USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume III > Part 71
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November 13, 1861, David Augustus Van- der Veer married Georgianna, born August 28, 1842, daughter of George and Ann (Ely) Hunt. Children: I. Louise Hunt. 2. Mari- anna Hunt, born October 24, 1870; married Edward Taylor, of Freehold. 3. Ella Hunt, born February 21, 1875; married, April 2, 1903, Bowen Bancroft Smith, of New York City ; they have one child, Bowen Hunt Ban- croft, born June 19, 1904.
(II) Cornelius, son of VAN DERVEER Cornelis Janse (q. v.) and Tryntje Gillis (de Mandeville) Van Derveer, was baptized No- vember 16, 1679. He was recorded on the assessment roll of Flatbush in 1683, and on the census enumeration of 1698. In 1731 he was sheriff of Kings county, Long Island. His will is dated June 7, 1775, and proved April 8, 1782. He married (probably) Jannetje, daughter of Gerret Hansen and Jannetje (Remsen) Van Nostrand. Children: John, dead in 1782: Katrina, born May 30, 1722, married Jacobus Lefferts; Cornelius, referred to below : Petrus, born June 5, 1735.
(III) Cornelius, son of Cornelis and Jan- netje (van Nostrand) Van Derveer, was born in December 5, 1731. He married Lea, daugh- ter of Jan Roelofs and Annetje (Emmans) Ver Kerk, who was baptized in New Utrecht, February 1, 1741. Among their children were : John C., father of late John Van Derveer, of Flatbush : George F., referred to below.
(IV) George F., son of Cornelius and Lea (Ver Kerk) Van Derveer, was born in Flat- bush, Long Island, in 1779, and died in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in 1876. He was a farmer. Children : Cornelius ; Ferdinand ; Henrietta, married Richard R. Van Dyke, of New Brunswick ; George F., referred to below.
(V) George F., son of George F. Van Der- veer, was born in New Brunswick, New Jer- sey, in 1832. After receiving a common school education he began working on his father's
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farm, which he afterwards inherited. In 1879 he removed to Dayton, Middlesex county, and later to Englishtown, Monmouth county, where he remained until his death. In politics he was a Republican. He married Mary T., born in Dayton, in 1835, daughter of Garret and Elizabeth Anderson. September 18, 1864. he enlisted in the Union army, and the follow- ing September 27 was mustered in Company G, Thirty-eighth Regiment New Jersey Volun- teers, and was mustered out June 30, 1865. Children of George F. and Mary T. (Annis) Van Derveer: I. George F. (3), deceased. 2. William H., in cigar and tobacco business in Freehold ; married Mary Elliot. 3. Richard R., a farmer at Jamesburg ; married Caroline Lane; one child, George F. 4. Matilda E., married and deceased, leaving one child, Clarence - 5. Edgar I., referred to below.
(VI) Edgar I., son of George F. and Mary T. (Annis) Van Derveer, was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey, December 7, 1869, and is now living in Freehold. He received his early education in the school at Dayton, where he went with his parents when he was ten years of age. Six years later he entered the employ of Luther V. Dey, of Englishtown, a dealer in general merchandise, for whom he worked as clerk for seven years, and in 1892 was admitted as a partner in the business, which was conducted under the firm name of E. I. Van Derveer & Company. This partner- ship was dissolved three years later, and Mr. Van Derveer then came to Freehold, where he went to work for Burtis & Zimmerman, the well known wholesale and retail dealers in bicycles, musical instruments, etc. Here he remained four years longer, and then he and his brother, William H. Van Derveer, started the wholesale and retail tobacco business at Freehold, which they have carried on ever since under the firm name of Van Derveer Brothers. At the time that this firm was formed, Mr. Edgar I. Van Derveer became identified with the Prudential Insurance Com- pany as its local and general agent, a connec- tion which he still continues to have. Mr. Van Derveer is a Republican, and in 1901 was elected coroner of Monmouth county; after serving in this capacity for three years he was in 1904 elected a member of the New Jersey assembly, a position to which he was re-elected in 1905. While in the assembly Mr. Van Der- veer proved himself a most valuable and prom- inent statesman, serving with distinguished ability as the chairman of the committee on
agricultural colleges and a number of other important committees. In 1906 he was made collector for the township of Freehold, and was appointed treasurer and custodian of the school funds. In November, 1908, he was appointed chief clerk in the sheriff's office, under Sheriff C. E. F. Hetrick. All these posi- tions he resigned June 5, 1909. In 1907, although strongly urged by everyone, he declined to accept the nomination as candidate for surrogate of Monmouth county, which was offered to him. May 7, 1909, President Taft appointed him postmaster of Freehold to succeed Mr. James Wesley Danser, who died April 10, 1909. Mr. Van Derveer is an enthus- iastic and a firm believer in the benefits of fraternal organizations, and is a prominent and influential member of a number of frater- nities, among which should be mentioned Columbia Lodge, No. 65, Knights of Pythias, of Englishtown; the Knights of the Golden Eagle, of Freehold, and the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, No. 742, of Long Branch. Mr. Van Derveer is also a member of the Freehold Driving Club, of the Merchants' Association of Freehold, and Hulse Hose Company, of which he is foreman. He is an enthusiastic and an expert sportsman, and for a long time had been a member of the Freehold Gun Club, in connection with which he won and still holds the individual state champion- ship as a sharpshooter. He is chairman of the Republican executive committee of Freehold, and a member of the Republican executive committee of Monmouth county. For many vears he has been a regular attendant of the Dutch Reformed Church, and in recent years he has become a vocal musician of considerable note.
In February, 1893, Mr. Van Derveer mar- ried Mary E., daughter of Abijah and Amanda ( Davidson ) Perrine, of Englishtown, the descendant of a family as old and as hon- orable in New Jersey annals as is that of Mr. Van Derveer. Children, both born in Free- hold: Mildred B., March 6, 1897 ; and Alvah, January 2, 1901.
The surname Bacheller, or BACHELLER Bachelor, Bachelder, Bach- ilor and Batcheller, is de- rived unquestionably from the English word Bachelor, meaning an unmarried man, or col- lege graduate. The spelling even at the pres- ent time varies greatly in different branches of the same family bearing this surname. Be- fore 1600 the family was scattered through
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the English counties of Kent, Surrey, Sussex, Wilts, Hants, Bucks, Middlesex, Norfolk and Suffolk, all in the southeastern part of the kingdom. Very few are found north of Lon- don. The earliest mention of the name is found in Surrey, and that country was prob- ably the home of the most important branch of the family at the time surnames came into use. It is likely that many unrelated Bachelor families adopted this surname in the eleventh and twelfth centuries, however.
(I) Joshua Batcheller, of Canterbury, came to this country with his wife and children be- tween 1630 and 1635, and about the same time as his brothers Joseph, Henry and John, and settled in Ipswich, Massachusetts Bay Colony. The name of his wife is unknown, and the names of but three of his children have come down to us: John, referred to below; Eliza- beth; and Hannah, married Daniel Warner, of Ipswich, Massachusetts.
(II) Sergeant John, son of Joshua Batch- eller, was born in England, and died in Read- ing, Massachusetts Bay Colony, March 3, 1676. He was one of the proprietors of Watertown in 1636, when he was granted six lots there, and was selectman. May 13, 1635, he was admitted freeman, but he soon removed to Dedham, where he and his wife were admitted to the church May 30, 1641. One of his Watertown lots of thirty-six acres he sold to Jeremiah Norcross before 1642. His will is dated July 2, 1670. He married Rebecca - -, who died March 9, 1662, in Reading, where her husband was selectman, 1651-54-58-1661-64; and town clerk. 1693-99. Children : 1. John, referred to below. 2. Jonathan, born October 14, 1643, baptized December 24, 1643; died December 4, 1653. 3. David, twin with Jonathan, baptized in Ded- ham, December 14, 1643; married there, De- cember 30, 1679, Hannah Plummer, who bore him five children. He was a soldier in King Philip's war, in the company of Captain Thomas Wheeler, and is said participated in the relief of Brookfield, in the Great Fort fight under Captain Nathaniel Davenport. 4. Mary, born 1635, died 1729; married, November 22, 1660, Nathaniel, son of Deacon William and Joanna Cowdrey. 5. Samuel, baptized Janu- ary II, 1639, died March 25, 1662.
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(III) John (2), son of Sergeant John (I) and Rebecca Batchelder, was born in Reading, Massachusetts, and died there September 17, 1705. In 1666 he drew land in the division of the Great Swamp, and his minister's rate was £1. 6. 4. In 1686 he was taxed to assist in paying for land bought from the Indians, and
in 1688 he was the fourth largest subscriber to the fund for building the new meetinghouse. From 1676 to 1702 he was selectman of Read- ing, and town clerk 1694-97. In 1675 he served in King Philip's war, in the company of Lieutenant William Hasey, in the Third com- pany troop, the captain being Edward Hutchin- son and the cornet Jonathan Poole. His heirs were granted land in the division of Narragan- sett, No. 2, now Westminster, Massachusetts. He married (first) January 2, 1662, Sarah , died December 21, 1685. Children : I. Rebecca, born October 30, 1663; married David, son of Thomas and Susanna Harts- horne ; a soldier in the French and Indian wars. 2. John, born February 23, 1666, died Novem- ber 2, 1732; married, November 10, 1696, Sarah Poore; eight children. 3. Henry, born July 29, 1668, died November II, 1688. 4. Sarah, born July 9, 1670, died in 1751 ; mar-
ried, 1691, John Pratt ; six children. 5. Sam- uel, born January 23, 1671, referred to below. 6. Nathaniel, born March 17, 1675, died May 18, 1763 ; was selectman 1734; married, August 26, 1703, Hannah Ellsley ; five children. John Batchelder married (second) May 10, 1687, Hannah - , who died October 5, 1693. Children : 7. Mary, born November 19, 1688; married, November 27, 1707, John (or Joseph) Damon ; two children of record, and probably others. 8. Elizabeth, born August 18, 1691 ; married, April 29, 1713, Stephen Parker. John Batchelder married (third) June 12, 1694, Hannah - .- , who died August 8, 1722 ; no children.
(IV) Samuel, fifth child of John (2) Batch- elder by his first wife, Sarah, was born in Reading, Massachusetts, January 23, 1671, and died June 22, 1704, when his will was dated. John Poole, of Lynn, was appointed guardian of his "nine year old" daughter Mary, and his "seven year old" son Henry, and Jonathan Poole, of Reading. was appointed guardian of his "ten year old" son William. Samuel Batch- elder married (first) in Reading, June 25, 1694, Mary -, who died April 23, 1701. Children : 1. Samuel, born May 31, 1695, died unmarried, 1722. 2. William, born May 22, 1697. 3. Mary, born November 12, 1698. 4. Henry, born July 5, 1700; referred to below. February 20, 1702, Samuel Batchelder married (second) in Charlestown, Mrs. Elizabeth Sweetser, born February 28, 1671, daughter of Thomas and Mary (Frothingham) White, and widow of Joseph Sweetser. She married (third) May 8, 1706, John Pearson, of Read- ing and Lynnfield. She bore Samuel Batch-
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elder one child : Elizabeth, born February 21, 1703, probably wife of Samuel Boutel.
(V) Henry Bacheller, youngest child of Samuel Batchelder, by his first wife, Mary, was born in Reading, Massachusetts, July 5, 1700, and died in January, 1767. He lived in Lynn. His will was written November 19, 1766, and proved March 2, 1767, while the inventory of his estate was made April 7, 1767, and the real estate was divided among his heirs June 6, 1769. He was the first to write his name Bacheller. He married (first) No- vember 24, 1723, Hannah Stocker. Children : I. Samuel, referred to below. 2. Lydia, born January 16, 1727. 3. Hannah, born January I, 1728. 4. Henry, born in Lynn, January 31, 1723, died January 12, 1826; married, April 4, 1758, Jerusha Breed; ten children. 5. Sarah, born October 1, 1734. 6. Mary, born April 2, 1738, died August 6, 1757. 7. Theophilus, born February, 1743, died young. Henry Bacheller married (second) in Lynn, Massa- chusetts, August 18, 1747, Sarah Johnson. Children : 8. Louis or Louie, July 17, 1848. 9. Rupee, August 7, 1753 ; served in the Rhode Island state troops of the Continental army, and March 4, 1831, was granted a pension of $169.98. He married (first ) at Newport, Rhode Island, Sarah Parsons, who bore him eleven chil- dren, and (second) in 1803, Mrs. Tryphena Cam- eron, of Vergennes, Vermont, who bore him no children. 10. Theophilus, called Corporal, born June II, 1751, died October 21, 1833; mar- ried (first) Mehitable Breed, who died in 1804; (second) a woman who died in 1807; and (third) Zeviah -, who died in 1821. II. Anna, born November 7, 1755. 12. Jonathan, born August 20, 1758.
(VI) Samuel (2), eldest child of Henry and Hannah (Stocker) Bacheller, was born in Lynn, Massachusetts, October II, 1725, and died there in September, 1759. He lived in Lynn, and administration on his estate was granted there September 27, 1759, the in- ventory being filed December 17 following, and the account rendered August 2, 1768. January 3, 1769, the general state court of Essex coun- ty appointed guardians for his two children. On March 6, 1755, Samuel Bacheller married, in Lynn, Hannah Breed. Children: I. James, born February 26, 1756, died intestate, August 31, 1837 ; was a shoe manufacturer, and lived at Lynn ; married, August 26, 1784, Elizabeth Perkins, born 1761, died December 13, 1845 ; seven children. 2. Samuel Jr., referred to below.
(VII) Samuel (3), youngest child of Sam- uel (2) and Hannah (Breed) Bacheller, was iii-24
born in Lynn, Massachusetts, November I, 1757, and died March 5, 1831, administration being granted on his estate October 4, 1831, and the inventory being filed April 3, 1832. He was a cordwainer and lived at Lynn. He married, in Lynn, September 23, 1779, Anna Derby, born August 27, 1761, died at Amherst, New Hampshire, February 22, 1843. Chil- dren : I. John Derby, referred to below. 2. James, born March 25, 1782, died 1834. 3. Hannah, born February 24, 1784, died March 25, 1809. 4. Joshua, born February II, 1790, died December 28, 1840. 5. Nancy, born Au- gust 28, 1792. 6. Samuel, born April 19, 1795. 7. Jessie Lee, born September 2, 1797, died May 10, 1820. 8. Joseph, March 31, 1801, died September 10, 1824. 9. Lydia, born Oc- tober 12, 1804, died October 20, 1832.
(VIII) John Derby,. eldest child of Samuel and Anna (Derby) Bacheller, was born in Lynn, Massachusetts, December 25, 1787, and died in Salem in 1842. He was a shoemaker, and lived at Lynn. In 1810 he married (first) Rachel Newhall, who died in January, 1828. Children : 1. Joseph Newhall, referred to below. 2. Rachel Newhall, born December 2, 1818, died November 30, 1896 ; married, March 14, 1844, John Breen, born in Nova Scotia, February 6, 1818, died July 26, 1896; lived at Salem, Massachusetts; two children. 3. Ben- jamin Pickering, born November 13, 1820, at Salem, Massachusetts ; cordwainer, living at Union, Maine; married, December 1, 1844, Ann Stetson, born July 17, 1824. John Derby Bacheller married (second) Ann Haseltine. Children : 4. John Derby Jr., born September 29, 1832 ; is a musician and shoemaker, living in Salem, Massachusetts; married, August 2, 1857, Lydia A. Chandler, born October 3, 1838; four children. 5. Margaret, married Hosea Burrell, and lives in Lynn. 6. Cath- erine, married William Mansfield; lives in Lynn. 7. Miriam, now dead; married Jere- miah Paul.
(IX) Joseph Newhall, eldest child of John Derby and Rachel (Newhall) Bacheller, was born in Lynn, Massachusetts, October 30, 1811, and died February 19, 1894. He was a shoe- maker by trade and a farmer by occupation. He came to Newark in early life and lived there and in South Orange and Vailsbury, but later lived at New Hampton, Orange county, New York. He married, in Newark, New Jersey, in January, 1840, Phoebe Stone Collins, born September 16, 1822, died February 1, 1894. Children: I. Joseph, born in 1841, died un- married, August 22, 1868. 2. John Collins,
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referred to below. 3. Benjamin, born March 17, 1847, in South Orange, New Jersey, died in New Hampton, New York; married, Au- gust 18, 1880, Mary Ella Wood, born Novem- ber 4, 1860; five children. 4. Marian, born in December, 1853; married Robert Moreland ; lives in Newark, New Jersey. 5. Charles, born October 4, 1855; is a farmer living in New Hampton, Orange county, New York; mar- ried (first) June 4, 1879, Louisa Daum, born November 5, 1856, died August 22, 1886; (second) Mary Aschenbach, born November 5, 1861 ; four children. 6. Phoebe, born June 2, 1863, died in November, 1873.
(X) John Collins, second child and son of Joseph Newhall and Phoebe Stone (Collins) Bacheller, was born in Newark, New Jersey, November 4, 1845, and is now living in that city. He was a manufacturer and lived in Newark, being the first of the family to make New Jersey his permanent home. October 18, 1866, he married Harriet Amelia, daughter of Henry L. Parcells, and a niece of George D. G. Moore, born February 4, 1840. Children : Joseph Henry, referred to below ; Harriet Es- telle, married, September 23, 1891, Albert H. Kent, lived in Elizabeth, New Jersey. (See l'arcells ).
(XI) Joseph Henry, only son of John Col- lins and Harriet Amelia ( Parcells) Bacheller, was born February 1, 1869, in Newark, New Jersey. He received his education in the public schools of that city, including the high school. After leaving school at the age of sixteen in 1885, he obtained a clerical position with the New York Life Insurance Company, with which he remained until 1890. In the latter year he became associated with Mr. Samuel S. Dennis, and later was placed in charge of large private interests connected with the estate of A. L. Dennis, with which he is still connected. He is also president of the Ironbound Trust Company, and a director of the Newark Fire Insurance Company. Mr. Bacheller entered upon what has proved to be a most useful and honorable public career in 1897, in which year he was elected alderman from the Ninth Ward, and was re-elected in 1899, and in 1901. In the spring of 1899 he was chosen leader of the Republican minority in the common council, succeeding Winton C. Garrison. In the spring of 1900 the Republicans gained ascendancy, and he was again selected as leader, and con- tinued to act in that capacity and also as chair- man of the finance committee until January, 1903, when he was elected president of the. council. He served as a member of assembly
in 1900-01-02, and during the last two years was leader of the Essex county delegation in that body. He served upon various important assembly committees, and always bore a prom- inent and efficient part in the legislative af- fairs. In the fall of 1902, after a sharp cam- paign, he was elected to the state senate, repre- senting Essex county, by a plurality of 10,269 votes over his Democratic opponent, Samuel Kalisch. During his three year senatorial term he served on several committees, and as chairman of the committee on municipal cor- porations rendered efficient service in all mat- ters affecting the industrial and municipal interests of the city of Newark. On January 23, 1904, Mayor Henry M. Doremus appoint- ed Mr. Bacheller to membership in the first Shade Tree Commission which had recently been created, of which he was made the first president, and which position he resigned De- cember 31, 1904, in order to accept the posi- tion of comptroller. On January 4 following, Mayor Doremus nominated him for city comp- troller, and he was immediately confirmed by the common council, and in which position he is now serving. He is also president of the Municipal Insurance Fund Commission, and a member of the New Jersey State Water Sup- ply Commission. Mr. Bacheller is a Repub- lican in politics ; president of the board of trus- tees of the Fairmount Baptist Church ; a mem- ber of St. John's Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, and Union Chapter, Royal Arch Masons ; of the Essex Club, the Garfield Club, and the Republican Club of New York.
Mr. Bacheller married, in Newark, April 30, 1895, Edith Adele, daughter of Israel Pierson and Mary Ella (Van Ness) Smith, of that city, whose two children were Edith Adele (re- ferred to above), born in Newark, March IO, 1876, and Alphena Pierson, born July 5, 1877. The children of Joseph Henry and Edith Adele (Smith) Bacheller are: Muriel, born March 27, 1896; Adele, August 25, 1897; Joseph Henry Jr., February 25, 1905; John Smith, October 2, 1907.
(The Parcells Line).
The name Parcell has passed through many modifications. Its original spelling in this coun- try was Pearsall, and the founder of the family. Henry Pearsall, was one of the early emigrants to Hempstead, Long Island, where he died July 24, 1667, leaving five children-Nathaniel, Thomas, Daniel, William, and probably Nico- las, although the name of the fourth child has not been absolutely ascertained.
Nacheller
t
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(II) William Parcell, as he spells his name in his will, son of Henry Pearsall, of Hemp- stead, died in Newtown, Long Island, between December 22, 1724, and October 6, 1728, leav- ing, according to his will, seven children- Nicholas, Walter, Thomas, Abraham, Jacob, Abigail, Catherine. To Nicholas, eldest son, he left his Newtown plantation; to his son Walter his plantation "in New Jersey." This plantation was in Bergen county, and Walter's descendants, as well as those of his brother Abraham, who moved thither, became very numerous in that part of the county, affiliating themselves with the Dutch settlers, and their name becoming changed in its spelling to Par- cel, Persel, and even Purcels. To his sons Thomas and Abraham, William Parcell left his "Plantation in Elizabethtown, New Jersey." Abraham, as we have seen, followed his brother Walter to Bergen county, and Thomas's de -- scendants, it would appear, formed the Eliza- bethtown branch of the family.
(III) Thomas Persells, son of William Par- cell, removed in early manhood to Staten Island, where he recorded his earmark May 15, 1697. May 22, 1702, he bought from Richard Salter, of Freehold, attorney for William Dockwra, of London, one of the East Jersey proprietors, a tract of land near Elizabethtown, and May 6, 1709, he made a still larger purchase from Thomas Gordon. The name of his wife and the births of his children have been ascertained, but so far as is known he is the only possible person in or near Elizabeth who could have been the father of Stephen Passels, referred to below.
(IV) Stephen Passels, of Elizabethtown, was born about 1726, and died in Elizabeth- town, April 8, 1786, in his sixtieth year. In his will he names his six children and his wife. He married Phebe, daughter of Nathaniel and Mary (Price) Crane, a great-granddaughter of Stephen Crane, of Elizabethtown, through his son Nathaniel, and Damaris (Ward) Crane. Children: 1. Mary, born about 1751, died October 14, 1814; married Charles Tooker. 2. Sarah, married (first) Mulford; (second) William Pierson; (third) William Christie. 3. Ann or Nancy. married Alexander Scott. 4. Abigail, born 1764, died 1821; mar- ried William Stiles. 5. Abner, referred to below. 6. Stephen, born 1774; died March 29, 1796, unmarried.
(V) Abner, eldest son of Stephen and Phebe (Crane) Passels, was born in Elizabethtown. He married (first) Elizabeth , and after her death, March 24, 1799, he married ( sec-
ond) Polly or Mary Lyon, widow of a Mr. Wheeler, of Lyons Farm, who died January 15, 1822, in her fifty-first year. Among his children were: Price, died June 18, 1795, in his third year ; Henry Lyon, referred to below.
(VI) Henry Lyon, son of Abner and Mary (Lyon-Wheeler) Passels, was born at Lyons Farms, in 1809. He was a coach maker, a Universalist, and a Whig. In 1832 he married Nancy Crane, born in Caldwell, 1811, daughter of Samuel and Hannah Maria (Crane) Moore. Her father was born about 1762, and died Feb- ruary 25, 1835, in his seventy-third year. Her mother died May 18, 1844, in her sixty-fourth year.
(VII) Harriet, daughter of Henry Lyon and Nancy Crane ( Moore) Parcells, was born in Newark, New Jersey, February 4, 1840, and married, October 18, 1866, John Collins (q. v. ), second child and son of Joseph Newhall and Phoebe Stone (Collins) Bacheller.
BEUGLESS
Previous to 1860 this name was spelled Bugless. Charles Bugless was born in Dela-
ware county, Pennsylvania. He married Mar- tha Miller, of Delaware county, Pennsylvania, and they had seven children: Charles P. (q. v.), John, James, Elizabeth, Rebecca, Martha, Mary.
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