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 57
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Leighton; Gideon, born April 10, 1768; Job, married Sarah Crooks; children of second wife: Paris, mentioned below; Daniel, mar- ried Patience Nichols: Newman, born in Exe- ter. December 10, 1779; Allen, married Betsey Barber : Joanna, married Timothy B. Nobles ; Asa, died unmarried ; Jonathan, married Sally Smith ; Dorcas, married Nichols; no children; Stephen, married Louisa Kingsley.
(\'II) Paris, son of Gideon Rathbun, mar- ried Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas and Char- ity (Perkins) Rathbun (see Rathbun VI). They lived in Washington county, New York, and both died in the town of New Haven, Oswego county. New York. Children: Char- ity. born about 1780: Esther, October 10, 1782; Paris; Amos; Lyman, Gideon: Eliza- beth; Cynthia: Mary Ann, married Lyon : Charity, married Harrington Wilcox (see Wilcox VI).
(V) Thomas, son of John (3) Rath- bun, was born March 2. 1709, on Block Island. He settled on the west side of Escoheag Hill, in 1744, and at Newport, in 1747. He was admitted freeman of North Kingston, 1736, and of Westerly. Rhode Island, May 1, 1744, and of Exeter. April 3. 1745. He died in 1784, from a cancer. He married, December 31, 1732. Charity, born 1709, died 1803. in North Kingston, daughter of Ebenezer Per- kins. Children: Oliver, born February 2, 1734. shot during the revolution; Charity, April 12, 1735; Thomas, mentioned below ; Daniel, born probably 1737 : Hannah, July 3, 1741 ; Simeon, May 10, 1745: Olief, Febru- ary 2, 1747: Mary, May 25, 1750: Nathan, born in Escoheag, May 25. 1753.
(VI) Thomas (2), son of Thomas (1) Rathbun, was born December 5, 1736, in Rich- mond, Rhode Island. He was admitted free- man of North Kingston, May, 1758. Children : Judith, born 1775 : Daniel, married Eley Nich- ols : Simeon, married. November 1, 1792, Ruth Ann Russell: Elizabeth, married Paris Rath- bun ( see Rathbun VII) ; Ruth, married Si- meon Gates.
(IV) Robert Wilcox, son of
WILCOX Thomas Wilcox (q. v.), lived at South Kingston, Rhode Island. He married Sarah Children. born at South Kingston: Son, June 26, 1724; Son. October 16, 1725. Born at North Kings- ton : Mary, June 4, 1727 : Robert and Armold, September 9, 1729: Robert, married. Decem-
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ber 29, 1749, Martha Potter: Hopson, men- tioned below.
(V) Hopson, son of Robert Wilcox, was born in Kingston, Rhode Island, or vicinity, in 1739. He was a justice of the peace and as a magistrate married his nephew Robert to Catherine Tripp.at Exeter, April 14, 1768. Hopson Wilcox married. December 10, 1761, Elizabeth Holway, at Richmond, Rhode
Island. According to the census of 1774. Hopson Wilcox was living in Exeter and had in his family three sons under sixteen, one female and one slave, In the same town there were heads of families of this surname as fol- lows: Abrahain 3d., Thomas, Job, Ishamel, Abigail, Elijah, Nathan, Israel, Abraham, Abraham, Jeffrey. William, John, George, Robert, Job and Robert. At Richmond there were Sheffield. Edward Stephen and Robert Wilcox. In 1790 Hopson Wilcox was living at Exeter and had, according to the first fed- eral census, three males over sixteen, two under sixteen and five females in his family, and Robert Wilcox, who lived next door, had in his family two males over sixteen, five un- der that age and three females. Presumably this Robert was Hopson's brother. The birth dates of Hopson and of his children are not on the town records. Hopson Wilcox and his sons came to Chenango county, New York, in 1795, and settled on a farm in the town of Smyrna, where he bought a hundred acres of land. This homestead was lately occupied by Melvin Willcox. The other children came in 1798, excepting two daughters, who remained in Rhode Island. Hopson Wilcox was a Friend and Quaker preacher. Hopson Wil- cox died at Smyrna, in April. 1822, and his wife in August, 1818, aged seventy-four years. Of their children the following came to Smyrna : Lillibridge, born at Richmond, Rhode Island, was a prosperous farmer at Smyrna, where he died in 1853 aged eighty years : Robert. Russell. John, Hazard, men- tioned below ; Betsey.
(VI) Hazard, son of Hopson Wilcox, was born about 1780-90 in Rhode Island, and came with his father's family to Smyrna. He set- tled in Smyrna and followed farming there all his active life. He married Flavilla Par- sons. Children : Hopson, Orrin B., men- tioned below, Melvin, Nancy, married Henry G. Green : Jennie, married Irving D. Atkins : Mary, married John W. Ingalls, of Little Falls, New York : George.
(VII) Dr. Morrin B. Wilcox, son of Hazard
Wilcox, was born in Smyrna, New York, March 1, 1833. died January 7, 1895. He was educated in the public schools of his native town and the Cazenovia Seminary. He worked on a farm until he was nineteen years old and taught school for several years. He was principal of the West Winfield Academy for a time. He then began the study of medicine in the office of Dr. Rose, of West Winfield, and in the Long Island Medical College, from which he was graduated with the degree of M. D. in 1863. For about two years he stud- ied also at the Albany Medical College. In 1863 he became a contract surgeon in the Union army in the civil war. After re- turning from the army he opened an of- fice in Cedarville, Herkimer county, New York. and practiced his profession there until 1875, when he came to Earlville, Chenango county, and practiced to the time of his death in 1895. He was a member of the county and state medical so- cieties and of the American Medical Associa- tion. In religion he was a Methodist. Dur- ing his later years he was a Prohibitionist in politics. He was a member of the local lodge of the Ancient Order of United Workmen. He married (first) Sarah Burgess; (second) Lizzie Wadsworth. born in West Winfield, New York. November 21. 1840, and is now living in Earlville, New York, daughter of Joel and Sarah ( Goodier ) Wadsworth ( see Wadsworth WH ). Child of first wife: Mary B., resides in California. Children of second wife: Sarah F., born December 30. 1867. married Walter W. Jones, of Earlville ; chil- dren: Carl Wynne, born August 28, 1897; Gertrude Marian, September 5, 1899 : Gerald. August 2, 1905: Earl Wadsworth, mentioned below.
(VIII) Dr. Earl Wadsworth Wilcox, son of Dr. Orrin B. Wilcox, was born in Cedar- ville. Herkimer county, New York. January 2, 1872. When he was three years old he removed with his parents to Earlville, New York, where he attended the public schools, the Earlville high school, the Cazenovia Semi- mary and the West Winfield Academy. He studied for his profession at the Albany Med- ical College, graduating in 1894 with the de- gree of M. D. He began to practice at Earl- ville, New York, removing to Norwich. March 15, 1900, and since then he has been in active practice in that town. He is a member of
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the Chenango County Medical Society, the New York State Medical Society and the American Medical Association. He is coroner of Chenango county. He attends the Prot- estant Episcopal church, and is a member of the Eagles. He married, June 26, 1895. Cleora M. Powell (adopted name), born at Deposit, Delaware county, New York, daugh- ter of Frank and Mary (Crandall) Vincent. Mary Crandall was a daughter of Joseph and Amerette (Pember) Crandall. Her Pember ancestor was a soldier in the revolution. Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox have one daughter. Cora Elizabeth, born in Earlville, New York, Oc- tober 12, 1896.
(The Wadsworth Line).
(II) Thomas Wadsworth, son of William Wadsworth (q. v.), was born in 1651. and was alive in 1716. He married. 1677, Eliza- beth -, and lived in East Hartford, on his father's lands, which he inherited. He was a farmer. Children: John, died in infancy : Sarah, born 1681: Elizabeth: Rebecca, 1686: Thomas, mentioned below ; Hannah, 1690 : William, 1692.
(III) Thomas (2), son of Thomas (1) Wadsworth, was born in 1689. died in 1716, before his father died. His wife Sarah was his executrix. Child: Thomas, mentioned below.
(IV ) Thomas (3), son of Thomas (2) Wadsworth, was born in 1716 at East Hart- ford, died in 1783. He married Sarah Ar- nold, who died in 1778. Children: Thomas. mentioned below; John, born 1742; Samuel, 1746; Josiah. 1748; William, 1753; Saralı, 1754 : Jerusha : Rebecca. 1757 ; Elizabeth, 1761. (\') Thomas (4), son of Thomas (3) Wadsworth, was born at East Hartford, in 1739, died in 1810. He was a farmer. He married Thankful Hills, who died in 1816. Children : George, born 1762; Thomas, 1763 ; David, 1767 ; Timothy, mentioned below : Sol- omon. 1772: Joel. 1774: Moses. 1776. died in infancy : Anna, died in infancy : Anna, born 1780 : Moses, 1783: Thankful.
(VI) Timothy, son of Thomas (4) Wads- worth, was born at East Hartford in 1770. died 1847. He with his brothers, Thomas, Moses and David, moved to New Hartford. Oneida county, New York, early in life, and they settled on what is now known as "Wads- worth Hill." He married Lydia Tyler. Children : Franklin, born 1795; Sally, 1797 :
Samuel, 1798; George, 1799; Joel, mentioned below; Betsey, 1803; Timothy, 1804; Erastus, 1805: Julia, 1807; Mary, 1809; Hester Ann, 1810; Maria, 1812; Nancy W.
(VII) Joel, son of Timothy Wadsworth, was born at New Hartford, New York, in 1800, lived in West Winfield, New York. He was a farmer. He married (first) Sarah Goodier, in 1830, and (second) Mrs. R. Dun- ham, in 1871. The second wife died in 1883. Children: Hester Ann, born 1832; George Henry, 1834; Emily Maria, 1836; Lizzie, 1840, married Dr. Orrin B. Wilcox ( see Wil- cox VII).
THOMPSON Captain William Thomp- son was a native of Con- necticut and is believed to have lived at New London. He was a master mariner. In 1790 the first federal census gives William Thompson, of New London county as head of a family, having three males over sixteen and one female. Among his chil- dren was Philemon, mentioned below.
(II) Philemon, son of Captain William Thompson, settled in Tompkins county, New York. He married Nancy A. McLallen, who was born in Trumansburg. Tompkins county, New York. She was a descendant of the founders of the town. The first settler of Tru- mansburg was Abner Tremain, who drew lot No. 2 in what was then the township of Ulys- ses. He came thither from Columbia county, New York, in 1792 : was a soldier in the revo- lution and drew his land for his services, a tract about three-quarters of a mile wide and two miles long on which the village of Tru- mansburg is now situated. With Tremain came his brother-in-law. John McLallen, who bought land of Tremain and built a log house in which he opened a tavern. The place was known for some years as McLallen's Tavern and "Tremain's Village," and finally took its present name of Trumansburg from the Tre- main family, some of whom used the spelling Truman. There was an excellent water privi- lege on the creek and Mr. Tremain began soon after his arrival to erect a mill ( see Tre- main IV). Children of Philemon and Nancy A. (McLallen) Thompson: Henry McLal- len, mentioned below ; George S .; John M .; Mary Belle.
John McLallen, whose sister Mary married Abner Tremain, came with him in 1792 and was employed as a teamster at first. He was then
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but nineteen years old. Ilenry and Robert McLallen and Jared Tremain, brother of Ab- ner, settled on farms west of Trumansburg in 1796. The McLallens were of Scotch-Irish ancestry, coming thither from Berkshire coun- ty, Massachusetts. Some of them lived at Stockbridge, Massachusetts. James McLal- len had three males over sixteen, three under that age and three females in his family in 1790: Robert McLallen, also of Berkshire county, had two males over sixteen, two un- der that age and three females. John Mc- Lallen married Mary King and their marriage was probably the first in the village of Tru- mansburg. His son, James McLallen, be- came a merchant: Dr. David, another son, was a physician, and Edward was an engineer and prominent in the militia. Descendants of John McLallen, many of whom spell their name, McClellan, have been numerous and conspicuous in the history of the town. The log cabin of John McLallen stood near the house now or lately owned by E. G. Hart. Ilis brother. Henry McLallen, was associated with him in the work and lived in Jesse Harriman's cabin. Henry McLallen remained on the farm, having bought the interests of his brother and he afterwards erected the Wart- burg Mills.
(III) Henry McLallen, son of Philemon Thompson, was born at Trumansburg, Tomp- kins county, New York, June 22, 1826, died July 5. 1905. He married Mary S. Bower, born April 23. 1834, died August 28, 1908, daughter of William Bower, and granddaugh- ter of Alexander Bower, who came with sev- eral sons from Scotland and settled near Wartburg. William Bower was born in Scot- land and was a millwright and surveyor in Schuyler county and Tompkins county, New York. Children of Henry McLallen Thomp- son: Charles E., born September 4. 1858; William P., February 18, 1862; Ellen M .. September 14, 1865; Frederick Richard, men- tioned below ; Anna M., October 4, 1871.
(IV) Frederick Richard, son of Henry Mc- Lallen Thompson, was born September 9. 1867, at Trumansburg. He was educated in Trumansburg high school; graduated from Philadelphia Dental College. 1889, degree of D. D. S., practiced from 1880 to 1904 at Ho- mer, New York ; removed to New York City, January, 1906, and engaged in real estate. He is a member of Homer Lodge, No. 352, Free and Accepted Masons. He married, Septem-
ber 19, 1894, Fanny M., daughter of William N. and Edith ( Hine ) Brockway.
( The Tremain Line ).
The Tremain or Truman family traces its ancestry to Sydenham, Devonshire, England. The surname is derived from the Manor of Tremayne in the parish of St. Martin on the banks of Helford-llaven, England.
(1) Joseph Tremain, immigrant ancestor of the American family, settled at New London, Connecticut, in 1666. He had sons Joseph ; Thomas, mentioned below.
(H ) Thomas, son of Joseph Tremain, had sons : John, mentioned below ; Simeon, Na- than, Benjamin.
(III) John, son of Thomas Tremain, set- tled near Pittsfield, Berkshire county, Massa- chusetts, a section from which many of the pioneers in Tompkins county came, and he was a man of ability and character, honored with various offices of trust. He lived also at Hillsdale. New York. His sons: Philip, Gains, John. Daniel, Jared. Abner, mentioned below : Jonathan.
(IV) Abner, son of John Tremain, was born December 25, 1761, at Hillsdale, New York. Four of his brothers were soldiers in the American army in the revolution. At the age of sixteen he enlisted in Colonel Van Courtland's regiment and served in the Fifth Company to the end of the war. His courage, firmness and ability were such that he was selected by Washington himself as one of those to assist in the capture of Stony Point on the Hudson river. General Wayne was in command of the expedition : lieutenant Colonel Fleury had immediate command of the right wing, which was composed of one hundred and fifty volunteers, and these were led by twenty men under Lieutenant Gibbon as a forlorn hope. Of these twenty men Ab- ner Tremain was one. He was in General Sullivan's army in the expedition through the Wyoming valley and up the Susquehanna ; was successively corporal, sergeant and ser- geant-major, and he was honored with a badge of merit for faithful service. Hle re- ceived as a bounty six hundred and sixty acres of land in what was then Herkimer county. lot 2, township 22, two miles long and three- fourths of a mile in width, the present site of the village of Trumansburg. Ile came thither in 1792 with his wife, three children. brother Philip and Philip's son Benjamin and
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his wife's brother, John McLallen. In 1794 he concluded to build a grist mill and went east to Chenango Point, now Binghamton, to purchase machinery. On his return he stopped over night at Davenport's Tavern, a mile from Trumansburg, on West Hill. It was in Feb- ruary and snow fell to the depth of two feet. He left the tavern at nine in the morning and after walking all day and until midnight he sought shelter at the house of Mr. Wayburn on Goodwin's Point, about two miles from home. He was cared for to the best of the ability of the family, but one of his feet was so badly frozen that amputation was neces- sary. He died August 18, 1823. His brother Philip located in Ledyard, Cayuga county. New York.
Abner Tremain married Mary McLallen. Their first house was on a lot opposite the present Methodist church. Children : 1. Mary, born 1788, died 1869; married Leroy Valen- tine. 2. Jonathan, July 17, 1790; married An- nis Tremblay. 3. Annis, June 27, 1792 : mar- ried General Isaiah Smith. 4. Lucinda, Au- gust 17, 1793; married Jeremiah Avers. 5. Calvin, September 13, 1794 ; married Ann Ay- ers. 6. Ashbel. September 1, 1796: married Mary Ayers. 7. Jared, October 5. 1800. 8. Abner, January 12, 1803, died January 30, 1883. 9. Charlotte. June 30, 1806; married Minor King. 10. Alfred, January 31. 18II. II. Erastus, July 31, 1813.
REYNOLDS John Reynolds, immigrant ancestor, was born in Eng- land in 1612. He was un- doubtedly a brother of Robert Reynolds, and is thought by many to have been a brother of James of Narragansett and William of Provi- dence. The first record of him in New Eng- land is in Watertown, Massachusetts, 1634. when his wife, Sarah, and others associated with him at Watertown, Wethersfield and Stamford. sailed from Ipswich on the ship "Elizabeth." On May 5. 1635, he was ad- mitted a freeman at Watertown. Several months later he moved to Wethersfield. Con- necticut, with other settlers. In 1641 he moved to Stamford, Connecticut, where his wife died August 21, 1657. He married Sarah
Children : Elizabeth, born about 1634. mar- ried, July 15. 1654. Peter Ferris: Jonathan, about 1636, married, 1657. . died 1673: John, mentioned below.
(II) John (2). son of John ( 1) Reynolds.
was born about 1038, died in 1702. He mar- ried Judah Children : John, born about 1670, died 1732: Mary, about 1672; James, 1674: Judah, about 1679; Jonathan, about 1682; Joshua, mentioned below ; David, about 1689.
(III) Joshua, son of John (2) Reynolds, was born about 1686. He married Children : John, mentioned below : Daniel, born 1714, died 1803; Caleb. 1717, died 1765 : Mary. April 28, 1723.
( IV) John (3), son of Joshua Reynolds, was born in 1712. He married, February 16. 1740, Joanna Winens. Children : Elizabeth, born April 5, 1742; Joshua, mentioned below ; Sarah, April 15, 1746; Geradus, October 17, 1748; John, October 29, 1750: Joanna. De- cember 11, 1753; Jacob, May 23, 1756, mar- ried Martha Winens, died 1828; Alpheus, May II. 1760.
(V) Joshua (2). son of Jolin (3) Reynolds, was born at Greenwich, Connecticut. He and Jonathan Reynolds settled at Rutland, Ver- mont. Jonathan. son of Hezekiah and Sarah (Webb) Reynolds, was born in Greenwich, February 28. 1740. The history of Rutland. Vermont, tells us that Jonathan came thither from Nine Partners, New York, a town to which many Greenwich men went, including several of the Reynolds family, and everything indicates that Joshua went with Jonathan to Nine Partners and that they went together to Vermont. Jonathan Reynolds bought two hun- dred and seventy-five acres of land in Rutland of James Mead for three hundred pounds, the same farm that was later owned by J. & Graf- ton Griggs: he was a lieutenant during the revolution, he died in 1840. lacking four days of a hundred years old. There was a Lieu- tenant Jonathan Reynolds in Colonel Robert V'an Rensselaer's regiment. Eighth Albany County.
Caleb Reynolds, another of this family, located at Pine Plains and remained there : Dr. Israel Reynolds, also of the Greenwich family, a son of Stephen, of Dutchess county, died at Pine Plains, 1797. aged fifty-one years. The first federal census of 1790, of Vermont. shows that Jonathan and Joshua were the only heads of family of this surname. Joshua had three males over sixteen. four under that age and four females in his family; Jonathan had three males over sixteen, four under that age and three females in his family. Among the sons of Joshua Reynolds were Joshua, men-
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tioned below ; Waldo; Polly, married Ford ; and others.
(VI) Joshua (3), son of Joshua ( 2) Rey- nolds, was born in Rutland, Rutland county, Vermont, July 14, 1785. When a young man he left Vermont and located at what is now LeRoy township, Bradford county, Pennsyl- vania, built a log house there and cleared a large farm. He married Sophia Gillett, born May 19, 1787, died October 6, 1821. Children, born in Bradford county : Julian. February 8, 1807, married Hayward; Henrietta, November 1, 1808; Lucinda, May 21, 1811, married Samuel Elliott; Nelson. mentioned below : Hiram, born October 6, 1821, married Betsey Taylor ; Charlotte E., born August 9, 1830. married Daniel Spaulding.
(VII) Nelson, son of Joshua ( 3) Reynolds, was born December 30, 1816, at LeRoy, Penn- sylvania, died at Canton, September 8, 1877. He settled in his native town, and was edu- cated there in the public schools. When a young man he also cleared a farin in that town. then called Canton. He married Clarissa Knapp, born October 18, 1821, died September 7, 1909. Children, born at Canton, New York : Solon A., mentioned below ; Garland H., born June 14, 1847; Mahlon D., April 17, 1848; Chellen N., January 27, 1858; Alice M., April 23, 1863. All were living in 1912.
(VIII) Solon A., son of Nelson Reynolds, was born at Canton, Pennsylvania, December 22, 1843. He was reared on his father's farm, and was educated in the public schools of his native town. He enlisted in the union army in the civil war, September 16, 1863, and was honorably discharged, June 23, 1865, after the close of the war. He was taken prisoner and confined sixty days in Salisbury prison. from which he made his escape and traveled over the mountains, suffering great hardship, reaching the union lines at Greenville, Tennes- see. After the war he resumed farming and has continued in that occupation at Canton to the present time. He married, in the fall of 1865, Mary Goff, born 1847, at North To- wanda. Pennsylvania, daughter of George and ( Kellogg ) Goff. Children, born at Canton ; William, 1866, died 1898 : Leon, 1869, died 1903; Oscar, 1874, receiving teller of the Second National Bank at Elmira, New York; George Goff. mentioned below : Howard Mil- ton, 1880, druggist at Sayre, Pennsylvania ; Linda ; Leslie. a merchant in Sayre.
(IX) Dr. George Goff Reynolds, son of
Solon A. Reynolds Was born at Canton. Penn- sylvania, June 5, 1877. He attended the pub- lic schools of his native town and the Canton high school. Afterward he taught school at Athens and Canton for three years. 1le be- gan to study medicine at the College of Phy- sicians and Surgeons, Baltimore, Maryland, where he was a student for three years. He took his medical degree, however, at the Uni- versity of Buffalo in 1908. In the following year he located at Nichols, New York, where he has since been practicing medicine. He is a member of the county and state medical so- cieties and of various college fraternities. He also belongs to Westbrook Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, of Nichols. In religion he is a member of the Church of the Disciples ; in politics a Democrat.
He married, August 19, 1903, Lulu Gustin, of Burlington, Pennsylvania, born May 9, 1878, daughter of Burton K. and Anna Gustin. Children : Dorothy, born May 21, 1904; Don- ald, ( October 10, 1910.
FRINK (Ill ) Samuel Frink, son of John Frink (q. v. ), was born February, 14, 1668-69 in Stonington, Con- necticut. He married, January 6, 1692, Han- nah, daughter of Ephraim Miner. Children : Samuel, mentioned below : Andrew, born Au- gust 7, 1694; Grace, December 18, 1695 ; James, November 5, 1097: Hannah, baptized March 17, 1700; Jedediah, baptized June 7, 1702; Jerusha, baptized May 24, 1704: Elias, baptized December 22, 1706; Abigail. baptized May 2, 1708, married John Holmes.
(IV) Samuel (2), son of Samuel (1) Frink, was born February 14, 1693. He married. May 26, 1714, Margaret Wheeler. Children : Samuel, born February 26, 1715; Isaac, De- cember 25, 1717; David, mentioned below ; Margaret, September 2, 1722; Andrew, Feb- ruary 23, 1724; Hannah, May 28, 1727; Abi- gail, May 6, 1729; Jabez, January 16, 1732; Mary, November 10, 1734.
(V) David, son of Samuel (2) Frink, was born May 30, 1720. He married Eunice Gal- lup, in 1744. They lived in Stonington, Con- necticut. Children : Eunice, born December 4, 1745; Lois, April 8, 1746: Abigail, Febru- ary 12, 1747; Hannah. December 30, 1748: David, June 12. 1750; Mary, January 20, 1752; Esther, October 21, 1754; Adam, March 8, 1756; Nathan, mentioned below: Isaac, February 4, 1761.
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(VI) Captain Nathan Frink, son of David Frink, was born April 8. 1759, in Stonington, Connecticut, died in Pharsalia, New York, about 1840. He was one of the pioneers of Pharsalia, making the overland trip with an ox-cart. abont 1820. He served as a private in the revolution under Captain David Dor- rance, of Voluntown. Hle was a pensioner in 1818, then being a resident of New York state. Children : Nathan, Hiram, mentioned below : Gilbert, John, Delight, Coddington.
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