USA > Maine > York County > Buxton > Records of the proprietors of Narraganset township, no. 1, now the town of Buxton, York county, Maine, from August 1st, 1733, to January 4th, 1811 > Part 18
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JNO WOODMAN
york ss march ye 26 th 1783 then the above named John Woodman Per- sonally appeared and made Solemn Oath to the truth of ye above Deposi- tion by him Signed Before me
TRISTRAM JORDAN Just Peace
13 .- Deposition of John Cole.
The Deposition of John Cole of Lawfull age Testifieth and Saith that he was a Soldier under Capt Daniel Lane in ye army of ye united States of america in ye year 1777 and was with the Said Lane when he was Captivat- ed by a part of General Burgoyns army and I See the Said Lane Stripped of all his Clothes Except his Shirt and Over hills-his Jacoat - I See tore to pieces and Divided amongst them I See ye Enemy Take his Watch at ye Same Time
bịs JOHN M COLE mark
york ss
march ye 26th 1783 then the above named John Cole who has Set his mark to the above Deposition Personally appeared and made Solemn Oath to the truth of the Same Before me
TRISTRAM JORDAN Just Peace
14 .- Deposition of John Cole, Jr.
The Deposition of John cole Jur Testifiath and Saith that he was a Sol- dier under ye Command of Capt Daniel Lane in ye vear one Thonsd Seven hundred and Seventy Seven Belonging to the army of the united States of america and was with the Said Lane near fort Ann - Between fort Edward and Skeensborough and there was Captivated by the Enemy of the united States : with the Sd Lane and at the Same Time I See ye Said Lane Strip- ped by the Enemy of all his Clothe : &e Except - Jacoat and overhalls - I also See ye Enemy aforesd Take a Silver watch from the Said Lane
JOHN COLE Jr
york ss march ye 26th 1783 then the above named John Cole Jur Person- ally appeared and made Solemn Oath to the Truth of the above Deposition by him Subscribed Before me
TRISTRAM JORDAN Just Peace
203
NARRAGANSET NUMBER ONE.
money to underpin the meeting house, & to Choose Commit- tees for any other thing that may then be thought on by the proprietors
15 .- Time allowed Capt. Daniel Lane to settle Account.
Captain Daniel Lane is allowed one month to settle his accompts with the Public, during which time the Commissaries of Issues are directed to supply him with his proper rations -
Given at Head Quarters Pompton this 13 day of Novr 79 by order of Genl Sullivan BNJN BAUM Secry Head Quarters West point 23d novem. 1779
It appearing that the time within limited will not be sufficient for Capt Lane to settle his public account the Commander in Chief directs that he be allowed to draw provisions and Forage for the whole month of Decem- ber.
By Command
TENCH TILGHMAN Secy
16 .- George Thatcher appointed Attorney.
I Daniel Lane of Buxton in the of York Gentleman Do hereby constitute and appoint George Thatcher to be my Attorney in all Causes, moved or to be moved for me, or against me : in my Name to appear, plead and pursue to final Judgment and Execution, with full Power of Substitution. Witness iny Hand and Seal. the twenty-third Day of march Anno Dom. 1785
Testis Silas Lee DANIEL LANE
17 .- Letter from Daniel Lane to George Thatcher. Buxton aprel ye 8th 1785
Sr I have Sent yon Coolbroths Note the Ritt is Served and I Should be glad would you Cary on Both the aitisons against Coolbroth and gutrige and the Execusions Shall be yourn till you are fuly Satisfide I am Shure of anofe of Colebroth to Satesfy yon when you gow to york take Bragdons Note with yon and I believe he Lives in Tatnuk Back of Wells - I Should have Come to See you But I have Bin Confind to my House this twelve and am Not abel to Walk out Dors
from your Humble Sarvant
DANIEL LANE
To George Thather Esqr Bideford
18 .- Capt. Daniel Lane's Loss while a Prisoner of War.
an accompt of Capt Daniel Lanes Loss when Prisoner with Lenit Gen! Burgnoine in the Year 1777 when taken by the Savages
(Viz) July 21, 1 English Fazie €10., 18,, od 1 Watch £20, 1 Hatt 40S £32,, 1,,0
1 Rifle Frock 48 / 2 Silk Hand- kerchiefs 962 - 7,, 4.,0 1 pr Buccles 30/ 1 Knapsack 18/ Cash £5,, 25,, Od 7,,10.,0 1 Coat 804 4., 0 .. 0
£50,,15,,0
204
NARRAGANSET NUMBER ONE.
10 To raise Sum or Sums of money as shall be thought necessary to Carry on any thing herein mentioned or any other thing that may then be thought on by the proprs -
When with Gent Burguoine in his Camp (Viz) 1 Horse £30 Saddle & Bridle £10 1 Blanket 1 4/ 5 pr Hoes at 18/ -
£41,. 4,,0 4.,10,,0 £45,,14,,0
Cash paid for Expences &c when Sick ) and on Parole Exclusive of Doctors Bills &c, whilst traviling home about 400 miles
54,, 0,,0
Cash pd Doctr abraham Monroe £7,, 1,, 0 ditto Wm Dexter 0,,18,, 0
ditto - Stephen Ball 2,, 4,, 0
ditto Ebenezer Roby 0,, 8,, 0
ditto - Francis Kittredge 1., 0,, 0
ditto - aaron Porter 5., 5,,11 £17,, 6,,11
a True accompt
DANIEL LANE Capt
York ss : July 8th 1786 the above Named Daniel Lane Personaly appeared and mad Solemn oath that the above acount by him Subscribed is Just and true
Before me
BENJA HOOPER Just Peace
19 .-- Letter from Daniel Lane to George Thatcher. Buxton, Jan'y 7th 1792-
Dear Sir /
Inclosed you have a certificate Purporting the time of my drawing pay in Colo Aldens Regt of massachusetts forces, in the late war with Brittain The design & intent of which is to evidence my right (with Other officers) to lands in the Western territory as part Compensation therefor
Had I not such an Oppinion of your benevolent disposition & endeavors to serve those who may have Occasion for your assistance, It would have been a necessary Object with me to make some appollog for thus intruding on you - therefore shall Say no more on that Subject, but proceed further to inform you that your assistance in presenting my claims for the lands due according to my Commission is an Object of Importance to me which I shall esteem as a token of Friendship if you would attend to the same - and that if you can recover a Warrant therefor, I should be glad you would dispose of, If you can obtain at the rate of 8d pr acre therefor & not otherays - I have sold the Claim to my son Isaac, which if you should re- cover a Warrant in my favor he is intitled thereto & that you would return the same to him
In Compliance Dear Sir you will Greatly Oblige
Your Sincere friend & humble Servt DANIEL LANE.
The Honble George Thatcher Philadelphia [This letter is in the hand-writing of the Hon. John Woodman. ]
£167.,11,,11
205
NARRAGANSET NUMBER ONE.
11 To See if they will have the Town Incorporated - - Newbury June 2 - 1764 -
JOSEPH COFFIN Propr3 Clerk -
At a Meeting of the Proprs of the Narragansett Township Nº 1 Held June 20, 1764*
20 .- Order from Daniel Lane to George Thatcher.
To the Honrable Treasure of the United States or an other person or per- sons that may be antherised to pay the moneys that Remains Due to the Continental army
Sir
pay to George Thatcher Esqr all the money that is due to me the Sub- scriber for Services Done for United States in the Continantall army
Buxton October th19 1792
DANIEL LANE Capt
Witness Sammel Knight Isaac Lane
21 .- Endorsement on the Wrapper of the above Papers.
Gent Washington says that the Effects Lost. Sickness &c., must be allowed at the Continental Board of Claims :
Congress allows to every Officer 12/, for every Soldier by him inlisted into the Continental army
Capt Dan! Lane was in Coll aldens Rigt Gen! Nixons Brigade Northern Department in 1777
at Sacrataries office in Boston & at the Continental Sacrataries office in Newyork is the number of Men Enlisted by Capt Lane
Mr King is requested to asssist N : Goreham Esqr in obtaining, at the Board of Claims what moneys, were allowed by Congress to me for back allowance whilst traveling through the indian County with Gen! Sullivan in the year 1779
[Filed : ] C: D: Lanes Papers in trust
[*From the Massachusetts Archives. Ante, page 71.]
To his Excellency Francis Bernard Esqr Commander in Chief in and over the Province of the massats Bay, the Honble his majesty's Councill & House of Representatives in General Assembly Convened
Humbly Shew The Subscribers Inhabitants of Narraganset No one in the county of York, That the said Settlement being a Frontier were un- der Continual Fears of the Indian Enemy, and were obliged to keep Watch and Ward till the Reduction of Quebeck in 1759 ~ That before the two late years of Drouth & Scarcity they were few in Number, and very Poor, being scarcely able with their utmost Diligence in the Improvement of such means as their Situation afforded to procure the Necessarys of Life -- That the two years of Scarcity, almost reduced them to Famine : -- in addition
206
NARRAGANSET NUMBER ONE.
Dn Timothy Haseltine was moderator Joseph Coffin Esq' was Chosen proprs Clerk
Voted that there be raised 50 £ Sterling to pay the Revd Mr Paul Coffins Salary this Present Year
Voted & Chose Jeremiah Hill Esq" Capt Tristram Jordan & M' Henry Adams & they are Impowered as a Commtee to Settle accounts with the former Commtee that have Sold Lands &e for non payment of Taxes & to Settle with all other Com- mittees - - -
to which in the year 1762, a desolating Fire Ravaged their small Improve- ments, Burnt several of their Dwellings . and much reduced the very little the Dronth had left 'em That these repeated calamitys obliged many of the then Inhabitants for the preservation of Life to pluck up Stakes and leave the Settlement, and those that remained were Just preserved from Perishing with Want, by the Relief afforded from some of the Neighboring Towns ~ That your Excellency and Honors did lay a Tax on the said dis- tressed Inhabitants in the year 1762, To the amount of Forty four Pounds seven Shillings & six pence which they are unable to pay, as many of the then Inhabitants are reduced to Penury by the calamitys aforesaid, and re- moved to other places - and those that remain are in a Condition but Little Better -
Wherefore your Poor Petitioners Humbly pray your Excellency & Hon- ours to Compassionate their distressed Circumstances & Remit to them the said Tax and Grant 'em such other relief in the Premises as your Wisdom shall direct & your Poor Petitioners as in duty Bound shall ever Pray &c
JOSEPH WOODMAN JOHN NASON
JOSEPH LEAVIT
JOSHUA WOODMAN JOHN BROOKS
SAMUEL LEAVIT
NATHAN WOODMAN JOHN COLE
UMPHERY ATKASON
JOHN BOYNTON EPHRAIM SANDS
DANIEL LEAVIT
WILL HANCOCK
TIMOTHY HASALTINE
JAMES EMERY
JOB ROBERTS JOHN LANE JOHN ELDEN
BENIAMEN DONEL SAMUEL ROAF
JOHN DONEL
JOHN ELDEN
SAMUEL MERRILL AMOS HOOD
In the House of Representatives October 31st 1764
Read & Resolved that the prayer of this Petition be granted by remitting the fax of Forty Four Pounds Seven Shillings & sixpence laid on Narragan- zett Township number One in the Year 1762, and that the Treasurer be directed to stay the Execution gone forth against them therefor
Sent up for concurrence
S : WHITE Spkr
In Council Nov. Ist 1764 - Read & Concurred
JNO COTTON D. Secry
Consented to -
FRA BERNARD
207
NARRAGANSET NUMBER ONE.
Voted & Chose Capt Cutting Moody Treasurer for said pro- prietors
Voted & Chose Capt George Jewett Lieut Joshua Wood- man Samuel merrill & John Elden & they are Impowred as & Committee to run out the town line
Capt Thomas Bradbury Ens" John Elden are Chosen Sur- veyors for the Year Ensuing, of ways
Voted & raised 100 Dollars to be Laid out in repairing the High ways this Year - viz - - 60 Dollars on the road from merrills to the l'attent Land* - & 40 Dollars on Pleasant point road -- - -
Voted that the money formerly raised to mend ways that is . not Yet worked out shall be laid out on the Beach Plain road up to Capt Bradburys - we allow 20/ old Tr to a man, & 20/' for a Yoke of oxen a Day on the ways -
Voted that John Nason be allowed 27 £ old Tr for provid- ing for the Ordination more than was formerly voted - & Timothy Haseltine 20 f more - - - & Voted Capt Woodmans account be Examined & allowed by the Committee as they shall think proper
Voted & raised one hundred pounds old Tr to pay said Na- son Haseltine & Woodman, & other Necessary Charges - / The Pastors & Delegates of the following Churches Conven- ed in Council at Narragansett N' 1. For the Incorporation of a Christian Church & the Ordination m" Paul Coffin to the work of the Gospell ministry, & Pastoral office there - - (viz) The first & second Church in Wells - - The Church in Bid- deford - The Church in Pepperelborough and a messenger from the Second Church in Scarborough
The Reyd Wr Moses Morrillt Moderator
*Ante, page 177, note.
+Rev. Moses Morrill was born in Salisbury, Massachusetts ; graduated at Harvard College. in 1737, at the age of nineteen years. He was Pastor of the Church in Biddeford, for thirty-five years, and died February ninth, 1778.
[From the Rocords of the 1st Church of Christ in Biddeford, Maine ] Biddeford august 9th 1742
The Church of Christ In this Place met according to appointment for to
208
NARRAGANSET NUMBER ONE.
The Revd Mr Daniel Little* Scribe - prayers by the Mod- erator
The Church Incorporated in the presence of the Councill Consisting of Seven members, ; Six of whom produced their Dis- missions from the Respective Churches to which they belong- ed, to the Satisfaction of the Councill. The Seventh viz Bradbury the Councill Voted to Receive into the number for Constituting the new Church, upon the Presumption that his Request for a Dismission from the first Church in Scarborough was Granted, tho Seasonable Care had not been taken to Con- vey it to, said Councill
After the moderator in the name of the Councill had declar- ed the new Church to be a Regular Congregational Church, every member had liberty to offer any thing to the Councill as matter of Dissatisfaction with respect to the Character of Either of their Brethren, or the Constitution of the Church, but nothing was offered. - Upon which they were desired to Signify their Concurrence with the Proprietors in their Choice of m' Paul Coffin to be the minister of that place, & their own Choice of him, to be their particular pastor, which was done with perfect unanimity in the presence of said Council - Mr
Choose a Pastor and after Seeking direction of Heaven It was Put to vote whether they would give mr moses morrill of Salisbury an Invitation to Settle with them In the work of the ministry, In the Congregational way of order and Discipline : It Passed In the affirmative : and was accepted of by the Said mr morrill : who was accordingly ordained : to the work of the ministry : In this Church : September the 20th 1742
*Rev. Daniel Little was born in Newburyport, Massachusetts, in 1724. His father removed to Haverhill, Massachusetts, and thence to Hampstead, New Hampshire. The son studied Theology under the direction of Rev. Joseph Moody, of York, Maine, and was ordained Pastor of the Second Church in Wells, in 1751, where he continned for fifty years. In 1766, Harvard College conferred on him the degree of Master of Arts. His first wife was Mary, daughter of Rev. Joseph Emerson, of Malden, Massachu- setts, by whom he had three children, one of whom married Rev. Silas Moody. of Arundel, a town the name of which has been shamefully changed to Kennebunkport. His second wife was Sarah, daughter of Col. Joseph Coffin, of Newbury, Massachusetts, by whom he had seven children, one of whom married Dr. Joseph Gilman. and another, Rev. Asa Piper, of Wake- field, New Hampshire. Rev. Mr. Little died October fifth, 1801.
+Paul Coffin. Thomas Bradbury, Thomas Atkinson, Jacob Bradbury, Timothy Hasaltine, John Nason, and Samuel Leavit.
209
NARRAGANSET NUMBER ONE.
Coffin their Elect pastor was then Called into the Councill & Declared his Confession of Faith, the Grounds of his hope as a Christian, & the Views with which he Entered, upon the Gospell ministry to the Satisfaction of the Councill, The Coun- cill then Voted that their way was Clear to proceed to Ordina- tion - - And the Publick Services were appointed to be per- formed as Follows viz,
The Revd m" Fairfield* to Begin with prayer
[*From Folsom's History of Saco and Biddeford, page 268.]
The Rev. John Fairfield [born October eighth, 1737.] was a descendant of John Fairfield, a puritan, who was admitted a member of the Church at Salem 1639, and freeman of the Colony the succeeding year. William Fair- field, Esq., a grandson of the latter, was the representative of Wenham, near Salem, in the General Court 27 years, one of which he presided as speaker of the House. He died 1742, in the eighty-first year of his age. His oldest son, William, settled in Boston, where he died 1770, leaving six children, the second of whom was our minister. The latter graduated at Harvard College 1757, and was engaged as a teacher at Manchester and Roxbury, Massachusetts, until he commenced preaching, February, 1760. Before his engagement at this place, Mr. Fairfield supplied the desk at Leominster, Mass., nearly five months, 1760; and subsequently preached in the warehouse at Arrowsick, Georgetown ; in the First Parish of Scar- boro'; and at Dunstable, Mass. Previously to his settlement, 20 July, 1763, he was married to Mrs. Mary, daughter of Capt. Ichabod Goodwin, t and widow of Foxwell Curtis Cutts, Esq., of Berwick. Soon after his settle- ment, Mr. Fairfield built the house now occupied by Mr. William Deering. His amiable consort died 16 April, 1774, at the age of thirty-seven ; leaving a family of six children, five of whom were daughters, and all at a tender age. Mr. Fairfield was twice subsequently married.
tCapt. Ichabod Goodwin was a son of Thomas and his wife, Mehitable Plaisted, and grandson of Daniel, the first emigrant of the family to the ancient Parish of Berwick, Maine, who was descended from the Suffolk branch of Goodwins, the most distinguished of whom are the Very Rever- end Harvey Goodwin, D. D., late Dean of Ely, but now Bishop of Carlisle, and his brother, Charles Wycliffe Goodwin, Assistant Judge in Her Britannic Majestie's Supreme Court for China and Japan, at Shanghai. Daniel was a name in the family from generation to generation. It was the name of his father, grandfather and great-grandfather. His father was born in 1590, at Great Oakley, Essex County, England. The error in the note on page eighty-eight, was caused by the insufferable chirography of England's distinguished Genealogist, Miss HARRIET A. BAINBRIDGE, 24 Russell Road, Kensington, London. She might, perhaps, become distinguished in the chirographic art if she should while away a butter-fly August at New Eng- land's far-famed Health-resort, BOAR'S HEAD HOTEL, at Hampton Beach, Hampton, New Hampshire, in company with Miss Annie Maria Goodwin, of North Londonderry, New Hampshire, as her teacher.
Mrs. Mehitable Plaisted Goodwin was captured by the Indians, March eighteenth, 1689/ 90, and carried to Canada where she remained till re- deemed in October, 1695. There is a curiously wrought table in the Butler family, in Moultonborough, New Hampshire, which belonged to her. Her children were Thomas, born July twelfth, 1697, married Elizabeth Butler, 14
210
NARRAGANSET NUMBER ONE.
The Revª m" Little to Preach
The Revd m" Morrill to give the Charge, & Conclude with
prayer
December second, 1722; Ichabod, born June seventeenth, 1700, married Elizabeth, daughter of Capt. Humphrey Scamman, August twenty-fifth, 1729 ; James, married Margaret, daughter of Col. Thomas Wallingford ; Olive, baptized March fourteenth, 1707/8 ; Mary, baptized June eighteenth, 1710, married John Davis, of Bristol, England, October twenty-third, 1718. John Cooper, Esquire, of Berwick, married Mrs. Abbot, one of the daugh- ters-perhaps Olive. On the Church records we find -
"May 20, 1716 Bial the daughter (?) of Mehitable Goodin, ownd the Cove- nant and was baptized."
When captured by the Indians, says Mather, "Mehitable Goodwin was " taken with a child of five months. When it cried they threatened to kill " it, which made the mother go aside and sit for hours together in the " snow to lull it to sleep; her master seeing that this hindered her from " travelling, took the child, struck its head against a tree, and hung it on " one of the branches ; she would have burried it but he would not let her, " telling her that if she came again that way she might have the pleasure " of seeing it. She was carried to Canada and after five years returned " home."
The children of Thomas Goodwin and his wife, Elizabeth Butler, were Elisha, baptized October ninth, 1726; Thomas, baptized October ninth, 1726 ; Olive, baptized July twenty-eighth, 1728; Moses, baptized October twenty-seventh, 1728; Elizabeth, baptized September sixth, 1730; Mary, baptized April fifteenth, 1732/3. died July eighteenth, 1736 ; James, bap- tized April twentieth, 1735, died July twenty-first, 1736; James, baptized May fifteenth, 1737, married Sally Griffith; Daniel, baptized August nine- teenth, 1738.
The children of Ichabod Goodwin and his wife, Elizabeth Scamman, were Hannah, born July twenty-fourth, 1730, married Tristram Jordan, November twenty-third, 1749; Ichabod, born August seventeenth, 1732, died in infancy ; Humphrey, born December twenty-fifth, 1735, died Au- gust twenty-sixth, 1736; Mary, born January twenty-fourth, 1736/7, mar- ried, first, Foxwell Curtis Cutts, March seventeenth, 1756 .- their children were Richard Foxwell, Samuel and William, -Foxwell Curtis Cutts died May twenty-second, 1761,-secondly, Rev. John Fairfield, of Biddeford, Maine, July twentieth, 1762, -they were married by Rev. Jeremiah Wise, Pastor of the Church in Berwick, and the fee paid was '2 pr. Gloves & quarter of Lamb & preached a day,"-in the Church Records of Saco, Rev. John Fairfield made the following entry, -"1774, April 16, Mary wife of Revd John Fairfield in child Bed Æ 38."; Ichabod, born February twenty- third, 1739, died in infancy ; Dominicus, born April twenty-fourth, 1741, married, first, Hannah Hill, July twelfth. 1763,-secondly, Mrs. Betsey Perkins, nee Littlefield, of Wells, in 1772; Ichabod, born May fourteenth, 1743, married Mary, daughter of Capt. Thomas, and granddaughter of Col. Thomas Wallingford, of Somersworth, New Hampshire ; Samuel, born August seventeenth, 1745, died unmarried; Elizabeth, born Deceni- ber twenty-fifth. 1748, died unmarried; Sally, born April twenty-first, 1754, married, first, Temple Hight, September twenty-fourth, 1772, -secondly, Rishworth Jordan.
The children of James Goodwin and his wife, Margaret Wallingford, were Margaret, baptized February fourteenth, 1742, married Thomas Hods- don, Jr., October thirtieth, 1763 ; Mehitable, baptized April third, 1744, married Thomas Chadbourn, October twenty-second, 1767 ; Jedediah, bap-
211
NARRAGANSET NUMBER ONE.
The Revd m' Hemenway* the Right hand of Fellowship - - The above Services Began at twelve O'Clock, Performed with
*Rev. Moses Hemmenway, son of Ralph, and Sarah Haven, was born in Framingham, Massachusetts, September fifteenth, 1735; graduated at Har- vard College in 1753 : taught school at Lancaster, Massachusetts, in 1757, 1758, and 1759 ; was ordained Pastor of the Church in Wells, Maine, Au- gust eighth, 1759; received the Degree of Doctor of Divinity from Harvard in 1785, and from Dartmouth in 1792; was a member of the Convention which adopted the Federal Constitution, in 1788; and died at Wells, April fifth (?) 1811.
tized May eighteenth, 1746, married Hannah Emery, November seventh, 1771, and was an officer of distinction in the Revolution ; Olive, baptized May twenty third, 1749, married Nehemiah Gray, March nineteenth, 1770; Mary, baptized February fourteenth, 1753, married Dr. - Hall ; Amos Wallingford, baptized April thirteenth, 1755, married Eunice Gatchel, of Wells, in 1786 ; Silas, baptized June eighth, 1760, married, first, Isabella Bragdon, of York, Maine, November fifteenth, 1789,-secondly, Anna Clement, of Dover, New Hampshire, in 1800; Thomas, baptized May third, 1764, married Nancy, daughter of Daniel Goodwin, of Eliot, Maine. There were two others, James and Samuel, who were taken prisoners dur- ing the war of the Revolution and died in Halifax prison.
The children of Maj. Jedediah Goodwin and his wife, Hannah Emery, were Emery, born August fourth, 1772; Hannah, born April twenty-fourth, 1774, married Joshua Emery ; Mary, born November nineteenth, 1775; James, born December twenty-sixth, 1777 ; Emery, born December twenty- first, 1779, married Polly Hamilton, in 1798 ; Jedediah, born January seven- teenth, 1782, married, first, Hannah Leavit. of York, February seventh, 1803,-secondly, Isabella Gooodwin, September twenty-ninth, 1815, -third- ly, Lucy Sawyer, January second, 1845; Margaret, born December twenty- eighth, 1783, married Dr. Thomas Teal, Jr., of York, in 1798 ; John. born October seventeenth, 1785; Joshua, born May tenth, 1787, married Sarah Neal, January eighteenth, 1809. - she was born August seventh. 1787, and died in York, December eighteenth, 1870; Samuel, born June tenth, 1789 ; James, born August eighth, 1791, married Mary Goodwin, September ninth, 1809 ; Eunice, born June thirteenth, 1793. married Benjamin Chase ; Betsey, born December twenty-third, 1795; Harriet, born April twelfth, 1800, married Daniel Stone.
The children of Emery Goodwin and his wife, Polly Hamilton, were George W., born February twelfth, 1799, married Cyrena Hodsdon, June, 1824 ; Fanny, born June twenty-fourth, 1800, married Samuel Gubtail, August eleventh, 1822 ; Ivory, born December twenty-eighth, 1803, married Jerusha Taunt, January eighteenth, 1824, and died February nineteenth, 1866, -she was born May twenty-eighth, 1807; John Wallingford, born July fifteenth, 1804, married Sally Junkins, December twenty-fourth, 1826, who was born February fourteenth, 1801.
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