History of East Haven, Part 22

Author: Hughes, Sarah E. (Sarah Eva)
Publication date: 1908
Publisher: New Haven, Conn. : Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Press
Number of Pages: 573


USA > Connecticut > New Haven County > East Haven > History of East Haven > Part 22


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32


Charles A. Bray


John Hemingway


Alfred Hughes


Francis D. Kellogg


Zadoc R. Morse


Charles W. Bradley


Julius H. Morris


1862


1868


Charles A. Bray


Lyman A. Granniss


Alpheus Young


Alvin B. Rose


Bradley Pardee


Charles A. Bray


Samuel Linsley


Henry P. Bradley


Alfred Hughes


Alfred Hughes


S. M. Tuttle


Hudson B. Forbes


Henry Smith


Timothy Andrews


1863


Charles A. Bray


Alpheus Young


Bradley Pardee


Henry A. Stephens


Samuel Linsley


Hudson B. Forbes


Alfred Hughes


Lyman Hotchkiss


S. M. Tuttle


Albert Forbes


Henry Smith


1864


Lyman A. Granniss


Bradley Pardee


Andrew Barnes Charles A. Bray


Edwin Granniss


James R. Hunt


Chas. A. Bray Zadoc R. Morse


F. Foote Andrews


William A. Woodward


James F. Babcock


Edward B. Thompson


Edward B. Thompson


1865


Bradley Pardee


Chas. A. Bray Alfred Hughes


Henry Smith Zadoc R. Morse


Alpheus Young


Edward E. Thompson


1869


Lyman A. Granniss Charles A. Bray George Hultz


1870


Alpheus Young


1871 Lyman A. Granniss Charles A. Bray James Thompson 1872 Lyman A. Granniss Horace H. Strong James Thompson


General Affairs. 319


Nelson Linsley Julius H. Morris


1873 Lyman A. Granniss Horace H. Strong James Thompson Dr. Henry E. Stone Julius H. Morris


1874 Lyman A. Granniss James Thompson Julius H. Morris William M. Lancraft John C. Bradley


1875 Albert Forbes William M. Lancraft John C. Bradley


1876 James Thompson William M. Lancraft John C. Bradley


1877 James Thompson William M. Lancraft John R. Kingsbury


1878 James Thompson William M. Lancraft Hudson B. Forbes


1879 Hudson B. Forbes James C. Woodward Alonzo D. Jacobs Levi L. Bradley Ruel S. Thompson


1880 Hudson B. Forbes Samuel Chidsey John C. Bradley


1881


Hudson B. Forbes Samuel Chidsey John C. Bradley


1882 Reuben H. Coe Ruel S. Thompson Henry Smith


1883 Leonard R. Andrews Ruel S. Thompson Henry Smith


1884 Leonard R. Andrews Ruel S. Thompson Henry Smith


1885 Albert Forbes Ruel S. Thompson Lyman A. Granniss


1886 Leonard B. Smith Ruel S. Thompson John S. Tyler


1887 Henry Smith John S. Tyler Ruel S. Thompson


1888 Leonard R. Andrews, Agt. Frank M. Sperry John S. Tyler


1889 John Ives Bradley, Agt. Frank M. Sperry John S. Tyler


1890 Leonard B. Smith, Agt. Ruel S. Thompson John S. Tyler


320 History of East Haven.


1891 Reuben H. Coe, Agt.


1900


John S. Tyler


John S. Tyler Ruel S. Thompson


Edmond B. Woodward Eugene S. Thompson


1892 John S. Tyler William S. Chidsey John Jackson


1901 John S. Tyler Edmond B. Woodward Eugene S. Thompson


1893 John S. Tyler William S. Chidsey Eugene S. Thompson


1902 John S. Tyler Edmond B. Woodward Eugene S. Thompson


1894 John S. Tyler Leonard R. Andrews Eugene S. Thompson


1903 John S. Tyler Edmond B. Woodward Eugene S. Thompson


1895 John S. Tyler Leonard R. Andrews Edmond B. Woodward


1904 John S. Tyler Eugene S. Thompson Edmond B. Woodward


1905. John S. Tyler Edmond B. Woodward Eugene S. Thompson


1898 John S. Tyler Henry T. Thompson Sidney B. Smith


1906 John S. Tyler Edmond B. Woodward Eugene S. Thompson


1899 John S. Tyler Edmond B. Woodward Henry T. Thompson


1907 John S. Tyler Edmond B. Woodward Eugene S. Thompson


1896 John S. Tyler Leonard R. Andrews Henry T. Thompson


18g; John S. Tyler Edmond B. Woodward Henry T. Thompson


RETROSPECTION.


Now as we take a retrospective view of the two hundred and sixty-eight years, so briefly and imper- fectly noted within the covers of this work, what do we see? First, a little handful of men, landing upon the wilds of a hitherto unknown, unexplored, and savage land, to build homes and found governments, whereby they might enjoy their own liberty of con- science in the worship of God, as they expressed it. A company of pioneers, strong in will power, firm in resolution, unflinching in courage, indomita- ble in perseverance, impregnably fortified by prin- ciple, taking the Scriptures as their guide and following its precepts, as revealed to them. They acknowledged with gratitude the law; they believed order was Heaven's high decree; they made integ- rity their watchword, and their ambition knew no bounds-masterful in spirit and practice.


We see the little colony of Connecticut holding out the beacon light of liberty as a torch to the world, in the first written constitution guaranteeing the whole rights of man that the world ever saw-one of their very first acts. Other constitutions had been given in foreign lands, but none which placed every man equal before the law. They continued to sow and to reap these first principles, until New England became the seed bed of the nation, if not of the world. They came with the Bible in one hand and a gun in the other, and to which was given the right hand would be difficult to determine.


We follow its growth, until to-day it stands a giant among all the nations of the earth. From the little


322 History of East Haven.


companies of emigrants dotting the seacoast, arises the prosperous homes of 80,000,000 of freemen, citizens of the United States, stretching from ocean to ocean. Instead of a wilderness, the whole land is dotted with cities, towns and villages, all enjoying the advantages which the highest civilization of culture, education and religion can give. Not only its size and population, but its resources are equally astonishing. Taken as a whole, this young nation astonishes the world by its rapid development of wealth, intelligence, culture and power.


In the Union, our own little state of Connecticut has always stood in the front rank. True, she has never filled the presidential chair directly, but the descendants of her sons have in the persons of U. S. Grant and Rutherford B. Hayes. She has furnished statesmen of the first order of ability, from the signing of the Declaration of Independence by Roger Sherman and Oliver Wolcott down to the day when Orville H. Platt passed away, whose memory will pass on to generations as one of the greatest statesmen of the age. Connecticut is small in stature, but mighty in intellect, education, industries and inventions.


The nineteenth century will be styled the century of inventions. We may commence with the little stick of a match, now a household necessity, which was not in use at the time the nucleus of this book was published in 1824. This was about the beginning of manufacturing, although steam as a propelling power had been used to a limited extent. Observe the change from Robert Fulton's little steamboat to the great leviathans of to-day, now swiftly crossing the ocean, bearing thousands of lives and millions of


Retrospection.


323


treasure daily. Contrast the little wooden ships with the ponderous engines of war now plowing the waters of the Pacific, the most powerful fleet that ever navi- gated those waters, whose naval discipline and strength are acknowledged throughout the world. Witness steam applied to mechanical arts, turning millions of wheels and spindles all over the land. Behold the wilderness of two hundred and fifty years ago now completely girded and bounded in every direction, with the iron tracks of its trolley and steam railroads, bear- ing its millions of travelers and freight from ocean to ocean. Notice the little, often unpainted school- house standing by the roadside, void of every con- venience, and now the vast universities all over this broad land supplied with every appliance of science, numbering its students by the thousands. Regard with thankfulness the elegant churches, of every material, belonging to every creed, some of great architectural design and beauty, furnished with every convenience and garnished with much elegance, rearing their lofty towers and spires heavenward; many at a cost reaching the million point, and some much beyond.


Inventions quickly followed one another, in all the varied industries of life, until there seemed to be nothing more to come, particularly during the last half of the century, but each year sees improvements and new wonders. The electrical spark which Benja- min Franklin brought from the clouds with his kite and key was left for Prof. S. F. B. Morse to develop and bring into use in 1844. He called it the "magnetic telegraph." No one seemed to comprehend his ideas, and he was the subject of much doubt, many


324 History of East Haven.


pronouncing him a monomaniac. After great dis- appointments, and severe struggles, he succeeded in obtaining $25,000 from Congress, which completed his experiments, and the first message said to have been sent over the wires was the nomination of James K. Polk in the fall of 1844. Others have further developed the science of telegraphy, until "we can sit in our bed-chamber and talk with those on the mountain." Electricity as a propelling power is only now in its infancy. It may supersede steam alto- gether-no one can calculate its limit. Those who have passed the scriptural limit of their age can look back, and with holy reverence and awe, exclaim with amazement and wonder "What hath God wrought!"


Rev. Stephen Dodd. June 1851. Aged 74.


.


3


EAST HAVEN REGISTER


CONTAINING AN ACCOUNT OF THE


NAMES, MARRIAGES AND BIRTHS


OF THE


Families which settled, or which have resided in East Haven, from its settlement in 1644 to the year 1800


BY REV. STEPHEN DODD


Being an Appendix to the History of East Haven Compiled by SARAH E. HUGHES


1910 THE TUTTLE, MOREHOUSE & TAYLOR PRESS NEW HAVEN, CONN.


-.


PREFACE.


The Trustees of the Old Cemetery, who republish Rev. Mr. Dodd's valuable work, fully appreciate its worth, for placing the annals of the town in book form for preservation. They realize that he compiled the work for the people, and placed it before them; that it has been prized by them and should be so con- tinued. Therefore, as a compliment to his faithful- ness, they have concluded to round out his entire work among them, including marriages.


CHARLOTTE J. THOMPSON, ELIZABETH H. BAGLEY, JENNIE A. FORBES, CHARLOTTE HEMINGWAY ATWATER, IDA M. FONDA.


CONTENTS.


Contributors Perpetual Care Fund.


vii


Appendix


I


Names, Marriages and Deaths


I


Names and Dates of Death


69


Deaths, Diseases and Ages


88


Marriages


138


Marriages by Episcopal Ministers


156


Deaths-by towns, since 1773.


158


Tree Planting of 1909-10.


162


Key to Map of East Haven Green


164


Addenda and Errata


167


APPENDIX.


The following account was collected from the public and family records, from tradition, and from monu- ments of the dead. Of some, no dates could be found. The families are traced as far back as there are any authentic memorials of them. Those which have removed from the town, are also noticed, where records or other correct information respecting them came in the way of the compiler. They are arranged in alphabetical order. The name of each family is stated in large capitals; the branches or descendants of the original family are designated by small capitals.


NOTE .- This mark [t] added to the names signifies that the persons died young.


NAMES, MARRIAGES AND BIRTHS.


ABBOT.


JOSEPH, had Abigail, Aug. 15, 1700, who married Nathaniel Jocelin, 1720; Mary, Nov. 14, 1704 (died unmarried).


ALCOCK.


THOMAS, married Mary Gedney, April 17, 1706. They had Martha, 1707; Lydia, who married Isaac Blakely; Philip, March 3, 1714-2d wife, widow Abigail Austin, Jan. 11, 1716, had Anna, Oct. 20, 1717; Thomas, Sept. 6, 1720.


ALLEN.


THOMAS, married Dorothy Mallory, Dec. 7, 1769. They had Thomast, infantt, Roger; Mary, who married Amos Broton, 1791; Thomas, Philemon, Betsey. Roger married Rhoda Tuttle, 1789.


2


History of East Haven.


ALLING.


THEOPHILUS, son of Samuel, was born Feb. 17, 1679, and married Elizabeth Smith, June 17, 1708. They had Titus, Timothy .- 2d wife, widow Elizabeth Bradley.


TITUS, married Deborah Page. They had Titus, Lydia, Abigail, Nathaniel, Deborah, Theophilus, Jonathan, Phebe, Nathaniel, Mary, Justus.


TITUS, JUN., married widow Lucinda Hickox, Jan. 27, 1789. They had Sylvia.


ANDREWS.


JEDEDIAH, married Hannah Thomas, 1731. They came from Woodbridge, and had John, May 17, 1731; Mary, June 15, 1733; Lydia, Jan. 16, 1735; Gideon, March 2, 1737 .- 2d wife, Elizabeth Baldwin, 1740, had Jedediaht, May 1, 1741 ; Hannah, Oct. 17, 1743; Jedediah, Feb. 3, 1751; Timothy, May, 1753; Nathan.


JEDEDIAH, JUN., married Ame Bradley. They had an infantt .- 2d wife, Abigail Barnes, Feb. 15, 1778, had infantt, infant, 1779t; Jedediah, April 3, 1781; Hannah, Jan. 25, 1783; Elizabeth, June 26, 1786; Abigail, infantt, Saltrue.


TIMOTHY, married Dorcas Smith, 1776. They had Nathan. Fell from masthead, Dec., 1798.


ANDREWS.


TIMOTHY, married Rachel Adkins. They came from Wal- lingford, and had Elisha, Dec. 12, 1746; Timothy, April 27, 1749; Rachel, Dec. 25, 1751, who married Samuel Crumb, 1772; Phineas, Nov. 25, 1752; Benjamin, Dec. 18, 1755 .- 2d wife, widow Anna Holt, Jan. 25, 1748, had Samuel, Nov., 1758; Temperance, Nov. 28, 1760, who married Joseph Hotchkiss, jun.


ELISHA, married Sarah Moulthrop, 1769. They had Jared, March 25, 177ot; Timothy, Oct. 10, 1772t; Jared, March 28, 1774; Lydia, Oct. 10, 1776+; Nathan, Nov. 9, 1778; Sarah, Nov. 30, 1780; Lydia, Oct. 21, 1782; Rachel, Oct. 16, 1784; Mabel, April 13, 1787; Lue, Oct. 27, 1792.


3


Appendix.


JARED, married Dorothy Phelps, 1792. They had Eliza, Mary, Sylvia, Samuel, Susan.


NATHAN, married Mehitabel Pardee. They had Reuel, Betsey, Almira, Mabel, Harriet, Mary, Nathan, Sarah, Julia.


AUGER.


NICHOLAS, was a learned physician of New Haven. He made his will in 1638, in which he mentions his sister, ESTHER COSTER, and his brothers JOHN and ROBERT, and NICHOLAS, the son of JOHN, and the youngest of JOHN's sons. His will was executed in 1669.


ROBERT, married Mary Gilbert, Nov. 20, 1673. They had Esther, Oct. 19, 1667; John, Nov. 26, 16787; Ann, Nov. 14, 1682; John, Nov. 16, 1686.


JOHN, married Elizabeth Bradley, July 1, 1710. They had Mary, Aug. 28, 1711, who married John Higgins; John, Isaac, Abraham; Elizabeth, who married Ives; Lydia, who married Charles Thomas, 1742; Daniel.


JOHN, JUN., married Rachel Barnes, 1744. They had Rachel, Oct. 27, 1744; Keturah, June 17, 1746; John, June 11, 1748; ; Peter, June 12, 1750; John, June 19, 1753; Puah, May I, 1755.


DANIEL, married Elizabeth Hitchcock. They had Philemon, May 20, 1754; Loist; Elizabeth, who married Rosewell Bradley, 1779, and Samuel Forbes, 1782 .- 2d wife, Mabel Brown.


PHILEMON, married Tabitha Perkins. They had Rosewell, Oct. 20, 1780; Lois, Sept. 20, 1782 .- 2d wife, Mary Shepard, Jan. 1, 1790, had Elizabeth, Jan. 10, 1793; Daniel, July 16, 1795; Abraham, Dec. 26, 1798t.


AUSTIN.


JOHN*, married Mary Atwater, 1667. They had John, April 23, 16681; David, Feb. 23, 1670; Joshua, Sept. 3, 1673;


* A petition dated Oct. 6, 1656, was presented to New Haven government, from the inhabitants of Greenwich, to be received under their care. John Austin was one of the petitioners.


4


History of East Haven.


Maryi; John, Oct. 14, 1677t; Mary, April 17, 168ot; a son, 16831 .- His wife died, 1683, and he married Elizabeth Bracket, Jan. 21, 1684, and had Sarah, Jan. 23, 1685.


DAVID, married Abigail , and had Abigail, April 5, 1699; David, Oct. 25, 1703; Stephen, Jan. 1, 1705; Jonathan, April 27, 1708; Mercy, 1710, who married Samuel Holt, 1737, and Caleb Hitchcock; Lydia, who married Ebenezer Darrow.


DAVID, JUN., married Rebekah Thompson, Feb. 11, 1731. They had David, May 6, 1732; Samuel, April 3, 1734; John, Sept. 23, 1736; Sarah, Aug. 13, 1737; Rebekah, Feb. 26, 1739 .- 2d wife, Hannah Punderson, had Hannah, Ang. 21, 1741, who married Rev. Nicholas Street, 1766; Punderson, Jan. 18, 17437; Punderson, Feb. 10, 1744; Jonathan, July 31, 1745-


DAVID, 3D, married Mary Mix, Dec. 14, 1752. They had Rebekah, Dec. 16, 1753; Mary, Oct. 24, 1755+; David, March 19, 1759; Ebenezer, June 18, 1761; Sarah, July 24, 1763; Elizabeth, June 1, 1765; Hannah, Oct. 26, 1767; Elisha, March 23, 1770; John; Mary, 1776, who married Rev. Andrew Yates.


SAMUEL, married Lydia Woolcot, Dec. 6, 1759. They had Samuel, Oct. 7, 1760; William, Sept. 8, 1762; Lydia, Dec. 9, 1764.


JOHN, married Anna Mix. They had Anna, who married Rev. Daniel Crocker.


JONATHAN, married Sarah Beecher. They had Thaddeus, John, Sarah, Nancy, Eli Beecher.


STEPHEN, married Martha Thompson, April 19, 1732. They had Tryphena, May 10, 1733; Stephen, June 17, 1733+; Mary, Jan. 25, 1740; Stephen, May 7, 1743; Abraham, May 25, 1749; Martha, Feb. 13, 1751.


JONATHAN (of DAVID, SEN.), had Abigail, 1738t; Lydia, Sept. 17, 1740.


JOSHUA, married Mehitabel Hitchcock. They had Silence, Feb. 28, 1714; Joshua, Sept. 17, 1733-


JOSHUA, JUN., married Abigail Hitchcock, May 6, 1756. They had Lois, Feb. 16. 175gt; Daniel, June 5, 1762; Lois, May 11, 1764-2d wife, Susannah Page.


5


Appendix.


DANIEL, married Sarah Pardee, Sept. 5, 1787. They had Wyllys, 1790t; Mary, June 18, 1792; John Pardee, April 3, 1794; Stephen, March 31, 1796; Sarah, Feb. 9, 1805.


BALL.


ALLING, married Dorothy. They had John, April 15, 1649; Eliphalet, Feb. 11, 1651 ; Alling, June 27, 1656.


JOHN, had Eliphalet, May 29, 1680; John, Sept. 30, 1685; Sarah, Sept. 26, 1687, who married John Miles, 1710; Han- nah, Jan. 12, 1690; Mercy, April, 1692, who married Joseph Mix, 1709; Mary, Oct. 21, 1694; Caleb, June 6, 1697.


JOHN, JUN., married Mary Tuttle, 1716. They had John, Nov. 21, 1716; Mary, Aug. 11, 1718; Eliphalet, Sept. 18, 17211; Eliphalet, July 29, 1723; Timothy, Nov. 10, 1724; Stephen, Hannah.


CALEB, married Abigail Osborne, 1720. They had Joseph, Sept. 9, 1721; Sarah, Nov. 25, 1723; Abigail, Oct. 12, 1727; Caleb, Dec. 2, 1729; Moses, Aug. 22, 1732.


ELIPHALET, married Hannah Nash, Feb. 13, 1672, and died July 16, 1673.


ALLING, JUN., married Sarah Thompson, Nov. 27, 1678. They had Sarah, Aug. 26, 1679, who married Joseph Ives, 1700; Lydia, Jan. 30, 1681, who married Rev. Jacob Hem- inway, 1712; Allingt; Mercy, who married Eleazar Morris, jun .; Mabel, who married Abraham Chidsey, 1722; Alling.


ALLING, 3D, married - Griswold. They had Lydia, Oct. 29, 1725, who married Abel Smith, 1737; Lucy, who married Ephraim Brush; Alling, Eliphalet, Wait, Daniel, Oliver.


BARNES.


THOMAS, signed the Colony Constitution, 1644. He, and his brother Daniel, settled on the plain south of Muddy River. He had Elizabeth, May 28, 1650; Thomas, Aug. 26, 1653; Abigail, Jan. 11, 1656; Daniel, 1659; Maybee, Jan. 25, 1663.


THOMAS, JUN., North Haven, had Mary, 1682; Thomas, July 21, 16841; Thomas, July 26, 1687; Sarah, 1689, who married Samuel Moulthrop; Rebekah, March 12, 1691; Abigail, June 10, 1693; Elizabeth, Nov. 10, 1695; Deborah, Feb. 1, 1698; Hannah, May 31, 1702; Samuel, April 11, 1705; Nathaniel, Jan. 11, 1707; Abraham, 1711.


6


History of East Haven.


SAMUEL, North Haven, married Rebekah Parker. They had Justus, Jan. 3, 1730t; Rebekah, April 28, 17331; Hannah, Sept. 5, 1735; Titus, Dec. 21, 17391 ;- 2d wife, Elizabeth Tuttle, had Rebekah, July 27, 17411; Samuel, April 24, 1743; Elizabeth, March 1, 1745; Isaiah, Jan. 2, 1748 .- 3d wife, Dorcas Turner, had Dorcas, Dec. 26, 1753t; Justus, March 6, 1756t.


SAMUEL, JUN., married Hepzibah Collins, 1764. They had Samuel, Jan. 3, 1765; Jeremiah, March 9, 1767t; Elizabeth, March 18, 176gt; Chauncey, Feb. 1, 1771; Elizabeth, March 7, 1773; Sarah, Nov. 4, 17751; Polly, Jan. 29, 1777; Amos, Oct. 14, 1779t ; Bela Collins, Dec. 18, 1781.


CHAUNCEY, married Huldah Smith, May 29, 1794. They had William, Maria, Samuel, Melinda, Jeremiah, Almira, Chauncey (by a second marriage this mother had three more).


NATHANIEL, married Mary Russel. They had Nathanielt, Abrahamt, Abrahamt; Mary, who married Daniel Holt, Wallingford; Eunice, who married Samuel Brittin .- 2d wife, Abigail Hotchkiss, had Ichabod .- 3d wife, widow Abigail Howel, March 22, 1745, had John, Jan. 28, 1746; Abraham, Nov. 18, 1747; Isaac, Dec. 21, 1749; Nathaniel, Aug. 28, 1751 ; Abigail, Feb. 4. 1753, who married Jedediah Andrews, 1778; Desire, Feb. 20, 1755, who married Samuel Luddington, 1787; Hannah, Oct. 2, 1757, who married Ephraim Chidsey, 1786; Jacob, Nov. 11, 1759; Levi, May 9, 1762.


ICHABOD, married Esther Tamadge, Aug. 12, 1756. They had Erastus, Hezekiaht, Thomast, Esther, Abigail, Anna.


JOHN, married Abigail Collins, Oct. 10, 1763. They had Obedience, Abel, Johnt and Elihu.


ABRAHAM, married Hannah Grannis, Jan. 1, 1776. They had Thomas, Sept. 22, 1782; Mehitabel.


ISAAC, married Lois Pardee, Feb. 12, 1776. They had Mehitabel, March 30, 1777; Abraham Jared, Aug. 1778; Mary, Aug. 2, 1780; Isaac, Dec. 12, 178zł; Jacob, Nov. 19, 1785; Huldah, June 9, 1788; Reuel, April 21, 1793; Julia, Nov. 7, 1796.


NATHANIEL, married Abigail Heminway, March 16, 1777. They had Abraham, Sarah, Abiudt, Nathaniel, Drusilla, Anson, Heminwayt.


7


Appendix.


LEVI, married Huldah Grannis, 1791. They had Levi, Asenath, Lydia, Nancy.


JACOB, married Hannah Chidsey, July 30, 1789. They had Silas, Harriet, Hannah, Sarah.


ABRAHAM (of THOMAS, JUN.), had Dimon, and three daughters.


JONATHAN, married Martha Frost. They had Jonathan, Aug. 26, 1750; Martha, Oct. 28, 1751, who married Jonathan Finch; Solomon, 1753.


SOLOMON, married Lydia Smith. They had Lydiat, Lydiat, Martha, James, Lydia, and three infantst.


BLAKESLEY.


ISAAC, married Lydia Alcock. They had Amos, Philemon and Maryt, Abraham, Lydia; Mary, who married Eliphalet Pardee, 1756; Isaac; Hannah, Aug. 29, 1741, who married Joseph Holt, jun.


BRAY.


ASA, married Lydia- They had John, Flora, Lydia, Abigail .- 2d wife, Hannah Hull, had Mary; Hoadley.


BRADLEY.


ISAAC, married Elizabeth He appears first on Branford records in 1674. He is then noticed as a "sojourner at New Haven," and the Town granted him a home lot of two acres at Canoe Brook. He removed to East Haven, 1683. They had Isaac, William, Samuel; Daniel, Dec. 20, 1696; Sarah, who married George Pardee, 3d, 1703; Elizabeth, who married John Augur, 1710.


WILLIAM, married Elizabeth Chidsey, Jan. 7, 1713. They had Caleb, Oct. 17, 1714; Ebenezer, March 25, 1716, who married Mabel Grannis, and removed to Northbury; Joseph, July 13, 1718; Elizabeth, who married John Thompson, New Haven; Desire, who married Eliphalet Tuttle; James, June 15, 1726.


CALEB, married Sarah Russel. They had Elizabeth, May 3, 1737, who married John Shepard, 1765; James, Nov. 9, 1739;


8


History of East Haven.


William; Tyrus, Rosewell (these two were lost at sea) ; Ame, who married Jedediah Andrews, jun., 1776; Huldah, who married Joel Northrop, 1773; Sarah, who married Isaac Page, 1770; Lucretia, who married Joseph Moulthrop; Lydia.


WILLIAM, married Rebekah Ives. They had Lucretiat; Joelt; William, May 18, 1763; Abigail, who married Nathan- iel Yale, 1791; infantt.


WILLIAM, JUN., married Mary Moulthrop, Oct. 6, 1785. They had Pollyt, William, Solomont, Lucretia, Rosewell, Tyrus, Polly, Elizabeth Rowe, Solomon.


ROSEWELL, married Elizabeth Augur, 1779. They had Ame. SAMUEL, married Sarah Robinson, Jan. 7, 1715. They had Zebulon, Oct. 6, 1715; Isaac, Nov. 30, 1717; Dan, Levi; Sarah, 1728, who married Isaac Chidsey, 1752; Simeon, 1731; Azariah, 1734; Gurdon, 1738.


ZEBULON, married Elizabeth Heminway, July 10, 1740. They had Abraham, June 13, 1741; Josiah, Sept. 17. 1743; Asa and Jaredt, May 9, 1746; Jared, May 30, 1749; Abijah, Oct. 31, 1751; Zebulon, Oct. 12, 1753; Elizabeth, Dec. 15, 1756, who married Andrew Davidson, 1774; Elijah, Oct. 10, 1759.


ABRAHAM, married Ame Heminway, Jan. 23, 1760. They had Mary, Abiudt, Rachel, Abiudt, Abraham, Sydneyt, Nancy, Sarah, Jared, Sydneyt.


JOSIAH, married Comfort Hitchcock, Feb. 2, 1764. They had Jeremiah, Aug. 11, 1766; Loruhamah, April 7, 1769, who married Jonathan Goodsell, 1791; Abigail, Jan. 19, 1773+; Zebulon, Sept. 16, 1774; Abigail, Oct. 22, 1776, who married Samuel Holt, jun., 1796; Elizabeth, Dec. 16, 1779, who mar- ried James Heminway, 1798.


ZEBULON, married Elizabeth Goodsell, May 11, 1794. They had infantt; Tryphena, Dec. 19, 1796; Abigail, Dec. 27, 1798; Jeremiah, June 6, 1800.


AsA, married Ame Morris, 1768. They had Amos; Jerusha, who married Benjamin Hutchins; Abiud, Gurdon, Elijah.


Amos, married Elizabeth Bradley, May 5, 1793. They had Betseyt, Jaredt, Jared, Amos, Betsey Morris, Asa, Jane Adeline, Elijah, Luther, Elizabeth.


JARED, married Sarah Smith, April 8, 1768. They had Sarah, March 16, 1769, who married Samuel Bradley; Eliz-


9


Appendix.


abeth, Oct. 28, 1770, who married Amos Bradley, 1793; Lorinda, Oct. 9, 1772, who married Heminway Holt, 1795; Asenath, Nov. 2, 1774, who married Hezekiah Woodward, 1794; Jared, April 2, 1778; Asa, July 19, 1781; Anson, Sept. 22, 1783; Elias, May 15, 1786; John Smith, Aug. 28, 1788.


ABIJAH, married Sarah Thompson, 1769. They had James; Esther, who married Stephen Heminway, 1791; Abijah; Desire, who married Eleazar Heminway.


ELIJAH, married Esther Thompson. They had William, Nancyt, Polly, Ame.


ISAAC, married Hannah Heminway. They had Eli, Oct. 6, 1747t; Anna, Dec. 26, 1749; Isaac, July 9, 1753; Eli, Elihu, Hannah, Enos, Desire, Asahel.


ELIEU, married Sibyl Grannis, May 22, 1780. They had Hannah, Sarah, Enos, Polly, Leura, Eli, Almont, Levi, Annat, Annat.


DAN, married Sarah Judd, 1751. They had Benjamin, Feb. 18, 1753; Uriel, Sept. 9, 1755; Edmond, Sept. 24, 1757; Sarah, Nov. 27, 1759, who married John Hungerford; Nehemiah, April 13, 1762; Ichabod, Nov. 10, 1764-2d wife, Mehitabel Heminway, Feb. 12, 1767, had Heminway, John, Major, Hezekiah, Samuel, Elihu, Polly, Reuel.




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.