Book of the Society of Colonial Wars in the State of New Jersey, 1917, Part 7

Author: Society of Colonial Wars in the State of New Jersey
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HORACE PORTER.


Mr. Horace Porter, who died at Lakewood, on March 6, 1915, had been a member of the Society of Colonial Wars in the State of New Jersey, since November, 1903. He was born April


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II, 1851, at Waterford, Maine. His father was Oliver Por- ter, a merchant of over fifty years' standing, and his mother was Mary Jane Seal. Both were of Colonial stock, the records show- ing Mr. Porter's descent, through his father's side, from the Shaw, Byram, Nash, Emery, Huntington, and Moulton families, and through his mother's side from the Pepperell, Jackson, Por- terfield, Slemons, and Frost families.


Mr. Porter spent his early days in the town of Waterford, and attended the Bridgeion Academy at Bridgeton, Maine. In 1880 he took up his life's work at Lakewood, New Jersey, and was an early factor in the success of that resort. Mr. Porter was also instrumental in building and maintaining the Waumbeck at Jef- ferson, New Hampshire.


Mr. Porter was not a robust man, and as a result of his faith- fulness and energetic attention to his business and also, in a measure, as the result of an European trip in 1896, he gradually began to feel the effects of his labors. About eighteen years ago he gave up his hotel interests and devoted himself to country life. He spent several years in northern New England and later moved nearer New Jersey and New York. In 1910 he located at Ridge- field, Connecticut, where he largely devoted his talents, as he had done elsewhere, since his retirement, to the raising of blooded poultry. In September, 1914, Mr. Porter decided to spend the winter months nearer the South, and so took up a temporary residence at Lakewood, where he died.


Mr. Porter was of keen intellect, a gentleman by nature. He easily trade and retained friends, and by his contleness of man- ner, diplomacy, and his interest in all with whom he came in con- tact, aided by a retentive memory and a disposition to see the sunny side of everything, he lived a life that was well worth while.


His interest in the Society of Colonial Wars was genuine and keen, and it was his regret that he was unable to be more active in its affairs.


Mr. Porter's remains are buried in Evergreen Cemetery, Lake-


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wood, New Jersey, a beautiful spot overlooking the attractive country and the scenes of his happiest days.


DANIEL REQUA FOSTER, D.D.


The Reverend Daniel Requa Foster, D.D., ninth in descent from Major John Freeman, was elected to membership in the Society of Colonial Wars in the State of New Jersey on Janu- ary 21, 19II. He died on October 25, 1915. From his obit- uary notice published by the Society of Sons of the Revolution in the State of New Jersey we quote the following :


"Mr. Foster's grandparents on both sides were Godly people with whom he was in his childhood intimately associated. He was born and reared in a religious atmosphere. His parents and aunts were devoted Christian people, but without the sternness of their Pilgrim forbears. They were endowed with a keen sense of humor and among their own kindred were most affectionate, and kind and courteous to every one, exceedingly hospitable, and fond of society. With such a heredity and environment, it would only be natural that Mr. Foster should have possessed those qualities which made him so helpful to others in his pastoral work. He loved people and sympathized with them in their joys and sorrows."


HENRY HERTEL TRUMAN.


Henry Hertel Truman, former Mayor of Orange, N. J., died Thursday morning, March 30, 1916, at his home, 56 Highland Avenue. Mr. Truman was born in Greenwich, Connecticut, in 1847. He was educated in the public and private schools there, and later attended the Brooklyn Polytechnic School. He moved to Orange in 1885 and was Mayor from 1800 to 1892.


Mr. Truman was a member of the New York Stock Exchange and of the New York Produce Exchange ; at one time he was a member of the firm of the late Governor Flower. He was a life member of the Orange Y. M. C. A., and a generous contribu- tor to many charities. He was a founder of St. Andrew's Episco- pal Church in South Orange, and was at one time Senior Warden.


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Mr. Truman was greatly interested in genealogy and was a member of many societies, among them being the Society of Colonial Wars, the Mayflower Descendants, the Society of the War of 1812, the Order of the Founders and Patriots of America, the Descendants of Colonial Governors, the Society of American Wars, the Sons of the American Revolution, the New England Society of Orange, the New York Academy of Political and So- cial Science, and the New Jersey Historical Society.


Mr. Truman married, November 18, 1874, Miss Julie M. Jud- son, and is survived by two children, Mrs. Percy M. Bradshaw of Orange, N. J., and Mrs. Noel T. Wellman of Cleveland, Ohio, and by one grandson, Robert Truman Bradshaw.


The funeral services were held in St. Andrew's Church, South Orange, and the interment was in Rosedale Cemetery, Orange.


Mr. Truman was greatly beloved by his many friends, and his generous hospitality and happy, cordial greeting made glad many hearts. His fairness no one ever dreamed of questioning and his judgment of men and things was far-reaching and sur- prisingly correct.


EMORY MCCLINTOCK.


Emory Mcclintock was born on September 19. 1840, at Car- lisle, Pennsylvania. His father, the Reverend John McClintock, for a time was Professor of Mathematics, Greek, and Latin in Dickinson College, and in Civil War time was in charge of the American Chapel in Paris, in which position he was active in his support of the Federal cause.


After studying at Dickinson College, which he entered at the age of fourteen, Mr. AlcClintock spent about a year at Yale, and in 1857 entered Columbia College, graduating with the Class of 1850. ' Following his graduation, he was Instructor in Mathe- matics in Columbia during the years 1859 and 1860. After studying chemistry in Paris and Göttingen, Mr. McClintock re- turned to this country in 1862 and planned to join the Army of the United States, in which he had been offered a commission as Second Lieutenant of Topographical Engineers. His military


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service, however, was rendered impossible because of illness. Between the years 1862 and 1866, Mr. McClintock was Vice- Consul of the United States at Bradford, England. It was in 1868 when he was appointed actuary of the Asbury Life Insur- ance Company of New York that his life work may be said to have begun, a work in which he rose to great eminence. From 1871 to 1889 he was actuary of the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, of Milwaukee, and in the latter year joined the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York in the same capacity, his actuarial status at this time having become one of the most prominent in the country. In 1906 to his actuarial duties in the Company there was added the responsibility of the Vice- Presidency. Impaired health, however, soon necessitated a limi- tation of his activities, and in 1911 Mr. McClintock was compelled to abandon them for the greater part.


Mr. McClintock is generally regarded as having been one of the most eminent of American mathematicians, and among its actuaries probably the greatest. The interest in genealogical mat- ters which he had was great, and of the Society of Colonial Wars in the State of New Jersey he was an enthusiastic member. From 1900 to 1904 he was its Governor. Mr. McClintock died at Bay Head, New Jersey, on July 10, 1916.


GENERAL WILBUR FISK SADLER, JR.


General Wilbur Fisk Sadler, Jr., was born at Carlisle, Penn- sylvania, on November 4. 1871. Having attended school at Carlisle and at Lawrenceville, he studied at Dickinson College, graduating with the Class of 1890. After a short connection with the lumber business in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, General Sadler engaged in street railway construction in Pennsylvania, continuing the same sort of work after his establishing residence in Trenton in 1898. Here other interests were taken up as well, and he be- came a director of the Broad Street National Bank and later its President. In 1907 he was elected President of the Chamber of Commerce of Trenton.


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In 1908 General Sadler was made a member of the staff of Governor John Franklin Fort and was appointed Adjutant Gen- eral on April 15, 1909. As Adjutant General his work was of conspicuous excellence, and to his credit is the reorganization of the National Guard and the very great increase in its efficiency. In the mobilization and preparation of troops for service on the Mexican border, General Sadler was unsparing of himself and untiring, exhibiting executive quality of the highest order and reflecting the greatest credit both on himself and on his State.


In the recovery of marsh lands in the rear of the State House at Trenton and the creation of Mahlon Stacy Park, General Sad- ler had large part, and to his energy is chiefly due the restoration of the Old Barracks by the State. The work on the Old Bar- racks was very absorbing to General Sadler, and to it he devoted endless interest, his researches covering the whole field of mili- tary buildings in the Colonies, and leading even to the records of the English War Office. He was active, too, in the restoration of the Douglass House and the Old Masonic Temple.


General Sadler was a member of a number of clubs, of the Society of Sons of the Revolution in the State of New Jersey, and of the Society of Colonial Wars in the State of New Jersey, of which he was at one time Treasurer. He died at Carlisle, Penn- sylvania, on November 10. 1916. In announcing the death of General Sadler to the New Jersey National Guard Governor Fielder issued the following order :


The Governor and Commander-in-Chief announces with deep regret the death of Brigadier General Wilbur F. Sadler. Ir. the Adjutant General of New Jersey, at the home of his brother. Lewis T. Sadler, in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, on Friday, November 10, 1916.


General Sadler entered the military service of New Jersey as Major, Pay Department, July 9, 1908, and was detailed upon the Staff of Governor John Franklin Fort. He was commissioned the Adjutant General, with the rank of Brigadier General, April 15, 1909.


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General Sadler brought to the duties of the Adjutant General's Department unusual executive and administrative ability. By tireless attention he familiarized himself with the most minute details of the military organization of the State. He cultivated the acquaintance of the officers connected with the War Depart- ment and regular army for the purpose of obtaining from them information and their experience upon military matters. He en- deavored in every way to advance the true interests of the Na- tional Guard and increase and develop the efficiency of the service. The result of General Sadler's efforts was to raise the National Guard of New Jersey to a standard of efficiency which received the deserved commendation of military authorities.


The National Flag will be displayed at half staff on the State Capitol and all State armories until sunset, November 13, 1916.


HAMILTON WRIGHT MABIE.


Hamilton Wright Mabie, L.H.D., LL.D., of Summit, New Jer- sey, essayist, critic, and orator, Associate Editor of The Outlook, author of "My Study Fire," "Backgrounds of Literature," "Wil- liam Shakespeare. Poet, Dramatist and Man," and other books, became a member of the Society of Colonial Wars in the State of New Jersey in 19of, and served as its Lieutenant Governor from 1909 to 1911. He died at his home on Sunday, December 31, 1916, at the age of seventy.


Mr. Mabie was descended on the paternal side from an officer named Mabille, who was on the staff of Admiral Coligny, and escaped to America through Holland after the massacre of St. Bartholomew. On the maternal side he was of Scotch descent. He graduated from Williams College in 186; and was sabse- quently admitted to the Bar. His tastes, however, being literary. he practiced law but a short time, and for the thirty-seven years previous to his death was an editor and writer of belles-lettres, winning a high and honorable place in American literature. No unworthy thought or undignified expression ever came from his pen. His ideals were the highest, his standards pure, and his


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point of view sane, kindly, and sympathetic. "This human sym- pathy," writes Dr. Lyman Abbott of him, "also gave to his writ- ings on religious themes a unique attractiveness. As it was the life, not the science, of nature which interested him, so it was the life and not the science of the soul of man. Not the anatomy of religion but its pulsating, inspiring life appealed to him. Na- ture interested him but slightly as a machine, greatly as a book. What concerned him was not the relations of natural phenomena to each other, nor greatly their relations to the physical welfare of man ; what fascinated him was their relation to the intellectual and spiritual life of man."


Mr. Mabie received many academic honors. He was a lec- turer on literary themes, of wide experience and popularity, and he was an after-dinner speaker of rare wit, eloquence, and charm. His personal charm and his sincere interest in other people won him many friends, and he was welcome in many and varied social circles.


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INDEX OF ANCESTORS WITH SERVICES AND DESCENDANTS.


(ANCESTORS IN SMALL CAPS.)


All services of Ancestors appearing in this publication have been verified by the genealogist and the aim has been to prove each paper from established evidence.


A. & H. A. Co., abbreviation for Member of Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Boston.


ABBEY, THOMAS, 1656-1728. Conn. In Capt. Appleton's Co., King Philip's War; wounded at the taking of the Indian Fort at Narragansett, December 19, 1675. One of the first settlers of Enfield.


Freeman, Alden.


ABBEY, LIEUT. THOMAS, 1686-1759. Conn. Sergeant and Lieuten- ant 1712-1713, Enfield.


Freeman, Alden.


ABBEY, THOMAS, 1731-18II. Conn. Soldier in French and Indian War, 1758-1761; Corp. Ist Reg. Conn. Troops, 1758; Lieut. in Capt. Seth King's Co., ist Reg. Conn. Troops, April 1, 1761. Freeman, Alden.


ADAMS, LIEUT. HENRY, 1604-1675- 6. Mass. A. & H. A. Co., 1652. Lieut. Medfield Militia. Killed by the Indians at the burning of Medfeld, February 21, 1573-1670. Rockwood, Charles G.


ADAMS, JAMES, -1651. Mass. Member of Marshfield Mili- tary Co .. 1643. Freeman, Alden.


ADAMS, JEREMY, 1604-1683, Hart- ford, Conn. With Capt. Ma- son against the Indian:, :538. Member of Hartford Trained Band up to tos


Adams, Arthur. Adams, Charles Franklin. Addoms, Lewis Paddock.


ADAMS, JESSE, 1739 --. Served as a Private in the French and Indian War from Scars- dale, Westchester Co., N. Y., 1759. Adams, Washington Irving Lin- coln,


ALDEN, DEP .- GOV. JOHN, 1599- 1687. Mass. Seventh and last surviving signer of the May- flower Compact. Member of Capt. Myles Standish's Dux- bury Co., 1643. Assistant 1633-'41-'50-'53-'54-'58-'67 - '86. Dept .- Gov. Member of Coun- cil of War, 1646-1676 Plym- onth.


Baker, Growve T Boyd, Robert Munro, Jr. Freeman, Alden.


ALDEN, JOSEPH, 1627-1697 .. Mass. Son of John Alden. Member of Capt. Misles Standish's Duxbury Co. 16: Freeman, Alien.


ALEXANDER, WILLIAM. 1726-1782. Styled Lord Stirling. A. D. C. on the stal of yor Si .... ley, 1750. Served in the war against the French. Commis- sary. Capt. of Company of Grenadiers, N. Y., 1760. Mem- ber of the King's Council, N. J., 1761.


Irving, Washington, 15.


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ALLEN, JEDEDIAH, 1646-1712. Mem- ber General Assembly, N. J., 1692. Hance, Wm. W. Hudnut, Alexander Malieu.


ALLING, SERGT. JOHN, JR., 1647- 1717. Assistant, 1704-1716. Commissioned Colonel, Com- mon Safety, 1704. Treasurer of Yale College, N. H., 1702- 1717. Member of Council, 1704-1716. Judge of Colonial Court and Court of Probates, 1704-1705.


ALLISON, RICHARD, 1660-1716, Bur- lington Co., N. J. Captain of Militia, 1705. Hudnut, Alexander Malieu.


ALMY, WILLIAM, 1601-1676, Ports- mouth, R. I. Commissioner, 1656-'57- 63. Adams, Washington Irving Lin- coln.


ANDERSON, CAPT. JOHN, 1694-1774. Captain Militia, Maidenhead, Hunterton County, N. J., 1727. Hudnut, Alexander Malieu.


ANTHONY, JOHN, 1607-1675. Ports- mouth, R. I. Corporal of Portsmouth Military Co., 1644. Commissioner from Provi- dence to General Court, str .. Deputy from Portsmouth to General Court, 1666, 1672. Pack, Charles Lathrop.


ARMS, WILLIAM, 16-4-1731. Soldier under Capt. William Turrer


Ip's War. 1670. Mcclintock, Emory.


AVERY, CAPT. JAMES. 1620-1604. Conn. Ens., Lieut .. and Cap :. of New London Train Band. Served throughout King Phil- ip's War. Commanded a Co. of English from New Lon- don, Stonington, and Lime with Pequot Allies. At Great Swamp Fight, 19 Dec., 1675.


Commanded one of the three companies in a series of forays into the Indian countries, issu- ing at intervals from New London, "led by Dennison and Avery." Deputy to General Court, 1658-1680. Commis- sioner of Peace and Judge. Giles, Frank W., Jr.


AVERY, CAPT. JAMES, JR., 1646- 1732. Lieut. of Forces for the King's service under Capt. Joseph Fitch, May, 1690. Capt. of Train Band, May, 1692. Deputy to General Court from New London, 1690-'92; '94, '95, '97, 1702, and from Gro- ton, 1707-1712. Justice, Com- missioner of the Peace and Guardian of the Pequots, 1694 to his death.


Giles, Frank W., Jr.


BACON, GEN. NATHANIEL, 16.44- 1676. Virginia. Member of the Council. Member of the Assembly from Henrico Co. Expedition against the In- dians, 1676. Secured Commis- sion from Berkeley and an Act of Assembly to raise 1000 men, 1676.


Tennille. William A.


BALDWIN. RICHARD 16-22-1645. Conn. Sergi. in Milford Mi- litia, Dutch and English War, 1654-1655. Deputy, New Ha- ven Colony and Colony of Connecticut.


w1233 Bur- 3. Member of Assembly. 1097. Adams, Arthur. Rallinger, Thomas French.


BANKS, LIEUTENANT JOHN. 1684. Connecticut. Deputy to General Court. 19 terms, be- tween 1651 and 1683. Lieu- Tenant. 16;8. Standing Coun- cil. King Philip's War, MoClintock, Emory.


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BARTON, BENJAMIN, 1645-1720.


Warwick, R. I. Lieut. of Militia, Warwick. Assistant, 1674-'75, 1683-'85, 1699-1703. Deputy.


Pack, Charles Lathrop.


BEAMSLEY, WILLIAM, 1632-1658. Boston, Mass. Member of A. & H. A. Co., 1656. Sprague, Rufus William, Jr.


BEEKMAN, LIEUT. WILHELMUS, 1623-1707. Lieut. Burgher Corps, New Amsterdam, 1652- '58, and New Orange, 1673- 1674. Vice-Director on the South River, 1658-1654. Schout at Esopus, 1664. McCracken, Charles D.


McCracken, Frederick Beekman.


BELDEN, DANIEL, 1648-1731. Hat- field and Decrfield, Mass. In King Philip's War. On Com- mittee of Fortification with Col. Partridge. McClintock, Emory.


BELDEN, SERGEANT WILLIAM, 1671- 1760. Sergeant 1703-4, Mass. McClintock, Emory.


BENEDICT, DANIEL, 1655 about. Soldier in King Philip's War, 16:5-6.


Parker, Chas. W.


BENEDICT, LIEUTENANT THOMAS, 1617-1690. Lieut. in Capt. Byron Newton's Foot Co., Jamaica. 1665. Member Co- lonial Assembly a Hemp- stead. 1005. Deputy from Norwalk. Conn., 1670-1675. Parker, Chas. W.


BENSON, CAPT. JOHANNES, 1655- 1715. Lieutenant of Albany troop, 1688. Captain, 1689. Brett, Cornelius.


BERGEN, JORES HANSEN, 1649-1736. Captain of Militia, Brooklyn, Long Island, 1700. Bergen, James J.


BILES, WILLIAM, SR., -1710. Member first Council, Prov. of Penn., 1683, '95, '98, 1700. Member of Assembly from Bucks Co., 1686-1710. Yardley, Farnham.


BISHOP, DEP .- GOV. JAMES,


1691. Conn. Dep .- Gov., 1683- 1691. Secretary New Haven Colony, 1661-1665. Assistant, Conn. Colony, 1668-1683.


BISHOP, JAMES, Member of Mili- tia, N. Y. & N. J. In Wood- bridge Company, 1715. Boyd, Robert Munro, Jr.


BISHOP, JOHN, SR., -- 1684. Member of Assembly, 1667- 1668. Member of Council, 1672-'82. Boyd, Robert Munro, Jr.


BISHOP, CAPT. JOHN, 1648-1722. Member of Assembly, N. J., 1680, 1685. Member of Coun- cil, 1692-1703. Boyd, Robert Munro, Jr.


BLOOMFIELD, EZEKIEL, 1653-1702- 3. N. J. Dep. from Wood- bridge to General Assembly, N. J., 1657. Libbey, William,


BORDEN, RICHARD, 1596-15;1. Portsmouth, R. I. Governor's Asst. 1653-54. Hudnut, Alexander Malieu.


BOULTER, NATHANIEL, 1625-1593. N. H. Private in King Phil- ip's War. Schaufler, William G.


BOWDOIN. JAMES, 1676-1747. Mass. Member of the Council, 1,4+- 1746. Plumer, David B.


BRADBURY, CAPT. THOMAS, 1610- 1693-5. Mass. Ens. of Mili- tary Co. of Salisbury, Mass., 1647-1648. Capt., 1660-1601.


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Dept. to General Court, 1651- 1657. Briggs, Frank O. Briggs, Frankland. Rockwood, Charles G.


BRADFORD, CAPT. WILLIAM, 1721- 1791. Penn. Member of the Philadelphia Associators for General Defense of the City and Province. Lieut. 4th Co., 16.47. Capt., 1756. Darrach, Bradford.


BRADFORD, Gov. WILLIAM, 1589- 1657. Mass. Governor of Plymouth Colony, 1621, until his death, except five years when he declined re-election. McGregor, Graham B. Metcalf, Manton Bradley. Shepard, Benjamin. Tyler, Mason W.


BRADFORD, MAJ. WILLIAM, 1624- 1702. Served in King Philip's War. Commander of the Plymouth Forces, and wound- ed in the Narragansett Fight. Baker, George F.


BRADLEY, CAPTAIN DANIEL, 1704- 1765. Ensign, 1743. Ist Lieut., 1743. Cape Breton Ex- pedition, Captain, 1747. McClintock, Emory.


BRADY, CAPTAIN JOHN, 1733-1778. Capt. Penn. Regiment en- . gaged against Indians, 1766.


BRAINERD, HEZEKIAH, 1680-1727.


Colonial Assemb Conn., 1713. 1714, 1,21, 1722. King's Council of Cont .. , 1723. '4, '5 and 1727. Sims, Clifford S.


BRENTON, GOV. WILLIAM, 1674. R. I. Dep .- Gov. of Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, 1663- 1666. Gov., 1666-ttg. Men- ber of Troop of Horse, TXT. Deen. William M. Strong, Alan H.


BRETT, FRANCIS, 1707-1767. Fish- kill, N. Y. Ensign in Dutchess Co. Militia, 1737; Captain, 1739.


Brett, Cornelius.


BRETT, LIEUT. ROGER, -1720. Lieutenant in Expedition against Canada, 17II. Brett, Cornelius.


BREWSTER, ELDER WILLIAM, 1566- 1644. Mass. 4th Signer of the Mayflower Compact. Member and Chaplain of Capt. Myles Standish's First Military Co. Served against the Indians.


Crocker, Clarence P. Parker, Charles W. Truman, Henry H. Foster, Daniel Requa.


BRIGGS, JOHN, ---- 1697, Kingston, R. I. Clerk of Military Com- pany, Kingstown, 1671. Adams, Washington Irving Lin- coln.


BROWN, JOHN, 1631-1706. R. I. Gov.'s Asst., 1665-1669. Dep. 1663-1664. Founder of Brown University. Greenc, Charles A.


BRUEN. OBADIAH. Gloucester, Mass., and


Conn. Deputy from Glouces- ter, 1644, et seq. Commis- sioner for New London. 1660- 64. Member of Committee to treat with the Indios, 1663. Deputy from New London. 1005. Boyd, Robert Munro. Jr.


BURD, COL. JAMES, 1726-1703. Penn. Capt. 1234


sary, Braddrecks Expedition Major, 3rd Battalion, Augusta Regt., 1756. Lieut .- Col., 2d Battalion, 1757. Col., 1758- 1760, Provincial Forces of Penn.


Grubb, Charles R. Grubb, Edward B.


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BURNHAM, LIEUT. THOMAS, SR., 1623-1694. Mass. Joined Pe- quot Expedition under Endi- cott, 1636. Selectman 1647. Corp., Ipswich Co., 1662.


· Sergt., 1664. Ens., 1665. Army Ens., Essex Regt. King Philip's War. Lieut., 1683. Dep. to General Court, 1683- 1685.


Burnham, Frederick G.


BURR, CAPTAIN JEHU, -1692. Lieutenant, 1673. Conn. Capt. King Philip's Wars. In stand- ing Council for that War, 1675-1676.


McClintock, Emory.


BURR, MAJOR JOHN (called Col.), 1673-1750. Fairfield Co., Conn. Capt., 1690. Commissary, 1693. Major, 1694. Major in Expe- dition to Port Royal, 1710. Judge of Court of Chancery, I733. Palen, Gilbert J.


BURT, HENRY, 1600-1662. Spring- field, Mass. Member of Mil- itary Company at Springfield. Clerk of the Company. Pack, Charles Lathrop.


BUSSING, ARENT ITARMENS, 1718. Aided in the defense of Harlem against the Indians, 1663. Corporal of the Night Watch, 16,6. Brett, Cornelius.


BUTZ. MICHAEL 1730-175 Penn. Member Capt Jacob Arndt's Co. ist Colonial Co. formed in Northampton Co., Penn, Oct., 1703.


CAMPBELL, JOHN, -1689. N. J. One of the earliest Lords Proprietor of East Jersey. Member of the General As- semily ci East Jersey. Den to represent the town of Perth Amboy, Apr. 8, 1686.


Member of the Court of Com- mon Rights. Freeman, Alden. Freeman, Joel F.


CAPEN, CAPT. JOHN, 1612-1692. Mass. A. & H. A. Co., 1646. Deputy from Dorchester, Mass., 1671, 1673, 1678. Lieut., 1674. Capt., 1683, 4th Sergt. A. & H. A. Co., 1650. Schauffler, William G.


CARD, JOHN, --- 1705. R. I. Gov.'s Asst., 1665-1666. Deen, William M.


CARHART, THOMAS. Served in the Expedition to Canada, 17.46. Adams, Washington Irving Lin- coln.


CARTER, CAPT. JOHN, 1616-1692. Woburn, Mass. Ensign, 1651. Lieutenant, 1664. Captain in King Philip's War. Griffin, Henry A.


CASTLE, CAPTAIN SAMUEL, - 1781. Captain, 1754. Conn. McClintock, Emory.


CHAMBRE IN, JOSEPH. 1651-1721. In King Philip's War, i66. Pack, Charles Lathrop.


CHAMBERLIN, NATHANIEL, 1689- 170. Northfield. Mass. Served against the Indians at Fort Dummer, 1725. Pack, Charles Lall


CHAMPEMLIN, RICHARD. -1673. Roxbury and Sudbury, Mass. Member of Roxbury Military Co., 1553. Pack, Charles Lathrop.


CHAMBERLIN, RICHARD, 1714-1784. Newbury. N. H. Served in the French and Indian Wars, 1747, 1748, 1758. Pack, Charles Lathrop.


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CHANDLER, MAJ. JOB. - 1659. Md. Maj. Maryland and Pro- vincial Forces, 1651-56. Mem- ber of King's Council. Re- ceiver-General, Justice and Commissioner of Provincial Court, 1651 ; reappointed 1656. Taken prisoner at the battle of Providence near Annapolis, between Puritans and Lord Baltimore's Adherents, and with all other Councilors, soldiers and officers of Lord Baltimore was condemned to die, Mar. 26, 1655. Chandler, Walter.




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