemer
Living
Downing
Living
Keihn
Willie
Lee
Lunsford
D. 1999
Pauline
Minch
Living
Georgene
Living
Mulvaney
Living
LaFleur
Living
Katherine
1855 - 1920
Sarah
Elizabeth
McDaniel
64
64
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] 1 DEAT 2 DATE 29 NOV 1920 2 PLAC Scatter Branch, Scatter Branch Cemetery. Hunt County, Texas
John
McDaniel
Nancy
Crow
D. 1972
Russel
Theryle
Hood
Daisy
Daugherty
1844
John
F.
Sibley
1876 - 1963
Willie
May
Hood
87
87
John
Albert
Smith
1881 - 1972
James
Clark
Hood
91
91
Lillie
Leota
Owens
Rhoda
Emery
1878 - 1970
John
Wayne
Hood
92
92
Estella
Pearl
1884 - 1959
Nellie
Aver
Hood
75
75
Verner
Elster
Smith
Massey
Hood
1886 - 1964
Mary
Ethyle
Hood
78
78
1889
Jeanettie
Fair
Hood
Waddi
Judson
Thompson
1892 - 1969
Boss
Douglas
Hood
76
76
Lettie
Alberta
Baker
Alfred
Baker
Alice
Newton
1914 - 1965
Nell
Marie
Hood
50
50
Living
McIlwain
Living
Hood
1815
John P
Hood
Esq
Living
Nance
1919 - 1960
Raymond
Douglas
Hood
40
40
Living
Hood
Living
Nickel
1924 - 1924
Mary
Alice
Hood
Living
Miller
Albert
Miller
Living
Plumb
Living
Hood
Living
Crowder
1828
N B
Living
Wilson
Estelle
Kane
Mame
Kane
Stout
Sullivan
1851
James Wilson
Zachary
Lumpkin Hood
1849 - 1922
Georgia
A
72
72
B G
Leverett
1861
Margarett
A. F.
Hood
1863
Cida A
E
Hood
Peppers
Hattie
Floyd
1871
Eugenia
S
Hood
1875
John
M Ran
Hood
Mary
L.
Carnes
1810 - 1882
Joseph
W.
Varner
72
72
1772 - ~1846
John
Varner
74
74
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Family tradition says that both John and Sarah are buried on their farm in the Varner Cemetery. Although John left no will, his heirs are listed in a deed, recorded in Belmont County . After John's death, his widow broke up housekeeping and went to live with her children, staying for a few months at a time with each one. John and Sarah made the long journey to Belmont County Ohio from Greene County, PA. John pur chased their homestead on April 19, 1826. Two years later John purchased 65 acres from Thomas Smith for $300. By then, he had one horse and two head of cattle, for which he paid 38 cents, 5 mils taxes. By 1830 John's sons, Samuel and Isaac also appeared on the Belmont County tax rolls. Most of John and Sarah's children migrated to Linn County, Iowa by 1860, to Kansas by 1872 and to Kay County, Oklahoma Territory at the time of the land rush in the late 1800's. These early Varners were farmers in Ohio and Iowa, and were intelligent, hard-working people. After moving to Kansas, they went into the building industry. Education was important, and even the earlier generation of Varner men were taught to read and write.
~1785 - ~1855
Sarah
Moore
70
70
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] AFN 2TKQ-TV
1869
Millie
Markin
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] According to Wilma Allen Hotchkiss Hildebrecht, Millie was a housemother at the Xenia, Ohio Soldiers and Sailors Orphans Home.
1871
Margaret
Markin
1873 - 1936
Abner
D
Markin
62
62
Christopher
Strickland
Lydia
P Ellis
Reuben
H. Ellis
1878
Gertrude
Ellis
Ellis
1869
Cora
Ellis
Mr.
Heald
1896 - 1981
Ellis
Dow
Markin
84
84
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] SSN 280-05-6613
1899 - 1967
Frank
Lorenzo
Markin
67
67
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] SSN 276-30-4392
D. 1992
Anne
Markin
Living
Becham
Living
Markin
1835 - 1902
Jennetie
T Fair
McElmore
66
66
D. 1988
Abner
Dilley
Markin
D. 1945
William
Dow
Markin
Living
Fannin
Living
Dunfee
Living
Smith
LA
Forrest R
Andrews
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Was an attorney and Judge in Lawrence County Ohio
Zitella
Andrews
Lee
Andrews
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Attorney in Ironton Ohio
Milton
Andrews
Clara
Andrews
Starling
Leverett
Mr.
Christy
Living
Kesterson
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Jr
Living
Bethune
Living
Bethune
Living
Bethune
Living
Turpin
Living
Brunnemer
Living
Beardmore
Living
Webb
Living
Webb
Living
Webb
Living
Webb
Living
Ramsey
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
Living
Markin
1805 - 1864
Daniel
H.
Markin
58
58
Margaret
Sumpter
J B
Hood
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] JB and Fairy has 12 children. Twelve girls and one boy. Only one name is known.
Richard
Sumpter
Mary
Kingery
1837 - 1864
Charles
M
Markin
27
27
Mary
A
Dolton
1840 - 1897
Martha
Markin
56
56
D. 1896
Bartley
Blankenship
1845 - 1864
Richard
Markin
19
19
1847
Luttitia
Markin
1852
Lucianna
Markin
Elizabeth
Golden
Fairy
Isabelle
McElmore
Lucinda
Dechard
1788 - 1850
Samuel
Markin
62
62
1790 - 1858
Thomas
Markin
68
68
1792
Martha
Markin
1797
John
Markin
1802
Elizabeth
Markin
1800 - 1880
Charles
W II
Markin
80
80
1808
Cornelius
B.
Markin
1810 - 1850
Andrew
Markin
39
39
1814 - 1900
James
M.
Markin
85
85
James Wilson
Zacariah
Hood
1816
William
H
Markin
BET. 1780 - 1790
Joseph
Markin
Rebecca
Deckard
1826 - 1864
Charles
William
Markin
38
38
George
Washington
Keys
Elizabeth
Lambert
Waller
1874
Oliver
A
Keyes
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Lived in Council Grove KS a little East of Charity & John Lee Allen, South of Main St, Sout h of Woodland Cemetery about 1/2 block. Oliver as a rural mail carrier with horse and buggy - he was completely bald by the time Wilm a Allen Hotchkiss Hildebrecht could remember him.
1875
Emma
L
Keys
1877
John
Hammond
Keys
1880
Charity
D.
Keys
James Wilson
Zacariah
Lumpkin Hood
1857 - 1945
Mary
Elizabeth
Waggoner
88
88
1874
Una
Varner
1877
Cloa
Varner
1812 - 1895
Joseph
Dye
83
83
1816 - 1889
Mary
Porter
73
73
1813 - 1874
Lucy
Andrews
61
61
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Joseph's family migrated to Ohio in 1816, and to Otter Creek Township, (Lafayette PO) Linn County, Iowa in 1859. When Joseph was 21 years of age, he fell in love with one of the Andrews sisters. The girls came from strict Quaker families. According to the Quaker religion, its members are prohibited from marrying outside of the church. Consequently, when Lucy Andrew was married Joseph Varner at the Methodist Church in Belmont County, Ohio, she was barred from her church. Afterwards, she joined the faith of her husband and became a Methodist. Joseph's occupation was that of a tenant farmer. In 1837, Joseph made a contract with Joseph Berry of adjoining Wayne township, to lease Berry's 21 acres of land in exchange for certain improvements, to wit: "clear the land and plant 25 apple trees on it of grafted fruit and 15 cherry trees" and other fruit trees, and to "build a good cabbin house 16 by 22 feet,...inc luding two windows and one door...and find sash and glass to put in the windows..." Joseph and Lucy later migrated to adjoining Monroe County. In 1847, Joseph purchased two lots in the village of Lewisville, which he sold three years later. In 1856, Joseph and his siblings sold their shares to the 80-acre tract of land inherited from their father, to their brother , Daniel, for $1400. During the next four years, Joseph, Lucy and their children moved to Linn County, Iowa. This was probably near the time Joseph's brothers, John and Isaac, also made the move to Linn County. Joseph continued to work as a tenant farmer, as the 1860 census proves. After the death of Lucy in 1874, Joseph was a storekeeper. Joseph died in 1882, and was buried beside his dear Lucy at Center Point Cemetery, Linn County, Iowa.
Ada
Ann
Experience
1890
Earl
Varner
1887 - 1887
Halleck
Varner
1d
1d
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Headstone in Parkerville Cemetery reads: Budded on Earth to Bloom in Heaven Halleck Varner January 31, 1887 February 1, 1887 Son of J E & M L Varner
Living
Eshnaur
Living
Scott
Nancy
Simpson
Francis
Sumter
1845 - 1928
Cornelius
Singleton
Markin
83
83
Elizabeth
(Betsey)
Blankenship
1837 - 1916
James
Marion
Allen
78
78
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] James was a Machinist in Ironton at the time of his death. Allen, James; 1868 March1; d-Ironton;O-Machinist; COD-Consumption Obituary ALLEN, JAMES Colonel - I.R. MAR 19, 1868 Died Mar 15, 1868 Ironton, Ohio of consumption. He was a Colonel in 2nd WV Cavalry. He was born in Fayette Co., VA, Feb 16, 1831 but moved to Jackson County, Ohio when very young. H e married in Gallia County in 1853. When the war broke out he volunteered and was made captain....After the war, he returned to old situation in the Clarke, Ricker & Co. machine works.
1848
Mary
Frances
Woods
Alice
Isabel
Hood
1869
Ed
Allen
1844
Eliza
Jane
Glandon
John
Glandon
Theodocia
Runion
1816
Bird
Dilley
Sally
Defoe
Dorothy
Dean
Allen
Living
Osborne
Living
Jordin
Living
Osborne
1826 - 1899
John
D
Hood
73
73
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] J D and Fairy had 13 children. Twelve girls and one boy. Names Unknown. J D Hood fought for the Confederate Army during the Civil War. A letter dated January 31, 1863 indicates they marched through Montgomery and to Entaro Alabama between the 24th and 31st. Newspaper clipping on the death of J D Hood: J D Hood , an old and respected citizen of the Scatter Branch community, died suddenly Tuesday night. He was not known to have been sick at all on retiring, but got up during the night and fell dead on the floor, where he was found by a member of the family. J W Hood, son of deceased, was serving on the jury here and was greatly shocked when he received news of the sudden death of his father, who settled in the community thirty years ago and raised a large family, who will have the sympathies of a large circle of friends and acquaintances . Interment took place yesterday at Scatter Branch cemetery. 1880 Hunt County Census shows John D Hood a farmer from South Carolina. 1860 South Carolina Census shows J D Hood in Bullocks Creek PO, York County, SC No 450. 1860 York County SC Census shows J D Hood age 32 male farmer, real estate value of 1200 and P P value of 1350.
Living
Osborne
Living
Smith
Living
Osborne
Living
Osborne
Living
Slater
Living
Osborne
Living
Osborne
Living
Martin
Living
Marchian
Living
Nelson
Fairy Isabelle
McElmore (Possibly
McLamore)
Living
Martin
Living
Martin
Living
King
Living
Martin
Living
Freeman
Living
McDiffett
Living
Johnson
Living
McDiffett
Living
McDiffett
Living
McDiffett
1810
James Wilson
Zachariah
Lumpkin Hood
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] 1840 Census shows Zachariah Hood living in Fairfield County, SC Page 166. AFN 2728-WH
Living
Morgan
Living
Eshnaur
Living
Kitner
1811 - 1846
Lucretia
Alford
35
35
Margaret
Wilson
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Margaret was a relative of President Wilson.
John
Alford
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] John was a stowaway from Ireland.
1813 - 1896
Matilda
Patterson
82
82
Mr.
Ward
1840 - 1841
Anna
Allen
1
1
1843 - 1890
William
Harrison
Allen
47
47
[SibleyClay49139.ftw] Served in Co K 5th West Virginia Infantry in Civil War.
1909
Robbie
Sibley
Wesley
Wallace
1872
Ardenia
Elizabeth
Sibley
1867
William
Pinkney
Vaughn
1891
Jessie
Lee
Vaughn
1890 - 1990
James
Frank
Clayton
100
100
1893
Bonnie
Sue
Vaughn
1892 - 1965
Wellard
Bryant
72
72
1895
Hollie
Emily
Vaughn
1897 - 1970
Theron
Lovelace
Nixon
72
72
1897 - 1962
William
Ivor
Vaughn
65
65
1895 - 1973
Blanche
Campbell
77
77
1899 - 1977
John
Claborne
Vaughn
77
77
1908 - 1925
Lenna
Irene
Hatzenbuehler
17
17
1901
Winnie
Jewel
Vaughn
1888
Frank
James
Warren
1904 - 1996
Hattie
Frances
Vaughn
92
92
1904 - 1986
Marvin
Albert
Russell
81
81
1905 - 1998
Merrell
Edward
Vaughn
92
92
1910 - 1995
Agnes
Joyce
Hitt
84
84
1907 - 1976
Mary
Louvinia
Vaughn
68
68
1903 - 1970
Lee
Roy
Wilder
66
66
~1873
Lula
Sibley
L. S.
Graves
Paul
Graves
William
Graves
~1878
Donia
Sibley
Rob F.
Hodge
Haden
Hodge
Hartwell
Hodge
1882 - 1953
Hattie
E.
Sibley
70
70
1881
Walter
A.
Williams
Harold
Williams
1909 - 1978
Howard
Augusta
Vaughn
68
68
1838
Marian
Sibley
Elizabeth
Burgess
1842 - 1921
George
Washington
Sibley
78
78
George was an early riser and felt that other should rise equally early. To that end, he would often pass by their homes and throw rocks at the windows and doors to get them up and out. George always took a few draughts from his jug before retiring in the evening. One of George's sisters was considered to be quite unstable and George had her committed. George and family all moved to Pontotoc, Mississippi in 1866. They lived in a log cabin when they first lived in Mississippi. Farmed 300 or more acres on several lots. His will gave each daughter (3) 100 acres and each grandchild a cow (except Nita). George W. was a prosperous and well regarded Civil War Veteran. After his death, his wife, Sarah Ann Perry, lived with Nettie. Nettie then felt that all the estate from George W. Sibley's will should go to her alone. As a result, attorneys were hired by Nettie on the one side, and by her sisters on the other side and the attorneys ended up with everything. [From Obituary sent by Edna McLain Dolland: "He was the fifth of eleven children and was attending school when the Civil War began; he then volunteered for Confederate Service. His Confederate Record shows him as a Private in Company G, 6th Georgia Infantry, Army of Tennessee, CSA; the unit being organized in Taylor County, Georgia as the Butler Van Guards." He was a Private March 4, 1862 and Present April 30, 1864. There are no further records. [An index card attached to the record states a summary: "Marked Absent in Hospital at Biglers Wharf for March & April 1862. Detailed for duty at the Winder Hospital, Richmond, Virginia as Nurse dated May 16, 1862. April 30 to Aug. 31, 1862 in Richmond, VA at Hospital sick. Returned to Camp Jan & Feb. 1863 present. March & April 1864 marked Present."] ] In 1861, young George volunteered for the Butler Van Guards being organized in Taylor County; it became Company G of the 6th Georgia Infantry, the first Regiment to organized in Georgia during the Civil War. Everyone was eager to fight and bring honor to their family and state so, of course, they all hoped to be sent to Virginia, where they were sure the major fighting would take place. The young men were sent off with speeches, flags, new hand-sewn uniforms and bibles. The speech accompanying the presentation of the flag to the Butler Vanguards was: "Gentlemen and Ladies: In presenting this flag to the Butler Vanguards, I am encouraged with the sentiment that there is too much patriotism burning upon the altar of their hearts to suffer it ever to trail in the dust, but with manful courage will they wave it at the head of the noble band, avowing no higher watchword than liberty and Southern rights. The stars are few, but they are of the first magnitude, and will shine with greater brilliancy the more heroic the achievements they wave over. I have said the stars are few, yet the mighty revolutions hat are going on will render those that are opaque more luminous, and then they will shine with greater effulgence than the stars that waved over the Swamp Fox of the noble state of South Carolina. But, gentlemen of the Butler Vanguards, short sentences are the best; so remember when you take your exit from Butler, the smiles of the ladies will attend you, and what is far better, you will have the smiles of God. Therefore receive these colors, and with them our best wishes for success in battle and safe return. Take them, and may they wave triumphantly in the Southern army, and if needs be over the home and grave of Washington, and may they particularly, with their glowing colors of red, white and blue." Still basking in the glow of the good feelings of family and friends, the Butler Vanguards did, indeed, head north to Virginia, joining up with he Chattahoochee Beauregards and the Pulaski Volunteers in Augusta, Georgia for the train ride. All joined in reverie and friendship, until the train reached Petersburg, where they were to change trains for the short ride to Richmond. To quote for the recollections of Green Fleming, a member of the Pulaski Volunteers, "It seems that each one of the three companies mentioned had engaged a passenger coach, fro, different railroad officials, on which to proceed to Richmond, and being that only two passenger coaches could be procured, there was a struggle as to which companies should occupy them, and for a while it seemed that the friendship which had grown so intimate between the companies was about to come to a close. Prof. John H. Brantly, who had accompanied us, requested the Volunteers to stand back and let him whip out the whole crowd and then we could have both coaches. During this time the three captains had 'compared notes,' and it being apparent that all had been treated wrong, especially the Volunteers, the Chattahoochee and Taylor companies, who had possession of the coaches, marched out, and with the Volunteers, sought and obtained another train with open cars, comfortably arranged with seats, where all fared alike and enjoyed a splendid ride. The boys did not like the idea of riding in box cars then, but soon learned to appreciate even a stock car filled with horses. On our arrival in Richmond we were sent to Hollingsworth Grove, a beautiful suburb of the city, and comfortably quartered." It wasn't long before camp life took its toll on George. By April 1862, he was in the hospital at Biglers Wharf. During this time, he received orders to remain at the hospital as a nurse. While he was nursing himself and other soldiers, his regiment, which had been garrisoned at Yorktown, Virginia, fought at the Battle of Seven Pines, part of the Seven Days Battle. The regiment, led by Alfred Colquitt, fought well despite only adequate leadership on the part of General Colquitt. The unit missed the Battle of Second Manasses in August 1862 but was ready, including George, for the Battle of Antietam, the bloodiest battle of the Civil War. The 6th Georgia suffered heavy casualties, about 200 of the 250 men engaged. The now battle hardened troops went on to fight at Fredericksburg, a battle noted for house to house fighting and bungled planning on the part of the Union's General Burnside. The regiment then had to really show its capabilities at the Battle of Chancellorsville. Colquitt's Sixth fought under Stonewall Jackson in an attack on the Union Eleventh Corps flank. General Colquitt hesitated, thinking, he said, that the Union cavalry was massing in his front. Fortunately, under Jackson's leadership, the battle was won anyway, although, unfortunately, Stonewall Jackson died there. After that, Colquitt and his embarrassed and depleted brigade were transferred from Virginia to North Carolina and then to Charleston, which they defended during the summer and fall of 1863. Colquitt's Brigade, including the 6th Georgia Regiment, got its chance to redeem itself when they were sent to Florida, arriving just in time to fight at the Battle of Olustee. The Sixth was detached from Colquitt's Brigade and fought on the extreme left of the Confederate line. They held their position despite losing five killed and fifty-six wounded and running so low on ammunition that they were forced to rummage through the cartridge boxes of the dead and dying. Just when they despaired of anything but death or surrender, a supply of ammunition arrived. The Sixth had truly redeemed themselves. The Sixth Georgia remained in Georgia for several months after that before returning to South Carolina. From there they were sent to fight Cold Harbor (June 1864) and the siege of Petersburg (July 1864). The Sixth played a prominent part in both battles. By late 1864, the Sixth had lost some 900 men killed and wounded. The unit then returned to North Carolina, where they fought at Bentonville before the final surrender in 1865. After the war, his once prosperous parents were left poverty stricken and, hence, decided, in 1866, to move to eastern Pontotoc County, Mississippi. "After his marriage to Lula Mary Sibley, he and his wife lived in Brame, where they were member of the New Hope Baptist Church, until 1894, when they moved to Springville, joining the Springville Baptist Church and, later, in 1904, the Palestine Methodist Church. In December 1919, they moved to Pontotoc, joining the Pontotoc Methodist Church, staying only until November 1920, when they moved back to Brame. In the Baptist Church, he served as Deacon. In the Methodist Church, he served as Steward. He was also a member of the Masonic Lodge [Obituary provided by Edna Earl McLain Dolland]."
Coy
Jernigan
Annie
Bell
Jernigan
Thomas
J.
Jernigan
Killed in Car wreck.
David
Hood
Jernigan
Doyle
W.
Floyd
Morris
K.
Floyd
Louis
L.
Floyd
David
A.
Floyd
1846 - 1914
Martha
Sibley
68
68
Franklin
Watts
Mattie
Bell
Watts
Will C.
Dillard
Emma
Watts
Walter
G.
Watts
Wallace
H.
Watts
Mattie
B.
Watts
Charlie
Watts
James
Clayton
Viera
Pitts
Amandy
Gentry
Augustus
Watts
1885 - 1956
Ida
Bell
Goggins
71
71
William
C.
Dillard
Nettie
Crane
Ida
Thompson
Edward
Hewlett
John
Allison
1850
Julie
Sibley
1849 - 1910
Hartwell
Sibley
60
60
Mary
J.
Eaves
John
Weaver
Florence
Weaver
Zula
Weaver
Jessie
Weaver
Ida
Weaver
Tommy
Weaver
Tom
Carlock
Worth
Carlock
~1864
Emaline
Tempanna
Kahrine Hensley
1887
John
William
Gilliam
1890
Harry
Augustus
Sibley
1888
Joseph
Louis
Sibley
1890
Fannie
May
Smith
1889
Nora
Lee
Sibley
Lola
Sibley
Mary
Sibley
Francis
Gilly
John
W.
Johnson
1843 - 1893
Nathaniel
Faulkner
49
49
Mattie
A. \\
Martha
Hammond
Josh
Stepp
1820
Allen
Boston
McLain
In the 1850 Census of Hancock County Alabama, page 362B, line 11, there is the following family: Allen McLain 29 Farmer $510 Born NC Mary 26 Ala Margaret 9 Ala Mary 6 Ala William 4 Ala Elizabeth 2 Ala David 2/12 Ala Margaret Hewatt 50 Va This looks promising as the parents of James McLain if the Maragaret Hewatt is actually Margaret Hewlett, mother of Mary. The census taker's spelling and writing are not good. Two pages later there is a William Hewlett, age 26, a "Lawer", born in Alabama, with his wife Sarah and sons David and William. If there is any relationship with Mary Hewlett, he would have to be her twin brother or a cousin. In 1860, in Winston County Alabama, the former Hancock County, Township 9, Range 10, Page 1207A. there is the following family: Allen B. McClain 42 Farmer $1500 Real Est. $1200 Personal Est. Born NC Mary K 39 Ala Margaret I. 19 Ala Mary K. 17 Ala William H. 14 Ala Elisabeth 11 Ala David H. 9 Ala Felix D. 7 Ala Rebecca 6 Ala Leander 2 Ala Margaret Hewlett 61 Va Then in 1870, also in Winston County, Houston Township, page 511A, there is this family: Allen McLain 52 Farmer $800 $400 NC Mary C. 48 Ala David 20 Ala Phelis D. (Felix) 17 Ala Rebeca 15 Ala Adan 12 Ala Dena 10 Ala Enoch 6 Ala James D. 3 Ala While these appear to all be the same family, growing in size and decreasing in prosperity, there are some problems with the ages, especially of Allen and Mary, perhaps accounted for my the census taker not actually talking to Allen and Mary in one or more of the censuses. Also, James Erastus's Obituary says that his mother's name was Mary Elizabeth Hewitt while the name here is Mary C or Mary K (Katherine or Catherine?) so the possibility exists that her middle name was not Elizabeth or that she had three names in addition to her surname. James Erastus is called James D. in the 1870 Census. According to Edna Earl McLain Dolland, James Erastus was sometimes called David. Perhaps he also had three names in addition to his surname. In 1880, Mary appears to be widowed as she and three of her children appear as: [Winston County, Township 9, page 559B] Mary C. McClane 56 Ala Va Va Deciann 20 daughter Ala NC Ala Eunice A. 16 daughter Ala NC Ala Erastus 12 son Ala NC Ala So, now Dena in 1870 becomes Deciann; Enoch becomes Eunice and James becomes Erastus; and it appears that the census taker in 1870 had the worst spelling. On 21 May 1888, Mary C. McLain of Lamar County Alabama left a will in which she names 10 children or their children. The daughters are named by their married names and their husbands appear to be witnesses to the will. There is also an S.F. Pennington who witnessed the will. She left 40 acres of land in Township 9, Range 10 in Winston County to each of 9 children plus 40 total to her Underwood grandchildren. The only child left out was James D. or Erastus McLain who had married Idella Morton some 5 months earlier at the age of 22 (1870 census), 23 (1870 census), or 25 (death record). Was James being left out in any way related to his recent marriage? Had he received any other money or land prior to his father's death? According to Edna Earl McLain Dolland, James was generally regarded to have been the black sheep of the family but no one at that time seemed to know why. One thing is certain, while all of his siblings owned at least a small parcel of land, James became a share cropper. Also in the will, the mysterious Leander or Adan becomes Leanora Ader (Rush). Also, James McLain's obituary claims that he was the last surviving of 14 children. If so, the other three must have died young enough to have never been noted in a census. There is an Allen McLain who purchased land in Mississippi in 1840 and who may or may not be the same Allen McLain. In 1850, Allen was the Assistant Marshall taking the Census inWinston County, Alabama. According to the Slave Census, Allen McLain owned eight slaves. Ancestry.com Web Site [http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse/dll?db=gedfam&ti=0&f0=f3514&f1=2319] shows an Allen McLain and sister Katherine McLain, children of Daniel McLain and Sarah Jane Unknown; this Allen McLain was married to Naomi Bateman, possibly in South Carolina. The relationship, if any, to Allen McLain and his wife Mary Hewlett, is unknown.
BET. 1821 - 1822 - BET. 1888 - 1890
Mary
Catherine
Hewlett
Mary was widowed by 1880. In 1888, she left a will in Lamar County in which all of her children or grand children are mentioned except for James who had recently married Idella Morton.
Van
McCord
1828 - 1891
Ellen
A.
Jepson
63
63
Living
Parker
George
Harmon
Living
Unknown
Joseph
Dolezal
Joe's father came to America as a stow-away at the age of 12 from Czechoslovakia. His name was actually Dolezal but when his mother remarried after her first husband was killed in the coal mines, she married a man whose name was Kaluarich. The names became merged into Dolerich. After the Second World War, Joe decided to to take a name which was less confusing. He chose one close to that of a man he admired, Dolland (pronounced Do-Lund).
Mary
Grinkgo
Vincent
Grenko
Vincent came to America several times. Of course, he came several times as ship's company but he also came for medical treatment. After recovering from his illness, he returned to Croatia, didn't like it, went back to America, didn't like it, returned to Croatia, changed his mind and returned to America to stay.
Living
Parker
Living
Parker
Living
Parker
Living
Bramlett
Living
Bramlett
Living
Bramlett
Living
Bramlett
Living
Kathy
Living
Rutherford
Living
Baldwin
Living
Baldwin
Living
Brooks
~1872
Clark
Morton
Mary
Adeline
Vaughn
Unknown
Reeves
1838
Missouri
Dillard
1858 - 1871
Richard
D.
Dillard
13
13
1851 - 1945
Margaret
Green
94
94
~1849 - 1938
King
Dillard
89
89
MAY have killed his brother-in-law, Thomas Porter. He and Mary had several children, three of whom had some kind of palsy, perhaps St.Vitus's Dance.
1877
Annie
C.
Dillard
Robert
A.
Martin
Jane
Sabre
Living
Harris
Living
Harris
Living
Harris
Living
Ryan
Living
Dolland
Living
Dolland
Living
Dolland
Living
Massey
Living
Mott
Living
Dolland
Living
Leader
Living
Leader
Living
Leader
~1788 - >1860
James
Dillard
72
72
Caroline
Sibley
Anne
Unknown
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Arrived on the ship Ann in August 1623.
<1652
Francis
Clay
<1655
William
Clay
William
Sibley
John
Wilson
Mary
Clay
Elizabeth
Clay
John
Clay
Margaret
Fulcher
~1672 - 1760
Henry
Clay
88
88
[Roberts, George Braden, Genealogy of Joseph Peck and Some Related Families, 1955, Clayton Library, Houston, Texas]: This Henry Clay is the first Henry Clay in America and the grand-father of the Statesman and orator. He owned large tracts of land in Henrico, Goochland, Chesterfiled and Cumberland Counties. [TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] From L.W. Rigsby, Henry died "of the nattles" in the Raells during an annual birthday dinner in honor of his eighty-eighth year. His will was probated during the September 1760 term of the Chesterfield Court. In it, he gave to his son William, the land and plantation on which he lived and the land and plantation on Deep Creek, in Henrico County (where Richard Belcher was living). To his son Henry he gave the land and plantation on which he lived plus 200 acres of land at Letalone, in Goochland County, "it being the Lower Survey belonging to me at the said Letalone." To his son Charles, he gave the plantation on which he lived and the land on the north side of Nuttree Run plus 400 acres at Letalone, "it being my Upper Survey at Letalone." To his son John, he gave the plantation on which he was living and the land on the north side of Swift Creek and the upper side of Nuttree Run." He gave in joint tenancy his Grist Mill on Nuttree Brunn to his sons Charles and John. To each of his daughters Amey and Mary 5 Pounds of current money. To his grandson, [Dr.] Henry Clay [of Kentucky], he gave 240 acres adjoining the lands of James Hill. To his granddaughter, Mary [later married Stephen Lockett], one Negro girl named Phoebe. He gave his wife Mary his Negroes, Lewis, Jo, Sue, Nann, Jenny and Sarah plus "what stock and household goods she pleases to have or make use of," of his. Other slaves were equally divided among his sons, as well as those given to his wife, after her death. Remaining money was divided among his wife and sons. After his wife's death, the plantation and adjacent lands upon which she was living went to his son, John Clay. "Henry Clay, of this will, is the common ancestor of the Clays of Kentucky, being the grandfather of Doctor Henry Clay, of Bourbon, of Honorable Henry Clay (great-grandson) of Ashland, of General Green Clay, of Madison,and of Captain Thomas Clay, of Daviess County, Kentucky." "Doctor Henry and General Green Clay were also first cousins though their mothers, Lucy and Martha Green, who were sisters, and the daughters of Thomas and Elizabeth (Marston) Green, of Amelia County, Virginia. (See Elizabeth Green's will, probated January, 1760, in Amelia.)" [LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] This is the first Henry Clay found in America. Little else is known of either Henry or his wife Mary. Henry did, however,leave a will, which was probated during the September Term, 1760, in Henrico County, Chesterfield Court. The items she left are listed in The Clay Family.
Ann
Mosley
Patsy
Mosley
Charles
Clay
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] In Amelia County, Charles and his wife Mary, deeded land inherited from his brother James to William Cousins on December 29, 1756.
Mary
Unknown
D. <1756
James
Clay
John
Watkins
Hewlett
Dorothy
Clay
Phoebe
Clay
Hannah
Clay
JAN 1692/93 - 1777
Mary
Mitchell
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] According to General Green Clay's Manuscript, Mary died of "the flux."
William
Mitchell
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] Willaim and Elizabeth Mitchell lived, died and were buried in Chesterfield County, on the east side of Swift Creek, on the farm occupied by Reverand Eleazer Clay.
Elizabeth
Innes
William
Mitchell
Clay
Henry
Clay
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] Of Southam Parish, Cumberland.
D. 1789
Charles
Clay
John
Clay
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] Of Dale Parish, Chesterfield County. John's will was made in Chesterfield County 15 November 1761 and probated November 1762. Witnesses were Thomas Hall and Francis Lockett. He bequeathed to his son, John, four hundred acres of land lying on the south side of Swift Creek, where his own father had lived, along with the three Negroes, Hager, Daniel and Lucy and their "increase." To his son Edward, he left two hundred acres on the head of the Dumpling Branch adjoining the road, plus the three Negroes, Peter, Chance and Fiby. To his wife Mary, he left the use of the plantation where they lived plus the three Negroes, Indian Peter, Indian Jude and Phillis and the benefit of the Grist Mill on Nuttree Run. After her death or remarriage, the land and mill went to Edward and his heirs. The remaining Negroes, household goods, livestock were to be equally divided among his wife Mary and the children John, Edward, Jeremiah and Fanny. He asked that his estate not be appraised and appointed Francis Mossley and his son John his executors. [Jeremiah is not listed as a child of John in the list provided in The Clay Family but, since he is referred to in the will, I have included him on my list.]
Amey
Clay
Mary
Clay
Unknown
Williamson
Unknown
Watkins
Sarah
2
Thomas
Clay
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] Thomas was deeded two hundred fifty acres of land in Amelia County on 5 May 1752.
Charles
Clay
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] Charles was deeded two hundred fifty acres of land in Amelia County 5 May 1752.
William
Clay
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] William was deeded two hundred fifty acres of land in Amelia County 5 May 1752. On 6 September 1764, William and his wife Ann made a deed to part with these lands.
Judith
Clay
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] Judith received fifty acres adjoining her brother Thomas.
Henry
Clay
Ann
Unknown
D. <1782
John
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] John Clay was the son of John Clay and (Mrs.) Mary Bass. His Will is recorded in Hanover county, Virginia. There is a copy of it in The Clay Family. The title of Sir with his name is likely an honorary one conferred due to his profession as a minister.
Edward
Clay
Fanny
Clay
Jeremiah
Clay
Betsy
Clay
<1690
Margaretha
Elisabetha
Gerlach
1765
James
Clay
Pattie
Clay
1760 - 1841
William
Clay
80
80
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] Wiliam was a Revolutionary War soldier, enlisting in Chesterfield County, Virginia, at the age of sixteen. He applied for a pension10 October 1832, at the age of seventy-two, when he was residing in Granger County, Tennessee. He was allowed pension for seven months' service as a Sergeant in he Virginia Troops. Part of the time he served under Captain Edward Mosely and Colonel Robert Goode.[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] William Clay, son of James Clay and Margaret Muse Clay, enlisted in the Revolutionary War at the age of 16 an applied for a pension in Grainger County, Tennessee in 1832.
Betsy
Clay
Sabina
Clay
Unknown
Nunnally
Zacharia
Lea
Nancy
Clay
David
Lea
Margaret
Clay
Nancy
Clay
1802
Micajah
Clay
1789 - 1866
Clement
Comer
Clay
76
76
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Clement Clay, son of William Clay and Rebecca Comer Clay, attended college in Knoxville, Tennessee and read law under the Hon. Hugh Lawson White, receiving his license to practice in 1809. Soon after being admitted to the bar, he moved to Alabama, where he resided until his death in 1866. He served in the War of 1812, represented his county in the territorial legislature in 1817...He also served his state as Supreme Court Judge, Congressman and Governor of the state. He 'was of medium size, but erect and with dark and restless eyes,His bearing was naturally austere and although sociable with a few, he was intimate with none. He was honorable in all the relations of life and sensitive to the slightest imputation of derogatory thereto.'"
Samuel
Clay
Anderson
Clay
1803 - 1873
Cynthia
Clay
69
69
1887 - 1888
Sophia
Ellenova
Paulson
1
1
George
Hudson
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] George's will was dated 30 November 1770 and probated 14 April 773.
D. BET. MAY - JUN 1781
Elizabeth
Jennings
Mary
Hudson
John
Watkins
Henry
Watkins
John
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] John was of the lesser gentry, entitled to a coat of arms. His title was acquired by his son Francis.
1587 - 1655
John
Clay
68
68
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] and [Roberts, George Braden, Genealogy of Joseph Peck and Some Related Families, 1955, Clayton Library, Houston, Texas] The Clays are of Welsh descent, the first of the Clays to America being Captain John Clay, a Gentleman, lesser gentry but not royalty. John is the ancestor of the Georgia Branch of the Virginia Clays. John Claye came to Jamestown Colony in Virginia in 1613 on the ship Treasurer. He received 100 acres of land as an old planter before the government of Sir Thomas Dale and 1100 acres for the transportation of 23 persons on the ship West 13 July 1635. During the early years, starvation and death were common; twice the population of 500 fell below 60. It was not until 1623 that John felt he could bring his wife Ann across the Atlantic to join him. She arrived in August 1623 aboard the Ann. They married in 1623 in Jordan's Journey, Charles River County, Virginia.
Richard
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Nor record of ever coming to America.
William
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] William settled in Charles River County, Virginia, and probably died without issue.
Francis
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Settled in Northumberland County, Virginia.
Edward
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Settled in Northumberland County, Virginia.
Robert
Sibley
Thomas
Clay
1785 - 1842
Levicia
Brown
57
57
Thomas
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Thomas Clay lived in Prince George (Amelia) County, where his will was probated the November following the date of 06 June 1726. His children are named in the will; his wife is not.[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] Thomas Clay had land grants, July 15, 1717 and June 2, 1722, on the upper side of Namozine Creek. This land was willed to his son James in his will, dated June 6, 1725and recorded in Prince George County November 8, 1726. His brother Henry was the sole executor of his estate.
1675 - 1765
Charles
Clay
90
90
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Charles Clay, son of Charles Clay and Hannah Wilson Clay, a resident of Dale Parish, Chesterfield County, Virginia, signed his will 28 January 1754. His will was recorded August 1765. In his will, he gives his homestead to his beloved wife Sarah. His granddaughter Mary receives the part of his son Henry, who is deceased [TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] Charles signed his will 28 January 1754; it was recorded in Chesterfield, August 1765. In it, he gives his homestead to his beloved wife Sarah. His granddaughter Mary Clay, daughter of his son, Henry Clay, receives her father's part of the estate.
Judith
Clay
1782
Augustus
Mead
Hewlett
Thomas
Hewlett
John
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] In his will, John left his wife Sarah 250 acres of land on Deep Creek.
1756 - 1821
William
Hewlett
65
65
~1754 - 1789
Nancy
Watkins
35
35
It seems probable that Nancy died in childbirth. Her last child was William, Jr.
Sarah
Chappell
John
Chappell
John
Clay
Amey
Clay
Sarah
Clay
Martha
Clay
Dorothy
Clay
Phoebe
Clay
William
Mitchell
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] "While Field's company was encamped on the banks of the Little Meadow River, a branch of the Gauley, two of his men, Clay and Doward (or Cowherd) were sent to hunt deer for the company and were attacked by the Indians. Clay was killed, but Coward made his way back to camp, having first killed one of the Indians." This quote is taken from Rigsby's Historic Georgia Families; he follows it with the statement that "this was just before the battle of Point Pleasant, and I believe explains the lack of further information concerning William Clay."
Henry
Clay
31 JAN 1715/16 - 1789
Charles
Clay
D. ~1762
John
Clay
Amey
Clay
~1735
Mitchell
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Grandfather of Henry Clay, of Kentucky, Mitchell was a Baptist minister and settled in the Slashes of Hanover. Quoting from L. W. Rigsby: "The Indians appear to have become angered at Clay and his family by reason of the aid given by them to the scouts and militia during the Revolution. In August, 1783, after Clay had harvested his crops, and while he was absent from home on a hunting expedition to secure game for the family larder, a party of Indians crept in and attacked the family. At the time Bartley and Ezekiel were building a fence around some stocks of grain. The older sons had not returned from the Revolution. Tabitha and some of the girls were at the river washing while Mrs. Clay and the smaller children seem to have been in the house. The first they knew of the Indians was when one of them shot Bartley from ambush. This frightened the girls, but Tabitha, seeing an Indian about to scalp her brother, rushed to his assistance and engaged the Indian in hand to hand conflict, she being without any weapon. It seemed for a while she might be victorious, but the Indian resorted to his hunting knife and literally cut her to pieces. Mrs. Clay undertook to secure the aid of one Blankinship at this time, but he being a coward, ran off and left the family to its fate. After killing Tabitha and Batley, the Indians captured Ezekiel Clay, and for some cause left the premises with him, perhaps in search of the elder Mitchell Clay. Mrs. Clay with her small children, secured the bodies of Bartley and Tabitha and placed them on the bed, when she and her small children left home, going to the New River Settlement. Mitchell Clay wounded a deer, which he followed for sometime and was late in returning home, when he found the bodies of his two children on the bed and his wife and small children gone. Imagine his horror and grief, not only for the dead children, but for those member of his family whose fate was as yet unknown to him. There being nothing he could do at home, he made his way to the New River Settlements, pursued by the Indians into the Settlements. Here the settlers appearing too strong, the Indians stole some horses and made their way back towards the Ohio River. A party was soon made up to follow them, consisting of Charles Clay, Mithcell Clay, Jr., James Bailey, William Wiley, Edward Hale, Isaac Hare, John French and Captain James Moore. They first went to the cabin and buried the Clay children. The Indians had divided, which fact was not discovered by the pursuers until after they had dome up with the party that had the horses. In the ensuing battle between the whites and the Indians, several Indians were killed. Charles Clay, only a mere boy, killing one of the Indians himself in the encounter. Mitchell Clay, Jr., was at the time too small to handle a gun well, but shot at one of the Indians, but missed him, the Indian being killed by another member of the party. The party of Indians carrying Ezekiel Clay were not overtaken. They took him down the West fork of the River, to their town, Chillicothe, where he was burned at the stake. The whites were so incensed at this conduct of the Indians that Edward Hale and William Wiley stripped the skin from the backs of two of the Indians and took the hide home and made razor straps from it, which were kept in the family for many years as a souvenir of the battle."
Pearce
Clay
Phoebe
Belcher
David
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] David was the first of the Clays to move to Georgia. He is also referred to by William Hutchinson as being a scout in Virginia during the Revolutionary War.
William
Clay
Henry
Clay
Charles
Clay
D. 1783
Bartley
Clay
Ezekial
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Ezekiel Clay was captured by Indians and burned at the stake. In retaliation, one of the pursuers of the Indians skinned the captured Indians and kept the skin as a razor strap and "souvenir."
Mitchell
Clay
Tabitha
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Tabitha was killed by Indians on Bluestone in 1783.
Rebecca
Clay
Patience
Clay
Sallie
Clay
Obedience
Clay
Nannie
Clay
Mary
Clay
Mitchell
Clay
John
Clay
George
Pearis
George
Chapman
John
Peters
John
French
Joseph
Hare
Lucy
Green
Mary
Clay
Thomas
Green
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Thomas's father was Dutch and settled near Petersburg, Virginia. Thomas was born during the crossing to America.
Thomas
Green
Martha
Filmer
Henry
Filmer
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Henry was a member of the House of Burgesses.
1736
Henry
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Henry Clay, son Henry Clay and Lucy Green Clay, moved to Kentucky in 1787 and died there in 1820. He was physician; his records are preserved in Bourbon County
Charles
Clay
Samuel
Clay
Thomas
Clay
Abia
Clay
Marston
Clay
Rebecca
Clay
John
Clay
Elijah
Clay
Lucy
Clay
Rachell
Povall
Elizabeth
Clay
John
Clay
Rebekah
Clay
1761
Samuel
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Served under General Green in the Carolinas during the Revolutionary War. His will was probated in Bourbon County, June 1810.
Rachel
Clay
Sally
Clay
Tabitha
Clay
Mary
Ann
Clay
Henrietta
Clay
Mattie
Clay
Henry
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Though not the celebrated statesman, Henry became a man of much note in Kentucky.
Letty
Clay
John
Bruce
Patsy
Ingram
William
Finch
Nancy
Winn
Barkley
Martin
Matthew
Martin
Benjamin
Bedford
Thomas
Dawson
George
M.
Bedinger
Littleberry
Bedford
Peggy
Helm
Archibald
Bedford
Henry
C.
Clay
Letitia
Clay
Samuel
Clay
George
Clay
Littleberry
Bedford
Clay
Richard
P.
Clay
John
Clay
Thomas
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Said to have gone to Georgia.
Rachel
Clay
William
Green
Clay
Martha
Green
Eleazer
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Eleazer, son of Charles Clay and Martha Green Clay, was a Baptist minister. He married three times and possessed considerable wealth. He served in both the French and Indian War and in the Revolutionary War.
1745
Charles
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Charles Clay, son of Charles Clay and Martha Green Clay, was ordained as an Episcopal minister by the Bishop of London, in 1769. He served as Rector of St. Ann Parish, Albemarle County. "He was an earnest patriot and created much enthusiasm in behalf of American Independence. He moved from Albemarle County to Bedford County, where his Will is of record, in which he mentions his friend the Hon. Thomas Jefferson, late president of the United States."
Henry
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Died during the Revolution in Trenton, Hew Jersey.
Thomas
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Thomas Clay, son of Charles Clay and Martha Green Clay, was a soldier during the Revolutionary War and a member of the First Constitution Convention of Kentucky. Many of his and Polly's descendants appear to be in Texas.
Betty
Clay
Lucy
Clay
Matthew
Clay
Green
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] General Green Clay was the first Clay Family Historian. Green Clay was the first Deputy Surveyor of Kentucky, was a delegate to the convention that ratified the Constitution and served in the Kentucky Legislature for twenty years, as Speaker of the (Kentucky) Senate in 1807. He was also a soldier during the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812.
Priscilla
Clay
Martha
Clay
Hopkins
Lewis
William
Thaxton
Alexander
Murray
Polly
Callahan
Editha
Davies
Junius
Axel
Clay
Odin
Green
Clay
Paul
A.
Clay
Cyrus
B.
Clay
Sally
Lewis
Elizabeth
Lewis
Clay
Paulina
Clay
Sally
Ann
Clay
Sidney
Payne
Clay
Brutus
Junius
Clay
Cassius
Marcellus
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] To quote L. W. Rigsby, "His life and career would fill a volume within itself. His life is certainly an epic of the slavery quarrel. He was appointed as minister to Russia by Abraham Lincoln. His 'Memoirs' give his records and should be secured and read by those interested in his life."
Sophia
Clay
Mary
Unknown
Bass
Unknown
Bass
Martha
Hewlett
Elizabeth
Hudson
[TheClayFamily1899Pub.FTW] Married at about fifteen, widowed by thirty-two and remarried by thirty-five. She bore nine children, one of them the statesman and presidential candidate Henry Clay. 29 September 1784, Elizabeth appeared in court as the wife of Henry Watkins. Her death notice appeared in "The Western Citizen," in Paris, Kentucky, December 1829: "Died in Woodford County, on the 4th instant, Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins, widow of Henry Watkins, her second husband, in the eightieth year of her age. He preceded her in the termination of this mortal career only ten days. Few women have fulfilled better the duties incident to all the relations here below in which she stood. Few have performed more devotedly, or for a longer period, those higher duties which, it is to be hoped, have now obtained their reward above. She was the mother of Henry Clay." Among the incidents of her life to which her obituary must have referred was theencounter with Tarletons and his troops during the Revolution, just days after Rev. John's death. One soldier thrust his sword into the fresh grave and virtually everything of any worth, including food, was taken.
Unknown
Hudson
Unknown
Jennings
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Possibly shares a common lineage with William Jennings Bryan.
John
Clay
Henry
Clay
Porter
Clay
John
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Moved to New Orleans.
Henry
Clay
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] The wee-known statesman.
1779 - 1850
Porter
Clay
71
71
[LWRigsbyHistGaFamilies.FTW] Married three times. Auditor of Kentucky in 1822, later became a Baptist minister. In part, his obituary reads: "Both boys were reared by a pious Baptist mother, but Henry was captivated by the glare of politics, while Porter followed the desire of his mother and became a Baptist minister and revivalist. At the age of 21, in 1815, Porter Clay was ad admitted to the bar in Kentucky. He was appointed auditor of state accounts by Governor W. G. Slaughter."
Sophie
Grosch
A. P.
Davis
Nancy
D.
Hewlett
Betsey
Hewlett
John
Clay
Duanna
Hewlett
Joanna
Hewlett
1737 - 1821
Margaret
Muse
83
83
According to Margaret's Obituary, reprinted in L. W. Rigsby's Historic Georgia Families, she was born near Richmond Virginia. There, in the enclave of the Church of England, it became her practice to listen to the preaching of the imprisoned Baptist preachers. Eventually she converted and chose to be baptized. The site chosen was the frozen over James River in the middle of the night, in order to avoid detection. Despite their precautions, they were apprehended and sentenced to either pay a considerable fine or be publicly flogged. Margaret could not afford the fine but was saved from the flogging by a kind-hearted soul who paid the fine for her. After the death of her husband, James, Margaret went to live with her daughter Sabrina and her husband Zacharia Lea. The young family and Margaret lived for short period in or near Knoxville. Around 1805, they, and Zachariah's brothers and their families, moved to Mississippi, traveling down the Tennessee and Mississippi Rivers on a flat boat; the "women would ply the oars while the men would ward off the Indians with their rifles." They settled on the Amite River, about 10 miles east of Liberty and 63 miles southeast of Natchez. Before long, they relocated a few miles away to Huron, where all of their children were born and Margaret lived out her remaining years. Margaret was the acknowledged spiritual leader of the family, giving thanks at the table and conducting the family worship. Margaret is buried with her daughter's family in the Lea Family Burying Ground at Lea Hall, Amite County, Mississippi.
1766
Rebecca
Comer
Martha
Clay
Elizabeth
Clay
Lydia
Clay
Jeremiah
1 Clay
1778 - 1863
Eleazer
Clay
84
84
Nancy
Clay
Sabrina
Clay
Samuel
Comer
1792
Margaret
Muse
Clay
1794
Nancy
Clay
1797 - <1830
William
Clay
33
33
1805
Samuel
Anderson
Clay
John
Bunch
Unknown
Hightower
Unknown
Kendricks
Susannah
Claiborne
Withers
1817
Clement
Claiborne
Clay
1820
John
Withers
Clay
Hugh
Lawson
White Clay
1784
Mary
Dunville
Mary
Ann
Clay
Alicey
Clay
Margaret
Muse
Clay
James
(twin)
Clay
William
(twin)
Clay
Nancy
Clay
Eleanor
Clay
Eleazer
Greene
Clay
Robert
D.
Clay
Morgan
S.
Clay
Mahala
M.
Clay
Angeline
Clay
Wade
Hampton
Clay
~1758 - ~1808
Levi
Pennington
50
50
Levi Pennington Jr.'s will was probated in Spartanburg, South Carolina, File 1518 [http://www/members.home.net/bobpenn1/PRA Group VI]
D. ~1829
Elizabeth
Ray
1782 - ~1868
Benjamin
Pennington
86
86
Brothers Benjamin, William M., Jesse, Solomon and Noah all moved to Fayette, then Sanford (now Lamar) County, Alabama.
~1789 - ~1868
Catherine
Tackett
79
79
~1818 - 1884
George
Washington
Pennington
66
66
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] George Washington Pennington died intestate in the State of Mississippi in 1879, according to testimony regarding the administration of his estate and sale of property in Vernon, Lamar, Alabama. The property was sold for a value equal to the costs of the sale. 1850 Federal Census for Fayette County, Alabama Pennington, George 32 SC Sarah 30 TN Rachel C. 12 AL Nancy C. 10 Frances M. 08 James E. 06 Henry J. 04 Angelina 04 Zachery Taylor 02 1860 Federal Census for Fayette County, Alabama Pennington, George 41 SC Louisa 36 TN Emeline 16 AL James 14 AL Henry 11 AL Angeline 11 AL Taylor 10 AL Mary Jane 09 AL Franklin 07 AL Washington 06 AL Barten 05 AL Berry 03 AL Hankins Andrew 24 TN Nancy 20 AL Mary 8/12 AL 1870 Federal Census for Lamar County, Alabama Precinct #1 P.O. Big Pond 01 August 1870 Morton John W. 33 AL Dry Goods Clerk Nancy C. 30 AL Keeping House Mary 11 AL [See Mary L. Hankins below] William C. 05 AL Attending School Idella J. 03 AL Thompson R. 8/12 AL Hankins Mary L. 11 AL Attending School The following information is taken from the research of Carrie Lee Pennington Boggan, The Pennington Family, vol.1, page 43: "All of George Pennington's children were born in Lamar County near Vernon, Alabama. It is said that he purchased one of the first lots ever sold in the town of Vernon. He was a large land owner of tht area. He gave a lot to the First Methodist Church to build on. "According ti the Confederate Military Records, 'George Pennington enlisted June 16, 1864 in Fayette County (later Lamar County) in Capt. Everett Palmer's Company, Private, Fayette Militia. He furnished a horse to July 24, 1864. "Other record says: 'Absent without leave since December 11, 1864. Payroll dated Cahaba, Alabama December 31, 1864. "Another card on George Pennington explained his absence without leave. 'Furlough by Medical Board for 60 days since Oct. 11, 1864.' Another card on George Pennington says, 'George Pennington, Capt. E. Palmer's Company, age 48. Enlisted June 15, 1864 in Fayette County (Lamar). Black eyes and black hair, and dark complexion. Detailed as a farmer. In Home Guards. Record Roll, dated June 22, 1864. After the Civil War George Pennington and his wife and most of their children moved to Calhoun County near Water Valley, Mississippi. He died of cancer, which ate away most of the flesh on one side of his face before his death in 1884."
~1830
Franklin
Pennington
~1805
John
B.
Pennington
Brothers John and Joseph Pennington moved to Logan County, Kentucky.
~1807
Mary
Pennington
~1809
William
Pennington
Brothers Benjamin, William M., Jesse, Solomon and Noah all moved to Fayette, then Sanford (now Lamar) County, Alabama.
~1811
Benjamin
Pennington
~1814
Joseph
M.
Pennington
Brothers John and Joseph Pennington moved to Logan County, Kentucky.
~1820 - ~1886
Alfred
Pennington
66
66
~1822
Nancy
Pennington
~1824
Viney
Pennington
~1827
Cynthia
Pennington
~1828
James
Ervin
Pennington
1821 - 1879
Sarah
Louisa
Lusk
58
58
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In Lamar county Alabama testimony regarding the estate of her husband, Sarah Louisa is said to be living near the Banner, Calhoun, Mississippi.
1836 - 1904
Rachel
Catherine
Pennington
68
68
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In Lamar County testimony in 1881, Rachel is in Marion County, Alabama.
~1840 - BET. 1870 - 1875
Nancy
Caroline
Pennington
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] Had 4 children with second husband, John. The censuses below show Nancy Caroline Pennington as a child in her parents' household in 1850, as the young wife of Andrew Hankins in 1860, near the household of her parents, and as the wife of John W. Morton in 1870, when her daughter was also living in the same household as her mother. 1850 Federal Census for Fayette County, Alabama Pennington, George 32 SC Sarah 30 TN Rachel C. 12 AL Nancy C. 10 Frances M. 08 James E. 06 Henry J. 04 Angelina 04 Zachery Taylor 02 1860 Federal Census for Fayette County, Alabama Pennington, George 41 SC Louisa 36 TN Emeline 16 AL James 14 AL Henry 11 AL Angeline 11 AL Taylor 10 AL Mary Jane 09 AL Franklin 07 AL Washington 06 AL Barten 05 AL Berry 03 AL Hankins Andrew 24 TN Nancy 20 AL Mary 8/12 AL 1870 Federal Census for Lamar County, Alabama Precinct #1 P.O. Big Pond 01 August 1870 Morton John W. 33 AL Dry Goods Clerk Nancy C. 30 AL Keeping House Mary 11 AL [See Mary L. Hankins below] William C. 05 AL Attending School Idella J. 03 AL Thompson R. 8/12 AL Hankins Mary L. 11 AL Attending School
~1842
Frances
Emeline
Pennington
1843
James
Ervin
Pennington
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In testimony regarding the estate of his father, James Ervin Pennington, is said to live in Vernon, Lamar, Alabama in 1881.
1845
Henry
J.
Pennington
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In 1881, Henry Pennington lives in Banner, Calhoun, Mississippi.
~1848
Susan
Angeline
Pennington
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In 1881 Susan Penningon Holt resides in Banner, Calhoun, Mississippi.
~1848
Zachariah
Taylor
Pennington
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In 1881 Zachariah is living in Banner, Calhoun, Mississippi.
~1853
Stephen
Franklin
Pennington
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In 1881 Stephen was living in Banner, Calhoun, Mississippi.
1854
George
Washington
Pennington
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In 1881, George Washington Pennington, Jr. is living in Banner, Calhoun, Mississippi.
~1855
Alfred
Burton
Pennington
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In 1881, Alfred Pennington is living in Banner, Calhoun, Mississippi.
~1857 - <1881
Berry
Pennington
24
24
~1851
Mary
Jane
Pennington
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] in 1881, Mary Jane Pennington Cobb is living in Banner, Calhoun, Mississippi.
~1836 - BET. 1860 - 1870
Andrew
Hankins
1859
Mary
Liza
Hankins
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In 1881, Mary Liza Hankins, according to testimony regarding estate of her father, was living in Itawamba County, Mississippi.
1841
Mary
E.
Hankins
David
Lee
Hankins
Mary
Bean
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] A brother names Roy Bean went to Texas.
John
H.
Hankins
Mary
Unknown
Richard
Hankins
Deborah
Unknown
James
William
Hankins
Mary
E.
Nelson
Frances
Rebecca
Graves
1814
George
Anderson
Graves
Nancy
Jane
Shaw
Joseph
Shaw
Rebecca
Forbes
Calvin
Polk
Graves
Moses
J.
Graves
Margaret
J.
Graves
Mary
Jane
Graves
Sarah
A.
Graves
Martha
Ann
Graves
Georgia
A.
Graves
Frances
Angelina
Mullinax
Mary
Jane
Newell
Simeon
B.
Thomas
Charles
Raphael
Burnett
Edgar
Perkins
James
Burton
Oakes
Brutiken
Mentau
Guin
1822
Idella
Morton
1826
Newton
F.
Morton
1828
Milton
Robertson
Morton
1832
James
M.
Morton
1834
William
Locke
Morton
1837 - 1910
John
Wesley
Morton
73
73
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] 1870 Federal Census for Lamar County, Alabama Precinct #1 P.O. Big Pond 01 August 1870 Morton John W. 33 AL Dry Goods Clerk Nancy C. 30 AL Keeping House Mary 11 AL [See Mary L. Hankins below] William C. 05 AL Attending School Idella J. 03 AL Thompson R. 8/12 AL Hankins Mary L. 11 AL Attending School In 1881, according to testimony regarding the estate of George Washington Pennington, John Wesley Morton was living in Vernon, Lamar County, Alabama. After 1885 John Wesley Morton and his third wife, Frances Graves, moved to Lee County, Mississippi, where he operated a blacksmith shop in Shannon. After his death, the business was operated by his son George Newton Morton and his five sons. The shop closed in1948.
1843 - 1893
Martin
W.
Morton
50
50
1850
Thomas
Clarke
Morton
Ezekial
Mace
Lydia
Matilda
Redus
Margaret
Moore
Mary
A.
Camper
Eudocia
Jane
Price
Martha
Hammond
James
B.
Morton
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] Came to Alabama in about 1820, settling in Marion County, which became Fayette County which became Lamar County. In addition to his occupations as physician, clerk, register and judge, James and his sons also began Morton's Mill near Vernon (Morton's Pond? and Morton's Gate?) Not on the Census after 1860. Final resting place unknown.
Mary
Unknown
Frances
Dees
~1841
Mary
E.
Hankins
1843
John
Leroy
Hankins
Virginia
Bailey
David
Thomas
Hankins
Hattie
Havana
Hankins
Andrew
Owens
Hankins
Martha
Rossina
Hankins
Alma
Jane
Hankins
Goerge
Joel
Hankins
William
Henry
Hankins
1848
Joel
G.
Hankins
Martha
J.
Perkins
Alice
Hankins
Sarah
Hankins
Mary
Jane
Hankins
Rufus
Smith
Hankins
Mack
C.
Hankins
David
Franklin
Hankins
1849
Stephen
Franklin
Hankins
1852
Daniel
Burton
Hankins
Mary
Jane
Sizemore
Catherine
Hankins
Green
Hankins
1884
Jacob
Hankins
Martha
Jane
Hankins
1856
William
Russell
Hankins
Nancy
Ann
Hankins
Mary
Liza
Hankins
1869
Thompson
R.
Morton
David
Lee
Hankins
Mary
Ann
Bean
Robert
L.
Pennington
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In 1881, Rober Pennington is living in Banner, Calhoun, Mississippi.
1794 - 1870
John
Lusk
76
76
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] According to The History of Yalobusha County Mississippi, John was born on Thicketty Creek, waters of the great Broad River, in Union District, South Carolina. John and his father, Thomas had both purchased land in Warren County Tennessee by 1812 but did not move right away. John, his wife, son, John "David", and parents migrated to Tennessee from South Carolina about 1817, just after daughter Elizabeth Ann Lusk died. In Tennessee, eight more children were born to John and Rachel. After the birth of the 10th child, by 07 November 1835, John and Rachel had moved to Alabama, most likely Fayette County, where John's sister Betsy Lusk Steen and her husband were living, as well as David and Loucinda. By 1840, they had moved again, this time to Choctaw County, Mississippi, where their second son TDJ Lusk and his wife Nancy Pennington were to live following their marriage in 1841. In 1850, John and Rachel moved from Choctaw County to Lafayette County, where they lived near his sister, Betsy Lusk Steen, and her family in Paris.
1795 - 1870
Rachel
Tenason
75
75
Isaac
A.
Smith
Rebecca
Moore
David
Holt
Nancy
Tackett
Henry
Cobb
Sarah
Lusk
Mary
Hankins
Elizabeth
Baswell
Samuel
Surratt
William
Winters
Walter
James Amos
Pennington
Nancy
~1781 - ~1813
Levi
Pennington
32
32
~1783
Isaac
Pennington
~1785
Elizabeth
Pennington
~1787
William
M.
Pennington
Brothers Benjamin, William M., Jesse, Solomon and Noah all moved to Fayette, then Sanford (now Lamar) County, Alabama.
~1793
John
Pennington
~1795
Rachel
Pennington
~1797
Sarah
Pennington
1798
Jesse
M.
Pennington
Brothers Benjamin, William M., Jesse, Solomon and Noah all moved to Fayette, then Sanford (now Lamar) County, Alabama.
~1802
Joseph
Pennington
~1804
Solomon
Pennington
Brothers Benjamin, William M., Jesse, Solomon and Noah all moved to Fayette, then Sanford (now Lamar) County, Alabama.
~1806
Mary
Pennington
~1807
Noah
Pennington
Brothers Benjamin, William M., Jesse, Solomon and Noah all moved to Fayette, then Sanford (now Lamar) County, Alabama.
Margaret
Cowan
James
Robbins
Elizabeth
Surratt?
Isabell
Sidenham?
Mary
Margaret
Surratt
Sarah
Unknown
Petty
BET. 1712 - 1714 - BET. 1789 - 1790
Levi
Pennington
The Penningtons, Beesons and Mendenhalls all lived within close proximity in Randolph County North Carolina. There is some speculation that Levi's wife, Martha, was either a Mendenhall or a Beeson. Levi in on the Rowan County Tax Rolls from 1755 through 1799. Levi's will , dated 5 December 1789 and probated Jun 1790 [Will Book I, Page 79] nmaes his wife and children. [http://www.members.home.net/bobpenn1/levireg/d5368html] "To son Levi - 110 acres whereon he now lives. To wife Martha & daughter Elizabeth Beeson, the 100 acres wheeon I now live...the remainder of my estate to be equally divided between my five children: Isaac, Rachel, Mary, Levi & Elizabeth." He further mentions Elizabeth's children and Levi Jr's son, also named Levi.
1714 - 1800
Martha
86
86
Isaac
Pennington
Rachel
Pennington
Mary
Pennington
1761
Elizabeth
Ann
Pennington
Edward
Beeson
Unknown
Perry
Unknown
Graves
John
Tennyson
Elizabeth
1816
John
Davidson
Lusk
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] In The History of Yalobusha County Mississippi, it states that David and Loucinda settled in Yalobusha County on property purchased from Alexander Tabb and located next to his cousin Robert Lusk and his great aunt Martha Davidson Lusk, near Water Valley. By 1850, they had six children, two being twins.
1819
Thomas David
Jefferson
Lusk
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] Thomas Jefferson Davidson and his two oldest sons joined the Confederacy. Joh D. was killed at the Battle of Franklin, Tennessee; William H.'s fate is unknown.
1817
Elizabeth
Ann
Lusk
1822
Martha
Lucretia
Lusk
1824
Susan
Jane
Lusk
1826
Cynthia
Lusk
1828
Nancy
Samantha
Lusk
1829 - 1889
Francis
Marion
Lusk
59
59
1832 - 1859
Robert
Andrew
Jackson Lusk
26
26
Loucinda
D. 1869
Nancy
Pennington
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] Nancy and her husband TDJ Lusk helped organize the Upper Milligan Springs Baptist Church in 1865. Nancy Pennington Lusk died of fever on 15 July 1869 and was the first person to be buried in the Upper Milligan Springs Baptist Church Cemetery.
Henry
Pennington
William
Wood
Sharpe
Cassandra
Cross
Druscilla
Phelps
~1760 - 1826
Thomas
Lusk
66
66
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] Both Thomas and his first wife, Susannah Davidson, were of "Scotch-Irish" ancestry which arrived in Philadelphia and followed the Great Wagon Road to the Carolinas. Thomas Lusk married for the second time sometime after 1810, when Susannah Davidson Lusk, his first wife, died. By 1817-1818, Thomas, his second wife and her children were accompanying his son John to Tennessee. On 03 January 1826 Thomas died "of an overweight of cold". His stepson James Smith became the administrator of the estate.
~1730 - ~1804
Robert
Lusk
74
74
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] According to The History of Yalobusha County Mississippi, Robert and Mary Vance Lusk, along with several of their adult children, including Major James Vance Lusk, went to Kentucky and Illinois about 1799, leaving the rest of the family in South Carolina, a move which marked the beginning of political and philosophical differences among the family.
~1735 - ~1803
Mary
Vance
68
68
~1765 - 1810
Susannah
Davidson
45
45
1744 - 1780
John
Davidson
35
35
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] Mrs. W.C. Trotter, Jr., in her article in Yalobusha County Mississippi History, mentions that John Davidson was a casualty of the Revolution.
~1743 - 1828
Sara
Gilham
85
85
1807
Elizabeth
Lusk
~1792
Isaac
Lusk
~1793
Andrew
Lusk
1800
Sarah
Lusk
~1805
Martha
Lusk
~1806
Nancy
Lusk
1809 - 1879
Susan
Lusk
69
69
William
H.
Steen
Nancy
Rhea
James
Fowler
Harrington
John
Bankhead
Allen
R.
Jamieson
Merrille
J.
Smith
~1700 - ~1763
James
Lusk
63
63
Jennett
James
Vance
1754 - 1803
James
Vance
Lusk
49
49
~1756
Nancy
Agnes
Lusk
~1758
Robert
Lusk
~1759
Andrew
Lusk
John
Lusk
Bashaba
1769
John
Lusk
~1770
Sarah
Lusk
~1772 - ~1853
George
Vance
Lusk
81
81
Lettice
Thomas
William
Hays
Steen
Samuel
Davidson
George
Davidson
Martha
Davidson
Joseph
Samms
Elizabeth
Hopper
Lacy
Sarah
Lusk
John
Lusk
Unknown
Reid?
BET. 1671 - 1672
John
Lusk
Joseph
Lusk
~1696 - 24 FEB 1744/45
William
Lusk
~1698 - 1748
Nathan
Lusk
50
50
~1720 - ~1763
Robert
Lusk
43
43
~1712 - 1751
John
Lusk
39
39
Sarah
Gunn
Elizabeth
Elizabeth
Hayes
Martha
McClure
1774
Sarah
Davidson
~1765 - 1846
Samuel
Davidson
81
81
1769 - 1860
Martha
Davidson
90
90
Thomas
George
Davidson
~1772
George
Davidson
William
Coke
Davidson
Peggy
Davidson
~1763
Mary
Lusk
~1767
Jennett
Lusk
D. 1806
David
Smith
Henry
Smith
Frances
Smith
Delilah
Smith
James
Smith
[MarjorieGreensHankinsPenningtonResearch.FTW] Oldest son of David and Bashaba Smith, James became the administrator of Thomas Lusk's estate.
1843
John
D.
Lusk
1845
William
H.
Lusk
1847
Elizabeth
Lusk
1849
Pleasant
James
Lusk
1851
Rufus
K. B.
Lusk
1853
Thomas
Newton
Lusk
1857
Martha
Lusk
1860
Robert
M.
Lusk
1862
Mary
Lusk
1865
Jacob
Addie
Lusk
1841
Margaret
I.
McLain
Might be Margaret Irene McLain.
1843
Mary
Katherine
McLain
1849
Elizabeth
McLain
Mary Catherine Hewlett McLain mentions the children of Elizabeth Underwood in her will in 1888 but does not mention Elizabeth so it seems likely that Elizabeth had already died.
1851
David
Hubbard
McLain
From The Dictionary of Alabama Biography, pg. 1, 127: "David Hubbard McLain, physician, was born April 23, 1861 in Winston County, Alabama and died May 31, 1897; son of Allen McLain and Mary Hewlett. The former [Allen], a North Carolinian of Scotch_Irish descent who came to Alabama with his parents when a child and located on a farm in Walker County, grandson of William Hewlett of Virginia. His ancestors, the McLains, Hewletts, Hubbards of North Carolina and Virginia achieved distinction in the War of 1812 and were prominent in the politics of the country and the cause of the Confederacy, he received his schooling at Mt. Hope Alabama, Lawrence County and in Spring Hill Academy, Tennessee under the direction of Dr. J. M. Clark at Mt Hope and graduated from the medical college of Alabama. After practicing for one year in Allens Factory in Marion County Alabama, he moved to Maysville, Madison County, Alabama and from there to Gurley in 1879 where he soon established himself in a practice extending over the eastern part of Madison County. He was a member of the Madison County medical society and the State Medical Association and for two terms was a member of the board of censors of the former, was a Democrat, a steward in the Methodist Episcopal Church, and a Knight of Honor. Married June 18, 1880 to Ella McBroom of Gurley. Children 1, Deceased 2. Last residence-Gurley Alabama."
1853
Felix
Duncan
McLain
BET. 1854 - 1855
Rebecca
McLain
1858
Leonora
Ader
McLain
1860
Deciann
McLain
1864
Eunice
McLain
BET. 1850 - 1851
William
Hewlett
McLain
Unknown
White
Walter
Nesmith
A. V.
Underwood
Allen
Underwood
Eunice
Underwood
Eva
Underwood
Elizabeth
Underwood
Mary
Underwood
Ella J.
McBroom
Unknown
Hewlett
George
Washington
Rush
William
L.
Morton
~1789 - 1824
William
Hewlett
35
35
William bought land in Morgan County from the United States Government on 24 April 1820. He died before 27 October 1824, when his wife appeared in court to settle her husband's estate. In his Will, dated 25 April 1821, he names his children, his present wife and makes pains to assure that all of his children receive equal shares from his estate, to the extent of itemizing loans and gifts to each child. The inventory of William Hewlett's Estate lists, in part, 7 Slaves ( John, Abraham, Fulles, Nelson, Eliza, Mary,and Nelley), 3 Horses, 1 Pair of Oxen and Cart, Numerous Sheep and Hogs, 3 Beds, Walnut Cupboard, Chest and Desk, 2 Tables and 10 Chairs.
1798 - BET. 1861 - 1870
Margaret
Elizabeth
Hubbard
On 27 October 1824, Margaret Hewlett appears in the Court Records of Morgan County, Alabama in connection with the settlement of her husband's estate. She was made guardian of her infant children, Mary Catherine and William (probably twins) on 3 October 1829. Margaret filed annual reports with the Orphans court in Morgan County. Probate records show all filings connected with her husband's estate. She was twenty-six year od age at the time. His land sold for $65. On 14 February 1831, she had received only $3.34 for her two children since her last report. In 1840, Margaret appears in Walker County with her two children under the age of 20; she also shows herself as owning three slaves at the time. Margaret never remarried and by 1850, she is in Winston County, living in the household of her daughter Mary Catherine and her husband Allen McLain. Margaret bought 80.15 Acres of land in Winston County, Alabama on 01 September 1860. It appears to be the same amount of land which her daughter later left to her children.
~1790
Hugh
McLain
In Margaret Murphy's account in The Heritage of Morgan County, Alabama: Hugh McLain was of Scotch-Irish descent and, as such, his ancestors almost assuredly arrived in America at the port of Philadelphia and, during succeeding generations, made their way down the Great Wagon Road from Philadelphia through Lancaster County, through the Shenandoah Valley and, possibly, from there toward, most likely, the Carolinas, since his wife Elizabeth Morris was born there. Hugh brought his wife and child(ren) to Alabama when Allen was a young child.
~1790
Elizabeth
Nancy
Morris
John
Morris
Mary
Maxwell
BET. 1821 - 1822
William
Hewlett
Colonel Hewlett held the highest rank of any officer from Walker County during the Civil War.
1754 - 1841
Thomas
Mortimer
Hubbard
86
86
In 1775, while living in Goochland County, Virginia, Thomas enlisted in the 1st Virginia Regiment, commanded by by Col. Patrick Henry. Later, he enlisted as a Sergeant in the Continental Line, serving therein for three years. Margaret Murphy quotes from from Thomas's Revolutionary War Pension Application: "I enlisted in the first Virginia Regiment in the ...of the Revolution under Captain John Fleming in the month of June or July in 1775, for one year. I was a citizen of Goochland County, Virginia. The Regiment was commanded by Col. Patrick Henry and Major Epps, filed officers not remembered. William Lewis and John Pettis were Lieutenants in Fleming's Company and I have forgotten the name of the Ensign. The Company joined the Regiment at Williamsburg, and from thence we marched to the Great Bridge; from the Great Bridge to Kemps Landing where we remained some time and marched to Norfolk, where the British Fleet was lying, they had cannoned the town and burned part of it before our arrival, and under the direction of the Committee of Safety, we burned the other part. After my enlistment Patrick Henry was elected Governor of Virginia and quit the Regiment. Sometime in June 1776, we returned to Williamsburg and on hearing of the Declaration of Independence, a faux de Joy in Williamsburg. About this time the Regiment was reorganized and I enlisted under the same Company Officers, in the 'Continental Line,' 1st Virginia Regiment for three years as as Sergeant...I was at the Battle of Trenton the 26th, 28th December 1776, when the Hessions were taken and no great while afterward, the British came upon George Washington, and the two armies fired upon each other across a mill pond. At the Battle of Princeton, I was struck wish a musket shot which broke two ribs, but did not enter the hollow. Before the Battle of Brandywine, I was appointed a General." After the Revolution, Thomas settled in Bedford County, Virginia until 1804 when he moved to Rutherford County, Tennessee. He went to Madison County, Alabama about 1815 and in 1818 went to Morgan County, Alabama. From 1818-1822, Thomas served as a Captain in Cotaco County's 6th Regiment, 2nd Division., Alabama Territorial Militia, under the command of Col. Hezekiah Johnston & Col. Jonathan L. Owens. In 1838, Thomas appears, judging from a research of the Morgan County Court Records by Bill Tubbs (437 Battle Creek Road, Jasper, AL 35503), to have given considerable property to Thomas Jr. Son David, representing the other children brought suit to find out if Thomas Jr was exerting undue influence on their father. The court sent out Charles L. King to discover the truth. Thomas Sr. acknowledged signing the deeds but refused to answer any other questions. Mr. Tubbs speculates that Thomas may have been peeved that all the rest of his children moved south and west of Morgan County. In his will, written in 1840, and executed by his son David, a lawyer in Moulton, Lawrence County, Alabama, he states that he had sold most of his land and Negroes, retaining only a small portion during his life. Of his remaining estate, he left to his four sons, Vincent, David, Stephen and James, equal parts of his property of any description. David was to sell everything at auction to pay his debts and, if demanded, to pay out of the proceeds, one dollar each to Green, Thomas, Elizabeth, Margaret and Catherine, and no more. Laura received his bed and furniture prior to sale of the inventory. The will and invetory follow. State of Alabama Orphan Court Morgan County Orphan Court Special 21 Aug't 1841 This day came David Hubbard and presented an instrument in writing purporting To be the last will and testament of Thos Hubbard late of Morgan County Deceased and offered the same for probate. And at the same time came Alexander A. McCarthy & William C. Roberts two of the Subscribing Witnesses of said will, and when duly Sworn deposeth and saith that they Signed the same as witnesses, in the presence of each other, and in the presence of N K Murphy the other Subscribing witness, and as the Said testator9') Special request said testator was of sound disposing mind and memory at the time of doing the Same and he published & acknowledged said Instrument to be his last will & testament And at the Same time came David Hubbard the Executor named in said will of Thos Hubbard Dec'd and applied for letters of Executorship upon said Decedents Estate whereupon it is ordered by the Court letters be committed to the said David Hubbard upon his entering into bond in the final sum of Six Thousand dollars Whereupon the said David Hubbard tendered his bond with S. Hubbard, G P Reid and H A McCartney which was approved of by the Court and Letters issued which was accordingly done Ordered by the Court that D A Morton J A Patterson H A High & John be and are hereby appointed to appraise the personal property of Thos Hubbard Dec'd. Ordered by the Court Citations issued to Thos Hubbard Harvery Morris in right of His wife, Margaret Hewlett John McLain in right of his wife & Vincent Hubbard for To be and appear before the Judge of said Court at the Court house in Summerville on the Second Monday in September next to show cause of any They can why the last will and testament of Thomas Hubbard Dec'd should not be entered of record. Will of Thomas Hubbard, Senior, and Proof The State of Alabama Before Horatio Philpott, Judge of the Morgan County County Court for said County Personally came Alexander A. McCartney, William C. Roberts, two of the Subscribing Witnesses to the Foregoing Will of Thomas Hubbard, Senior, late of said County, Deceased, Which Will is hereunto appended, and Dated, in the Caption, on the 18th of August 1840, at the request of said Thomas Hubbard, Senior, is in Presence and in the presence of each other, and that they saw the said Thomas Hubbard Sign the same and Acknowledge and Declare it as his last Will and Testament, and they also saw the other Subscribing Witness Nathan H. Murphey Sign the same, in the presence of the said Thomas Hubbard and in the presence of each of said Witnesses, and that the said Testator Thomas Hubbard, Senior, was as the time of Signing the same of Sound disposing mind and memory. Sworn to and Subscribed A. A. McCartney In the Presence of W. C. Roberts H. Philpott Judge Ordered to be Entered of H. Philpott Record Will The State of Alabama, Morgan County, August 18th 1840. I, Thomas Hubbard, Senior, of said County, now of sound mind and Memory (but being old and infirm) do make and ordain and publish my Last Will and Testament, as follows, and hereby revoke all former Wills, Whatsoever, (to wit). Item 1st Having sold my land and Negroes, retaining Possession of the land and certain Negroes during my life, I hereby give And bequeath unto Vincent Hub___, David Hubbard, Stephen Hubbard And James Hubbard, my four sons in equal parts all of my property of Every description whatsoever, Household and Kitchen furniture, Stock Crops and Farming Utensils Debts due and Money on hand at the time of My death. I Thomas Hubbard appoint my son David Hubbard as Executor of this will and whose responsibility it will be to settle my estate at the ???under the will in my book. Sworn my Estate in conformity my said will viz. selling all of the property at public sale for cash giving one months notice of the Time and place of sale and out of the proceed shall if demanded pay to Vincent Hubbard, Thomas Hubbard Elizabeth Wilson, Margaret Hewlett, Catharine Morris One Silver Dollar each, and nothing more, and the resiium of the proceeds shall be divided according to the provisions of the first item in this Will between the said Vincent, David, Stephen, and Jane, and if one or more of them should then not be living Children of such As may be dead previous to the distribution herein contemplated. I give to Cynthia Caledonia Hubbard my largest Bed as specific Legacy, with the Furniture thereunto belonging, and I give to Livura Emily Hubbard my remaining Bed and Furniture, also a specific Legacy to be set apart Before my Property is inventoried for the purpose of Sale. Witness my Hand and seal, the nineteenth day of August in the year eighteen hundred And forty, in the presence of Test. W. C. Roberts Thomas Hubbard {Seal} A. A. McCartney Bond of David Hubbard Executor of Thomas Hubbard Senior Know all men by these presents, that we David Hubbard, Stephen Hubbard, Green P. Price, Alexander A. McCartney, ar held and firmly bound unto Horatio Philpott judge of the County Court of the State of Alabama, and his successors in office, in the final sum of six thousand dollars, to which payment well and truly to be made we and each of us do bind ourselves, our heirs & firmly by these presents sealed with our seals and dated the 21st day of August 1841. Now the condition of the above obligation is such that whereas the above bound David Hubbard has been duly appointed executor of the estate of Thomas Hubbard, Sen'r, deceased; now if said David Hubbard shall well and truly perform all the duties which are or may be by law required of him as executor, then the above obligation to be void; else to remain in full force and virtue. Witness our hands and seals, the date above written. David Hubbard {Seal} Stephen Hubbard {Seal} Green P. Price {Seal} A. A. McCartney {Seal} Approved and Ordered to be Entered of Record August 21st 1841 H. Philpott An Appraisement of the Estate of Thomas Hubbard Senior A List of the Personal Property Appraised by James A. Patterson and James M. Murphy and Henry A. High 1 Gray Horse 60.00 1 Bay Mare 15.00 1 Large Steer 15.00 1 Small Do. 5.00 1 Lot Hogs 45.00 1 Crib Corn 30.00 1 Lot Lumber .50 1 Lot Old Waggon Irons 15.00 1 Wheel Barrow and Slide 1.00 1 Grindstone 1.50 1 Box Tools .75 1 Plough etc 1.00 2 Bbls Salt 12.00 Smoke House Lumber 1.50 1 Old Cupboard 3.00 1 Half Bushel & 1 Peck Measure .75 1 Table 3.00 2 Bedsteads 2.00 1 Small Pot 1.00 2 Ovens 2.00 1 Stew Kettle .75 2 Pair Pot Hooks 1.00 1 Lot Shovel & Tongs 1.50 Sheep Shears etc .75 1 Cow 7.00 Potatoes 5.00 6 Stacks Oats 18.00 2 Stacks Fodder 10.00 2 Boxes Wheat 5.00 1 Large Kettle 3.00 1 Pot and Hooks 1.50 1 Old Oven .50 1 Tub .75 1 Sieve Sifter and Tray 1.00 2 Spinning Wheels 1.50 5 Ploughs 5.00 1 Lot Chains etc. 3.00 1 Mattock 1.00 1 Lot Gear 2.00 1 Lot Horse Shoes .50 1 Cross Cut Saw 3.00 1 Lot Barrels 1.00 1 Broad Axe 1.50 5 Augers 1.00 2 Saws 1.50 2 Wedges & Trow 1.00 1 Hatchet & Drawing Knife 1.00 1 Table 1.00 1 Strap and Razors 2.00 1 Walker's Dictionary 1.50 1 Old Trunk .50 1 Old Book .25 1 Set Knives and Forks 2.00 1 Bottle Oil .25 1 Brush .25 1 Old Table .50 1 Glass 2.00 4 Large Jars 6.00 1 Pair Andirons .50 1 Pontoon .25 1 Shot Gun 5.00 1 Bureau 7.00 1 Sideboard 4.00 1 Bed 1.50 1 Axe 1.00 1 Old Shovel .13 1 Old Case .25 1 Lot Meal 4.00 1 Lot Leather 3.50 1 Lot Books 1.00 6 Chairs 1.50 1 Set Plates 1.00 2 Bowls .25 1 Pitcher 1.50 Cups and Saucers .50 1 Box Salt .25 3 Tumblers .75 4 Silver Spoons 2.50 1 Lot Queensware 2.50 1 Cradle 2.50 Bonds of David Hubbard No 1 Bond for $800 due 14th Dec'r 1839 800.00 No 2 Bond for $1000 due 14th Dec'r 1840 1000.00 No 3 Bond for $900 due 14th Dec'r 1841 900.00 Note on D. Hubbard for $140, 15th April 1841, Due one day after Date 140.00 This inventory was taken by us, on or about the 20th day of August; and contains a just and true account of the Goods, Chattles, Rights and Credits of the Estate of said Thomas Hubbard, Sen'r, at the time of his death. James M. Murphy James A. Patterson Henry A. High The State of Alabama Personally appeared before Morgan County S. S. me John Ormand a Justice of the Peace for said James M Murphey James A. Patterson, and Henry A. High, the above subscribing Appraisers, appointed by the Judge of the County Court of said County to assess the appraised of the Personal Estate of Thomas Hubbard late of said County, deceased, who being duly sworn Deposeth and Said that the foregoin Appraisement is s true Valuation of the aforesaid Estate as made by them, void of prejudice or partiality, and to the best of their judgment, skill and ability. Given under my hand and seal at Office on this nineteenth day of November 1841. John Ormand {Seal} A Justice of the Peace State of Ordered by the Court That the Within Alabama Inventory and Appraisement be entered of Record Morgan County Nov 22nd 1841
D. <1841
Mary
Blakeley
Swann
1786
Green
Kirk
Hubbard
1788
Thomas
Hubbard
1790
Vincent
Hubbard
1792
David
Hubbard
David served as Congressman from Alabama and was the first Confedeerate Commissioner of Indian Affairs. During the War of 1812, he served as a Major.
1790
Elizabeth
Hubbard
1805
Catherine
Hubbard
1800
Stephen
Hubbard
1803
James
Hubbard
Elizabeth
Hamm
John
Marlin
Wilson
Elizabeth
Campbell
Rebecca
Stoddard
Nancy
Catherine
Williams
Eliza
Dewoody
John
Harvey
Morris
1796
Betsey
Hubbard
1811
John
Morris
McLain
1815
Mary Margaret
Elizabeth
McLain
1821
William
Taylor
McLain
1830
George
W.
McLain
1831
Martha
McLain
1834
Nancy
McLain
1826
Hugh
McLain
Thomas
White
Mary
Ann
Flannigan
Living
McWeeny
Living
McWeeny
Mary
Adeline
Vaughn
1860
Infant
Dillard
Frances
Dillard
Elizabeth
Dillard
Enoch
S.
Baker
1841
Sarah
Dillard
Eliza
Brown
Gabriel
T.
Goggans
~1820
James
Dillard
Elizabeth
Unknown
1845
Sarah
Dillard
1846
Mary
M.
Dillard
1848
Martha
C.
Dillard
1850
George
W.
Dillard
1851
Benjamin
Dillard
1852
Susan
Ann
Dillard
1853
Mariah
R.
Dillard
1856
Josephine
Dillard
1859
James
F.
Dillard
Sarah
Bryant
Josephus
Dillard
1814
Nancy
Dillard
1825
Dorcus
Elizabeth
Dillard
1829
Nancy
Ann
Dillard
~1830
Mary
Dillard
~1834
Sarah
M.
Dillard
~1838
Thomas
Dillard
~1843
Martha
Dillard
~1845
Joseph
Dillard
~1755 - 1851
Joseph
Dillard
96
96
~1760 - 1852
Pricilla
Wilkens
92
92
~1783 - 1852
Nancy
Dillard
69
69
1785 - 1852
Gemima
Dillard
66
66
1789
Harcanius
Dillard
1790 - ~1857
Phoebe
Dillard
67
67
1794 - 1850
Dorcas
Dillard
56
56
1796 - 1857
Delilah
Dillard
61
61
1798 - 1892
Samuel
Dillard
94
94
1801 - 1860
Lucretia
Dillard
59
59
~1806 - 1866
Josiah
Dillard
60
60
James
Richardson
Bryant
Isaac
Rodgers
Nancy
Bryant
Unknown
Barnett
Johnston
Briant
William
F.
Bryant
Elizabeth
Reid
James
Reid
Cynthia
Hammett
1775
Mary
Clay
Judith
Clay
1785 - WFT Est. 1818-1876
John
Carlock
WFT Est. 1775-1797 - WFT Est. 1818-1884
Isabelle
1740 - 1815
George
Carlock
75
75
1720 - WFT Est. 1721-1810
Frederick
Carlock
1674 - ~1763
David
(Gerlach)
Carlock
89
89
From FIRST FAMILIES OF AMERICA, Vol VI, page 637 & Vol VII, page 773: David was born in Germany, went to Holland and then to America, before 1727, settling in the Shenandoah Valley of the then quite vast Augusta County, Viginia. His son, Hancrist ( Johannes Christ), was a soldier in the American Revolution His son, Abraham, though too young to volunteer, made bullets for the American soldiers and later fought in the War of 1812. David is in the court records in February 1762, concerning a dispute with John Gratton, in Brock's Gap. [www.genealogy.com. Document not named]
Living
Herron
Living
Lim
Living
Herron
Living
Herron
Private
Kenneth
E
Herron
Living
Johnson
Living
Herron
Living
Herron
Living
Herron
1903 - 1973
George
R.
Johnson
70
70
1906 - 1995
Nellie
B.
Gatton
88
88
Living
Johnson
1873 - 1940
Levi
Gatton
67
67
1878 - 1966
Jennie
Ethel
Wells
87
87
1899 - 1963
Lester
Glenn
Gatton
64
64
1901 - 1960
Esther
Matilda
Gatton
58
58
1903 - 1983
Bill
Julian
Gatton
79
79
Private
Abraham
Isaac
Gatton
1908 - 1947
Ethel
Naomi
Gatton
38
38
1910 - 1980
Irene
Isabelle
Gatton
70
70
Private
Wilma
Muriel
Gatton
1913 - 1967
Robert
Levi
Gatton
53
53
1915 - 1915
Helen
Winona
Gatton
6m
6m
1916 - 1982
Lloyd
Neil
Gatton
65
65
1856 - 1944
Abraham
Jefferson
Wells
88
88
1858 - 1927
Louisa
Ione
French
69
69
1879 - WFT Est. 1897-1973
Winona
Wells
1882 - 1983
John
Henry
Wells
101
101
1885 - WFT Est. 1920-1976
Elvie
Neil
Wells
1887 - WFT Est. 1916-1981
Nellie
Louisa
Wells
1890 - WFT Est. 1904-1984
Mary
Susan
Wells
1893 - WFT Est. 1894-1983
Fred
Wells
1896 - 1973
Iver
Paul
Wells
76
76
1818 - 1881
Uriah
Wells
63
63
1821 - 1897
Susannah
Carlock
76
76
WFT Est. 1839-1865 - WFT Est. 1844-1948
Rebecca
Comfort
Wells
1838 - 1915
George
W.
Wells
77
77
1839 - WFT Est. 1840-1933
Infant
Girl
Wells
1841 - WFT Est. 1855-1935
Mary
T.
Wells
1842 - 1927
Samuel
Arthur
Wells
84
84
1844 - 1915
Martha
Mahala
Wells
71
71
1852 - WFT Est. 1890-1947
Sara
Isabel
Wells
1853 - WFT Est. 1874-1943
Uriah
Winton
Wells
1858 - WFT Est. 1902-1950
Hiram
Warner
Wells
1800 - 1881
George
Osborn
Carlock
80
80
1802 - 1876
Elizabeth
Cox
73
73
1823 - 1862
Henry
Carlock
39
39
1765 - 1843
Abraham
Carlock
77
77
1770 - 1802
Abigail
Osborn
32
32
Living
Davis
Living
Herron
Living
Nash
Living
Herron
Living
Nash
Living
Blue
Living
Herron
Living
Herron
Private
Phillip
Shenefield
Private
Ivan
G.
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
Linderman
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
Blue
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
Adams
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
Stafford
Living
Rex
Living
Jacob
Living
Jacob
Living
Weatherstone
Living
Cook
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
Holmes
Living
McCullough
Living
McCullough
Living
White
Living
White
Living
White
Living
George
Living
Peterson
1884 - 1955
Jess
Carlock
71
71
Private
Tracy
Bigley
Private
Wayne
Blair
Private
Fred
Gatton
1925 - ~1992
George
Gatton
67
67
Private
Leo
William
Baughman
Private
Emilie
Frances
White
1826 - 1858
Martha
Glendening
31
31
WFT Est. 1834-1854 - WFT Est. 1859-1938
Elizabeth
A
Murphy
WFT Est. 1824-1844 - WFT Est. 1858-1930
James
Murphy
WFT Est. 1840-1868 - WFT Est. 1891-1954
Ellen
Puckett
1842 - 1915
Samuel
Kier
73
73
1849 - WFT Est. 1890-1940
George
A.
Miller
WFT Est. 1849-1869 - WFT Est. 1874-1953
Naomi
French
1865 - WFT Est. 1902-1960
Birdie
Eunice
Rockwell
1846 - 1908
Henry
Carlock
Wells
62
62
WFT Est. 1842-1861 - WFT Est. 1867-1946
Sarah
Covington
1849 - WFT Est. 1870-1939
John
W.
Wells
WFT Est. 1845-1865 - WFT Est. 1870-1949
Amanda
Gabriel
WFT Est. 1878-1898 - WFT Est. 1903-1982
Florence
Henderson
Living
Wells
Private
Edna
Harp
Private
Edna
Belle
Berry
Private
Leslie
Wayne
Gatton
Private
Shirley
Irene
Gatton
Private
Earl
Warner
Venetz
WFT Est. 1873-1893 - WFT Est. 1907-1979
Joe
Mogel
WFT Est. 1862-1882 - WFT Est. 1897-1968
Harry
A.
Negley
Private
Harold
Negley
Living
Pauline
1919 - WFT Est. 1948-1997
Ruby
Mae
Gatton
1899 - 1958
Clifford
Harold
(Red) Orey
59
59
WFT Est. 1818-1841 - WFT Est. 1865-1929
Elizabeth
C.
Canady
1792 - WFT Est. 1793-1882
Isaac
Carlock
1795 - WFT Est. 1796-1885
Reuben
Carlock
1797 - WFT Est. 1798-1891
Sarah
Carlock
1798 - WFT Est. 1799-1892
Eunice
Carlock
1800 - WFT Est. 1801-1890
Abraham
Willard
Carlock
1802 - WFT Est. 1803-1896
Mary
Jane
Carlock
1802 - WFT Est. 1803-1896
Catherine
Carlock
1780 - 1851
Mary
Anne
Lee
71
71
1805 - WFT Est. 1806-1899
Nancy
Carlock
1807 - WFT Est. 1808-1901
Anna
Carlock
1809 - WFT Est. 1810-1903
Abigail
Carlock
1811 - WFT Est. 1812-1901
Jacob
Madison
Carlock
1813 - WFT Est. 1814-1903
Miriam
Carlock
1815 - WFT Est. 1816-1909
Cynthia
Carlock
1817 - WFT Est. 1818-1911
Ruth
Carlock
1820 - WFT Est. 1821-1914
Penina
Carlock
1823 - WFT Est. 1824-1913
William
Jackson
Carlock
1715 - 1803
Hanchrist
Carlock
88
88
1730 - 1830
Sarah
Whitman
100
100
1845 - WFT Est. 1874-1936
George
William
Carlock
1847 - 1904
Uriah
Wells
Carlock
57
57
1849 - WFT Est. 1867-1943
Sarah
Ann
Carlock
1851 - WFT Est. 1872-1941
Henry
Glendening
Carlock
1855 - 1883
Susan
Jane
Carlock
28
28
1853 - WFT Est. 1885-1947
Martha
Elizabeth
Carlock
1856 - WFT Est. 1877-1946
Hiram
Warner
Carlock
1857 - WFT Est. 1858-1947
John
James
Carlock
1859 - WFT Est. 1860-1949
Thomas
Jefferson
Carlock
1860 - WFT Est. 1861-1950
Richard
Caleb
Carlock
1862 - WFT Est. 1863-1956
Harriet
Lenora
Carlock
WFT Est. 1859-1888 - WFT Est. 1865-1967
Uriah
Wells
WFT Est. 1859-1888 - WFT Est. 1864-1970
Mary
J.
Wells
WFT Est. 1859-1888 - WFT Est. 1865-1967
George
W.
Wells
WFT Est. 1859-1888 - WFT Est. 1865-1967
Samuel
Wells
WFT Est. 1859-1888 - WFT Est. 1865-1967
John
Wells
WFT Est. 1859-1888 - WFT Est. 1865-1967
Andrew
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1869-1971
Charles
A.
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1869-1971
Oliver
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1869-1971
John
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1869-1971
Joe
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1869-1971
Claud
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1868-1974
Adella
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1869-1971
Hall
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1869-1971
Arthur
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1868-1974
Maud
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1869-1971
Roy
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1869-1971
Theodore
Wells
WFT Est. 1863-1892 - WFT Est. 1868-1974
Laurel
Wells
1888 - WFT Est. 1889-1982
Edith
Pearl
Wells
1872 - WFT Est. 1873-1962
Harlan
Miller
1875 - WFT Est. 1876-1969
Margaret
Stella
Miller
1880 - WFT Est. 1881-1974
Bessie
Maude
Miller
1883 - WFT Est. 1884-1973
Richard
Jefferson
Miller
1883 - WFT Est. 1884-1977
Grace
Gertrude
Miller
1887 - WFT Est. 1888-1981
Martha
Susannah
Miller
WFT Est. 1822-1852 - WFT Est. 1873-1939
Strong
1870 - WFT Est. 1871-1960
Ira
Bird
Strong
1846 - 1905
Rachel
N.
Canady
58
58
1868 - WFT Est. 1869-1958
Madison
Henry
Carlock
1870 - WFT Est. 1871-1964
Mary
Ellen
Carlock
WFT Est. 1868-1896 - WFT Est. 1873-1978
Elizabeth
Carlock
WFT Est. 1868-1896 - WFT Est. 1873-1978
Ella
Carlock
WFT Est. 1868-1896 - WFT Est. 1873-1978
Bell
Carlock
WFT Est. 1868-1896 - WFT Est. 1873-1978
Stella
Carlock
WFT Est. 1868-1896 - WFT Est. 1874-1975
Frank
David
Carlock
WFT Est. 1868-1896 - WFT Est. 1874-1975
Jess
Carlock
WFT Est. 1868-1896 - WFT Est. 1874-1975
Charles
Carlock
WFT Est. 1832-1852 - WFT Est. 1867-1938
Daniel
A.
Canady
WFT Est. 1867-1890 - WFT Est. 1872-1971
Caleb
Wade
Canady
WFT Est. 1867-1890 - WFT Est. 1872-1971
Charles
Winton
Canady
WFT Est. 1867-1890 - WFT Est. 1872-1974
Cora
Canady
WFT Est. 1867-1890 - WFT Est. 1872-1971
Lou
Canady
WFT Est. 1867-1890 - WFT Est. 1872-1974
Laura
Canady
WFT Est. 1872-1901 - WFT Est. 1877-1983
Clara
Carlock
WFT Est. 1872-1901 - WFT Est. 1877-1983
Mary
Carlock
1846 - 1884
John
Good
37
37
1869 - WFT Est. 1870-1959
George
W.
Good
1871 - WFT Est. 1872-1961
Henry
Good
1874 - WFT Est. 1875-1968
Minerva
Good
1880 - WFT Est. 1881-1974
Ada
Good
1882 - WFT Est. 1883-1976
Arch
Good
WFT Est. 1877-1906 - WFT Est. 1883-1985
Thomas
Carlock
WFT Est. 1877-1906 - WFT Est. 1883-1985
Jefferson
W.
Carlock
WFT Est. 1877-1906 - WFT Est. 1883-1985
Orville
Carlock
WFT Est. 1867-1895 - WFT Est. 1873-1974
Frank
Wells
WFT Est. 1867-1895 - WFT Est. 1873-1974
Chester
Wells
WFT Est. 1867-1895 - WFT Est. 1872-1977
Nellie
Wells
WFT Est. 1867-1895 - WFT Est. 1872-1977
Pearl
Wells
WFT Est. 1867-1895 - WFT Est. 1873-1974
Abraham
Wells
WFT Est. 1867-1895 - WFT Est. 1872-1977
Jene
Wells
WFT Est. 1867-1895 - WFT Est. 1872-1977
Lillie
Wells
WFT Est. 1870-1899 - WFT Est. 1875-1981
Margaret
Wells
WFT Est. 1870-1899 - WFT Est. 1876-1978
Travis
Wells
WFT Est. 1870-1899 - WFT Est. 1875-1981
Elsie
Wells
WFT Est. 1870-1899 - WFT Est. 1876-1978
Lafayette
Wells
WFT Est. 1870-1899 - WFT Est. 1876-1978
John
Wells
WFT Est. 1870-1899 - WFT Est. 1876-1978
Cleveland
Wells
WFT Est. 1870-1899 - WFT Est. 1875-1981
Clara
Wells
WFT Est. 1874-1903 - WFT Est. 1880-1982
Willie
Wells
WFT Est. 1874-1903 - WFT Est. 1879-1985
Clara
Wells
WFT Est. 1874-1903 - WFT Est. 1879-1985
Anna
Wells
WFT Est. 1874-1903 - WFT Est. 1879-1985
Valetta
Wells
WFT Est. 1862-1889 - WFT Est. 1868-1969
Henry
Allen
Kier
WFT Est. 1862-1889 - WFT Est. 1868-1972
Nellie
Marion
Kier
WFT Est. 1862-1889 - WFT Est. 1868-1969
Claud
Kier
WFT Est. 1862-1889 - WFT Est. 1868-1972
Anna
Cora
Kier
WFT Est. 1862-1889 - WFT Est. 1868-1972
Susie
Fidelia
Kier
WFT Est. 1862-1889 - WFT Est. 1868-1969
Andrew
Jackson
Kier
WFT Est. 1862-1889 - WFT Est. 1868-1969
Vern
C Kier
WFT Est. 1862-1889 - WFT Est. 1868-1972
Martha
Elizabeth
Kier
1880 - WFT Est. 1881-1974
Ina
Ellen
Kier
WFT Est. 1862-1889 - WFT Est. 1868-1969
Donald
Golden
Kier
1884 - WFT Est. 1885-1978
Lena
Olive
Kier
1883 - WFT Est. 1884-1977
Gertie
Odessa
Wells
1888 - WFT Est. 1889-1982
Helen
Wells
1891 - WFT Est. 1892-1985
Beulah
May
Wells
1894 - WFT Est. 1895-1984
Golden
George
Wells
1897 - WFT Est. 1898-1987
Wayne
Willard
Wells
1899 - WFT Est. 1900-1989
Merle
Wade
Wells
Mary
Clay
1725 - WFT Est. 1726-1819
Catherine
Carlock
1723 - 1811
Conrad
Carlock
88
88
1717 - WFT Est. 1731-1811
Caroline
Carlock
1767 - WFT Est. 1768-1857
Isaac
Carlock
1775 - WFT Est. 1776-1865
Jacob
Carlock
1772 - WFT Est. 1773-1862
Moses
Carlock
1770 - WFT Est. 1771-1864
Eunice
Carlock
1774 - WFT Est. 1775-1864
Job
Carlock
1779 - WFT Est. 1780-1873
Mary
(Polly)
Carlock
WFT Est. 1712-1729 - ~1860
Susan
Witmer
1750 - WFT Est. 1751-1840
Lemuel
Carlock
1755 - WFT Est. 1756-1849
Catherine
Carlock
1694 - 1725
Anna
Marie
Lisemus
31
31
~1679 - ~1763
Hans
Gerlach
84
84
WFT Est. 1632-1655 - WFT Est. 1677-1743
Anna
Maria
Kummer
WFT Est. 1700-1720 - WFT Est. 1734-1806
Fredrick
Starnes
WFT Est. 1719-1739 - WFT Est. 1740-1823
Mary
Starnes
Living
Crawshaw
1880 - WFT Est. 1916-1971
Orlando Martin
(Charlie)
Henderson
Private
Robert
Vance
Henderson
Private
Ewena
Iona
Henderson
Private
Baby
Boy A
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Private
Viva
Lorene
Davis
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Venetz
Living
Carlock
Living
Kinzle
Living
Carlock
Living
Carlock
Living
Carlock
Living
Carlock
Living
Hager
Living
Beavers
Living
Bopp
Living
Green
Living
Courtney
1910 - 1973
Iva
Billings
63
63
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Roberson
Living
Jackie
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Stevens
Living
Beverly
Living
McDonald
Living
Barbara
Living
Jackie
Private
Helen
Rose
Living
Gatton
1928 - 1928
Eugene
Johnson
1946 - ~1970
Larry
Joe
Bigley
24
24
[MichaelHerronWFTv11t1440.ftw] Committed suicide
Private
Jack
Gilbert
Living
Gilbert
Private
Clarence
Baughman
Private
William
Leo
Baughman
Living
Baughman
1933 - 1984
James
Baughman
51
51
Living
Baughman
1935 - 1988
Paul
Baughman
53
53
Living
Schultz
Living
Ann
Living
Hembry
Living
Noftsger
Living
Miller
Living
Baughman
Living
Baughman
Living
Redman
Living
Redman
Living
Redman
Living
Redman
Living
Redman
Living
Toney
Living
Toney
Living
Simpson
WFT Est. 1895-1920 - 1982
Viola
Belle
Janssen
1936 - 1989
Irene
Louise
Gatton
53
53
Living
Gatton
Private
Helen
Holmes
Private
Marion
Schoen
Whipple
Living
Gatton
Living
Whipple
Living
Whipple
1928 - 1969
Florence
Enzwiler
41
41
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Turner
Living
Gatton
Living
Pitt
Living
Pitt
Living
Pitt
Living
Pitt
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
1943 - 1958
Clara
Minerva
Orey
15
15
Living
Orey
Living
Peto
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Stark
Living
Stark
Living
Stark
Living
Stark
Living
Stark
Living
Miller
Living
Miller
Living
Miller
Living
Miller
Living
Hamilton
Living
Hamilton
Living
Houk
Living
Houk
Living
Houk
Living
Vogel
Living
Vogel
Living
Vogel
Living
Vogel
Living
Hock
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Dunn
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Cross
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Orey
Living
Garton
Living
Garton
Living
Garton
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Fischer
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
McDermott
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
Living
Garbowski
Living
Gatton
Living
Polichio
Living
Gatton
Living
Gatton
1892 - 1935
Elona
L.
Lumpkin
43
43
[MichaelHerronWFTv11t1440.ftw] Lona Wells was shot and killed by Robert Vance Henderson. Paul was a Denver policeman. Vance got his service gun and was drunk and shot her. Her children were raised by Paul's brother John.
1920 - 1922
Richard
Wells
2
2
Private
Sylvan
R.
Wells
1923 - 1966
Harold
Vance
Wells
43
43
Private
Leland
Joseph
Wells
1927 - 1977
Robert
French
Wells
50
50
Private
Barbara
Youngblood
Living
Wells
Living
Wells
Living
Wells
Private
Betty
1925 - 1995
Beth
Margaret
Creighton
70
70
Living
Wells
Living
Wells
Living
Wells
Living
Wells
Living
Netz
Living
Wells
Living
Wells
Living
Lohr
Living
Wells
Living
Wells
Living
Wells
Living
Wells
Augustus
Andrew
Hewlett
Fred
Hewlett
BEF. 1 JAN 1687/88
Anna
Maria
Gerlach
<1693
Johann
Henrich
Gerlach
<1696
Elisabetha
Margaretha
Gerlach
<1699
Maria
Gertraud
Gerlach
<1702
Johann
Gerlach
BEF. 24 FEB 1706/07
Elsa
Catharina
Gerlach
Mary
Payne
Silas
Cooper
Judy
Unknown
Samuel
Dillard
Living
Sexton
Living
Sexton
Living
Bramlett
Living
Bramlett
Living
Bramlett
Living
Cockrell
Living
Cockrell
Living
Weidman
Living
Weidman
Living
Baldwin
Living
Baldwin
Living
Baldwin
Thomas
Hazard
1861 - <1894
Betsy
V.
Paulson
33
33
1822 - 1891
Paul
O.
Paulson
68
68
~1629
Ann
Pope
1603 - 1660
Nathaniel
Pope
57
57
~1623
Lucy
~1682
Amey
Veale
~1625
Katherine
D. BET. 1759 - 1760
Humphrey
Pope
Ann
Pope
John
Pope
Sarah
Pope
1685 - 1716
Nicholas
Muse
31
31
~1668
Anna
Catharina
Unknown
~1608
Margaret
Hawkins
1588 - 17 MAR 1661/62
Margery
Aucocke
1532 - 1595
John
Hawkins
63
63
1667 - 1716
Elizabeth
Pope
(Payne)
49
49
~1543
Bartholomew
Mewes
~1561
Margaret
Bower
1568 - BET. 1616 - 1617
Edward
Mewes
~1639
Michael
Mewes
~1637
George
Mewes
~1627 - 1689
Robert
Mewes
62
62
11 MAR 1631/32
Alice
Mewes
BET. 1588 - 1589 - 12 MAR 1639/40
Edward
Mewes
~1677
Ann
Muse
BET. 1561 - 1562 - 1622
Sir
Richard
Hawkins
William
Pope
Muse
~1675 - 1722
John
Pope
47
47
~1671 - 1733
Humphrey
Pope
62
62
~1726 - 1786
Ann
Barbara
Muse
60
60
~1665 - 1732
Thomas
Muse
67
67
1592
Hawkins
~1675 - >1730
Jane
Muse
55
55
~1612
Mary
Hawkins
~1610
Joan
Hawkins
16 MAR 1604/05 - 1678
John
Hawkins
1667 - 1717
Elizabeth
Hawkins
50
50
~1540 - 1591
Katherine
Gonson
51
51
~1568 - 1629
Judith
Hele
61
61
~1677
Mary
Muse
~1673 - 1722
John
Muse
49
49
~1675 - 14 JAN 1724/25
Ann
Sanford
Hopkins
1699
Mary
Muse
~1697
Edward
Muse
9 JAN 1700/01
William
Muse
~1707
Augustine
Muse
1710
Hopkins
Muse
1709
Ann
Muse
~1715
Sarah
Muse
1720 - 1790
George
Muse
70
70
~1722
John
Muse
1633 - 1723
John
Muse
(Mewes)
89
89
~1644
Catherine
(Lewis)
Moss
Hopkins
Muse
1667 - 1716
Elizabeth
Pope
49
49
1645 - 1695
Humphrey
Pope
50
50
~1669
Jemina
Pope
~1673 - 1723
Lawrence
Pope
50
50
~1675
Jemima
Pope
~1677
Mary
Pope
~1605
Richard
Hawkins
~1663 - 1723
Johann
Christ
Gerlach
60
60
Johan Christian Gerlach was one of the original patentees in the Mohawk in 1723.
10 JAN 1728/29 - 1828
Mary
Muse
Mary
Pope
1704
Elizabeth
Muse
1831
Catherine
Johnson
Carl
Johnson
Ann
B.
Jepson
Ellen
Andersen
William
Andersen
Agustus
Andersen
Andrew
Andersen
Antone
Andersen
Julia
Andersen
Antone
Andersen
Julia
Unknown
1889
John
Andersen
1892
George
H.
Andersen
Milford
Andersen
Meribah
Parker
John
Slocum
Ebenezer
Slocum
Nathaniel
Slocum
Peleg
Slocum
Samuel
Slocum
Mary
Slocum
Eleazer
Slocum
Jacob
Mott
Adam
X Mott
1672
Joanna
Slocum
Joanna
Slocum
Mary
Thurston
Hannah
Tucker
Mary
Holder
Abraham
Tucker
Elephal
Fitzgerald
Christopher
Almy
Joseph
Earle
Adam
Lawton
Joseph
Russell
Ann
Borden
Barbara
Unknown
1639 - 1719
Daniel
Lawton
80
80
Anders
Jepson
Ellen
Larson
Mary
Unknown
Martha
Unknown
BET. 1641 - 1644
Isbell
Lawton
~1646
Mary
Lawton
~1648
John
Lawton
~1650
George
Lawton
~1652
Robert
Lawton
1657 - 1712
Susannah
Lawton
55
55
~1656
Mercy
Lawton
~1658
Ruth
Lawton
~1660
Job
Lawton
~1662
Elizabeth
Lawton
Unknown
McLain
John McLain or, possibly, McCain, of Randolph County, North Carolina left a will in Novemebr 1824, in which he named his siblings: Hugh McLain, Lydia Burney, Vance McLain, George McLain, Forbus McLain, Mary Winning, Guy McLain, Green McLain, niece [illegible] and nephew, son of Hugh, John. Since Hugh McLain purportedly came from North Carolina, these records should be researched further.
John
Malmstrom
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