USA > New Jersey > Biographical, genealogical and descriptive history of the first congressional district of New Jersey, Volume I > Part 22
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Hugh Middleton's grandson John Vining was the chief justice of the state of Delaware and speaker of the Delaware house of assembly. He died in the Middleton house in Mannington and was borne by pall-bearers on foot four miles to Salem and buried in the aisle of St. John's Episcopal church. His tombstone and that of his father were taken up of late years and now are built into the front wall of the church. His personal property was in- ventoried at five hundred and seventy-two pounds. He was elected the sheriff of Salem county in 1696, 1697, 1699, and elected justice in 1701. Hugh Mid- dleton's father was from Leicestershire and his mother from Gloucestershire. England. The Vining family came from Essex county, Massachusetts. Sarah Hurley, daughter-in-law of Hugh Middleton, married Joseph Pledger.
From the emigrant's grandson Edward is descended Aaron Bradway, of Elsinboro. In his will, bearing date November 11th, 1774, he says: "To my son Joshua I give the plantation I now live on, with all the house and
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buildings thereunto belonging; but if my son Joshua should die before he has lawful issue, then my will is that the said plantation be divided between my two sons Aaron and Edward Bradway (by the meeting of Friends). To my grandchildren Mary and Tacy Goodwin, and my daughter Rebecca Good- win, and my two daughters Sarah and Hannah, sixty pounds proclamation money; and to my son Thomas one hundred and fifty pounds proclamation money; and to my sons Edward, Aaron and Thomas, my house and lots in Salem; also woodlands, etc. My wife Sarah, executrix."
Thomas Bradway's mother was Sarah Smith, the second wife of Aaron. Joshua, the first son of Aaron Bradway, mentions in his will, bearing date October 16th, 1807: "My will is that one thousand pounds be put to interest, said interest to be paid annually to my niece Hannah Goodwin during her life, and after her death, the said one thousand pounds to the surviving chil- dren of my half-brother Edward Bradway, and to the children of my half- sister Hannah Bradway, now deceased, and to the children of half-sister Sarah Waddington; and all said children to have equal shares except my half-sister Hannah's son Joshua is to have as much as any two of the others. Secondly, I give Grace Bradway, daughter of Edward Bradway, two hundred pounds, which is in addition to her share of the thousand pounds above or- dered. I devise to my half-brother Thomas Bradway my two houses and lots in the town of Salem and a wood lot in Upper Alloway's Creek. I also give to said Thomas two thousand dollars in cash. I give to my housekeeper. Elizabeth Black, three hundred pounds; to Prudence, the daughter of Rich- ard Smith, fifty pounds; to James Bartram, twenty-five pounds; to Daniel Jones, twenty-five pounds; to my colored boy, Chord Hazard, twenty-five pounds, when he comes to the age of twenty-one, with interest from date: to my executors, Thomas Bradway and Isaac Moss, all the remainder of my es- tate, be it more or less."
Joshua Bradway died in 1807, aged fifty-nine years. Thomas Bradway married Isabel Dunlap. They had three children,-Sara A., Thomas D. and Eliza. Thomas Bradway, Esq., died August 18, 1821, aged fifty-six years and seven months. Isabel, his wife, died November 25, 1827, aged fifty-two years, three months and eighteen days. Sara Ann married John S. Wood. They have five children: Adeline M., John S., Thomas B., Warren D. and Lucy I. Adeline married Thomas Sinnickson and they have two children,- John W. and Mary H. John S. Wood, Jr., was born November 23, 1823, and died June 21, 1853, unmarried. Thomas B. married first Elizabeth Jones and had two children, Thomas J. and Elizabeth. Thomas J. married Jennie Ware, a daughter of Charles Ware, near Jericho, Salem county: they have no children. Elizabeth married William Calvert, an Englishman, and they
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have one child, Elizabeth, seven years old. Thomas B. Wood's second wife was Elizabeth Dace, of Beesley's Point. Warren D. married Vashti Black- wood, a daughter of John and Sarah Blackwood, of Alloway: they had five children,-Sara Ann, Rena S., John W., Linda M. and Ralph. Sara Ann married Alfred Haines and they have one child, Helen, five years old. The other four are unmarried. Lucy I. Wood married Dr. Henry C. Clark, of Woodbury. They have two children,-Alice W. Clark and Harry H. Clark. Harry H. married Frances Bothsford and they have one child, Helen, seven years old. Thomas D. Bradway's first wife was Eliza Blackwood, a daughter of Joseph and Ann Blackwood. She died November 8, 1852, aged forty-four years, leaving three children,-Charles, Thomas and Isabel D. Charles mar- ried Hetty Biddle, a daughter of Aaron Biddle, of Pennsville. He died young, leaving no children. Thomas, Jr., married Eliza Newell, a daughter of Charles and Artemesia Newell, of Penn's Neck, and they have six chil- dren,-Harry, Charles, Louis A., Arthur, Isabel and Eliza. Harry married and died young, leaving two children. Charles married Eva Richardson and had two children, living in Wilmington: Isabel is married, the other single. Isabel D. Bradway married Charles A. Pettit, of Philadelphia: she is dead, leaving one son, Frank D., who married Margaret Whilden. They have one son, Frank, nine years old.
Thomas D. Bradway's second wife was Sarah Miller, a daughter of Mar- tin Miller. They had four children,-Richard Dunlap and William M., who died in infancy, Eliza and Frank D., unmarried. Eliza Bradway married Mr. Duboisson, of Natchez; they had one child, Eliza, who married Dr. Coxe and lived and died on a plantation near the Yazoo river in Mississippi, and left six children.
The Blackwood family are descended from the editors of Blackwood's Magazine, Edinboro, Scotland.
William Bradway and Sarah Hancock were married second month, 12th, 1750, and had the following children: William, who married Mary Ware, and Mary Bradway married John Thompson, of Elsinboro. William Brad- way, Sr., mentions in his will his grandsons Adna, Samuel and Joseph Brad- way, and granddaughters Sarah and Rebecca. Adna married Mary Paulin and had the following children: James, Sarah, Mary and Matilda Bradway. James married Elizabeth, a daughter of Edward and Mary Harris Bradway nee Warner, and went west. Sarah married Ephraim Turner and had the following children: Edmund married Mary Ann Tice: issue, Joanna, now deceased, and Carrie, who married and resides up Jersey. Ann Turner mar- ried first Joshua Tharp; second husband, John Smith: issue, Dr. Winfield Scott Smith. Elizabeth Turner married Job Griscom: issue, Robert B.,
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who married Elizabeth Butcher, a daughter of Robert and Mary Ann Butcher, and their children were John, Elwood, Job T., Sarah and William. Mary Turner married Richard Hancock: issue, Harriet, who married Albert Fogg: issue, Howard, Mary (deceased), Elizabeth, Luke F., John, Richard, Francis and Mary Ann Fogg. Albert Fogg married a descendant of the emigrant Edward Bradway, and is now the owner of the property my father, William Bradway, inherited under the old English law, said property deeded by the emigrant to his son William in 1692. Sarah Bradway Hancock mar- ried D. Harris Smith: issue, Ralph Ogden Smith; Clara F., who married Alvin W. Davis: issue, Edward and Linnie Davis.
In a book in the Mercantile Library in Philadelphia, entitled Americans of Royal Descent, occurs the name of Ruth Bradway, who married Josiah Davis, a descendant of a family tracing their descent from one of the English kings. Mary L., who married George Smith, had issue living, Anna Winfield and Richard Smith. Calvin G. Turner married Kesiah Moore; second wife, Harriet Rainear. Rebecca Turner married Joseph B. Finlaw and had issue, Mary, Sarah, Elizabeth, William, Joseph and Ephraim.
Sarah Turner married Daniel Hires, a brother of George Hires, ex- congressman, also a brother of the late John Hires, ex-sheriff, and of Charles Hires, a prominent business man of Salem. Her children were George, Anna, Elizabeth, Ephraim, Laura and Mary. Her second husband was lieutenant Joseph Carter, who entered the navy July 19, 1861, at Portsmouth, New Hampshire. His certificate was signed by President Lincoln and Gideon Welles, the secretary of the navy, which Mrs. Carter has now in her. possession. He fought all through the war and was in the service thirty years, holding many positions of trust, and was assigned as one of the officers on board the cruiser Richmond, in which General Grant traveled around the world. He and Grant were very good friends. His duty on land extended about ten years in different navy yards. His last duty was at Cramps' ship- yard at Philadelphia as inspector of hulls. He was ordered before the retiring board in 1890 and was retired with high honors, as to his abilities as an officer. He lived at Manchester, Massachusetts, until his death, July 30, 1897. He was a man of fine tastes and made a large collection, during his journeys around the world, of lacquer and Japanese curios.
Ephraim and Sarah Turner had three children,-Hannah, Ephraim and Ruth Turner, who died at an early age. William Bradway, Sr., mentioned in his will: "To my grandson Adna Bradway all that plantation and tract of land I bought of William Carll adjoining the place I live on and whereon the said Adna Bradway now lives." Samuel Bradway married and had three children,-Ruth, Mary Ann and Samuel. Ruth married Josiah Davis,
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and their children were Annie, Edward, Albert, William, Esther and Hannah. Mary Ann married John McCollister, and their children were Gidion, Isabell. Emily, William, Harriet and Charles.
William Bradway, Jr., born tenth mo., 10th, 1754, and Mary Ware born IIth mo., 17th, 1756, daughter of John and Elizabeth Ware, were married twelfth mo., 30th, 1773, and had five children: Sarah Bradway, born sixth mo., 12th, 1775; Anna Bradway, second mo., 13th, 1780; Ezra Bradway, born first mo., 12th, 1783; John Bradway, first mo., 28th, 1787, and Rachel Brad- way, third mo., 2d, 1789. Sarah married Elisha Stretch, and their children were Mary, Joshua, William, Ann and Job Stretch. Mary married Mark, the son of Mark and Martha Bradway, and lived but a short time, dying without issue. Joshua married Elizabeth, the daughter of Waddington Bradway, Sr. They had one son, Joshua Stretch, who studied medicine and practiced his profession in Salem for a time. He married Lydia, a daughter of Mark Bainer, of Philadelphia. He left Salem and removed to Philadelphia, where he died soon after of consumption. He left a widow and children. His father Joshua was remarkable for his high moral character. William, second son, learned the tailoring business. He was proficient in his calling and his customers were the best in the town and county. Toward the close of his life he left Salem with his family and removed to Jersey City. Ann, the youngest daughter, married John D., a son of Mark and Elizabeth Denn Stewart. They had seven children,-Elizabeth, Charles, Elisha, Sarah. James, John and Ann Stewart. Elisha was in Company F, Twelfth New Jer- sey Volunteers, and was in the Army of the Potomac. James was in the west when the war began, and enlisted in the Twelfth Iowa, was taken pris- oner at the battle of Shiloh and sent to Andersonville prison, kept there for eight months before being exchanged, and sent again to the front at Vicks- burg, was taken sick there and came home to die. Job, the youngest son of Elisha and Sarah Bradway Stretch, was appprenticed to his brother Will- iam to learn the tailoring business, and he followed that occupation in Salem during the remainder of his life. His wife was Catharine, a daughter of John Nicholson, a lineal descendant of Samuel Nicholson, who in 1675 emigrated to this country with John Fenwick and his family from the county of North- amptonshire, Eng. Job and his wife Catharine had the following children: Eliza, Charles, Harriet and Mary. Eliza married Joseph Paul of Phila- delphia. Mary married John P. More. Harriet died young.
Anna Bradway married James Stewart. Their children were Hannah and Mary Stewart. Hannah died young and unmarried. Mary married William, a son of William and Ann Stewart Griscom. Their children were Hannah, who married Charles Marott, of Philadelphia; William Wade Gris-
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com, who married Sarah Cooper, a daughter of James Cooper, near Wood- bury, and they have children. James married Hannah Borton, of Wood- town. Anna Bradway's second husband was Samuel Fogg, a son of Edward and Hannah Ware Fogg, and had one son, William Fogg, of Salem, who was born March 23, 1809, and married Mary Hancock Hall. She was born twelfth day of the first month, 1814, at 6 o'clock in the morning. Date of marriage, March 24, 1831. They had eight children. Susan, born 7th of February, 1833, and died in January, 1883. She married Nathaniel Wodruff, of Bridgeton, and had five children: Frank, Mary E., William S., Clement and Preston K. Samuel Fogg, born 15th of January, 1836, died 27th of October, 1843. Sarah H. Fogg, born the IIth of November, 1837, died the IIth of August, 1843. Anna B. Fogg, born the 27th of September, 1840. died the 15th of October, 1842. Sarah H. Fogg, born the 29th of July, 1843. married, 5th of June, 1867, Peter Lantz and had seven children, three of whom now living,-Samuel, Anna and Lily. Clement Fogg, born the 13th of April, 1846, is now living in Salem. William H. Fogg, born the 17th of January, 1849. died August 25th, 1883, and left a widow and two children,- Mary and Harry Fogg. Emily H. Fogg married Richard Kirby the 29th of November, 1874, is now deceased. She had no issue.
Rachel Bradway's first husband was Joseph Stewart, a son of Samuel and Sarah Tyler Stewart, of Salem township. Their children were Mary, Anna and Lydia Stewart. Rachel's second husband was David Griscom, a teacher of Clerment boarding school near Philadelphia for several years. They had two children,-Rachel and David. He afterward gave up his school and pur- chased a farm in Chester county, Pennsylvania, removed to it and there ended his days. His daughter Rachel married a man by the name of Alsop.
John Bradway, a son of William and Mary W. Bradway, was born first mo., 28th, 1787, married Hannah Pancoast, a daughter of John and Sarah Keasby Pancoast, and had the following children: Clayton, born eighth mo., 20th, 1809; Beulah, born sixth mo., 2d, 1811, died aged six days; Sarah P., born seventh mo., 10th, 1812; Mary Ann Bradway and Achsah Ann Bradway were born 12th mo., 4th, 1816. John Bradway's second wife was Clarissa Hancock. They had two children: John H. Bradway, born tenth mo., 3d, 1820, in Philadelphia, and Hannah Bradway, born seventh mo., Ist, 1823, who died eleventh mo., Ist, 1824. His father, then being in the lumber busi- ness at Maiden street wharf, Kensington, but having obtained a lease of land from Richmond to Point no Point, he banked in the meadow between these points in 1821, now occupied by the Reading Railroad Company for coal- shipping, etc., and died second mo., 28th, 1824, at the age of thirty-seven.
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Clarissa H. Bradway, with her son John H., moved to Fourth and Button- wood, where they remained until 1836.
John received a fair education in private schools and at the age of sixteen became an assistant teacher in Samuel W. Black's academy, where he had been a pupil for three years, and remained with him until he was twenty-one years of age, attending lectures at the Franklin Institute during each winter. About this time the public schools of Philadelphia had become quite popular. and private schools were not so well patronized. John left Philadelphia in the fall of 1841 to take charge of a school at Woodstown, New Jersey, to be known as the Bacon Seminary. The house not being completed, he taught in the old brick house adjoining until spring and then removed to the new building, where he remained until the spring of 1844, when he removed to Sculltown and associated himself with George Risley in merchandising. From there he went to Clarksboro, in 1846, having purchased the stock of Thomas R. Adams at the time, and two years later the entire property. In 1849 he married Mary E. Tonkin, born first mo., 18th, 1824, a daughter of Edward and Elizabeth Clark Tonkin, her father widely known as the raiser of the famous Tonkin cattle named the Duke of York and the Earl of Jersey, paint- ings of which by Woodside, of Philadelphia, the celebrated cattle painter of that time, are in possession of his daughter. In 1854 he sold the store prop- erty and purchased a farm known as the Coursault place (then pronounced Crusoe) at Mickelton, on which he resided until the spring of 1857. In the fall of which year he was elected a member of the legislature by a flattering majority.
In 1857, 5th month, 7th, he was elected the cashier of the Gloucester County Bank at Woodbury and afterward First National, and continued as cashier, vice-president and president for thirty-eight years, resigning on his seventy-fifth birthday. Edward T. Bradway entered the same bank, now the First National Bank of Woodbury, when sixteen years old, and remained as assistant cashier and cashier for twenty years, resigning on account of ill health. William Bradway entered the State Bank in Camden in 1874 and is paying teller in the city office at this time. Edward T. Bradway, son of John H. and Mary E. Bradway, was born fifth month, 31st, 1850. Clara Bradway, a daughter of John H. and Mary E. Bradway, was born eighth month, 21st, 1852. John C. Bradway, a son of John H. and Mary E. his wife, was born third month, 21st, 1856. William Bradway, a son of John H. and Mary E .. was born eighth month, 25th, 1857. John Saeger Bradway, a son of William Bradway and Jennie S., his wife, was born 2d month, 17th, 1890. Margaret Saegar Bradway, a daughter of William Bradway and Jennie his wife, was born tenth month, 12th, 1892. Mary B. Creveling, a daughter of Wesley
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Creveling and Clara B., his wife, was born second month, 27th, 1885, and died ninth month, 7th, 1885. John Bradway, Jr., died second month, 28th, 1824. Hannah P. his wife died seventh month, 2d, 1817. Ezra Bradway, a son of William Bradway, Jr., and Mary Ware, daughter of John and Elizabeth Ware, was born May 12, 1783, and died February 6, 1819, aged thirty-five years. Mary Denn, a daughter of James and Elizabeth Kirby Denn, was born January 20, 1785. They were married February 9, 1804. William Bradway, a son of Ezra and Mary Denn Bradway, was born October 3, half- past seven o'clock in the morning, in the year of 1805. They had the follow- ing children: John W. Bradway, born April 7, 1808; George Bradway, born February 23, 1810, and died April 4, 1821; Anna Bradway, born February 14. 1812, and died July 24, 1812; Mark D. Bradway, born August 24, 1813, and Charles Bradway, June 26, 1817.
Mary Denn Bradway's second husband was Elisha Stretch, grandson of John Stewart, the emigrant. Their children were Beulah, born April 6, 1821, married Nathan Kiger and had the following children: Mary Kiger, who died young; Alfred, who married Jane Armstrong and has two children; Lewis, who never married; Nathan, Jr., who went west and was never heard from; and Annie, who married Charles Carll and has one son, Arthur. Mary D. Stretch, born October 22, 1823, and died a young woman, unmarried, aged twenty-five years nine months. Sarah B. Stretch, born May 5, 1829. married Joseph Mitten, had one daughter, Mary (now deceased) and is still living, in Iowa, a widow. Elisha Stretch died September 16, 1832, aged six- ty-three years eight months.
William Bradway married Mary W. Shourds, a daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth Ware Shourds. She was born in Penn's Neck, January 24, 1804, and married William Bradway, in May, 1830. They had the following chil- dren: Elizabeth A., born March 12, 1831 ; Sarah, September 10, 1832; Mary, September 3, 1836; Annie Rachel, February 17, 1841; and Ellen, February 5, 1845. William Bradway died September 9, 1877, aged seventy-two years; and Mary W. Bradway died August 15, 1894, aged ninety years and six months. Elizabeth married Jeremiah Powell, a son of John and Rebecca Powell, March 29, 1854, and they had six children: Sarah Ware Powell, born December 27, 1854; Mary Bradway, July 9, 1856; Annie, July 4, 1859; a son. born January 3, 1864; Louisa, November 6, 1865 ; and John, August 25, 1871.
Sarah W. Powell and Henry H. Fogg, son of Richard and Mary Woolman Fogg, were married in Philadelphia, by the Mayor, March 30, 1880, and they had the following children: Henry Norman, born November 28, 1883; Helen Johnson, April 4, 1887; and Edith, March 23, 1893. Henry H. Fogg was born December 5, 1852, and died August 29, 1899. John Powell married
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Bertha, a daughter of William and Anne English Harris, and has two chil- dren,-Elizabeth and Jeremiah. Elizabeth A. Powell died January 29, 1891.
Amos Harris married first Catherine Smith, of Elsinboro, and had three children,-Rebecca, Hannah J. and Stretch. Amos Harris and Sarah Brad- way were married March 19, 1856, and had five children: Catherine Smith, born June 4, 1857; Sarah Marian, June 22, 1859; Margaret C., August 23, 1863, and died ninth month, 6th, 1865; Howard, born January 5, 1867; and Mary Lincoln, August 22, 1868.
Sarah M. Harris married William Johnson, of Lower Penn's Neck, a son of James S. and Sarah Lindzey Johnson, the 25th March, 1879, and had four children: James R. Johnson, born May 21, 1880; Josephine Johnson, June 28, 1881; Marguerite Harris Johnson, born February 8, 1890, and died July 16, 1890; and Howard Harris Johnson, born April 26, 1892.
Howard Harris, of Elsinboro, and Berthe Vaughan, of Philadelphia, a daughter of John and Eliza Vaughan, were married November 8, 1893, in Philadelphia, and have two children: Ellen B. Harris, born August 14, 1894; and John V. Harris, January 4, 1896.
Mary Harris, of Elsinboro, and Robert Newell Vanneman, of Manning- ton, a son of Edwin A. and Josephine Vanneman, were married January 18, 1888. at Philadelphia, by Mayor Fitler, and had three children: Marian J. Vanneman, born December 11, 1891; Margaret H. Vanneman, March 27, 1893; and William B. Vanneman, May 2, 1896. Mr. R. N. Vanneman was elected the sheriff of Salem county November 7, 1889.
Quinton P. Harris and Elizabeth T. Powell were married and had two children: Anna, who died in infancy; and Elizabeth Powell, born October 23. 1858, and married Richard M. Acton, Jr., a son of Casper and Rachel G. Acton, January II, 1882. For his second wife Quinton P. Harris married Mary, a daughter of William and Mary Ware Bradway, January 23, 1862. They had five children: Lucy. born December 16, 1862, married I. Clinton Arnold, a lawyer of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, January 26, 1897; Martha English, born August 16, 1864, died March 29, 1865; Ellen Bradway, born January 26. 1866, married Dr. W. Scott Smith, a son of John and Ann Turner Smith. May 21, 1891; Margaret, born December 6, 1870; Quinton Parker Harris, born July 1, 1873, now in California.
Annie Bradway has been a successful teacher for many years. Rachel Bradway married Joseph Wallen Sheppard, a son of William and Sarah Fithian Sheppard, February 10, 1864, and had four children: Ralph May was born March 9, 1865, and died January 16, 1870; William Bradway, born May 10, 1867, and died December 3, 1871; Ruth Evans Sheppard, born De- cember 23, 1869; and Annie Bradway Sheppard, born July 29, 1872. Ruth
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married William B. Sickler, a son of Zaccheus and Anna Miller Sickler, April 15, 1895, in Philadelphia, by Mayor Warwick. They have one son, Joseph Wallen Sheppard, born December 1, 1897. Joseph W. Sheppard, born July 7, 1832, died August 22, 1897. Ellen Bradway never married and re- mained with her parents until their death.
John W. Bradway, a son of Ezra and Mary Ware Bradway, married Rhoda B. Butcher, a daughter of Dr. Joseph and Harriet Butcher, and they had six children. Harriet E. married George M. Chester, of Camden county, New Jersey, a son of John W. and Mary D. Chester. Mary D. Bradway mar- ried Reuben L. Sharp. Rhoda married B. F. Ladow. Emma married David D. Sharp. John, Jr., married Ella Harris. William married Hannah Sharp: his second wife was Frances McCarter. Harriet and George Chester's children were George, Jr., who died at the age of thirty-six; Harriet B., who died at the age of three years; Mary D., who died at twenty years of age; Frank, who died at birth; and John W., now living. George, Jr., left a widow, Emma, and two daughters,-Harriet and Julia. Mary Bradway and Reuben Sharp had seven children, viz .: Dr. Ezra Sharp, now practicing in Camden, New Jersey; Joseph, a dentist in Bridgeton; Jennie, a doctor in Camden; Dallas, a preacher and writer near Boston; Phoebe and Mary, the first and second wives of William Morgan, both died of consumption. Mary's second husband was William Snagg and they have two children,-Lizzie and John. Rhoda Bradway and B. F. Ladow had six children. Emma Bradway and David Sharp also had six children,-Rhoda, Emma, Duffield, Samuel, Levi and Burleigh. John, Jr., and Ella, his wife, had the following children: Eva, Edward, Frank, Howard and Raymond. William and Hannah his wife had these children,-Charles, Joseph, Henry and John. By his second wife, Frances, he had one daughter, Rhoda.
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