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 III > Part 21
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(I) Selah Snell, of this family, lived in Montgomery county, and was a soldier in the revolution in the first New York regiment under Colonel Goose Van Schaick. He mar- ried Polly Failing.
(II) Joseph, son of Selali Snell, was born October 9, 1777, died in 1802. He married Elizabeth Christman, born May 24, 1783, died in 1859. Children: 1, John, born in 1800, died August 11, 1867, 2. l'olly, born 1802, died 1855; married Josiah Nourse. 3. Elijah, born 1804, died 1836; married Violetta Broad. 4. Archibald, 1808. 5. Louisa, born 1811, died June 12, 1877; married Alanson Philley and Silas Seward. 6. Amanda, born 1813, died February, 1832. 7. Joseph, born August 17, 1815; married Lavinia Hungerford and Eliza Saxton. 8. Emily, born 1816, died 1860; mar- ried Randolph Seeman. 9. Orland, born 1818; married Temperance Jennings and Harriet Ross. 10. Angelina Atherton, married Edwin Taylor ( see Taylor Vlll ). 11. Sylvanus, born 1823, died June 1, 1897 ; married Olive Bald- win and Franklin. 12. Pamelia, born February, 1825; married Lafayette Keeler.
FRINK John Frink, immigrant ancestor, was born in England, and was an carly settler in Ipswich, Mas- sachusetts. He was doubtless a mariner, but we know very little of him. He died early, leaving a will in which he made bequests to his two sons, George and John, and wife Mary. Children, probably born in England : John, mentioned below ; George.
(II) John (2), son of John (1) Frink, was born about 1635, probably in England, and as early as 1666 settled at Stonington, Con- necticut, and bought a tract of land at Taub- wonk in Stonington where he erected a dwell- ing house for himself and family. He was a soldier in King Philip's war. lle mar- ried, in Taunton, 1657, Grace Stevens, and presumably lived there for a time. He had three daughters when he came to Stonington. Children: Grace, born 1658; Hannah, 1661: Deborah, 1665 ; born at Stonington: Samuel, February 14, 1668-69: John, mentioned below : Thomas, May 25, 1674; Judith, baptized April 15, 1680.
(III) John (3), son of John (2) Frink. was born in Stonington, May 18, 1671, died there, March 2, 1718. He married, Febru- ary 15, 1694. Hannah Prentice. Children, born at Stonington: John, October 7, 1694 : Nicholas, December 17, 1696; Thomas, Jan- nary 15, 1700; Hannah, November 27, 1701 ; Zachariah, November, 1702: Mary, 1705: Jo- seph, baptized June 6. 1708: Benjamin, men- tioned below ; William, baptized March 10.
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1714: Thankful, baptized February 8, 1716; Esther, baptized January 23, 1717.
(I\') Benjamin, son of John (3) Frink, was born in Stonington, January 25, 1710. He married. January 12, 1732, Tacy Burdick, of Westerly, Rhode Island. Children, born at Stonington: John, mentioned below; Sam- uel, born October 24, 1734; Amos, January 1, 1737; Joseph, June 20, 1739; Prentice, July 31. 1741 ; Prudence, March 18, 1744; Tacy or Tracy (twin), September 22, 1748; Ann (twin) ; Oliver, September 4, 1751.
(\) John (4), son of Benjamin Frink, was born at Stonington, October 26, 1732. He married, November 22, 1750, Anna Pendle- ton. Children, born at Stonington: Jolin, mentioned below ; Giles, May 12, 1753; Sarah, December 9, 1755; Thomas, lived in Spring- field in 1790; perhaps other children.
(VI) John (5), son of John (4), Frink, was born at Stonington, September 12, 1751. He was a soldier in the revolution, Captain Robert Oliver's company, Colonel Greaton's regiment (First Hampshire County) in 1777- 80. He was in the Major's company in 1780. In 1790 the census gives him one son under sixteen and five females in his family.
(VII) Stephen, son or nephew of John (5) Frink, was born January 18. 1777, died Jan- uary 11. 1860. He married Hannah Low, whose father was a soldier in the revolution. Their son John is mentioned below; their daughter Johanna Low, born July 2, 1802, married. September 7, 1821, while on a visit to Roseboom, Otsego county, New York, Par- cefor Carr Dutcher, born January 3, 1794.
(VIII) John (6), son of Stephen Frink, married, and among their children was John. mentioned below.
(IX) John (7), son of John (6) Frink, was born January 17, 1821. He married Mary Louise Jacques, born November 3, 1838. Moses Jacques, her father, was born March 4. 1802, died February 25, 1855 ; married, July 7, 1832, Mary Jane Wemple, born December IO, 1810, died April 6, 1883. Their children : Freeman Jacques. born August 24. 1834 ; Charles Jacques, married - Wilcox and had Jennie Wilcox and Clark Wilcox Jacques ; Mary Louise Jacques, married John Frink, mentioned above. Moses Jacques, father of Moses Jacques, was born April 24, 1773; married, April 29, 1792, Hannah Islestine, born April 29, 1772, died April 23, 1855. Their children : Hannah Freeman Jacques, born Au-
gust 27, 1796; Polly Jacques, October 21, 1797; David Jacques, December 24, 1799: Moses Jacques, mentioned above: Albert Jacques, December 28, 1803; Isaac Jacques, May 22, 1807, died July 15, 1826; Rebecca Jacques, twin of Isaac, died August 26, 1836. Hannah (Islestine) Jacques was born April 29, 1772, daughter of Robert Islestine, wlio was born in Holland, June 27. 1729. His children by his wife Catherine were: Mar- garet Islestine, born March 17. 1757; Jolin Islestine, May 5, 1759: Robert Islestine, May 14, 1761; Hannah, mentioned above. Chil- dren of Mr. and Mrs. Frink: Flora Alberta, born February 25, 1871, died November 6, 1892. 2. Theodore Wemple, mentioned be- low. 3. Harry Van Ness, born June 21, 1879: married, June 7, 1905, Flora May Henry ; children : Henry Lowell and Marion.
(X) Theodore Wemple, son of John (7) Frink, was born in Richfield Springs, Otsego county, New York, September 8, 1875. He was educated in the public and high schools of his native town. He entered the employ of a firm manufacturing chinaware, and in 1907 he became secretary of the Lily France Corset Manufacturing Company of New York City. He married, February 24, 1906, Irene Madeleine Mandon, born May 5, 1882. Child. Madeleine Van Ness, born June 19, 1908.
GILES John Giles was a soldier in the revolution. He married -- and among his children was John, men- tioned below.
(II) Dr. John (2) Giles, sone of Jolın (1) Giles, was a physician. He was drowned in the Susquehanna river at Apalachin, New York. He married Priscilla Smith. After his death his widow married Smith Barton, of Apalachin. Children of Dr. Jolin and Priscilla Giles: John S., mentioned below : Frances, married E. A. Morey, of Candor ; Mary E., married Rev. David W. Barton ; died in Missouri; four children: Smith G .. Silas, Arthur, Lillian, deceased.
(III) John S., son of Dr. John (2) Giles, was born November 3. 1836, in Apalachin, New York, died there August 5, 1904. He followed farming in his native town all his active life. He enlisted in the Union army, August 27, 1862, and served in the civil war until discharged on account of physical dis- ability. Jun 19. 1864. He was a second lieu- tenant in Company H. One Hundred and
& Shils
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Ninth Regiment, New York Volunteer Infan- try, and was commissioned first lieutenant, February 16, 1864. He took part in all the engagements in which his regiment partici- pated until he was mustered out. He was taken prisoner during the battle of the Wild- erness, May 7, 1864, and he was wounded, June 17, 1864, during the assault on Peters- burg. He took a prominent part in public affairs. For many years he was president of the board of education, an office he held at the time of his death. He was instru- mental in forming the union school district, and acted as highway commissioner for six years. He secured the incorporation of the Cemetery Association and was president of the corporation. He was a member of Round- hill Lodge. Free and Accepted Masons, of Union, New York. In religion he was a Methodist, and in politics was a Republican.
He married, April 29, 1858, Martha A., born at Apalachin, May 23, 1842, daughter of Anson Buffum and Lois M. (Burton) Glover. Children, born at Apalachin : 1. Charles Frederick, mentioned below. 2. William Henry, born February 7, 1862; died January 3, 1879. 3. Emma Louisa, born May 26, 1865 : died October 12, 1865. 4. Nettie Eliz- abeth, born August 31, 1868; married Ran- som S. Holmes, of Apalachin : children : Dora A. and Ransom S. Holmes Jr. 5. John Ran- som, born July 12, 1872: bank cashier, Cam- bridge, Massachusetts; married Mary Coop- er and has two children: George Royal and Charles F. 6. George Anson, born August 4. 1875 ; a real estate broker, Cambridgeport, Massachusetts ; was member of Massachu- setts legislature two terms, also member of common council ; married Susie Richardson ; children : John Silas and Susan.
(IV) Charles Frederick, son of John S. Giles, was born at Apalachin, June 20, 1860. He was educated in the public schools. Dur- ing his youth he worked on the homestead and he succeeded to the ownership of the farm on which he has always lived. He makes a specialty of fancy fruit and market gardening and of registered cattle and sheep. He is thoroughly progressive and enterpris- ing. adopting the best modern methods of agriculture and making it financially prof- itable. He is president of the Cemetery As- sociation, and has been justice of the peace of the town for twelve years. He is an ac- tive and influential Methodist, and a trustee
and secretary of the official board of the Methodist Episcopal church. In politics he is a Republican. He is also a member of Tioga Lodge. Independent Order of Odd Fel- lows; of Wamsutta Tribe, Improved Order of Red Men, of Binghamton; of Anawan Lodge of Hay Makers of Binghamton. He is a member and was one of the founders of the Order of Royal Fellowship of Philadel- phia and is a councilor of the order.
He married, August 18, 1878, Anna Good- now, of Apalachin, born November 13, 1860, daughter of Abram and Parmelia (Barney) Goodnow. Children, born at Apalachin: I. Evan R., born January 12, 1881, died Octo- ber 4, 1881. 2. Lillian M., born June 1, 1885, died March 17, 1907; married George B. Palmer ; one son, Francis Charles, born Feb- ruary 28, 1907.
PALMER Walter Palmer, immigrant an- cestor, was born, according to tradition, in county Notting- ham, England, died in Stonington, Connecti- cut, November 19, 1661. The first authentic records of him in New England are in Charlestown, Massachusetts, when he and Abraham Palmer were admitted freemen, May 14, 1634. He owned considerable real estate and received land in the first division in 1637 and again in the division of 1643. He was among those who met to prepare for the new settlement at Seacuncke, afterwards Reho- both, Massachusetts, and settled there. At this time he gave the value of his estate as four hundred and nineteen pounds. He was deputy to the general court from Rehoboth, and in 1653 moved to what is now Stoning- ton, Connecticut. He bought land from Gov- ernor Haynes on the east bank of the Weque- tequoc river. His entire tract of land con- tained about twelve hundred acres. His will was dated May 19, 1658, and proved May II, 1662. He married (first) in England, Ann he married (second) Rebecca Short, a member of Rev. John Eliot's church in Roxbury. Children of first wife: Grace, married Thomas Minor: John, died unmar- ried : William, died unmarried ; Jonas; Eliza- beth. Children of second wife: Hannah, born June 16, 1634; Elihu, January 24. 1636; Ne- hemiah, mentioned below; Moses, April 6, 1640; Benjamin, May 30, 1642: Gershom ; Rebecca.
(II) Nehemiah, son of Walter Palmer, was
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born November 27, 1037, in Charlestown, died in Stonington. Connecticut, February 17, 1717. He was interred in the old burial ground on the east side of Wequetequoc cove, and his gravestone is still standing. He was admitted a freeman in Connecticut, May 10, 1666, and became a prominent man in the town of Ston- ington, where he settled. For fifteen years, from 1668 on, he served as deputy to the gen- eral court, and in 1681 was on a committee to buy land from the Indians He gave most of his property to his sons before his death. He married, in Stonington, November 20, 1662, Hannah, born in 1644, died October 17, 1727, daughter of Thomas and Ann (Lord) Stanton. Children, born in Stoning- ton : Joseph, October 3, 1663; Elihu, March 12. 1666. died young: Jonathan, August 7, 1668; Daniel, mentioned below ; Elihu, bap- tized December 14, 1674; Jonathan, baptized December 14, 1674, twin of Elihu ; Nehemiah, baptized July 8, 1677 ; Hannah, baptized April II, 1680.
(III) Daniel, son of Nehemiah Palmer, was born June 12, 1672. died February 28, 1762. He received one-half the homestead by deed of gift from his father, for his "duti- ful care" of him, and owned land also in Vol- untown, given him by Nehemiah Smith, his wife's father. He was a commissioner in 1724 and 1728, and justice of the peace for fifteen years. He repeatedly served as deputy to the general court. He gave much of his land to his children before his death. His will was dated May 12, 1747, and it is interest- ing to note that he owned several slaves, as he bequeathed to sons Daniel, Nathan, Nehe- miah, Rufus and James, each a negro girl or boy, and to his daughter Rebecca a negro girl. He married (first ), March 25, 1700-0I, Margaret Smith, who died June 4, 1726, daughter of Nehemiah Smith. He married (second), January 12, 1732, Mrs. Mary Den- ison, born November 14, 1680, died 1762, widow of William Denison, and daughter of John and Abigail (Chesborough) Avery. Children by first wife: Nehemiah, born April 9, 1702: Daniel. mentioned below ; Samuel, April 7, 1707, died August 5, 1727 ; Nathan, October 27, 1711; Rufus, October 7, 1713; Huldah, November 15, 1715, died July 25, 1727 ; Lydia. August 16, 1718, died June 25. 1727: James, July 18, 1720: Rebecca, April 13. 1725.
(I\') Daniel (2), son of Daniel (1) Palm-
er, was born in Stonington, Connecticut, June 10, 1704, died in Voluntown, Connecticut, Au- gust 17, 1772. His estate was distributed among his heirs, March 13, 1773, and he made a will which has been lost. His wife Mary and son Samuel were executors, and Samuel died before the final distribution, in 1773, when those who received shares were Rebecca Sherman, his daughter, Joseph, his son, Lydia, Margaret, Mary Stanton, and Huldah, his daugliters, and Joseph, the son of Samuel, who was deceased. Daniel Palmer married, in Stonington, January 6. 1731, Mary, born in Stonington, March 21, 1704, daughter of Deacon Joseph and Mary (Palmer) Palmer. Children : Samuel, mentioned below ; Daniel, born January 17, 1734; Mary, January 31, 1737; Lydia, May 13. 1738: Rebecca, April 24, 1742; Joseph, December 27, 1744; Mar- garet, November 1, 1747; Huldah, March 3, 1750; Freelove, May 14, 1753.
(V) Samuel, son of Daniel (2) Palmer, was born in Voluntown, Connecticut, No- vember 20, 1731, died January 19, 1773. be- fore his father's estate was distributed. His children were all mentioned in the will of his younger brother, Joseph Palmer, in 1780. Ile married, January 19, 1754-55, Lucretia Fish. Children : Rebecca, born May 25, 1756: Lu- cretia, September 13, 1757; Elizabeth, Sep- tember 19. 1759: Margaret, January 4, 1761; Daniel, September 22. 1763: Joseph, men- tioned below.
(VI) Joseph, son of Samuel Palmer, was born in Voluntown, Connecticut, March 22, 1767. In 1790, according to the first federal census, there were in Orange county, New York, Henry and Joseph Palmer. The latter had in his family himself and two females. Both were given as of Haverstraw.
(VII) Daniel (3), son or nephew of Jo- seph Palmer, was born about 1790 in Orange county, New York. He removed to Newfield, Tompkins county, New York, in 1832. He lived in Mounthope, a town taken from Deer- park and Wallkill. His farm was afterward known as the Craig place. He married
and among his children were : Heman B., born October 12, 1822; George, mentioned below ; William O., July 20. 1830. at Mounthope, Orange county.
(VIII) George, son of Daniel (3) Palmer. was born about 1828 in Orange county, prob- ably at Mounthope, died in Little Meadows, Pennsylvania, in 1891. He was a chair man-
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ufacturer. Hle removed to Little Meadows in 1863 and lived there the remainder of his life. lle married Nellie La Bar. George La Bar was an early settler in Lansing, Tomp- kins county, New York, in 1798, and his son Ephraim was a sheriff of that county. Chil- dren of George and Nellie Palmer : Frank, mentioned below : Lucelia; Archie, who died young.
(IN) Frank, son of George Palmer, was born at Newfieldl, Tompkins county, New York, 1852, died at Little Meadows, Penn- sylvania, March 20, 1904. lle attended the public schools and Wyoming Seminary. When a young man he engaged in the lumber business and built a large mill at Little Mead- ows for the manufacture of lumber, and also had a buckwheat flour and feed mill there. In 1890 he established a large plant at the railroad station at Apalachin, New York. He continued business to the time of his death, devoting himself to the plant at Little Mead- ows, while his son had charge of the business at Apalachin. In politics he was a Republi- can. He married. in 1873. Mary Belle, born January 7. 1859, at Little Meadows, daugh- ter of John and Maria ( Harris) Lewis. Her father died in the service during the civil war. Ile was in an engineering corps. Chil- dren: George B., mentioned below : Esther, born September 4, 1877: Louise, February 16. 1878: Lewis, June 7. 1800.
(A) George B., son of Frank Palmer, was born at Little Meadows, Pennsylvania, March 10, 1875. He was educated there in the pub- lic schools and in the Owego high school, graduating from the latter in 1894. For two years he was a student in Cornell University. He left college to engage in business with his father under the firm name of Palmer & Son, and since 1902 has had charge of the busi- ness at Apalachin, New York, where he has resided. He also owns a half interest in a large lumber tract at Nichols, New York. He is a member of Friendship Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, of Owego; Eelskatawa Tribe. Improved Order of Red Men : and of the Binghamton Club of Binghamton, New York. In religion he is a Methodist, and in politics a Republican, progressive.
He married (first ), May 10, 1906, Lillian MI. Giles, of Apalachin, born June 1. 1885. died March 17, 1907, daughter of Charles Frederick and Anna ( Goodnow) Giles. They had one son, Francis Charles, born February
28, 1907. Married (second), February 8. 1912, Alma D., daughter of George and Char- lotte ( Brown ) Glann.
Walter Haynes, immigrant an- HAYNES cestor, was born in Sutton Mandifield, Wiltshire, England, in 1583. He also owned a house and other buildings on the island of Purbeck in the southeast part of Dorsetshire. He came to New England in the same ship with Peter Noyes, yeoman, of Penton, Southampton, with his wife Eliza; sons under sixteen years of age, Thomas, John and Josiah : daughters Suffrance and Mary; and servants John Blandford, John Rediat and Richard Biddle- come, arriving in Boston in 1638. His fam- ily and that of Peter Noves intermarried. About a year after his arrival in this coun- try Haynes removed from Watertown, Mass- achusetts, to Sudbury, having a grant of land there December 22, 1639. He was one of the foremost citizens, and was on the first board of selectmen in 1639 and served the town ten years altogether as se- lectman. He was one of the first, perhaps the very first, to build on the west side of the Sudbury river and is believed to have built the Haynes garrison house which was near the old Haynes home. The garrison house stood until the middle of the nineteenth cen- tury. The Haynes homestead was in the northeast section of the town in the part called the Pantry district. Hon. G. F. Gerry. a lineal descendent of Haynes, has written a charming poem entitled "Pantry School" ( see "Ilistory of Sudbury." p. 510). Haynes was admitted a freeman, May 13, 1641 ; dep- puty to the general court in 1641-44-48-51. He was commissioner to settle small causes, 1645. He was a member of the Ancient an 1 Honorable Artillery Company (see "Whit- man's History of the Company." 1842. p. 97). Haynes had learned the trade of linen weaver. Ile died February 14. 1664-65. His will was dated May 25, 1659, with codicil dated March 4, 1663-64, and proved April 4. 1665, be- queathing to wife Elizabeth: sons Thomas, John and Josiah: son-in-law Thomas Noyes : son-in-law Roger Gourd and "my daughter his wife" a tenement in Shaston, Dorsetshire. England. The will of Alice Haynes, his mother, is printed in the New England Gene- alogical Register (vol. XXXIN. p. 263). . A Thomas Haynes died in Sudbury, July 28,
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1640. The will of Walter Haynes states that his son Thomas was then away from home. Many of the facts in this sketch were pre- served by John Haynes, born 1684, and writ- ten when he was nearly ninety years of age. The manuscript is now or lately was in pos- session of a descendant, Frederick Haynes Newell. The historian of Sudbury ( Hud- son) writes of the Haynes family: "The family is well known and quite numerous in Sudbury. Members have lived in various parts of the town and have held prominent offices, civil and military." Children: Thom- as; John, mentioned below: Josiah, married Elizabeth, daughter of Peter Noyes; Suf- france, married Josiah Tredway, of Water- town: Mary, married Thomas Noyes, had no children : daughter, mentioned in will, mar- ried Roger Gourd and remained in England. (Il) John, son of Walter Haynes, was born in England in 1621. While he is named among the children coming with his father in 1638, he was in Watertown living with his cousin Reed or Rice in 1637 according to the old manuscript mentioned. Ile was admitted a freeman in 1646, and was a deputy to the general court in 1668. He married, Octo- ber 13, 1642, at Sudbury, Dorothy, born in England in 1620, daughter of Peter and Abi- gail Noyes. Her father was deputy to the general court in 1640-41-50; was selectman of Sudbury for twenty-one years ; was admit- ted freeman, May 13. 1640; was commission- er. John Haynes died in 1692 leaving a will dated that year. Children: Elizabeth, born July 16, 1644; Mary, 1647; John, May 4, 1649: Dorothy, 1651-52 ; Peter, April 7, 1654: Joseph. September 7, 1656, killed in boyhood by falling from a tree : Thomas, 1658: James, .mentioned below ; Daniel, May 16, 1663: Ra- chel. February 12, 1665; Ruth, April 7, 1668: David, May 4, 1671.
(III) James, son of John Haynes, was born in Sudbury, March 17, 1660-61, died October 15, 1732. He married, at Sudbury, November 4, 1689. Sarah, born September 28. 1669. died September, 1756, daughter of Joseph and Mary (Darvell ) Noyes, of New- bury and Sudbury. Her father was select- man of Sudbury in 1662; constable 1667-68; justice of the peace. Rev. Noves, father of Joseph Noyes, was born in Choulderton, Wilt- shire, England, in 1608: was brother of Rev. Nicholas Noves, of Newbury, Massachusetts ; settled in Newbury: his old house still pre-
served there; married Sarah Brown. James Haynes lived in Sudbury and was a farmer. Children : James, mentioned below ; Abraham, September 24, 1696; Sarah, July 11, 1699; Ahiga (or Ahijah), October 16, 1701; Re- becca, August 20, 1705; Thankful, April 22, 1708: Dorothy, December 23, 1710.
(I\ ) James (2), son of James ( 1 ) Haynes, was born at Sudbury, April 17, 1692, died March 18. 1755, in his native town. He mar- ried (first ), March 14, 1716-17, Susannah Woodward, who died August 15, 1717. He married (second ), September 6, 1720, Mary, daughter of John Rugg and granddaughter of John Rugg, the immigrant. Children by second wife, born at Sudbury: James, men- tioned below: Captain Joshua, born October 7. 1723. married. March 29. 1759. Rebecca Marsh.
(\') James (3), son of James (2) Haynes, was born at Sudbury, May 25, 1721. He married, August 14, 1741, Eleanor Lee, of Shrewsbury, Massachusetts. She died at Sud- bury. April 25, 1759. Children, born at Sud- bury: Joseph, mentioned below ; David, Octo- ber 1. 1744, settled at Bennington, Vermont. as appears from the census of 1790: Mary, November 2, 1746; Eleanor, March 29, 1748 ; Ruth, May 21, 1750; James, February 28, 1752, died 1753: Ann, September 2, 1755: James, July 8, 1757.
(VI) Lieutenant Joseph Haynes, son of James (3) Haynes, was born at Sudbury, May 30. 1742. He was an early settler at Lisbon, New Hampshire. He was a lieuten- ant in Colonel Timothy Bidwell's regiment in 1778. He was in Captain Samuel Young's company of this regiment, December 15. 1777. to March, 1778 (see New Hampshire Revo- lutionary Rolls, state papers, vol. XVI. p. 307). In this company and regiment, of which General John Stark was then sergeant- major, he took part in the expedition to Can- ada in February, 1778. His son Joseph served in the same company in 1779. Cap- tain Samuel Young was of Lisbon, also. The town was granted in 1763 and settled after- ward. Joseph Haynes and Joseph Jr. were living there in 1790, according to the first federal census, both with families. Joseph Haynes signed a petition, January 12, 1786. asking for relief from taxes. The petition was headed by Major Samuel Young, just mentioned. It represented that there were but few settlers in Lisbon when the revolu-
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