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1807 - 1881
Samuel
McKee
73
73
1880 Census lists Samuel with paralisis 1860 Census - $3000 real property, $600 personal property, Ripley Co., Delaware Township, Indiana, farmer
1791 - 1847
Lydia
Billings
56
56
The McKee Reunion in 1915 booklet says that David's family came over from Scotland and Lydia's family were from the New England States.
1774 - 1865
David
McKee
91
91
The McKee Reunion in 1915 booklet says that David's family came over from Scotland and Lydia's family were from the New England States.
1913
Donald
Eugene
Heisler
Donald graduated from University of Oregon with a law degree.He practiced law in The Dalles, Oregon. He has held office as District Attorney, and State Representative. Donald married Helen Rothenburger. Helen died in 1942. Donald then married Roberta Myrth Van Valkenburgh on 3/20/1945, in Portland, Oregon. They had 4 children. He worked with Meredith Van Valkenburgh in The Dalles before he retired.
1772 - 1819
Nancy
Ansley
47
47
1767
Robert
Peake
There may be an additional son Robert born in 1803 in Virginia, but he wasn't listed on the 1820 North Carolina census. Robert and Nancy Peake's grandsons, Leonard and Samuel, married two Booth sisters, Martha Ann and Margaret Children [ 1. Children Peggy PEAKE b: ABT. 1791 -- questionable ] 2. Children Littlebury PEAKE b: ABT. 1808 3. Children William PEAKE 4. Children John Comer PEAKE b: ABT. 1808 5. Children Robert PEAKE b: ABT. 1813 6. Children Nancy PEAKE b: ABT. 1815 (Robert and Thomas?)
1744 - 1820
William
Ansley
75
75
William migrated to Hillsborough, NC and then to Georgia. He owned the West Point Grist Mill on the Eno River in NC from 1786 to 1798. It has now been restored. He and Rebecca were twins. Service: Revolutionary War Muster Rolls, 1775-83 Will: 20 JUN 1820 Will Probated. Will Book B, page 100 - Lincoln County, GA William Ansley II - Born 1744. Baptised 2 Sep 1744 at the Old Tennemt Scotchish Presyterian Church Upper Freehold, Monmouth Co. New Jersey. It is believed that William travel to South Carolina with his brothers' Thomas and Benjamin prior to 1769 . William first bought property in North Carolina in 1769 and a total of four land grants are listed prior to 1880. William is listed in the Orange Co. Tax records of 1779. Three of the grants are in Hillsborough Orange County and the fourth is in what was then Western lands of North Carolina but now Eastern Tennessee. William sold out his land holdings of 987 acres in 1798 and crossed over the Georgia border into Lincoln County. Settling in Lincolnton. I have found two marriages one to Anny or Amy Edwards or Edmund (b. 1786 in SC. D. 1857 in Lincoln Co. Ga.)3 Jan 1808 in Lincoln Co. Ga. The first marriage to Sarah Strayhorn ( b. In 1746 in Hawfield Orange Co NC. D. 1808 in Organge NC.) Abt 1770 in NC. All of the children of the first marriage are named in the DAR application of Mrs. Jacqueline Rawls Noland. William died in 6 Oct. 1819 and his will was probated 24 Jun 1820 in Lincolnton, Lincoln County, Georgia. 12 of the 16 names listed in William's will and presumed to be his children. William moved from Manmouth Co., New Jersey to Orange Co., North Carolina in 17??. He purchased a Grist Mill about 1780 on the Eno River in Orange Co. from Mr. Abercrombrie, the builder. This Mill has been restored as the West Point Mill located in Eno River Park in Durham, Durham Co., North Carolina. He also owned Synott's Mill, which was down stream from the West Point Mill, also on the Eno River. William transferred 200 acres of land in Orange Co., North Carolina to his son Gilbert in 1798. This transfer was witnessed by William's son David. William moved from Orange Co., North Carolina with his sons Gilbert and David in late 1798 or early 1799 to Abbeville District, South Carolina. William then moved from Abbeville District to Lincolnton, Lincoln Co., Georgia in 1799. Cenus: 1779 ANSLEY WILLIAM Orange County NC 1800 United States Federal Census Ansley, William, State: South Carolina Year: 1800 County: Abbeville 1810 United States Federal Census Ansley, William, State: Georgia Year: 1818 Georgia Census, 1790-1890 1818 ANSLEY WILLIAM Lincoln County GA Revolutionary War Muster Rolls, 1775-83 ANSLEY WILLIAM PRIVATE 115 Children: 1. Nancy ANSLEY b: ABT. 1770 in North Carolina 2. Gilbert D. ANSLEY b: ABT. 1773 in Orange County, North Carolina 3. Samuel ANSLEY b: 29 JUN 1774 in Orange County, North Carolina 4. William ANSLEY b: ABT. 1776 in Orange County, North Carolina 5. David ANSLEY b: 1783 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey 6. Rebecca ANSLEY b: ABT. 1785 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey 7. Margaret ANSLEY b: ABT. 1787 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey 8. Thomas ANSLEY b: 1787 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey 9. Jesse ANSLEY b: ABT. 1789 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey 10. Benjamin ANSLEY b: ABT. 1789 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey
1715 - ~1750
Rebecca
Cox
35
35
Rebecca Cox and Elizabeth Cox were sisters. (But there is a chance that this Rebecca Cox is not Jame's daughter.)http://xpda.com/family/etc/The_Cox_Family_in_America.pdf
~1707 - <1773
William
Ansley
66
66
William came to America in 1733. He was one of 59 persons who joined the Old Tennent Presbyterian Church, Freehold, on June 8, 1735. The following year, his wife Rebecca became a member. They probably married in the intervening time. Rebecca is known to have died in the 1750's and William, after marrying Elizabeth Cox, died intestate in 1773. Elizabeth was appointed administrator of his estate on March 27, 1773, so William must have died in early 1773. Some say William's father is Henry, some say Benjamin. Some say Benjamin is related to the Annesleys
1958
Catherine
Elaine
Jorski
1746 - <1808
Sarah
Strayhorn
62
62
Children 1. Nancy ANSLEY b: ABT. 1770 in North Carolina 2. Gilbert D. ANSLEY b: ABT. 1773 in Orange County, North Carolina 3. Samuel ANSLEY b: 29 JUN 1774 in Orange County, North Carolina 4. William ANSLEY b: ABT. 1776 in Orange County, North Carolina 5. David ANSLEY b: 1783 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey 6. Rebecca ANSLEY b: ABT. 1785 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey 7. Margaret ANSLEY b: ABT. 1787 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey 8. Thomas ANSLEY b: 1787 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey 9. Jesse ANSLEY b: ABT. 1789 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey 10. Benjamin ANSLEY b: ABT. 1789 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey
1784 - ~1857
Amy
Edwards
73
73
Residence: 1850 living with Mary And Richard Griffin
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1688 - 1773
Solomon
Munson
85
85
According to sources "The Munson Records" by Myron Munson, Solomon was the first of the Munson's to leave New Haven, CT for another state. After the death of his wife Mary Moss, Solomon took his family and moved to Morristown, NJ. It may be worth noting that Solomon appears on the records at Trenton, NJ, 18 Oct 1852, as "Principal Creditor of John Prudden (remember Samuel (1717) married Sarah Prudden, late of Morris County, deceased). Hanover Church existed as early as 1718. Morristown was West Hanover, and its Church (Presbyterian) was organized in 1740. A list of members made 13 Aug 1742 includes Solomon Munson and his wife Tamar; he became a ruling elder 5 July 1754. A copy of his will appears on page 194, Vol. 1 of "The Munson Records".
1664 - 1741
Samuel
Munson
77
77
Genealogical and Family History of the State of Connecticut: A Record of the Achievements of Her People in the Making of a Commonwealth and the Founding of a Nation. Volume IV Adams (The Munson Line). (III) Samuel (2), son of Samuel (1) Munson, was born February 28, 1668-69, and lived in Wallingford. He married Martha -, who died January 7, 1707, and he married (second) March 10, 1708, Mary, widow of Caleb Merriman, daughter of Deacon Eliasaph Preston. She was born April 24, 1674, and died November 28, 1755. He died November 23, 1741. In 1690 Samuel received from his father a deed of his dwelling house, barn, and one-half his "accommodations" in Wallingford. March 15, 1692, he was given by the town thirty acres of land gratis, and in 1696 was given liberty with five others to build a saw-mill. April 26, 1698, he was chosen treasurer of the town, and in December of the same year auditor. In 1694-95, 1701 and 1704 he was chosen lister. He was townsman in 1709 and 1713. In 1710 he was made sergeant, and in October, 1712, ensign. December 25, 1711, he was chosen town clerk, an office which he filled continuously for twenty-nine years. His will was dated July 11, 1741, and his son Lent, who inherited the larger part of the estate, was executor. To his other sons Solomon, William, Waitstill and Merriman, he had already conveyed a full portion of land. The inventory of the estate was £1, 512 15s. 7. Children of first wife: Solomon, born February 18, 1689-90; Samuel, August 25, 1691; Marlo, February 15, 1693-94; William, mentioned below; Waitstill, December 12, 1697; Eunice, September 13, 1700; Obedience, October 13, 1702; Catharine, June 3, 1704. Children of second wife: Tamar, December 5, 1707; Lemuel, February 5, 1709; Merriman, November 30, 1710; Mamre, December 16, 1712; Lent, November 16, 1714. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------- III. Samuel Munson, born February 28, 1669, at Wallingford, Connecticut, married Martha. She died January 7, 1707. He married the widow of Caleb Merriman, daughter of Eliasaph Preston. She died November 28, 1755. Samuel died November 23, 1741, aged seventy-three, at Wallingford. He was town clerk at Wallingford twenty-nine years. In October, 1712, the General Court divided the Traine Band of Wallingford, "Samuel Munson to be ensigne of the west company of Traine Band."
~1670 - 1706
Martha
Farnes
36
36
1643 - 1692
Samuel
Munson
48
48
Genealogical and Family History of the State of Connecticut: A Record of the Achievements of Her People in the Making of a Commonwealth and the Founding of a Nation. Volume IV Adams (The Munson Line). (II) Samuel, son of Thomas Munson, was baptized August 7, 1643, and married, October 26, 1665, Martha, daughter of William and Alice (Pritchard) Bradley. After his death, between January 10 and March 2, 1693, she married (second) 1694, Eliasaph Preston, 1758 born 1643, died 1707, schoolmaster, second town clerk, and deacon of Wallingford. She married (third) Matthew Sherman. Genealogical and Family History of the State of Connecticut: A Record of the Achievements of Her People in the Making of a Commonwealth and the Founding of a Nation. Volume IV Adams (The Munson Line). Samuel Munson was made a freeman of New Haven in 1667, and in 1670 was one of the founders of the new plantation of Wallingford, Connecticut. He signed the agreement relative to the founding of the same, and was assigned one of the original houselots in the new town, besides a river or farm lot. April 6, 1671, he was present at the first town meeting, and April 29, 1673, also in 1674, was chosen selectman. June 17, 1674, he was made drummer. October 19, 1675, during King Philip's war, he was chosen ensign by the court at Hartford, and November 25 colony agent. In 1679 he was chosen the first schoolmaster of Wallingford, and in 1684 was made rector of Hopkins Grammar School. In the years 1676-80 he was auditor, and in 1677-78-80-81-92 he was lister. In 1680-81 he was again selectman, and in 1692 constable. The administration of his estate was given to his widow Martha and his son John. Children: Martha, born May 6, 1667; Samuel, mentioned below; Thomas, March 12, 1670-71; John, January 28, 1672-73; Theophilus, September 10, 1675; Joseph, November 1, 1677; Stephen, December 5, 1679; Caleb, November 19, 1682; Joshua, February 7, 1684-85; Israel, March 6, 1686-87. ---------------------------------------------------------- II. Samuel Munson, born August 7, 1643, according to the New Haven First Church record, was married according to the town record October 26, 1665, to Martha, daughter of William and Alice (Pritchard) Bradley. Samuel died in 1693 in Wallingford, Connecticut. He was deputy from New Haven to the General Court of Connecticut, 1665, 1678, 1680, 1683. Samuel Munson with thirty-eight others of New Haven founded Wallingford, Connecticut. The General Court of Hartford on May 12, 1669, "doe grant liberty to make a village on the East River." Among the names signed to the agreement appear those of Samuel Munson, Thomas Yale, Thomas Curtis, Samuel Peck and John Peck, Joseph Benham, John Brockett and Nathaniel How. A record of the General Court October 19, 1675, reads: "This court confirms Samuel Munson ensigne Wallingford Traine Band." Father: Thomas Munson b: 13 Sep 1612 in bpt/ Rattlesden, Suffolk, England Mother: Joanna Unknown b: 1610 Marriage 1 Martha Bradley b: 26 Oct 1648 in New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut Married: 26 Oct 1665 in New Haven County, Connecticut Children 1. Samuel Munson b: 23 Feb 1664/65 in Wallingford, New Haven County, Connecticut 2. Martha Munson b: 6 May 1667 in New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut 3. Thomas Munson b: 12 Mar 1669/70 in New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut 4. John Munson b: 28 Jan 1671/72 in New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut 5. Theophilus Munson b: 1 Sep 1675 in New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut 6. Joseph Munson b: 1 Nov 1677 in Wallingford, New Haven County, Connecticut 7. Stephen Munson b: 5 Dec 1679 in Wallingford, New Haven County, Connecticut 8. Caleb Munson b: 19 Nov 1682 in New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut 9. Joshua Munson b: 7 Feb 1683/84 in New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut 10. Israel Munson b: 6 Mar 1685/86 in New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut
1648
Martha
Bradley
William
Bradley
Alice
Pritchard
1612 - 1684
Thomas
Munson
71
71
The 350th Anniversary of Thomas Munson coming to America was celebrated at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut in August of 1987. Many members of the Munson family were benefactors for establishing Yale University. There is a Thomas Munson Family Association which any Munson family member may join. Information on the Munson family is available in The Munson Record: A Genealogical and Biographical Account of Captain Thomas Munson and His Descendants, by Myron A. Munson, M.A., 1895. There are now 5 volumes of this Munson family history and copies may be found in larger libraries across the country. ----------------------------------- Thomas Munson (1612-1685) first appears in America in records of Hartford, Connecticut in 1637 as a member of the militia unit engaged in the Pequot Indian War. In 1639, he signed the Fundamental Agreement at New Haven where he established his permanent home. His life is well documented in The Munson Record Volume I and the Connecticut Colony records. The evidence is persuasive that the Thomas Munson who was recorded as being baptized in St. Nicholas Church in Rattlesden, County Suffolk, England on September 13, 1612 was the same man who later distinguished himself in the public affairs of colonial New Haven. The principal tie is the age listed on his gravestone.. aged 73 years, which links well with the baptismal record. The Church records document that the Thomas Munson of Rattlesden was the son of John and Elizabeth Munson. John was baptized 14 Oct 1571 and was buried 26 Nov 1650. Elizabeth was buried 3 Jan 1634/5. John was the son of Richard and Margery (Barnes) Munson. Richard was buried at Rattlesden on 3 Dec 1590, while Margery was buried there 7 Feb 1622/3. (The Munson Family of County Suffolk, England and New Haven Connecticut, Milton Rubincam, The American Genealogist, January 1941.) --------------- Beginnings - Thomas Cooper of Springfield and Some Allied Families by Agnew Thompson Cooper and John Bradley Cooper, published 1987: Thomas Munson was first recorded as in Hartford, Connecticut in 1637. He was one of sixty-three signers of the "Agreement", sergeant in the "Trayned Band" selectman in 1656, promoted to "Ensigne" in 1661, assigned "seat No. 29 of the shorte seats in the meetinghouse". He was a member of the Council of War which considered what action should be taken against the Dutch in America and he commanded troops around Saybrook, Connecticut in King Phillip's War. He was later commissioned to deal with the Indians. I. Capt. Thomas Munson, the ancestor of all the Munsons in the United States, was born in 1612 and died in 1685. He came from England, and in 1637 was one of the forty-two men of Hartford, Connecticut, who served under Captain Mason in the Pequot Indian war. He was of New Haven, where he signed the Fundamental Agreement in 1639. He was lieutenant in 1664-76, served under Captain Treat in the King Phillip war; was captain in 1676 of the New Haven Militia. Captain Thomas was elected to the Plantation Court in 1662. He was foreman of the first grand jury empaneled in New Haven; also a member of the Supreme Court of Appeals. In 1666 he was elected deputy to the General Assembly, serving in this capacity for twenty-four sessions.
1610 - 1678
Joanna
68
68
1571 - 1650
John
Munson
79
79
~1575 - 1633
Elizabeth
Sparke
58
58
1545 - 1590
Richard
Munson
45
45
~1547
Margery
Barnes
George
Barnes
Margery
1706 - 1783
William
Herndon
77
77
~1729
Mary
Colson
Mary Colson is a descendant of the Mayflower Pilgrim Isaac Allerton, who was thrown out of Plymouth Colony.
1811 - 1842
Rebecca
Langston
30
30
1733
Christian
Bennett
1914
Elmo L
Van
Valkenburgh
1911
Loletta
Marquerite Van
Valkenburgh
1871 - 1952
Charles
E Reid
80
80
Charles Reid, Sr. was a pioneer settler in Oklahoma. He was born February 23, 1871 near Bloomington, Illinois. He was the oldest child of Luther Reid and Sarah (Kaufman) Reid. About the year 1885 the family moved to Kansas, settling on a farm seven miles south and one east of Peabody, Kansas. Dad's father came on ahead to fix a house for the family to live in. Dad was a boy of 12 when they moved. He, his mother, and three other children made the trip in a covered wagon pulled by horses, across the country. When the Cherokee Outlet was opened for settlement in Oklahoma, on September 16, 1893, Charles Reid and two or three neighbor boys decided to make the run on horseback. They started at the State line south of Hunnewell, Kansas. With the shot of the pistol, the line quickly moved south. After riding about 20 miles south, Dad set his stake on some ground just north of Tonkawa a mile or so. When the ground was measured off into quarters and eighths, another man had staked on the same piece of ground. Dad just pulled his stake, rather than argue with the man, and went back to Kansas. The following spring, he came back to Oklahoma, bought a relinquishment and proved up on the N E1/4 27-28-3. In the spring of 1896 or 97, there was a big wheat crop in the Cherokee Strip. Dad's brother Thomas moved a threshing machine down from their home in Kansas, and threshed for many farmers in the community. From that year on, they were known as "the Reid Brothers Threshing Crew." This went on until 1914 when Dad moved to Colorado, and sold his interest in the outfit to his brother. Charles was a bachelor for about 14 years. His father passed away in the fall of 1894. The neighbors of Charles tried hard to find him a housekeeper, by giving parties and inviting young ladies to them. In the summer of 1906, Florence O. Robinson came to visit her sister, Mrs. Rufus Forsyth. A romance started soon after she arrived, and on November 27, 1907 they were married. The wedding was held near Bethany, Illinois at the Robinson home. As the years went by Charles and Florence had six children born to them. They were Mrs. Ralph (Grace), Webster; Jerry S. Reid, Ponca City; Walter Neil Reid, who died at the age of 8 months; Charles E. Reid, Blackwell, Oklahoma; Gail E. Reid, Midwest City, Oklahoma; and Mrs. Leland (Avis) Eaves, Puerto Rico. In the summer of 1914, the Reid family moved to Colorado, near Keensburg, thinking that the climate would be better for Dad's health. After two years, they decided to move back to their place north of Deer Creek. Mother, with three children, came on the train to Deer Creek ahead of Dad. He came on a freight train with our household goods and livestock, arriving a few days later. We stayed with the Rufus Forsyth family until our furniture arrived. Stanley Forsyth (a cousin), Jerry, my brother, and myself would play out on the road. Mama told us we would get hurt, but we'd do it anyway. She even told us one day that the old devil would get us if we didn't mind, but we continued playing on the road. The next day the old devil showed up between the house and the road. We were scared. Stanley took out for the house as fast as he could go; I grabbed Jerry's arm and we started for the house too. Our mothers were waiting at the door for us. We told them that the old devil was in the yard, but we didn't stop until we got inside and under the bed. Later we learned it was Mama dressed up like the devil to keep us off the road! The schools were one room buildings, and one teacher to a building with all eight grades being taught. Dad held all offices of the school board at one time or another, while he had children in the grade school. W e lived 21/4 miles from school. We would either walk, ride a pony, or drive a pony and buggy for transportation. One evening my brother and I were returning home from school; we were playing and cutting up on the pony's back, when all of a sudden she just jumped sideways and we both fell to the ground. She didn't run from us, but stood beside us until we got up. Since we were almost home, we walked and led the pony the rest of the way. In 1917 Dad had a nice two story house built for his family. We were so pleased with this new house as we had more room. Charles Reid did most of his farming with horses until his boys were teenagers, then he got a tractor. Our father was a hardworking man, a good manager, and a good neighbor. Like many pioneer families, they struggled long days through all the hardships common to all the early settlers. They raised most of the food that we ate, milked cows, churned their butter, baked bread, and cured their meats, in order to keep their family fed during these years. We lost our mother on September 12, 1949 and Dad on February 2, 1952. They are both buried in the cemetery at Nardin, Oklahoma. by: Mrs. Ralph Webster Deer Creek, Oklahoma, History of Grant County Families, 1980
1843 - 1906
Luther
Reid
62
62
Charles E's obituary said he died in 1894, but a tombstone at Whitewater Center Cemetery, Butler County, Kansas says he died March 6, 1906 and was born November 10, 1843. Children: 1. Charles RIED b: 18 SEP 1871 in , McLean, Illinois 2. Thomas RIED b: 3 SEP 1873 in , McLean, Illinois 3. Minnie RIED b: 3 APR 1876 in , McLean, Illinois 4. George Frank RIED b: ABT 1879 in , McLean, Illinois 5. David RIED b: 6 JAN 1885 in , McLean, Illinois 6. Etta RIED b: 5 JAN 1887 in , McLean, Illinois 7. Olin RIED b: 9 JAN 1892 in , McLean, Illinois
1851 - 1921
Sarah
Kauffman
70
70
Children: 1. Charles RIED b: 18 SEP 1871 in , McLean, Illinois 2. Thomas RIED b: 3 SEP 1873 in , McLean, Illinois 3. Minnie RIED b: 3 APR 1876 in , McLean, Illinois 4. George Frank RIED b: ABT 1879 in , McLean, Illinois 5. David RIED b: 6 JAN 1885 in , McLean, Illinois 6. Etta RIED b: 5 JAN 1887 in , McLean, Illinois 7. Olin RIED b: 9 JAN 1892 in , McLean, Illinois
1898 - 1978
Robert
Emerson
Buckles
80
80
Worked as General Agent, Mdse Traffic, Southern Pacific Lines. In 1952, Vice President and General Manager of Southern Pacific Transport Company. Telegram dated Harlingen Texas September 6, 1933: "Dear Folks at Home: Well the storm liked to have wiped the whole country out, but we are safe and dry and have plenty to ear, we all stayed in the passenger depot night before last and yesterday the ceiling is off our house and some of the windows but we can get along fine, fully half of the houses were blown down and the roofs off. Don't worry about us we are all right and will get along alright, will write soon. Love to all Robt."
1906 - 1973
Martha
Fern
Buckles
66
66
1899 - 1934
Doris
Mae
Gillett
34
34
Father: Lewis GILLBERT Mother: Lena HERRING
~1728
Absalom
Langston
He may have been born later. His parents married in 1730. 1754 Granville County, North Carolina, Captain David Harris' Company Thomas Bell, Lieutenant., Peter Green, Sergeant. Absolum Langston #51 James Langston #54 Solomon Langston #55 Richard Bennett #59 William Mangham #64 James Mangham #65 William Mangham, Jr #66 Samuel Mangham #74
1928
Robert
Lewis
Buckles
2nd wife Margie
1931
Eugene
Walter
Buckles
1920 - 1998
Gail
Gillett
Buckles
78
78
Grace
Truman
Nixon
~1809
Eli
McKee
Census: 1840 Otter Creek, Ripley County, Indiana
~1811
Edmond
McKee
Marriage 1 Frances W. (Franciss) Hendericks b: FEB 1820 in Indiana * Married: 27 NOV 1837 in Ripley County, Indiana * Note: Edmond and Frances were married by Miles Mendenhall, Associate Judge. * Marriage License: 11 NOV 1837 in Ripley County, Indiana Children 1. Milton Lewis "Lew" McKee b: ABT 1840 in Indiana 2. Milford McKee b: ABT 1842 in Indiana 3. Hester A. McKee b: ABT 1848 in Indiana 4. Mary A. McKee b: ABT 1851 in Iowa 5. Beverly McKee b: MAR 1853 in Iowa 6. Erastus F. McKee b: SEP 1857 in Iowa
1823 - 1893
Simon
B
McKee
69
69
Occupation: Shoemaker 1860 Israel Township, Preble County, Ohio Occupation: Shoe Manufacturer 1870 Liberty, Union County, Indiana Occupation: Farmer 1880 San Antonio, Los Angeles County, California Marriage 1 Mary Hanna(h) Smith b: DEC 1829 in Indiana * Married: 9 JUL 1846 in Union County, Indiana * Note: Marriage was recorded on 16 Jul 1840. They were married by Hayden Hayes, licensed minister. * Marriage License: 8 JUL 1840 in Ripley County, Indiana Children 1. Alice Emma McKee b: JUN 1847 in Indiana 2. Granvill(e) McKee b: ABT 1849 in Indiana 3. Clarissa McKee b: ABT 1853 in Indiana 4. Clarence Earnest McKee b: 4 MAR 1855 in College Corner, Butler County, Ohio 5. Howard Lewis or Lockwood McKee b: 9 SEP 1858 in College Corner, Butler County, Ohio 6. Anna Ido Lettie McKee b: 3 FEB 1861 in College Corner, Butler County, Ohio
~1815
Thomas
McKee
# Census: 1850, age 35 Jefferson, Switzerland County, Indiana # Census: 1860, age 43 Yuba, Sutter County, California # Census: 1870, age 54 Arroyo Grande, San Luis Obispo County, California # Census: 1880, age 64 Wilmington, Los Angeles County, California Marriage 1 Mary Broshar b: ABT 1818 in Indiana * Married: 26 DEC 1838 in Ripley County, Indiana 8 Children 1. Jane McKee b: ABT 1840 in Indiana 2. Marion D. McKee b: ABT 1842 in Indiana 3. David or Daniel E. McKee b: ABT 1844 in Indiana 4. Drucilla McKee b: ABT 1846 in Indiana 5. Sarah McKee b: ABT 1848 in Indiana 6. Linda or Lydia McKee b: ABT 1851 in Indiana 7. Della McKee b: ABT 1853 in Missouri 8. Thomas McKee b: ABT 1859 in Missouri
1818 - 1879
Joseph
McKee
60
60
Occupation: Farmer 1870 Chariton, Appanoose County, Iowa Occupation: Minister, United Brethren (in Christ) 1860 Stratton Township, Edgar County, Illinois Occupation: Farmer 1850 Adams Township, Decatur County, Indiana Marriage 1 Mary Main b: 24 NOV 1822 in Monroe County, Ohio * Married: bet 3 - 31 Jul 1839 in Napoleon, Ripley County, Indiana Joseph McKee and Mary Main were issued a marriage license in Ripley County, Indiana, on 3 July 1839 by the Clerk of Circuit Court, Conrad Overturfs. Their actual marriage was not recorded until 15 August. The recorded date is not given, just that they were married in July. * Marriage License: 3 JUL 1839 in Ripley County, Indiana Children 1. Julia Ellen McKee b: 1840 2. Sarah Elizabeth McKee b: 11 MAR 1843 in Indiana 3. James Monroe McKee b: 1845 in Ripley County, Indiana 4. Charles Urvin McKee b: 3 SEP 1848 in Decatur County, Indiana 5. Lewis Parker McKee b: 19 JAN 1851 in Napoleon, Ripley County, Indiana 6. Marquis Lafayette McKee b: 6 FEB 1854 in Napoleon, Ripley County, Indiana 7. Lydia Ann McKee b: 17 NOV 1856 in Poland, Owen County, Indiana 8. Flora Elma McKee b: 8 DEC 1859 in Owen County, Indiana 9. Alice Mary McKee b: 12 JAN 1863 in Coles County, Illinois 10. Joseph Edwards McKee b: 27 JUN 1866 in Appanoose County, Iowa
~1820
Rebecca
McKee
There is a marriage on the Indiana Marriage index for a Rebecca McKee and a Stephen S. Masters (Marsters) in Marshall County, Indiana, 16 May 1844. This is probably not this Rebecca McKee.
William
Peake
1805
Littleberry
Peake
1807
Thomas
Peake
He might not be a son of Robert.
1808
John
Comer
Peake
1815
Nancy
Peake
~1773
Gilbert
D
Ansley
1774
Samuel
Ansley
1775
Rebecca
Ansley
~1776
William
Ansley
1783
Margaret
Ansley
1783
David
Ansley
1787
Thomas
W
Ansley
1789
Jesse
Ansley
1790
Benjamin
Ansley
~1791
Sarah
Ansley
Elizabeth
Ansley
1735 - 1809
Thomas
Ansley
74
74
Maybe born 14 JAN 1736, or 20 MAR 1736/37 Thomas served in the Georgia militia during the Revolution; served in the Georgia House of the General Assembly in 1782; and served as Justice for Wilkes County 1782-1795. He was baptized in the Old Tennent Presbyterian Church in Monmouth County, NJ on March 20, 1737. Thomas and Rebecca migrated to North Carolina and later to Georgia, where they built the "Rock House: as part of the Wrightsboro Colony. This house has been restored and still stands at Thompson, GA and is a national historic site. Marriage 1 Rebecca Cox b: 1733 in Middletown, NJ * Married: 1 NOV 1760 in Freehold, NJ Children 1. Benjamin Harrison Ansley 2. Joseph Ansley b: 1755 3. Samuel Ansley b: 22 FEB 1765 in Monmouth County, NJ 4. Able Ansley b: 1761 5. Thomas Ansley , Jr. b: 1767 6. William Ansley b: 1760 7. Rebecca Ansley 8. Nancy Ansley 9. James Ansley b: 1777
1738
Benjamin
Ansley
1744
Rebecca
Ansley
twin
~1745
Mary
Ansley
1746
Anne
Ansley
1750
Elizabeth
Ansley
1810
Squire
Hill
Knapp
1674
Mary
Preston
1691
Samuel
Munson
1692
Marlo
Munson
1695
William
Munson
1697
Waitstill
Munson
1700
Eunice
Munson
1702
Obedience
Munson
1704
Katherine
Munson
1707
Tamar
Munson
1708
Lemuel
Munson
1710
Merriman
Munson
1712
Mamre
Munson
1714
Lent
Munson
1679
Martha
Munson
1669
Thomas
Munson
1671
John
Munson
1675
Theophilus
Munson
1677
Joseph
Munson
1679
Stephen
Munson
1682
Caleb
Munson
1683
Joshua
Munson
1685
Israel
Munson
1648
1642
Elizabeth
Munson
1595
Elizabeth
Munson
1598
John
Munson
1601
Frances
Munson
1603
Susan
Munson
1606
Judith
Munson
1609
Mary
Munson
~1613
Remember
Munson
1573
Ann
Munson
1576
Thomas
Munson
~1670 - 1735
Richard
Bennett
65
65
He was not rich, and was not governor. He died intestate in 1735.
~1672 - ~1752
James
Bennett
80
80
D. ~1751
John
Bennett
D. ~1768
Benjamin
Bennett
D. 1719
Richard
Bennett
Mary
William
Bennett
John
Bennett
Benjamin
Bennett
Susan
Bennett
Elizabeth
Bennett
Mary
Bennett
Selah
Bennett
Mary
Rogers
William
Rogers
D. ~1783
Benjamin
Bennett
James
Bennett
Mary
Bennett
m. Proctor
Frances
Bennett
m. Sims
Priscella
Bennett
m. Dugger
Joseph
Bennett
Reuben
Bennett
Moved to North Carolina
Brambley
Bennett
Sarah
John
Bennett
Benjamin
Bennett
Richard
Bennett
William
Bennett
Sarah
Bennett
m. Sadler
Mary
Bennett
Elizabeth
Bennett
Charles
Bennett
Priscilla
Bennett
Frances
Bennett
Nancy
Bennett
James
Bennett
<1703
Anne
Bennett
D. 1757
William
Bennett
1726 - 1772
Grace
Bennett
46
46
D. 1767
Robert
Ruffin
Hi lived in Northampton County, North Carolina
William
Ruffin
Anne
Ruffin
m. Smith
Olive
Ruffin
m. Barrow
Mary
Kearney
D. 1803
William
Boddie
Married Clary Lylies 2/23/1776 in Granville County, North Carolina
Green
Hill
He lived in Bertie County and Bute County, North Carolina.
1740
Henry
Hill
He was a senator from Franklin County, North Carolina
1741 - 1825
Green
Hill
84
84
He was a member of Provincial Congress of North Carolina at Newbern Aug 25, 1774, and at Halifax April 3, 1775; member of Commission of Safety for Bute, 1774; also a member of Provincial Congress which met at Halifax and declared Independence April 4, 1776. He was also a JP in 1778 and a Major of the Bute County Regiment commanded by Colonel Thomas Eaton and Lieutenent Colonel William Alston. Was also Treasurer of Halifax District and a member of the Council of State, 1783. He was a Methodist Minister.
1745
Hannah
Hill
1747
Bennett
Hill
1750
William
Hill
1754
Mary
Hill
1756
Sarah
Hill
1761
Temperance
Hill
1763
Elizabeth
Hill
Nancy
Thomas
Mary
Sewell
D. ~1752
James
Bennett
The will of James Bennett: I, James Bennett, of Southwark Park, of Surry Co, give to my son William Bennett, plantation on which he now lives and part of a tract formerly bought of Charles Binns; to my son James 20sh; to my son John all my carpenter's tools now in his possession. To daus. Anne, Martha, Mary, & Sarah personalty. To my dtr Bridget the use of my best house and as much land as she can work. To my son Samuel the use of my plantation where he now lives.After death of Samuel and his wife w/o male issue, I give plantation to my gr/son Thomas Bennett, s/o William. Son Samuel to be Exr. Teste: Charles Binns, Wm. Godwyn, Wm Batt, Wm Clark Probated Oct 17, 1752
D. 1761
William
Bennett
James
Bennett
D. 1770
John
Bennett
D. 1773
Samuel
Bennett
Anne
Bennett
Martha
Bennett
Mary
Bennett
Sarah
Bennett
Bridget
Bennett
Mildred
Williams
Thomas
Bennett
He lived in Dobbs County, North Carolina
D. <1779
William
Bennett
Nathaniel
Bennett
Nathanial was in the Revolutionary War at Portsmouth. He died unmarried.
D. <1785
Jesse
Bennett
Elizabeth
Bennett
She buried Isle of Wight Records in an old hair trunk, saving the records while her husband was away in the Army during the Revolutionary War.
Sarah
William
Bennett
Ann
William
Bennett
Sarah
Bennett
Martha
Bennett
Samuel
Bennett
James
Bennett
Francis
Young
He was Clerk of Isle of Wight.
Sarah
Welch
Daughter of John Welch, of Isle of Wight County, Virginia.
John
Bennett
D. 1778
William
Bennett
He died on a voyage.
Jesse
Bennett
Thomas
Bennett
Edmund
Bennett
D. 1785
James
Bennett
Martha
Bennett
Lucy
Bennett
Mary
Brambley
Bennett
Thomas
Hart
Josiah
Dobbs
Thomas
Stevens
1876 - 1945
John
Henry
Miller
69
69
1879 - 1943
Alice
Idella
Langston
64
64
1913 - 1973
Edgar
Earl
Miller
60
60
1915
Annie
Dee
Rider
1851 - 1918
William
Langston
67
67
Buried Lebannon Baptist Church Cemetery, Tippah County, MS Ordained Minister of The Gospel
1852 - 1938
Mary
Elizabeth
Bragg
86
86
1829
Johnathan
Langston
1832
Sarah
Elizabeth
Woodall
1797 - 1870
Jacob
Langston
73
73
1796 - 1865
Mary
Couch
69
69
1913
Edna
Pearl
Miller
1898 - 1932
Emily
Ophelia
Miller
33
33
Married Waymon Hastings.
1900 - 1950
George
Edward
Miller
50
50
Married Alice Harden.
Mary
Alma
Miller
John
Hillie
Miller
1904 - 1983
William
Cleveland
Miller
79
79
Married Rosie Lindley.
1853
James
Langston
1840
Martha
J
Langston
1820
William
Langston
1823
Nancy
Langston
1826
Eli
Langston
1833
Elizabeth
Langston
1838
Wesley
Wiley
Langston
1839
Jesse
Langston
1840
Mary
Langston
1762 - 1834
Nathaniel
Walton
Langston
71
71
He was a Baptist Minister.
1762 - 1839
Catherine
Smith
77
77
1784
Sarah
Langston
Married William Bennett. Son Langston Bennett born 1817, died after 1850 Lawrence Co. MS.
1785
Rachel
Smith
Langston
Married Thomas M. Compton.
1786 - 1859
Martha
Langston
73
73
Married William Groves Yarborough, 15 children.
1789 - 1859
Nancy
Langston
70
70
Married Eli M. Bearden, 4 children.
1791 - 1854
Willis
Langston
63
63
Married Nancy Adair, 6 children.
1792 - 1870
John
Langston
78
78
Married Martha Gray, 7 children.
1795
Elizabeth
Langston
Married Chaney Stone, 4 children.
1799
Mary
Langston
Married Archibald Stone.
1801 - 1845
Caleb
Langston
44
44
1804 - 1850
Absalom
Langston
46
46
Married Armenta Starnes.
1806 - 1830
Gennett
Langston
24
24
Married Abner Stone, 4 children.
Lettice
Langston
Mary
Langston
Nancy
Langston
1750
Jacob
Langston
1754
John
Langston
1755
Caleb
Langston
1756
Nehemiah
Langston
1763
William
Langston
1765
Daniel
T
Langston
1769
Martha
T
Langston
1770
Samuel
Bennett
Langston
1770
Sarah
Langston
1854 - 1948
Sarah
Frances
Bragg
94
94
Married 1st Daniel Monroe Lewis 4/20/1870 Married 2nd James P. Rinehart 1900
Sarah
E
Langston
Married A. P. "Pink" Durham.
James
Langston
Died young, suffocated in a trailer of cotton seed.
Rhoda
Langston
Died as a young child.
1875 - 1942
William
John
Langston
67
67
Buried Hinkle Creek Cemetery. Married Nettie Ann Thompson, August 8,1881-March 16, 1969 Children: Leslie, married May Inman Vidal, married Richard Lang Mattie Dell, married Thomas Johnson Addie Etoy, 3/14/1908-2/14/1990 Loyce Lester
Edward
Andrew
Langston
Married Dora Florence Thompson.
1882 - 1962
Mary
Eliza
Langston
80
80
Buried Antioch Baptist Church #2 Cemetery. Married James McClarity Killough, 12/10/1880-1/20/1964. Children: Arthur Leroy, Grover Clarence, Willie Vernon, Fred Monroe, Sarah Louinger Lillie, Mary Ruby, James Reuben, Curtiss Randolph, Edith Gladys, Joseph Edward.
1890
Ophelia
Etoy
Langston
Married Henry Eaton, 11/3/1879-8/24/1956 Children: Mary Fannie, Roy, Ray, Ellis, Ollis, Golda Mae, Leland.
1806 - 1886
Armenta
Starnes
80
80
After her husband died, Armenta faced the difficult task of raising children without a father. There is no indication that she remarried. She had four sons and four daughters. Her second youngest child was eight years older than Erskine. After the Civil War she moved to Phillips County, Arkansas where her brothers had moved. She was the daughter of Aaron Starnes (1761-1833) who fought in the Revolutionary War. Aaron’s father came to South Carolina from New England. This family can be traced to Shubael Stearns who was part of the first wave of Puritan migration from England to Boston. He arrived in 1630 with his son Charles Stearns (1625-1695) on the Arabella (which also carried Governor John Winthrop). Shubael died just after arriving in America and his son Charles was raised by his uncle Isaac Stearns. There are very good records on this family and many of their marriages. Charles’ grandson Shubael III and his sons were caught up in the religious movement known as the Great Awakening which began in the 1730s. They became devout Baptists about 1745 and found that their views were suspect in New England. Shubael III and his sons left for the Carolinas in 1754 initially settling in North Carolina where his son, Shubael IV, became a famous Baptist minister. Shubael III’s son John (Armenta’s grandfather) and two of his brothers moved on to South Carolina in the late 1760s. They were not ministers but they helped to organize Baptist churches everywhere they went. Some pedigrees including that of Harold Fox identify Armenta’s grandfather John as the son of Shubael III’s brother Charles, but I have not found any records to support that. I did find sources that identify a son of Shubael III as John which I believe to be the more likely connection. Either way the line goes back to the Shubael I who arrived on the Arabella. After going South the Stearns changed the spelling of their name to Starnes.
1849 - 1939
Erskine
Lyles
Langston
90
90
Obituary: Mr. Langston, who had recently celebrated his 90th birthday, died Wednesday morning at 10:30. He was a Civil War Veteran. Interment was made in Spur Cemetery Friday afternoon, following services held at the First Baptist Church. Ward Funeral Home officiated. Friends and relatives here to attend the funeral services of E.L.Langston held at the First Baptist Church Friday afternoon included: Miss Clara Pratt, of Lubbock; Mr. and Mrs. P.H. Baker, of Canyon; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Baker of Canyon; Mr. and Mrs. J.M. Baker and Mr. and Mrs. W.A. Baker of Wichita Falls; Mrs. Scott Webster of Amarillo; Mr. and Mrs. M.D. Ivy of Rotan; Mrs. Leonard of Sterling, Kansas; and Mrs. Floy Barfoot of Lamesa.
~1637 - 1704
Samuel
Farnes
67
67
1642
Martha
~1605 - ~1675
John
70
70
~1582
John
Farnes
~1582
Alice
Turrels
~1557
John
Farnes
~1561
Rabredge
Beache
~1700 - 1796
Elizabeth
Cox
96
96
When a child, she planted the box bushes at the old home in Upper Freehold. They grew very large and suggested the name, "Box Grove," by which the place was afterwards known.
1672 - 1750
James
Cox
78
78
According to the Throckmorton Family History, James Cox was grandfather to Governor James Cox, a hero of the Revolution and a member of Congress from Ohio, who died in 1810 before his term expired. He was described in his will as "James Cox, of Upper Freehold, in the County of Monmouth and Province of New Jersey, Gentleman.'' His political sympathies were with the people as opposed to the proprietaries. If he were not as active and outspoken as his brother John and others had been at the time of the outbreak at Middle- town, he was not less interested in the success of the popular movement When the rule of the Assembly had become intolerable and the titles of freeholders to their lands seemed likely to be called in question, the governing body were denounced as enemies to the country. In 1707, an attempt was made to bring about the dissolution of the Assembly and to elect a new one. With this end in view a fund was raised, known as "the Blind Tack," to which James Cox and his brother, Joseph, were liberal contributors. Whatever may have been the outcome of that campaign, the rights of freeholders were ultimately assured and he lived for many years afterwards in peaceful possession of his estate at Upper Freehold, which passed at length, without a cloud upon its title, to his numerous family. He was long identified with the Baptist Church and died at a good old age in the religious faith in which he had been reared. His body was interred in the family plot on his farm at Upper Freehold, where, as his will states, many of his kindred were buried. His own grave and the graves of two others are all of which any trace remains.http://xpda.com/family/etc/The_Cox_Family_in_America.pdf
Anne
~1693
Rebecca
Stillwell
~1650
Elizabeth
Blashford
D. ~1689
Theodore
Ingham
~1691
Thomas
Cox
name on Upper Freehold tax list 1731 ; assessed on 120 acres; record book of Baptist Church, Middletown states that Thomas Cox, one of its members died, about 1733 or 1734; m. ; children : i. Mary, ii. Dinah, iii. John.
1692
Rachel
Cox
~1693
Anna
Cox
1696
Alice
Cox
~1699 - 1753
James
Cox
54
54
He was born about 1698 or earlier. He died in 1853 leaving a widow, Elizabeth, and five sons—two by his first wife — besides daughters referred to in his will, but not named. His brother-in-law, Thomas Fenton, Jr., an executor ; personal estate appraised by Joseph Robins, at £152.11, including "a Palatine boy" valued at in, the latter probably an indentured servant ; value of realty not given. He was taxed on 300 acres, in Upper Freehold, 1731 ; married at least twice; last wife, Elizabeth (Fenton?); Hannah Robins who m. James Cox, Monmouth Co., license Nov. i, 1745, may have been his wife; if so. A previous marriage must have occurred to account for his large family. Children : i. Nathaniel, ii. John, iii. a daughter, iv. a daughter, v. a daughter; second or third marriage—vi. Thomas, vii. Isaac, viii. Elisha; the last three under age in 1753.
~1700
Dorothy
Cox
1710
John
Cox
1713 - 1801
Joseph
(Judge
Joseph) Cox
87
87
He was described as "a fanner, in easy circumstances, of unblemished character, of strong mind and highly respected; honored no man because he was rich; never ashamed of honest labor; reading the Bible aloud, one of the delights of his old age. One of his grandsons refers to his fine and venerable appearance and to that of his wife, who was in no respect his inferior and who, he thinks, must have been beautiful in her earlier years. The wealth that he left to his children was not insignificant, although, when divided by ten, it could scarcely have gone far; but their lives were enriched by the nobler heritage of a godly character and an untarnished name. Children : i. Catharine, ii. Margaret, b. June 17, 1738, d. Apr. 8, 1740; iii. William, b. July 5, 1740, d. May, J759; iv- Thomas, v. Ann, vi. Asher, vii. Joseph, viii. Samuel, ix. James, x. Ezckiel, xi. Mary.
~1667
Thomas
Cox
He was described in his will, as a yeoman, of Freehold, Monmouth County, Freehold being the name of the township, now Upper Freehold, where his family had become established. By the terms of the will, an "acre square * * * on the hill above the orchard," was left as a "burying place for the family of the testator and his brother, John Cox," His personal estate was valued at more than ¿630, which, together with his landed interests, was a considerable fortune, for that time. His business capacity may be inferred from the frequent mention of his name in connection with the settlement and administration of estates. Though not an office holder, apparently, he was actively interested in public affairs and a staunch supporter of popular government. He was one of those who, in 1700. signed a remonstrance, complaining of certain acts of the Proprietors, and asking for the appointment of a competent Governor. A year later, he signed a similar petition, urging that the Province be taken under the government of the King unless the Proprietors appoint a suitable Governor. Thus early was the way being prepared for that great popular uprising which culminated, seventy-five years later, in the American Revolution. In the matter of religion, he was a Baptist and one of the earliest members of the old church of Middletown, in the communion of which he died at the comparatively early age of 55 years. Children: i. Catharine, ii. Mary, iii. Elizabeth, b. July 30, 1698; probably died young: iv. Thomas, v. Alice, b. July 22, 1702, d. young( ?) ; vi. John. b. Mar. 27, 1706, d. young ( ?) ; vii. Lydia.
~1670 - 1729
John
Cox
59
59
He was born probably about 1670; died in the autumn of 1729 ; little is known of him beyond the fact that he figured somewhat prominently in the riots which broke out in Monmouth County in 1701. Despairing of obtaining relief by peaceful methods, from the arbitrary exactions of the government, he became identified with the movement to secure, by force, the justice which could not be wrung from the authorities, through petition or remonstrance. At a Court of Sessions held at Middletown, March 6, i/oi, he and other citizens were fined ten shillings each, for contempt and misbehavior before the Court. A few days later, the Governor and Justices were seized by the excited populace and held as prisoners from the 25th to the 2gth of March. There was as little doubt of the contempt in which the authorities were held by the people as there was of the utter disregard of popular rights on the part of the authorities. John Cox was no advocate of the doctrine of passive resistance. He was openly aggressive, and, in character and spirit not unlike the men of his blood who, in after years, at the battle of Monmouth, continued the fight which their fathers had begun, in a small way, at Middletown, at the beginning of the century. His part in the riots does not appear to have affected his standing in the Baptist Church of which he continued to be a member until the end of his life. He died at his home in Upper Freehold, leaving a widow and eight children to mourn his loss and a comfortable estate to cheer them in their affliction. The names of the children occur frequently in the early annals of the neighborhood, but in the absence of family records, and the multiplicity of identical names, at the same time, in other branches of the family, it has not been found possible to identify them all with any degree of certainty. Children : i. John, ii. Joseph, iii. Samuel, iv. Elisabeth, v. Rachel, vi. Mary, vii. Alice, viii. Mercy. (The order in which their names are mentioned in his will).
1811 - 1905
Martha
L
Davis
94
94
Paul Shipp [shippp@klsinc.org] 1. 1900 Census, Albemarle County VA, Rivanna District. Vol 2, Ed 5, Sheet 2, Line 68. SHEET 230. 2. 1870 Census Orange County, VA, p. 297. SHEET 49. 3. Marriage Information for Garret Amos & Martha Shipp. Located in Orange County Marriage Register #2, p. 11, line 21. SHEET 158. 4. 1850 Census Fluvanna County, VA, p. 14. SHEET 229. 5. Her own tombstone. 6. Interview with Vergie Lee Shipp (grandaughter). See interviews/corres- pondence 6 Mar 1992. Miss Shipp said, "My father {George Mitchell Shipp} was eight years old when my grandmother moved from Buckingham County here {Albemarle}, so my mother said, he was raised here from an eight year old boy." {quote taken from the interview} 7. 1860 Census Fluvanna County, VA, p. 712. SHEET 48. 8. Tombstone. Marked "Martha Davis Shipp". Located in Shipp Family Cemtery, dates on stone b. Jan 1811 d. Feb 1905. 6. Marriage Licence issued to Hiram Shipp, dated 19 Dec 1835. Willis C. Wills and Hiram Shipp paid the bond of $150 so that Hiram could marry Martha Davis, daughter of Susanna Davis of Fluvanna County. A letter of consent for Martha to marry was included with the bond. The original is at the Fluvanna Court House. SHEET 616.
1824
Solomon
Caplinger
LaNita Caplinger Johnson Johnson, Lanita [ljohnson@okfoods.com]
1795 - 1874
George
Herndon
79
79
War of 1812 49th VA Reg Occupation: Cooper Lived in Tenn, then Hopkins Co, Ky, then Pilands Store, Ozark Co., Mo. Applied in 1871 for a War of 1812 pension.
1793 - ~1813
Joseph
Herndon
20
20
Died in the War of 1812
1798
Elliott
Herndon
Moved West.
1800
Elisha
Herndon
1802 - 1862
Moses
Herndon
60
60
Lived at Whitmell, Va.
1803 - 1888
Aaron
Herndon
85
85
Lived in a historical brick home on Franklin Turnpike at Pleasant Gap. In a letter to JGH dated 24 January 1938 Mrs. Delphia Jane (Herndon) Dickerson wrote, in part as follows: " Just recently while driving out from town on Franklin Turnpike, I noticed that the famous old Capt. Doctor Aaron Herndon's red brick house was being razed, much to my sorrow and regret for it had been a famous landmark bearing historical fame. Pleasant Gap was a post-office and directly across the Turnpike was the colonial type brick house. Artists liked to paint the old house so I know of two who have splendid pictures of the house and probably will keep them among their exhibit pictures."
Susanna
Haislip
1766 - >1782
Randolph
Herndon
16
16
1806
Emma
Herndon
1808 - 1885
Richard
Quinn
Herndon
77
77
1811 - 1903
Elizabeth
F
Herndon
92
92
~1815 - 1859
James
Herndon
44
44
1818 - 1891
Benjamin
Herndon
72
72
~1776 - <1850
Hannah
Long
74
74
John
Herndon
William
Herndon
Joseph
Grasty
Mansfield
Lucy
Parkham
James
Herndon
D. ~1850
Walter
Herndon
Clayton
Herndon
Sally F
Herndon
Susanna
Boone
1788 - 1857
Michael
Herndon
68
68
John
Jackson
~1739 - 1811
Joseph
Herndon
72
72
According to the 1790 Fluvanna County land tax records Joseph had in household one male above 25, one male under 21 and one black over 16. Doesn't look like the records included white females. Reuben (probably Joseph's son) had one male over 25 and three males under 25. In a letter to JGH dated 24 January 1938 Mrs. Delphia Jane (Herndon) Dickerson wrote, in part as follows: "Just recently while driving out from town on Franklin Turnpike, I noticed that the famous old Capt. Doctor Aaron Herndon's red brick house was being razed, much to my sorrow and regret for it had been a famous landmark bearing historical fame. Pleasant Gap was a post-office and directly across the Turnpike was the colonial type brick house. Artists liked to paint the old house so I know of two who have splendid pictures of the house and probably will keep them among their exhibit pictures." Thomas Hall Herndon, uncle to JGH, received a letter from John A. Herndon, Sr., Superintendent of Schools, Danville, Va., dated "Mch 28 1891 ", now in the possession of JGH. It is one of the earliest genealogical letters he has. It reads in part as follows: "We are not able at this writing to trace our ancestry further than to Great Grand father, whose name was Joseph Herndon. His last residence was in Fluvanna County, Va, where he owned a good estate and reared a large family of boys and girls, the boys largely predominating. All of them, we are advised, were respectable and useful citizens with probably one exception, Robert who became a victim to the dire monster, drink, but never otherwise disgraced the name. I make and enclose herewith a diagram which though very imperfect may be some guide."
1765 - 1855
Reuben
Herndon
90
90
(Medical):1818- moved to Henry Co., Va.. Returned to Pitts. Co. after Hannah died.
Mary
~1740
Polly
Elliott
Some gedcoms list her as Mary (Polly) Elliott.
1768
Edward
Herndon
Nancy
Ann
Rucker
1792
Mary
Gaines
Herndon
1793
Elizabeth
Rucker
Herndon
1795 - 1873
Dillard
Herndon
78
78
1797
Catherine
Digges
Herndon
1798
Sarah
Herndon
1800
Frances
Herndon
1802 - 1820
Nancy
Herndon
17
17
1804
Rachel
Herndon
1807 - 1821
Thomas
Rucker
Herndon
14
14
1809 - 1809
William
Herndon
1809 - 1809
Edward
Herndon
1712 - 1777
Ann
Drysdale
65
65
1731 - >1799
Elizabeth
Herndon
68
68
1733
Lucy
Herndon
1735 - >1808
Owen
Herndon
73
73
1738 - 1831
Edward
Herndon
92
92
Patricia Wakins-Schmidt This Edward Herndon was the Revolutionary soldier. He was Captain in Colonel Francis Taylor's Regiment. His record is found in War Department, Washington, D. C., in Heitman's Historical Register of Officers of the Continental Army during the Revolution, p. 900, and in List of Revolutionary Soldiers, Virginia State Library, p. 215.
John
Rowan
Herndon
Cousin of William Henry Herndon
1741
Sarah
Herndon
1744
Reuben
Herndon
1745 - 1828
William
Herndon
83
83
The Culpeper 1782 tax lists show that William Herndon then owned 200 acres on Robinson River which he had a short time before purchased from Cyrus and Mary Boyle. On the Madison County tax roll of 31 March 1794 he was styled " Senr." by 3/11/1799 he had moved to Green County, Kentucky.
1763 - 1835
Mary
Rucker
71
71
1820 - 1895
Elliot
Bohannon
Herndon
74
74
Admitted to the Springfield bar in 1842; in 1854-55 was city attorney of Springfield; in 1856 was State's Attorney for Sangamon County; in 1857-1861 was U. S. District Attorney; and in 1874-75 was corporation counsel for the city of Springfield; called " in court a master of incisive irony " 3 and to his brother " an odd genius ", and described as " crabbed and crippled ".
1764
William
Pendelton
Herndon
Revolutionary War soldier
1765 - 1805
Benjamin
Houston
Herndon
39
39
1766
Elizabeth
Herndon
1767
Rachel
Herndon
1771
John
Herndon
1782
Henry
Herndon
Twin of Joel
1776
George
Herndon
1780
Nancy
Herndon
1782
Joel
Herndon
Twin of Henry
1730
Joseph
Rennolds
D. 1875
Rebecca
Johnson
Nancy
Smallwood
Keplinger
LaNita Caplinger Johnson Johnson, Lanita [ljohnson@okfoods.com]
Robert
Mansfield
~1748
William
Reynolds
Lucy
Herndon
Phillip
Reynolds
settled in Louisa County, Va
~1769
Amy
Herndon
Fluvanna Co., Va in 1850
1771 - 1825
Elliott
Herndon
54
54
~1773
Jesse
Herndon
Fluvanna Co., Va. Arbemarle Co., Va
D. >1813
George
Herndon
Rhoda
Herndon
Mary
Herndon
Ann
Herndon
Settled in Rockcastle County, Ky., where they lived when they conveyed to Doctor Aaron Herndon of Pittsylvania Co., Va. Ann's share of the estate of her father.
John
Reynolds
~1782
Susanna
Herndon
Paul Shipp [shippp@klsinc.org] Marriage Licence of George Davis and Susanna Herndon, dated 25 Oct 1813. George Davis and Joseph Herndon paid $150 to secure the licence so that George could marry Susannah Herndon. The original document is located in Fluvanna County Court House. The ministers marriage return book, page 92 says that George and Susanna were married on 30 Oct 1813. SHEET 621. 2. Fluvanna County Deed Book 17 page 251, and page 342. In these deeds Hiram agreed to support Susanna Davis as a member of his family in exchange for use of her tract of land (probably for farming). The land in the deeds is described as, "her tract of land on which she now resides, lying in the County of Fluvanna, containing forty-four acres more or less and bounded by the lands of Stephen Johnson, James Baltimore (DB17P251, dated 14 Nov 1853). On 26 Feb 1856 (DB17P342) Susanna and Hiram agreed to break the contract because Hiram was unable to live up to it. Susanna allowed Hiram to live on the property until the 25th of December and then he was to surrender all interest in the property, and the former contract was to be dissolved. SHEETS 617-618, and SHEETS 625-626. 3. 1850 Census Fluvanna County page 16, line 35. Susanna is listed in her own household with no husband, age 67, born in Virginia. Living with her was Sarah E. Dennis, age 9, no relationship listed. Enumeration was done on 7 Aug 1850. 4. 1860 Census Fluvanna County page 758, Central Plains District. Susan Davis is listed as living by herself, age 78, born in Virginia. Enumeration was 5 Nov 1860. I [Paul Shipp] have assumed that George Davis is really her husband and that Herndon is truly her maiden name by searching the marriage records of Fluvanna county for all marriages of Davis men to women named Susanna, and only one exists, listed above.
1787 - 1857
Joseph
Herndon
70
70
Carpenter War of 1812 - Seventh Va. (Gray's) regiment Albemarle Co., Va with Laurena
1788
David
M
Herndon
War of 1812 Seventh Va. Regiment. #245 DAVID M. HERNDON [36 Joseph] was born 1788 in Fluvanna County. He married first 8 October 1818 POLLY MURRY (daughter of Samuel Allen Murry and his wife Sally. He married secondly 5 January 1824 MAHALA T. SNEAD (b ca 1800). They were all members of the Fluvanna Baptist Church. Their home was at Central Plains, Va. David M. Herndon was a private in Captain Horace Timberlake's Company, Seventh Virginia Regiment, from 26 August 1814 to 27 February 1815, and served at Fairfield and Mitchell's Spring under Lt. Col. Wm. Gray. He received bounty lands for his service.
John
M
Herndon
Elisha
Herndon
Robert
Herndon
1798
Sarah
Herndon
Lewis
Herndon
1802 - >1816
Jane
S
Herndon
14
14
James
H
Herndon
Aaron
Reynolds
~1806
Thompson
Herndon
According to the Census below, Thompson must have lived close to Elisha Herndon RIN 6199 CENSUS YR: 1850 STATE or TERRITORY: VA COUNTY: Fluvanna PAGE NO: 12 REFERENCE: 27 July 1850 M. B. Shepherd, Ass't Marshal LN HN FN LAST NAME FIRST NAME AGE SEX RACE OCCUP. VAL. BIRTHPLACE 13 96 97 Herndon Thompson 44 M W Cooper Virginia 14 96 97 Herndon Susanna 30 F W Virginia 15 96 97 Herndon Mary J. 15 F W Virginia 16 96 97 Herndon Sarah E. 14 F W Virginia 17 96 97 Herndon James H. 12 M W Virginia 18 96 97 Herndon Susan F. 10 F W Virginia 19 96 97 Herndon Lemuel T. 8 M W Virginia 20 96 97 Herndon Margaret P. 6 F W Virginia 21 96 97 Herndon Nathaniel J. 4 M W Virginia
Trent
1779
Elizabeth
Price
Dolly
Dawson
William
Clements
Thomas
O
Henley
~1820
Ann
Emmerson
Richard
Kirby
George
Davis
~1750
Joseph
Reynolds
Susanna
Dawson
1799 - 1906
Lorena
106
106
106 is pretty old.
Polly
Murray
~1800
Mahala
T
Snead
Elizabeth
Murry
Nancy
Henley
Jane
Kidd
Polly
Anderson
Frances
Haislip
~1820
Mary
Susanna
Henley
Benjamin
Reynolds
Margaret
Reynolds
1804 - 1863
Sarah
Jane
Herndon
59
59
Judy Merricks Does any one have any information pertaining to the Birth and Marriage(s) of John "Wesley" Powell? From what I can find he was possibly born around 1800-1816. I think from what I can find he may have been married twice. 1st to Sarah Jane Herndon d/o Ruben Herndon and Hannah Long Herndon on Dec. 20, 1824. 2ndly to Eliza Jane Gauldin d/o of Samuel H.Gaulden and Cathen Gaulden on November 9, 1954. Can anyone confirm this? The reason I think he may have been married twice is the number of children I have found in records at the Chatham Courthouse and on Family Search. Com, also family story tells that his wife was killed (shot)as she stepped in front of her son to protect him. I think this must have been Sarah Jane Herndon. Another puzzling thing is who is his parents/mother. I thought it was Elizabeth, Nancy has been mentioned in the family. Also, how do I go about looking up this "killing". I have been told by family members that someone served time. Amy Hughes John W Powell is my 4th great grandfather. According to my records, Sarah Jane Herndon Powell died on July 17, 1863 in Pittsylvania County, Virginia. I haven't heard anything about the "killing". But if my records are correct, maybe the date of death will help you out. If you would like to share information, email me at: hughesamyd@hotmail.com Hope to hear from you, Amy
1807
Anna
Herndon
1810
David
Herndon
Went to NC
1812
Reuben
Herndon
Moved West.
Richard
Reynolds
Elizabeth
Reynolds
Polly
Trent
1817 - ~1867
Jesse
Burton
Herndon
50
50
CENSUS YR: 1850 STATE or TERRITORY: VA COUNTY: Fluvanna PAGE NO: 22 REFERENCE: 2 August 1850 M. B. Shepherd, Ass't Marshal LN HN FN LAST NAME FIRST NAME AGE SEX RACE OCCUP. VAL. BIRTHPLACE MRD. SCH. R/W DDB 23 178 179 Herndon Jesse B. 33 M W Laborer Virginia X 24 178 179 Herndon Mary D. 28 F W Virginia X 25 178 179 Herndon Albert C. 1/12 M W Virginia
Tabitha
Reynolds
Sophronia
Herndon
Mary
L
Herndon
Elizabeth
Herndon
William
Clements
Polly
Clements
Joseph
Clements
1769
Elliott
Herndon
1852
Joseph
W
Herndon
1854
Elliott
F
Herndon
1855
Daughter
Herndon
1857
John
M
Herndon
1833
Sarah
C
Herndon
1835
James
Herndon
1837
William
B
Herndon
1839
Edward
L
Herndon
1841
Nicholas
W
Herndon
Enlisted CSA, deserted, captured, courtmartialed, captured by Union forces in Pennsylvania; enlisted USA; deserted to CSA.
1843
Mary
E
Herndon
1827 - 1835
Nathaniel
Herndon
8
8
Died in childhood.
1819 - 1819
Herndon
1821
Nancy
Lewis
Herndon
lois Carey Email: lcarey@bcpl.net 995 NANCY L. HERNDON, b 1821, living 1900 unm.; lived in 1880 with her nephew David M. Herndon.
1823 - 1894
Mary
A
Herndon
71
71
Name: lois Carey Email: lcarey@bcpl.net URL: URL title: Note: I am the grgrgrandaughter of David M.Herndon and Polly Murry of Fluvanna county,Va' My grgrandparents were Mary A. Herndon and David Robinson David was first married to Mary Hodges in Goochland County, in 1813. He married Mary A.Herndon in Fluvanna in 1852 He served in the war of 1812 for which Mary A. Herndon received a pension and Bounty Warrants. My grandparents were John Walker Pace and Rebecca Robinson Rebecca Robinson Pace died in 1941 and is buried in Riverview Cemetery in charlottesville, Va. She was born in 1853 in Fluvanna Co.Va Do you know where David Herndon and Polly Murry might be buried.? Name: Lois Carey Email: lcarey@bcpl.net URL: URL title: Note: David C.Robinson and Mary a.Herndon are my grgrandparents David was born abt. 1789 and died in Fluvanna Co Va In 1861. He was first married to Mary Hodges in Goochland County,Va and had several children by her, several of whom lived in Fluvanna and married there. David also enlisted in the war of 1812 in Goochland. Mary A.Herndon Robinson received a pension and bounty land warrants after his death in 1878. A Edward or Edwin Cosby was a witness to her application for pension. Do you know of any Cosby connection to either the Herndon,Robinson or Pace families. The daughter of David Robinson and Mary A. Herndon was Rebecca Ann Robinson b. 1853 in Fluvanna. She married John Walker Pace b. 1843 in Fluvanna. There were Cosby's living neaby and also later a Fanny Cosby lived with them .. Would like to connect these families.
1781
Nancy
Herndon
1783 - 1854
Thomas
Herndon
71
71
He went with his father's family to Green County, Kentucky, where on 31 May 1809 he married NANCY. Thomas and Nancy Herndon removed from Green County, Kentucky to Franklin County Indiana in 1821. On 17 March 1821 he purchased 120 acres on Blue Creek in Butler Township, 4 miles southwest of Brookville.' There (as a member of the family wrote) the " woods were full of Indians and wild animals." Thomas Herndon " had a log cabin education. He remembered too that General Harrison made a canoe out of a buckeye tree." 3 One of the most exciting incidents in the life of the people of Franklin County at about this date was the trial of an old Revolutionary soldier, Samuel Fields, on the charge of having murdered his grandson, Robert Murphy."' Thomas Herndon was a member of the grand jury which indicted Samuel Fields
1785
Nathaniel
Herndon
1787
Caddis
Oliver
Herndon
Caddis Herndon served in Major Bagley's regiment of Kentucky Militia during the War of 1812. He enlisted at Newport, Ky., as a private in Captain Garret Peterson's Company, Colonel Barbee's Regiment, 23 August 1812 and served until mustered out at Newport 19 March 1813. A part of this time his captain was Robert Burnet. His name appears on the tax lists of Green County, Ky., in 1811, 1816, 1818, 1819, and 1821. He lived in Jefferson County thereafter until his death at Paducah in 1833.
1789
Judith
Herndon
1790
Frances
Herndon
1792
Jane
Herndon
1794
Wesley
Herndon
born 2 January 1794 in Madison County, Va., and continued to live there until his parents removed to Green County, Ky., approximately ten years later. From 11 June 1814 to 3 0 June 1815 he served under Captain B. Harrison in the Second Regiment of United States Riflemen. Because of that service he was allowed a pension. In his pension application papers he stated that at the time of his enlistment he was of, light complexion and sandy hair; was 5' 11" tall; and that he had followed the occupation of blacksmith. He married at Brookville, Ind., 26 May 1813, ESTHER HALBERSTADT. They removed in 1825 to the town of Union in Boone County, Ky. From there they went to Burlington and shortly thereafter to Florence in that same County. They made their home there for the rest of their lives. Wesley Herndon died suddenly of a heart attack while shoeing a horse 9 October 1854.
1795 - 1867
Archer
Gray
Herndon
71
71
He was still a tiny child when his father moved from Virginia to Greensburg, Green County, Ky. He served as a private in the company of Indiana Militia commanded by Captain Shultz in the War of 1812, having volunteered at Brookville 1 May 1814 for one year. He actually served, from 28 July 1814 until discharged at Vincennes, Ind., 28 July 1815. Reference has already been made to him as an old hunter always on the alert for marauding Indians in the sketch of his brother Elliott. Early in 1819 he and his wife moved to Troy, Madison County, Ill., and in the spring of 1821 they moved from Madison County and settled in the community which afterward became known as German Prairie, about five miles northeast of the present city of Springfield. Soon after this they moved to Springfield where he was in business until 1826. In that year he was elected State Senator and was one of the " Long Nine " who were instrumental in having the State capital moved from Vandalia to Springfield. They were so designated because the shortest among the nine of them was over six feet tall. He was United States Receiver of Public Moneys in the Land Office from 1842 to 1860. Additional information on the personality and activities of Archer Gray Herndon may be obtained from David Donald: Lincoln's Herndon, New York; A. A. Knopf, 1948. Owner of the Indian Queen Tavern, Springfield, Il., Il. state senator and politician, one iof the Il "Long Nine". Fought in the war of 1812. Started out as poor when in Ky., and later ion Il.
James
Nelson
1742 - 1829
Mary
Ann
Gaines
87
87
1769 - 1835
Ehart
65
65
Richard
Jerrell
Hawkins
1774
Mary
Herndon
Elizabeth
Zachery
Nancy
Nixon
1851
Oliver
Emmerson
Herndon
Mary
Bohannon
1771
George
Herndon
1773 - 1842
William
Herndon
69
69
Source of birth, death, marriage: Terri Allred
1825 - 1890
Archer
Gray
Herndon
64
64
A farmer, living in Rochester township nine miles southeast of Springfield the last thirty years of his life.
1786
Elizabeth
Long
Joseph
W
Herndon
Enlisted as private, Capt. Cocke's Company, Fluvanna Light Artillery, CSA; resided in the old family home near Scottsville in 1900
~1835
Mary J
Herndon
~1836
Sarah
E
Herndon
~1838
James
H
Herndon
~1840
Susan
F
Herndon
~1842
Lemuel
Herndon
~1844
Margaret
P
Herndon
~1846
Nathaniel
J
Herndon
1824
Mary
Herndon
Susannah
Wright
Elizabeth
Jennings
Nancy
Sergeant
Anna
Darnell
1764 - 1810
Catherine
Chambers
46
46
Thomas
Morris
Ann
Roach
James
Long
John
Carroll
1759
James
Nelson
Thomas
Nelson
Nancy
Kirtley
1785 - >1802
Thomas
Herndon
17
17
1787
Edward
Herndon
1789 - 1857
James
Herndon
68
68
War of 1812
1790 - >1845
Ezekiel
Herndon
55
55
1792
Elizabeth
Herndon
1794
Mary
Pendleton
Herndon
1796
Abner
Herndon
1797
Rachel
Herndon
William
Herndon
1800
Henry
Herndon
1802
Manson
Herndon
1804
Joel
Herndon
1807
Thomas
Herndon
~1796 - ~1870
Jesse
Herndon
74
74
1810 Census places a Jessee Herndon in Albemarle, Va. with one female between 26 and 44 (wife;) and one male < 10 and three females 10--15. This is probably not the same Jessee just based on approx. birth date alone. Marriage date to Nancy Shelton was 1828. Maybe Jessee was married twice. 1830 Federal Census puts Jesse in Surry County, NC. This was two years after Jessee married Nancy Shelton in Surry County. Census shows 1 male <5, 1 male 10-15, 1 female 5-10 and one female 10-15. Moved to Russell Co., Va. in 1831. 1840 Federa Census puts Jesse in Russell County, Va. with one male < 5, two males 5-10, one male 10-15, one male 20-30, male 40-50, two females < 5, one female 10-15, one female 20-30, one female 40-50. Between 1831 and 1846, moved to Washington Co., Va. 1860 Census puts Jesse in Washington, Va. with Nancy (wife), Rachel, Rebecca, Hannah, Aaron and Margaret in the household. Source for Jessee and his children is the 1840 Washington Co. Va.census., and John Goodwin Herndon's Book. Jesse's first wife was Mildred(unknown) she is the Mother of James Herndon. 1802 Fluvanna land tax records: Jesse Herndon with one male in household. Source for Jessee and his children is the 1840 Washington Co. Va.census., and John Goodwin Herndon's Book. Jesse's first wife was Mildred. She is the Mother of James Herndon.
1764 - ~1821
James
Gaines
Herndon
57
57
Mary
Sarah
Thornton
Jeremiah
White
William
Jordan
Elizabeth
Wood
Lucinda
Wood
Lucy
Quinn
1830
Howell
L
Herndon
~1833
Elisha
Herndon
Killed in battle 19 June 1863 at Frederick, Md.
1835
Robert
J
Herndon
Private in Capt. Cocke's, Capt. Ancells, Capt. Snead's and later in Capt. John L. Massie's Co.; captured at Waterloo S July 1863; subscribed oath of allegiance to U.S. at Ft. Delaware; had light complexion, dark hair, gray eyes; was 5' 6" tall. Married the widow of his deceased brother Elisha.
1838 - 1857
David
Herndon
19
19
1843 - 1850
Mahala
Herndon
7
7
1844
Susan
Herndon
1846 - 1858
Reuben
M
Herndon
12
12
1841 - 1853
Adam
Herndon
12
12
Mourning
Clark
Sarah
Carter
Roanna
William
Montague
1793 - 1852
Nancy
Keen
59
59
born 11 October 1793 on her father's second plantation in James City County, Virginia.
Betsy
Gaddy
Elizabeth
Berthy
William
Bass
Ananias
Coffee
1794 - 1875
Esther
Halberstadt
80
80
A memorial notice appearing in the Boone County journal of 27 May 1875 gives the following additional information concerning Mrs. Herndon: I From letter to JGH dated 13 October 1937 from Louis C. Yager, of Indianapolis, Ind. 192 The Herndons of the American Revolution " The parents were strict Christians, of the Presbyterian faith; the children were all baptised in their infancy. The strong mind and retentive memory which so characterized the deceased in her old age was made manifest in early years. . . . At the age of twelve the family moved via Pittsburg and the present site of Cincinnati to Harrison near Brookville, Ind., then an unbroken wilderness. In the journey across the mountains her father and brothers walked while she drove the four-horse team. They arrived safely at Pittsburg where they took flats for Cincinnati which was then a cornfield with three log cabins for a city. Here they landed and started through the wilderness looking for a suitable place to settle; finally they arrived at the present site at Brookville where they took possession of a quarter section of land and located themselves. They built a rude log cabin with a hole in the roof for a chimney, and a blanket hung in front of a small opening for a door. At night the wolves would come around the door and fight over the bones that were thrown from the tables.... She leaves 23 grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren."
Lucy
Reynolds
Peggy
Reynolds
Mary
Reynolds
Betsy
Reynolds
Henrietta
Reynolds
William
Reynolds
Catherine
Reynolds
~1774
Joseph
Reynolds
Henrietta
Reynolds
William
Reynolds
Washington
Reynolds
Mary
Reynolds
Judah
Reynolds
Joseph
Reynolds
Sally
Reynolds
Susan
Reynolds
Polly
Reynolds
William
Reynolds
1772
Garland
Reynolds
Lucy
Nelson
Sally
Herndon
1814 - 1814
Anthony
Herndon
3m
3m
1816 - 1895
William
Herndon
78
78
1818
Elizabeth
Herndon
1821 - 1887
Amanda
Herndon
66
66
1823 - 1829
Mary
Herndon
5
5
1827 - 1829
Sarah
Ann
Herndon
2
2
1829 - ~1890
Jane
Herndon
61
61
1831
Mellison
Herndon
1835 - 1910
Elijah
Kirtley
Herndon
75
75
In 1860 he was a carpenter, then a tollkeeper on the old Lexington Highway. During the last 30 to 40 years of his life he was a livestock broker associated with Green, Embry, and Co., Cincinnati. He was a member of the Christian Church.
1811
Minerva
Herndon
1812
Elizabeth
Herndon
1815 - 1826
Judith
Herndon
10
10
1817
Benjamin
Herndon
1820 - 1836
George
Herndon
15
15
1822 - 1825
Polly
Herndon
3
3
1825
William
C
Herndon
a blacksmith in Vigo County, Ind., in 1850, when his mother made her home with him. He later married settled in Longview, Texas, where he died.
1831 - 1832
Margaret
Herndon
8d
8d
1811
Gideon
Herndon
At age 10 he removed with his parents to Franklin County, Indiana. There he married 20 February 1831 his first cousin Mildred Rafferty
1813
Sophronia
Herndon
1815 - 1892
Susanna
Herndon
76
76
~1818
Eva
Herndon
1820
Elizabeth
Herndon
In 1856 they lived in Sangamon County, Ill
~1822
Mary
Herndon
lived in Brookville, Indiana, in 1850
1825 - 1859
Frances
Herndon
34
34
lived in Brookville, Indiana, in 1850
1827
Carey
lived in Sangamon County, Ill., in 1856. Just thought as a Herndon researcher I might let you know I had followed Sarah Dant Herndon after Carey had passed away. What I found was that she had married a Lewis J. Ferguson 28 Oct 1858 in Menard County, Illinois. On the 1860 Athens, Menard County census, Sarah was listed married to Lewis Ferguson and there was a Herndon female child listed by the name of Melvina, born about 1854 in Illinois. Since Lewis J. Ferguson was captured and taken to Andersonville Prison in Georgia and subsequently died there in 1864, I was unable to find Sarah & Melvina in the 1870 census records and thereafter. But, I thought you might be interested that a child was born of the union between Carey Jones and Sarah. My own descendency in the Herndon line is through William Henry Herndon of Springfield, Illinois. The full line is James Nathaniel, Beverly Houston and Houston Beverly Herndon. Hope this information is of some help to you in your research. Respectfully, Carole Herndon Weimer phillycarole@aol.com
1829 - ~1892
Milton
Keen
Herndon
63
63
along with Schuyler Colfax, who was later Vice President of the United States, and three other prominent Odd Fellows, he signed the charter granted 8 January 1850 to Carroll Encampment, No. 22, in Carroll County, Indiana. Shawnee Encampment, No. 25, IOOF, in Fountain County, Ind., was organized 6 March 1851 and was instituted by Milton Keen Herndon, M.W.R.C.P. He and his wife lived in 1870 in Hammond, Franklin County.
1832 - 1913
Archer
Bohannon
Herndon
80
80
lived at Brookville, Franklin County, where he was elected auditor; was later a member of the law firm of Bracken and Herndon and of the Brookville Presbyterian Church.
1782 - 1864
Hearndon
82
82
Pittsylvania Co., Va. William and Elizabeth, who was 18 when she married, settled on a part of the plantation of her parents, their home being called "The Maples."
1805 - 1882
James
Herndon
76
76
1807
Elizabeth
Herndon
1809 - 1862
Jones
Herndon
53
53
1812
Daniel
Herndon
1813
William
Herndon
1816
Polly
Herndon
1818 - 1857
Jane
Herndon
39
39
Lived in Strawberry, Pittsylvania Co., Va.
1824
Nancy
Herndon
1865 - 1901
Nina
Belle
36
36
Through the course of time, William Henry Herndon's first daughter has been known as Nina Belle, at least in literature. After doing some grave hopping in Oak Ridge Cemetery and getting information from the office, I found this "lost" daughter. Cemetery records have her listed as Mamie Belle Cox in Block 14, Lot #41, along with William H. Herndon and his wives. Also buried there is a Josephine Cox, her daughter. There are no headstones. Mamie's date of burial is listed as 7-11-01 (actually date of death) and Josephine on 6-20-86. I have a copy of her marriage license to Frank J. Cox. The marriage date is listed as Aug 21, 1895 in Sangamon County, Illinois. Her parents were listed as W. H. Herndon and Anna Miles. Her obituary reads, "Cox--Died, at 7:55 o'clock Thursday night, July 11, 1901, at St. John's hospital......Miss Belle Cox." With this information, there is no doubt in my mind this is what became of William Henry's eldest child. Carole Herndon Weimer, descendent of William Henry Herndon. HAR3 has Nina married to Ballard.
1836 - 1893
Anna
Miles
56
56
Through the course of time, William Henry Herndon's first daughter has been known as Nina Belle, at least in literature. After doing some grave hopping in Oak Ridge Cemetery and getting information from the office, I found this "lost" daughter. Cemetery records have her listed as Mamie Belle Cox in Block 14, Lot #41, along with William H. Herndon and his wives. Also buried there is a Josephine Cox, her daughter. There are no headstones. Mamie's date of burial is listed as 7-11-01 (actually date of death) and Josephine on 6-20-86. I have a copy of her marriage license to Frank J. Cox. The marriage date is listed as Aug 21, 1895 in Sangamon County, Illinois. Her parents were listed as W. H. Herndon and Anna Miles. Her obituary reads, "Cox--Died, at 7:55 o'clock Thursday night, July 11, 1901, at St. John's hospital......Miss Belle Cox." With this information, there is no doubt in my mind this is what became of William Henry's eldest child. Carole Herndon Weimer, descendent of William Henry Herndon
1822 - 1861
Mary
Maxcy
39
39
1818 - 1891
William
Henry
Herndon
73
73
Billy Herndon was the son of Archer Gray Herndon (a member of "the Long Nine" a group of men who got the state capitol of Illinois moved to Springfield - so named because they were all over 6' tall). Billy was Lincoln's 3rd & last law partner. After Lincoln's death, he devoted his life to researching Lincoln's life. Lincoln had told him he never read biographies because they were all lies. (At that time, bios were written in romantic style and rarely said anything negative about anyone.) Herndon was determined to write an accurate account of Lincoln's life, believing he would want it that way. Nearly every book written about Lincoln used some of Herndon's research. He was much hated at the time for his writings. After many years of giving his research to other writers, he finally agreed to co-author the book "Herndon's Lincoln," which is in libraries and available for sale today. Author of Herndon's Lincoln: the true story of a great life ... The history and personal recollections of Abraham Lincoln, by William H. Herndon, Jesse William Weik, et al, 1889. David Herbert Donald wrote a biography of William H. Herndon called "Lincoln's Herndon: A Biography," published in 1948. Herndon, Kansas Herndon Kansas's history began in May 1876 when Lorenz and Sophia Demmer came from Smith County, Kansas to stake their homestead claim in SE 4 of Sec. 3-2-31. Their first residence was a cave in the banks of Ash Creek at the east edge of what would become the town of Herndon. In the spring of 1877 the first of many Austrian-Hungarian immigrants, Mathias and Teckla Hafner, homesteaded a mile west of town. The autumn of 1879 saw merchant I. N. George haul in a wagon train of merchandise and supplies. He put up a building and opened the first general store in Herndon and in Rawlins County. A year later Mr. George became postmaster of the town then called "Pesth. He got the town's name changed to Herndon to honor Billy Herndon, who was Abraham Lincoln's law partner. ================================== Excerpt from "Lincoln and Whitman," by Daniel Mark Epstein, 2004 Springfield, 1857 Abraham Lincoln's law partner William "Billy" Herndon, thirty-nine, loved the birds and wildflowers of the prairie, pretty women, and corn liquor. He also had an immoderate passion for new books, and for the transcendental philosophizing of pastor Theodore Parker and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson. By his own accounting he had spent four thousand dollars on his collection of poetry, philosophy, and belles lettres-a fortune in those days, when a good wood-frame house in Springfield, Illinois, cost half as much. Journalist George Alfred Townsend called Herndon's library the finest in the West. Herndon's narrow, earnest-looking face was fringed with whiskers in the Scots manner, and his eyes were close-set, intense. His favorite philosopher-poet was Emerson. Herndon so admired the Sage of Concord that he purchased Emerson's books by the carton and gave them away to friends and strangers with the zeal of an evangelist. A backwoods philosopher, Herndon even solicited Emerson's endorsement for his tract "Some Hints on the Mind," in which he claimed to have discovered the mind's fundamental principle, "if not its law." So when Emerson espoused a new book of poetry, calling it "the most extraordinary piece of wit and wisdom that America has yet contributed," Herndon wasted no time in locating a copy, which could be found on the shelves of R. Blanchard's, Booksellers, in Chicago, where he frequently traveled on business. Having held the olive-green book, its cover blind-stamped with leaves and berries; having regarded with a twinge of envy the salutation "I Greet You at the / Beginning of A / Great Career / R W Emerson," gold-stamped on the spine, the bibliophile-lawyer plunked down his golden dollar for the second edition of Whitman's Leaves of Grass. And knowing the storm the book had caused in more sophisticated circles, Herndon brought the brickbat-shaped volume to the office he shared with Lincoln and set it in clear view on the table, where anyone might pick up the book and thumb through it. Leaves of Grass was exactly the length of a man's hand. He laid it down on the baize-covered table with the complacence of an anarchist waiting for a bomb to explode. The Lincoln-Herndon law office was on the second floor of a brick building on the west side of Springfield's main square, across from the courthouse. Visitors mounted a flight of stairs and passed down a dark hallway to a medium-sized room in the rear of the building. The upper half of the door had a pane of beveled glass, with a curtain hanging from a wire, on brass rings. Lincoln would unlock the door, open it, and draw the curtain as he closed the door behind him. Two dusty windows overlooked the alley. Herndon's biographer David Donald describes the office as "a center of political activity, of gossip and friendly banter, and of such remote problems as the merits of Walt Whitman's poetry." The office was untidy and cobwebbed. Once, after Lincoln had come home from Congress with the customary dole of seeds to distribute to farmers, John Littlefield, a law student, discovered while sweeping that some of the stray wheat seeds had sprouted in the cracks between the floorboards. A long pine table that divided the room, and met with a shorter table to make a T, was scored by the jackknives of absent-minded clerks and clients. In one corner stood a secretary desk, its many pigeonholes and drawers stuffed with letters and memoranda, its besieged surface sustaining a spattered earthenware inkwell and a few gold pens. Bookcases rose between the tall windows. A spidery black stain blotted one wall, at the height of a man's head, where an ink bottle had exploded-the memento, according to Lincoln, of a disagreement between law students over a point of jurisprudence that would not yield to cold logic. Papers were strewn everywhere, as if by a prairie wind: on the table, on the floor, on the five scattered cane-bottomed chairs and the ragged sofa where the senior partner of the firm liked to stretch out his full length, his head on the arm of the sofa. His legs were too long to fit the settee, so Lincoln would rest his feet on the raveling cane seat of a chair. There he reclined every morning, after arriving at nine, clean-shaven. And he would read, aloud. He read newspapers and books, always aloud, much to the annoyance of his partner, who found the high, tuneful voice, with its chuckling interludes and asides, a distraction from the warrants and writs and invoices. Herndon once asked Lincoln why he had to read aloud, and the forty-eight-year-old ex-Congressman explained: "Two senses catch the idea: first I see what I read; second I hear it, and therefore I can remember it better." Lincoln-not boasting-said that his mind was like steel: the gray matter was difficult to scratch, but once engraved on it, information was nearly impossible to efface. According to Herndon, Lincoln did not read many books, but whatever he did read he absorbed completely. The law students got to Whitman first. Perhaps they had read about Leaves of Grass in Putnam's Monthly Magazine, where the eminent Charles Eliot Norton had announced that words "banished from polite society are here employed without reserve" and called the book a curious mixture of "Yankee Transcendentalism and New York rowdyism"; or they might have caught notice of it in the New York Criterion, where the dyspeptic Rufus Griswold referred to it as "this gathering of muck." In America's most influential literary journal, the North American Review, Edward Everett Hale rhapsodized about Leaves of Grass. And in May 1856 no less an authority than Fanny Fern-the highest-paid columnist in the country-referred to Whitman in the New York Ledger as "this glorious Native American." The book was widely praised and condemned, much discussed, if not much purchased or read. According to Henry Bascom Rankin, who was a student in the Lincoln-Herndon office in 1857, "discussions hot and extreme sprung up between office students and Mr. Herndon concerning its poetic merit." A few verses: I mind how we lay in June, such a transparent summer morning, You settled your head athwart my hips and gently turned over upon me, And parted the shirt from my bosom-bone, and plunged your tongue to my bare-stript heart . . . I turn the bridegroom out of bed and stay with the bride myself, I tighten her all night to my thighs and lips. Poetry indeed! These long, racy, unrhymed verses did not look like any poetry the provincial law students had ever seen, no matter what Emerson or the bluestocking Fanny Fern wrote. The talk of Whitman that animated the law office during the unseasonably warm spring of 1857 relieved the furious, anguished discussion of the Supreme Court's recent decision about Dred Scott, which aroused Lincoln from a spell of political torpor. Yet even Scott's fate led them back to Leaves of Grass: I am the hounded slave, I wince at the bite of the dogs, Hell and despair are upon me, crack and again crack the marksmen, I clutch the rails of the fence, my gore dribs, thinned with the ooze of my skin . . . The argument over Whitman did not differ much in Springfield from the dispute in Boston and New York. Was this poetry? Then there arose the livelier controversy over the book's brazen immodesty. Was Leaves of Grass indecent? Many of the verses sounded shameless, unfit for mixed company. Take for example the anonymous woman watching twenty-eight young men bathing by the shore, who comes "Dancing and laughing along the beach" to caress their naked bellies: They do not know who puffs and declines with pendant and bending arch, They do not think whom they souse with spray. Was this Walt Whitman actually depicting a sexual act outlawed everywhere but in the debaters' dreams? It was shocking, pornographic. The men wondered whether such a book should be allowed on library shelves, or in homes where women and children might casually be seduced by it. Who was responsible for the corruption of morals: the author, the printer, the Chicago bookseller, or buyers of Leaves of Grass like Billy Herndon? The students wrangled, and read the poems aloud, with Herndon sometimes acting as Whitman's advocate, other times as an impartial referee. Visitors dropping by, such as Dr. Newton Bateman, superintendent of schools, would join in the discussion provoked by lines such as: A woman waits for me-she contains all, nothing is lacking, Yet all were lacking if sex were lacking, or if the moisture of the right man were lacking. Lincoln worked quietly at his desk, raking his coarse hair with his long fingers, or he came and went, apparently oblivious to the disturbance the new book was causing in the workplace. Having lost a year to politics, stumping for the Republican John Frémont during the presidential campaign of 1856, advocating "free soil, free labor and free men," he had a lot of catching up to do in his neglected law practice. He was also having a spell of depression, "the hypochondria," as it was called in those days. This mood afflicted him periodically, often between periods of intense business or creative work. So he turned his back on the students, and Herndon and Dr. Bateman, as they challenged one another's taste in literature and questioned one another's morals, reading passages of Leaves of Grass and attacking or defending Whitman as the spirit, or the letter, moved them. The poet was utterly uninhibited, whether he was describing himself, or addressing the President: Walt Whitman, an American, one of the roughs, a kosmos, Disorderly, fleshy, sensual, eating, drinking, breeding, No sentimentalist, no stander above men and women, or apart from them-no more modest than immodest . . . I speak the pass-word primeval, I give the sign of democracy, By God! I will accept nothing which all cannot have their counterpart of on the same terms. Have you outstript the rest? Are you the President? It is a trifle-they will more than arrive there every one, and still pass on. One day, after the debaters had departed, a few clerks, including Henry Rankin, remained, copying documents. Lincoln rose from his desk. This was always a sight because sitting down Lincoln appeared to be of average height, but his limbs were so disproportionately long that when he unfolded and stretched them it was as if a giant had sprung up out of a common man. "Quite a surprise occurred," Rankin recalled, in a memoir written years later. Lincoln picked up the book of poems that had been disturbing the peace and began to read, as he rarely did, in devoted silence, for more than half an hour by the Regulator clock. When the pressure of perusing the poetry silently became more than Lincoln could endure, he thumbed back to the first pages of Leaves of Grass and began reading aloud, in that tenderly expressive voice with the Kentucky accent and continual undercurrent of whimsical humor. I celebrate myself, And what I assume you shall assume, For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you. I loafe and invite my soul, I lean and loafe at my ease, observing a spear of summer grass. The light of afternoon streamed through the office windows, gilding the dust motes. Houses and rooms are full of perfumes-the shelves are crowded with perfumes, I breathe the fragrance myself, and know it and like it, The distillation would intoxicate me also, but I shall not let it. The atmosphere is not a perfume, it has no taste of the distillation, it is odorless, It is for my mouth forever, I am in love with it, I will go to the bank by the wood, and become undisguised and naked, I am mad for it to be in contact with me. The smoke of my own breath, Echos, ripples, buzzed whispers, love-root, silk-thread, crotch, vine My respiration and inspiration, the beating of my heart . . . "His rendering," Rankin remembered, "revealed a charm of new life in Whitman's versification." Here and there Lincoln found a verse too coarse, a line or phrase he felt the poet might have avoided. But on the whole he "commended the new poet's verses for their virility, freshness, unconventional sentiments, and unique forms of expression." Lincoln put the book back down on the office table, desiring Herndon to leave Whitman there where he might not get lost in the tide of books, newspapers, and documents. "Time and again, when Lincoln came in, or was leaving, he would pick it up, as if to glance at it for only a moment, but instead he would often settle down in a chair and never stop reading aloud such verses or pages as he fancied." Once Lincoln made the mistake of taking Leaves of Grass home. The next morning he brought the book back, grimly remarking that he "had barely saved it from being purified in fire by the women." This anecdote goes a long way toward explaining the politician's lifelong reticence about the poet and his book. Of course, by "the women" he meant his wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, who controlled nearly everything that went on inside the big, two-story house at the corner of Eighth and Jackson where they lived with their three boys. It is uncertain what verses or pages Lincoln fancied. The feuds among Lincoln's early biographers, struggling over the soul of the martyred President, have few parallels in American letters. In 1928 a rival biographer, Reverend William E. Barton, in a popular book that took pains to disassociate Lincoln from Whitman, challenged Rankin's memory. As early as 1932, however, the scholar Charles Glicksberg, in Whitman and the Civil War, declared that Barton's book was "marked throughout by a hostile spirit toward Whitman" and discredited Barton's premise that Lincoln was unaware of Whitman's existence. Modern scholars, such as Whitman biographers Gay Wilson Allen and Jerome Loving, and David Herbert Donald, who wrote books on both Herndon and Lincoln, likewise have accepted Rankin's story in spite of Reverend Barton. One of the points that authenticate Rankin's account is his dating of Lincoln's encounter with Leaves of Grass. Only in that year, two years after the first publication of Whitman's poems in 1855, would the ex-Congressman and future President Lincoln have had the freedom and inclination to study such a literary curiosity. Only in 1857 could the reading of Whitman have produced such an impact on his oratory. Billy Herndon, who knew Lincoln better perhaps than any man in Lincoln's day, said he was the rare man without vices, but with a flagrant disregard for propriety, "the appropriateness of things." He was so heedless of his appearance that he forgot to comb his coarse black hair. He cared so little about clothing that sometimes he wouldn't wear this piece or that. After all, he was raised on a farm in Kentucky, barefoot. "He never could see the harm in wearing a sack-coat instead of a swallowtail to an evening party, nor could he realize the offense of telling a vulgar yarn if a preacher happened to be present." ================================== "William H. Herndon and Mary Todd Lincoln," by Douglas L Wilson:http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/jala/22.2/wilson.html
1841 - 1915
James
Nathaniel
Herndon
74
74
1856
Mary
N
Herndon
1849
Elizabeth
R
Herndon
1843
Annie
May
Herndon
1870 - 1891
William
Miles
Herndon
21
21
1875
Minnie
Herndon
1845
Beverly
Powell
Herndon
1852
Leigh
W
Herndon
D. 1991
Pat
1947
Larry
Buckles
1951
Linda
Buckles
m. Steve Howard, Glen Broshear
1956
Lorie
Buckles
Colleen
1957
Jerry
Buckles
1955
Doreen
Buckles
1958
Sarah
Buckles
1956
Jeff
Buckles
1964
Melissa
Buckles
m. Timothy Council
1921
Helen
Marie
Coffman
1945
Beth
Marie
Buckles
1947
Daniel
Gail
Buckles
1947
David
Lee
Buckles
1951
Susan
Marie
Buckles
1936
Jack
Gordon
Mendel
1972 - 1974
Jack
Gordon
Mendel
2
2
1974
Jason
Gail
Mendel
1977
Cynthia
Marie
Mendel
1978
James
Glenn
Mendel
Amy
Beth
Collins
1998
Christopher
Mendel
1999
Matthew
Collin
Mendel
Robert
Martinez
1996
Robert
Martinez
Denise
Hooper
1971
Kristopher
Buckles
1974
Kelli
Ruth
Buckles
Carolyn
Botzell
1946
Diane
Hall
1972
Kerrianne
Buckles
1975
Joshua
David
Buckles
Sara
Danielle
Terrio
1998
Michaela
Buckles
1941
Alvin
Franklin
Prince
1981
Donald
Earl
Prince
Gene
Whitlaw
1928
Virginia
Dell
Whitlaw
1938
Sheldon
Leon
Whitlaw
1943
David
Frank
Whitlaw
A C
Stevens
Steve
Stevens
Cherise
Stevens
Dickson
Pogy
Williams
Frank
Young
1981
Jeremy
Williams
1983
Holly
Williams
1984
Rebecca
Williams
1850
Mariah
(Bell) Isabell
Dougherty
~1783 - 1851
Elizabeth
Tillery
68
68
I am guessing that this is Jane's mother and George L is Jane's brother. Elizabeth lived with Jane in 1850. Maybe she was born in 1785.
~1690 - ~1725
Charles
Colston
34
34
He was a captain.
1692 - ~1726
Rebecca
Travers
33
33
Children of Mary and Charles: 1. Travers Colston b: 4 JAN 1713/14 in , Richmond, Virginia 2. Charles Colston b: ABT 1716 in , Richmond, Virginia 3. Susanna Colston b: ABT 1718 in , Richmond, Virginia 4. Elizabeth Colson b: ABT 1720 in , Richmond, Virginia 5. Winifred Colson b: ABT 1722 in , Richmond, Virginia 6. Mary Colson b: ABT 1729 in , Fredericksburg, Virginia
~1663 - ~1700
Samuel
Travers
37
37
Samuel, son of Colonel William Travers (q. v.), was justice of the peace for Rappahannock county in 1686 and 1687, and burgess for Richmond county in 1696-1697 and sheriff in 1697. He married Frances Allerton, daughter of Colonel Isaac Allerton. He had three daughters, Elizabeth who died unmarried ; Winifred who married Daniel Hornby, and Rebecca who married Captain Charles Colston. Children 1. Elizabeth TRAVERS b: bef. 6 Feb 1689 or 1690 in Virginia 2. Rebecca TRAVERS b: 15 OCT 1692 in Virginia 3. Winifred TRAVERS b: ABT 1694 in Virginia 4. Frances TRAVERS b: 20 AUG 1697 in Virginia
~1668 - <1721
Frances
Allerton
53
53
~1682 - ~1712
John
Taverner
30
30
Father: John Taverner b: BEF 1655 Mother: Elizabeth Gooch b: BEF 1655 in York County, Virginia
~1713
Travers
Colston
~1716 - ~1726
Charles
Colston
10
10
~1720 - ~1726
Elizabeth
Colston
6
6
~1722 - ~1726
Winifred
Colston
4
4
~1718
Susanna
Colston
~1627 - 1679
William
Travers
52
52
William Travers was a merchant of London in 1645. He came to St. Mary's County Maryland, then to Dorchester County, Maryland, and finally to Rappahannock County, Virginia where he died before Nov. 14, 1679. He was given his title of Colonel officially by the house of Burgesses of Virginia. As captain with Colonel John Washington, Captian John Lee, William Moseley, and Robert Beverly, he was appointed to settle the bounds of Northumberland and Westmoreland counties. As Colonel of Rappanhannock County in 1675, the Royal Council of Virginia appointed him one of a commission to employ Indians in defense of the coloney. He was Burgess for Lancaster County 1677 and speaker of the house. He married Rebecca, who became administratrix of his will, the appraisement being made at "Exeter Lodge."
~1643 - 1702
Rebecca
Hussey
59
59
On 3 Nov 1679, Rebecca Travers wills to her goddaughter, Rebecca Bonge, goods to be delivered to her either upon the death of Rebecca Travers or the marriage of Rebecca Bonge. (widow Rebecca Travers married John Rice shortly after this date). In 1688 a William Bengee (alias) Barber brought suit against John Rice and his wife Rebecca (widow of Col. William Travers) for release from servitude. A Rappahanock Court order dated April 4, 1688 ordered William Benge to appear at next court to answer to the said Rice. On May 2, 1688 a William Benge, servant to William Travers, was deemed to be free.
1628 - 1702
Isaac
Allerton
74
74
Isaac was among nine men in the seventh class to graduate from Harvard in 1650. By 1653 he was active in his father's trading activities. Following the death of his mother (Fear) in 1633, Isaac (Jr.) was raised by his grandfather William Brewster. Brewster died in 1644 and it is not known who cared for Isaac (Jr.), who would have been 14 years old. In order to enter Harvard, Isaac (Jr.) needed to demonstrate a certain level of academic achievement and secondly, the recommendation from a prominent individual(s). Allerton (senior) had the wealth for his son's education and it is suspected that William Brewster, who had the largest library in Plymouth, provided the education and recommendation needed to be accepted in Harvard. Isaac (Jr.) married Elizabeth from New Haven as early as 1652. They had two children while residing in New Haven, Elizabeth (b 1653), and Isaac (b 1655). As early as 1655 Isaac Allerton (Jr.) purchased land in Northumberland Country Virginia. Isaac Allerton's (Jr.) wife Elizabeth died about 1660. He moved his young family to Virginia and married the widow Elizabeth Colclough about 1663. They had three children, Willoughby, Frances and Sarah, born in Virginia. In 1665 Isaac Allerton (Jr.) was a major in the Virginia militia and second in command to Colonel John Washington (grandfather of our first president) engaged in Indian campaigns. Isaac Allerton (Jr.) was a county Justice of the Peace, member of the Virginia House of Burgess 1676-7 and died in 1702 owning a 2,150-acre plantation on the Rappahanock River. Children in Isaac's (Jr.) first family returned to New Haven, married and their descendants distributed themselves throughout New England and New York. Children in Isaac's (Jr.) second family remained in Virginia, married and their descendants distributed themselves throughout Virginia.
~1635 - >1672
Elizabeth
Willoughby
37
37
During her lifetime, Elizabeth Willoughby wedded three husbands. The first was Simon Overzee, a Dutch merchant who traded widely in the lower James River bain, the counties along the Chesapeake Bay, and Maryland. Overzee died in 1660, and within the year Elizabeth took her second husband, George Colclough. The younger brother of a wealthy, well-placed London grocer, and himself a merchant, Colclough had settled in Northumberland County around 1651. By 1656 he was a magistrate and a burgess for the county. The marriage lasted until Colclough's death in 1662. Thereupon, the widow Colclough married Isaac Allerton, the son of a Plymouth, Massachusetts merchant who also resided in Northumberand. She was Isaac Allerton's second wife. Either just before of soon after they were wed, Allerton was commissioned a justice of the peace. Subsequently he became a member of the House of Burgesses and eventually won a seat on the governor's council. "The Old Dominion in the Seventeenth Century" ------------------ She was mentioned in an April 1672 letter from Governor CharlesCalvert to Cecilius, 2nd Lord Baltimore regarding Maryland landrights of her deceased first husband (Simon Overzee).
~1586 - 1659
Isaac
Allerton
73
73
Isaac Allerton was about 34 years old when he came to Plymouth on the Mayflower in 1620. He had been a long-time member of the Pilgrims' church in Leiden, and was recorded as having been a tailor from London. He married his first wife, Mary Norris, in Leiden, in 1611, and there had children Bartholomew, Remember and Mary, all of whom came on the Mayflower with him. He and Mary buried a child, not yet named, at St. Peters on 5 February 1620. Isaac Allerton had a sister Sarah in Leiden, who married to Mayflower passenger Degory Priest. Mayflower passenger John Allerton, also a Leiden resident, most likely was a relative as well, although the exact relation has not been discovered. Isaac Allerton was one of the more active and prominent members of early Plymouth. He was elected as Governor Bradford's assistant in 1621, and continued as an assistant into the 1630s. In 1627, he was sent to negotiate the Plymouth Colony's buyout of the Merchant Adventurers, the investors who had originally funded (and had hoped to profit from) the Colony. The Colony was about £2500 in debt; a small group of Plymouth's residents, including Bradford, Brewster, Standish, Fuller, and Allerton, sought to assume the debt themselves in return for the rights to profit from the company. Allerton was sent to England to negotiate further, and would return to England on several more occasions. Unfortunately for the others, Allerton began to use his "free" trips to England to engage in some private gains, purchasing goods and selling them in the Massachusetts Bay and Plymouth. He also used his capacity as Plymouth's designated negotiator to engage the Colony in a number of unapproved money-making schemes: he went so far as to purchase ships (which he partially used for his own private trading), and to attempt to negotiate grants and patents for trade--all at great cost to the company and none of it approved by the others back at Plymouth. When his trading schemes failed, the Company found itself in far greater debt than it ever started out with. When Allerton's wife Fear died at Plymouth about 1634, and with the general ire of the Colony against him, he had little reason to stay. He moved to the New Haven Colony, and by 1644 had remarried to his third wife, Joanna Swinnerton. Isaac Allerton remained an active trader, and did regular business with the Dutch at New Netherland in modern-day New York. Records of his trading can be found in numerous other colonies as well, including Virginia and Barbados. ------------------------------------------- Isaac Allerton (1585/1586 - 1659) was one of the original Pilgrims who came on the Mayflower to settle at Plymouth Colony in 1620. He is believed to have been born in London, England, about 1585 or 1586 and was raised to become a tailor. A religious non-conformist, he apparently followed the Scrooby exiles to Leiden, Holland as a young man. There he married his first wife, Mary Norris, in November 1611. Accompanying Isaac and Mary on the Mayflower were their three children: Bartholemew, Remember, and Mary, and a servant boy named John Hooke. Allerton's wife and Hooke died in the first winter at the Plymouth Colony. Allerton also had a stillborn son by his wife Mary while they were on the ship in Plymouth Harbor. Allerton remarried to Fear Brewster, the daughter of William Brewster in 1626. With her he had another son naming him Isaac Allerton Jr. Bartholomew returned to England sometime after 1627. Allerton quickly rose to prominence among the Pilgrim leaders, serving as William Bradford's assistant governor during the early years of the colony. After the adoption of a more formalized governmental structure in 1624, he served again as one of five assistant governors. In 1627, he became one of the eight "undertakers" of the colony's debt and made several voyages to London to negotiate with the colony's creditors. While serving as the colony's business agent, Allerton began several business ventures of his own, relying on the colony's credit for collateral. These ventures failed, thus leaving his colleagues back in Plymouth saddled with a greatly increased debt. Also, Allerton was asked to bring over trade goods to sell to the natives, however, Allerton brought over retail goods to sell to the colonists and fishermen who came over every year. Later on Allerton did not mark which goods were his and which belonged to the colony. When the goods were unloaded, Allerton took the most expensive items leaving the Plymouth colonists with the cheaper goods. In 1629 Allerton brought Thomas Morton back to New England, and allowed him to live in his house; this got the Plymouth colonists very upset. This rendered Allerton permanently persona non grata in Plymouth. Bradford wrote: "Mr. Allerton played his own game and ran a course not only to the great wrong and determent of the Plantation... but abused them in England also in prejudice against the Plantation," and later on he wrote "Concerning Mr. Allerton's accounts. They were so large and intricate as they could not well understand them, much less examine and correct them without a great deal of time and help and his own presence, which was hard to get," and also "he screwed up his poor father-in-law's account". Settling in Marblehead, Massachusetts, Allerton established a profitable fishing business. Fear Brewster died in 1634, and Allerton married Joanna Swinnerton sometime between 1634 and 1644. He was soon commanded by the Massachusetts authorities to leave the colony. He relocated to New Amsterdam in 1643. Two years later, he moved again to the new English settlement at New Haven, Connecticut, where he continued his activities as a merchant. Allerton died in February 1659 in New Haven and was buried under the town common. Although his estate, when inventoried, appeared to be large, he was in fact found to have died insolvent. -------------------------------------------------- Isaac Allerton in Marblehead, New Amsterdam and New Haven by Robert Jennings Heinsohn, Ph.D., SMDPA The activities of Isaac Allerton in Leiden and Plymouth are well known. Well known also are the circumstances concerning his dismissal as Plymouth's London agent. The purpose of this article is to piece together information describing his activities after he left Plymouth in 1631 until his death in 1659. To appreciate Allerton's activities it is useful to summarize developments in the English, Dutch and Swedish colonies during the time he pursued his trading activities. Dutch, Swedish, English Rivalry The Dutch and Swedes were rivals and built forts and settlements along the Delaware River to control trade. While rivals, they were united in their desire to prevent the English from creating competing settlements on the Delaware. The rivalry between Dutch and Swedes waxed and waned and it wasn't until 1655 when the Dutch gained the upper hand and eliminated Swedish influence. Complicating matters were treaties with Indians that often deeded the same land to different people at different times. New Amsterdam – The Dutch West India Company (WIC) was chartered in 1621. The company claimed all the land between the Connecticut and Delaware Rivers as, New Netherlands, and built trading stations on the Hudson (North) and Delaware (South) Rivers. While English and Dutch colonies were organized for trade, they were governed differently. The English colonies at Plymouth, New Haven and Massachusetts were established for trade and conversion of Indians to Christianity. The English colonies a nonconformist religious ethos from which evolved the concepts of self-government. The Dutch on the other hand, organized colonies as business ventures requiring... "...peopling the colony ...expanding to unsettled parts increasing profit and trade..." Trade was to be "free" providing it was conducted in WIC vessels, and subject to freight charges, 15% export and 10% import duties set by WIC. New Amsterdam was the colony on Manhattan Island and the colonists were considered WIC employees subject to the authority of the Director-General who was accountable only to the company directors in the Netherlands. The Director-General and two administrators were advised by a council of five personally chosen colonists. Fort Orange (Albany, NY) was settled in 1623, Fort Nassau on the east side of the Delaware River (Camden, NJ), was settled in 1625, later abandoned but reoccupied in 1633. In 1626, Peter Minuit the first Director-General of New Amsterdam (1626-1631) purchased 22,000 acres of land from the Manatans Indians for 60 guilders ($24) worth of trinkets. Dutch families were assigned land and provided farm equipment, animals and supplies. Prescribed amounts of their agricultural products were required as repayment. In 1628 New Amsterdam contained 270 people. In 1638 William Kieft became the third Director-General and served until 1645 when he was replaced by Peter Stuyvesant. New Sweden – The first major settlement on the lower Delaware Bay, Swanendael (Lewes, DE), was undertaken by the Dutch in 1631 for whaling and growing tobacco and grain. The settlement was abandoned after Indians destroyed it and massacred the inhabitants. In 1632 Swedish, Dutch and German stockholders formed the New Sweden Company and claimed land surrounding the Delaware Bay and River to trade for furs and tobacco. In 1638 the company financed Fort Christina (Wilmington, DE) and placed it under the command of Peter Minuit. From 1638-43 tobacco became the most profitable product sent to Sweden. Peter Minuit (1580-1638) In 1641, the New Sweden Company purchased the WIC interests in Fort Nassau. In 1643 settlements were built on Timicum Island in the Delaware River (Essington, PA) and Fort Elfsborg (Salem, NJ). By 1646 New Sweden contained 200 inhabitants. Stuyvesant began to recognize that prosperous New Sweden was adversely affecting the Dutch fur trade. In 1648 he constructed Fort Beversreed on the west side of the Delaware near the mouth of the Schuykill River (Philadelphia, PA) and in 1651 he built Fort Casimir (New Castle, DE) south and upstream of Fort Christina to control all ships on the Delaware River. In 1654 new settlers from Sweden expelled the Dutch from Fort Casimir. Stuyvesant retaliated in 1655 be sending seven armed ships and 317 soldiers newly arrived from Holland to put the New Sweden forts under siege and forced their surrender. After 17 years, New Sweden passed into Dutch hands. Stuyvesant permitted the Swedish and Finish colonists to continue as a "Swedish Nation" governed by a court of their choosing, free to practice religion, organize a militia, retain their land holdings and trade with the Indians. All the Dutch settlements in North America passed into English hands after the English seized New Amsterdam in 1664. The independent "Swedish Nation" continued until 1681 when William Penn received a charter for Pennsylvania and Delaware. New Haven – Theophilus Eaton was a wealthy merchant and governor of the Eastland Company in London. He became interested in New England colonization and was one of the original patentees of the Massachusetts Colony. His longstanding friend, John Davenport, minister of a large London congregation, was persecuted by Bishop Lourd for his nonconformist views. Eaton joined Davenport and his congregation immigrating to New England, arriving in Boston Harbor in 1637. The congregation became dissatisfied with the Massachusetts Colony's severe practices and was given permission by Governor Winthrop to establish the colony, New Haven, even though the Dutch laid claim to the Quinnipiac harbor. The English did not have a patent but the settlers purchased land from the Indians in November 1638. Within a few years New Haven settlers founded settlements along the Connecticut coast and at numerous locations throughout eastern Long Island. A group of settlers in New Haven wished to establish a fur trading station on the Delaware River. While they did not have a patent, 20 families purchased land from the Indians in 1641 on the east side of the Delaware River near the Dutch Fort Nassau (Camden, NJ) opposite the mouth of the Schuykill River and at Varkens Kill, south of the Swedish Fort Christina. Disagreement arose with the Swedes in Fort Christina and the English settlers were asked to swear allegiance to Sweden or return to New Haven. In addition, the Dutch did not want competing English settlements south of New Amsterdam and in 1643 sent forces to seize the settler's ships and supplies and transport them to New Amsterdam whereupon they returned to New Haven. The smaller English settlement at Varkens Kill was allowed to remain. In 1654 some New Haven settlers made plans for a second expedition to build a settlement on the Delaware River based on their 1641 agreement with Indians and asked the Dutch for permission. The request was denied. Allerton's Activities in Marblehead, 1631-1636 In 1630/1, Bradford dismissed Allerton as Plymouth's London business agent because he betrayed the colony's trust by overcharging, mishandling the colony's finances and increasing the colony's debt without approval. Believing his work was misunderstood and unappreciated, Allerton decided to trade for himself. Allerton's stature in the colony was substantial, and he continued living in Plymouth with his wife and children and was elected Assistant Governor in 1633/34. At this time Allerton was the wealthiest man in Plymouth and the largest taxpayer. In June 1632 Allerton and James Sherley (an original Merchant Adventurer and Undertaker) formed a trading company and built trading stations on the Kennebec and Penobscot Rivers. In September 1632 Allerton and Moses Maverick (1611-1685, husband of his oldest daughter, Remember, 1614-1652/56) sailed the White Angel (leased from James Sherley) into the harbor at Marblehead. Allerton and Maverick purchased fishing vessels, built a warehouse and quarters for fishermen. By 1633 they had five men and eight boats fishing in the harbor. In 1633 they built a second warehouse and fisherman's quarters at Machias on Maine's north coast. Maverick and Allerton were among the original settlers of Marblehead. In 1633/44 Allerton experienced a series of misfortunes. The French and Indians destroyed his fishing facilities in Machias and one of his ships was lost at sea while trading with France. In February 1634 the living quarters housing Allerton and his fishermen in Marblehead was destroyed by fire. Plymouth suffered an epidemic and Allerton's second wife, Fear, daughter of William Brewster, died of fever in December 1634. Allerton conveyed his Plymouth property at Rocky Nook (later called Kingston) to his youngest daughter Mary (1616-1699) and her husband Thomas Cushman (1607/08-1691). Allerton angered the Massachusetts Colony General Court by embracing freethinking religious views. In addition, he employed as secretary, Thomas Morton of "Merrymount," whose religious beliefs and unacceptable personal behavior caused him to be involuntarily returned to England in 1629. In addition, Morton and Allerton befriended Roger Williams whose extreme separatist views offended the Puritan ministers. Williams was banished and established a colony in Providence, RI. In March 1635 the civil authorities ordered Allerton to leave Marblehead and in May he conveyed his Marblehead fishing properties to Moses Maverick and moved to New Amsterdam. Moses remained in Marblehead to become a leader in New England's fishing industry, and one of Marblehead's leading citizens holding many positions of civic authority throughout his life. Allerton's Activities in New Amsterdam, 1636-1646 Between 1636 and 1642 Allerton's activities are not well known. There is not evidence that he had a permanent home in New Amsterdam. He may have traded for himself, or the WIC, or for wealthy Dutch family trading companies in New Amsterdam. New Amsterdam in 1651 Engraving by Joost Hartgers Allerton established good relations with Director-General William Kieft and was granted "burger privileges" as a resident of New Amsterdam. One of the earliest records of Allerton's trade in New Amsterdam was trading corn with Director-General William Kieft in 1639. In 1642 Allerton sold his bark, Hope, to New Amsterdam residents Govert Loockermans and Cornelius Leendertsen. Allerton and Loockermans became partners in trading and in 1643 were granted permission to buy land on the east side of Broadway, which they sold shortly thereafter. Loockermans became a wealthy landholder, and influential in the governance of New Amsterdam, both before and after being seized by the English. Director-General William Kieft was an autocrat and ruled New Amsterdam in an arbitrary fashion, generating animosity throughout the colony. In 1643 a minor altercation with Indians evolved into a serious uprising followed by an ugly slaughter of Weckquaskeek Indians on Manhattan Island. Kieft feared a major Indian assault. Allerton was asked by Kieft to join a "group of 8 men" to help New Amsterdam. Because he was English and respected in New Haven, Kieft sent Allerton and another Englishman to New Haven in 1643 to ask for men and materials to help defend New Amsterdam. In addition, the "group of 8" was asked to propose measures to improve civility and law-and-order in New Amsterdam. New Haven refused to send men to support the Dutch but Kieft entered into an agreement with the Indians in 1645 that settled the dispute. Because of Kieft's dictatorial manner, several of the eight men petitioned the WIC directors to recall Kieft as Director-General. In time Kieft was replaced by Peter Stuyvesant, and the men initiating the recall petition were accused of insurrection and faced punishment. Allerton was the second signatory of the petition but was not the group's primary spokesman. In 1646, Allerton established a permanent residence in New Haven. Allerton was unique among all the 17th century New England trader merchants because he was an influential resident in both New Amsterdam and New Haven. As a resident in both colonies, he engaged in trade free of the restraints New Amsterdam imposed on English traders, and New Haven imposed on Dutch traders. Thus Allerton was able to trade in English colonies in North America, Swedish and Dutch settlements on the Delaware River. Trade records show that he also traded in ports in England and the Netherlands, Curacao, the Barbados, Virginia, New Amsterdam, New England and Canada. During the testy years when New Amsterdam and New Sweden were at sword's points, Allerton traded in New Sweden while not antagonizing the Dutch and obtained goods that he transported to New Amsterdam for shipment to Europe in Dutch ships. Other English traders were less successful from trading with the Swedish and Dutch on the Delaware. Allerton's Activities in New Sweden, 1644-1655 Ships from Sweden were unable to provide a reliable stream of supplies to the New Sweden settlements and the settlers depended on visits from Dutch trader merchants. Using his sloop, Allerton began trading in New Sweden and remained one of its principal and reliable traders until he retired. In January 1644 Allerton sold goods at Fort Christina. In June 1644 he sold 11,346 pounds of tobacco for 5 stivers per pound (Dutch money, 20 stivers = 1 guilder). In the fall of 1645 he returned to collect his outstanding accounts and sold 14 bushels of barley seed, a pair of millstones and Dutch bushel measures. In the fall of 1647 Allerton returned to collect 3,800 florin (British money, florin = 2 shillings) on his accounts. In 1651 Allerton was a witness to an agreement in which the Indians granted the Dutch land south of Fort Casimir. In 1654 Allerton sold 13,519 pounds of Virginian tobacco at 9 stivers per pound and if the Swedes were unable to receive a gross profit of 7 stivers per pound that they expected in Europe, he agreed to reduce his price. In 1654/6 Allerton acted as courier and interpreter for the Governors of New Haven and New Sweden concerning permission for the English to build a settlement on the Delaware based on an agreement the English made with the Indians in 1641. The request was refused. In 1655 Allerton brought food, vinegar, hops to Christina on credit. In 1656 he transported goods from Christina for sale in New Amsterdam. These trading practices illustrate a way for the Governor of New Sweden ensured steady visits from merchant traders. Using both credit and currency the Governor knew that the trader merchants would return to redeem credit owed them. For their part, Allerton and other trader merchants offered credit to ensure that their return with new supplies would be welcomed. Owing to the shortage of European currency and manufactured goods in New Sweden, Indian wampum became a common medium of exchange in the fur trade. Wampum were beads Indians made from clam shells and strung on strings, woven into belts or sewn on garments as ornaments. Indians along the Delaware River valued wampum made by New England Indians from clam shells found in the Narragansett Bay and from the shores of Long Island Sound. Making wampum was a time-consuming craft in which the Narrgansetts excelled. Wampum made by the English was inferior and less valuable in trade. Indians with whom New Sweden traded prized New England wampum as the medium of exchange in trade for furs. Allerton acquired New England wampum extensively, he often acted as a courier carrying passengers, important documents, letters of credit between Dutch, English and Swedish colonies. In 1654 Cromwell sent two ships and 900 men to seize New Amsterdam by force. When the ships were anchored in Boston harbor Allerton learned that the attack would begin in a few weeks and informed Director-General Peter Stuyvesant who began to assemble a force to defend the colony. Cromwell and the government in the Netherlands signed a treaty of allegiance and the attack was called off. Allerton's Warehouse in New Amsterdam, 1646-1655 In 1646 Allerton purchased a narrow, 500-ft strip of waterfront property on the East River a mile north of the tip of Manhattan and constructed a two-story warehouse and dock. The warehouse was managed by George Woolsey from Yarmouth, England. The warehouse at 1700 Pearl Street became known as "Allerton's Building" and was a favorite place where English traders convened when conducting business in New Amsterdam. The northern end of the land was called Peck's Slip where a ferry provided service across the East River to Brooklyn. In 1654 the house was used as an almshouse for boys and girls from the Netherlands "bound-out" for employment in New Amsterdam. In 1656 Woolsey received permission to sell beer and wine and to operate the house as an inn. After Allerton's death, George Woolsey lived in the house until 1668. The building survived into the 18th century at a location that today would be near the South Street Sea Port and the intersection of the South and Peck Slip Streets, several hundred feet south of the Brooklyn Bridge. By 1655 Allerton was recorded to be the sixth wealthiest resident in New Amsterdam. Allerton Married Joanne Swinnerton Sometime before 1644 Allerton married his third wife, Joanna Swinnerton in New Haven. Joanna is believed to be the widow of Job Swinnerton, admitted to Salem in 1637. In 1646, Allerton asked Bradford, Brewster, Winslow and Standish to be his agents and sell his lands, goods and cattle to clear all his debts and demands of the undertakers that were uncovered in 1630/31. In 1646 Allerton became a permanent resident of New Haven where he and his wife lived for the remainder of his life except for trading voyages and occasional visits to his warehouse in New Amsterdam. In March 1647 Isaac and Joanna were assigned seats in the New Haven meeting house. He built a stately home with four porches and many fireplaces on two acres of land on the creek on the northwest corner of Union Street between Cherry Street on the north, and Fair Street on the south. The home was located among the grand homes of Davenport, Eaton and other original New Haven settlers. In 1661 Allerton's widow, Joanna sheltered Edward Whaley and William Goffe, the Regicide Judges who sentenced Charles I to be beheaded and who were now being pursued by the agents for Charles II to be returned for trial in England. Allerton Died in 1659 Isaac Allerton died early in the year 1659. He was buried in the old Burying Ground at New Haven that occupied the square in the heart of the present city upon which stands the Old State House and three churches. No monument or gravestone have been found. The burgomasters of New Amsterdam appointed Allerton's son, and his business associates, Loockermans, Leendertsen, George Woolsey, and John Lawrence to be curators of his trading business which included ships, warehouse and real estate in New Amsterdam. In spite of his reputation as one of New England's wealthiest merchants, Allerton died insolvent with debts to creditors located in many of the ports in which he traded. Allerton's son purchased his father's New Haven home from his creditors and deeded it to his stepmother, Joanna, in 1660. Joanna died in 1682. The home was taken down in 1740. Allerton's Son Isaac, 1630-1702 Allerton had two sons, His first son, Bartholomew, was born in Leiden (ca 1612), sailed on the Mayflower but retuned to England after 1627. His second son, Isaac, was born to Fear in 1630 and was among nine men in the seventh class to graduate from Harvard in 1650. By 1653 he was active in his father's trading activities. Following the death of his mother (Fear) in 1633, Isaac (Jr.) was raised by his grandfather William Brewster. Brewster died in 1644 and it is not known who cared for Isaac (Jr.), who would have been 14 years old. In order to enter Harvard, Isaac (Jr.) needed to demonstrate a certain level of academic achievement and secondly, the recommendation from a prominent individual(s). Allerton (senior) had the wealth for his son's education and it is suspected that William Brewster, who had the largest library in Plymouth, provided the education and recommendation needed to be accepted in Harvard. Isaac (Jr.) married Elizabeth __ from New Haven as early as 1652. they had two children while residing in New Haven, Elizabeth (b 1653), Isaac (b 1655). As early as 1655 Isaac Allerton (Jr.) purchased land in Northumberland Country Virginia. Isaac Allerton's (Jr.) wife Elizabeth died about 1660. He moved his young family to Virginia and married the widow Elizabeth Colclough about 1663. They had three children, Willoughby, Frances and Sarah, born in Virginia. In 1665 Isaac Allerton (Jr.) was a major in the Virginia militia and second in command to Colonel John Washington (grandfather of our first president) engaged in Indian campaigns. Isaac Allerton (Jr.) was a county Justice of the Peace, member of the Virginia House of Burgess 1676-7 and died in 1702 owning a 2,150-acre plantation on the Rappahanock River. Children in Isaac's (Jr.) first family returned to New Haven, married and their descendants distributed themselves throughout New England and New York. Children in Isaac's (Jr.) second family remained in Virginia, married and their descendants distributed themselves throughout Virginia. Conclusions There are no portraits of Isaac Allerton and very few reports about him written by people who actually knew him. In the words of James Sherley: As an agent, Mr. Allerton appears to have been indefatigable in his attempts to promote the interests of his employers. He was a person of uncommon activity, address and enterprise. In the absence of more information, it is possible to speculate about Allerton's personality based on his accomplishments. His vigorous trading practices would be commonplace today but in the 1620s they offended the Pilgrim's collectivist attitude and he was censured by Plymouth. His freethinking religious views would also be commonplace today but in 1634/5 they offended Puritan sensibilities and caused his banishment from Marblehead. Having been burned twice, Allerton's activities in New Haven and New Amsterdam display prudence borne of experience. He avoided personal involvement in acrimonious political disputes within, and between the colonies. Caution enabled him to remain above controversy to pursue trading and become a prominent and trusted trader merchant in three rival colonies that were often sword points. Records show that he contributed financially to civic activities in both New Amsterdam and New Haven when called upon during emergencies and trough regular assessments. Some historians use the words "unlucky" and "unscrupulous" to describe Allerton, but the historical records of New Amsterdam, New Haven and New Sweden contain no evidence that his trading practices were unscrupulous. Johan Rising, Governor of New Sweden recorded that Allerton drove a "sharp bargain," but so did all trader merchants of the time. While other men rose to prominence as political leaders, Allerton achieved success in the world of commerce. He overcame adversity three times in his life and recovered to build four successful careers. After fleeing Suffolk County England, Allerton, Brewster and Priest displayed such enterprise in the Netherlands that they were granted honorary citizenship in Leiden. Allerton survived the Mayflower voyage and the horrific first year in Plymouth and rose to become Assistant Governor and London agent. He left Plymouth in disgrace, began a thriving fishing enterprise in Marblehead only to be expelled because of his freethinking religious views. Beginning anew for the fourth time he became one of New England's most successful trader-merchants and a prominent citizen of both New Haven and New Amsterdam. Allerton was an uncommon man of unusual talent who lived a long and active life. His resourcefulness to overcome adversity suggests that he should be counted as one of the remarkable men in early 17th century America. He mastered the world of commerce and rose above the political conflicts that embroiled the English, Swedish and Dutch colonies to become a respected citizen in all these colonies. Many of Allerton's contemporaries refer to him as the first "Yankee trader" and "more Dutch than English." He epitomized what today is called the entrepreneur. One suspects that if Allerton were alive today, he would recognize, indeed master, the exotic financial activities such as off-shore limited partnerships, investment hedging, derivatives and other business practices that characterize today's global economy. Dr. Robert Jennings Heinsohn is Emeritus Professor of Mechanical Engineering at The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA. Born in Brooklyn, New York, he and his wife Anne have lived in Pennsylvania Furnace, PA, since 1963. He is a descendant of Isaac Allerton, John Howland, John Tilley, and Robert Cushman, the chief agent of the Pilgrims in London. BIBLIOGRAPY Allerton, W., A History of The Allerton Family in the United States 1585 to 1885, published by Samuel Walter Allerton, New Y 1888 (reprinted by Higginson Books, Salem, MA) Calder, I. M., The New Haven Colony, Yale University Press, New Haven, CT, 1934 Cushman H., Memoirs of Isaac Allerton, NEHGR, Vol. 8, p 265-270, 1854 Dahlgren S. and Norman H., The Rise and Fall of New Sweden, Almqvist & Wiksell Intl., Stockholm, Sweden, 1988 Greenwood I., Allertons of New England and Virginia, NEHGR Vol. 44, p 290-296, July 1890 (reprinted by Higginson Books, Salem, MA) Hall, N. A., Joanna Swinnerton: The Third Wife on Isaac Allerton Sr., NEHGR Vol. 124, p 133, 1970 Hoadly, C. J., Records of the Colony Jurisdiction of New Haven 1635-1665, Case Lockwood & Co, Hartford, CT, 1858 Hoffecker, C. E., Waldron R., Williams, E. and Benson B.E., New Sweden in America, University Delaware Press, Newark, DE, 1995 Innes J. H., New Amsterdam and Its People, Vols. I & II, Ira J. Friedman, Inc., Port Washington, NY, 1902 Johnson, A., The Swedish Settlements on the Delaware, Vols. I & II, Burt Franklin, New York, NY, 1911, republished 1970 Roads, S. Jr., The History and Traditions of Marblehead, Houghton, Osgood, Co., Cambridge, 1880 Shepherd, W. R., The Story of New Amsterdam, Ira J. Friedman division, Kennikat Press, Port Washington, NY, 1926 Wakefield, Robert S., FASG, and Margaret Harris Stover, CG, Mayflower Families Trough Five Generations, Volume 17, The Family of Isaac Allerton, 1998 ----------------------------------------- Will of Isaac Allerton, 1659: At a Court of Magistrates Octob. 19. 59 A writeing presented as the last will & Testament of Isaac Alerton, late of Newhaven deceased, wth an account of certaine debts, dew to him; & from him; An account of Debts at the Duch first, 700. & odd gilders from Tho: Hall by Arbitration of Captaine Willet, & Augustine Harman; about Captaine Scarlet wch I paid out, And there is 900 gilders owing by John Peterson the Bore, as by Georg Woolseyes booke will appeare; & severall obligations thereto, ffrom Richard Cloufe owes, as Georg Woolseyes Booke will make appeare; I thinke 900. gilders, but his Estate being broken. I Desire that what may be gotten may be layd hold on for mee, Due from william Goulder 270, od gilders, by his Bill appeares; Due from John Snedecare a shoomaker 150, od gilders as by his acco appeares. from the widdow of the Hanc Hancson due as by severall Bills & accounts; Peter Cornelioussen 120. od guilders as by ye account will appeare. Due from Henry Brasser for rent for 28 moneths, from the first October 1656. to the last of May 58: for three roomes at 3 gilders a week. I am in his Debt for worke of the old acco wch must be Deducted; there is 20 li in George Woolseyes hand, that came fro. mr Tho Maybue for mee There is 420. oaf. gilders that I owe to Nicholas, the ffrenchman, & a Cooper I owe something to, wch I would have that 201; in Georg Woolseyes hand, & the rest of that in Henry Brassers hand to them two; And now I leave my son Isaac Allerton and my wife, as Trustees to receive in my debts, & to pay what I owe, as farr as it will goe & what is overpluss I leave to my wife and my sonne Isaac, as far as they receive the Debts to pay what I owe; In Captaine Willetts hand. a pcell of booke lace 1300 & odd. guilders Wch I left in trust with Captaine Willett to take care of: Seale My brother Bruster owes mee foure score pounds & odd. as the obligations will appeare. Besides all my Debts in Delloware Bay & in Virgenia wch in my booke will appeare, & in Barbadoes. what can be gott; Witness. Isaac Allerton Senior John Harriman
~1606 - <1634
Fear
Brewster
28
28
Fear Brewster was the third daughter of Mayflower pilgrim William Brewster and his wife Mary. She was named Fear because at the time of her birth, the Puritans were holding secret meetings and were under constant threat of arrest. Her early years, and indeed her whole life, were full of unrest. In 1608 she moved, along with the other pilgrims, to Amsterdam (and later Leiden). Fear was only 14 when her parents and two younger brothers left for America on the Mayflower. She was left in the care of her older siblings, Jonathan (born in 1593) and Patience (born in 1600). Jonathan joined the pilgrims in 1621 onboard the Fortune. Fear arrived in America with Patience onboard the Anne in July 1623. Fear married Isaac Allerton, another Mayflower pilgrim, around 1626. He was 20 years her senior. They had a son, Isaac Allerton Jr., born about 1627. There is speculation that they had a daughter, Sarah Allerton, who was baptised on August 13, 1633 and probably died in infancy. Fear died young, but the exact date is unknown. She died sometime before her sister Patience's death December 12, 1634.
~1643
John
Rice
~1660 - ~1687
William
Travers
27
27
1686/7, 14 Feb: William TRAVERS of Rappahannock Co., VA Gent., made his will. Gave to my dear Mother, Rebecca RICE, 5000 pounds of tobacco, during her natural life to be left in the hands of my brother Samuel TRAVERS, to be at her disposall when she shall be pleased to call for it & after her death to return to my said brother Samll TRAVERS, & Rawleigh TRAVERS their heires executrs. Gave to my father in law John RICE, my riding horse with furniture. Gave all the rest of my estate unto my two loveing brother Samll & Rawligh TRAVERS, their heires executrs Adminstrs forever equally to be divided between them. My will is that if my Father in law, Mr John RICE, pay 15000 pounds of tobacco as part of my estate unto my said loveing brothers their heirs or order on the 10th day of March which will be in the year of our Lord 1687/8 that then he shall have the liberty to pay the remayning part from thence until the tenth day of October which will be in the year of our Lord God 1689. I do constitute and appoint my two loveing Brothers Samll & Rawleigh TTRAVERS my lawfull executrs of this my last Will and Testament. Signed Wm. TRAVERS. Wits. Wm SLOUGHTER, Geo BAKER, Joanna GRAYDEON.
~1673 - ~1701
Rawleigh
Travers
28
28
1692, 2 Dec: Rawleigh TRAVERS of Richmond Co., VA, Gent., one of ye sons of Colo. Wm. TRAVERS late of Rappahannock Co., deced, Whereas my said Father inter alia dyed seized of a certain divident or Tract of lande in Stafford Co. upon ye head of Doeggs Creeke containinge 786 acres of lands as by ye Survey & Pattent will appeare writ Pattent beares date 22 Mar 1677 recorded in ye Secretaries Office and forasmuch as that ye aforesaid Divident of 786 acres of land by dissent in Law came & descended to Samll. of Richmond aforesaid Eldest Brother to me ye said Rawleigh & heir at law to my said Father wch aforesaid Samll. TRAVERSE in consideration of his Brotherly love and naturall affection to me ye said Rawleigh TRAVERSE did sell and sett over in fee simple to me ye said Rawleigh as appeares by his Deed of Conveyance to me executed & recorded in Rappahannock Co. Court records, Now Know yee that I ye said Rawleigh TRAVERSE for ye sume of 5000 poundes of Tobacco in hande paid mee by Wm. LAMBERT of Northumberland Co., Planter, have sold unto ye said Wm. LAMBERT his heires & assignes ye uppermost 200 acres of ye said Divident, bounded begininge alt an old marked pohickorie standings at ye head of Dogues Creeke close by ye Horse Road Cove and against a great branch that is on ye Northeast of said Creeke and extendinge into ye woods accordinge to ye Pattent North West by a line of trees West South West to a Corner tree to bee marked & from thence North East & by East to ye above mentioned pohickorie. Signed Rawleige TRAVERSE. Wits. George BRENT, John PYKE. Rawleigh TRAVERSE doe by these presents authorize my good friende & Kinsman Mr. Rawleigh TRAVERSE of Ocouakeeke in Stafford Co. my true & Lawfull Atturney to acknowledge my Deed of Sale in Stafford Court to William LAMBERT or his Atturney. Signed Taw. TRAVERSE. Wits. George BRENT, John PYKE. Rawleigh TRAVERSE ye Atturney of ye above said Rawleigh TRAVERSE came into Court 14 Dec 1692 and acknowledged ye abovesaid Deed of Sale.
D. ~1620
Mary
Norris
She died in the first winter at the Plymouth Colony.
~1566 - 1644
William
Brewster
78
78
William Brewster was a Pilgrim colonist leader and preacher who came from Scrooby, in north Nottinghamshire and reached what became the Plymouth Colony in the Mayflower in 1620. He is generally considered to be the most famous of the pilgrims. He was accompanied by his wife, Mary Brewster, and his sons, Love Brewster and Wrestling Brewster. Son Jonathan joined the family in November 1621, arriving at Plymouth on the ship Fortune, and daughters Patience and Fear arrived in July 1623 aboard the "Anne." Scrooby Manor was in the possession of the Archbishops of York. Brewster's father, William senior, had been the estate bailiff for the archbishop for thirty-one years from around 1580. With this post went that of postmaster, which was a more important one than it might have been in a village not situated on the Great North Road, as Scrooby was then. William Junior studied briefly at Peterhouse, Cambridge before entering the service of William Davidson in 1584. In 1585, Davidson went to the Netherlands to negotiate an alliance with the States-General. In 1586, Davidson was appointed assistant to Queen Elizabeth's Secretary of State Francis Walsingham, but in 1587 Davidson lost the favour of Elizabeth, after the beheading of her cousin (once removed) Mary, Queen of Scots. Cambridge was a centre of thought concerning religious reformism, but Brewster's time in the Netherlands, in connection with Davidson's work, gave him opportunity to hear and see more of reformed religion. While, earlier in the sixteenth century, reformers had hoped to amend the Anglican church, by the end of it, many were looking toward splitting from it. On Davidson's disgrace, Brewster returned to Scrooby. There, from 1590 to 1607, he held the position of postmaster. As such he was responsible for the provision of stage horses for the mails, having previously, for a short time, assisted his father in that office. By the 1590s, Brewster's brother, James, was a rather rebellious Anglican priest, vicar of the parish of Sutton and Lound, in Nottinghamshire. From 1594, it fell to James to appoint curates to Scrooby church so that Brewster, James and leading members of the Scrooby congregation were brought before the ecclesiastical court for their dissent. They were set on a path of separation from the Anglican Church. From about 1602, Scrooby Manor, Brewster's home, became a meeting place for the dissenting Puritans. In 1606, they formed the Separatist Church of Scrooby. Restrictions and pressures applied by the authorities convinced the congregation of a need to emigrate to the more sympathetic atmosphere of Holland, but leaving England without permission was illegal at the time, so that departure was a complex matter. On its first attempt, in 1607, the group was arrested at Scotia Creek, but in 1608 Brewster and others were successful in leaving from The Humber. In 1609, he was selected as ruling elder of the congregation. Initially, the Pilgrams settled in Amersterdam, and worshipped with the Ancient Church of Francis Johsonson and Henry Ainsworth. Offput by the bickering between the two, though (which ultimately resulted in a division of the Church), the Pilgrams left Amsterdam and moved to Leiden, after only a year. In Leiden, the group managed to make a living. Brewster taught English and later, in 1616-1619, printed and published religious books for sale in England though they were proscribed there, as the partner of one Thomas Brewer. In 1619, the printing type was seized by the authorities under pressure from the English ambassador Sir Dudley Carleton and Brewster's partner was arrested. Brewster escaped and, with the help of Robert Cushman, obtained a land patent from the London Virginia Company on behalf of himself and his colleagues. In 1620 he joined the first group of Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower on the voyage to North America. When the colonists landed at Plymouth, Brewster became the senior elder of the colony, serving as its religious leader and as an advisor to Governor William Bradford. As the only university educated member of the colony, Brewster took the part of the colony's religious leader until a pastor, Ralph Smith, arrived in 1629. Thereafter, he continued to preach irregularly until his death in April 1644. Brewster was granted land amongst the islands of Boston Harbor, and four of the outer islands (Great Brewster, Little Brewster, Middle Brewster and Outer Brewster) now bear his name.
Mary
William Brewster married Mary (whose maiden name is unknown) there is some speculation as to her maiden name, with the most common being Love or Wentworth. The maiden name of William Brewster's wife has not been proven. The claim it was Mary Wentworth rests solely on the fact that Mary Wentworth happened to live somewhat close to William Brewster in Scrooby, Nottingham. That is very shaky evidence to say the least. Further, it has been proposed that William Brewster may have married Mary Wyrall, but the evidence is just as flimsy for that marriage. There are no fewer than seven marriages from 1590-1610 that have been located in parish registers showing a William Brewster marrying a Mary. All, however, have been satisfactorily eliminated as probable candidates for the William and Mary (Brewster) who came on the Mayflower. So at present, there is no evidence to document who William Brewster's wife Mary actually was.
Elizabeth
She was Isaac Allerton's first wife.
1653 - 1740
Elizabeth
87
87
1655
Isaac
Allerton
Isaac Allerton is not named in his father's will. Under the primogeniture in force in Virginia at that time Isaac, if he were living, would have been entitled to a share of his father's estate even if he were not named in the will. There is no record he shared in the estate and it must be assumed he died childless before his father.
~1664 - 1724
Willoughby
Allerton
60
60
Probate inventory for his grandson Willoughby Allerton (his son Isaac's son who died in 1759) is here: http://xpda.com/family/etc/AllertonWilloughby1759Inventory.pdf
~1671 - >1731
Sarah
Allerton
60
60
1653 - 1709
Hancock
Lee
56
56
~1703 - ~1750
Elizabeth
Lee
47
47
1707 - <1768
Zachary
Taylor
60
60
~1743 - 1829
Richard
Lee
Taylor
85
85
1760 - 1822
Sarah
Dabney
Strother
62
62
1784 - 1850
Zachary
Taylor
65
65
He was 12th President of the United States, 1849-50. He died in office and was succeeded by his Vice President Millard Fillmore.
D. <1661
Simon
Overzee
D. <1663
George
Colclough
~1593 - 1658
Thomas
Willoughby
65
65
In 1610, as a young man of 17, Thomas Willoughby the immigrant left Rochester, Kent, England for Virginia. His age at the time of his migration suggests that he might have been a younger son in search of the advancement that the accident of birth had denied him. But whether or not he was entitled to be called a gentleman, as he was styling himself by the 1620s, is uncertain. Willoughby's early years in the New World are clouded by a dearth of evidence. He may have done some soldiering prior to his coming or soon thereafter, for he was listed in the muster of 1624/25 as "Ensigne Thomas Willoby." By the 1620s, though, Willoughby clearly had begun to acquire land and political offices. Although his name does not appear in the land patent records until 1628, he had already sued out patents to three hundred acres of land as early as 1626. By the time he died, Willoughby had amassed over 3,600 acres of land by patent. His military experiences probably account for his gradual insinuation into the colony's political life. In 1627 Governor George Yeardley and the Council of State appointed him to command a militia force sent to attack hostile Indians. There after, Willoughby served as a judge on one of the monthly courts that preceded the county court system, and he sat in the House of Burgesses. After the General Assembly erected the county courts, he became one of the first justices of the peace in Lower Norfolk County, following its formation in 1637. By the 1640s he had been elevated to a seat on the Council of State, a post he apparently occupied until Interregnum. In addition to these public duties, Willoughby performed other community services. For his neighbors he was one of the chief creditors in the county. As such, his name regularly appears in court records as a suitor in debt actions. Since he also engaged in a wide range of commercial activities and even made frequent trips to London, it may be surmised that he was also a contact for city merchants as well. On more than one occasion, Willoughby was asked by county officials to do such tasks as buy law books for the court of recruit a minister from England. Thomas Willoughby died in England sometime before August 1658. He left two daughters and a son, but since he died intestate, there is no record of how his property was distributed among his heirs. The Old Dominion in the Seventeenth Century, Warren M. Billings, 1975 ---------------------------------- Thomas Willoughby was from Rochester, Kent, England. He came to America in 1610 aboard The Prosperorous. He was among the first settlers in that area. July 4, 1627, Ensigne Thomas Willoughby was ordered to command an attack on the Indians. James City Court: "At this court was thought fit that we should draw out parties from all our plantations and go upon the Indians and cut down their corn, and further that we should set upon them all in one day, vizt. the first day of August next: ... For the Chesapeakes, Ensigne Willoby ... November 17, 1628, Ensigne Thomas Willoughby of Elizabeth City was awarded a land patent of 50 acres. In 1628/29 Thomas Willoughby was assigned as a monthly court judge in Elizabeth City. In 1629/30 Thomas Willoughby, William Kemp, and Thomas Hayrick were Burgesses for the Assembly, representing the Upper Part of Elizabeth City. In 1631/32 Thomas Willoughby was a Burgesse for the Assembly, representing Waters Creek and the upper parrish of Elizabeth City. In 1639 he was Justice of the Peace, and in 1640 he was a Member of the Council of State. Captain Thomas Willoughby was granted 2,900 acres of land for the transportation of 28 people to Virginia. In March, 1645- 46, the assembly ordered Capt. Edward Hill and Capt. Thomas Willoughby to go Maryland and demand the return of certain Virginians who had remained there without permission. While in Maryland, Hill was chosen governor by the insurrectionist party and held office for several months.
Alice
1535 - 1590
William
Brewster
55
55
In January of 1575 or 1576 he was appointed by Archbishop Sandys as "receiver of the town of Scrooby and bailiff of the manor house in that place belonging to the Archbishop, to have life-tenure of both offices." 1563 - William BREWSTER (Sr.) married first about 1563 to Mary (SMYTHE) SYMKINSON, daughter of William SMYTHE of Stainforth and widow of John SYMKINSON. In 1579, William BREUSTER and Mary his wife sued in chancery, William and Francis HOBSON, claiming life settlement of lands in Doncaster, late of John SYMKINSON, formerly husband of said Mary BREWSTER. John SYMKINSON and Mary his wife are first named in YORKSHIRE FINES in the year 1556 regarding lands in Wakefield, while they are last named during his lifetime in a fine of the year 1562 regarding lands at Wakefield. William and Mary (SMYTHE) BREWSTER had a son William BREWSTER (1563-1644). THE AMERICAN GENEALOGIST, v.41, pp.1-5; Sherwood, Mary B., PILGRIM, A BIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM BREWSTER (1982), p.15. 1579 - In 1579, William BREUSTER (Sr.) and Mary his wife, in 1579, sued in chancery, William and Francis HOBSON, claiming life settlement of lands in Doncaster, late of John SYMKINSON, formerly husband of said Mary BREWSTER. John SYMKINSON and Mary his wife are first named in YORKSHIRE FINES in the year 1556 regarding lands in Wakefield, while they are last named during his lifetime in a fine of the year 1562 regarding lands at Wakefield. 1580 - Sometime after 1579, William BREWSTER (Sr.) married second to Prudence STOCTON, who was his relict. William and Prudence (STOCTON) BREWSTER probably had children James BREWSTER m. --?-- WELBECK; Prudence BREWSTER m. Robert PECK; and John BREWSTER. THE AMERICAN GENEALOGIST, v.41, pp.1-5; Banks, Charles Edward, THE ENGLISH ANCESTRY AND HOMES OF THE PILGRIM FATHERS (1929), pp.35-39; Sherwood, Mary B., PILGRIM, A BIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM BREWSTER (1982), p.15.
Mary
Smythe
~1505
William
Brewster
children: William and Henry.
Maud
Mann
~1505
William
Smyth
John
Simkinson
Joanna
Swinnerton
1679 - ~1749
Joseph
Cox
70
70
He was one of the two children referred to by the administrator of his father's estate as being "very small" at the time of his father's death. Joseph increased in stature, however, as the years went on and when he arrived at man's estate, married Catharine, daughter of Thomas and Deborah (Grover) Shepherd. This matrimonial alliance introduced him to one of the oldest families of the colony. Catharine Shepherd was a great grand-daughter of William Lawrence Sr., one of the founders of Middletown, who is said to have been a son of Sir Henry Lawrence, President of Cromwell's Council, and Amy Peyton, whose family afterwards became prominent in Virginia. In 1706, Thomas Cooper, a London merchant and one of the twenty-four proprietors of East Jersey, conveyed one-half of his proprietorship, or one forty-eighth part of all the lands in the Eastern division of New Jersey, with the exception of 5000 acres, to thirteen persons, resident in the township of Middletown. The name of Joseph Cox and that of his brother James, appears in the deed of conveyance among the grantees who thus came into possession of a very extensive and valuable tract of land. The consideration named in the deed was only £260, but even that sum, in hard cash, was no doubt, of more value to an enterprising London merchant than an untamed wilderness three thousand miles away. But whatever his point of view it is clear that the purchasers made an entirely safe and judicious investment. A year later, he became interested in the movement to dissolve the Assembly and to bring about a new election, and contributed £12 towards the fund, that was raised to further this object, his brother, James, contributing a liberal though somewhat smaller amount. How this money was used we are not informed. John Bowne who was the custodian of the fund, doubtless gave an account of his stewardship but was not required, apparently, to make public his disposition of the so-called " Blind Tack." Thereafter his name occurs at intervals, in public records, for a period of forty years, chiefly in connection with the transfer of land, the witnessing of wills, and the recording of the ear mark with which his cattle were branded. The last conveyance that he is known to have made bears date of February 29, ( ?) 1747-8. when in consideration of £400 he gave to Matthias Johnson, his son-in-law, and Obadiah Bowne, yeomen, both of Middletown, a deed for certain property in Middletown, Shrewsbury and Barnegat, reserving as a burying ground for his posterity, one chain square, (in Middle- town?) where his wife and children were buried. Reference is made in the same instrument, to land in Middletown which he had previously given to his son Thomas. That his death occurred soon after the above transaction, may be inferred from a town record of November 17, 1750, to the effect that "Matthias Johnson, Jr., used the ear mark of his grandfather, Joseph Cox," at that time, apparently, deceased. Children : i. Thomas, ii. a daughter, wife of Matthias Johnson, and others whose names are not known.
~1646 - 1681
Thomas
Cox
35
35
Thomas Cox was "a man of ability,education and prominence." He settled on Long Island, New York at the head of Newtown Creek in 1665. Then he moved to Monmouth New Jersey and in 1667 lived in Middletown. In 1668 he helped make laws for Middletown, and was a founder of the Baptist Church in Middletown. ------------------------------ Thomas Cox, was born, probably, in England. He died in Middletown, NJ, 1681; a resident of Newtown, Long Island, in 1665, as appears from his marriage license, issued in that year, by the Colonial Governor, Richard Nicolls, of New York. The following is a transcript made from the original document in the State Library at Albany, in 1908: "Whereas I have received information of a mutual intent and agreement between Thomas Cox of Marshpath Kills in ye Lymmits of New Towne, and Elizabeth Blashford to enter into the state of matrimony, and that there lyeth no lawful obstacle or obligation on either part to hinder the performance thereof, I do hereby grant unto them Lycences so to do—and do also require one of ye Jus tices of ye peace of ye North Ryding of Yorkshire upon Long Island or ye Minister of some Parish therein to Joyne the said Thomas Cox and Elizabeth Blashford in Marryage, and to pronounce them man and wife and so to record them according to the law made in that behalf, for doing whereof this shall be sufficient warrant. Given under my hand and Seal at James Hart in New York this 22nd day of April, 1665. Rich. Nicolls." No mention of his name occurs in the early records of Newtown, nor is anything positively known as to the time or place of his birth, or the date of his arrival in the colony. From the Public Record Office in London, however, we learn that in 1650, one Thomas Cox, with two others, was licensed to pass to Virginia. There is also in possession of one of the descendants of Thomas Cox, of Newtown, an old plate, somewhat elaborately decorated, and bearing date of 1661, which has been handed down from generation to generation, and which is said to have been brought by one of the family, from Virginia. Beyond that, no clue to his antecedents has been discovered. Shortly after his marriage, he joined the colony which, during the summer and autumn of 1665, settled at Middletown and Shrewsbury, New Jersey. The majority of those who took up land in Monmouth County, under the Nicolls patents and who organized these towns, were from Long Island and New England, the latter coming chiefly from Rhode Island. The settlers at Shrewsbury were, for the most part, Quakers ; at Middletown, the Baptists predominated. There is nothing to indicate that Thomas Cox was actively identified with either body, although his family and his descendants, for several generations, were of the Baptist faith, as many of them are to this day. Between the Baptists and the Quakers of that period, there appears to have been an entirely friendly feeling. Intermarriages were not unusual among them, and a community of interests, social, religious and political, had drawn them somewhat closely together. His love for Elizabeth Blashford may perhaps have made him tolerant of her faith, if he did not accept it as his own. But whatever his religious predilections, he was, evidently, a just man. The lands which he acquired were guaranteed to him by the Ni- colls patent, but he recognized the prior right of the Indians to the property and paid them, in full, for the portions which were allotted to him. His activity in local affairs dates from the beginning of the year 1667, when he was chosen one of the overseers of the fence. To what extent the lands of the early settlers were inclosed, does not appear, but it is evident from the frequent record of ear marks, that cattle were allowed to range at large, on lands that were owned in common. The following entry was made in the book of the Town Clerk, January 4, 1668: ''Tho. Cocks his marke is the top of the right eare cntt off and a swallow taile and a hole in the left eare." From overseering the fences, he advanced another step in his public career, when in the following year, he was appointed "rate maker" of the town. Later, he was chosen to assist the constable, and still later, he became a town deputy. That he had a mind of his own may be inferred from the fact that, while serving in that capacity, he dissented from certain laws ordered at the town meeting. "The habit of dissent appears to have been a family characteristic, inherited perhaps, from ancestors who had been trained in the school of Cromwell and who had caught the spirit of independence which he inspired in his followers. The next public office to which he was chosen was that of town overseer, which may have differed somewhat from that of town deputy, although the distinction is not quite clear. By this time, or a little later, he had made his mark in the world. He may have made it before, but it is certain that he made it on the 8th of November, 1673, for it appears on a document bearing that His mark date, and is thus recorded: Tho. Cockes. signum talis" It would have been more gratifying to family pride if this suggestion of illiteracy had not been discovered. But the schoolmaster was not largely in evidence in his day, and comparatively few of the early pioneers had opportunity for acquiring even the rudiment? of an ordinary education. In spite of this handicap, many of them through sheer force of character, industry, and native ability, were able not only to accumulate wealth, but to exercise large influence in the social and political life of the communities in which thev lived, and Thomas Cox appears to have been of that number. Within a few years after his settlement at Middletown, he had become an extensive land owner and a recognized man of affairs in Monmouth ( ounty. In 1676, he was chosen a deputy, to meet the Governor and his Council at Woodbridge, a circumstance which seems to indicate that he was a man of some consequence and a representative citizen. The occasion of his errand to Woodbridge is not a matter of record, but in the light of contemporary history, it is fair to assume that he appeared in support of the popular, as opposed to the proprietary interests. He died in August, 1681, leaving a widow and six children, two of whom are described as being "very small." The necessity of caring for these small children, to say nothing of the others, the eldest of whom was only thirteen years old at the time, may have inclined the widow to entertain the proposition of a second marriage, shortly after her husband's death. At all events, the days of her mourning were not unduly protracted. The administrator of the Cox estate appears to have lost no time in pressing his suit. Whatever considerations he may have urged, the following extract from the town records tells its own story of the speedy culmination of an exceptionally brief courtship. "Tho. Ingham and ye wid. Elizabeth Cox were married by Cap. John bowne Justis of the peace in Middle Town, Sep. ye 9:1681." This second marriage was terminated by the death of Ingham, in 1690-1. The children, by this time, had grown larger, and as there appears to have been no urgent need of a further matrimonial alliance, the presumption is that Elizabeth Ingham died a widow. children: i. Thomas, ii. John, iii. James, iv. Joseph, and two others, probably daughters. http://xpda.com/family/etc/The_Cox_Family_in_America.pdf
1715 - 1800
Mary
Mount
85
85
Daughter of Thomas Mount of Schrewsbury (son of Matthias son of George). She was mother of Brigadier General James Cox of the Revolutionary Army, and great grand mother of Samuel Sullivan Cox (known as "Sunset Cox") who was a member of Congress, and United States minister to Turkey.
1753 - 1810
James
Cox
56
56
He was born in Monmouth County, New Jersey, the son of Judge Joseph and Mary (Mount) Cox. He was an officer in the American Revolutionary War at the Battles of Brandywine, Germantown and Monmouth, and was elected Brigadier General of the Monmouth Brigade after the war. He was a member of the New Jersey General Assembly from 1801 to 1807 and was its speaker from 1804. He served as a Representative in the 11th United States Congress from 1809 until he died of a stroke on 12 September 1810 in Upper Freehold, New Jersey. James Cox married Ann Potts (1757–1815), daughter of William and Amy (Borden) Potts, on 29 February 1776. They were the parents of thirteen children, including Ezekiel Taylor Cox, who was a member of the Ohio State Senate and father of United States Representative Samuel Sullivan Cox.
1671 - 1760
Mary
89
89
1634 - 1672
Thomas
Willoughby
37
37
Thomas Willoughby II was born in Virginia in 1632. His father intended that he should be trained in a mercantile calling, for the elder Willoughby sent the boy to the Merchant Taylors' School in London when he was twelve. The earliest evidence of Thomas II in the records of Lower Norfolk County occurs in April 1656, when he turned down an appointment to the bench, and a month later when he was fined for refusing jury duty. His refusal of both responsibilities may have resulted from his royalist sympathies, a supposition that is borne out by his acceptance of a commission as a justice of the peace a year after Sir William Berkeley's restoration as governor in 1660. Like his father, Willoughby held several other county posts during his tenure on the Lower Norfolk Court. A colonel in the county's militia, he also served one term as sheriff in 1666. At the time of the Second Anglo-Dutch War he was one of the commissioners appointed to oversee the construction of a fort on the lower James River. But unlike the elder Willoughby, the son never served in the House of Burgesses or on the Council of State. Sometime prior to 1659 young Willoughby married Sarah Thompson, daughter of a planter in Northumberland County. They had a son and a daughter who grew to adulthood. By 1672 Thomas Willoughby was dead at the age of 40. "The Old Dominion in the Seventeenth Century" ------------------------------- Legend has it that his wife awoke one morning following a terrific storm (possibly the "Harry Cane" of 1667) to see a point of land in front her home, where there had been only water the night before. The Willoughby family, it is said, were quick to apply for an addendum to the original land grant, giving them ownership of the "new" property. Thomas was apprenticed as a merchant 1644-1647. In 1656 he refused to be sworn as Justice of the Peace (Commissioner), and he was fined 150 pounds of tobacco for refusing jury duty. In 1661 he served as a Commissioner, 1666 he was Sheriff, and in 1667 he was a Commissioner for Nansemonde Fort for the building of a fort there. Thomas Willoughby II married Sarah Thompson, daughter of Richard Thompson. She and her sister Elizabeth, who married Peter Presly, inherited over 2000 acres from their father, which was assigned to their husbands. Thomas and Elizabeth had two children, named Thomas and Elizabeth.
Alice
Willoughby
1873 - 1899
Eva
Belle
Yeager
26
26
1847 - 1946
Francis
Marion
Yeager
99
99
1856 - 1940
Amelia
Louise
Patterson
84
84
1813 - 1898
Joseph
Yeager
84
84
1818 - 1877
Mary
Brown
58
58
1782 - 1836
Joseph
Yeager
54
54
1784
Margaretha
1739 - 1838
Joseph
Yeager
98
98
1822
Wordon
Safety
Patterson
1826
Susan
Brown
1779 - 1848
Safety
Worden
Patterson
69
69
1781
Phebe
Davis
~1786
John
Brown
1879 - 1957
Charles
Monroe
Heisler
78
78
CHARLES M. HEISLER, one of the enterprising, public-spirited young men of Wasco county, is a farmer living one mile southwest of Dufur. He is a native Oregonian, having been born in Prineville, June 3, 1879. His parents, sketches of whom will be found elsewhere in this work, were Monroe and Cynthia L. (White) Heisler. Our subject attended district school two years in Prineville, and also the Dufur and Lagrande graded schools, and this education was supplemented by a year at Albany College, Albany, Oregon. Returning home he remained with his parents engaged in farm work and stock-raising, which business he has since followed successfully. In 1897 he purchased an interest in the property from "Grandpa" Heisler, and later purchased two hundred acres adjoining his land. They cultivate four hundred acres of wheat and barley, which averages forty bushels to the acre. They winter about one hundred head of cattle, and the same number of hogs. Our subject has a substantial story and a half frame house, supplied with the first barb-wire telephone in Wasco county, connecting at Dufur with long distance telephone. Mr. Heisler was married August 26, 1900, to Eva L. Powell, born near Dufur, July 13, 1883, the daughter of Isaac J. and Adelia E. (Colver) Powell, the father a native of Illinois and the mother of Marshfield, Coos county, Oregon. Her father came to Oregon when a small boy, and is now a farmer at Tygh Valley. Mrs. Heisler has three brothers and four sisters. Our subject and his estimable wife have lost one daughter, Blanch Agatha, who died August 26, 1903, at the home, aged two years, one month and two days. Fraternally Mr. Heisler is a member of Ridge-ly Lodge, No. 71, I.O.O.F., and W.O.W. Both are members of Star Lodge No. 23, Rebekahs, and Mrs. Heisler is a devoted member of the United Brethren church. An Illustrated History of Central Oregon, Western Historical Publishing Company, Spokane, WA. 1905 --------------------------- Wasco Co., Oregon The Dalles Chronicle, Wednesday, September 4, 1957 page 2 Charles Heisler Taken by Death Charles Monroe Heilser, 78, who was born at Prineville when that town was still part of Old Wasco county, died yesterday at a local hospital. Mr. Heisler was born June 3, 1879, and moved to the Dufur area in 1898 to join his father in farming. Charles Heisler operated a ranch there for 22 years. He was married to Miss Eva Lois Lowell at Dufur on Aug. 26, 1900. In 1947 they moved to The Dalles. He was a member of the First Methodist church, the Masonic lodge at Dufur and the Old Wasco County Pioneer association. Mr. Heisler leaves his widow, Eva; two sons, Kenneth G. Heisler of Boyd, Md.; and Donald E. Heisler of The Dalles; three brothers, Clarence of Dufur, Claude of Gervais and Harold Heisler of Portland; eight grandchildren and one great grandchild. Funeral services will be held at Spencer & Libby Memorial Chapel at 2 p.m. Friday with the Rev. Revelle Roach officiating. Interment will be in the IOOF cemetery at Dufur.
1883 - 1973
Eva
Lois
Powell
90
90
Monroe
Heisler
Cynthia
L
White
1843 - 1921
Isaac
Jamison
Powell
78
78
Isaac and his family, crossed the plains about 1845. Isaac grew up in Waldo Hills Oregon. He attended Willamette University,and for a while he taught school in Waldo Hills and Coos Bay. He then heard his calling, and started Preaching. He preached in Coos Bay, Dufur, Tygh Valley,Wapanitia, The Dalles, and Needy, all in Oregon. For a while he preached to the indians at Warm Springs Oregon. When preaching at Needy, Oregon,he built a church, that was a museum in 1985. He lived at one point in Wasco County. Children 1. John Melvin POWELL b: 2/9/1872 2. Herbert Wesley POWELL b: 12/1/1870 3. Alice Rosa POWELL b: 8/26/1874 4. James Walter POWELL b: 6/15/1877 in Wasco County Oregon 5. Anna Gertrude POWELL b: 2/1/1880 in Boyd Oregon 6. Eva Lois POWELL b: 7/13/1883 in Dufur Oregon 7. Bessie Pearl POWELL b: 12/29/1885 in Wapanitia Oregon 8. Lida May POWELL b: 12/7/1888 in Needy Oregon 9. Myrtle Alta POWELL b: 7/27/1892 in Dufur Oregon 10. POWELL b: 2/27/1895 in Dufur Oregon
~1850 - 1920
Adelia
Emily
Colver
70
70
1792 - 1861
Theophilus
Powell
68
68
He was on the "lost wagon train of 1845," where they ran across the "Lost Blue Bucket" gold mine, not recognizing the yellow pebbles in the creek as gold. He was a preacher for the Methodist Church in Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri, and Oregon. --------------------------------- At the time of Theophilus' first preaching, the Methodist Church issued 1 year certificates to preach under.There was 1 in Virginia in 1935, Between 1838 and 1845, he received several more certificates in Missouri. In 1836 and 1837, Theophilus recieved a total of 450 acres in Land Grants. All but 50 acres was on Powell Creek, Kentucky. The other 50, was on Begus Creek, Kentucky. The land, however, was not productive, and sometime between 1838 and 1841, he moved to Missouri with his brother Allen and Allen's family.After arriving in Missouri, Theophilus started preaching again. he was a "Circuit Rider" type of minister on the American Frontier.He officiated at many marriages. Not long after going to Missouri, Allen's wife, Mary, became ill, and died, leaving Allen with 8 children. Soon after, Allen lost his life in a prairie fire he was fighting. Another of Theophilus' brothers came to Missouri and took the girls. Theophilus moved in with the boys. There were 5 boys. In 1941, Theophilus married a young widow, Rachael Center Tull. Her husband had died of tuberculosis, leaving her with a baby boy, William Tull. By 1843, They had 2 children of their own, Mary and Isaac. The young couple became discouraged farming, due to low farm prices and lack of markets. The area was rampant with Malaria cases. They started to hear stories about Oregon, and in 1845, they left Independence, Missouri by wagon train to Oregon. Rachael's mother, Mary Center, a sister Lucy, and 2 brothers went along.Their destination? Oregon City! By June 20,1845, they had reached the Platte River. The leader of the wagon train was Captain Solomon Tethrow. After only a few days, he resigned, and Captain English took his place. The roads at first were in good shape, fuel for the oxen, and water was plentiful. Things changed quickly. They travelled 10-20 miles a day, so the trip was going to be a long one.According to Palmer's Journal, at Independence, the wagon train company decided to hold an election to choose a pilot for the trip. They had 2 volunteers. Mr Adams, would pilot the train to the end of the trail, for $500.00 in advance.Mr. Steven Meek, an old fur trader who claimed to know the land well, offered to pilot the train for $250.00 total, with only $30.00 in advance. They chose Mr. Meek.The book "Early Western Travels",says that on August 27, some 200 families separated from the main train. Mr. Meek was leading these 200, promising a shortcut over the mountains to the Willamette Valley, from Malhuer Creek. Soon the vegetation and water disappeared, along with the good roads. The only water was stagnant pools,even the cattle didn't want to drink. Those that did became ill,many dying, and many more so weak they could barely travel. The days were hot and the nights so cold ice formed in their water buckets. As if this weren't enough, it soon began the fall rain and winter snows. Much to their discomfort. According to family stories, this was the train that discovered the "Blue Bucket" mine. The stories say it was Theophilus that flattened a piece of gold on his wagon wheel, saying "It may be gold, but I do not know that it is." No one since has found the mine area, or any gold, though many have tried. By now the train was helplessly lost. A scouting party returned saying they had found a way out, just in time to save Mr. Meek from being hanged by the angry train members. Mr. Meek then left the train to fend for themselves.According to "History Of Oregon" by Harvey K. Hines,(on page 287) this was the ill-fated emmigrant train that was lost on Meek's Cutoff. After their rescue,the scouts found the Dechutes River. It took the wagon train about 2 weeks to find a place to get across. They ended up dismanteling a wagon,and using heavy cable, they made an aerial ferry.(Confirmed by both "Our Colonial Lines" and "History of Oregon") With that they ferried their belongings and families across the river. This crossing, was at Shearer's Bridge.
~1818
Rachel
Center
~1750
Cader
Powell
Edward
N
White
Catherine
Burkhart
1828 - 1905
William
(Grandpa)
Heisler
77
77
Children 1. Charles Monroe Heisler b: 27 SEP 1852 in Marion County, Oregon 2. Louisa Heisler b: 2 APR 1854 in Lane County, Oregon 3. Susannah Heisler b: 7 APR 1856 4. Alexander Heisler b: 12 DEC 1857 5. Mary Jane Heisler b: 27 SEP 1859 6. Jefferson Davis Heisler b: 11 SEP 1861 7. Sarah Catherine Heisler b: 24 SEP 1864 in Lane County, Oregon 8. William H. Heisler b: 3 MAR 1867 9. Martha Anna Heisler b: 7 JAN 1874 "December 1, 1880, the townsite of Dufur was platted by E.B. and A.J. Dufur, Jr. The patent to the land which comprised the original townsite was issued by the United States to C.W. Brohack, September 16, 1872, and at once came into possession of Joseph Beezley. A few days later it was purchased by E.B. and A.J. Dufur who retained possession until the platting in 1880. Connected with the material advancement of Dufur will be remembered the names of Hon. A.J. Dufur, his three soils, Dr. L. Vanderpool, E.D. Bohna, William Heisler, A.J. Brigham, the pioneer merchant, C.W. Williams, D.E. Thomas, J.A. Guleford, A.J. Brigham, W.R. Menefee, George Nedrow, Johnston Brothers, (T.H. and G.W., who purchased the business interests of C.A. Williams.)" William Heisler worked as a tobacconist in Pittsburgh after he left home at age 17. Then he enlisted as a soldier in the Mexican War; his unit, Company A of Colonel Powell's battalion under Captain Sublett, was assigned to guard the Oregon Trail. After the war he worked at gold mining in California. Following his marriage in 1851, he travelled by covered wagon on the Oregon Trail with family and neighbors of his new wife to the Willamette Valley of Oregon, settling on a donation land claim (similar to homesteading in the midwest.) He pursued a variety of jobs, including farmer, cattleman, miller and storekeeper. Before he died in 1905, he was known in the town of Dufur as "Grandpa Heisler." Martha McConnell Heisler was similarly known as "Grandma Heisler." (source: Susan Molye)
Martha
McConnell
Martha McConnell Heisler was pregnant during the entire wagon trip from Cedar Co., MO to Lane Co., OR. Her first child was born in the wagon while they were wintering over in Oregon, waiting for spring in order to make a land claim. In her old age she was known as "Grandma Heisler" all around Dufur, Oregon. (source: Susan Molye)
John
McConnell
Mary
Hill
John
Heisler
1791
Catherina
Yost
1759 - 1839
Daniel
Yost
80
80
He was very active in Friedens Union Church near what later became New Ringgold. He lived in New Goshenhoppen, Pennsylvania. He was a veteran of the Revolutionary War. He was active in local politics and was appointed Justice of the Peace for his area. On 9 DEC 1811, Governor Snyder commissioned Daniel Yost an associate judge for a new judicial district, then seated in Orwigsburg. He served in this position until December 29, 1836. He was the first Associate Judge of Schuylkill County.
1767
Elizabeth
Barbara
Hillegass
George
Jacob
Heisler
Anna
Kunigunda
Hoffman
1821 - 1885
David
Funk
Kauffman
64
64
Children: 1. Sarah Kauffman b: 27 DEC 1851 2. Annie Kauffman b: 14 SEP 1854 3. Samuel Kauffman b: 3 FEB 1856 4. Abraham Kauffman b: 27 OCT 1860 5. George S. Kauffman b: 25 SEP 1862 6. Hetty Kauffman b: 20 JUN 1864 7. Henry Kauffman b: 28 MAR 1866 8. Thomas F. Kauffman b: 27 MAR 1870
1827 - 1893
Rebecca
Snell
65
65
1765 - 1825
Michael
Kauffman
59
59
Marriage 1 Barbara Gingerich b: 1767 Children: 1. Mary Kauffman b: 1784 2. Barbara Kauffman b: 1785 3. Michael Kauffman b: 17 NOV 1790 Marriage 2 Barbara Shallenberger b: 1762 * Married: 1785 Children: 1. Elizabeth Kauffman b: 13 FEB 1792 2. Christian Kauffman b: 8 JUL 1796 3. Anna Kauffman b: 1798 Marriage 3 Anna Funk b: 10 JAN 1781 * Married: 20 MAR 1804 Children 1. Jacob F. Kauffman b: 29 AUG 1805 2. Catherine Funk Kauffman b: 22 JAN 1807 3. John Funk Kauffman b: 11 OCT 1808 4. Mary Funk Kauffman b: 16 FEB 1810 5. Samuel F. Kauffman b: 19 SEP 1811 6. Henry Funk Kauffman b: 12 DEC 1812 7. Susanna Funk Kauffman b: 21 JAN 1814 8. Benjamin Funk Kauffman b: 28 JAN 1816 9. Esther Funk Kauffman b: 12 MAY 1817 10. Abraham Funk Kauffman b: 24 AUG 1818 11. Martin Funk Kauffman b: 23 OCT 1819 12. David Funk Kauffman b: 6 AUG 1821
1781
Anna
S
Funk
Jacob
Funk
1745
Barbara
Schock
1722 - 1806
Christian
Kauffman
84
84
~1730
Barbara
Gochenauer
1668 - 1743
Johan
Andreas
Kauffman
75
75
Children: 1. Johan Andrew KAUFFMAN b: ABT 1718 in Millersville, Lancaster, Pennsylvania 2. Mary Kneisley KAUFFMAN b: ABT 1718 in Of, Manor Township, Lancaster, Pennsylvania 3. Elizabeth KAUFFMAN b: 10 JAN 1720 in Millerville, Lancaster, Pennsylvania 4. Christian KAUFFMAN b: 1722 in Manor Township, Lancaster, Pennsylvania 5. Michael KAUFFMAN b: ABT 1726 in Millersville, Lancaster, Pennsylvania 6. Anna Barbara KAUFFMAN b: ABT 1726 in , York, Pennsylvania 7. Jacob KAUFFMAN b: ABT 1729 8. Anna Maria KAUFFMAN b: ABT 1730 in Millersville, Lancaster, Pennsylvania 9. John KAUFFMAN b: ABT 1732 in , Lancaster, Pennsylvania 10. Magdelena KAUFFMAN b: 25 FEB 1735 in , Lancaster, Pennsylvania 11. Veronica KAUFFMAN b: ABT 1736 in , Lancaster, Pennsylvania 12. Isaac KAUFFMAN b: 7 FEB 1741 in , Lancaster, Pennsylvania
~1698 - 1759
Elizabeth
Kneissle
61
61
She was Johan Kauffman's second wife.
~1700 - 1764
Joseph
Gochenauer
64
64
1648
Michael
Kauffman
Children: 1. Johan Andreas KAUFFMAN b: 13 NOV 1668 in Of Friesenheim, Baden-Wurttenberg, Germany 2. Barbara KAUFFMAN b: 9 FEB 1673 3. Michael KAUFFMAN b: 14 MAR 1675 in , , Germany c: in Grunstadt, , Germany 4. Christian KAUFFMAN b: 11 MAR 1677 5. Christina KAUFFMAN b: 19 MAR 1679
~1647
Elsbeth
Herschi
~1615
Isaac
Herschi
Children: 1. Isaac HIRSCHI b: 4 AUG 1639 in Schangnau, Bern, Switzerland 2. Christian HIRSCHI b: 8 JAN 1641 in Schangnau, Bern, Switzerland 3. Elsbeth HIRSCHI b: ABT 1647 in Schangnau, Bern, Switzerland
Elisabeth
Schmidt
1620
Michael
Kauffman
He lived at Zullhalten near Steffisburg and Farni.
Anna
Brendli
1593
Nicklaus
Kauffman
~1591
Elsbeth
(Elsi)
Blank
~1555
Jost
Blank
Elsbeth
Hebysen
Children 1. Peter BLANK b: 9 FEB 1581 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 2. Anna BLANK c: 13 JAN 1583 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 3. Hans BLANK c: 17 JAN 1585 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 4. Hans BLANK c: 13 FEB 1586 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 5. Niclaus BLANK c: 30 JUN 1588 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 6. Elsbeth (Elsi) BLANK c: 21 FEB 1591 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 7. Daniel BLANK c: 28 JAN 1593 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 8. Barbli BLANK c: 25 MAY 1595 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 9. Margaretha BLANK c: 3 APR 1597 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 10. Niclaus BLANK c: 10 AUG 1600 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland
~1520
Peter
Plank
Children: 1. Jost BLANK b: ABT 1555 in Of Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 2. Niclaus BLANK b: 23 JAN 1558 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland
Margreth
Ebersole
~1554
Jacob
Kauffman
Marriage 1 Christine RABER Children: 1. Anna KAUFFMAN b: 3 APR 1580 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 2. Hans KAUFFMAN b: 19 FEB 1581 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 3. Magdalena KAUFFMAN b: 22 APR 1582 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland Marriage 2 Anni BÜRKI b: in Of Trimstein, Bern, Switzerland * Married: 11 MAY 1584 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland Children: 1. Casper KAUFFMAN b: 11 APR 1585 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 2. Margareth KAUFFMAN b: 29 MAY 1586 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 3. Jacob KAUFFMAN b: 1 MAY 1590 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 4. Nicklaus KAUFFMAN b: 10 DEC 1593 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 5. Michael KAUFMANN b: 30 MAY 1596 in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland 6. Verena KAUFMANN b: in Steffisburg, Bern, Switzerland
Anni
Bürki
1632
Heinrich
Gochenauer
Jacob
Gochenauer
Margretha
Peter
1880 - 1977
Andrew
Henry
Jorski
97
97
Residence 1930 - Elk City, Oklahoma
1882 - 1939
Sophia
J
Klimkowska
57
57
Obituary: Mrs. SOPHIA JORSKI, 55 years old, of Harrah, a native of Poland and a resident of Oklahoma since she was 12 years old, died of a brain tumor Monday at St. Anthony Hospital. Shortly after coming to the United States from Poland, Mrs. Jorski moved to Oklahoma City. She lived here two or three years before moving to Harrah. Survivors include her husband, ANDREW JORSKI, a farmer; four daughters Misses JULIA JORSKI, VICTORIA JORSKI, and DOROTHY JORSKI, all of the home, Miss HELEN JORSKI of Oklahoma City; and three sons, FELIX JORSKI of 2016 Harden Drive, LOUIS JORSKI and CARL JORSKI, both of Harrah. Rosary will be at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Watts & McAtee chapel. Requiem mass will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday in the Catholic Church at Harrah. Burial will be at Harrah.
1906 - 1990
Julia
Eve
Jorski
84
84
1908 - 1984
Felix
James
Jorski
75
75
1910 - 2002
Helen
Louise
Jorski
91
91
1913 - 2001
Louis
Samuel
Jorski
88
88
Maybe he was born 3/24/1912
1915 - 2006
Victoria
Ursula
Jorski
90
90
Obituary: Victoria Jorski Seikel, 90, passed away June 28, 2006, after a lengthy illness. She was born Oct. 21, 1915, to Sophia and Andrew Jorski in Harrah, the fifth of their seven children. Her great grandfather, Isaac (Ike) Jorski, staked a claim in Harrah in the second Oklahoma Land Run Sept. 22, 1891. A graduate in 1934 from Harrah High School and from Draughon’s Business School in Oklahoma City, she married Lawrence Seikel Aug. 6, 1940, in St. Teresa of Avila Catholic Church. They had three sons. Lawrence and his brother, Paul, were partners in Seikel’s Dry Goods and Grocery established in 1936 on Church Street in Harrah until Lawrence’s death in 1974. Victoria devoted her time to her sons and their home and found time to volunteer for the Metropolitan Library System for many years where she served as a moderator for the American Institute of Discussion program. She also tutored young readers in the summer reading program. She volunteered for a number of years as a docent for the Mabee-Gerrer Museum of Art at St. Gregory’s University in Shawnee. For a number of years, she served the church through the Catholic Daughters of the Americas and was a member of the Altar Society. She was a member of the Red Rose Garden Club for many years. She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, Lawrence; and son, Larry; her sisters, Julia Jorski Graves, Helen Jorski Pate; and brothers, Felix, Louis and Carl Jorski. She is survived by sons, John Gregory and wife, Linda, of Edmond and Mark Seikel and wife, Judy, of Harrah; a sister, Dorothy Jorski Towne of Colorado Springs, Colo.; grandchildren, Kimberly Seikel Beall and husband, Mike, of Hamilton, Ohio; Jana Kathleen Seikel of Edmond, Jessica Kate and John Paul Seikel of Harrah; great-grandchildren, Courtney and Jacob Beall of Hamilton, Ohio. A rosary was said Friday, June 30, 2006, at 6:45 p.m. with a wake at 7 p.m. at St. Teresa of Avila Catholic Church in Harrah. A mass of Christian burial was held Saturday at 11 a.m. at St. Teresa’s with burial in St. Teresa’s Cemetery conducted by Ford Funeral Service. Memorials may be made to St. Teresa’s Building Fund, P. O. Box 418, Harrah, OK 73045.
~1920
Dorothy
Marie
Jorski
1922 - 1989
Carl
Albert
Jorski
67
67
1851 - 1920
Ignatius
(Ike)
Jezewski
69
69
In 1880 he lived in Peyatte Township, Pulaski County, Arkansas. Ike was the third oldest of six children born to Jacob & Victoria Jezewski. On the 1900 census it states Ike immigrated to the US in 1873. Ike's first wife was Victoria Olegniczak, daughter of George and Barbara Olegniczak. Ike and Victoria were living in Marche, Arkansas where they had five children, Andrew Henry, Mary Anna, John Jacob, Martha Anna, and Selina Victoria. Ike's wife Victoia died in 1889 and Ike then married Katy Rominski. On Sept. 22, 1891 Ike took part in the second land run on what was once Indian Territory, from Marche Arkansas. Ike and his family were one of the ten original family's that settled the town of Harrah, Oklahoma. Ike secured a homestead of 160 acres, three miles east of Harrah. Ike's family lived in a dugout under ground for a year before they erected a tent made from the remnant of the wagon, where they lived for the next 2 years. Later they built a 10 ft. by 10 ft. dirt floor cabin. Ike and Katie farmed the land and raised their children in Harrah. At the age of 71 years in 1920 Ike died of natural causes. During his life he lived without electricity and a motor vehicle. Most of his family still live in and around Harrah, Oklahoma and have many businesses around the Oklahoma City area. Ike's headstone says: "Ojciec Ignac Jezewski Urouzil sie dnia Stycznia 1859 Umarl dnia 20 Sierzpnia 1920," or "Father Ignac Jezewski was born on January 1859. He died on 20 August 1920."
1860 - 1889
Victoria
Olejniczak
29
29
On August 13, 1888, Wiktoria Jezewski came to New York on the ship Ems from Bremen, Germany. She was listed as 36 years old.
1814 - 1896
Jacob
Jezewski
82
82
In 1865 or 1869 he moved to the U.S. from Poland with his wife Victoria and their children. In 1900 he was living in Marinette County, Wisconsin with his oldest daughter Marianna Zinda.
1826 - 1917
Victoria
Korynta
91
91
Maybe she was born in 1821 or August, 1924. On the 1910 census it states Victoia was the mother of 11 children with only seven of them still living.
1842
Jacob
Jezewski
1845
Mary
Jezewski
1847
Martin
Jezewski
1850
Isaac
Jezewski
1863 - 1943
John
Jezewski
80
80
John was the son of Jacob and Victoria Jezewski/Jorski who came to the US in 1865. John married Josephine Olejniczak in 1888 in Marche, Arkansas. They left Arkansas in the land run of 1891 and helped settle the town of Harrah, Oklahoma.They lived in Elk Township, Harrah, Oklahoma until 1891 when they moved to Illinois to find work. John and Josephine are both buried in Ascension Cemetery.
1869
Anna
Jezewski
1866 - 1956
Katie
Romanski
89
89
Catherine "Katie" Romanski was a young girl of only 23 and had not been in the U.S. long before she met Ike Jorski. Ike was a 40 year old widow with five children when he and Katie were married in Marche Arkansas. They came to Oklahoma in the land run of 1891 and settled in Harrah, Oklahoma where they raised their children. THE OKLAHOMA COUNTY HERALD Aug. 30, 1956 Pg. 1 Catherine Jorski Passes Away At Age of 86. Mrs. Catherine Jorski, 86, of Harrah, passed away last Wednesday. Rosary was held Thursday evening in the Wilson funeral home. Requiem mass was at 9 a. m. Friday in St. Teresa's church, and burial was in the Harrah Catholic cemetery. Mrs. Jorski a 50-year resident of Harrah was born in Poland. She was a member of the Catholic church. Survivors include two sons, Andrew Jorski, Harrah, and John Jorski, Oklahoma City; and three daughters, Mrs. Slena Kusek, Harrah, Mrs. Mary Nowokowski, McLoud, and Mrs. Anna Kozak, Wagoner. Note: These were Catherin's step children, she raised them after Ike's first wife Victoria died. Also, her grand daughter said her birth date was 1870, on the 1900 census it has 1867, and her headstone has 1866.
1883 - 1986
Mary
Anna
Jorski
103
103
Mary was one of five children born to Ike and Victoria Jorski. She married Andrew Frank Nowakowski in 1898. they had the following children, regina, Theresa, Adam, Anna, Cecelia, Vincent, Lucy, Anthony, Carl, Emily, Emma and Leo. Mary was only fifteen when her father Ike arranged the marrage between Andrew and Mary. She lived to be 103
1885 - 1980
John
Jacob
Jorski
95
95
1887 - 1971
Martha
Anna
Jorski
84
84
Anna was the daughter of Ignac/Ike Jezewski/Jorski and Victoria (Olejniczak) Jorski. In the land run of 1892 Anna's family was one of the ten original families that traveled from Marche Arkansas to Harrah, Oklahoma in a covered wagon to homestead land. She married Phillip Kozak and left Harrah, again in a covered and settled in Wagoner. They raised ten children. OBITUARY; Wagoner Tribune Aug. 4, 1976 Rosary Slated in Honor of Mrs. Anna Kozak Funeral services for Mrs. Ann Kozak, 84, will include a rosary at 7:30 p.m. Thursday (tonight) in Hersman Chapel and mass at 11 a. m. Friday at Holy Cross Catholic Church with Rev. Thomas E. Meitol officiating. Mrs. Kozak a pioneer resident died Tuesday night at her home on Route 2. She was born in 1887 in Pulaski County Arkansas and moved to Wagoner in 1920. She was a member of Holy Cross Church here in Wagoner. Interment will be in Elmwood Cemetery. Survivors include her husband, Phillip; three sons Frank of the home. Phillip Jr. and Klemens (Clemens), both of Tulsa, four daughters, Mrs. Martha Hofschulte, Muskogee, Mrs. Helen Stansial (Stansill), Vinita. Mrs. Frances Ballou, Lynn, Mass., and Mrs. Theresa Allred, Wagoner; two brothers, Andrew Jorski, Harrah, Ark., (should be Harrah, OK.) John, Oklahoma City; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Nowakowski, McCloud, Selina Kusek, Harrah; 13 grandchildren, 16 great-grandchildren and 13 great-great-grandchildren. Pallbearers will include Frank Hofschulte, Leo White, Gus Zabienski, Roy Phillips, Edwin Cole and W. A. Thieleke. Children: Theresa Anna Kozak Allred (1908 - 1999)* Lucille Marie Kozak Blair (1913 - 1958)* Frank Kozak (1916 - 1989)* Felix Kozak (1920 - 1952)* Phillip Kozak (1926 - 1983)* Helen Marie Kozak Stansill (1929 - 1998)* Mary Imogene Griffey Kozak (1930 - 2006)*
1889 - 1994
Selena
Victoria
Jorski
105
105
THE HARRAH NEWS Thursday Jan. 5, 1995. Selena Victoria Kusek, 105, passed away Dec. 29, 1994, in her home surrounded by loving family members. She was born Oct, 20, 1889 in Pulaski County, Ark. to Ike and Victoria Jorski. She came to Harrah in 1892 and was married to Joseph Kusek Apr. 16, 1907. Her husband died March 13, 1951 Mrs. Kusek was a homemaker and a wonderful mother. She was a member of St. Teresa's Catholic Church, Harrah. She will be remembered for her indomitable will and for her loving relationship with those around her. She was proud of her home and her family "Grandma always had every thing in order for all of us." a granddaughter remembered. According to Mrs. Kusek's doctor she made medical history a little more than two and a half years ago when a pace maker was installed --- one of the oldest Americans to undergo such surgery. Her family & friends were grateful for the extension of this wonderful lady's life. She is survived by one son, Bud, Harrah, four daughters Agnes Czerczyk and Belbenia Meany both of Harrah, Frances Millerand, Angie Skrapke, both of Oklahoma City; eight grandchildren, Paul Nickel, Raymond Nickel and Tim Kusek, all of Harrah, Holly Nicklas, Dallas, Texas, Leota Witten, Oklahoma City, Linda Harkins, Midwest City, Janet Windsor and Joe Skrapke, Oklahoma City; ten great grandchildren, Mark Witten, Chris Corley, Gina Harkins, Michael Nickel, Eric Nickel, Melissa Nicholson, Jennifer Grannan, Tony Nickel, Steven Windsor and Annie Nicklas and two great great grand-children, Cory Nichelson and Bryan Grannan. She was preceded in death by her husband, Joseph; two daughters, Helen Wozniak and Marina Hopcus, Burl and a son Frank. Funeral Mass was held Monday, Jan. 2, 1995, at St. Teresa's Catholic Church. Burial was in St. Teresa's Catholic Cemetery directed by Asa Smith Funeral Service. The Daily Oklahoman Page: 27 December 31, 1994 OBITUARY - Selena Victoria Kusek Selena Victoria, age 105, Harrah, died Dec. 29, 1994 at her home. She was born October 20, 1889 in Pulaski County, Arkansas to Ike and Barbara Jorski and came to Harrah in 1892. She was married to Joseph Kusek on April 16, 1907. She was a member of St. Teresa's Catholic Church. Survivors include one son, Bud of Harrah; 4 daughters, Agnes Czerczyk and Belbenia Meany, Harrah, Frances Miller and Angie Skrapke, Okla. City; 8 grandchildren, 10 great grandchildren and 2 great-great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Joseph; 2 daughters, Helen Wozniak and Martha Hopcus Burl; and a son, Frank. A Vigil will be at 7:00 p.m. Sunday with Funeral Mass at 10:00 a. m. Monday, both at St. Teresa's Catholic Church. Burial will be in St. Teresa's Cemetery.
1839 - 1919
Josev
Klimkowska
80
80
1842 - 1924
Rozalia
Majka
81
81
Agnes
Frances
Klimkowska
1871
Marianna
Klimkowska
1874
John
Klimkowski
1880 - 1964
Martin
Klimkowski
83
83
In 1920 he was living with his sister Helen and her husband Peter Senkowski. His death record and WWI draft card say he was born in November 12, 1880.
1880
Katam
Klimkowska
1885
Jacob
Klimkowski
His WWI draft card says he was born 6/12/1885.
1886
Andreas
Klimkowski
1888
Margeret
Klimkowska
1892
Helen
Klimkowska
1929
Rosalie
Wyskup
Jerry
Jorski
Janie
Jorski
Andrew
Jorski
Matthew
Jorski
Michael
Jorski
Otis
Cook
Betsy
Gary
Thomas
Susan
Carla
Susan
>1808
Winifred
Ansley
1810
Mary
Ansley
1819
Sarah
Ansley
~1820
Louisa
Ansley
William
Strayhorn
Thomas
Chambers
from Orange County, Virginia
Rachel
Chisolm
from Orange County, Virginia
1727 - 1781
Joseph
Fry
54
54
~1730 - ~1781
Ann
Funk
51
51
1754 - 1823
Benjamin
Franklin
Fry
69
69
Benjamin Fry, while living in Frederick County, Virginia, enlisted in the Revolutionary Army, March 3, 1777 for three years. He served as Sergeant in Captain John Mark's Company, 14th Virginia Regiment, commanded by Colonel Charles Lewis. He was wounded in the Battle of Brandywine September 11, 1777, while serving as Sergeant under General George Washington, and was sent home on furlough (U.S. War Department record). He later rejoined his regiment and Colonel Lewis when ordered to join the Army of the South in Georgia. Benjamin was with Troop C under Count Pulaski at the Seige of Savannah. (Knight's "Georgia Roster of the Revolution"). After the Revolutionary War Benjamin returned to Frederick County, Virginia, where he married Mary Ann Jameson. Shortly afterward he moved to Wilkes County, Georgia. In a 1790 Tax Digest, Captain Elsberry's District of Wilkes County, Benjamin is listed as owning 283 acres of land in Wilkes County and 250 acres in adjoining Franklin County. In 1792 Benjamin Fry sold land in Franklin County, Georgia, signed by Benjamin and wife Mary Fry. Record taken from Wilkes County Deed Book kk p. 16: "Benjamin Fry, late soldier in the 14th Virginia Regiment commanded by Colonel Charles Lewis appoints Francis Baldwin to receive my pay due me as a soldier afore-said and my land also from the United States or the State of Virginia. June 20, 1793. J.S. Smith, Judith Jordan, Test." (This proves Benjamin to be the same person as shown on the War Department record.) Oglethorpe County Deed Book D p. 57: June 1, 1799, between Benjamin Fry and his wife Mary to Daniel Holderfield, wherby the said Benjamin Fry and his wife Mary sell 105 acres of land on waters of Macke Creek for $500. Witnesses: George Dogget, Isaac Eason, Thomas Duke. Wilkes County Deed Book ZZ p. 19: December 21, 1802, Benjamin Fry of Wilkes County, Georgia to William McLaughlin of the county of Oglethorpe state of Georgia for the consideration of $400 all that tract of land in Wilkes County containing 200 acres on the water of Long Creek. Witnesses: Pit Nuluer, John Moore, Om. Brookes. (This proves Benjamin was still living in Wilkes County when his son Benjamin was born 9/15/1800.) Early in 1803, Benjamin Fry and his family joined the many Georgians who were going westward seeking new homes. He and his family settled in old Randolph County, Georgia, which in 1808 became Jasper County. The U.S. Government granted Benjamin a pension beginning September 1810 because of a wound received while he was in Service. This would was doubtless received at the Battle of Brandywine. The last pension paid him covered that period from September 4, 1822 to March 4, 1823. On March 15, 1823 Benjamin Fry certified that three months previously he had moved to Henry County from Jasper County, Georgia. He died in Henry County September, 1823 (War Department Record). Date of death of Mary Ann (Jameson) Fry is not known, but it was between 1820 and 1830. Family tradition places her death about a year before her husband's - that is, about 1822. 1820 U.S. Census, Jasper County, shows she and her husband living with their son Benjamin Fry, Jr. in Monticello, Jasper County, Georgia. The 1830 census does not show her in the the household of Benjamin, Jr.
1754 - ~1822
Mary
Ann
Jamison
68
68
1786
Mary
Fry
1789
Annis
Fry
1791
Sally
Fry
1796 - 1854
Lodwick
Fry
58
58
Lodwick Fry arrived in San Augustine County, Texas in 1839, where he applied for a 640 acre grant. Lodwick and his family were preceded in Texas by his younger brother Benjamin, who arrived in 1834. In 1840, Lodwick received a land grant for 320 acres in Houston County. Lodwick owned 320 acres in Trinity County at the time of his death. This land was divided among Sarah's four daughters in 1875. Lodwick sold the 320 acre John Kirby survey, located in Walker County, to Isaac McGrary on July 29, 1854, with the consent of Sarah and her daughters. Sarah died in Trinity County in1875, leaving 320 acres she received from the State Land Grant.
1798
Margaret
Fry
1799 - 1825
Milly
Fry
26
26
1800 - 1872
Benjamin
Franklin
Fry
72
72
Benjamin Franklin Fry, Jr. was born September 15, 1800 in Wilkes county, Georgia to Benjamin Fry and Mary Ann Jameson Fry. While he was a young child, his parents moved to Jasper Co., Georgia, and he grew to manhood there. On December 23, 1820 (or 1819) he married Nancy Carden (or Carter), from Jasper County, Georgia. Benjamin is listed in the 1820 U. S. Census Record as follows: Benjamin Fry, Jasper Co., Ga., Monticello Town District No. 228-216: 1 male over 10 and under 26 yrs. (himself); 1 male over 45 yrs. (his father); 1 female under 10 yrs. (This may be daughter of Ben's sister Sally who died before 1822.); 1 female over 16 and under 26 yrs.; 1 female over 45 yrs. (Mary Ann Jameson, Ben's Mother). Ben Jr's mother died 2 years later and his father 3 years later. They were obviously in poor health and in need of assistance, so they were in the household qf their youngest son in 1820. The Henry County 1830 U. S. Census Record lists Benjamin Fry: 1 male 20-30 yrs., 1 male under 5 yrs., 2 males 5-10 yrs., 1 female 30-40 yrs. (This would indicate that Nancy was slightly older than Ben. Census taken before Sept. 15, 1830.) Family tradition places Mary Ann Jameson's' death about one year before her husbands, that is 1822. Ben Jr. moved from Jasper County to Henry County in December 1822 and there his father died September 1823. While Benjamin Fly's forefathers were of the Lutheran faith, he, being reared in a Baptist community, became a Baptist, and later joined the Baptist ministry. About 1833 he moved to LaGrange Georgia where he filled a pulpit in the Baptist Church for a short time. In 1834 he heard the call of Texas for colonists, and December of that year found him, with his family, entering from the north the Mexican Territory called Texas. After crossing the Red River near Jonesborough, now called Davenport, near the present town of Clarksville, they stopped to rest for a few days. While doing this, their son, John Gilmore Fry, was overcome with nostalgia for his old Georgia home, and, though but a lad, determined to, and did return with some Georgia people he had met at a horse race in Joneshorough. (John Gilmore b. Sept. 1823 was 11 years old.) Benjamin Fry, with the rest of his family, continued their journey which ended in Nacogdoches. From there he moved to Crockett, Houston County, Texas. Family Group Sheet Just after the Battle of Gonzales Oct. 2, 1835, the call went out that Texas should throw off the yolk of Mexico, no longer should that country encroach upon the rights of the Colonists. Benjamin Fry joined the Texas Army at San Augustine on Oct. 5, 1835 just three days after the first battle in Gonzales. On the evening of that day, an enthusiastic meeting was held, and Sam Houston and Thomas Rusk spoke. A company of men was then organized to leave on the morning of Oct. 10th, just four days later. The cry of this Company was 'Take Bexar', and they became known as the "Red Landers" because the soil of East Texas, their home, was of a red color. They traveled what is known as the 'El Camino Real', or 'King's. Highway', which road was blazed in 1691 between San Antonio and Nacogdoches, and joined Stephen F. Austin and his men at the Salado Creek about ten miles from San Antonio. Benjamin Fry was in the skirmish at Salado Creek, Battle of Conception, and later, when camped with the Army out of San Antonio, he saw Ben Milam step out in front of the men and say, "Who will go with old Ben Milam into San Antonio?" Benjamin Fry was one of the "Old Three Hundred and One' volunteers, who stepped forward and followed Ben Milam into battle. The "Seige of Bexar" was on. For four days and five nights the Mexicans fought - house to house - room to room - until the morning of Dec. 9, 1835 when the Mexicans were defeated. At the Battle of San Jacinto April 21, 1836, Benjamin Fry was in the First Regiment , Texas Volunteers, Company 1 under the command of Captain William S. Fisher. This Company was known as the "Velasco Blues". He had joined on March 6, the same day the Alamo fell to the Mexicans, just 4 days after Texas declared their independance on March 2nd at Washington on the Brazos. Benjamin was released from duty June 6, 1836. After his release from duty, Benjamin returned to the ministry. ---------------------------- Fry was a Baptist Minister who is said to have preached under five of the "Six Flags over Texas," becoming known as the "Fighting Parson." He was at the siege of Bexar, at San Jacinto, and fought later in the Mexican War. He was born in Wilkes County, Georgia in 1800 and married Nancy Carter in 1829. He preached his final sermon on the day of his death in Jeddo, Bastrop County, 1872. There were few churches in those days. Saloons sometimes had to make do, requiring on the part of a saloon keeper a certain degree of introduction: "Oyez, oyez, there's goin' to be some hell-fired racket here this mornin, gents, by Fightin' Parson Potter, a reformed gambler, but now a shore-nuff gospel shark... the Devil's gonna git ye quicker'n hell kin scorch a feather." Religion generally came late to the Republic. Although the Baptist J. H. Pilgrim founded a Sunday School in Austin's colony, a Catholic mission to the new nation in 1836 found there to be only two priests in the whole of Texas. The Methodists came in the persons of the Reverend Martin Rider and his assistants Robert Alexander and Littleton Fowler in 1836. The first Lutheran may have been the Reverend Louis C. Ervenberg, a German. The first Protestant Episcopalian, Caleb S. Ives, arrived in 1836. from Debrett's Texas Peerage, Hugh Best, Coward-McCann, Inc., New York, 1983 ------------------ In 1840, Benjamin owned 640 acres in Houston County, Texas. His son King Lodwick (18) owned 320 acres, his brother Lodwick owned 320 acres, and his nephew Robert owned 320 acres. A meeting was held in the School house in the town of Huntsville, Montgomery County, Republic of Texas, on Monday, September 16, 1844 for the purpose of organizing a Baptist Church. The following proceedings were had to wit-. After divine worship by the Rev. Benjamin Fry, the meeting was called to order by Elder Z. N. Morrell who invited all persons present who wished to become members of the church about to he organized to take seals and also invited visiting brethren sit with us. Rev. Benjamin Fry, Chairman of the Committee heretofore appointed to draft an abstract of principles reported the following, to wit: Articles of Faith, etc. On November 11, 1844 Benjamin Fry was involved in the organization of Antioc Church in Anderson Co., Texas. When the Mexican War broke out, "Benjamin Fry was enrolled May 17, 1846 at Cincinnati, Texas for six months; was mustered into service todate May 30, 1846 at Fort Polk, Point Isabel, Texas as a Sergeant in Captain Bennet's Company B, 1st Regiment Texas Foot Riflemen Mexican War; and was mustered out with the Company and honorably discharged the service as Sergeant Aug. 24, 1846 near Camargo," according to the U.S. War Department. He was mustered out due to ill health. ------------------------ Captain Cheshire, from Eastern Texas, had fitted up a large tent for the accommodation of those who felt piously inclined; whence, on a calm moonlight night, the melody of psalm singing, sermonizing, and prayer, resounded over the camp. The chief orator, on these occasions, was our orderly-sergeant Fry. He was a decided character, and deserves a passing notice. The Sergeant was the tallest man in our regiment, being six feet nine in his stockings, and was slim and straight as an Indian; long favored, with blue eyes, and pleasant countenance, and a nose of huge proportions. Whether he belonged to the Methodist, Baptist, or Universalist persuasion, could not be ascertained from his discourses. One thing, however, was certain,--if he was a Methodist, there was not much method in his eloquence. He never touched upon doctrinal points; and when not holding forth to his congregation, there was nothing of the parson in his manner, unless it was his general good-nature, and friendly smile, and word for every one he met. The Sergeant declared "he had volunteered to look after the spiritual interest of the boys. That he meant to serve the Lord; but, if duty required him to shoot Mexicans, why, he thought he could do so, and look to heaven with a clear conscience." He was one of those pious soldiers who could trust to Providence, but chose to take care of his own powder. from Chile Con Carne or The Camp and the Field by: S. Compton Smith, M. D., Acting surgeon with General Taylor's Division in Mexico. ------------------ In No. 15, Public Department Papers in the Archives of the State Library there is an affidavit made June 10, 1836, by Captain William S. Fisher at Velasco that Mr. Fry served in his company of "Valasco Blues" from March 6 to June 6, 1836. Mr. Fry was issued Donation Certificate No. 184 on December 3, 1849, for 640 acres of land for having participated in the battle of San Jacinto. He received Bounty Certificate No. 9247 for 640 acres of land for having served in the army from March 6 to September 6, 1836. On January 11, 1850, Governor Peter H. Bell signed a joint resolution of the Legislature granting Mr. Fry one-third of a league of land as a headright, setting forth that he "entered the army of Texas in October, 1835, aided in the siege of Bexar, and participated in the battle of San Jacinto." The 1850 Walker County, Texas Census listed Ben Fry, 51, Carpenter; Nancy Fry, 54; Ben Fry, 23. From A History of Cincinnati, by Vernon Cleveland Fitzgerald Schuder: "In Walker County, on the west bank of the Trinity River, Cincinnati, Texas was founded by James C. DeWitt in 1837. Carpenters in Cincinatti were Ben Fry, Dan Clarke, and William Devane Shockley." Down river a few miles lived Benjamin's. brother Lodwick, Lodwick's son Robert, and other members of Lodwick's family. In the fall of 1853 the yellow fever epidemic struck the town of Cincinnati. An estimated 250 of about 600 people died from the "Yellow Jack". Whether or not the yellow fever affected the Fry families directly or not is not known. But several had died and are buried in the Fry Cemetery on what was Robert's land near present day Point Blank, San Jacinto County, Texas. 1860 found Benjamin and many of the Fry relatives in Limestone County, Texas. In 1867 it was reported that Ben had a home in Jeddo, Bastrop County, Texas. Benjamin's wife, Nancy Carden (Carter) Fry died in Jeddo, May 1867 and is buried in Jeddo Cemetery. She was reportedly a very small woman, had dark eyes and black hair, and in her later years, smoked a pipe. In October 1869 in Trinity County, Benjamin Fry married Martha Elizabeth ("Lizzie") Phillips Williams, widow of "Buck" Williams. The 1870 Trinity County Census, Aug 3, 1870 listed Benjamin Fry, 69 Baptist Minister and Farmer, Married within the year; Lizzie Fry, 40, Housewife, born in Mississippi; Sterling Williams, 20, Farm Labor, born in Lousiana; Mitchell, 15, born in Lousiana; Christiana, 12, born in Lousiana; Lizzie, 7, born in Lousiana. November 17, 1870, George Washington Fry was born to Benjamin and Lizzie Fry. G. W. Fry was about one year old when Lizzie died. Ben was an old man and was concerned for the future of his new son, so in the fall of 1872 he took G. W. to Waelder, Texas, Gonzales County, to his grand daughter Mary Ann Hopkins, daughter of his son King Lodwick, for her to care for. On October 3, 1872, Benjamin Franklin Fry died and is laid to rest beside his first wife Nancy.
John T
Hay
Thomas
Wilson
Jeremiah
Goolsby
1796 - 1852
Mary
(Polly)
Allen
56
56
She was the daughter of William Allen
D. 1875
Sarah
Jane
She was the widow of Meridath Duncan. He ran the Duncan Ferry mentioned as "the Dry Ferry" in "Trinity River Navigation" by Patricia Hensley.
Alexander
Allen
Joseph
Deadwilder
1799 - 1867
Nancy
Carden
68
68
She is listed as "Carter" on the Texas historical marker at Benjamin's grave site.
1830 - 1871
Martha (Lizzie)
Elizabeth
Phillips
41
41
She was his second wife, and was the widow of Buck Williams.
John
Carden
Martha
1870 - 1929
George
Washington
Fry
58
58
George Washington Fry was born November 17, 1870 to Benjamin Franklin Fry and Martha Elizabeth (Phillips) Williams. Benjamin was an old man of almost 70 when he married Lizzie at 39. His first wife Nancy Garden had died in 1867 in Jeddo, Texas. He had lived in 1850 at Cincinnati, on the Trinity River. October 1869, he married Lizzie, widow of "Buck" Williams. Buck and Lizzie had four children - Starling born 1850, Mitchel born 1855, Christiana born 1858, Lizzie born 1863. The 1870 Census, Aug 3, 1870, Mindy County, Texas listed Fry, Benjamin, 69, Baptist Minister and Farmer, b. -George, Married within the year - Oct.; Mrs. Lizzie, 40, Hse Kpr, Miss.; Williams, Sterling, 20, Frm Lbr, La.; Mitchell, 15, La.; Christiana 12, La.; Lizzie, 7, La. --------------------------- "Benjamin Fry Family" told to Iva Blalock by Elliot Fry and Zona Knight Barnett. (Benjamin Elliot Fry - son of George W. Fry; Arizona Knight Barnett - daughter of Lizzie Williams Knight) Benjamin Fry was close to 70 when he married Martha Elizabeth (Lizzie) Phillips Williams, Buck Williams widow. Martha Elizabeth and Buck had two children. They were Christi Ann Williams, who married Lum (Columbus) Morgan, and Lizzie Williams who married William (Billy) C. Knight. (Benjamin Fry had children by his first wife. Some of his boys fought in the Civil War. (Benjamin's' wife died.) Benjamin and Martha Elizabeth had one son, George Washington Fry. When George Washington was one year old, Martha Elizabeth Fry died, Benjamin Fry gave George W. Fry to one of his granddaughters and her husband to raise. (I believe their names were Hopkins and they lived at Waelder, Texas.) George W. was about two years old when his father, Benjamin Fry died. George W. thought he was a Hopkins until he was 7 years old. He was standing in the chimney corner one day and overheard Mrs. Hopkins reading a letter from one of his (George's) half- sisters, saying she felt George W. was still living. George W. came in the house and told the woman what he heard, and begged to go live with his sister. The old lady told George W. that she loved him and couldn't give him up. As time went on, George W. began to notice the Hopkins family showed a difference between him and their own son, Sam. George W. had to do his chores and Sam's too. If Sam didn't want to bring in wood or carry water, George W. had to bring it all in. George W. had to hoe his row of cotton, and help hoe Sam's row, for Sam would lag behind. George W. made up his mind, when he got a little age on him, he was going to run away. Years later, Mrs. Hopkins died (Aug. 18. 1881, when George W. was 11, nearly 12.) and George W. was placed in a distant relative's home. His home life was no better there. They had a large family and all worked hard. At 14, George W. ran away and went to work on a cattle ranch. The family did not think enough of him to look for him. George W. worked hard for a few years building fences, rounding up cattle and helping to feed and brand them. When he earned enough money to buy a horse and saddle from the rancher, he quit the job and started on his way to San Jacinto County to live with his half-sisters Christian and Lizzie Williams. He rode in the day and slept at night under the stars with the saddle pad under his head for a pillow. He staked his horse nearby to graze on grass. George W.'s food consisted mostly of parched corn. It was late one afternoon, when he got to the Trinity River. After crossing the ferry, he asked the man f he knew Christian and Lizzie. "I don't know them son, but you can come home with me. My wife might know them." When they reached the ferryman's home, the old lady hugged the boy. "Are you really George Fry?" she asked, "I thought you were dead. Eat supper, son, and spend the night with us. I will tell you in the morning how to get to your sister's house. I'm too old and shocked to talk about it now." The next morning the old lady told George W. that Christian had married Lum Morgan, and Lizzie was married to William (Billy) C. Knight. She showed him a trail and told him to follow it and it would take him to the cotton gin where W. C. Knight worked When he reached the gin, Lum Morgan was there with a wagon of cotton to be ginned W. C. Knight and Lum were picking the cotton up in a basket and throwing it in the compress to be ginned and baled "Wait until I get through here son," said Lum, "and I'll take you to see your sister." Christian was at the well drawing a bucket of water when Lum drove up in the wagon and George W. followed on horseback. She set the bucket down and ran to meet them. "You're George W.," she said, hugging the hay. "I'd know you anywhere." I never did believe you were dead even though they wrote that you were. I'll take you to see Lizzie." ------------------------------- San Jacinto County, A Glimpse Into The Past, Volume H, By: Iva Aden Blalock. pg. 30 - It was a fall evening, just before sundown in the year of 1892, (More likely 1885 since family tradition says he returned when he was about 16. He would be 16 in November.) when George W. Fry came to the East side of the Trinity River at Ryan's Ferry. He hallooed for someone to come and ferry him and his horse across the river. When Ryan and George W. Fry came to the Ryan cabin, Mrs. Ryan was so glad to see the 16 year old boy she hugged and kissed him. "Honey, you were about two years old when your father took you away, but I would recognize you anywhere," remarked the old lady. The Ryans gave George W. his supper and a warm bed to sleep in. The next morning, Ryan went with George W. to the Durdin cotton gin to meet William C Knight who worked at the gin. Knight had married George W.'s half-sister Lizzie Williams Caswell Knight. Told to me by Aunt Oma - Ben took George W. to his granddaughter by horseback and before arriving they got caught in a thunder storm. Ben wrapped the baby in a saddle blanket to keep him warm and dry while he got soaked, contracting pneumonia and dying of complications shortly after arriving. She said also that when George W. worked on the cattle ranch, he received room and board and very little money. While at the ranch he realized the need for an education and acquired a tutor to teach him, at night, to read and write, while working on the ranch by day. In 1893 George Washington Fry married Sarah Margie Warren on November 30, 1893 at Cold Springs, San Jacinto County, Texas. They moved to Bell County where their first three children, Ben Elliot, Gazzie and Jeff were born. Probably in the fall of 1900, G. W. moved his family to Shockley Community, Walker County, Texas where Harvey, Oma and Murphy were born. History of Shockley Chapel Cemetery, By: Mrs. R. H. Aden, says the last Church-School was built in 1910. George Fry helped build the church. "He hung the bell in the tower," said Elliott Fry. Gazzie Fry said, "You could hear the bell all over the community. It told us when it was time for church and time for school." Methodist ministers were Reverends Robert (Bob) Mann, John Mann, and Luther Ellisor, and the Baptist Ministers were Reverends John Bartee, W. Burton, Robert Day, Tom Richardson, Riley Wilson, and George Fry. Families in the community were; Winters, Wilson, Mann, Knight, Roark, Carter, McClendon, Hoot, Scofield, Love, Wimberly, Dixon, Ellis, Barnett, Bartee, Copland, Green, Fry, Webb, Burton, Hughes, and others. Giorge Knight recalls - "It was during family visits between my grandmother Lizzie (Elizabeth Williams, Caswell, Knight) Aunt Zona and Dad (John Allerson Knight) that I overheard references, with apparent fond affection, of Preacher (George Washington) Fry. "It was on one of these occasions that Dad and Aunt Zona were teasing grandmother Lizzie about how she used to pull Preacher Fry's coat tail as he walked back and forth preaching if she felt it was time for him to end his sermon. From their talking, I saw him as a thin, tall, red headed man that loved the Lord and the preaching of His word. "I have often wondered where my parents came up with the name of George for me, since I wasn't aware of any relatives by that name. Since Grandmother Lizzie lived in the home with my mother and father, I am now convinced that my mother and grandmother had a shared interest in naming my brother and me because my brother was named after my grandfather, William Knight, and my mother's oldest brother, Preston White. Apparently, I was named after my grandmother's beloved half-brother, George Washington Fry, and my half-uncle, Albert Knight. I am happy to believe that I could have been named George in honor of George Washington Fry." About 1911, G. W. and family moved to Black Jack Community, Walker County. Huntsville and Walker County, Texas, A Bicentennial History, By: D'Anne McAdams Crews, 1976. Page 436 - Early settlers of the Black Jack Community include the... George W. Fry family,... Hiram and Fannie Vause Little,...Steely,... Ellisor,... Niederhofer,... Coward,... Allen,... Palmer,... Sheppard, etc. March 15, 1915 - Sarah Margie Warren Fry fell asleep in Christ March 15, 11 P.M. 1915. Had been bedridden from stroke for some time. March 25, 1923 - G. W. married Mrs. J. S. Hollis. George Washington Fry was a Baptist Minister from 1916 to 1929. He was instrumental in the forming of a Baptist Church at Cut and Shoot, Montgomery County, Texas. He was unable to preach in '29 because of cancer of the throat. May 27, 1929 - G. W. Fry died and is laid to rest in Shockley Chappel Cemetery, Walker County, beside his wife Sarah Margie Warren.
1820 - ~1820
Mary
Ann
Fry
1822 - 1869
King
Lodowick
Fry
47
47
In 1840, Age 18, He was reported in the Republic of Texas paying 1 poll tax (male in household over 21) and having 320 acres of land (surveyed). In 1860 he was living in Bastrop Co., Texas and farming. Had $1,540 real estate and $1,445 personal property. On August 21, 1863 he enlisted in Bastrop Company for 3 years in Company I, Terrell's Regiment Texas Cavalry. On February 3, 1864 he was sent on Detached service with his enrolling officer in Colorado County, with Horses. There were no more pay slips after February 1864, and his son Mack Alexander was born in 1865, so he must have returned home. In April 1867 K. Lodwick's wife Levinia died at age 41, leaving 8 children under age 18. The youngest, age 2, also died that year. This presented an extremely difficult situation. His oldest daughter Nancy took her two brothers George Washington and Daniel Webster. His daughter Mary took her sister Elizabeth Jane Judson. It is not known what happened to the others. In Feburary 1869, King Lodwick died at age 47 in Huntsville and is buried at Crocket, Houston County, Texas.
1823
John
Gilmore
Fry
1826
Benjamin
Franklin
Fry
Elizabeth
A
Carpenter
1870 - 1915
Sarah
Margie
Warren
45
45
Her mother's maiden name was King.
1817 - 1881
Robert
Fry
63
63
1820
Nancy
Fry
1829
Benjamin
James
Fry
1831
Tecy
Fry
1836
Mary
Frances
Fry
1839
William
T Fry
1844 - 1844
Eliza E
Fry
1822 - 1853
Lucinda
Kerby
31
31
She is the daughter of Josiah Isaiah Kerby and Christian Williams.
1830 - 1895
Martha
Jane
Overton
64
64
Alexander
Steel
Elisha
Williams
Synthia
I V
Crenshaw
James
Nashley
1839
Cynthia
Josiah
Isaiah
Kerby
1854
Nancy
Emily
Fry
1856 - 1935
Kiziah
Catherine
Fry
79
79
1858 - 1935
Robert
A Fry
76
76
1861 - 1943
Lecy
Matilda
Fry
81
81
1862 - 1862
William
L Fry
1863
Joseph
Fry
1863
Josephine
Fry
1865 - 1892
Edward
G Fry
27
27
Alice
V
Sayers
1845
Henry
Fry
1847 - 1930
Mary
Ann
Fry
83
83
1849 - 1930
Christian
Elizabeth
Fry
80
80
Amanda
E
Charles
Fry
1826 - 1867
Lavinia
Nancy
Hallmark
41
41
She is the daughter of Richard Hallmark and Mary Ann Prewitt.
1855
George
Washington
Fry
1871
Elizabeth
Bradden
1895
Ellen
Fry
1897
Texana
Fry
1878
Thomas
E Fry
1859 - 1943
William
Francis
Fry
83
83
1880 - 1965
Polly S
Steel
84
84
She is the daughter of Jamed Lodwick Steel and Paralee.
1850 - 1925
John
Gilmore
Fry
74
74
1854 - 1904
Nancy
Elizabeth
Blackburn
50
50
1875 - 1953
King
John
Fry
78
78
1877
Daniel
Fry
1879
George
F M
Fry
1881
Mary
Fry
1883
Alice
Fry
1885
Myrtle
Fry
Lucy
May
Mercer
1859 - 1941
Daniel
Webster
Fry
82
82
1865 - 1941
Lou
Ada
Roberts
75
75
1886
Lula D
Fry
1887
Daniel
Fry
1888
Maude
Fry
1890
Lorena
Fry
1893 - 1911
Leola
Fry
18
18
1895
Carrie
D Fry
1902 - 1902
Cecil
Fry
22d
22d
1861
Jasper
Newton
Fry
1863
Elizabeth
Jane
Fry
1865 - 1867
Mack
Alexander
Fry
2
2
1844 - 1883
Nancy
Ann
Fry
39
39
1845 - 1881
Mary
Ann
Fry
35
35
~1848
Marilda
Ann
Fry
1849 - 1877
Benjamin
Franklin
Fry
28
28
1852 - 1931
Richard
Jefferson
Fry
78
78
1857 - 1941
Kenneth
Lodwick
Fry
84
84
James
F
Hopkins
Coleman
Penelton
Hopkins
John
Lane
They had no children.
Elizabeth
Johnson
She was John's second wife.
1856 - 1910
Mary
Elizabeth
Johnson
54
54
She was the daughter of William E. Johnson and Anna Elizabeth Duckett
1855 - 1925
Ida
Texana
Blackburn
70
70
She married Benjamin Franklin Fry in 1873. Ben died in 1877. She married secondly King Lodowick Fry, Jr in 1880.
1880 - 1896
King O
Fry
16
16
1881 - 1889
James
F Fry
7
7
1883 - 1944
Annie
R Fry
61
61
1888
Clara
E Fry
1893
Ellis E
Fry
1895
Lewis
G Fry
1896 - 1968
Albert
Byron
Fry
71
71
1875
Eulalia
Fry
1877
William
G Fry
1879 - 1908
Elizabeth
L Fry
29
29
1881 - 1953
Richard
Boyd
Fry
72
72
1882 - 1911
King
Claude
Fry
28
28
1885 - 1915
Cordie
May
Fry
30
30
1887 - 1966
Mary
Florence
Fry
79
79
1889 - 1953
Howard
Jefferson
Fry
64
64
1891 - 1945
John
Hayden
Fry
53
53
1893 - 1983
Lois
Fry
90
90
1895 - 1968
Mona
La Rue
Fry
73
73
Cora
Alma
Hodge
Pearl
Carson
Edna
Virden
1873
Ben
Ida
Fry
1876
George
W Fry
1877
Lilla
Beth
Fry
1895 - 1978
Benjamin
Elliot
Fry
82
82
1897 - 1976
Gazzie
Eular
Fry
79
79
1899 - 1979
George
Jeff
Fry
80
80
He never married.
1901 - 1977
Thomas
Harvey
Fry
75
75
1905 - 1996
Evie
Oma
Fry
91
91
1907 - 1962
John
Murphy
Fry
54
54
John Murphy Fry, sixth child of George Washington Fry and Sarah Margie Warren, was born November 25, 1907 at Shockley, Walker County, Texas. On April 9, 1933, Murphy married Sudie Beatrice Hoot under a large pine tree outside Center Hill Baptist church after Sunday service. They lived on Mr. Lewis's place at Black Jack. Murphy share cropped, living in a converted barn having two rooms, a kitchen and a living room, with a small front porch. The floors and walls had cracks, according to Mom, "you could throw a cat through." His first three children Aaron, Sarah and Martin were born there. Probably the fall of 1937 he moved a short distance to the Little farm, to a better house. Mr Little, a fellow preacher and friend of Murphy's father G. W. Fry, had died, leaving the farm unused. Murphy's next two children, Sadie and Molly, were born here with "Grandma" Little as midwife. (Hiram and Fannie Little) In October or November of 1942, Murphy moved his family to Oakhurst, San Jacinto County, to the Fowler farm where he share cropped for 1/4 livestock and crops as rent. On March 14, 1962, he died at Huntsville, Walker County, and was laid to rest in Shockley Chappel Cemetery, in the old community where he was born. He is buried beside his father and mother.
1911
Sudie
Beatrice
Hoot
1934
Aaron
Murphy
Fry
1935
Sarah
Beatrice
Fry
1936
Dennis
Martin
Fry
1938
Sadie
Mae
Fry
1940
Mollie
Virginia
Fry
1944
Cecil
Ray
Fry
1946
Florence
Jean
Fry
Buck
Williams
1850
Starling
Williams
1855
Mitchell
Williams
1858
Christiana
Williams
1863
Lizzie
Williams
J S
Hollis
She had been married before.
Ada
Virgil
Bartee
Pauline
Thomas
M
Malone
1947
Ilka
Maria
Lenk
1971
Raymond
Eric
Fry
1976
Steven
Eugene
Fry
Lorna
Belle
Haines
She had three children: Stacy Dawn Haines, born 2/2/1977 Hazzard, Kentucky Robert Bradley Haines, born 4/26/1978 Winchester, Virginia Mary Ann Haines, born 12/14/1979 Cumberland, Maryland
1859
Sarah
Fry
Harvey
Fry
Corbett
Fry
Jim
Fry
Alexander
Fry
Marie
Fry
Aubrie
Fry
Fonzie
Fry
John
Hopkins
Fry
Silas
Gilmore
Fry
1908 - 1984
Mildred
Fry
76
76
~1907 - ~1907
Peach
Fry
1723 - ~1812
Benjamin
Fry
89
89
He received from his father's will the sum of fifteen pounds. He might have been born in 1830. Marriage 1 Catherine Children 1. Sarah FRY birth b: Abt 1765 in Virginia 2. Benjamin FRY birth b: 25 Dec 1758 in Fredrick County,Virginia 3. Christina FRY birth b: Abt 1760 in Frederick County,Virginia 4. Isaac FRY birth b: 14 Jul 1765 in Fredrick County,Virginia 5. Henry FRY birth b: 18 Nov 1777 6. William Elijah FRY birth b: 9 Nov 1780 in Virginia 7. Samuel FRY birth 8. Martin FRY birth b: 1783 in Fredrick County,Virginia 9. Elizabeth FRY birth b: Abt 1786 in Virginia 10. Rebecca FRY birth 11. Katherine FRY birth b: in Frederick County,Virginia
Catherine
Rebecca
Spears
1783 - 1843
Martin
Elijah
Fry
60
60
1787 - 1868
Sarah
Froman
80
80
1812
Noah
Fry
1815
Martin
Fry
1817
Levi
Fry
1819
Froman
Fry
1825 - 1901
Catherine
Fry
75
75
1832
Sara
Fry
In the June 1830 Census Sarah Clines is listed under mother-in-law Frances Clines. Sarah Clines age 28, Sarah's children, Mary age 10, Lewis L. age 8, George W. age 4 and Harrison age 3. According to the information in the Cline book, Sarah's husband Harrison Cline, born 1821, died Oct. 1857 and his wife was listed guardian of children Mary Jane Cline, Lewis T. Cline and George Cline. Harrison Jr. was not listed as yet therefore he was probably born April 14, 1858 after his father had passed. 1870 Census family listed under Sarah Cline, still living in the Tick Creek area on the original Cline Land. 1880 Census living with dtr. Mary Jane and husband Ben Arington as well as J.M. Rucker and wife still in the Clay Village District.
1821 - 1857
Harrison
Cline
36
36
Jesse Cline reported as guardian in the Sept. 1829 and Oct. 1830 term for the infant children of James Goben. Jesse Cline's will was probated Sept. and Oct. 1851 with Levi Fry as Administrator. Harrison Cline listed as approving and also being the only heir. Census Records, Cline Book, "Cemeteries in Shelby Co., KY", Yesteryear's Footsteps" family site on Rootsweb.
Sarah
1837
Eliza
Fry
1841
William
Fry
1844
Warner
Fry
1848
Mary
Fry
1817
Sarah
Froman
1843 - 1921
William
Isaac
Fry
77
77
In 1880, the census showed Cathrine Stopher and Alfred Ellis also lived with them.
~1848
Mary (Eliza)
Elisabeth
Stopher
~1868
Orsemus
P Fry
~1870
Louis
C Fry
1870 - 1945
Leonard
Martin
Fry
74
74
~1874
Oscar
W Fry
~1876
Mattie
E Fry
~1877
William
A Fry
~1878
Anna
Fry
~1879
Livna
C Fry
1876 - 1958
Leila
Vaughn
Montfort
82
82
Father: Thomas Hertell MONTFORT b: 7 Jan 1854 Mother: Joanna(Joseph Ann) 'Josie' SCROGIN b: 31 Oct 1855 in Kentucky
1899
Eva
Christina
Fry
1893 - 1935
Oscar
Harvey
Merchant
42
42
Esther
Andrea
Brady
Joyce
Roe
Marvin
Earl
Wright
Barbara
Thomas
David
Nahoun
Frank
Ray
Stafford
Phonzo
Wayne
Swan
Collier
G
Wright
Neal
Amsler
John
N M
Gunn
~1765
Sarah
Fry
1758
Benjamin
Fry
~1760
Christina
Fry
1765
Isaac
Fry
1777
Henry
Fry
1780
William
Elijah
Fry
Samuel
Fry
~1786
Elizabeth
Fry
Rebecca
Fry
Katherine
Fry
D. 1726
Hugh
Drysdale
Hugh Drysdale, lieutenant governor of Virginia (1722-1726), succeeded Governor Spotswood in the administration of the colony, September 27, 1722, and remained in office till his death, July 22, 1726. Very little is known of his antecedents, but during his administration in Virginia he was very popular. There were two sessions of the assembly during this period, one beginning May 9, 1723, and the other beginning May 12, 1726. At the first, on the recommendation of Governor Drysdale, laws were passed to regulate the militia and for the more effectual prevention of Negro insurrections. It appears that not long before a conspiracy had been planned by Negroes. This conspiracy furnished additional reasons for the duty laid the same session on liquors and slaves. At the next session a commission was issued by the governor constituting Philip Finch to be the first sergeant-at-arms and mace-bearer of the House of Burgesses. Previous to this time an officer called the messenger had discharged these duties. Governor Drysdale announced to the house that "the interfering interest of the African Company" had obtained from the board of trade the repeal of the law of the previous session imposing a duty on liquors and slaves. He stated his belief that if a new duty be laid on liquors for the support of the college, then "in a languishing condition," the English government would not object, and this was done. Drysdale was a sick man during this session, and not long after its adjournment he died at Williamsburg, July 22, 1726. Hugh Drysdale, lieutenant-governor of Virginia (1722-1726), succeeded Governor Spotswood in the administration of the colony, September 27, 1722, and remained in office till his death, July 22, 1726. Very little is known of his antecedents, but during his administration in Virginia he was very popular. There were two sessions of the assembly during this period, one beginning May 9, 1723, and the other beginning May 12, 1726. At the first, on the recommendation of Governor Drysdale, laws were passed to regulate the militia and for the more effectual prevention of Negro insurrections. It appears that not long before a conspiracy had been planned by Negroes. This conspiracy furnished additional reasons for the duty laid the same session on liquors and slaves. At the next session a commission was issued by the governor constituting Philip Finch to be the first sergeant-at-arms and mace-bearer of the House of Burgesses. Previous to this time an officer called the messenger had discharged these duties. Governor Drysdale announced to the house that "the interfering interest of the African Company" had obtained from the board of trade the repeal of the law of the previous session imposing a duty on liquors and slaves. He stated his belief that if a new duty be laid on liquors for the support of the college, then "in a languishing condition," the English government would not object, and this was done. Drysdale was a sick man during this session, and not long after its adjournment he died at Williamsburg, July 22, 1726.
Hester
Mann
1916
Elizabeth
Nevens
1942
Clarice
Van
Valkenburg
1945
Janiece
Van
Valkenburg
Donald
Rentfro
Sherri
Rentfro
1970
David
Black
Black
Rentfro
Brown
1939
Larry
Brown
1941
Ronald
Brown
1943
Marlis
Brown
1947 - 1948
Loleta
Kristina
Brown
1
1
1955
Malae
Brown
1830 - 1894
Francis
Pruyn Van
Valkenburgh
63
63
Francis married Mary Jane Stacy on 25 May 1862 in, Livingston Co, IL. Mary was born in Aug 1844 in, IN. William H van Valkenburg was born in Jan 1864 in, Il. William married Anna A Fifield daughter of John Willis Fifield and Mary Bird on 2 Sep 1894 in Milwaukee, Milwaukee Co, Wi. Anna was born about 1870 in, OH Francis P or Frank van Valkenburg was born in 1867 in Gilman, Iroquois Co, Il Francis married Ella Louise Hunt daughter of William H Hunt and Mary Driscoll on 26 Oct 1896 in Danville, Vermilion Co, Il. Ella was born in 1868 in Wabash, Wabash Co, In. Stacy H Van Valkenburg was born in 1876 in Chicago, Cook Co, IL BIRTH: Written family records of H P Van Valkenburgh; 30 Jul 1830 at 9PM, Francis Pruyn at Seneca Falls MARRIAGE: records of Livingston Co, IL
1844
Mary
Jane
Stacy
1870 age 25; b c 1845 1880 age 28? 1900 Aug 1844 1900 in Danville, Vermilion Co, IL 1910 in Danville, Vermilion Co, IL
1864
William
H Van
Valkenburg
1870 age 6 1880 age 16 1900 Jan 1964 1880 in Chicago, Cook Co, IL living with parents 1894 at time of marriage to Anna Fifield he resided in IL 1900 in Danville, Vermilion Co, IL ED 68 6/100; no wife listed
1867
Francis
P Van
Valkenburg
1870 age 2 1880 age 13 1910 age 42 1900 in Danville, Vermilion Co, IL; no information given 1910 in Danville, Vermilion Co, IL living with Stacy BIRTH: place from marriage record; marriage age 30 MARRIAGE: records of Vermilion Co, IL OCCUPATION: Railroad Conductor
1876
Stacy
H Van
Valkenburg
1880 age 4 1910 age 33 1920 age 44 1910 in Vermillion, Danville Co, IL 1920 in Portrage Twp, St Joseph Co, IN BIRTH: complete date from WW1 draft MARRIAGE: 1st; no known record MARRIAGE: 2nd; records of Lenawee Co, MI; his 2nd marriage
1868
Ella
Louise
Hunt
1920 age 49; born IN MARRIAGE: records of Vermilion Co, IL; marriage age 29 SOURCE: all information from marriage record
William
H Hunt
Mary
Driscoll
John
Willis
Fifield
Willis may be his last name.
Mary
Bird
~1870
Anna
A
Fifield
All information from marriage record
~1879
Anna
Battie
1910 age 31; listed as Emma; 0 children 1920 age 41; listed as Anna; 0 children MARRIAGE: records of Lenawee Co, MI; marriage age 27
John
Battie
Stacy
van
Valkenburg
1833 - 1893
Bartholomew
Jacob Van
Valkenburgh
59
59
Bartholomew married (1) E Viola Bushnell on 1 Jan 1866 in, [IA]. The marriage ended in divorce.E Viola Bushnell was born in Apr 1838 in of, Il. Bartholomew and E Viola Bushnell had the following children: Emma A Van Valkenburg was born on 12 Apr 1870 in Benton, Lafayette Co, WI. [Notes] Nina Van Valkenburg Lester L Van Valkenburg was born on 12 Jul 1875 in Big Prairie, IA. [Notes] Bertha Belle Van Valkenburg was born about 1877 Bartholomew married (2) Josephine Frashier (Frazier) on 1 Sep 1880 in Delhi, Delaware Co, IA. Josephine was born about 1 May 1851 in of, Delaware Co, IA. NOTE: Bartholomew and Josephine lived in Esrom, Barton Co, MO. Some time after his death she married Amasa Frizzell of Esrom. This was 3 Jan 1898 in LaMarr, Barton Co, MO. From Civil War app of Bartholomew Bartholomew and Josephine had the following children: Herman P Van Valkenburg was born on 9 Nov 1886 in of, Barton Co, MO. [Notes] BIRTH: Written family records of H P Van Valkenburgh; 13 Apr 1833 at 5PM, Bartholamew Jacob at Seneca Falls MARRIAGE: 1st: Civil War pension app; he divorced Viola on 9 Sep 1879 at Delhi, Delaware, Co, IA MARRIAGE: 2nd: Civil War pension app DEATH: information from Civil War pension app
1875
Lester
L Van
Valkenburg
1880 not on census with Father 1900 Jul 1875 1900 in Park Co, C0 Ed 187 8/74 BIRTH: from Fathers Civil War pension app
1838
E
Viola
Bushnell
1870 age 30; listed as E Viola 1900 Apr 1838 age 62; listed as Viola 1900 in Corning, Adams Co, IA; birthplace MI DEATH: IA cemetery records; listed as Viola (Van Valkenburgh) Kellogg
1874
Nina
Van
Valkenburg
1880 age 6 BIRTH: From Fathers Civil War pension app
1877 - 1956
Bertha
Belle Van
Valkenburg
79
79
1880 age 3 BIRTH: From Fathers Civil War pension app MARRIAGE: IGI
Benner
William
Van
Alstyne
1868
George
Washington
McLaughlin
1870
Emma
A Van
Valkenburg
1880 not on census BIRTH: From Fathers Civil War pension app NOTE: Emma in the biological daughter of Mr Kirkpatrick and Josephine Frashier. Bartholomew listed her on his Civil War papers as his daughter. It is a possibility that she was adopted. Emma used both last names. She is being placed in this family for that reason.
~1851
Josephine
Frashier
NOTE: Bartholomew and Josephine lived in Esrom, Barton Co, MO. Some time after his death she married Amasa Frizzell of Esrom. This was 3 Jan 1898 in LaMarr, Barton Co, MO. From Civil War app of Bartholomew
1886 - 1917
Hermand
P Van
Valkenburgh
31
31
BIRTH: born in Rayne?, no state given; date from Cemetery record DEATH & BURIAL: Find A Grave; listed as Hermand P Van Valkenburgh SOURCE: other information from Fathers Civil War pension app
~1911
Catherine
M Van
Alstyne
1896
James
Alvin
McLaughlin
Opal
Arsula
Cox
Marsha
Joan
McLaughlin
William
Anderson
McLaughlin
1901 - 1983
Nina
Bell
McLaughlin
82
82
SOURCE: Joann Skaggs Pickett 2006
1892 - 1961
Melvin
Hubert
Skaggs
68
68
SOURCE: Joann Skaggs Pickett 2006
1934
Joann
Skaggs
SOURCE: Joann Skaggs Pickett 2006
Pickett
Sara
Anne
Myles
1846
Sarah
W
Brown
1870 age 24 1880 age 32
~1871
Antonette
M Van
Valkenburg
1880 age 9
John J
Brown
Rebecca
A
Hadley
1835
Abram
Mathias Van
Valkenburgh
Abram married Sarah W Brown daughter of John J Brown and Rebecca A Hadley on 7 Jul 1869 in Whitewater, Walworth Co, Wi. Sarah was born on 24 Jun 1846 in Buffalo, Erie Co, Ny. Children: Antonette M or Nettie van Valkenburg was born about 1871, in Walworth Co, WI 1880 age 41 1869 in Whitewater, Walworth Co, WI 1870 in Walworth Co, WI p575 1880 in Lime Town, Sheboygan Co, WI ED 208 /15; Occupation: Drugist BIRTH: Written family records of H P Van Valkenburg; 13 Apr 1835 at 5PM, Abraham Mathias at Jerusalem MARRIAGE: records of Walworth Co, WI; film # 1,275,585 has birthplace as Jerusalem, NY
1837
Harman
Beardsley Van
Valkenburgh
Harman married Kittie May about 1858 in, [Ia]. Kittie was buried in Fairview Cemetery, Earlville, Delaware Co, IA (Death is from Cemetery records; no other information and may not be the wife of Harman) 1850 in Ohio living with Alvin and Jane Bagley 1880 of Seattle, WA; from probate record of sister BIRTH: Written family records of H P Van Valkenburgh; 13 Mar 1837 at 2AM, Herman Beardsley at Itheca
Kittie
May
SOURCE: This information from VV Gen book DEATH: Cemetery records; no other information and may not be the wife of Harman
1845
Alvin
Bagley Van
Valkenburgh
Alvin married Elizabeth Wright about 1876 in, [Ia]. Elizabeth was born about 1858 in, Pa. 1870 in Oneida, Delaware Co, IA living with Bartholomew VV; Occupation: Druggist 1880 in Delhi Twp, Delaware Co, IA ED 155 24/26 1910 in Benton Co, MO 007 0011 0281 Alvin and Elizabeth had the following children: Kittie van Valkenburg Faye van Valkenburg was born about 1890 in, MO NOTE: middle initial either E or C
~1858
Elizabeth
Wright
1880 age 22 1910 age 55 MARRIAGE: records of Tama Co, IA
~1878
Kittie
Van
Valkenburg
1880 age 2; listed as K A Van Valkenburg 1910 age 32
~1890
Faye
Van
Valkenburg
1910 age 20 NOTE: middle initial either E or C
~1875
Ted
Wright
1910 age 35
~1901
Faye
Wright
1910 age 9
1793
Bata
Van
Valkenburgh
~1790
William
Beardsley
1880 Sherland, IL
1820
Jane
Beardsley
~1822
Martin
Beardsley
~1824
Chloe
Beardsley
George
Boardman
Hubbard
J R
Dickerman
Fowler
1848 - 1848
Wilburforce
Van
Valkenburg
2m
2m
SOURCE: all info from Watchman of the Prairies 1848: BIRTH & DEATH: Aug 29, Died at St Charles, Kane Co, IL, the 19th inst., after a short illness, Wilberforce, only son of B & W Van Valkenberg, ages 2 months and 8 days.
1807 - 1848
Abbey
Durant
41
41
BIRTH & DEATH: Cemetery records MARRIAGE: records of Kane Co, IL DEATH: info from the Watchman of the Prairies 1848 Sept 12, Died at St Charles, Kane Co, IL Sept 1st, after an illness of more than two months, Mrs Abbey, wife of Bartholomew Van Valkenbergh, ages 42 yrs. Only two weeks ago she laid in the grave her only and infant son.
1808 - 1838
Ruth
Phelps
Crandall
30
30
BIRTH: Crandall Genealogy DEATH: Crandall Genealogy
1830 - 1890
Catherine
Adeline Van
Valkenburg
60
60
1880 age 49 1880 in Baraboo, Sauk Co, WI BIRTH: Crandall Genealogy; name of Catherine Adeline; IGI has Adelia MARRIAGE: family records SOURCE: additional information from Crandall Genealogy and VV Genealogy NOTE: middle name has been recorded as Adelia and Adeline
1832
Ruth
Ann Van
Valkenburg
1850 age 17 1860 age 26 1850 in Adams, Sauk Co, WI p016 living with Crandells 1860 in Sauk Co, WI living with Crandells; Occupation: teacher BIRTH: Crandall Genealogy MARRIAGE: records of Dane Co, WI SOURCE: additional information from Crandall Genealogy and VV Genealogy
~1831 - 1907
Henry
Southard
76
76
1880 age 49; born PA 1880 in Baraboo, Sauk Co, WI
~1828
Richard
Lewis
Warren
AKA Lewis Richard Warren
1840
Emily
Van
Valkenburg
SOURCE: family records MARRIAGE: records of La Salle Co, IL
1826
Thomas
McDermott
Amos
Livermore
Catherine
Sargent
1834
Huldah Jane
Josephine Van
Valkenburg
1850 age 16; listed as Hulda J VV 1860 age 26 1880 age 46 1860 in Brooklyn Twp, Sauk Co, WI p022 living with Knapps family BIRTH: Crandall Genealogy MARRIAGE: family records SOURCE: additional information from Crandall Genealogy and VV Genealogy
1841 - 1918
Estella
Isabelle Van
Valkenburg
76
76
1850 age 8 1900 Nov 1841 age 58; 0 children 1880 in Mendon, IL 1900 in Mendon, Adams Co, IL BIRTH: date from 1900 census MARRIAGE: married 36 years in 1900 DEATH: cemetery records; film #934,676
~1829
Abraham
John
Goode
1860 age 31; listed as Abrahan J 1870 age 44 1880 age 52; listed as A J 1860 in High Forest, Olmstead Co, MN 1870 in Pleasant Grove, Olmstead Co, MN 1880 in Pleasant Grove, Olmstead Co, MN
1849 - 1908
DeLaine
L
Dickermann
58
58
1850 age 9; born IL; listed as L. De Lane 1900 Oct 1840 age 59 1850 in Ursa, Adams Co, IL living with parents BIRTH: date from 1900 census MARRIAGE: married 36 years in 1900 DEATH: cemetery records, film # 934,676 He was in the Union Army from 2-23-1865 to 9-4-1865, a private in 155 Illinois Infantry, Company D.
1895
Irma
Langdon
1900 Oct 1895 ate 4
1835 - 1837
Martin Van
Buren Van
Valkenburg
2
2
SOURCE: Crandall Genealogy
~1812
Jeanette
Johnson
1850 age 38; born CT; known as Jennett Fowler 1880 age 68; divorced 1850 in Ursa, Adams Co, IL 1880 in Adams Co, IL MARRIAGE: Adams Co, IL newspaper article NOTE: living with Jenette in 1850 is the following: Mary I Fowler age 15 born IL Frances A Fowler born IL Estella I Valwalemburg age 8 It seems that Jennette was first married to a Fowler and that it was not her maiden name.
D E
James
Schackley
~1854
Ruth
Maria
Southard
1880 age 26 BIRTH: OneWorldTree
1856
John
Bartholomew
Southard
1880 age 24 1900 Apr 1856 BIRTH: 1900 census MARRIAGE: married 20 yrs in 1900
1858
Emma
Jane
Southard
1880 age 22 1900 Mar 1858 BIRTH: OneWorldTree
1888
Ray
Langdon
1900 Dec 1888 age 14
~1862
Robert
Bagley
Southard
1880 age 18 BIRTH: OneWorldTree
~1864
Henry Van
Valkenburg
Southard
1880 age 16 BIRTH: OneWorldTree
~1860
Harriet
Schackley
1858
Harlon
Langdon
1900 Nov 1858 1900 in Greenfield, Sauk Co, WI MARRIAGE: married 19 years in 1900
Byrde
McKee
Vaughan
Jane
~1853
Wilbur
Bartholomew
Goode
~1857
Lucy
Goode
1860 age 3; born WI; listed as Lucy 1870 age 13
1858
Cora
Electa
Goode
1860 age 1; born WI 1880 age 21 1900 Oct 1858
~1861
Francis
Edwin
Goode
1870 age 9; born MN 1880 age 20l kusted as Francis E
~1862
John
Paul
Goode
1870 age 7; listed as John 1880 age 18; listed as Paul J
~1865
Martha
Ruth
Goode
1870 age 5 1880 age 15; listed as Martha R
1867
Mark
Simeon
Goode
1870 age 2 1880 age 13; listed as Mark S
~1871
Jane
Elizabeth
Goode
1880 age 9
George
Smith
Frank
Hacker
Katherine
Hancock
Alfred
Trask
Mildred
Mahitable
1862
May
Elizabeth
Southard
1880 age 20 BIRTH: OneWorldTree
1896
Clarence
Langdon
1900 Sep 1896 age 3
1795 - 1880
Electa
Hopkins
84
84
1860 age 64; born VT SOURCE: All information from VV gen
1811 - 1840
Hannah
Allen
Livermore
29
29
1799 - 1874
Bartholomew
Van
Valkenburgh
75
75
1850 age 50 1860 age 60 1831 will of Father list his as in Sempronius, Steuben Co, NY 1839-1840 in IL 1848 in St Charles Twp, Kane Co, IL @ property tax list 1850 in Prattsburg, Steuben Co, NY p284 1860 in Prattsburg p825 Bartholomew married (1) Ruth Phelps Crandall daughter of Simeon Crandall and Ruth Ward Phelps on 16 Jun 1830 in NY. Ruth was born on 22 Feb 1808 in Fire Hill, NY. She died on 29 Sep 1838 in Ottawa, La Salle Co, IL. Bartholomew and Ruth had the following children: 1. Catherine Adeline Van Valkenburg 2. Ruth Ann Van Valkenburg was born on 8 Dec 1832 in Semphronius, Cayuga Co, NY. Ruth married Richard Lewis Warren on 18 Oct 1866 in Mazomanie, Dane Co, Wi. Richard was born about 1828 in, CT 3. Huldah Jane Josephine Van Valkenburg 4. Martin van Buren Van Valkenburg was born on 12 Apr 1835 in Sempronius, Cayuga Co, NY. He died on 12 Oct 1837. Bartholomew married (2) Hannah Allen Livermore daughter of Amos Livermore and Catherine Sargent on 3 Apr 1839 in, La Salle Co, IL. Hannah was born on 4 Feb 1811 in Spencer, Tioga Co, NY. She died on 30 Mar 1840 in Ottawa, La Salle Co, IL. They had the following child: 5. Emily Van Valkenburg was born on 9 Mar 1840 in Ottawa, La Salle Co, IL. Emily married Thomas Mc Dermott on 1 Feb 1857 in, La Salle Co, Il. Thomas was born in 1826 in, County Wexford, Ireland. Bartholomew married (3) Jeanette Fowler on 3 Feb 1841 in Mendon, Adams Co, IL. The marriage ended in divorce. Jeanette was born about 1812 in, CT. She was buried in Quincy, Adams Co, IL. Bartholomew and Jeanette had the following child: 6. Estella I Van Valkenburg was born in Nov 1841 in, Adams Co, IL. She died in Mendon, Adams Co, IL. She was buried on 19 Apr 1918 in Mendon Cem, Mendon, Adams Co, IL. Estella married De Laine L Dickermann son of J R Dickerman and D E about 1864 in, [Adams Co], IL. De was born in Oct 1840 in of, Adams Co, IL. He died in Mendon, Adams Co, IL. He was buried on 4 Aug 1908 in Mendon Cem, Mendon, Adams Co, IL. Bartholomew married (4) Abbey Durant on 27 Apr 1847 in, Kane Co, IL. Abbey was born about 1806. She died on 1 Sep 1848 in St Charles, Kane Co, IL. Bartholomew and Abbey had the following child: 7. Wilburforce Van Valkenburg was born on 11 Jun 1848 in St Charles, Kane Co, IL. He died on 19 Aug 1848 in St Charles, Kane Co, IL. Bartholomew married (5) Electa Hopkins daughter of John Hopkins and Elizabeth Richardson about 1849 in, [Steuben Co], NY. Electa was born on 3 May 1795 in, VT. She died in Jan 1880 in Prattsburg, Steuben Co, NY. BIRTH: Bartley s/o Bartholomew J V Valkenburg and Catharine Pruyn; Church record; Saturday 1 o'clock AM was born unto them a son baptised by Parson Laupaugh at Kinderhook named Barthley; no witnesses; Bible record. MARRIAGE: 1st: Crandall Gen has 16 Jun 1830 2nd: records of La Salle Co, IL 3rd: Bartholomew Van Valkenburg of La Salle to Jeanette Fowler in Mendon, Adams Co, IL; Newspaper article: Bride of Mendon, Groom of Ottawa, La Salle Co, IL 4th: records of Kane Co, IL 5th: no known record DEATH: Crandall Genealogy
1883 - 1956
Peyton
Kavanaugh Van
Valkenburg
73
73
1900 Oct 1883 1900 in Port Arthur, Jefferson Co, TX living with parents 1914-1916 in Los Angeles, Los Angeles Co, CA 1918 in Leon Co, FL; WWI draft 1941 in Austin, Williamson Co, TX; with wife Miriam BIRTH: 1900 census has oct 1883; WWI draft has 12 Oct 1885 DEATH: FL death record
1893
Tenny
Lou
Lacy
1900 May 1893 age 7
1914
Mildred
Van
Valkenburg
BIRTH: records of Los Angeles Co, CA #7705
1916
Francis
Dwight Van
Valkenburg
BIRTH: Los Angeles Co, CA birth record # 2628 NOTE: did live in NY; could have gone to FL SOURCE: information from Colleen VV Emery dated 1981
1922 - 1996
Yvonne
van
Valkenburg
73
73
BIRTH & DEATH: SSDI; Yvonne V Walters
1841 - 1921
Francis
Dwight Van
Valkenburgh
79
79
1850 age 8 1860 age 18 1870 age 28 1900 Oct 1841 age 58 1860 in Warren, Bradley Co, AR living with parents 1870 in Warren, Bradley Co, AR; with 1st wife 1880 in Little Rock, Pulaski Co, AR; with 2nd wife 1893 in New Orleans, LA; from city directory 1900 in Port Arthur, Jefferson Co, TX; with 3rd wife 1910 in New Orleans, LA; with 3rd wife MARRIAGE: 1st; records of Muscogee Co, GA FHL film #401846 Frank D Van Valkenburg to Antoinette M Bazmore MARRIAGE: 2nd; records of Hot Springs Co, AR MARRIAGE: 3rd; family records, from bio; married in the summer of 1888 at the Methodist Sea Shore Camp Grounds
~1849 - <1888
Ida A
Hite
39
39
1867 age 19 at time of 1st marriage 1870 age 21; born TN 1871 age 22 at time of 2nd marriage 1870 in Clear Creek Twp, Hot Springs Co, AR l/w Wm. Hite BIRTH: MARRIAGE: 1st; records of Hot Springs Co, AR; see copy of certificate MARRIAGE: 2nd; records of Hot Springs Co, AR; see copy of certificate DEATH: no known record
1893 - 1969
Miriam
Samuel
75
75
1900 Oct 1893 1900 in Belmont Co, OH living with parents 1941; already married to Peyton DEATH: SSDI; and FL death record
~1845 - <1871
Antoinette
M
Bazemore
26
26
1870 age 25; born LA NOTE: Family records have the name of Nettie; 1870 census has Nellie Also has that she is from Cartersville, GA; 1900 census for her son William has her born in GA
1868 - 1961
William
Bazemore Van
Valkenburg
92
92
1870 age 1 1880 age 11 1900 Dec 1868 age 31 1900 in Grant Co, LA; says Mother born in GA; single 1956 in Biloxi, Harrison Co, MS; from the VV Gen
~1868
John
Barnett
1870 age 2 NOTE: this census is very hard to read; at first is seems that his age is 21 but on furthur study of the census it is a 2; the census taker puts tags on his 2's thus making them look like 21's
1810 - 1888
Emily
Allis
78
78
~1833 - 1851
Josiah
Allis Van
Valkenburgh
18
18
1850 age 16 DEATH: Cemetery record; died age 18 yrs
1835 - 1886
Caroline
Gridley Van
Valkenburgh
51
51
1850 age 15 1860 age 25 MARRIAGE: 1st: records of Bradley Co, AR MARRIAGE: 2nd: records of Bradley Co, AR
~1840
William
Bartholomew
Van Valkenburgh
1850 age 10
1843 - 1909
Horace
Bulle Van
Valkenburgh
65
65
1850 age 6 1880 age 36 1900 Nov 1843 age 56 1880 in Pennington Twp, Bradley Co, AR 1900 in Warren, Pennington twp, Bradley Co, AR MARRIAGE: records of Bradley Co, AR; see copy of certificate
~1845 - <1850
Mary
C Van
Valkenburgh
5
5
1850 not on census
1847 - 1937
Emily
Lemira Van
Valkenburgh
90
90
1850 age 2 1860 age 12 MARRIAGE: records of Nevada Co, AR
1845
Ellen
W
Thompson
1900 Oct 1845 age 54 1910 age 64 BIRTH: date from 1900 census MARRIAGE: abt 1888; married 12 yrs in 1900; 0 children NOTE: FB Scottland; MB Ireland: In this country since 1860; here 40 yrs on 1900 census
~1830 - <1866
Downer
Singer
36
36
1850 age 21 1857 marriage age 27 1860 age 30 1850 in Bradley Co, AR 1860 in Warren, Bradley Co, AR MARRIAGE: records of Bradley Co, AR WILL: FHL film # 982,766 p 48
~1859
Emily
Singer
1860 age 1 1870 not on census
1829 - 1904
John
Randolph
Barnett
74
74
1870 age 50 1900 Sep 1829 age 70; 5 Sep 1829 from death record 1860 in Warren, Bradley Co, AR 1870 in Warren, Bradley Co, AR 1880 in Warren, Bradley Co, AR 1900 John in Warren, Bradley Co, AR MARRIAGE: records of Bradley Co, AR
1869
Powell
Barnett
1870 age 5/12; born Dec 1869
1871 - 1944
Charles
Randolph
Barnett
73
73
1880 age 10 NOTE: VV Genealogy has birthdate as 4 Jan 1870. This is in error, probably 1871 inasmuch as he had a brother Powell born in Dec 1869
1874 - 1938
Edward
Lee
Barnett
64
64
1880 age 5 1900 Oct 1874 1920 age 34; born AR 1920 in Warren, Bradley Co, AR BIRTH: census record has 1874; VV gen records have 1875 MARRIAGE: records of Bradley Co, AR
~1840 - <1870
Joseph
Banford
30
30
BIRTH: date calculated from age at time of marriage; marriage age 27 MARRIAGE: records of Hot Springs Co, AR
~1868
Mary
Banford
1870 age 1; name of May 1880 age 12; name of Mary
~1834
John P
Holmes
BIRTH: date calculated from age at time of marriage MARRIAGE: records of Nevada Co, AR; age 50, of Emmet, Nevada Co, AR
1874 - 1946
Francis
Garrett Van
Valkenburg
72
72
1880 age 7 1900 Jan 1874
1878
Ida Stanley
Van
Valkenburg
1880 age 2 1900 Feb 1878 1900 in Port Arthur, Jefferson Co, TX
1879
Lily Fones
Van
Valkenburg
1880 abt 6/12 1900 Dec 1879 1900 in Port Arthur, Jefferson Co, TX 1910 living with sister Carrie
1881
Grace
Eva Van
Valkenburg
1900 Nov 1881 1900 in Port Arthur, Jefferson Co, TX
1885 - 1970
Carrie
Rupert Van
Valkenburg
85
85
1900 Apr 1885 1900 in Port Arthur, Jefferson Co, TX living with parents 1910 in Little Rock 1913 to Austin, TX @ city directory BIRTH: date from 1900 census; complete date from social security death index DEATH: social seurity death index
Harry
Walters
Alexander
R
Crebbin
Ester
Williams
Joseph
Evans
Blackburn
Charles
M
Taylor
Joseph
Holland
MARRIAGE: Family date collection, Ancestry.com; Joseph Holland & Eva Van Valkenburgh
Peyton
Fuller
~1848 - 1930
Sally
Catherine
Smith
82
82
1880 age 28; born abt 1852 1900 Jan 1849 age 51 BIRTH: date of 1849 from family records; 1848 from cemetery records DEATH: cemetery records has birth date as 25 Jan 1848 instead of 1849
1879 - 1945
Fay Hempstead
Van
Valkenburgh
65
65
1880 age 7/12 1900 Sep 1879 age 20 BIRTH & DEATH: Cemetery records
1880 - 1960
Henry
L Van
Valkenburgh
79
79
1900 Oct 1880 age 19 BIRTH: date from 1900 census BIRTH & DEATH: Cemetery records
1883
Horace
Bulle Van
Valkenburgh
1900 Feb 1883 age 17 1915 Faculty menber at Daniel Baker College in Brownwood, TX
1885 - 1971
William
Moore Van
Valkenburgh
85
85
1900 Dec 1885 age 14 1920 age 37 1920 in Conway, Faulkner Co, AR ED 28 14/88 1940 in Little Rock, AR BIRTH & DEATH: Cemetery records
~1887 - 1985
Caroline
Emily Van
Valkenburgh
97
97
1900 Sep 1887 age 12 BIRTH: date from 1900 census and family records DEATH: social security death index
1890 - 1982
Lottie
Mae
Blake
92
92
1884 - 1973
Grace
Cowan
88
88
1886 - 1986
Beulah
Williams
99
99
BIRTH & DEATH: SSDI DEATH: Cemetery record
1891 - 1987
Mildred
Ruth
Little
95
95
1920 age 28; born AR BIRTH & DEATH: Cemetery records; listed as Mildred Ruth Little Van Valkenburgh
D. 1948
Alexander
Lawton
Greene
1875
Vertie
Bradley
1900 Feb 1875; name of Vertie 1910 age 35; born AR 1900 in Warren Bradley Co, AR; Occupation Music teacher BIRTH: date from 1900 census MARRIAGE: records of Bradley Co, AR; E L Barnett age 27 to Virtie Bradley age 27
Molly
O'Neil
Josiah
Allis
Mary
Bull
~1819
William
Hite
~1827
Mary
~1953
Colleen
van
Valkenburg
SOURCE: Colleen Van Valkenburgh Emery; says she is 28 yrs in 1981
~1948 - 1972
Nelson
Van
Valkenburg
24
24
DEATH: died age 23 in 1981 SOURCE: Colleen Van Valkenburgh Emery
D. ~1976
Eileen
Flynn
DEATH: died 5 yrs ago; letter written in 1981
<1910
Randolph
Barnett
1920 listed on census but with no age
James
I
Lookadoo
1912 - 1972
Fay
Van
Valkenburgh
60
60
BIRTH & DEATH: Cemetery records
1913 - 1998
Lucille
Van
Valkenburgh
84
84
1919 - 2003
Dale
Blake Van
Valkenburgh
84
84
1929
Wayne
Van
Valkenburgh
1911
Alexander
Lawton
Greene
1915 - 1993
Horace
Townsend
Greene
78
78
Vera
Hardcastle
Faye
Davis
Katherine
Orto
D. 1997
Inez
Connelly
1944 - 1975
Gail Lucille
Van
Valkenburgh
30
30
1948
Howard
Dale Van
Valkenburgh
BIRTH: TX birth record
Charles
L
Golden
1936
Sandra
Golden
1944
Gaye
Lynne
Golden
Bass
Gray
1953
Gary
Thomas Van
Valkenburgh
1908 - 1995
Horace
Bulle Van
Valkenburgh
87
87
DEATH: Cemetery record
Viola
Gerfe
1936
Holly
Viola Van
Valkenburgh
ID#: B492.D53.11 MARRIAGE: records of NM; Holly Van Valkenburgh 7 George Mills Cowan, Jr
1939
Horace
Bulle Van
Valkenburgh
ID#: B492.D53.12
1947
Lou Ann
Van
Valkenburgh
ID#: B492.D53.13
Betty
Louise
Dove
1947
Fay
Van
Valkenburgh
BIRTH: TX birth record
1936
Lynne
Van
Valkenburgh
Dorothy
Cunningham
1954
Steven
Wayne Van
Valkenburgh
1958
Kathryn
Grace Van
Valkenburgh
1962
Blake
Allen Van
Valkenburgh
Michele
Sarni
Bauman
1970
Lillian
Michele Van
Valkenburgh
NOTE: adopted by Steven Wayne Van Valkenburgh
1974
William
Michael Van
Valkenburgh
NOTE: adopted by Steven Wayne Van Valkenburgh
1983
Steven
Matthew Van
Valkenburgh
1970
John
Paul
Johnson
1956
Brian
Keith
Thompson
1994
Alex
Michael
Thompson
1997
Kyle
Mathew
Thompson
1965
Lisa
Carol
Turner
1998
Lauren
Ashley Van
Valkenburgh
Virginia
Evans
~1905
Harriet
Evans
1920 age 15; born TX 1920 in Biloxi, Harrison Co, MS living with Grandparents Francis D and Ellen Van Valkenburg
Frank Van
Valkenburg
Banford Evans
Rebecca
Taylor
Joseph
Holland
Samuel
Whitaker
~1930
Eleanor
Ramsey
Crebbins
J C
Williams
Luella
1910 - 1946
Jack
Christopher Van
Valkenburgh
35
35
DEATH: Cemetery record
1913
Dorothy
Van
Valkenburgh
1910
Betty
Van
Valkenburgh
Eunice
Le
Bauve
Joseph
Edward
Mandru
James
M Day
Roland
Fischer
Cedric
Fischer
1952
James
Van
Day
1944
Jack
Christopher Van
Valkenburgh
1935
James
Edward
Mandru
1938
William
Frank
Mandru
1940
Dorothy
Jeanne
Mandru
1943
Judith
Ann
Mandru
Joseph
Edward
Mandru
James
Lacy
Edna
William
Samuel
Mary
Valiant
F
Lammert
1955
Lee V
Lammert
ID#: B492.D53.111 MARRIAGE: records of NM; Holly Van Valkenburgh 7 George Mills Cowan, Jr
George
Mills
Cowan
1957
Jeni
Lou
Cowan
ID#: B492.D53.112
Kenneth
Ronald
Ohm
1968
Gary
Franklin
Ohm
ID#: B492.D53.113
Reza
Moradi
1983
Julie
Jaleh
Moradi
1984
Ryan
Reza
Moradi
Muniz
1995
Sean
Ohm
Cheryl
Wilbur
1997
Kevin
Kenneth
Ohm
Lopez
1810 - 1866
William
Moore Van
Valkenburgh
56
56
William married Emily Allis daughter of Josiah Allis and Mary Bull in 1830 in Prattsburgh, Steuben Co, NY. Emily was born on 1 Jan 1810 in Prattsburgh, Steuben Co, NY. She died in 1888 in Warren, Bradley Co, AR. She was buried in Warren, Bradley Co, AR. They had the following children: 1. Josiah Allis Van Valkenburgh was born about 1833 in Prattsburgh, Steuben Co, NY. He died on 2 Oct 1851. He was buried in Old Cemetery, Prattsburg, Steuben Co, NY. 2. Caroline Gridley Van Valkenburgh 3. William Bartholomew Van Valkenburgh was born about 1840 in Prattsburgh, Steuben Co, NY. 4. Francis Dwight Van Valkenburgh 5. Horace Bulle Van Valkenburgh 6. Mary C Van Valkenburgh was born about 1845 in Prattsburgh, Steuben Co, NY. She died before 1850. 7. Emily Lemira Van Valkenburgh was born in 1847 in Prattsburgh, Steuben Co, NY. She died in 1937 in Oak Park, Cook Co, IL. Emily married John P Holmes on 18 May 1884 in, Nevada Co, AR. John was born about 1834 in Emmet, Nevada Co, Ar. BIRTH & BAPTISM: Church record MARRIAGE: family records DEATH: Probate record of Bradley Co, AR
~1813
Mariah
Vanzile
~1845
Alonzo
Knapp
Alonzo died in the Civil War.
~1831
Joseph
Knapp
Joseph died in the Civil War.
~1848
Erasmus
Manford
Knapp
Nancy
Ann
Davis
William
Raymond
Knapp
He was a Spanish America War Veteran.
Eva
Lena
Crosby
William
Howard
Knapp
He was a Marine Captain in World War II.
Monica
Mary
Kellermann
William
Frederick
Knapp
John
Peter
Knapp
Joseph
Anton
Knapp
Mary
Ann
Knapp
Teresa
Marie
Knapp
James
Christopher
Knapp
Gregory
Lee
Young
Elizabeth
Monica
Young
John
Gregory
Young
Elizabeth
~1895
Viola
Knapp
~1876
Charles
Knapp
~1840
Marion
Knapp
~1832
Lydia
Knapp
~1834
Mariah
Louisa
Knapp
~1837
Laura
Knapp
1797
Adalbert
Jezewski
Marianna
Jarzabkowna
Marianna
Jezewski
She was the daughter of Adalbert Jezewski and Marianna Jarzabkowna. She married Ignatz Anton Korynta on February 4, 1849 in Wiele, Chojnice, Bydgoskiego, Poland. He was the son of Joseph Korynta and Magdalena Zabrocki.
1904 - 1907
Joseph
Jorski
2
2
Cecil
Graves
1783 - 1845
Joseph
Korynta
62
62
1783
Magdalena
Zabrocki
1750 - 1800
Stanislaus
Korynta
50
50
Marianna
Francisci
Zabrocki
Marianna
1772
Elizabeth
Korynta
1774
Stefan
Korynta
1777
Martin
Korynta
1779
Franciszca
Korynta
1886 - 1969
Joseph
Frank
Wyskup
83
83
His World War I draft card says he was born in Austria. The 1930 census record lists him as born in Poland and speaking Polish. He was probably born in Barycz, Poland, which was ruled by Austria at the time. In 1920 he lived in Dewey, Oklahoma. He immigrated to the U.S. 20 Apr 1897 on the SS Roland in Galveston.
1889 - 1981
Anna
(Annie)
Michalski
91
91
She immigrated to the U.S. in 1911
1859 - 1945
Ignacy
(Ike)
Wyskup
85
85
He came to the U.S. on the S.S. Roland sailing from Bremen, Germany on March 31, 1897, arriving in Galveston, Texas on April 20, 1897. His last residence is listed as Barysz (Barycz), which was in Austrian ruled Poland. He is listed with Zofia 35, Pioter 13, Josef 11, Antoni 9, and Ipolonia 6. His nationality is listed as "Galacia," the same as the two previous families and two subsequent families in the manifest. In the 1910 census, he, Sophia, Tony, and Polina are listed as "Aust. Polish. living in Dewey, Oklahoma.
1862 - 1916
Sophia
Byke
53
53
~1913
Szofia
J
Wyskup
~1915
Mary
K
Wyskup
1918
Frances
Wyskup
~1920
Nellie
Wyskup
~1923
Helen
Wyskup
1911 - 1997
Mike S
Wyskup
85
85
1882 - 1970
Peter
Marion
Wyskup
87
87
They lived in Choctaw, Oklahoma in 1920. He immigrated in 1897 on the SS Roland to Galveston. He was a farmer. Maybe he was born in 1883.
1888 - 1966
Anton
(Tony)
Wyskup
78
78
1890
Polina
Wyskup
1897 - 1960
Stanley
Wyskup
62
62
1899 - 1976
John
Henry
Wyskup
77
77
1901 - 1990
Martha
Teresa
Wyskup
89
89
Francisci
Jezewski
Justina
Zywicki
1871
Marianna
Klimkowska
Anton
Szybiak
Adeline
Szybiak
Annie
Szybiak
Frances
Szybiak
John
Szybiak
Josephine
Szybiak
Katie
Szybiak
1874
John
Klimkowski
~1886
Elizabeth
(Lizzie)
She is listed in the 1920 census as born in Germany with parents born in Germany.
1914 - 1999
Felix L
Klimkowski
84
84
~1918
Leona
Klimkowski
1892
Helen
Klimkowska
~1888
Peter
Senkowski
~1914
Victoria
Senkowski
Helen
1886
Andreas
Klimkowski
Martha
Theresa
Wilkowski
Adam
Klimkowski
Addey
Klimkowski
Carl
Klimkowski
Eleanor
Klimkowski
Frank
Klimkowski
Henry
Klimkowski
Jean
Klimkowski
Jess
Klimkowski
Joe
Klimkowski
Louise
Klimkowski
Marion
Francis
Klimkowski
Pete
Klimkowski
Rene
Klimkowski
1923 - 1995
Richard
Leonard
Folsom
72
72
William
Skorkosky
William
Skorkosky
Martha
Shirley
Kerri
Klimkowski
Randy
Klimkowski
Bob
Wilkes
Jean
Ann
Wilkes
Mark
Wilkes
Roberta
Karen
Klimkowski
Marsha
Klimkowski
Susan
Klimkowski
Earl
Porter
Gloria
Porter
Jim
Porter
Mary
Lou
Porter
Pauline
Adelaine
Klimkowski
Benny
Klimkowski
Christine
Klimkowski
1888
Margeret
Klimkowska
Steciak
Cashmere
Steciak
Elizabeth
Steciak
Ethel
Steciak
Florence
Steciak
Frances
Steciak
George
Steciak
Leona
Steciak
Twaful
Steciak
1882 - 1970
Peter
Marion
Wyskup
87
87
They lived in Choctaw, Oklahoma in 1920. He immigrated in 1897 on the SS Roland to Galveston. He was a farmer. Maybe he was born in 1883.
1880 - 1940
Mary
Babiak
60
60
They lived in Choctaw, Oklahoma in 1920. She and her parents were born in Poland. She arrived in Galveston December 10, 1896, on the Halle. Her last residence was Buczacz. Maybe she was born in 1884 and died in 1941.
1909
Effie
Wyskup
~1911
Jollie
Wyskup
~1912
Ordlie
Wyskup
1913
Helen
Pauline
Wyskup
~1915
Lena
Wyskup
1916 - 2009
Edward
V
Wyskup
93
93
Obituary: Edward Vincent Wyskup, 93, of Choctaw, passed away on Tuesday, May 26, 2009, at his residence. Ed was born to Pete and Mary Wyskup on April 5, 1916 in Harrah, OK. He grew up in the Choctaw area where he presently lives. Ed was a crop farmer and raised cattle also. He enjoyed fishing and gardening which his garden in front of the house became a Choctaw area landmark. He was a member of the St. Teresa Catholic Church in Harrah. Ed is survived by his children, Larry Wyskup of Newalla, Marquita Northcutt of Choctaw, and Anita McMichael of Del City, 6 grandchildren, 11 great grandchildren. Ed is preceded in death by his parents, wife of 57 years Eula "Martie." Prayer Service will be held 7:00 PM, Thursday, 5/28/2009 and Mass Service will be held 10:00 AM Friday, 5/29/2009 with both being held at the St. Teresa Catholic Church with burial at St. Teresa Cemetery in Harrah. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the St. Teresa Building Fund.
1918 - 2001
August
Louis
Wyskup
82
82
1888 - 1966
Anton
(Tony)
Wyskup
78
78
1896 - 1959
Mary
M
63
63
~1917
Anna
Wyskup
~1919
Augie
Wyskup
1921 - 1992
Frank
Stanley
Wyskup
70
70
1923 - 2008
Marion
C
Wyskup
85
85
1926 - 2008
John
W
Wyskup
82
82
1928
Martin
Wyskup
~1865
Lucy
Senkowski
She married Ike sometime between 1916 and 1920.
Senkowski
~1905
John
Senkowski
~1908
Joe
Senkowski
1837
William
B
Dougherty
The family left Ohio and settled briefly in Illinois and then settled in Poweshiek County, Iowa. It was here that William married Ellen Lee who was born 1843 in Ohio.
1843
Ellen
Lee
1862
Tilitha
C
Dougherty
1863
Martin
E
Dougherty
1867
Russell
S
Dougherty
1874
James
B
Dougherty
1877
Lena
B
Dougherty
Maude
Horton
William
Jasper
Johnson
1867
Olive
Johnson
1868
Florence
(Lulu) Luella
Johnson
1871
Guy
Tricillian
Johnson
1873
Aaron
Johnson
1875
Johnson
1877
Fred J
Johnson
1879
Theodora
(Dora) Jane
Johnson
1882
Sarah
Elizabeth
Johnson
1887
George
Henry
Johnson
1761 - 1833
Aaron
Starnes
72
72
Aaron Starnes fought in the Revolutionary War. Aaron’s father came to South Carolina from New England. This family can be traced to Shubael Stearns who was part of the first wave of Puritan migration from England to Boston. He arrived in 1630 with his son Charles Stearns (1625-1695) on the Arabella (which also carried Governor John Winthrop). Shubael died just after arriving in America and his son Charles was raised by his uncle Isaac Stearns. There are very good records on this family and many of their marriages. Charles’ grandson Shubael III and his sons were caught up in the religious movement known as the Great Awakening which began in the 1730s. They became devout Baptists about 1745 and found that their views were suspect in New England. Shubael III and his sons left for the Carolinas in 1754 initially settling in North Carolina where his son, Shubael IV, became a famous Baptist minister. Shubael III’s son John (Armenta’s grandfather) and two of his brothers moved on to South Carolina in the late 1760s. They were not ministers but they helped to organize Baptist churches everywhere they went. Some pedigrees including that of Harold Fox identify Armenta’s grandfather John as the son of Shubael III’s brother Charles, but I have not found any records to support that. I did find sources that identify a son of Shubael III as John which I believe to be the more likely connection. Either way the line goes back to the Shubael I who arrived on the Arabella. After going South the Stearns changed the spelling of their name to Starnes.
1851 - 1928
Mary
(Mollie)
G. Nix
77
77
1861 - 1940
Gregory
Michalski
79
79
In 1930 he lived in Dewey, Oklahoma with Verna. 5 of 9 the children are Anna (Joseph Wyskup), William, Angie R (Walter Walker), Frank, and Tony
1864 - 1916
Fewronia
52
52
"Matka Tu Spoczywa Fewronia Michalska Urodzona dnia 21 Mar 1864 Umarla dnia 25 Pazdz 1916" Mother is buried here, Fewronia Michalska, born on 21 Mar 1864. She died on 25 Oct 1916.
Harriette
Wyskup
~1927 - ~1929
William
(Billy)
Wyskup
2
2
Lawrence
Wyskup
Still born first child of Anna and Joeseph Wyskup was named Lawrence assumed buried in Harrah Catholic Cemetary. No tombstone on either one but records are in church of St. Teresa of Avila.
1893 - 1977
Verna
May
Stromski
84
84
Verna's parents were born in Germany. 1930 census: Gregor Michalski 69 Verna Michalski 38 Augy Michalski 13 Mary Michalski 11 Francis Michalski 8 Frank Michalski 6 Tony Michalski 4 Christine Michalski 2 1/12
1924 - 2010
Frank
Michalski
86
86
Obituary: Frank Joe Michalski died July 31, 2010 at the age of 86. He was born to Gregory and Verna May Michalski on April 6, 1924 in Harrah, OK. He was preceded in death by both parents; his wife, Dorothy; and son, Robert A. Michalski. Frank is survived by one son, Michael Michalski of Oklahoma City. He proudly served his country in the Philippines during World War II while in the Army. He retired as a Parts Inspector for Tinker Air Force Base. He loved to fish and loved his country. Funeral service will be 10:00 A.M., Wednesday, August 4, 2010, at Bill Eisenhour Southeast Chapel, with interment at Sunny Lane Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to Hospice Quality Care, located at 921 S. Sooner Road, Del City, Oklahoma 73115. Condolences may be offered at www.eisenhourfuneral.com www.eisenhourfuneral.com
1922
Leo
Jennings
1866 - 1946
Josephine
Olijneczak
80
80
1894 - 1987
Augustine
Jorski
93
93
1904 - 1992
Martha
Miller
88
88
1930
Raymond
A
Jorski
1925 - 2002
Benjamin
J
Jorski
77
77
1930
Raymond
A
Jorski
Thomas
Jorski
James
Jorski
1838 - 1922
Adelbert
(George)
Olejneczak
84
84
George was born in Poznan, Poland in 1878. According to the 1900 census he immigrated to the US in 1890 His first wife died in 1889. According to the 1910 census Barbara was his second wife, they had been married for fourteen years and she stated she had had ten children but by 1920 only three of them were still living. One of them was Victoria who was the first wife of Ike Joski/Jezewski and Josephine who married John Jorski, Ike's brother. George was one of the original families that came from Marche Arkansas during the 1891 land run into Oklahoma. They settled the town of Harrah, Oklahoma. George was about eighty four years old when he died.
Barbara
1860 - 1889
Victoria
Olejniczak
29
29
On August 13, 1888, Wiktoria Jezewski came to New York on the ship Ems from Bremen, Germany. She was listed as 36 years old.
Pate
1895 - 1987
Jawidga
(Hattie)
Kusek
91
91
The Oklahoman June 7, 1987 Pg 14 JORSKI Hattie, 91 died June 5, 1987 at home. Born Sept. 27, 1895 in Marche, AR. and lived in Harrah since 1960. Member of St. Teresa's Catholic Church. Survived by 4 daughters, Veronica Kupczynski, Frances Meek, Teresa Grogg and Barbara Mitchell; 1 son, Tony; 12 grandchildren, 21 great grandchildren, Wake at 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Mass 10 a. m. Monday, both at St. Teresa's Catholic Church. Burial in St. Teresa's Catholic Cemetery, directed by Wilson Smith Funeral Service.
1869 - 1953
Andrew
Frank
Nowakowski
83
83
1889 - 1973
Phillip
Jack
Kozak
83
83
1877 - 1951
Joseph
Kusek
74
74
1931 - 2008
Leo (Bud)
Paul
Kusek
76
76
Harrah resident Leo Paul "Bud" Kusek, 76, died Tuesday, Sept 9, 2008, in Midwest City. Rosary and Wake Service were held at 6:40 p.m. Thursday September 11, 2008 at St. Teresa Catholic Church in Harrah. A Mass of Christian Burial was held at 11 a.m. Friday September 12, 2008 at St. Teresa Catholic Church, Harrah. Burial followed at St. Teresa Catholic Cemetery in Harrah.
1832 - 1852
Gaspar
Wyskup
20
20
I'm not sure about him.
1901 - 1990
Martha
Teresa
Wyskup
89
89
Mike J
Stasyszen
~1849 - 1920
Eliasz
(Eler)
Babiak
71
71
Immigrated in 1987
1862
Sophie
She arrived in Galveston December 10, 1896, on the Halle. Her last residence was Buczacz.
1872
Stefan
Babiak
He and Dorotea arrived in Galveston December 10, 1896, on the Halle. Their last residence was Buczacz.
1879
Walter
Babiak
He arrived in Galveston December 10, 1896, on the Halle. His last residence was Buczacz.
1885 - 1964
Anton
Babiak
79
79
He arrived in Galveston December 10, 1896, on the Halle. His last residence was Buczacz.
1886
Julia
Babiak
She arrived in Galveston December 10, 1896, on the Halle. Her last residence was Buczacz.
Jess
Wozniak
1897 - 1960
Stanley
Wyskup
62
62
1903 - 1999
Frances
H
95
95
1899 - 1976
John
Henry
Wyskup
77
77
1918
Elanora
Rose
Klimkowski
Stasyszen
Stasyszen
1922 - 1945
Frank
Andrew
Stasyszen
23
23
1924 - 2007
William
Edward
Stasyszen
83
83
1925 - 1995
Edward
Louis
Stasyszen
70
70
1932 - 2002
James
Joseph
Stasyszen
70
70
1934 - 1977
Sophie
Marie
Stasyszen
43
43
1944 - 1944
Jerry
Lee
Stasyszen
1924 - 2002
Eula
(Martie)
78
78
Barbara
Wyskup
Marjorie
Wyskup
1890
Polina
Wyskup
Anton
Babiak
Sowa
1880
Jason
Lucious
Jennings
1880
Susie
Troxler
1932 - 1994
William
Michalski
62
62
I'm not sure if these are the correct dates (or mother).
1917 - 1998
Angie
R
Michalski
80
80
1925 - 1977
Tony
Michalski
52
52
1924 - 2010
Frank
Michalski
86
86
Obituary: Frank Joe Michalski died July 31, 2010 at the age of 86. He was born to Gregory and Verna May Michalski on April 6, 1924 in Harrah, OK. He was preceded in death by both parents; his wife, Dorothy; and son, Robert A. Michalski. Frank is survived by one son, Michael Michalski of Oklahoma City. He proudly served his country in the Philippines during World War II while in the Army. He retired as a Parts Inspector for Tinker Air Force Base. He loved to fish and loved his country. Funeral service will be 10:00 A.M., Wednesday, August 4, 2010, at Bill Eisenhour Southeast Chapel, with interment at Sunny Lane Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to Hospice Quality Care, located at 921 S. Sooner Road, Del City, Oklahoma 73115. Condolences may be offered at www.eisenhourfuneral.com www.eisenhourfuneral.com
Dorothy
Robert
A
Michalski
Michael
Michalski
1920
Walter
Walker
1945 - 1963
Walter
Gene
Walker
17
17
1917 - 1998
Angie
R
Michalski
80
80
1894 - 1987
Augustine
Jorski
93
93
1889 - 1963
Paulin
Albert
Jezewski
73
73
Pelagra
Jezewski
Benjamin
Jezewski
Joseph
J
Jezewski
Lydia
Jezewski
Casmiera
Jezewski
Maria
Jezewski
Catherine
Jezewski
1889 - 1963
Paulin
Albert
Jezewski
73
73
1897 - 1947
Pauline
49
49
1915 - 1929
Leon
A
Jorski
13
13
Dorothy
J
1925
Mickey
1872
Stefan
Babiak
He and Dorotea arrived in Galveston December 10, 1896, on the Halle. Their last residence was Buczacz.
1878 - 1915
Dorija
36
36
1895 - 1983
Joseph
S
88
88
1896
Josef
He arrived in Galveston December 10, 1896, on the Halle, less than a year old. His last residence was Buczacz.
~1900
Walter
J
Babiak
~1908
Bruno
A
Babiak
~1903
Effie
A
Babiak
~1904
Edward
R
Babiak
~1907
Carrie
J
Babiak
~1909
Alma
Babiak
~1911
Mary
A
Babiak
~1912
Lena
Babiak
~1914
Juley
Babiak
1911 - 1998
Doris
Eunice
Eberle
87
87
1873 - 1952
Christian
Fredrick
Eberle
78
78
In the late 1890's, about 10 years before Oklahoma became a state, Christian Fredrick Eberle, the young, Iowa born son of German Immigrants, was instrumental in establishing a lumber yard and hardware store in the fledgling pioneer town of Deer Creek. In addition to the lumber and hardware, the E.F. Eberle & Co. secured a McCormick-Deering dealership. Eberle was known through out the area for his knowledge of that line of implements and for his exceptional memory of McCormick-Deering parts numbers. Prior to the 1902 establishment of the Bank of Deer Creek, E.F. Eberle & Co. provided a service by shipping in the needed currency to cash checks for the community. Just as they sold wagons and buggies that provided early transportation for the Deer Creek area, C.F. Eberle & Co. also sold cars and trucks as the automobile industry budded and grew. About 1913, they became a Chevrolet dealer and "Chris" Eberle is credited with having driven the first Chevrolet into Oklahoma. Throughout their almost 50 years in business, C.F. Eberle & Co. also dealt with and provided for their customers products from other companies: Aerometer, Coleman Lamp, De Laval Separator, Dempster Mill, Fairbanks Morse, Goodyear Tire an d Rubber, John Deere Plow, MAytag, Stromberg Carlson Telephone, and Westinghouse. C.F. Eberle sold the business in 1944 when he and his wife Floy retired.
1877
Floy
Marston
Parents were born in Michigan.
~1914
Lawrence
H
Eberle
~1918
Elda P
Eberle
~1906
Ruby
Dee
Eberle
~1902
Olga
Ruth
Eberle
1824 - 1910
Johannes
Konrad
Eberle
86
86
1830 - 1920
Agnes
Krebill
90
90
The youngest child of Friedrich and Anna Krebill and was not much more than three years old when they arrived in America. She is probably the only one of the children who obtained all of her school education in America. In addition to attending the English public schools during these pioneer years, Agness, like most children of Mennonite families also attended german parochial school for a few months every summer as well as receiving catechismal instructions. After completing the catechism course at about the age of fourteen years, members of the class were baptized and accepted into the church as members. During much of her life, Agness was known by the name "Nancy". Source:Torsten Eymann database,Web page downloaded, March, 2000 by Michael Hervey,http://www.iig.uni-freiburg.de/~eymann/ Am 25.10.1833 in die USA ausgewandert.Aus 1. Ehe mit Christian Eymann(1822) 5.5121 waren 4 Kinder. In 2.Ehe verheiratet(4.3.1858)mit John Conrad Eberle,geb 16.1.1825 in Deutschlan,verstorben.am 24.5.1910 in Halstead,Kansas/USA.5 Kinder aus dieser Ehe. Gustav Heinrich Eberle Louise Friderica E.verh.Jakob Dester Lydia Rose E. verh.Charles H. Krehbiel.Christian Friedrich E.verh.Floy Marston Jenny Christine Eberle
1788 - 1849
Friedrich
Krebill
61
61
1794 - 1857
Anna
Risser
62
62
1909 - 2002
Austin
Laurie
Smart
93
93
Don Webster use to work for Austin, shearing sheep, herding sheep and cattle, and harvesting wheat. Austin farmed a section out by Dalhart, TX. Don and Meredith Van Valkenburgh worked there.
1885 - 1952
James
Robert
Smart
67
67
Information from Bandera Co Pioneer History Book. Information from Bob P Weed, Fort Worth, Texas, he states that James died from invagination f illeum. He also lived in California and worked for Imperial Irragation Co. Children: Alpha Irene SMART b: 12 Aug 1903 in Utopia, Uvalde, Texas James R SMART b: Apr 1906 in Utopia, Uvalde, Texas Austin Laurie SMART b: 23 Sep 1909 in Utopia, Uvalde, Texas Marshall Robert SMART b: 20 Jul 1916 in Utopia, Uvalde, Texas
1884 - 1961
Leona
Elizabeth
Weed
77
77
1849 - 1930
Solomon
Franklin
Weed
80
80
Bobby in his records states he drove a peddlers wagon to supply settlers in Texas, and was a wild bronc rider and trainer of horses and mules, and was of French descent. Solomon lived with his daughter Melvina Weed Reavis and her family on Little Creek from about 1905 until his death in July 1930. Solomon's wife stayed with their youngest son Amos until her death in January 1925. According to the 1850 census, Solomon was born in 1849, as he is listed a year old in 1850. The place of birth is not clear. A hand written obituary states Post Lavaca, and Tom Cain states Jefferson County. On the 1850 Texas census the family was living in Gonzales County, and Solomon was 1 year old. He purchased one acre of land in Willow City, 25 October 1886. Children: Asa Franklin WEED b: 9 Mar 1872 in Dripping Springs, Hays County, Texas Jesse Lee WEED b: 22 Mar 1873 in Hays County, Texas Naomi Edith WEED b: 25 Jul 1874 in Gillespie County, Texas Melvina Rebecca WEED b: 25 Sep 1875 in Hays County, Texas Benjamen Andrew WEED b: 8 Dec 1876 in Hays County, Texas Lewis Augustus WEED b: 13 Feb 1878 in Hays County, Texas Thomas Solomon WEED b: 22 Nov 1879 in Hays County, Texas Travis Oliver WEED b: 10 Jan 1881 in Hays County, Texas Lela Mae WEED b: 9 May 1882 in Willow City, Gillespie, Texas Leona Elizabeth WEED b: 22 Feb 1884 in Gillespie County, Texas Leattie English WEED b: 28 Feb 1886 in Gillespie County, Texas Bertie Arena WEED b: 9 Jul 1887 in Llano County, Texas Laura Alcester WEED b: 27 Apr 1889 in Willow City, GillespieCounty, Texas Amos Uriah WEED b: 18 Apr 1891 in Bandera County, Texas
1848 - 1925
Eda
Chadick
77
77
Eda could neither read or write, according to census takers, but a post card sent in 1913 from Eda to Claudia Phelps showed fairly good handwriting for that time and at her age. Her parents were either Isaac and Catherine or Asa and Elizabeth.
1821 - ~1889
Benjamin
Weed
68
68
Father: Benjamin WEED b: 1 May 1797 in Mississippi c: 15 Aug 1801 in Opelousa Church v. 1, p 250 Mother: Celeste Sarah HANKS b: 27 Feb 1801 in St Martinville, Louisiana
1828 - ~1905
Rebecca
Williams
77
77
Father: Absalom WILLIAMS b: 1788 in Natchez District, Spanish Louisiana Mother: Mary BURTON b: ABT 1792 in Probably Natchez District, Sp, Louisana Children: Benjamin W WEED b: 1846 in Gonzales County, Texas Susanna A WEED b: 1847 in Texas Solomon Franklin WEED b: 27 Sep 1849 in Gonzales County, Texas Josie Henderson WEED b: 1873 in Arkansas?
Julia
Lefort
1827
Semaraus
Joseph
Price
Hart
1729 - 1776
Thomas
Hatch
47
47
Children: 1. Barnabas HATCH b: 16 OCT 1750 in Kent, Litchfield Co., Connecticut 2. James HATCH b: 12 JUN 1752 in Kent, Litchfield Co., Connecticut 3. Margaret HATCH b: 8 MAR 1754 in Kent, Litchfield Co., Connecticut 4. Phebe HATCH b: 8 MAR 1754 in Kent, Litchfield Co., Connecticut 5. Abigail HATCH b: 8 DEC 1755 in Kent, Litchfield Co., Connecticut 6. Sarah HATCH b: 1 SEP 1759 in Kent, Litchfield Co., Connecticut 7. Abi HATCH b: 2 JAN 1762 in Kent, Litchfield Co., Connecticut 8. Lydia HATCH b: 29 DEC 1763 in Kent, Litchfield Co., Connecticut 9. Ruth HATCH b: 1 SEP 1765 in Kent, Litchfield Co., Connecticut 10. Lassell HATCH b: 14 OCT 1767 in Kent, Litchfield Co., Connecticut
~1703
Barnabas
Hatch
~1703
Abigail
Lassell
Phoebe
Cushman
Spooner
1654 - ~1735
Joseph
Hatch
81
81
Sometime before 1676, he was captain in King Phillips's War. He inherited the homestead of his father, Jonathan, in Falmouth, acquired a large estate, and exercised wide influence. All his children moved to Conecticutt before his death except Lydia (Hatch) Gifford and Ebenezer.
1663 - 1709
Amy
Allen
45
45
Children: i. LYDIA4 HATCH, b. Jan 15, 1684, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. bef. Jan 26, 1753, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; m. WILLIAM GIFFORD, JR, Jun 21, 1711; b. Feb 16, 1656, Sandwich, Barnstable, Mass; d. bef. 1738 - 1739, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass. Note: They were members of the Society of Friends. ii. AMY ALLEN HATCH, b. Jul 10, 1687, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. Jun 01, 1764, Tolland, Tolland, CT. iii. JOSEPH HATCH, JR, b. Aug 03, 1689, Falmouth, Plymouth Colony, Mass; d. Apr 27, 1750, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass. iv. ICHABOD HATCH, b. Oct 21, 1691, Falmouth, Barnstable Co, Mass; d. bef. Feb 27 - May 23, 1754, Falmouth, Barnstable Co, Mass. v. RUTH HATCH, b. Nov 09, 1693, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; m. SAMUEL SWIFT, Dec 24, 1712, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; b. Apr 09, 1686, of Sandwich, Barnstable, Mass; d. bef. Jan 03, 1758, Sandwich, Barnstable, Mass. Note: RUTH HATCH: They are the ancestors of the Swift Family of Kent, CT. vi. JOANNA HATCH, b. Jun 02, 1696, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass. She is said to have died young. vii. ELIZABETH HATCH, b. Nov 06, 1697, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; m. (1) JOSHUA LASSELL, aft. 1722; d. 1768, Kent, Litchfield Co, CT; m. (2) STEPHEN SWIFT/SKIFF, Aug 01, 1722; b. Nov 06, 1697. Note: ELIZABETH HATCH: She had seven children by her first marriage. viii. REBECCA HATCH, b. bef. Jan 25, 1700 - 1701, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. May 02, 1783. ix. EBENEZER HATCH, b. Mar 26, 1702, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. May 07, 1783, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass. x. BARNABAS HATCH, b. bef. Mar 08, 1703 - 1704, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass.
Dorcas
Sprague
1625 - 1710
Jonathan
Hatch
85
85
He lived in West Barnstable, Massachusetts. He came to Massachusetts Bay Colony from England in 1634. Children: i. MARY3 HATCH, b. Jul 16, 1647, Barnstable, Barnstable, Mass; d. aft. 1713. ii. THOMAS HATCH, b. Jan 01, 1649, Barnstable, Barnstable, Mass; d. probably Barnstable Co, Mass. iii. JONATHAN HATCH, JR, b. May 17, 1652, Barnstable, Plymouth Colony, Mass; d. Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass. iv. JOSEPH HATCH, b. Mar 07, 1654, South Sea, Barnstable, Mass; d. bet. Feb 16, 1735 - 1736, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass. v. BENJAMIN HATCH, b. Sep 07, 1655, Barnstable, Plymouth Co, Mass; d. abt. 1730, Tolland, Tolland Co, CT. vi. NATHANIEL HATCH, b. Jun 05, 1657, Barnstable, Barnstable, Mass; d. abt. 1705. vii. SAMUEL HATCH, b. Oct 11, 1659, South Sea, Barnstable Co, Mass; d. bef. Aug 08, 1718, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass. viii. MOSES HATCH, b. Mar 04, 1662, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. May 20, 1747, Falmouth, Barnstable Co, Mass. ix. SARAH HATCH, b. Mar 21, 1664, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. Jul 08, 1731, Sandwich, Barnstable, Mass. x. MERCY HATCH, b. Apr 27, 1667, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. aft. Jan 1711. LYDIA HATCH, b. May 16, 1669, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. Dec 01, 1681, Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass.
~1626 - 1710
Sarah
Rowley
84
84
She married when she was 13 and he was about 21.
~1598 - <1661
Thomas
Hatch
63
63
He lived in Dorchester, Massachusetts Bay Colony about 1630, then Yarmouth, and finally, by 1641, he settled in Yarmouth for the rest of his life. On January 7, 1639, Thomas Hatch and nine others applied to Plymouth Colony for a grant of leave to purchase land and form a new township at a place now known as Yarmouth on the Cape Cod peninsula. The town was incorporated Jan 17, 1639.
D. ~1688
Grace
Henry
Rowley
Sarah
Palmer
D. >1670
Lydia
Hatch
1620 - 1669
Henry
Taylor
49
49
Children of LYDIA HATCH and HENRY TAYLOR are: i. LYDIA3 TAYLOR, b. Jun 21, 1655, Barnstable, Barnstable Co, Mass. ii. JONATHAN TAYLOR, b. Apr 20, 1658.
1754 - 1834
John
Price
Tillery
80
80
~1758 - 1843
Lettice
Matthews
85
85
1724
John
Tillery
~1729
Margaret
Davenport
George
Davenport
Ruth
Sydnor
1702 - 1728
Samuel
Tillery
26
26
1705 - 1787
Winifred
Hobson
82
82
1676 - 1745
John
Tillery
69
69
Margaret
~1651 - 1698
Henry
Tillery
47
47
Mary
Wascale
~1685
Mary
Tillery
1704
Rawleigh
Tillery
1706
Tillery
1715
George
Tillery
1717
Elizabeth
Tillery
1720
Maryanne
Jane
Tillery
1725
Joannah
Tillery
1757
Rebecca
Tillery
1759
Ann
Tillery
1726
Mary
Eleanor
Tillery
1786
John
Tillery
1787
Richard
Matthews
Tillery
1791
Sampson
Tillery
1793
William
Pearson
Tillery
1796
Margaret
Tillery
1800
Lettice
Tillery
1803
Thomas
Price
Tillery
1732 - 1796
Archer
Matthews
64
64
1745 - 1815
Letitia
McClenechan
70
70
D. 1757
John
Matthews
Betsy
Ann
Archer
Robert
McClenechan
Sarah
Breckenridge
Franz
Joseph
Jezewski
Not sure about him.
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