USA > New York > Genealogical and family history of central New York : a record of the achievements of her people in the making of a commonwealth and the building of a nation, Volume I > Part 36
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(V) Isaac, son of Joseph (2) Hastings, was born in Shrewsbury, April 5, 1751, and died September 25, 1831. He, married, in 1775, Sarah Goddard, of Petersham, Massachusetts. She died November 11, 1804, and he married (second) Sarah Whipple, of Grafton, born October 19, 1773. He settled in Warwick,
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Massachusetts. Children of first wife: 1. Han- nah, born 1776. 2. Joel, August 23, 1778; married Olive Hutchins, of Winchester, New Hampshire ; had five children ; he was father of the late Charles Hastings, of Malone, New York, and grandfather of Herbert Hastings and Dr. C. A. Hastings, of Constable, and of Clara, wife of Dr. H. H. Reynolds, of Malone. 3. Sarah, died May 15, 1827, aged forty-six years. 4. Isaac ( twin ), born March 29, 1783. died 1827. 5. Rebecca (twin ), March 29, 1783 ; married Luther Wheeler, of Grafton; had three children. 6. Submit, married Lincoln Rawson, of Richmond, Massachusetts; had twelve children. 7. Hannah, married Eben- ezer Stearns, of Warwick ; had five children. 8. Lydia. 9. Caleb. 10. Joseph, mentioned below. II. Child, died in infancy. 12. Clarissa. Child of second wife: 13. Daniel, January 22, 1807, died 1888 ; married Experience Leonard, of Warwick: children : Nathan, and Samuel, town clerk of Warwick, 1908.
(\'1) Joseph (3), son of Isaac Hastings, was born December 11. 1793, and married, March 27, 1817, Cynthia Hutchins, of Eden, Vermont, born October 2, 1798. She was granddaughter of James Harwood, who served in the revolution. The latter's great-great- grandson, Dr. W. H. Harwood, of Chasm Falls, New York, has been for forty years engaged in genealogical research. They set- tled in Constable, New York. Children: I. Lydia, born April 13, 1818; died February, 1871 ; married Aaron Stowers, January 29, 1840: no children. 2. Harriet, July 21, 1819, died June 21, 1846; married, November 28, 1839, Alfred Bassett; children : Sylvanus, served in the civil war, Company I, from Malone, Joel J. Scaver, captain, wounded and discharged September, 1865, died December 30, 1882; Asa, also served in the war, in same company, killed in battle, May 3, 1863. 3. Harvey, mentioned below. 4. George D., Feb- ruary 20, 1823: died in Constable, April 1. 1895 : married, May 2, 1847, Mary Blanchard ; five daughters: Alta. married J. N. Aubrey, of Constable ; Hattie, married C. W. Howell, of Constable; Anna, married Albern Aubrey, of Constable; Lillian, married Dr. Warren Brand, of Burke, New York : Georgia, married Asa llarmon, of Constable. 5. Clarissa, May 23. 1825, died February 13, 1905: married George Pearl, of Burke ; one daughter, Mary, married Millard Pike, of Burke. 6. Emery, September 30, 1827, died September 1, 1858;
married, March 22, 1853, Mary Whipple ; chil- dren : Emery, Fanny ; he was a physician and settled in DeKalb, New York. 7. Isaac, May 5, 1829, died in LaFayette, Indiana ; married A. Ann Wicks, of Gasport, New York, An- gust 17. 1853 : one daughter, Clara, who died. 8. Sarah Maria, February 27, 1831 ; married James S. Dudley, of Constable ; children : Har- vey J., of Malone ; George K., of Constable ; Eva B., married Sheridan Beebee, of Con- stable : Clara \'., married LeRoy Buell, of Con- stable. 9. Joseph, March 30, 1833, died in Palermo, Kansas, February 6, 1899; married, in Indiana, Alvira Fisk, of DeKalb; two chil- dren : Frank, and Ida, both of whom were liv- ings in 1908, in New Mexico; he was a physi- cian, and settled in Palermo. 10. Alfred, Oc- tober 13, 1835; married, November 2, 1857, Mary O. Bullock, of Moira, New York; she died February 6, 1900, and he married ( sec- ond) Mrs. Louisa Babcock, of Burke; two children-Fred C., died April 20, 1894, aged thirty-five years ; Cynthia, married A. E. Bee- bee, of McMillan, Wisconsin. Alfred served in the civil war, enlisted August 23, 1864, in Company C, from Malone, Third New York Cavalry, organized at Rochester, New York ; was at the battle of Chapin's Farm, September 29, 30, 1864: afterwards ill for many weeks at Hampton Hospital, Fortress Monroe, Vir- ginia ; discharged under Colonel George W. Lewis, June 10, 1865 ; his regiment served in First Brigade, Kautz's Division of Cavalry, Army of the James. 11. Cynthia, September 2, 1837; married, November 2, 1857, Willis Bullock, of Moira: settled in Wayne town- ship, Doniphan county, Kansas ; children : Dr. Frank, of Forest City, Missouri; Will, of Nodaway, Missouri ; Dr. Eugene, of South St. Joseph, Missouri : Aaron, of South St. Joseph, Missouri : Joseph, of Nodaway ; Ella, married G. A. Ricklefs, of Bendena, Kansas. 12. James M., March 30, 1840: married (first) Margaret Ross, of Lancaster, Canada; she died in 1887, and he married (second) Elsie Brockway, of Bangor. 13. Polly Irene, April 14, 1842, died December 14, 1858. 14. DeWitt C., December 30, 1844 ; married Rebecca Will- meth : children : Clinton ; Ada, married E. G. Winzor, of Doniphan; George; Blaine; the latter two died in childhood; he settled in Wayne, Kansas.
(VII) Ilarvey, son of Joseph Hastings, was born April 26, 1821, and died in Constable, October 25, 1900. He married, December 26,
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1844, Lucy Dudley, of Constable. Child, Sylvia, married R. C. Wilson, of Constable (see Wilson).
James Hillick was a native of
HILLICK the north of Ireland. He came to this country when a young man, about 1820, and located at Ithaea, New York. Among his children was Hugh, men- tioned below.
(II) Hugh, son of James Hillick, was born in 1825, and died in 1865. He resided at Ithaca. He married Maria Phillips, who died in 1871, aged about forty-two years. Chil- dren: 1. Charles, died in 1892; was a book- binder at Ithaca, also served as city clerk of Ithaca. 2. William P., see forward. 3. James. a conductor, employed by the Lehigh Valley railroad, resides at Seneca, New York.
(III) William P., son of Hugh Hillick, was born December 9, 1853. He was educated in the public schools of Ithaca. The first two years of his business life he spent in Ithaca, at the jewelers and opticians trade, and later worked at the same trade in Syracuse. From 1879 to 1892 he worked independently in Ful- ton, New York, then went to Syracuse and remained there until 1892, when he finally re- turned to Fulton, and has been in business in that town ever since. From 1894 to 1902 he was town clerk, was village elerk for six years, city chairman 1902-05. He married Mattie Sheridan, born in Whitby, Canada, daughter of Dennis and Debora (Foster ) Sheridan. Children : William S., mentioned below, Fred- erick, James, Erma, Clara, Blanche, Sarah, Lucy. In politics Mr. Hilliek is a Republican. He is a member of Hiram Lodge, No. 144. Free and Accepted Masons, and of the Benev- olent and Protective Order of Elks.
(IV ) William S., son of William P. Hilliek, was born at Fulton, New York, April 7, 1879. He attended the public schools of his native town and graduated from the Fulton high school. He studied law in the office of Piper & Rice, of Fulton, and was admitted to the bar in November, 1901. Since then he has been in active and successful practice in that town, and has advanced rapidly to a position of prominence at the bar of the county. In 1003-04 he was corporation counsel for the eity of Fulton and had charge of important litigations then pending. In religion Mr. Hil- lick is a Presbyterian. In politics he is a Re-
publican, and is a member of the State and County Bar associations.
William S. Hilliek married, December 28, 1904, Katharine Nodecker, born August 6, 1883, daughter of Peter and Jennie Nodeeker, of Cortland, New York. They have one child : Joseph Dennis, born January 6, 1909.
BRADT Albert Andriese Bradt ( also spell-
ed Bratt ), and his brother, Arent Andriese Bradt, were early set- tlers at Albany among the Dutch pioneers. Arent Bradt located at Schenectady in 1662, and is progenitor of most of the Bradt families of that city and vicinity. Albert located per- manently in Albany. Some of the Albany family were Lutherans, but most of them have belonged to the Dutch church. The Bradts were probably born in Holland, but were ealled "Normans," and occasionally "Swedes," the ancestry probably being French-Norman. Al- bert Andriese Bradt "de Noorman," as he was generally called, owned a farm and mill on the Norman's Kill, which took its name from him. In 1672 his son Barent succeed to the mill property, and in 1677 leunis Slingerland sue- ceeded to the lease of Albert Bardt's farm. Albert died, according to Dr. O'Callaghan, June 7, 1686, "con van de oudste en eerste imcoon- ders der Colonie Rensselaerswyck." He mar- ried ( first ) Annetje Barentse Van Rotmers, who died in 1662. He married again, but his second marriage ended unhappily; the governor gave an order, October 24, 1670, for the separation of Albert A. Bradt and Geertruy Vosburgh, "because of strife and difference that hath arisen between them." Children of first wife : Barent of Albany ; Eva, married Antony' de Hooges, and (second) Roelff Swartwout, of Esopus; Storm, alias Storm Albertse Vanderzee; Gissetie, married Jan Van Eechelen ; Andries, mentioned below ; Jan, of Catskill, in 1720; Dirck, of Albany.
( II) Andries Albertse, son of Albert An- driese Bradt, was called "de Sweed" and "de Noorman." In 1683 he owned sawmills on the Wynantskie river. In 1730 he owned a lot of land on the east side of Pearl street, Albany, between Beaver and Hudson streets. He married Cornelia Tennise Vervey (Van Wie or Vernoy. otherwise spelled). He mar- ried ( second ) Wyntie Rosa, who was buried December 24, 1742. ( Bans published Septem- ber 18, 1708). Children, born at Albany, with
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dates of baptism : Annetje, December 17, 1694; Maritje, August 1, 1697; Effie, January 7, 1700; Teunis, January 27, 1703 ; Barent, April 7, 1706. Children of second wife: Maria, Sep- tember 1, 1709; Hillege, June 30, 1718; Mar- guerita, April 3, 1720; Albert, mentioned below; Geertruy, May 3, 1724; Catharina, January 2, 1725.
(III) Albert, son of Andries Albertse Bradt, was born at Albany, in 1722, baptized Febru- ary 28, 1722. He married there, November 24, 1743, Anna Carel. Children, born at Al- bany (baptismal dates) : Andries, at Sche- nectady, October 7, 1744; Catharina, April 24, 1748; Wyntie, March 31, 1751; Catarina, No- vember 11, 1753; Jan and Hendricks, twins, June 12, 1757.
(IV) Hendrick, or Henry, son of Albert Bradt, was born in Albany, and baptized June 12, 1757. He was a soldier in the revolution in the Albany county regiment of Colonel Philip P. Schuyler, and his name appears on the list of Albany county soldiers entitled to land bounty. He married Maritje Arnold.
(V) Albert, son of Henry Bradt, was born at Albany, June 15, 1779. He owned a men's furnishing store in Albany and was a deputy sheriff of the county.
(VI) Hiram, son of Albert Bradt, was born in Albany, and died at North Hannibal, Febru- ary, 1904, at the advanced age of ninety-three years. He was educated in the public schools, and learned the trade of tailor, He worked at his trade in Albany until he removed to Ira, where he continued the business until he came to North Hannibal in 1863, when he engaged in farming. He was justice of the peace in the towns of Ira and Hannibal, New York, for many years, and collector of taxes of the town of Hannibal. In religion he was a Pres- byterian. He married Mary Ann Van Wie. Children : Albert; William J .: Edgar H .; Emily, married Fred Stark; Alfred P., men- tioned below.
(VII) Alfred P., son of Hiram Bradt, was born in the town of Ira, New York, May 23, 1851, and was educated in the public schools of Hannibal. He was for a time associated with his father in market gardening and farming, but was early in life attracted by the news- paper business, and as a boy corresponded for several newspapers in this section. At the age of twenty-two he bought the newspaper-the Hannibal Reveille-of his brother Albert, in Hannibal, and conducted it for two years. In
1881 he sold this business and came to Oswego Falls, now Fulton, New York, and established The Observer, a weekly newspaper, which he has conducted to the present time with flatter- ing success. For the past eight years it has been vigorous in support of temperance and pro- hibition policies, and is the official organ of the Prohibition party in Oswego county. Mr. Bradt not only gives to the Prohibition party the support of his newspaper but contributes freely to the county, state and national com- mittees, and in every way in his power furthers the cause of temperance and total abstinence, and all other movements for moral and polit- ical reform. He has been nominated twice by his party for assemblyman. He was the first publisher in the county to install the Mergen- thaler linotype machine in his printing office. and his paper is on the list of Select County Weeklies of the State of New York. He has built up a flourishing printing business and the circulation of the newspaper has shown a healthy growth. The edition is now eighteen hundred copies. Mr. Bradt is a member of Neatawanta Lodge, No. 245, of Odd Fellows. and of the Chamber of Commerce, of which he has been a director and vice-president. He married, in 1872, Phœbe A. Cox, born in Granby, New York, daughter of Martin Cox, of North Hannibal, New York. They have no children.
Mrs. Bradt has been of material assistance to her husband in the establishment and con- duct of The Observer, in its earlier develop- ment, being a capable and efficient writer, con- tributing much toward placing the paper in the position it occupies in the journalistic world. She is an active member of Kayendatsyana Chapter, No. 77, Daughters of the American Revolution, having filled the office of secretary and is the press reporter of the chapter. She gains admission to the Daughters of the Amer- ican Revolution through her paternal great- grandfather, William Cox. Her grandfather. John Cox, served in the war of 1812, while her father, Martin M. Cox, served in the civil war.
MORSE Robert Morse, immigrant ances- tor, was born in England and came to Massachusetts. He lived at Boston, Newbury and Rowley, in that col- ony, and finally settled in Woodbridge or Eliz- abethtown, New Jersey. He married (first) Elizabeth He married (second), at Boston, October 30, 1654, Ann Lewis. The
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name is spelled both Morse and Moss and in other ways. Children : Abraham : James, born 1644: Elizabeth, September 25, 1655; Robert, mentioned below; Mary, February 25, 1657- 58; Daughter, December 16, 1660; Lydia, July 13, 1662; Sarah, April 28, 1665; Peter, of Elizabethtown.
(II) Robert (2), son of Robert (I) Morse, was born February 1, 1656-57. He resided at Elizabethtown, New Jersey. Children : Rob- ert, Amos, Peter, Joseph, Joshua and Peter.
(III) Joseph, son of Robert (2) Morse, lived near Bridgeton, New Jersey. Children : Joseph, born May 31, 1709, died August 25, 1779: Amos, born 1712, lived in Rahway ; David, died young.
(V) David Morse or Moss, believed to be a great-grandson of Robert (II). The history of Cuyler, New York, states that he came from New Jersey and settled on Lot 87, now in part covered by the village of Cuyler. He was a soldier in the revolution and died at Cuyler in 1844, aged eighty-three years. According to the census of 1790 a David Morse was living at Warwick, Orange county, New York, and had in his family two sons under sixteen and four females (see "History of Cortland Coun- ty" and census of 1790). David Morse settled in Cuyler in 1792. He received a grant of six hundred acres of land from the govern- ment for his service in the war. Cuyler was then a part of Fabius in Montgomery county, afterward part of Solon, Onondaga county and later Truxton, Cortland county, and finally Cuyler, Cortland county. When he came the place was still a wilderness and without roads. He came in a canoe up the river and was one of the first settlers. He built a log cabin on the present site of Eugene Morse's barn and the family has in its possession the original deed dated 1790 and signed by Governor Clin- ton. Children, born in New Jersey: Philip, John, Deborah, Benjamin and Susan. Born in New York state : William, mentioned below ; David, Polly. Joseph.
(VI) William, son of David Morse, was born in what is now Cuyler, Cortland county, New York, in 1793-94, died in Illinois, in 1854. He was a farmer in his younger days on the homestead, and his later years were spent in Illinois. He married Betsey Hills who is de- scended from an old Connecticut family. Chil- dren, born in Cuyler : Adeline, married Levi Tongue; William Addison, mentioned below ;
Warren, resides in Cuyler; Betsey, married William Gage and lives in Iowa. Children by a second wife, born in Illinois : Alcan, Mari- ette, Eldorette, Ruth, Arthur, all living in the west.
(VII) William Addison, son of William Morse, was born in Cuyler, September 2, 1827, died April 22, 1910. He was educated in the public schools and followed farming on the homestead cleared by his grandfather. He took a keen interest in the affairs of his native town and held the office of assessor and other places of trust and honor. He married, De- cember 31, 1850, Maria Hamilton, born in Otsego county, New York, in 1828, died at Cuyler in 1904. daughter of Thomas Hamilton. Children, born in Cuyler : Eugene, mentioned below ; Elba, born September 5, 1853 ; married John McAllister, of Cortland ; William, died in Illinois ; Ida, born June 15, 1857, married S. F. Brown, of Cortland.
(VIII) Eugene, son of William Addison Morse, was born in Cuyler, New York, Janu- ary 23, 1852, on the homestead. He received his early education in the public schools of his native town and at DeRuyter Academy. He was a clerk in the railway mail service in 1888-89 and from 1890 to 1892 was engaged in the grocery business. Since then he has con- ducted the homestead on which his great- grandfather settled. He has two hundred acres of land in the village of Cuyler and has a dairy of forty cows. On the spot where his great-grandfather erected the first log house in 1792, he has recently built a large new barn. In many ways his farm is a model, scientifically conducted and highly productive. Mr. Morse is town clerk of Cuyler and has held various other offices of trust and responsibility in the town. He is a director of the Patrons Fire Relief Association and a member of DeRuyter Lodge, No. 692, Free and Accepted Masons, of DeRuyter; of Cuyler Grange, No. 449, Patrons of Husbandry : of DeRuyter Lodge. Independent Order of Odd Fellows. In relig- ion he is a Methodist and he is a trustee of the Cuyler Methodist Episcopal Church. In poli- tics he is a Republican.
He married, December 17, 1878, Adella Thompson, of McGraw, New York, daughter of James C. and Mariette (Corwin) Thomp- son, granddaughter of Luther Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Morse have no children, but have adopted a son, William A., born in 1907.
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William Shattuck, the im- SHATTUCK migrant ancestor, was born in England, in 1622, and died in Watertown, Massachusetts, where he was an early settler, August 14, 1672, at the age of fifty. He was a proprietor of Water- town in 1642, and had then a homestall of one acre and a small lot of upland. He bought of Joseph Clough, tailor, and Susan, his wife, his house and garden, also thirty acres of up- land, bounded on the east by William Paine and E. Goffe, north by Joseph Morse, west and south by highway. He bought besides twenty- five acres of upland, three acres of swamp land, and one-third part of twelve acres of meadow. He was a weaver as well as a plant- er, and gave evidence of being man of prop- erty and good social position. His grave in the Watertown cemetery was marked in 1853 by the genealogist, Lemuel Shattuck, also the grave of his son John. William Shattuck's will, dated August 3. 1672, mentioned wife Susanna, sons John, Philip, William, Benja- min and Samuel, son-in-law Samuel Church. The inventory included his house and land, farm at Stoney Brook, and four acres of pond meadow, altogether valued at £204. He died August 14, 1672. He married, 1642, Susanna who married (second ), November 18. 1673, Richard Norcross. She died December II, 1686. Children: Susanna, born 1643; Mary, August 25, 1645, married Jonathan Brown; John, mentioned below; Philip, born 1648; Joanna, born about 1650, died April 4, 1673, unmarried ; William, 1653; Rebecca, 1655: Abigail, 1657; Benjamin, February 28, 1666.
(II) John, son of William Shattuck, was born in Watertown, Massachusetts, February 11, 1647. He owned land in Groton, but it is not known that he ever lived there. He was a carpenter by trade, and lived in the middle district of Watertown, now the center village of Watertown. In 1669 he ran the mill on Charles river, located near where the road from Watertown to Newton Centre now crosses the river. He gave his life for his country in King Philip's war. He was a ser- geant in Captain Richard Beers' company of Watertown. They marched to the relief of Hadley, in western Massachusetts, but were diverted by a report that the Indians had at- tacked Northfield. On their way thither they were attacked by a large force of Indians and narrowly escaped annihilation. Out of thirty-
six only sixteen escaped with their lives. Cap- tain Beers was among the slain. Shattuck was chosen to make the lonesome and perilous journey to Boston to inform the governor of the state of affairs and of the result of the skirmish. In ten days he arrived safely at Charlestown, but, while crossing the ferry, the boat, overloaded with horses and other freight, was upset by the waves and foundered. He was the only man drowned by the accident. He married, June 20, 1664, in his eighteenth year, Ruth, daughter of John and Elinor Whit- ney, the immigrant ancestor, and a prominent New England family. She was born in Water- town, April 5. 1645, and married ( second). March 6, 1677, Enoch Lawrence, son of John. In 1678 she with her second husband and the Shattuck children removed to Groton, and occupied John Shattuck's land there. Enoch Lawrence died in Groton, September 28, 1744, aged ninety-five years six months twenty-three days. Children of John Shattuck: John, born June 4, 1666: Ruth, June 24, 1668; William, mentioned below. Children of Ruth Shattuck Lawrence : Nathaniel, Daniel, Zachery and Jane,
(III) William, son of John Shattuck, was born at Watertown, September 11, 1670, and died at Groton, in 1744. He resided in Gro- ton, a little to the south of the house built by his grandson, Job Shattuck, near Wattle's Pond. He lived in Groton with his mother and stepfather, Enoch Lawrence, in 1678, and returned to Watertown about 1688, residing there fourteen years. In 1691 he was select- man of Watertown. The town voted to pro- vide for his family in 1690, when he was away in the war, half the cost to be from the town, half from the county treasury, to be paid his uncle William Shattuck. He had a grant of a lot near Patch's meadow on his return from the service, and was given the privilege of cutting timber from the common land. In 1702 he bought land in Groton and removed thither, but the Indian troubles soon caused him to consider leaving that town, and his wife and children actually did remove to Water- town in 1707, and lived in the family of John Barnard Jr. He deeded land to his son Will- iam, October 21, 1716. His son John was his administrator. His inventory was dated June I, 1744, and his estate divided in 1747. lle married (first), at Watertown, March 19, 1688, Hannah Underwood, of Watertown; (second), March 24, 1719. Deliverance Pease,
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who survived him. He and his wives were members of the church. Children: William, mentioned below ; Hannah, born 1690, married Nathaniel Blood; Daniel, born 1692; Ruth, 1694, married Abraham Nutting; John, 1696
(IV) William (2), son of William (1) Shattuck, was born in 1689, at Groton or Watertown, and died at Groton, August 17, 1757. He was baptized, an adult, April 14, 1717. He lived near Wattle's Pond, on a farm given to him by his father and enlarged by his own purchases. During his life he gave prop- erty to his children by the first wife, and took their quitclaims against his estate. His will was dated August 13, 1757, and proved Sep- tember 8 following, his son Ezekiel executor. He married (first), March 15, 1711, Abigail, daughter of his great-uncle, Samuel Shattuck. She was born in Watertown, October 17, 1687, joined the church December 2, 1716, and died about 1727. He married (second), in 1729, Margaret Lund, born in Merrimac, New Hampshire, a descendant of Thomas Lund, one of the earliest settlers. She died June 13. 1764. Children, born at Groton : William, mentioned below ; Abigail, born November II, 1718; Jeremiah, October 2, 1721 ; Zachariah, March 16, 1724; Sarah, January 13, 1726. Children of second wife: Ezekiel, born June 12, 1730; Margaret, July 4, 1732; Job, Febru- ary II, 1736.
(V) William (3), son of William (2) Shat- tuck, was born at Groton, January 25, 1712, and died March 13, 1761, at Hollis, New Hampshire, where he was a farmer and early settler. He was a soldier in the French and Indian war, and soon after his return made his home in Hollis. He married (first) Ruth who died November 4, 1744; (sec- ond) Experience Spaulding. Children : Rutlı, born February 1, 1739; William, mentioned below; Mary, November 4, 1743. Children of second wife: Nathaniel, married Eunice Hazen ; Experience, married, August 13, 1772, Benjamin Simpson.
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