Cousins and Littlejohn's islands, 1645-1893, Part 2

Author: Kaster, Katherine Prescott
Publication date: 1942
Publisher: [Portland, Me.] : [Loring Print. Co.]
Number of Pages: 150


USA > Maine > Cumberland County > Cousins and Littlejohn's islands, 1645-1893 > Part 2
USA > Maine > Cumberland County > Cousins and Littlejohn's islands, 1645-1893 > Part 2


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


At a meeting of the Committee on May 25, 1728 at the sign of the Orange Tree in Boston it was voted that "Messrs Deacon Samuel Seabury James Parker Jacob Mitchell Ger- shom Rice & Phineas Jones by & are hereby chose & ap- pointed a Sub-Committee to reside at Northyarmouth & to manage the Prudentials of said town for the present year."


There are two reports concerning the Bay that have come down to us from this time which are of interest. In 1728 James Parker wrote, "I have this day seen the choisest timber cut down and sawn into bolts for staves. Transient men come down in gangs and cut timber from the Islands of


12


whom there are nineteen on Chebeag and several vessels cut- ting their loads. Thus it has been all winter." The other report is: "It is difficult to conceive of the gigantic size of the trees .... The 'averaged' six to eight feet in diameter; and it was not uncommon to be able to 'turn a pair of yoked oxen around on a stump, after the tree had been cut away.' " This latter may be somewhat of an exaggeration because Mr. Rowe in his "Shipbuilding Days in Casco Bay" gives an up- per limit of three or four feet for the diameter of the trees hereabouts in the early days. The woods of today began nearly a century after that time as all except the very larg- est trees are less than one hundred and fifty years old.


When the town was surveyed a plan was made of the two Islands by Capt. Joseph Heath. According to this map there were about 886 acres in the two Islands and both were divid- ed into two parts "for quantity and quality." The division was made in such a way that the owners who held through Richard Bray received the northeast end of Cousins plus the southwest end of "Long Island" (as Littlejohn's was then called) amounting to 424 acres; the owners who held through Mrs. Sayward received the remaining parts contain- ing 462 acres. The dividing line on Cousins ran from a hem- lock tree in a gully on the southeast side - not far east of the present bridge - north 46 degrees west across the is- land to a hemlock tree by the water on the northwest shore -near the site of the present wharf below the Talbot house. The line was not parallel to the direction of the stone walls. The line on Long Island ran from a hemlock tree in a gully - just west of the north field - south 60 degrees east to a tree by the water on the southeast shore - about half way between the present Soule and Dickerman houses. Portions of the old wall are still in place where it crosses the swamp.


In 1729 Jonathan Preble sold to Phineas Jones three sixteenths of both Islands or 166 acres. Jones (1705-1743) was a surveyor from Worcester, Massachusetts, and after


13


DIVISIONS OF ISLANDS TO 1730-34


1645,7 John Cousins


Bray half , 1650 1


Sayward half


Richard Bray (1/2) 1 16,79


1679


George Pearson (1/2)


Mrs. Mary Sayward (1/2)


1


1


Thomas Pearson (1/2-)


Joseph & Hanmmond James Pearson (share)


Sayward


Bray


1


1716


1761


1717


Timothy Thornton (1/2-)


Samuel Bucknam Jr. (share)


Jonathan Preble (3/8) 1


1720, 1 3


Samuel White (1/4-)


Ebenezer Thornton (1/4-)


1727


Phineas Jones (3/16)


1732


Joseph Belcher (1/4-)


1732


1734


Samuel Bucknam Jr. (14-)


1729 1


1730


1 Benjamin Blaney 63 acres


Samuel Totman & Abraham Creighton 88 acres


Samuel Bucknam Jr. (1/8-) (1/8)


Benjamin Blaney


1734:


actually about 186 acres on Cousins (although supposed to be 210 acres) 92 acres on Littlejohn's


Benjamin Blaney


190 acres


James Sayward


90 acres


on Cousins


Nathaniel Bray


Jonathan Preble


170 acres


Totman & Creighton


88 acres on Littlejohn's


Nathan


heirs


(1/10)


(1/40)


1729


1


Samuel Bucknam Jr.


14


serving on the committee for the resettlement of North Yar- mouth became a leading real estate dealer of Falmouth. He handled a great deal of property in Falmouth, in North Yar- mouth and to the Eastward.


In September of 1731 the southwest end of Cousins Is- land was divided so that the owners were given definite parts rather than shares of the whole. According to the indentures there were 384 acres on the southwest end of Cousins and 88 acres on the northeast end of Littlejohn's (as Long Island now became known. (See page 37 for mention of the name.) The owners of the Sayward half and their shares were: James Sayward, one fifth; Phineas Jones, three eighths; Jonathan Preble, three eighths, and Nathaniel Bray Jr. one twentieth. Jonathan Preble and Nathaniel Bray Jr. together were given 1701/2 acres on the end of the Island including the present Groves farm, the Doyle land, Harmony Hill, and Madeline Point. The line ran from near the latter point across the island to the shore just east of the present wharf, - from a fir tree marked on the northwest side, south 53 degrees east across the Island to a heap of stones near the point of rocks by the water.


Phineas Jones was given the 88 acres on Littlejohn's and 63 acres on Cousins along the main division line. The south- western boundary started from a point on the southeast shore 75 "poles" southwest of the hemlock tree mentioned previously and ran across the island north 53 degrees west to the northwest shore. The northwest shore boundary was 10 "poles" longer than the opposite one.


James Sayward received the remaining 891/2 acres on Cousins.


The following March Phineas Jones sold his 63 acres on Cousins to Benjamin Blaney for £100. In August of the same year Samuel White sold his remaining quarter share in both islands to Samuel Bucknam Jr. for £350, the deed for which


15


contains the first use of the name Little John's. Two years later Phineas Jones sold his Littlejohn's property to Samuel Totman, bricklayer, and Abraham Creighton, laborer, both of North Yarmouth.


Map No. 1 indicates the land divisions and owners after the division of 1731. The only changes necessary to bring it up to 1734 are to transfer Phineas Jones' property to Blaney and to Totman and Creighton as above, and to drop Samuel White's name. Nothing is known of Creighton, but Totman owned land in North Yarmouth as early as 1727 and he was a signer of the incorporation of the First Church on November 18, 1730. He signed a confession faith upon the ordination of Rev. Nicholas Loring on November 17, 1736. He and his wife Experience had at least the following chil- dren : Samuel, born 1729; Deborah, born 1733; Hannah, born 1734 and Joshua born in 1737. As the Sayward grandsons all lived elsewhere, the only owners of interest are Samuel Bucknam Jr. and Benjamin Blaney.


Samuel Bucknam Jr. and his father were interested in Falmouth as early as 1718 when they bought land there. The names of both appear on a list of persons admitted as inhabi- tants of Falmouth about this time. Samuel Sr. was also one of 39 grantees of land in Falmouth in February 1720, and bought 100 acres on Muscle Cove from the Felt and Pike heirs in 1729 and 1730.


The first Bucknam in America was William of Charles- town and Malden. His son Joses married Judith Worth by whom he had, among others, Samuel. Samuel and his wife Mrs. Deborah (Sprague) [Mellen] Bucknam had many chil- dren among whom were Samuel Jr., born 1699, and Abigail who married Benjamin Blaney.


Samuel Jr. was a "coaster" and must have been fairly well-to-do because he owned considerable property. He bought land on the Islands in 1729 and in Falmouth later the


16


MAP #1. COUSINS AND LITTLEJOHN'S ISLANDS IN 1731.


Samuel Bucknam Jr. Benjamin Blaney Samuel White


Z<


+


Phineas Jones


Phineas Jones


Samuel Bucknam Jr. Benjamin Blaney Samuel White


James Sayward


Jonathan Preble Nathaniel Bray


same year. He bought more land on the Islands in 1732; a 100-acre lot, No. 30, on the east side of Royal's River, North Yarmouth, from Edward King for £50 in 1735; another 100 acre lot, No. 77, on the west side of Royal's River that he sold to Samuel Waldo for £25 in 1735, and 4 acres of salt marsh and upland on the West Cousins River that he bought from the Assessors of North Yarmouth for £30 in 1735.


He married Mrs. Elizabeth (Richardson) Wyman who had two children by her first husband: Amy who married Nathan Oakes, and John. She was received into the First Church on July 22, 1759. They had four children, all appar- ently born on Cousins Island: Samuel, Elizabeth, Lucretia and William Richardson.


Samuel sold for £230 his "Home lot" in North Yarmouth in 1739, the year his son Samuel was born, so that this may have been the time when he came to Cousins Island to live. He built a house not far from Sandy Point.


Benjamin Blaney was born about 1700 in Lynn and re- moved in 1724 to Malden where he was a tanner. He married Samuel Bucknam Jr.'s sister Abigail on Oct. 13, 1725. They had six children born in Malden between the years 1730 and 1742. Benjamin was a Lieutenant of Militia in 1743-1746 and in the latter year he was promoted to Captain. Although the easternmost point of Cousins Island is named for him he may never have lived here. He was killed either by a fall from his horse or from injuries received in stopping a brawl on the evening of February 8, 1750/1. He was buried in Malden.


Samuel Bucknam Jr. and Benjamin Blaney were inves- tors in the Land Bank of 1740 in which they presumably lost money when the Bank collapsed due to the action of Parlia- ment.


In the years 1734 to 1742 the town was redivided but Cousins, Littlejohn's and other islands were not included in


17


this division. In 1735, the town lines were "preambulated". The bounds extended from the white rock adjoining Fal- mouth, northwest 8 miles, then northeast about 11 miles, un- til intersected by a line running northwest from the mouth of Bungonug River, and from the white rock and the mouth of the river, to extend southeastward to the sea. These boundaries included what is now Cumberland ; Pownal ; most of Freeport; all of the islands northeast of a line passing be- tween Great Chebeague and Long Islands; Mare Point; Harpswell neck; Cape Small, as well as Yarmouth itself. The more distant parts such as Cape Small early requested to be set off from the town as it was so difficult to travel from there to North Yarmouth.


On August 23, 1734, Jacob Mitchell, Joseph Chandler, Samuel Fisher, Andrew Ring and James Tuttle were appoint- ed a committee to treat with the heirs of John Cousins who claimed Cousins and Littlejohn's Island. The depositions which were in existence giving evidence of the ownership of the Islands during the preceding century undoubtedly were a help in upholding the claims of these "heirs" of John Cous- ins. No records seem to have been left of the findings of the committee and there are no deeds in existence for the period 1737-1760 but the gap may be bridged by inference.


Samuel Bucknam Jr. and Benjamin Blaney divided their halves of the two Islands. They were supposed to own 321 acres on Cousins and 93 acres on Littlejohn's of which about one quarter belonged to Blaney. Since Bucknam appears to have had all of the 93 acres on Littlejohn's, Blaney must have had approximately 115 acres on Cousins, leaving about 210 acres for Bucknam. Map No. 2 shows the division. Blaney probably had what is there assigned to Hamilton, Drink- water and Jonathan Mitchell.


Samuel Bucknam kept his property and bought the rest of Littlejohn's from Totman and Creighton or some inter- mediate purchaser.


18


Blaney's easternmost 50 acres went to a John Hamilton. John Hamilton (died 1767) and his wife Betty (Chandler) Hamilton were in North Yarmouth as early as 1733 when their eldest son John was born. Either one of the two Johns might have been the owner of the property but both were residents of Walnut Hill and never lived on Cousins. The second son Ambrose who was born in 1735 settled on Che- beague and was ancester of all the Chebeague Hamiltons. The third son Rowland was born in 1737 and it was to him that these 50 acres belonged in 1779. As he was on the tax list in 1759 he may have been living on the Island at that time. He married first in 1768 Elizabeth Cushing of Fal- mouth. They had four children: Elizabeth, Lucy, John "4th" and Mary.


The forty-three acre strip lying next southwest of the properties of Rowland Hamilton and of Samuel Bucknam was sold to Joseph Dinkwater. The first Drinkwater of whom record can be found was Thomas of Taunton, Plymouth Col- ony. He married Elizabeth, the daughter of John and Pa- tience (Soule) Haskell and the granddaughter of George Soule who came in the Mayflower. They had ten children, at least four of whom came to Casco Bay about 1730: War- ren, John, George and Joseph. Joseph bought property in North Yarmouth of John Starnes on April 24, 1732, and later drew a 100 acre lot, No. 99, next to the Falmouth line in the right of his Home-lot No. 69. This he sold to Phineas Jones in 1734. He and his wife Jane probably came to live on Cousins in that year. It is said that all of his children were born in a "garrison house" which probably stood some- where near the spot where the Talbot house stands today. The southwest boundary of this piece of property is de- scribed as running from a spruce tree by the shore "to the north of Drinkwater's Point so called, said tree marked ED &EM," thence South 53 degrees East 7 rods, thence 37 de- grees West 1 rod, thence South 53 degrees East 40 rods,


19


MAP "2. COUSINS AND LITTLEJOHN'S ISLANDS IN 1780


Loring and Gray


William R. Bucknam


Roland Hamilton


Daniel


Drinkwater


Jonathan Mitchell


Loring and Gray


John Lewis


Nicholas & Solomon Loring


thence North 37 degrees East 1 rod, thence South 53 degrees East to the shore. Why this jog of sixteen feet should have been made in the line is now a mystery. Drinkwater's Point is the location of the wharf below the Talbot house.


In addition to two daughters, Joseph Drinkwater had nine sons all of whom became masters of vessels. The story is told that on one day all nine entered Boston Harbor. The officer at the fort became suspicious of a conspiracy upon re- ceiving the report of nine ships having masters named Drinkwater. He sent a man to investigate. When he learned that all nine were brothers, he invited them to supper at the fort.


The remaining 87-90 acre tract of Blaney's to the south- west of Drinkwater's land, and the 90 acres of James Say- ward went to Deacon Jacob Mitchell4. His father, Jacob3 (Jacob2, Experience1) Mitchell was born in 1670 in Dart- mouth and removed to Kingston, but sold his home in the latter town in 1728 and removed to North Yarmouth. He was one of the founders of the First Church in 1730 and was deacon from 1737 until his death in 1744. His son Jacob4 was born in 1697 and followed him to North Yarmouth in 1743. He also was deacon of the First Church, being elected to that office in 1745. He sold Blaney's 87 acres to his son Col. Jonathan Mitchell and Sayward's 90 acres to his son-in- law Judge Lewis on June 10, 1748. Col. Mitchell sold 2 acres to Judge Lewis on August 23, 1748. This piece is the triangle on the north shore bordering on the Talbot and Bartlett lots. The old boundary reached the shore just west of the quarry. The house where Judge Lewis lived and where all his chil- dren were born stood near the quarry. Col. Mitchell built his house and barns just west of the site of the present chapel.


Col. Jonathan Mitchell was a leading figure in this part of the state. In his youth he was a blacksmith but later was called "gentleman" when his title of Colonel was not used. He


20


owned considerable property in addition to his 90 acres on Cousins Island.


His military career started in 1758 when he was appoint- ed Ensign of the town's militia. This militia was called the Train Band or Alarm List. He was promoted to Lieutenant in 1764 and to Colonel of the 2nd Cumberland County regi- ment in 1776. He was in command of the forces defending the seacoast and was in charge of building a fort in the har- bor. He also took part, as Colonel under Adjutant-General Peleg Wadsworth and General Lovell, in the ill-fated expedi- tion to take Majorbagaduce (Castine).


He attended meetings in Portland protesting the actions of the British, such as the closing of the Port of Boston, and was active in the affairs of the State.


He and his wife Sarah were members of the First Church of North Yarmouth until their deaths. She died in 1804 aged 80 years and he died 13 years later in 1817 at the age of 93.


Jonathan Mitchell's brother-in-law, John Lewis, was born in Hingham in 1717 the son of John and Deborah (Hawke) Lewis. He removed to North Yarmouth in 1743 and became a member of the Cumberland County bar. He was generally known as "Judge Lewis". He took an active part in politics especially during the war. He held many im- portant posts in the state finally attaining to the position of Chief Justice of the County in 1796.


He and his wife Mary, sister of Col. Jonathan Mitchell, were members of the First Church and he was Deacon from 1796 until his death in 1803. He bought a house on the main- land about 1760 and may have spent the later years of his life there. As the island property went to his daughter Mary at his death it is probable that she lived there after her father went to the mainland to live. She was born on August


21


17, 1752 on Cousins Island and married on March 4, 1773 Daniel Mitchell (of another family). Daniel was captured by the Indians in 1751 when he was just a boy and lived with them for many years. He was restored to his parents in 1762. His sister Elizabeth married Capt. John Soule and was ancestress to Raymond Talbot.


Nathaniel Bray's and Jonathan Preble's 1701/2 acres on the southwest end of the Island went to Rev. Nicholas and Solomon Loring, sons of John Jr. and Jane (Baker) Loring. Rev. Nicholas was born in 1711 and was graduated from Harvard College in 1732. He came to North Yarmouth where he was chosen minister of the First Church in 1736. He mar- ried in 1737 Mary Richmond by whom he had ten children. One of them, Bezaleel, and his wife Elizabeth lived on Cous- ins, and another, Richmond (1738-1814), married Lucretia, the daughter of Samuel Bucknam Jr.


Solomon Loring was born in 1715 in Pembroke, Mass., where he was apprenticed to a blacksmith. When he came of age he removed to North Yarmouth where he built a block- house and carried on the trade of blacksmith. He also held several town offices. He married Alice Cushing by whom he had thirteen children. Their daughter Sarah married Wil- liam R. the son of Samuel Bucknam Jr.


In 1736 an epidemic of "throat distemper" attacked the town and took 34 persons, but no one connected with the Is- lands died that year.


The years 1744-47 had held little but trouble for the settlers. The Indians were continually killing and burning. Then, after a few years of peace the French and Indian War had broken out in 1755. Some of the inhabitants of the town took an active part in the war, and many of them joined the Train Band or Alarm List of 1757 et. seq.


22


....


KNOWN INHABITANTS OF 1750 For house numbers see map page i.


IIIA


Samuel Bucknam Jr.


Aged 51


Elizabeth


43


Samuel


11


Elizabeth


9


Lucretia 6


VIII


William Richardson 3


Col. Jonathan


Mitchell


26


Sarah


26


Jothan


4


Jonathan


2


Olive


b


Joseph Drinkwater 40


Jane


35


X


Thomas


16


Judge John Lewis


33


Joseph


14


Mary 27


John


12


John


3


Micajah


11


Asa


1


Phineas


9 ?


Samuel


7


Sarah


5


Sylvanus


3


Hannah


1?


John Wyman? 18


Amy Wyman ? 16


VIIA


23


KNOWN INHABITANTS OF 1760 For house numbers see map page i.


IIIA


VIII


Samuel Bucknam


Jr.


aged 61


Elizabeth


53


Sarah


36


Jothan


14


Jonathan


12


Olive


10


Sarah


9


Bela


5


Theodotia


2


Joseph Drinkwater


50


Jane


45


Joseph (mar.)


24


X


Judge John Lewis


43


Micajah


21


Mary


37


Phineas


19 ?


John


13


Samuel


17


Asa


11


Sarah


15


Mary


8


Sylvanus


13


Isaiah


3


Hannah


11?


? ?


David


9


Belzaleel Loring


21


Daniel


6


Col. Jonathan


Mitchell


36


Samuel


21


Elizabeth


19


Lucretia


16


William R.


13


VIIA


Eliab


b


John


22


24


KNOWN INHABITANTS OF 1770 For house numbers see map page i.


IA


VIII


Andrew Gray


aged 34


Col. Jonathan Mitchell


aged 46


Elizabeth


4 ?


Sarah


46


Pamelia


3


Olive


20


Samuel


1 ?


Sarah


19


Richmond Loring


33


Bela


15


Lucretia


26


Theodotia


12


Samuel


5


Eliab


10


Richmond


3 ?


Arwithera


8


Elizabeth B.


1


Orthniel


5


Dummer


1


V


Hannah ?


?


Rowland Hamilton


33


Elizabeth


X


Elizabeth


1?


?Judge John Lewis


53


VIIA


Mary


47


Joseph Drinkwater


60


Asa


21


Jane


55


Mary


18


Sylvanus


23


Isaiah


13


Hannah


21?


?


David


19


Belzaleel Loring


?


Daniel


16


? ?


Elizabeth 29


25


KNOWN INHABITANTS OF 1780 For house numbers see map page i.


1A


V


Andrew Gray


aged 44


Roland Hamilton 43


Elizabeth


39


Mary (after June 9)


Elizabeth


14


Pamelia


13


Samuel


11


?Lucy


9 ?


Lucretia


9


John


7 ?


Saba


7


Mary


5 ?


Dorcas


5


Ebenezer


3?


Jacob ?


?


VIIA


Susannah


b


Richmond Loring


42


Lucretia


36


Samuel


15


Richmond


13 ?


Col. Jonathan


Mitchell


56


Sarah


56


Eliab


20


Arwithera


18


Orthniel


15


Dummer


11


William Richardson


Bucknam


aged 33


Sarah


33


Elizabeth


11


Rachel


9


? ? Daniel Mitchell


aged 36


Samuel


5


Mary


28


William


2


Lewis


3


Sarah


1


Jeremiah


b


Mary


b


26


Daniel Drinkwater 26


VIII


Elizabeth B.


11


William


6


Lucretia


4


Reuben


1


IIIA


Hannah ?


9 ?


X


Dorcas


8


Elizabeth 11?


CHAPTER IV


In 1761 Samuel Bucknam Jr. bought up the interests of Joseph and Hammond Pearson, and the mortgage held by James Bowdoine's estate, thus gaining a clear title to all of his property on the Islands. He died the following year but his widow, Elizabeth, continued to live on the Island until her own death in 1768. As both Samuel and Elizabeth died intes- tate, the land was divided among all of the children. Amy Oakes and John Wyman, Mrs. Bucknam's children by her first husband, inherited only one sixth part each of her widow's share of one third. The others each owned one sixth part of Elizabeth's share plus one fourth part of the remain- ing two thirds. The son Samuel was then dead and his widow, as well as Amy and John, sold out to the others: Elizabeth, Lucretia and William Richardson. Elizabeth who had mar- ried Andrew Gray about 1760 and Lucretia who had married Richmond Loring about 1765 took all of Littlejohn's and the east end of Cousins, including Blaney's and Cornfield Points. William kept about one hundred acres around Sandy Point and the old house where he lived with his wife Sarah Loring and their children. The Grays and Lorings had a house on the site of the present brick house.


During the war years 1775-1783 Col. Mitchell and Judge Lewis were busy with military and civic duties in Portland and elsewhere. Richmond Loring and Rowland Hamilton are said to have served in the army for a while in 1775, but their names do not appear in the lists. Several of the Drinkwater family served, both in the army under Col. Mitchell and aboard privateers. Some of them were on the supply vessels carrying provisions for the troops at Majorbagaduce.


In 1778 Andrew Gray and Richmond Loring and their wives divided their easternmost piece of property where their house stood in such a way that the Grays received all of Corn- field Point, and the Lorings, all of Blaney's Point and most


27


of the Neck. The Lorings had a barn just west of the cross- fence at a place known as "the flying place". This name probably comes from the presence in that locality of myriads of ducks and other wild fowl during the fall and spring mi- grations.


After all of his children were born, Joseph Drinkwater sold his 43 acres to his son Daniel in 1779 for £360. The latter was planning to marry Rebecca Fisher in the next year and wanted a home for her. However, she apparently preferred to live on the mainland if her husband was to be away at sea a good part of the time, so he sold the place in 1782 to Wil- liam Weeks who lived there for several years but about whom little is known. However, his name is still given to the eastern shore of this property - Weeks' shore.


In 1780 Rowland Hamilton married a second wife, Mary Hanaford, and the following year their first child, Rachel, was born. At that time they had all five of the children bap- tized. This would seem to indicate that Rowland's first wife may not have been a member of the church. Jacob was born in 1782 and Annah in 1784.


In 1785 there arrived on the Islands from Bridgewater, Massachusetts, two brothers - Hezekiah and Eleazer Hill. The former was born on November 27, 1754. He had served . six days as private in Captain David Kingman's Company, Colonel Edward Mitchell's regiment on an alarm at Squant- um or Braintree Farms in March 1776. It is said that he took part in the Boston Tea Party. He was married to Eunice Collins. When they arrived they had at least one son, Heze- kiah Jr., and probably Ebenezer and David also.


Hezekiah, began buying property from William Bucknam immediately, the first piece being 72 acres around Sandy Point including one half of the house. Excluded from this was about one half acre in which was situated the cellar of some older house even then no longer in existence. If the


28


KNOWN INHABITANTS OF 1785 For house numbers see map page i.


IA


Hezekiah Hill


31


Andrew Gray


aged 49


Eunice 27


Elizabeth


19


Hezekiah


5


Pamelia


18


Ebenezer


3 ?


Samuel


16


David


1?


Lucretia


14


?Eleazer Hill


22


Seba


11


V


Dorcas


9


Rowland Hamilton


53


Ebenezer


8


Mary




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