USA > New Hampshire > Belknap County > Sanbornton > History of Sanbornton, New Hampshire, Vol II - Genealogies > Part 3
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10. JOHN3 [6] (John2, John1), was a millwright, farmer, and captain of the militia, retaining his father's home place ; m., Ist, Sarah (Sally) Abbott, dau. of Ezra (see), Dec. 14, 1815 (Crockett), who d. May 16, 1817, in her 22d year. He m , 2d, Nancy Rollins, June 11, 1818 (Cawley), who was the dau. of Jotham Rollins (see), and d. Feb. 26, 1837, ae. 39-4. IIe mn., 3d, Mrs. Ruth, widow of Aaron Favor, June 6, 1838, whose maiden name was Ruth Sanborn, b. March 6, 1786, d. Jan. 2, 1870, in her 84th year, at J. P. Lane's, in Tilton. IIe d. at sea, July 4, 1853, ac. 60-6 ; was on his return from Oregon, where
9
GENEALOGIES. - ADAMS.
he had been stopping two years; while crossing the Gulf of Mexico he was buried in its waters. Children (2d wife) :
11. SARAII K. (?), b. Feb. 15, 1819; m. Franklin Cheney, of Lowell, Mass., April 22, 1846, who was b. Dee. 18, 1812, in West Concord, Vt. Children : - 1. William Franklin (Cheney), b. Oct. G, 1847, a settled Episcopaliau clergy- man, nt Dedham, Mass. (1878). 2 George Abrams, b. June 22, 1850; m. Etta M. Fletcher. of Penn Yan, N. Y., who has since d. ; now res. in Lowell. One child, a daughter.
12. WILLIAM PENN, b. Aug. 15, 1820; m. Sarah Lavina Phelps, dau. of George Morey, and Sarah Whittle (Fitch) Phelps; was a millwright in Ala- bama, then in Oregon; deacon of the Cong. Church at Dalles, and d. Nov. 20, 1873, ae. 53-3. Children : - 1. Sarah Lavina, b. Aug. 25, 1843, in Gaines- ville, Ala. ; m. Harvey A. Hogue, Dec. 24, 1861, and res. in Portland, Oregon. Children : - I. Harry Wildey (Hogue), b. Feb. 6, 1865. II. Chester James, b. Sept. 19, 1875. 2. Georginna (Abrams), b. Oct. 24, 1845, d. In Ala., Dec. 5, 1847, ne. 2-1. 3. William Rolllus, b. July 2, 1848, in Galnesville; m. Eliza Alice McFarland, Feb. 3, 1870, of the Dalles, Oregon. Children : - I. William Lueu, b. April 14, 1874. II. Alice Luvina, b. June 23, 1878, iu P. 4. Clara Minnie, b. Sept. 8, 1855, in Cornwallis, Oregon, d. May 5, 1864, in her 9th year. 5. Nellie Anne, b. Oct 20, 1800, d. Sept. 3, 1861, ae. 10 mos 6. Ilarry Augustus, b. Ang. 10, d. Aug. 24, 1861, in Portland, Oregon, ne. 2 weeks.
13. REBECCA CHAPMAN, b. Nov. 8, 1823; m. Willlam B. Ottway; rem. to Australia, where she is now, a widow. One son, b 1861.
14. ROSINDA, b. Jun. 9, 1825; m. Willlain B. Preston, a scale manufac- turer, of Boston (res. In Revere), June 5, 1849. He is deacon of a Baptist church. Children :- 1. Persis B. (Preston). 2. Abby Frances; m. Fred. Clarridge. Two children; Que son, one dan , deceased. 3 John Abrams.
15. DANIEL KENDRICK, b. June 1, 1829; m. Mary M. Chapman, April 2, 1854, who died Ang. 25, 1864. Ile is a farmer In Oregon (Portland). Chil- dren : - 1. John, b. 1358, died Aug. 30, 1864, ac. C. 2. Mary Emma; now res. in Mass.
16. BETSEY AYERS, b. Feb. 15, 1831, d. Oet. 10, 1835, ac. 4-8. " So fudes the lovely blooming flower." [The rest of the Inscription illegible (1878).]
17. "NANCY JANE, b. Mar. 9, 1835; m. Sanborn Gale Simons, Oct. 22, 1857, in Boston. Ile was born Nov. 19, 1818, in Concord, sou of James W., his grandfather Simous having settled in Alexandria, and his mother being Clarissa Hutchins, of this town. Ile is a tauner and currier by trade ; rem. to Oregon, Oct., 1864, and to Washington Territory, May, 1866. Now res. (1878-80) at the Dalles, Wasco Co., Oregon, where she is a teacher of private and singing schools, with good success. Children : - 1. Jennie Dilla- way (Simons), b. Nov. 26, 1858; m. William Henry Olds, Dec. 24, 1876. Children : - I. Jennie D. (Olds), b. Feb. 20, d. March 11, 1878, ae 13 days. II Bessie Charlotte, b Aug. 28, 1879. 2. Frances Bowers (Simons), b. Oct. 29, 1500.
THE ADAMS FAMILIES. - I.
1. ISRAEL ADAMS, b. 1748; came from Methuen, Mass., about 1799 or 1800, and settled upon the late Ingalls place, prec ling Caleb Rogers ; he had been a man of property, and is said to have
10
HISTORY OF SANBORNTON.
driven the first chaise into town, which was visited as "a great euri- osity " by the Sanborntou boy's between services on the Sabbath, as remembered by Capt. J. B. Perkins. His experiment at farming here was not successful. Ilis first wife d. Oct. 16, 1804, and he m., 20, Anna Ober, Feb. 8, 1807 (Bodwell) ; soon after rem. to Hill ; there helped to form the Congregational Church, Feb. 19, 1815, and there d., July 18, 1818, ac. 70. Ilis mother, as . Widow Adams," had d. here, " March 11, 1803," and his sister, "Oct. 5, 1804." Children :
2. BETSKY, d. suddenly, Nov., 1804.
3, 4. RUTH, d. July 23, 180G (?). DEBORAH.
5. ISAAC, was a book merchant, in l'ortlund, Me. ; accumulated property, and there d., uum. His estate fell to hils brother.
6. JOSEPH, b. 1786, who was ludustrious, fulthfully requited his father, giving him a home In HIIII; afterwards m. ; res'd. in Bridgewater, and, on the death of lils brother, settled on a valuable farm In Hebron. He d. with hils son, lu Baltimore, Md.
7. ELIZA (2d wife), res'd. In Boston, at G. W. Crockett's, and there d.
8, 9. CHARLES; GEORGE; also one other son, and one other daughter, an invalid, by 2d wife.
II.
10. WARREN ADAMS, unconnected with the above ; was a hotel keeper, or " taverner," first at the Bridge, and then at Clark's Corner, where he d., of asthma, Sept. 15, 1845, ae. 53. Family unknown.
THE AIKEN FAMILY.
1. MATTHEW4 AIKEN (Thomas3, Nathaniel?, Edward') was of the truly noble Scotch-Irish stock, and b. March 21, 1766, in Deering, his father, Thomas3, having moved thither from Londonderry, of which town Edward' and his two brothers, James and William, were " first proprietors," emigrating from the North of Ireland about 1722. He m. Sally Hackett, July 8, 1794, who was b. Feb. 3, 1771, and d. March 18, 1848, ae. 77; he had d. Sept. 8. 1812, ae. 46-6, in Pelham, where he had been "a saddler and harness maker of the first class." Some of their children are known to have been born in Peterborough :
2. JAMES GILMAN, b. May 10, 1795; was last heard from as an otlicer in the revolutionary war of oue of the South American states.
3. Ilemack [7], b. June 8, 1797, in Peterborough.
4. SALLY, b. May 10, 1799; m. Phinchas Stevens, engineer, who built the two mills of the Franklin Falls and the Woollen Co.'s. She res. in Manches- ter (1877), where he d., March 5, 1864, ne. 64-4-4.
5. EMMA, b. June 10. 1802; m. David Hamblett, millwright, Manchester.
6. ALFRED. 1) July 11, 1804; a tanuer; settled first in Bennington, Vt. ; now (1877) in Beckett, Mass.
7. HERRICK5 [3] ( Matthew4, Thomas3, etc.), commenced as a man- ufacturer of machinery in the old shop of Daniel Herrick, where, of
11
GENEALOGIES. - AIKEN.
late, Sleeper & Page's sash and blind factory, Franklin Falls, about the years 1837-38; next occupied the former palm-leaf hat-pressing shop of G. C. Ward, where now the late Frank Aiken's; then the lower story of Trussell & Morey's yarn factory, till his own machine shop of wood was built on same site in 1863; burnt, and rebuilt of brick in 1865. Making saw sets, at first, he became the inventor of spiral brushes ; took a patent for a leather-splitting machine, and several patents and seven medals for other valuable inventions. " An honest man." He m. Aun Matilda Bradley, of Saco, Me., Feb. 5, 1830, the dau. of Isaac Bradley, of Dracut, Mass., b. Aug. 28, 1810, and a descendant, in the 5th generation, of the renowned Hannah Dustan, of Haverhill. He d., Nov. 7, 1866, in Franklin, ac. 69-5. Children :
8. WALTER [13], h Oet. 5, 1831, in Dracut.
9. JONAS BRADLEY [16], b. Aug 23, 1833, in D.
10. JAMES HACKETT, b June 20, 1835, in D , d. of cholera, at Calcutta, Ind., March 25, 1852 ac. 16-9, having embarked with Capt. Smith, of the merchant ship "Berkshire," seven months previously. "He did his whole duty."
11. FRANCIS HERRICK, b. June 10, 1843, in Franklin; continued his father's business in F., accumulated several thousands, and there built a beautiful residence; was a Freemason of the 32d degree; had a fine poetical taste; in. Hattie A Colby, of Hill, Sept., 1865, and d. of heart disease, Jan. 16, 1876, ae. 32-7. "One by one we eross the river."
12. CHARLES LOWE, b. July 23, 1845, in F .; a bookkeeper (1877) ; res. at Elkhart, Ind. ; m. Isabella Burleigh, of Thornton. No child.
13. WALTER" [8] (Herrick5, Matthew4, etc.), has continued the mannfacture of machinery on the Sanbornton side of the Winni- piscogee, in Franklin, being the inventor of a knitting-loom, and of the gimlet-pointed serew, and having taken ont in all some tifteen dif- ferent patents. Besides his large machine shop and serew factory (see Mills), he owns the oldler hosiery mill above them, the annual value of whose products, in favorable times, has amounted to $212.000. Was also owner (jointly) of the Summit House, Mt. Washington (1877), of the finest residence in the Franklin part of Sanbornton (burnt Feb. 20, 1877, but rebuilt more substantially the season follow- ing), and of a hotel at the Bermuda Islands. He m., 1st, Susan Colby, of Warner ( ?), 1853 ; m., 2d, Mary Dodge, of Hampton Falls, Jan. 1, 1867. Children (1st wife) :
14. JAMES, b. Feb. 5. 1854.
15. FRED, b. Nov. 4, 1855.
16. JONAS B.6 [9] (Herrick5, Matthew+, etc. ), in., 1st, Ellen Serib- ner, of Franklin, 1864, who d. of consumption, April 14, 1865 (day of Pres. Lincoln's death) ; m., 2d, Adaline Proctor, of Northfield, Vt ,
-
12
IHISTORY OF SANBORNTON.
Dec. 25, 1866. He has extensive business connections, and was pro- prietor of the Sawyer House, Webster Lake, Andover. Children :
17. ALICE MATILDA, b. Jan., d. March, 1865 ( Ist wife).
18. MARY LOUISA, b. Nov. 19, 1867 (2d wife).
19. CHARLES WILSON, b. Sept., 1869.
20. GEORGE PROCTOR, b. Dec. 4, 1873; was drowned, by a sad casualty, May, 1876, in Andover, ne. 2-5.
THE ALDRICII FAMILY.
1. CALEB ALDRICHI came from Smithfield, R. I., to Ilill, as a shoemaker ; next lived in Northfield ; then in Sanbornton, near the present residence of Hollis K. Thompson, and also occupied, as a farmer, the house which has now disappeared (see " Sites ") between Josiah Osgood's and the Samuel March place, Lot No. 30, 21 Div. Ile In., 1st, in Rhode Island ; m., 2d, Betsey Quimby, of this town ; m., 3d, Matilda Kellogg, of Hill; m., 4th, Mrs. Lovey (Shaw ) Clark, dau. of John Shaw (see), March 11, 1834 (Hooper). . He finally d. in Hill, near the Bridge, and his last wife moved to Michigan, with her son. Children :
2. SARAH, b. and remained in R. I.
3, 4. WINDSOR (deceased). CHARLES, lives in R. I.
5. HARRIKT BLODGETT (2d wife), b. Jan. 20, 1813 ; m. Absalom Dalton (sce).
C. EDWIN (4th wife) ; rem. West (as above).
THIE ATKINSON FAMILY.
1. SIMEONS ATKINSON was descended from a Newbury (Mass ) fam- ily, the earliest ancestor of which in this country was Thomas1, of Bury, Lancashire, Eng. (brother of Theodore, of Boston), whose son Jolin2 was born in Concord, Mass., 1640 ; a hatter in Newbury, 1663, and there m. Sara Mirick, April 27, 1664. IIc (Simeon5) was born March 30, 1754, in Newbury (Joseph4, Nathaniel3, Jolm2, Thomas1) ; lived as a farmer in Boscawen, and there d. Feb. 14, 1827, ae. 73. He m. Phebe Clark, April 23, 1781, who d. April 2, 1830. Children :
2. SILAS [7], b. Dec. 28, 1781, in Boscawen.
3. DANIEL CLARK [15], b. Sept 8. 1785 ('84). in Boscawen.
4. SIMEON, b. Feb. 10, 1791; settled in Boscawen ; d. Aug. 20, 1865, ac. 74-6; unm.
5. HANNAII, b. July 8, 1795; m. James H. Gill, of Boscawen, Aug. 12, 1830; d. July 22, 1850. ac. 55.
C. HALE, b. March 3, 1798; lived on his father's place in B., and there d., unin., April 15, 1874, ae. 76.
7. SILASG [2] (Simeons, Joseph+, Nathaniel3, etc.), was a miller in Boscawen ; then at Union Bridge, 1822-33, where he carried on the mills of his brother [3], IIon. Daniel C. He m., 1st, Dorothy Shepard, Nov. 10, 1810, who d. May 5, 1812, in Boscawen ; m., 2d, Sally
13
GENEALOGIES. - ATKINSON.
Hutchins, of Hampstead, April 28, 1814, who d. March 30, 1874, in B. Ile d Sept. 29, 1837, in Northfield, ae. 55-0. Children :
8. DOROTHY, b. March 28, 1812, in Boscawen; m. Samuel A. Ambrose, or B., Nov. 23, 1836, and d. May 23, 1870, ac. 58-2. ·
9. ATTHARATES [20], b Feb. 14, 1815.
10. ASENATH H., b. March 17, 1817; m. John M. Whitcher, of Northfield, Nov. 19, 1840.
11. ALEXANDER WELLINGTON, b. Feb. 1, 1819, in Boscawen; was a stone- cutter on the Croton Aqueduct, and d. at Yonkers, N. Y., March 23, 1839, ac. 20-2.
12. HORATIO NELSON [35], b. July 20, 1822.
13. HANNAII, b. Sept. 7, 1>27, at Union Bridge; was there drowned, in the canal near her father's house, Aug. 25, 1830, ae. 3.
14. SIMEON ARISTIDES [38], b. Sept. 25, 1830, at. U. B ..
15. DANIEL C.6 [3] (Simeon5, Joseph4, Nathaniel3, etc.), was gradnated at Dartmouth College, 1806, and studied law with Parker Noyes, Esq., at Salisbury Village (now Franklin), and with Hon. Daniel Webster. He first opened a law office in this town, at the Square. for a few months, and then, in 1809 or '10, at the Bridge ; built the large three-story mansion near the Island (Mrs. Curry's, burnt in 1875), and had his office near the Bridge, on site of the present Hill's block (south eud). He was six times moderator of town meetings (see List) in Sanbornton, and school committee, 1818, '26, and '29 ; was senator and councillor in the State goverment, and was appointed Judge of Probate for Strafford Co. in 1824. IIe owned the mills near Burley's (Union) Bridge, at East Sanborntou, for sev- eral years, and was a man of marked prominence and excellence in all his professional, business, and social relations. The village of Til- ton early owed much to his generosity and public spirit. He m., 1st, Mahala Tilton, dau. of Jeremialı (see), Oct. 12, 1818 (" Nov. 11, 1817," Bodwell), who d. June 12, 1820, in her 20th year. He m., 2d, Mehetabel Tilton, sister of the last, Sept. 3, 1828 (Crockett), and d. April 5, 1842, ac. 56-7. His widow survived him about two and a half years, and d., of consumption, Nov. 12, 1844, ac. 37-3. Children ; also an infant who d. 1829 :
16. NAPOLEON BONAPARTE [47], h. April 14, 1819 (1st wife).
17. MAHALA TILTON, b. Feb. 26, 1833 (2d wife), d. Dec. 12, 1851, In her 19th year, at Warner.
18. JOSEPHINE BONAPARTE [49], b. Oct. 25, 1835.
19. CHARLOTTE, b. Dec 29, 1837 ; res., uum., in Concord (1876), as a music teacher.
20. ATTHARATES7 [9] (Silas6, Simeon5, Joseph4, etc.), went South as a stone-mason, and has resided chiefly at Madison, Ga. ; in. Martha J. Fort, of Milledgeville, Ga., Dec. 9, 1839, who was there b. Ang. 17, 1818, and d., 1875, in Madison, ae. 57. Children were all b. in
14
HISTORY OF SANBORNTON.
M. ; the five oldest sons were in the Confederate service through the whole war, and all returned home in good health ; the fourteen of the family still living (1876) ! Children :
21. CHARLES BACON, b. Sept. 20, 1810.
22. ALFRED OVERTON, b. Dec. 13, 1841.
23. MARCELLUS ATTHANATES, b. Muy 1, 1843.
24. ALEXANDER WELLINGTON, b. June 22, 1844.
25, 26. HELEN OTELIA, b. Sept. 22, 1845. SILAS FONT, b. July 12, 1847.
27. HALK ARISTIDES, b. Nov. 14, 1848.
28. EUGENE JUDSON, b. June 13, 1850.
29. Evengrr Gu.L., b. April 11, 1852.
30, 31. CONA VINGINIA, b. Oet. 12, 1853. ROSA BELL, b. Sept. 22, 1855.
32. MILLARD FILLMORE, b. Oct. 15, 1856.
33. PAUL MORTIMER, b. Sept. 18, 1859.
34. BEATHICE MAY, b. Jan. 28, 1861.
35. HORATIO N.7 [12] (Silas6, Simeon5, Joseph4, etc.), m. Susan Pearsons Durgin, of Boscawen, dan. of Sainnel M. Durgin, at the Bridge (Tilton), Nov. 10, 1846. She d., May 10, 1869, at Boscawen. IIe is engaged with his son in the wheelwright business, at Tilton (1876). Children :
30. FRANCES MARLA, b. Oct. 28, 1849, in Boseawen; there d., July 10, 1863, in her 14th year.
37. LEROY SAMURL, b. March 31, 1852, in B.
38. SIMEON A.7 [14] (SilasG, Simeon5, Joseph4, etc. ), has resided 20 years in the South ; a printer, now (1876) in the "New York News " office. He m. Ethelinda Potter, who was b. Oct. 8, 1831, in St. Croix, W. I. Children :
39. FRANK HIALE, b. July 6, 1852, in Murletta, Ga.
40. ALICE (Allie) LOUISA, b. Dee. 14, 1854, in Marietta, Ga., d. March +, 1875, ac. 20-3.
41. SALLY HUTCHINS, b. June 7, 1857, in Augusta, Ga.
42. LEORA ErmE, b. Sept. 15, 1859, in Angusta, Ga.
43. SIMEON ARTHUR, b. Jan. 15, 1862, in Angusta, Ga.
44. MAMIE EDDRIENNE, b. Sept. 9, 1864, in Madison, Ga.
45. KATIE LENA, b. Nov. 27, 1871, in Athens, Ga.
46. CORA ADELIA, b. Jan. 15, 1875, in Mount Vernon, N. Y.
47. NAPOLEON B.7 [16] (Daniel C.6, Simcon5, Joseph+, etc.), m. Zapharine D. Robinson, dau. of Asa (see), Feb. 28, 1847; was first a trader at Sanbornton Bridge ; is now a druggist and apothecary (1876) in Madison, Ga., having there resided since 1850. Child :
48. MARY ELLA, b. March 23, d. July 24, 1835, ac. + mos., at Madison.
49. JOSEPHINE B.7 [18] (Daniel C.6, Simeon5, Joseph+, etc.), m. John Harrison Goodale, Jan. 19, 1871, who was born Oct. 2, 1816, in Deering. He taught in Newbury, Vt., and Columbus, Ga., six years ; was an editor in Manchester, 1848-61, and superintendent of public
15
GENEALOGIES. - BADGER. - BAKER.
schools for Hillsborough County, 1856-9. Removing to California in 1864, he returned to N. II. in 1869, after travelling in Alaska and British Columbia ; was N. II. Secretary of State, 1871-2, and (1875-6) the superintendent of public schools in the city of Nashua. Children :
50. MARY HALE (Goodale), b. Feb. 6, d. March 9, 1872, ae. 1 mo. 3 days.
51. JOHN MOONEY, b. Nov. 11, 1873, d. Aug. 16, 1874, ae. 9 mos.
52. CHARLOTTE ATKINSON, b. May 26, 1875.
THE BADGER FAMILY.
1. THOMAS BADGER was b. 1758, and came from New Market about 1799 ; was a blacksmith, and an excellent workman ; lived in various parts of town, - first, in a house built by himself, late " Moody Place," near the Bay Road, where his 2d dau. was b., also at the Bridge, and finally in Upper Gilmanton. He was an carnest Christian of the F. W. Baptist order ; d. March 18, 1818, ac 60. IIc m. Abigail Bennett, who d. about 1838, at Laconia, with her dau. [9]. Children :
2. Thomas, b. lu Newmarket; the only one of these children who did not come to town.
3. JAMES, m. Mrs. Sarah (Hoit) Morgan, widow of Benjamin M. (see), Nov. 22, 1810 (Crockett), and d. suddenly, by the falling of a tree (see Cas- nalties), April 19, 1811. She m., 3d, Nathaniel Burleigh (see). Child : - 1. James, d. Jan. 14, 1814.
4. LEANDER, m. - Couner, of Meredith; lived with his father, then at " Roxbury" (N. E. part of the town) ; finally rem. to Bristol, and there d.
5 WILLIAM, m. Sally Rundlett, of Gilmanton; resided in Laconia; a farmer.
6. JOIN EMERSON, m. Irena Carter, of Concord, Nov. 18, 1816 (Bodwell) ; was a hatter at the Square, also kept the hotel (J. H. Lane's); finally rem. to Montpeller, Vt. Children, besides oue daughter : - 1. Willlam. 2. John. 3. Curtis.
7. STEPHEN, removed to Copenhagen, N. Y. ; 2 sons.
8. NATHANIEL E., a seventh sou; soldler at Portsmouth, 1814; in. a lady from P., and died near Boston.
9. NANCY, b. Feb. 15, 1798, in New Market ; m., Ist, John Ladd, of Upper Gilinantou (see). She in., 2d, Joseph Fitleld (see) ; m., 3d, Moses Lakeman (see).
10. HANNAHI CLARK, b. Nov. 30, 1800, In Saubornton, as above; m. Jolin Laue (see).
11. WARREN. d. of fever, Ang. 26, 1823.
12. SAMUEL, d. ae. 4.
THIE BAKER FAMILY.
- The earliest emigrant ancestor of the Sanbornton Bakers was undoubtedly
1. Jouv1, who was freeman in Charlestown, Mass., 1631. IIe had a son,
10
HISTORY OF SANBORNTON.
2. THOMAS?, of Roxbury, whose son, in turn, was probably (though a link may be missing),
3. THOMAS3, who in. Sarah Pike, of Roxbury, May 28, 1702. Their children were :
4. JouN', b. Sept. 144, 1704, d. young.
5, 6. JOHN1, b. Dec. 17. 1705. ELIZABETHI, b. Feb. 15, 1707.
7. THOMAS4, b. April 13, 1710.
8. JOSErI+, b. Jan. 25, 1714, who was a deacon of the Congrega- tional Church, held a captain's commission, and was the surveyor of several towns in that part of the colony of New Hampshire which was claimed by Massachusetts, - among the rest, of Pembroke, where he afterwards settled. Ife was m. May 31, 1739, to Hannah Lovewell, only child of Capt. John Lovewell, the celebrated warrior, who lost his life in the severe battle with the Indians at Pigwaeket now Fryeburg, Me., called " Lovewell's Fight," April 18, 1725. She was b. July 23, 1721, in Dunstable, and, as his sole heir, inherited, with her husband, the lands assigned to her father in Pembroke. Of their eleven children, born in Pembroke, nine became heads of families, - three sons and six daughters. The oldest were :
9. JOSEPH [11], b. Nov. 7, 1740; and
10. LOVEWELL, b. Sept. 18, 1743; who settled In P., and left a numerous posterity there and in Goshen, Haverhill, etc.
11. JOSEPH5 [9] (Joseph+, Thomas3, Thomas", John1), m. Marion Moore, a descendant of the Scotch Covenanters, and settled in Bow. Their children were :
12. JOHN, b. Sept 4, 1763; m. Mary Thompson; d. Dec. 20, 1832, in Con- way, ac. 69.
13. JAMES, b. March 8, 1765; m. Judith Whittemore; settled in Bow; d. 1808, ae. 43.
14. DANIEL, b. April 2, 1767; m. Elizabeth Swett, of Pembroke; both d. 1848; he, ae. 81.
15. JESSE, b Sept. 5, 1769; m. Sarah Whittemore, of Pembroke; settled finally in Shipton, C. E., and there d., May 20, 1847, in his 78th year.
16. HANNAN, b. Sept. 15, 1774; in. Dea. Beuj. Huntoon, of Salisbury.
17. JOSEPH, b. Sept. 18, 1777; settled lu Loudon; twice m.
18. MARY ANN, b. Nov. 17, 1779 ; in. Samuel Dow, of Concord.
19. PHILIP CARRIGAN [21], b. March 16, 1782, in Bow.
20. MARK [26], b. May 2, 1785.
21. PHILIP C.º [19] (Joseph5, Joseph+, Thomas3, Thomas?, John1), m. Mary Dow, of Concord, Dec. 10, 1806, who was there b., at Horse Hill, March 24, 1780. He was a shoemaker and farmer ; moved from Bow to Sanbornton, in 1836, purchasing the Ede Taylor, now Daniel B. Sanborn, place, one mile north of the Square, Sept. 25, 1835; he there d., May 10, 1837, ae. 55 -- 2. She d. with her son, Amos M., on the Sanborn Road, June 28, 1865, ae. 85-3. Children :
17
GENEALOGIES. - BAKER.
22. CLARINDA, b. Aug. 3, 1808, in Bow; m. Fenner H. Emerson; now residing (1876) with her son in West Heuniker. Another son : - 1. William F. (Emerson), d. in town, Aug. 23, 1847, ae. 14.
"This gentle one, so kind, so good, Called hence by early doom, Just came to show how sweet a soul In Paradiso will bloom."
23. TIMOTHY DOW [33], b. May 17, 1810.
24. AMOS MORGAN [35], b. Sept. 25, 1815.
25. MARY ANN, b. Dec. 5, 1819, d. Oct. 2, 1826, at Bow, In her 7th year.
26. MARKG, Esq. [20] (Joseph5, Joseph4, Thomas3. Thomas?, Jolin1), m., 1st, Abigail Ambrose, of Pembroke, May, 1807, the dan. of Nathaniel and Phebe (Lovejoy) Ambrose, b. April 19, 1794, in P. He res'd. in Bow, where their children were all b., and first came to Sanbornton in 1836 ; settled as a farmer .on the old Tilton, present John B. Batchelder place, Lot 65, 2d Div. (Tilton), purchasing the same of John Curry ; moved to the Bridge in 1848, living near Alex. H. Tilton's, where now his son's widow, and there d., Oct. 6, 1865, ae. 80-5. His 1st wife had d. Nov. 21, 1849, ae. 55-7, and he had m., 2d, Mrs. Elizabeth (Patterson) Duncan, of Londonderry, Fall of 1850, who d. in L., June 6, 1875. Children :
27. SAMUEL DOW [39], b. July 8, 1808, in Bow.
28. ALBERT, b. Feb. 5, 1810; graduated at Dartmouth College. 1834; stud- ied law with Hou. Franklin. Pierce, in Hillsborough Centre, and there prac- tised extensively till his death, Oet. 17, 1841, ac. 31-8; unm.
29. GEORGE SULLIVAN [42], b. Ang. 7, 1812.
30. ABIGAIL BARNARD, b. Jan. 15, 1816; m. Alex. II. Tilton (see).
31. MARTHA SMITH, b. Jan. 19, 1819; in. Luther C. Pillsbury, of Concord, deputy warden of the State Prison in Concord, and afterwards in Weathers- tield, Coun. She now res. with her oldest daughter : - 1. Ellen Cleveland (Pillsbury), b. April 18, 1845; m. Edwin Philbrook, in Maroa, Ill., an eminent school teacher ; now res. at Blue Rapids, Kansas. 2. Mary Neale, b. April 5, 1849, in Albany, N. Y., d. April 10, 1856, in Sanborntou, ae. 7. Job ix 12, quoted on her gravestone.
32. MARY MORSE, b. July 16, 1821; m., Ist, George W. Glover, Dee. 12, 1843 (Curtice); an architect in Wilmington, N. C., where he d., of yellow fever, May, 1844. She m., 2d, Daniel Patterson, of Saco, Me., a dentist; was res. In Lynn, Mass. (1876) ; and having made a discovery, as she pro- fesses, from her own experience, in 1864, that disease may be cured, as it is caused, by mind Instend of matter, she has embodied her vlews in an able metaphysical treatise of 456 pages, entitled "Selence and Health," in eight chapters, published in Boston, 1875, by the Christian Scientist Publishing Company. Having m., 3d, Gilbert Eddy, of Boston (221 West Springfield St.), she now (1880) preaches regularly, on the Sabbath, at the Hawthorne Rooms. Child : - 1. George Washington (Glover), b. Sept. 11, 1844; served iu the late war, three years; was wounded; has since res'd. in Iowa, and is how a miner, at Deadwood, Dacotah Territory. 2
18
HISTORY OF SANBORNTON.
33. TIMOTHY D.7 [23] (Philip C.6, Joseph5, etc.), being first overseer in a factory in Rhode Island ; m. Rhoda Thayer, of Barretts- ville, R. 1., Ang. 22, 1840, in Thompson, Coun. She was the daughter of Dr. Euoch Thayer. He was afterwards a teamster and stage owner from Concord to Meredith and Conway ; latterly, in the livery-stable business at Lake Village for more than twenty years. Child :
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