USA > New York > Genealogical and family history of northern New York : a record of the achievements of her people in the making of a commonwealth and the founding of a nation, Volume II > Part 15
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66
(III) Daniel, third son of Samuel and Bethia (Morgan) Weed, was born October 27, 1695, in Amesbury, and probably died before October 31. 1736. He married. Jan- uary 24, 1720, Dorothy Sargent, and the records of 'the second Amesbury church show the baptism of three children, namely : Daniel, May 11, 1729; Orlando, September 12, 1731 ; "Naomie of Dan'l Weed's wife," October 31, 1736. The mother was received as a member of this church September 14, 1735-
(IV) Daniel (2), son of Daniel (1) and Dorothy (Sargent ) Weed, was baptized May 11, 1729, at the second church of Amesbury, and may have been six or eight years old at the time, but was probably an infant, as the family tradition as to his age indicates. He learned ship-building, probably, at Newbury, and settled at Ports- mouth, New Hampshire, where he followed this occupation. His last years were spent in Grafton, New Hampshire, where he at- tained the age of ninety-five years.
(V) Joseph, son of Daniel (2) Weed, was born July 23. 1762, probably in Ports- mouth, whence he went to Lebanon, New Hampshire, and thence moved to Essex, Chittenden county, Vermont, and engaged in farming, reaching the age of eighty-two years. He married, March 10, 1783. Lydia Allrich.
(VI) Roswell Alcott, son of Joseph and Lydia (Aldrich ) Weed, was born in 1797, in West Lebanon. New Hampshire, and bed January 17, 1860, in Plattsburgh, New York. He was reared in Essex, Vermont, where he remained until he attained his ma- iority, and located in Plattsburgh in 1818.
He was employed some time as a clerk and engaged in lumbering operations, remaining ten years in Plattsburgh. He then pur- chased land in Belmont, Franklin county, New York, on which he conducted lumber- ing business and operated a grist mill until 1839, when he returned to Plattsburgh. For some years he engaged in mercantile opera- tions here, and retired with a competence a few years before his death. He was active in promoting the interests of the village of Plattsburgh, and was a director in vari- ous industrial enterprises, one in which he took especial interest being the plank road which was built in his time. Every effort to improve the town and country about it received his encouragement and support. He married, in Plattsburgh, Sarah A., a native of that place, born in 1810, died 1895, daughter of Smith and Hannah ( Roberts) Mead. and granddaughter of Nehemiah and Sally ( Newcomb) Mead, of Easton, Wash- ington County, New York. Smith Mead was born in Easton and became an early settler of Clinton county, serving many years as county clerk. At the time of the battle of Plattsburgh, in September, 1814, when he took part in repelling the British, he was living about five miles from the vil- lage. He attained the great age of ninety years. His wife, Hannah, died at the age of sixty-five years. She was a daughter of Jolin Roberts, a revolutionary soldier and a pensioner in his old age, which was passed near Plattsburgh, and granddaughter of General Roberts, of Manchester, Vermont. Roswell A. Weed and wife had the follow- ing children: 1. Cornelia A., married Thomas Benedict, of South Norwalk, Con- necticut. and died in Igo8. 2. Smith Mead, mentioned below. 3. William B. 4. Mary E. 5. Sarah M., married William S. Ketcham. 6. Hannah, died at the age of fifteen years.
(VII) Hon. Smith Mead, elder son of Roswell .A. and Sarah A. ( Mead ) Weed, was born July 26. 1833, in Behnont, New York. His parents returned to Plattsburgh
1
522
NORTHERN NEW YORK
to reside in 1839, and he secured his early education in the common school and an academy there. It was his desire from early boyhood to take up law, but was opposed by his father, who placed him in a general store as clerk, three years in Plattsburgh. and two years in Boston. When he had reached man's estate he at once began the study of the law, which had so long been denied him, in the office of Judge Beck- with at Plattsburgh, and was admitted to the bar, January 1, 1856, and thereafter pursued the course of the Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts. taking high rank in the class of 1857 and graduat- ing with the degree of LL. B. After grad- uating at Harvard he began the practice as a partner of his former preceptor in Platts- burgh, the third member of the firm being Henry Johnson, a noted attorney. Mr. Weed devoted himself with diligent attention to the interests of his clients, and was corre- spondingly rewarded with success. His aim was to do well whatever he undertook, and his careful study of cases and the law kept him fully informed and enabled him to use his powers to the best advantage. As a consequence he rapidly made his way to the front rank of his profession and gained the confidence and esteem of the community. Whether consciously or unconsciously, he was laying the foundation for future use- fulness, and was soon called to higher fields of endeavor. His reputation for diligence. intelligence and decision, coupled with a pleasing manner and presence, soon brought him into leadership. In 1865 he was pressed to become a candidate for president of the village, to which position he was easily elected and continued to fill by re-election for several years. In 1867 he was a mem- ber of the constitutional convention in the state of New York, from the Fourth Ju- dicial district. as delegate-at-large. He was a staunch Jeffersonian Democrat from prin- ciple, as well as strongly inherited tenden- cies, but notwithstanding the fact that the district was overwhelmingly Republican in
normal tendency, he was repeatedly elert to the legislature by a handsome major; beginning with 1865, and continuing i three years, and again in 1871, 1873 a. 1874. During this service he was a stre. force in shaping legislation, far-sighted a progressive, and took the initiative in pa. . ing several important measures to final pa- sage. Among these was the free school . . of 1867, which put away forever the "ray bill" and made the public schools of the stat . for the first time free to all. He was seen. lously active in securing railroad commun? : tion between the Lake Champlain region an : New York City, and drafted the artic! of association which put the matter in stic organized form as to secure result: Through his influence, largely, a grant . : $250,000 was secured from the state legis ;. ture, and capitalists of Clinton and Esse: counties subscribed to bonds ; and finally. it. November. 1875. the road was opened Plattsburgh and through to Rouse's Poir. and Montreal. This public service has ne :- er been forgotten, and has placed Mr. Wee permanently among the public benefactor of the region. In speaking of the enter- prise. the Plattsburgh Republicun said "Mr. Weed has met and overcome difficy! ties which would have discouraged a man of less strength and less perseverance." .1. the banquet hekl in celebration of the st :: cess of the undertaking. one of the sp.al. ers. Hon. R. S. Hale, said : "For a seas" of years no man has struggled for the stc cess of this enterprise as has the Hon. Sm ... M. Weed. In the pursuit of that end h has never faltered. never flinched. never hesitated, pursuing his object with ski" with sagacity. I am sorry t' say I have been opposed to his policy in r .. gard to this enterprise, but time has vin cated his judgment." Mr. Weed's pract .. " grew to such proportions and his reputatie so extended as to require the maintenan.". of an office in the metropolis, which was e- tablished in 1873. though his residence c" tinued in Plattsburgh. He became cours".
Fory& S Need
523
NORTHERN NEW YORK
for various stock companies and has served ( see Standish VII). Children: 1. Ros- on the official boards of great industrial en- well Alcott, born June 19. 1860, died un- married at the age of forty years. 2. George Standish, mentioned below. 3- Margaret Celeste, June 16, 1866, residing in Plattsburgh. unmarried. 4. Katherine Miller Standish. April 1. 1878, wife of Judge Henry T. Kellogg. of Plattsburgh. terprises. He founded the Chateaugay Ore and Iron Company in 1881, and was its president. In 1867 he purchased these mines and in 1874 the Hon. Andrew Will- iams became a partner in the mines. He built the Chateaugay railroad from Platts- burgh to Lake Placid, and in 1881 the ore company and iron company were consoli- (lated and additional capital admitted, and was later sold to the Delaware & Hudson Railroad. In 1868 he was senior counsel for prosecution of Robert C. Dorn, the canal commissioner, which was one of the most noted cases of the state, for impeach- ment. His legal work carried him through all branches of litigation. He was vice- president and member of the executive board of the Nicarauga Canal Company and president of the San Domingo Improve- ment Company. In 1887 he received the full Democratic vote for United States senator in the legislature. and he has been an active participant in party councils through many years. He was a delegate in the national Democratic conventions of 1876-80-84, and enjoyed the personal friendship and confidence of Samuel J. Til- den. being often, during the later years of that statesman's life a welcome visitor at "Greylock." his home. As a public speaker Mr. Weed has long enjoyed a high reputa- tion, and his forceful and energetic charac- ter needs no mention beyond the achieve- ments already noted. His time and abilities have always been at the command of every enterprise calculated to aid in promoting human progress, and he is esteemed as one of New York's most useful citizens. In re- cent years he has practically retired from all activities of a business or professional nature, and he enjoys the well-earned re- pre of life at his home in Plattsburgh. overlooking Lake Champlain. He married September 6, 1859. Caroline Leslie, daugh- ter of Colonel Matthew M. and Catherine Phoebe ( Miller) Standish, of Plattsburgh
(VIII) George Standish, second son of Smith M. and Caroline L. (Standish) Weed. was born February 13. 1862, in Plattsburgh, and began his education in the schools of his native town. On leaving the high school he began his preparation for col- lege at St. Paul's school in Concord, New Hampshire, later becoming a student at Philips Exeter Academy. Entering Harvard College he was graduated in the class of 1886, with the degree of A. B. Returning to his home he pursued the study of law and was admitted to the bar in 1888. and be- came a member of the law firm of Palmer, Weed & Kellogg, a leading legal firm of Clinton county. He has always taken an active interest in politics, and has been con- tinuously a member of the county Demo- cratic committee since leaving college. In 1886 he received the nomination of the Democratic party for member of assembly. and was elected by a majority of eighteen hundred. the district having a usual Republi- can majority of at least two thousand. He was re-elected in 188 ;. and in 1887-88 he was a member of the state committee of his party and served as treasurer of that body. During his first year in the assembly he was a member of the committees on ap- propriations. villages and state prisons, and the following year (having been re-elected without opposition from the Republicans ). served on committees on ways and means. rules and others. In the following year he was elected president of the village of Platt burgh. and filled that position with acceptability. One year later. upon the resignation of Judge S. A. Kellogg. Mr. Weed was selected to fill the position of county judge. Since the establishment of
------
-------
524
NORTHERN NEW YORK
the State Normal School at Plattsburgh, he has been a member of its board of man- agers, serving as treasurer of the board. and was also many years chairman of the teachers' committee. From August 1. 1893. to July 1, 1899, he was collector of cus- toms at the port of Champlain. He married. May 20, 1891, Frances Il., born January 1, 1870, at Essex, New York, daughter of Hon. John Ross. Children: 1. Caroline Standish, born February 28, 1893. 2. Catryna Ten Broeck. December 8. 1898.
John Ross was born August 12, 1836, of Scotch ancestry, and married. September II. 1867, Anna Mary Ketchum, born January 25, 1837, daughter of John Ten Broeck Ketchum and his second wife, Lucy Ann Swetland. John T. B. Ketchum was born June 6, 1805, and died February 10, 1882. He married first ) November 30, 1830. Caroline Elizabeth Cargill, who lived only a few years, and he married ( second ). Janu- ary 25. 1836, Lucy Ann Swetland, born September 11, 1817. daughter of William and Henrietta Julia ( Kirtland ) Swetland. He was a son of Joseph Ketchum, born March 16, 1781, died March 1. 1863. son of Hiram and Mary ( Barlow ) Ketchum, of Waterford, New York. Joseph Ketchum married, September 22, 1804. Maria Bodyn Ten Broeck. born September 10. 1785, at Claverack, New York, died July 11. 1863. She was a daughter of Major John C. Ten Broeck. of Claverack ( see Ten Broeck. V. ). John Ross was the eldest son of General Henry H. and Susanna ( Blanchard) Ross, of Essex, New York. General Henry H. Ross was the son of Daniel and Elizabeth (Gilliland) Ross. Elizabeth Gilliland was the daughter of William Gilliland, the pio- neer of the Champlain valley. Su-anna ( Blanchard) Ross was the daughter of An- thony J. and Maria ( Williams) Blanchard. Maria ( Williams ) Blanchard was the daughter of General John Williams, of Sa- lem, New York. These lines of ancestry connect the Weeds of Massachusetts with some of the oldest New York familie -.
(The Ten Broeck Line).
This old Dutch name is distinguishe ! the annals of the early settlement of . colony of New Amsterdam, later New Y in the revolutionary rolls of the state. .. also in the arts of peace. It was borne those of high blood in Europe, and hin- ways been a guaranty of good breeding ... fine citizenship.
(I) Wessels Ten Broeck, immigrant cestor, is supposed to have come from Il land to this country with Peter Minur 1626. Little is known of him further. record appears in this country of his id .: riage or children.
( II) Dirck Wesselse, son of Wessels 's Broeck, was born December 18, 1638, 11 ' ably in what is now New York City, a. died September 18. 1717. He married. 1663. Chrystina, born May 19, 1644. ( November 24. 1729, daughter of Correl. Massen and Catalyntje ( Martensen ) VA Buren.
(IH) Johannes, son of Dirck W. :.. Chrystina ( Van Buren) Ten Broeck. .. born in 1683. and married (first ) June 1 1709. Elizabeth, daughter of Johannes a: Elizabeth ( Staats ) Wendell. He marri (second ) December 29. 1714. Catry: daughter of Hendryck and Catharine V. Vragh ) Van Rensselaer, baptized Janta: 1, 1692.
(IV) Cornelius, son of Johannes a: Catryna (Van Rensselaer ) Ten Broeck. : born May 14, 1727, and died June 26. 17 He married Maria, daughter of Peter ... Agnes Constance ( de Bruyn ) Bodyn. 1. December 8. 173t. and resided in Claver .. New York.
(V) Major John C., son of Corne and Maria ( Bodyn) Ten Broeck, was b. March 15. 1755, in Claverack, and . August 10, 1835. in Watervliet. New Y. When hostilities began between the An.c en colonies and the mother country. enlisted as a soldier of the Continental 1: and was commissioned November 21. 1. as first lieutenant of the sixth company. :
525
NORTHERN NEW YORK
regiment, which was composed of the flower of the state and commanded by his kins- man. Colonel Goosen Van Schaick. He distinguished himself as a brave soldier throughout the war, was promoted to cap- tain June 29, 1781, and was later brevetted major. He participated in the battles of Trenton, Brandywine, Monmouth. and shared in the privations at Valley Forge. His only wound was received at the battle of Yorktown, where he was struck in the shoulder by a shell. In preparation for the campaign of 1777 the First New York Regiment marched to Mohawk Valley, in answer to the summons of Colonel Marinus Willett, but family tradition says that John C. Ten Broeck was in Fort Stanwix with Colonel Peter Gansevoort: and it is sup- posed that he was detailed to attend Colonel Gansevoort when the invasion from Canada was impending. When peace returned Major Ten Broeck retired to the vicinity of his native home, and late in life made his home at Watervleit. He married. Decem- ber 30. 1784. his cousin. Antje, born May 9, 1754. died May 7. 1838, daughter of Hen- drick and Annetje (Van Schaick ) Ten Broeck.
(VI) Maria Bodyn, daughter of John C. and Antje (Ten Broeck) Ten Broeck, was born September 10, 1785, at Claverack, and became the wife of Joseph Ketchum ( see Weed, VIII).
(The Standish Line).
To every one with the slightest familiar- ity with American history this name is familiar. It is unnecessary to repeat here the history of Miles Standish, the staunch founder of a staunch family, but a brief resume of his career is not without interest "1 this connection.
( I) Captain Myles Standish, born 1586. was one of the Pilgrim band which came to Le shores of Massachusetts in 1620, accom- anied by his wife, Rose, who died January .9. 1621. After a short stay in Plymouth, " settled in Duxbury, across the bay from
the first settlement, on the hill still known as Captain's Hill, whose sides spring ab- ruptly from the shore. He was a signer of the famous "Mayflower" compact, and be- came one of the leading men of the colony, being made military commander at a meet- ing held in February. 1621, to establish mil- itary arrangements. He conducted all the early expeditions against the Indians, and continued in the military service of the col- ony all his life. "He commanded the Ply- mouth troops which marched against the Narragansetts in 1645, and when hostilities with the Dutch were apprehended in 1653. he was one of the council of war of Ply- mouth and was appointed to command the troops which the council determined to raise. He was also prominent in civil affairs, and was for many years assistant ( member of the governor's council) and, when it be- came necessary in 1626, to send a delegate to England to represent the colonists in the business arrangements with the merchant adventurers, he was selected. He was a commissioner of the United Colonies and a partner in the trading companies. He par- ticipated in a division of cattle in 1627, at which time he had a wife Barbara, and died October 3, 1656. An imposing monument to him has been erected on Captain's Hill, Duxbury. His name is known all over the world, especially through Longfellow's ro- mantic poem, "The Courtship of Myles Standish." Children : Alexander, Charles, John, Myles and Lora.
(II ) Alexander, eldest child of Myles and Barbara Standish, was admitted to the free- dom of the colony in 1648, and was the third town clerk of Duxbury from 1695 to 1700. He died between July 5 and August IO, 1702. He married ( first ) Priscilla. daughter of Jolin and Priscilla ( Molines ) Alden, and ( second ) Desire, daughter of Edward Doty, and widow of William Sher- man, her second husband, the first being Is- rael Holmes. She survived him and died in 1703. Children by first wife: Myles, Ebe- nezer, Lora, Lydia, Mercy, Sarah and Eliz-
526
NORTHERN NEW YORK
abeth. By second: Thomas, Desire, Icha- bod and David.
(HI) Ebenezer, second son of Alexander and Sarah ( Alden) Standish, was born 1672, in Plymouth, and died March 19, 1755. He married Hannah, daughter of Samuel Sturtevant, of Plymouth. She died January 23. 1759.
(IV) Zachariah. son of Ebenezer and Hannah (Sturtevant ) Standish, was born October 12. 1698, in Plympton, Massachu- setts, and died there March 30. 1770. He married Abigail, daughter of Ebenezer Whitman, of Bridgewater, Massachusetts. born 1704. died August 3. 1788.
(V) Zachariah (2). son of Zachariah ( I) and .Abigail ( Whitman ) Standish, was born May 30. 1739. in Plympton, and died there March 26. 1780. He was a soldier of the revolution, serving in several enlist- ments. He marched, March 28, 1777, in Captain Lothrop's command, Brigadier Jo- seph Cushing's brigade. on the alarm at Bristol, Rhode Island. He was also a mem- ber of Captain William White's company. Colonel Enoch Putnam's regiment, detached from the militia to reinforce the Continental army, for a term of three months, agreeable to a resolve of the general court of Massa- chusetts, made June 30, 1781, and marched to West Point, where he did duty. He mar- ried ( first ). April 8. 1760, Rebecca Wood. who died June 19. 1769. aged twenty-four years : married ( second ) Olive Pool.
(VI) Zachariah (3), son of Zachariah (2) and Rebecca ( Wood) Standish, was born October 3. 1763. in Granville. New York, and died January 1. 1804. He mar- ried. June 6. 1791. Mary Scott, born March 24. 1778. died July 31. 1824.
(VII) Colonel Matthew M .. son of Zach- ariah (3) and Mary ( Seott ) Standish, was born August 18. 1704. and died June 24, 1866. He was a man of intense patriotic spirit, and commanded a company at the battle of Plattsburgh in 1814. He married. September 2. 1818, Catherine Phoebe, born August 6. 1800. died July 16. 1866, daugh-
ter of Dr. John and Elizabeth ( Smith ) M. ler.
(VIII ) Caroline Leslie, daughter of 31 . thew M. and Catherine P. ( Miller ) S: dish, became the wife of Smith M. We ( see Weed VII).
Joseph Weed was a descend. WEED of the Weed family of St ... ford, Connecticut, early setti of that town. He was born at Milton, S. atoga county, February 7. 1791 or 170- He was reared in his native town and e. eated there in the publie schools. He ca .. to Essex county when a young man, a' bought a traet of timber land and may factured lumber. He owned several m !! He was a Whig, and was one of the f ... postmasters of Ticonderoga. He died Ticonderoga. New York, March I. IS He married ( first ) Luey Benedict, who d: in 1843. He married ( second ) Mary H .. of Ticonderoga, born 1813, died in .1; gust. 1889. daughter of Henry B. a: Esther (Coats) Hay. Children of fir wife: George C .. mentioned below ; Alir Walter. Frederick, Amanda and Emelir. Children of second wife: Alexander i. born March, 1844. of Weed Brothers, dru. gists : Mary, married Richard Arthur, of ! conderoga : children : Charles W., Joseph 1. and Jennie D. M. Arthur. Charles, do aged twelve years. Henry, died you - Albert, mentioned below.
( II ) George C., son of Joseph Weed. v born at Ticonderoga about 1816, died al 1001. Ile married Sarah Smith Chilli John, mentioned below. Jennie, Philip. .. fred and Joseph.
( I]) Albert. son of Joseph Weed.1 born at Ticonderoga. January 10, 1857 was educated in the public schools and Union Free Academy at Ticonderoga. worked for a time at the trade of carpet: and for some three years in the pulp nit ! Ticonderoga. He then learned the d !! business, and from 1892 to September, Iv was in partnership with his brother. . V
1
527
NORTHERN NEW YORK
ander H. Weed, under the firm name of Weed Brothers, druggists. He has been in the fire insurance business in addition to his other avocations since 1887. in the firm of Weed & Burleigh. He is also a partner in the firm of Stevens & Weed, dealers in cloth- ing. Ticonderoga. He was a director of the First National Bank in Ticonderoga for a number of years. In polities he is a Re- publican, and he has taken a prominent part in public affairs. He was supervisor of the town, 1891-93: member of the board of ยท trustees of the incorporated village of Ticon- deroga ; member of the assembly in 1895- 96. Since 1901, when he was appointed by President MeKinley, he has been postmaster of Ticonderoga. He is a member of Mount Defiance Lodge. No. 794. Free and .Accept- ed Masons; of Carillon Chapter. No. 290, Royal Arch Masons, Ticonderoga; of De Soto Commandery, Knights Templar, of Plattsburgh; of Oriental Temple, Mystic Shrine, of Troy. In religion he is an Epis- copalian.
Mr. Weed married, October, 1884, Ida Stevens, of Westport, New York, daugh- ter of Charles A. Stevens. Children : Charles, born 1888, died 1894. Marjorie, July, 1897.
(III) John, son of George C. Weed, was born at Ticonderoga in 1848. He was edu- cated in the public schools, and has always lived in that town. Children : Joseph Thur- low, who is mentioned below: George, who was born August 12, 1882, died February 12. 1910.
( \\') Joseph Thurlow, son of John Weed. was born at Ticonderoga. August ;. 1880. He was educated in the public schools and at Middlebury College. He was admitted : the bar, September 26. 1005, at Brook- hn. New York, and is practicing at Ticon- deroga. In politics he is Republican. in eligion a Baptist. He married. May 30. 1907. Pearl L., daughter of Daniel W. and Jane ( Thompson ) Smith, of Danbury, Con- erticut; one child. Virginia Thompson Weed.
The surname Platt is of an- PLATT cient English origin, but the family is numerous neither in this country or Great Britain.
(I) Deacon Richard Platt. immigrant ancestor of all of the surname in this coun- try, came from Hertfordshire, England, and settled as early as 1638 in New Haven, Connecticut, from there he went to Mil- ford, Connecticut, where he lived until his death in 1684 or 1685. He was admitted a freeman before 1669, when his name ap- pears on the list. His wife Mary died and was buried January 24. 1676. His will be- queathed to all his sons, to the children of his daughter Mary by her second husband, Thomas Wetherell, and Hannah, wife of Christopher Comstock, and Sarah, who mar- ried Thomas Beach and Miles Merwin. Chil- dren : I. Mary, married ( first), May I, 1651, Luke Atkinson ; ( second), January 3, 1667, Thomas Wetherell. 2. John, settled in Norwalk: married Hannah Clark. 3. Isaac, settled in Huntington, Long Island, with his brother, and has many descendants in that section. 4. Sarah. 5. Epenetus, bap- tized July 12, 1640; mentioned below. 6. Hannah, born October 1, 1643. 7. Josiah, 1645. S. Joseph, 1649; married, 1680, Mary Kellogg.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.