Matches 2,701 to 2,750 of 3,871
|
Notes |
Linked to |
2701 |
Or 16 May 1660. | Cole, John (I51876)
|
2702 |
Or 17 Jan 1666. | Cole, Ruth (I51888)
|
2703 |
Or 26 Feb 1746 | Phetteplace, Anne (I27119)
|
2704 |
or 7 Feb 1694/95? (Torrey) | Family F1125
|
2705 |
Or 8 Nov 1655 | Cole, James (I51873)
|
2706 |
Or date of birth 1678? Mehetabel and Thomas had four children recorded at Braintree. | Adams, Mehetable (I6517)
|
2707 |
or David? | Bushnell, Daniel (I22392)
|
2708 |
or July 1860, aged 39 in 1900 census. | Culp, David Sirian (I26331)
|
2709 |
Or Mary Hout, Huit or Hart; prob. not the daughter of Simon Hoyt. | Hoyt, Mary (I22454)
|
2710 |
Ora committed suicide apparently despondent by the recent surgery in which most of his stomach was removed. Marie found him in the basement of their home. He had slit his wrists. | Blackmer, Ora James Isaac (I1144)
|
2711 |
Ora lived in Pewamo and Lyons, Ionia County, the early part of his life and in Lansing later. He was a charter member of the Masonic Order in Pewamo. | Blackmer, Ora James Isaac (I1144)
|
2712 |
Orange, Louis b. 1862; d. 1910 | Oranje, Louwerus (Lew) (I447)
|
2713 |
Orcutt in History of Stratford and Bridgeport says Samuel and his brother-in-law Henry Summers were probably the first settlers in what is now Bridgeport, Connecticut. He apparently lived at the junction of Washington and Park avenues. The latter is the old dividing line between the towns of Stratford and Fairfield. "Washington Ave. began at Samuel's house." At first he apparently was on the Stratford side of the line, just south of Summer's homestead, the Fairfield road separating them, but before his death he lived on the Fairfield side; 1695, 1700, he was called "of Fairfield." In 1720, his daughter Johannah sold land in Fairfield between the street and creek, "southward from the mansion and homestead of my late father." Samuel was a sergeant; freeman, 1669, & "husbandman." He fought in King Philip's War. He owned 13 parcels, a total of 300 acres, including lands at Ireland Brook, Chestnut Hill, Pagesutt Long Hill and Tashua Hill (now in Trumbull). He called Henry Wakeley "honored father-in-law," meaning step-father. On May 2, 1690, Mr. Gregory and his neighbors petitioned to be exempt from ministers' rates and schoolmasters' salaries in the two towns and to provide for themselves. The granting of this request virtually made the signers founders of the future city of Bridgeport. Samuel was one of the ten organizers of the Church of Christ in Stratfield in 1694. Tom, an Indian, was captured in the Dismal Swamp Fight, King Philip's War. Samuel Hall bound him to Samuel Gregory as a "servant for lifetime." In 1691, after three years service, "having behaved as a servant should do," Tom was freed. | Gregory, Samuel (I48975)
|
2714 |
ORIGIN.- Bermondsey, Surrey
MIGRATION.- 1630
FIRST RESIDENCE: Charlestown
REMOVES: Woburn 1640
CHURCH MEMBERSHIP.- 'William Learned and Goodith his wife' were admitted to Charlestown church on 6 December 1632 [ChChR 8].
FREEMAN.- 14 May 1634 [MBCR 1:369].
EDUCATION.- Charlestown committee 'to consider of some things tending towards a body of laws &c.," 26 April 1638 [ChTR 38].
OFFICES: Charlestown selectman, 1636 [ChTR 16].
ESTATE: Surrendered five acres Mystic Side, 1635 (ChTR 14]. Allotted two shares of ~hayground, which was increased to three, 1635 (CHTR 19,20]. Had five acres of land Mystic Side, 1637 [ChTR 27]. "W[illia]m Lernett" had three and three-quarter cow commons, 1637 [ChTR 32]. In the Mystic Side allotments of 23 April 1638 he had portions of fifteen, forty and five acres [ChTR 37]. Had three and three-quarter cow commons, 30 December 1638 [ChTR 42].
On 13 January 1636/7 Charlestown selectmen "agreed to allow Goodman Learned a portion of marsh by his house agreed upon by Goodmaan Richeson & Goodman W[illia]m Baker for his haylot by Mr. Gibbons's which he yieldeth up to the town' [ChTR 24].
In the Charlestown land inventory of 1638 'William Lernett" held seven parcels of land: "three acres of arable land and meadow ... with a dwelling house"; "four acres of arable land ... in the East Field"; three and three-quarters cow commons; 'two acres of meadow ... in Mystic Marshes'; "five acres of woodland ... in Mystic Field"; "fifteen acres of woodland ... in Mystic Field"; and 'forty acres of land ... in Rock Field' [CHBOP 25].
When Gardy James sold land to Rowland Layhorn on 28 March 1649 James recited that the five acre lot had been bought by him from John Power, hosier, "who had it of William Mirable, and he had it of Georg. Michel, who had it of William Learned, which was the first proprietor' [CHBOP 101].
COMMENTS: Admitted an inhabitant of Charlestown in 1630 (ChTR:61. in lists of Charlestown inhabitants of 9 January 1633/4 and January 1635/6 [ChTR 10, 15]. Signed petition of 10 February 1634/5 establishing office of selectman in Charlestown [ChTR 13].
On 16 November 1637 "Will[iam] Larnet acknowledged his fault in subscribing the seditious writing [in favor of Rev. John Wheelwright], & desiring his name to [be] crossed out, it was yielded him, & crossed' [MBCR 1:208].
Some sources that a Sarah "Leonarde' baptized on 30 September 1604 at Ware, Hertfordshire, was the first daughter of the immigrant, but the date of this baptism precedes the only known marriage of William Learned by two years, and the surname in the Ware baptism is not one of the usual variants of Learned.
Because there was a JOHN HALL in Charlestown with wife ~Bethia some years earlier than the marriage of Elizabeth Learned to a John Hall of Charlestown, the suggestion has been made that one John Hall married successively the sisters Bethia and Elizabeth Hall. This hypothesis has two fatal flaws. First, marriages between a widowed man and his first wife's sister were considered incestuous in seventeenth-century New England, and only one or two instances are known. Second, the JOHN HALL with wife Bethia had moved to Cape Cod before the marriage between John Hall and Elizabeth Learned; these were two different John Halls. | Learned, William (I12412)
|
2715 |
ORIGIN: Sudbury, Suffolk
MIGRATION: 1632
FIRST RESIDENCE: Boston
REMOVES: Braintree 1641
RETURN TRIPS: Travelled to England in 1633 for his marriage, and then returned to New England in 1634
OCCUPATION: Husbandman. Boston jailkeeper, 1637-1640 [MBCR 1:217, 260; WP 4:175, 252].
CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: Admitted to Boston church as member #144, which would be shortly before 11 November 1632 [BChR 15]. On 5 December 1641 he and his wife Alice were recommended to Braintree church [BChR 35], and on 8 May 1642 Richard Brackett was dismissed to Braintree church 'at their desire of him unto the Office of a Deacon amongst them" [BChR 36]. (Savage gives 21 July 1642 as the date of Brackett's ordination as deacon, but the source for this has not been found.)
FREEMAN: 25 May 1636 [MBCR 1:372].
EDUCATION: Sufficient to be Braintree clerk of writs. Signed will with shaky hand.
OFFICES: Deputy for Braintree to General Court (as 'Capt. Richard Bracket"), 23 May 1655, 3 May 1665, 15 May 1667, 31 May 1671, 15 May 1672, 27 May 1674, 7 October 1674, 19 May 1680, 4 January 1680/1 [MBCR 3:373; 4:1:222; 4:2:142, 331, 485, 507; 5:2, 15, 266, 303, 426]. Commissioner to meet with men of Plymouth 'to lay out that marsh lying at Connahassett," 29 May 1655 [MBCR 4:1:230; also MBCR 3:380, 438]. Commissioner to lay out land, 5 December 1683 (MBCR 5:426]. Appointed by General Court "to join persons in marriage in the town of Braintry ... also to administer oaths in civil cases," 15 October, 1679 [MBCR 5:251-52].
Braintree selectman, 1652, 1653, 1670, 1672, 1683 (BrTR 5, 6, 9-13, 21]. Braintree clerk of writs, 1646 to 1654 (The published volume of Braintree vital records is prefaced by a page, apparently part of the original record, which lists each of the persons who maintained the record book. The first clerk, in 1643, was Henry Adams, 'then by Capt. Richard Brackett, then by Jno. Mills.' Adams died in 1646, and Mills assumed the duty in 1654 [BrVR 627, 629, 635]). Appointed to various other town committees (BrTR passim]. Agent for Braintree in case against John Andrews and Benjamin Phippeny, 12 November 1659 (MBCR 4:1:401).
Admitted to Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company in 1639 [HAHAC 1:86). On 15 October 1684 on "the request of Capt(ain] Richard Brackett, being above seventy-three years of age, & infirmities of age upon him, having desired formerly, & now also, to lay down his place as chief military commander in Braintry, the Court grants his request..." [MBCR 5:459].
ESTATE: On 21 March 1635/6 the Boston selectmen included Richard Brackett in a list of those who had been ordered on 30 November 1635 to build upon their allotments for habitation and had not done so [BTR 1:9]. On 18 February 1638/9 Richard Brackett was one of six men ordered to "make sufficient the cartway against Mr. Hutchinson's house, under which they drain their gardens' [BTR 1:381. On 24 February 1639/40 Boston selectmen granted leave "to our brother Richard Brackett to mow the marsh lying in the New Field, which he hath usually mown, for this next summer time" [BTR 1:481.
On 25 October 1667 "Richard Bracket of Braintry ... husbandman" sold to John Hull of Boston, goldsmith, for 5 pound 5s. thirty acres 'within the woods in ... Braintry, but belonging to the said town of Boston & about twenty-five years past by the said town of Boston granted & laid out, to other men' [SLR 6:237].
On 13 July 1671 James Brackett of Boston, setcooper, sold to John Harris of Boston, mariner, for 12 pound "a parcel of land lying & being a part of the land purchased by him the said James Brackett & Richard Brackett his father of Jeremiah Bumstead of Boston aforesaid joiner, Richard Brackett his said father consenting thereto, & being a witness hereunto,' the northwest bound being 'the residue of land appertaining to the said James Brackett & his said father" [SLR 7:237-38].
In his will, dated 29 January 1688/89 and probated 19 December 1690, Richard Brackett of Braintree bequeathed to wife Alice Brackett for life entire estate in Braintree and all income from estate in Billerica; to the children of his son John "by his wife Hannah Brackett" one-fourth of his lands and housing in Billerica; to son Peter Brackett, son-in-law Simon Crosbey and son-in-law Joseph Thompson the remaining three parts of the Billerica estate to be divided equally; to son Peter Brackett 5 pound; to "the two daughters of my son Josiah deceased Elizabeth and Sarah," 20 pounds apiece at age of twenty (to be paid by Peter Brackett, Simon Crosby, Joseph Thompson and the children of John Brackett); to "the said Sara daughter of my son Josiah" 5 pound and "the feather bed her mother carried away"; to "my son James Brackett all my now dwelling house, barn, orchards, lands & meadows lying & being in Braintrey"; to "my son-in-law Joseph Crosby" 10 pounds; to "my daughter Hannah Blancher" 20s.; "my great Bible to my daughter Rachell Crosby for her use during her life & at her decease to be to my grandchild Abigall Tompson"; to "Hannah Bracket the daughter of my son John" movable goods worth 20 pounds; to "my beloved wife Allice Brackett" the rest of the movables for her to dispose of as she wishes, "whereas I have given to my grandchild Sarah Brackett the daughter of my son Josiah Brackett deceased five pounds, my will is that it should be null void & of none effect as also the ten pounds given to
Joseph Crosby I give to his daughter Anna Crosby" [SPR 8:9]
ASSOCIATIONS: Through his mother and his wife Richard Brackett became a member of, and the first immigrant from, the largest kinship network as yet uncovered among the participants in the Great Migration, a network worked out mostly by Mary Lovering Holman, John Brooks Threlfall and Douglas Richardson. (See John Brooks Threlfall, Fifty Great Migration Colonists to New England & Their Origins [Madison, Wisconsin, 1990], pp. 63-116, for a summary of much of this research.)
Richard Brackett was son of Peter Bracket and his wife Rachel; another son of this couple was Peter Brackett who came to Braintree about 1636 [TAG 52:65-75, 92]. About 1618 Rachel, the mother of the two Brackett immigrants, married secondly Martin Sanders, and in 1635 Sanders, his wife, their Sanders children, along with Rachel (Brackett) Newcomb (sister of Peter and Richard Brackett), her husband, Francis Newcomb, and their children sailed for New England on the Planter [Hotten 48-49; TAG 55:215-2171. (A likely further connection arises through Martha Ray, wife of Peter Brackett. She was almost certainly first cousin to Simon Ray, who also came to Braintree, and the latter was in turn first cousin to Hester [Wells] Mason, wife of Hugh Mason who came to Watertown (TAG 56:94-96].)
From his admission to Boston church we learn that Richard Brackett was certainly in Boston by 1632, but he must have returned to England in 1633, for on 6 January 1633/4 he married at St. Katherine by the Tower, London, Alice Blower [NEHGR 127:17]. She was daughter of Thomas and Alice (Frost) Blower- she may have had two brothers who came to New England, and her father certainly came to New England in 1635, but apparently died soon [TAG 52:73-75; see also NEHGR 139:148-49]. Her mother, Alice Frost, was sister of Thomasine Frost, who married Edmund Rice, immigrant to Sudbury, and also of Elizabeth Frost, who married first Henry Rice and then Philemon Whale, the latter also an immigrant to Sudbury [TAG 15:227, 26: 10-11; TG 6:131-41; Stevens-Miller Anc 143-44].
Taking into account all these persons and their children, then, there were more than forty future immigrants to New England who were related to Richard Brackett by blood or marriage before their departure from England. | Brackett, Richard (I23503)
|
2716 |
ORIGIN: West Hatch, Somersetshire
MIGRATION: 1629; "Lyon's Whelp"
FIRST RESIDENCE: Charlestown
REMOVES: Dorchester by 1633, Scituate 1635, Windsor by 1639, Fairfield by 1649, Stamford 1657
CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: On 19 April 1635 "Symeon Hayte and Bernard Lumbard and their wives' joined the church at Scituate [NEHGR 9:2791.
FREEMAN: 18 May 1631 (MBCR 1:366].
OFFICES: Dorchester fenceviewer, 8 October 1633, 24 May 1634 [DTR 3, 6].
ESTATE: On 3 April 1633 "Symon Hoite" was responsible for building forty feet of fence at Dorchester, based on ownership of two cows [DTR 2]. On 6 January 1633/4 it is "ordered that the marsh and swamp before Goodman Hosford and Davy Wil[ton] shall be divided among themselves and Symon Hoyte' [DTR 5]. On 2 June 1634 it is 'ordered that Goodman Witchfeild and Goodman Hoyte shall have to be divided between them the marsh that lies in the north side of the neck towards Boston over against Mr. Rainsford's house in Boston, being for 8 acres by estimation' [DTR 6]. On 10 February 1634/5 'Simon Hoyte' was ordered to keep one of the bulls in the neck of land [DTR 10]. On 17 April 1635 it is 'ordered that the lot of meadow which was Symon Hoyte's next to Boston side joining to John Witchfeild shall be divided betwixt Mr. Rodger Williams and Gyles Gibbes" [ DTR 11].
In his accounting of houses built at Scituate, Rev. John Lothrop included 'Goodman Haite's" as the sixteenth, about midway in the section of those built between September 1634 and October 1636, and with the annotation 'which Mr. Bower hath bought" [NEHGR 10:42].
In the Windsor land inventory on 28 February 1640[/41] "Symon Hoyte' had granted from the plantation for meadow and upland "four- score acres,' also 'on the northside of the rivulet fourscore acres, thirty [of?] which is given his son Walter Hoyte from the town' [WiLR 1:88].
Five of the children of Simon Hoyt gave in receipts for their portions of his estate: Samuel Firman 'to my mother Hoyt for all demands from my father's estate," 25 March 1662; 'Moses Hoyte of Westchester, discharge to Joshua Hoyt of Stamford," 2 April 1666; "Samuell Hoyte, receipt for portion from father Simon Hoyte,' April 1665; 'Samuel Finch, receipt for wife's portion from father Simon Hoyte," April 1665; and "Benjamin Hoyte, receipt to brother Joshua Hoyte for portion from father's estate," 27 January [blank] [TAG 1 1:34; Gillespie Anc 289].
On 1 February 1674 Moses Hoyt, Joshua Hoyt, Samuel Hoyt, Benjamin Hoyt, Thomas Lyon, Samuel Finch and Samuel Firman came to an agreement "concerning the distribution of the estate of our deceased mother Susanna Bates" [Gillespie Anc 289-90, citing Stamford LR A:61].
ASSOCIATIONS: In the list of houses built at Scituate, the twenty first, built probably just a few months after that of Simon Hoyt, was the Smiths Goodman Hait's brother' [NEHGR 10:42]. Who this might be has not been learned. This may, however, be the basis for the identification of Hoyt's second wife as Susanna Smith, on the assumption that "The Smiths" intends a surname. But it more likely was meant for the occupation, as a blacksmith was an essential element of each of these new towns, and one frequently finds grants made specifically for the smith or the miller, without stating the name of the person employed in that calling.
COMMENTS: In 1903 Emily Warren Roebling included in The Journal of the Reverend Silas Constant a number of birth, marriage and death records said to pertain to the family of Simon Hoyt, and to be from the parish register of Upway, Dorsetshire. Donald Lines Jacobus and John Insley Coddington questioned these records, because parish registers provide us with baptismal and burial dates rather than birth and death dates, and also because some of the dates were incomplete, lacking the day of the event; despite this, Paul Prindle argued in 1976 for their authenticity [Gillespie Anc 287].
More recently the IGI has led to several entries in the parish register of West Hatch, Somersetshire, which are more appropriate for this family, and which are in direct contradiction with the data published by Roebling. As a result, we reject here all the Upway dates, and also the identification of the first wife of Simon Hoyt.
Without the evidence for the identity of the first wife we might wonder whether Simon Hoyt had more than one wife. The range of years over which Simon Hoyt had children (nearly thirty) and the agreement over the estate of his widow, Susannah ( ) (Hoyt) Bates, which did not include the four older surviving sons, are sufficient evidence that Simon Hoyt was married twice.
Without the Upway dates we have no evidence for daughters Ruth and Deborah, and the sons need to be rearranged. Walter would appear to be the eldest son, for two reasons at least. First, in the Windsor grants of land to his father, there is also a grant to him, at a time when he would recently have come of age. If John were older, we would expect to find him in these land records as well. Second, from the records of Matthew Grant we know that both Walter and Nicholas had married before Simon Hoyt moved to Fairfield, but there is no indication from Windsor records that John had married this early. There is also no evidence for a son Thomas. Prindle lists some records for such a person, but they actually pertain to Thomas Hyatt of Stamford [Gillespie Anc 290; FOOF 1:318]. To add to the confusion, probate documents for Simon Hoyt and Thomas Hyatt are mixed together on the same pages of the Stamford records [TAG 11:34].
The seven children of the second wife must all have been born in the 1630s and 1640s, from about 1632 to about 1647. These records are internally consistent, but do raise a small problem when compared with what little we learn from the records of Scituate and Windsor, the two towns in which Simon Hoyt lived from 1635 to about 1646. Hoyt and his wife were admitted to Scituate church in 1635, but had no children baptized there, and Matthew Grant tells us that Simon Hoyt had two children born during his residence at Windsor [Grant 93]. The two eldest children of this marriage, Mary and Moses, were probably born in Dorchester. The next two, Joshua and Miriam, seem firmly placed as born in the years when the family lived in Windsor. The birth of Benjamin is recorded at Windsor on 2 February 1644[/5], but the dates for Samuel and Sarah are less certain, and seem to cluster around the period from 1645 to 1647, very close to the birth of Benjamin. If Grant is right, then these three must have been born in Fairfield; the solution may be that each of these is a little younger than our estimate, or that the Hoyt family moved to Fairfield as early as 1644. Either Grant is in error as to the number of children born in Windsor, or Benjamin wasn't really born in Windsor, but had his birth recorded there perhaps because he had elder brothers still living in that town.
Simon Hoyt settled at Charlestown in 1629 [ChTR 2]. On 7 May 1640 "Symon Hoyette and his family are to be freed from watch & ward until there be further order taken by the court" [RPCC 11; CCCR 1:49]. | Hoyt, Simon (I25494)
|
2717 |
Osterle, Charles of Ellington Twp, Tuscola Co., Mi., b. in Mi., parents: J. Osterle and Mary Summerhalter, m. 6 Jan 1889, to Almira Harrison of Ellington, b. in Mi., parents: Mr. Harrison and Jane Ball, Witnesses: Herman Osterle and Preston Cooley. Rev Robert L. Cope officiated. | Family F265
|
2718 |
OSTRANDER, Clarence1863 1865 -----
OSTRANDER, Harmon 1809 1888 -----
OSTRANDER, John B.1835 1924 -----
OSTRANDER, Mary Ann1812 1899 -----
OSTRANDER, Sarah1841 1916 | Ostrander, Harmon (I60046)
|
2719 |
Other dates given for the birth of Peter:
6th day of 7th mo. 1655 (6 Sep)
7th day of August 1655
!Boston Records, NEHGR 12:109
b. date: 7th.day 1st.mo 1655 Braintree
!was a deacon, settled in Mendon;
!Morse Family | Holbrook, Peter (I6271)
|
2720 |
Other families of the name (O'Kelly) were at Warren, Rhode Island, and for more than a century members of these families operated Kellys Ferry across the Warren or Swansea River, between Warren and Barrington, R. I., at the place where Kelleys Bridge now spans the river. This ferry was referred to at various times in town and county records of the early part of the eighteenth century, and in comments of travellers passing between Providence and Boston. It was first mentioned in 1681, when a petition was presented to the proprietors of Swansea for a highway through Brooks Pasture (now Warren) to Kellys Ferry, and in 1688 a road was laid out from Bristol Ferry to Kellys Ferry.A History of Rhode Island Ferries, by Anna Augusta and Charles V. Chapin, Providence, 1925.24 The Kelly who then operated it is not referred to by name in the records and he is unknown to local chroniclers, and the first mention of its operator was in 1725, at which time and for many years thereafter it was owned by Duncan Kelley, who was succeeded by his son, John Kelley. This John Kelley apparently resumed the old family name. He was a soldier of the Revolution, and his name was entered as John OKelley, in the roll of Captain Ezra Ormsbees company of militia of the town of Warren in 1776, and it again so appears in the records of the Rhode Island General Assembly in 1782, when permission to sell certain real property was granted to Mrs. Elizabeth OKelley of Warren, widow and administratrix of John OKelley. | Kelley, Duncan (I47779)
|
2721 |
Other possible dates of marriage, 17 Jan 1694/95, 13 Feb 1694/95. Capt. Peter Adams was selectman of Braintree several years. He was chosen Deacon of First Church, 21 Aug 1727. !The Vinton Memorial, John Adams Vinton, 1858 | Adams, Peter (I10856)
|
2722 |
Other spellings might be BURDIN, BURDEN, BARDEN, BARDENS. No certainty yet that Mary is the daughter of James and Mary (Sanders) Bardens. She is not listed among the children in the Bardeen-Barden Genealogy. There is reason to believe this is the correct family. Some of the other children known, lived in the area of Uxbridge and married into families like Cook, White and other Mendon area families. Her supposed nephew married Hannah Traske. | Burdin, Mary (I21793)
|
2723 |
OTTO MARTINSON 13 Dec 1883 Jan 1973 75211 (Dallas, Dallas, TX) (No Location Given) 454-60-5891 Texas 1955 | Martinson, Otto Reverend (I102)
|
2724 |
Overleden bij de geboorte van haar zoon. | Leunis, Barbel (I3190)
|
2725 |
p. 062 | Ostrander, Harmon (I60046)
|
2726 |
p. 11
Frame house, value $500, family #95
Curtis, Henry L., 34, M, b. Saratoga co, md., resident 2y, Farmer
Mary, 32, F, Wife, b. Saratoga co, md., resident 15y
Florence A., 10, F, Child, b. Saratoga co, resident 2y
Arthur S., 7, M, Child, b. Saratoga co, resident 2y
Henry H., 3, M, Child, b. Saratoga co, resident 2y
Gibbs, Charles W., 17, M, serv't, b. Jefferson co, resident 17y
Gardner, Sarah E., 20, F, serv't, b. Saratoga co, resident 2y | Gibbs, Charles Winfield (I26706)
|
2727 |
p. 12
Frame house, value $200, family #105
Townsend, Hiram, 49, M, b. Jefferson co, md, resident 3y, Farmer
Luna, 36, F, Wife, b. Jefferson co, md., resident 3y
Ambrose, 19, M, Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 3y
Eber, 15, M, Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 3y
Harland, 5, M, Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 3y
Orville, 4, M, Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 3y
Stone, Luna, 24, F, Boarder, b. Jefferson co, resident 7/12y
Allison, 2, M, Boarder, b. Jefferson co, resident 2/12y
Infant, 1/12, M, Boarder, b. Jefferson co, resident, 4/12y | Family F1969
|
2728 |
p. 12
Log home, $50
Allen, Anna, 60, f, b. Duchess county, NY, in Jefferson county 31 years.
Hiram, 18, m, Child, b. Jefferson Co, Farmer
Patience S., 14, f, Child, b. Jefferson Co | Deuel\Devol, Anna (I46425)
|
2729 |
p. 19
Frame hose, value $500, family #178
Lewis, D. L., 30, m, b. Jefferson co, md., resident 28y, Farmer
Ursula, 36, F, wife, b. Oneida co
Weaver, Maitland, 10, m, neph, b. Jefferson co | Lewis, DeMarquis LaFayette (I27093)
|
2730 |
p. 19
Frame house, value $350, family #175
Lewis, Eseck, 71, m, b. Mass, md., resident 51y, Farmer
Hannah, 71, m, wife, b. Washington co
Sarah A., 32, F, Child, b. Jefferson co
George O., 18, m, G child, Monroe co | Lewis, Easeck (I25970)
|
2731 |
p. 19 (2nd Election District)
Townsend, Elon D., 56
Sylvatus, 46
Martin, 26
Hiram, 23
Catherine, 21
Almon, 17
Adison, 10
(Information is from an index, not the original census) | Townsend, Elan Durkee (I25082)
|
2732 |
p. 207
Framed house, value $100, family #57
Bryant, George, 22, M, b. St Lawrence co, md., resident 13y, Farmer
Esther, 28, F, wife, resident 28y
Frances E., 2, F, child, resident 2y | Bryant, George Henry (I17559)
|
2733 |
P. 211
Dwelling #13
Frame construction, value $300
Family 113
Habline, Aderline, 49, F, b. Herkimer Co wid., resident 14y
Townsend, Amanda, 14, F, Child, b. Jefferson Co, resident 14y
Sarah, 11, F, Child, b. Jefferson Co, resident 11y
Layfayett M., 7, M, Child, b. Jefferson Co, resident 7y
Note: This is taken from a transcription. I've not seen the actual record (10/2003) | Pardee, Adaline (I20617)
|
2734 |
p. 215
Frame house, value $150, Family #144
Townsend, Almon, 51, M, b. Jefferson Co, md., resident 29y, Farmer
Cloe, 41, F, Wife, Jefferson Co, md., resident 29y
Warren, 55, M, Brother, b. ?, wid., resident 7y
Kelsey, Mary, 14, F, Servant, b. Oneida Co, resident 3y | Townsend, Almon (I5736)
|
2735 |
p. 215 family #143
Frame house, value $800
Townsend, George H, 31, M, b. Jefferson Co, md., resident 1y, Farmer
Jane, 27, F, Wife, b. Jefferson Co, md., resident 1y
Eug???, 7, F, Child, b. Jefferson Co, resident 1y
Warran, 5, M, Child, b. Jefferson Co, resident 1y
Loran, 2, M, Child, b. Jefferson Co, resident 1y
Clark O, 18, M, Servant, Jefferson Co, resident 16y | Townsend, George Warren (I5675)
|
2736 |
p. 218
Log house, value $10, family #180
Goltrite, Oscar, 26, M, b. St. Lawrence Co, md., resident 25y
Goolthright, Lenora, 19, F, Wife, b. Jefferson Co, md., resident 18y
Goolthright, Biron, 1/2, M, Child, b. Jefferson Co, resident 1/2y | Family F1903
|
2737 |
p. 219
Frame house, value $300, family #181
Goolthright, Orin, 32, M, b. Jefferson Co, md., resident 23y, Farmer
Angeline, 22, F, Wife, b. St. Lawrence Co, md. resident 12y
Miron, 5/12, M, Child, b. Jefferson Co, resident 5/12y
Orin, 63, M, Father, b. Herkimer Co, wid., resident 25y, Farmer
Filander, 20, M, Boarder, b. Jefferson Co, resident 20y | Family F2203
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2738 |
p. 22
Frame house, value $1400, family #196
Lewis, Nicholas, 82, m, b. Rhode Island, resident 51y, Farmer
Waitstill, 77, F, wife, b. Conn | Lewis, Nicholas (I27098)
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2739 |
p. 228
Log home, famly #231
Thomas, John, 53, Male, b. Herkimer Co, md., resident 2y, Farmer
Eliza, 47, F, Wife, b. Jefferson Co, md., resident 2y
Eliza Ann, 13, F, Child, b. Lewis Co, resident 2y
Lucinda, 11, F, Child, b. Lewis Co, resident 2y
David F., 8, M, Child, b. Jefferson Co, resident 2y | Thomas, John (I45708)
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2740 |
p. 233
Log house, value $10, family #306
Townsend, Elam D., 48, M, b. Jefferson co, md., resident 10y, Farmer
Sabra, 38, F, Wife, b. Jefferson co, md., resident 10y
Mary E. C., 18, F, Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 10y
Martin V., 16, M, Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 10y
Adelia L., 15, F, Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 10y
Hiram C., 15, M, Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 10y
Catherine N., 11, F, Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 10y
Almon, 7, M, Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 7y
Adison, 6/12, M, Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 6/12 | Townsend, Elan Durkee (I25082)
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2741 |
p. 25 (2nd Election District)
House #233, framed, $500, family # 233
Joseph Gibs, 30, m, b. Lewis Co, married, farm laborer, voter, owns land
Elen Gibs, 26, f, wife, b. Lewis Co, married
George Gibs, 9, m, son, b. Lewis Co
Mertie Gibs, 4, f, daughter, b Lewis Co
Mertie Carter, 71, f, mother, b. Saratoga Co, widowed
(Agricultural listing for Joseph Gibs was not found) | Gibbs, Joseph (I26707)
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2742 |
p. 26
Frame houes, value $2500, family #235
Babcock, Wm P., 46, m, b. Madison co, md., resident 40y, Farmer
Roxy L., 48, F, wife, b. Jefferson co
Wm A., 22, m, child, b. Jefferson co, Farmer
Esther M., 21, F, child, b. Jefferson co
Lysander W., 19, m, child, b. Jefferson co
Elizer P., 14, m, child, b. Jefferson co
Eliza C., 14, F, child, b. Jefferson co | Babcock, William Powers (I27091)
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2743 |
p. 28
Frame house, value $300, family #256
Townsend, Josiah, 85, m, Columbia, md., resident 54y, Farmer
Dolly, 84, F, wife, b. Conn
John D., 59, m, child, b. Saratoga, resident 54y, Methodist Clergy
Amanda, 51, F, child, b. Herkimer Co
Josiah, 26, m, G child, b. Jefferson co, resident 4y, Carpenter
Uronus, 22, m, G child, b. Jefferson Co
Alfred A., 16, m, G child, b. Jefferson Co
Wm V. 13, m, G child, b. St Lawrence co
Woodruff, Henry, 67, m, boarder, b. Connecticut, resident 46y, Cabinet
Parker, Chloe J., 19, F, G child, b. Jefferson Co
Townsend, Mary, 22, F, G child, b. Dutchess Co | Townsend, Josiah (I24079)
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2744 |
p. 284 #1591
Alexander Odrin, age 37 of Coldwater
& Charlotte Harrison, age 28 of Coldwater
married at Ovid on 16 July 1857
Witnesses: Mrs. Pamelia Fern of coldwater and Miss Sarah E. Lawrence of Ovid. | Family F2961
|
2745 |
p. 3
Frame house, value $400, family #23
Post, Stephen, 76, M, b. Duchess co, md., resident 34y, Farmer
Patience, 68, F, Wife, b. Duchess co, md., resident 34y
William H., 51, M, Child, b. Jefferson co, md., resident 34y
Sally, 31, F, Child, b. Jefferson co, md., resident 10y
John H., 8, M, G'd Child, b. Jefferson co, resident 8y | Post, Stephen (I46391)
|
2746 |
p. 302
framed, $2,500, Covel, Seth, 56, m, Montgomery, md, 40, Farmer, 1----1-
Beulah, 53, f, wife, Saratoga, md, 53
Isaac, 20, m, Child, Saratoga, 20
Sarah, 17, f, Child, Saratoga, 17
Eliza, 15, f, Child, Saratoga, 15
Adaline, 11, f, Child, Saratoga, 11
Hendrick, Charles, 24, m, Servant, Saratoga, 24
Covell, Hannah, 86, f, New York, wid, 40
Archibald, 53, m, Child, Montgomery, 40 | Coville, Seth (I46420)
|
2747 |
p. 37
Frame house, value $150, family #339
Odell, Joel, 30, m, b. Jefferson Co, md., resident 30y, Farmer
Mary J., 20, F, wife, b. Jefferson Co
Alden, 2, m, child, b. Jefferson Co | Family F2333
|
2748 |
p. 37
Stone house, value $800, family #338
Lewis, Benajah, 53, m, b. Saratoga Co, md., resident 50y, Farmer
Amey A., 49, F, wife, b. Madison Co
George, 19, m, child, b. Jefferson Co
Christopher, 10, m, child, b. Jefferson Co
Marian C., 8, F, child, b. Jefferson Co | Lewis, Benajah A. (I27088)
|
2749 |
p. 5 (2nd Election District)
House #33, Framed, $500.00 value, Family #33
Peleg Heath, 65, m, Conn, married 1 time, now married, Provision Dealer, voter, owns land
Adaline Heath, 56, f, wife, b. Oneida Co., mother of 5 children, married 1 time, now married
Alfred Heath, 22, m, son, Conn., single, voter | Heath, Peleg (I1669)
|
2750 |
p. 83
Ridgeway, Freeman B., Jay (south), teamster
Mrs. Harriet E.
!1907 Coldwater City Directory, p. 83 | Ridgway, Freeman B. (I26434)
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