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 33

Author: Cutter, William Richard, 1847- ed
Publication date: 1910
Publisher: New York, N.Y. : Lewis Historical Publishing Co.
Number of Pages: 994


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 33


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( II) Hon. Robert E. Healey, fourth son of Thomas E. and Elizabeth ( Nash)


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Healey, was born June 10, 1870, in Platts- burgh, New York. He attended the public schools of his native city, graduating from the high school in 1891, and was two years a student at Union College. Schenectady. He read law in the office of Hon. J. B. Riley. of Riley & Cantwell. and after two years in the Albany Law School he was graduated in the class of 1804. He was admitted to the bar the same year, and immediately began practice in his native town, where he has won distinction and success. After two years of practice alone he formed a partner- ship with his former preceptor, under the name of Riley & Healey, which connection continued five years. In 1900 he was ap- pointed recorder of the village of Platts- burgh, and in the midst of his term of three years the city was incorporated, the office of recorder being made equivalent to city judge. Mr. Healey being the first to fill that honorable position. In 1903 he was ap- pointed by Governor Odell to the county judgeship of Clinton county, to fill vacancy caused by the promotion of Judge Henry T. Kellogg to the supreme bench, the latter suc- ceeding S. A. Kellogg. deceased. In the succeeding election Judge Healey was nom- inated for the full term of six years on the Republican ticket, and was elected, being now ( 1910) in the discharge of his duties. and during his tenure of office his decisions have never been reversed. Having always manifested an intelligent interest in the con- duct of public affairs, Judge Healey early took an active part in promoting their prog- ress. and is recognized as one of the most public-spirited citizens of his native town. He is now a member of the board of educa- tion and of the industrial committee of Plattsburgh. Identified with many social and fraternal organizations, he is a member of the Plattsburgh, McDonough Social and Commercial club -: of the Knights of the Maccabees, an insurance body : Plattsburgh Lodge. No. 621. B. P. O. E., in which he is a working member : and Plattsburgh Coun- cil. No. 255, Knights of Columbus, in which


he has long been a leader. For five and one-half years he was grand knight, and i- now master of the fourth degree. He was one of the eight delegates of the order from this state to the national convention which dedicated the home maintained by the order at New Haven, Connecticut.


Judge Healey married, May 18, 1897, at Watertown. New York, Mary F. Burn -. sister of Father Burns, rector of Holy Fa- ther's church, in that city, who performed the marriage rite. She was born at Port Henry, New York, daughter of John and Margaret Burns, was graduated from Pots- dam School in the class of 1896, and taught one year in the Plattsburgh high schon.1. Children : Robert Burns, born May 6, 1880). and Margaret Elizabeth. September IS. 1900, both in Plattsburgh.


HALE The surnames Hale. Heald. Haild, and Haile are identical in origin in this country. Fam- ilies of these names have a common ancestor in John Heald, or Hale, of Concord. The name is also spelled Held. Helde, and Halde. According to tradition. John Heald was from Berwick-on-Tweed. Northumberland. England. A representative of the famil: who visited this place about 1890 was 1111- able to find any trace of the Healds there. "It is probable." writes Professor Charle- A. Torrey, of the Chicago University. "that the tradition is incorrect." Heald settled in Concord. Massachusetts, at an early date. probably in 1635. He was admitted a free- man June 2. 1641. He lived also at Riv- bury and Cambridge. He died May 24. 1662. in Concord. His autograph will middle a short time before that date is found at the East Cambridge probate office ( Middle- sex county ), and his handwriting is re- markably good. In his will he mentioned his wife Dorothy, sons John and Timothy. and daughter Hannah, besides "five younger children." Children: 1. John, born in Eng- land: married. June 10. 1661. Sarah Dean 2. Timothy, settled in Suffield, Connecticut


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3. Hannah, married John Spaulding. t. Dorcas, born May 22. 1645, died 1050. 5. Gershom, mentioned below. 6. Dorothy. born October 16, 1649. 7. Thomas, born January 19, 1651 ; married, at Hadley, No- vember IN. 1675. Priscilla Markham: an- cestor of Enfield family: proof not com- plete. 8. Isaac. settled in Stow. 9. Israel. born July 30. 1666; married Martha Wright.


(II ) Gershom Hale, or Haile, son of John, was born March 23. 1647. at Concord. Massachusetts. He married, May 6, 1673. Ann Vinton, and settled in Springfield. Massachusetts. He lived previously at Con- cord and Stow. In later years his name was spelled Hale. He had a grant of land on the west side of the Agawam river, March 11. 1700-01, upon Feeding Hill. He died at Springfield, May 13. 1717. His wife Ann died there September 4. 1698. Children : 1. Dorothy, born March 9. 1,73- 74. 2. John, March 24. 1775-76. 3. Han- nah, October 10. 1776. 4. Dorothy. May 19. 1778. 5. Dorcas, April 14. 1779: mar- ried Obadiah Cooley. 6. Ann, January 5. 1681-82. 7. Gershom, February 5. 1684. mentioned below. S. Benjamin. born at Springfield, August 17. 1698.


(III) Gershom ( 2), son of Gershom ( 1) Hale, was born in Concord, February 5. 1684. He and his father lived in West Springfield, and took part in the first town meeting. April 19. 1,20. His father had the third lot of ten acres in a division of the proprietary in 1721. His brother Ben- jamin had the fourth lot : he also shared in the division. In a list of men over twenty- one in Springfield ( West ) April. 1707. he and his brother John and their father are mentioned. He was elected hogreeve in 1715-16. an honor reserved generally for newly married men. His brother John was similarly honored in 1714. He married Mercy -. Children: Gershom. born at Springfield, June 13. 1711 : mentioned be- low: Israel, born 1713: Mercy. June 22. 1716.


(IV ). Gershom (3), son of Gershom ( 2) Hale, was born at Springfield. June 13. 1711. He lived at West Springfield, and had a son Gershon1.


(\') Gershom (4), son of Gershom (3) Hale, was born about 1732. He settled early at Orwell. Addison county, Vermont. with his son Gershom, and John, probably also his son. He was a soldier in the rey- olution, in Captain Zadock Everest's com- pany. Colonel Ira Allen's regiment, in 1781, and again in 1782. His only son, Ger- shom. mentioned below, was in the same company.


(VI) Gershom (5). son of Gershom (4) Hale, was born about 1754. at West Spring- field. and was in the same company with his father in a Vermont regiment in the revo- lution. Both he and his father were among the seventy-one who took the freeman's oath.


(VII) Benjamin, son of Gershom (5) Hale, was born at Orwell. November 18, 1786, and died at Canton, New York. Jan- uary 8. 1853 .* He was a private in Cap- tain Scovell's company i mounted ), Vermont militia, war of 1812, and his widow was awarded a bounty land certificate on ac- count of his services under the Act of Con- gress of March 3. 1855. He married Ju- dith Thompson, daughter of Festus Thomp- son (reputed to have come from the Island of Guernsey ). January 28. 1806: she died at Canton, March 25. 1859. Children, all born in Orwell: 1. Savilla. November 17, 1806. 2. Winthrop. September 2, 1708. died January 14. 1809. 3. Horace Win- "*There is an unexplained discrepancy as to the age of Benjamin Hale. The tlates of birth and death a- they appear in the text would make his age at death of years one month twenty days. But the grave-tone has: "Benjamin Hale, died Jan. 8. 1853. aet. 68 vr- " This stone was erected by his son. Ger-hom Hale, who had a most ac- curate memory. Under date of August 2. 1007, Commissioner of Pensions Warner wrote to a grandson of Benjamin Hale: "In the soldier's application for bounty land. made in St. Law- rence county. New York, Is the statement in 1851 that he was then sixty-six years of age." This statement is in harmony with the inscription on the gravestone.


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throp, May 13. 1810, see forward. 4. Fes- tus Thompson, March 29. 1813; died in Illinois. 3. Mary, April 26, 1815; died in Illinois. 6. Oramel B., November 8. 1817. died December 2. 1893. in Chapin, Illinois. 7. Esther, June 22, 1819: married John C. Bush, May 4. 1846; died. June 7, 1886. in Lisbon, New York. 8. Martha. April 28. 1821. 9. James Riley. June 14. 1823; stu- dent at Amherst College, class of 1852, and at Andover Theological Seminary 1852-54: graduated at Union Theological Seminary, 1855; Presbyterian or Congregational cler- gyman at DeKalb and Massena. New York. and York, Pennsylvania. till 1861; enliste 1 as private in United States Marine Corps. June 28. 1861. at Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania, and was honorably discharged July 20, 1865, at Brooklyn, New York, as cor- poral. 10. Clarissa F .. May 6, 1827, died at Lisbon, New York, in 1902.


(VIII) Horace Winthrop, son of Ben- jamin Hale, was born in Orwell, May 13. 1810, and died at Canton, January 14. 1879. He was educated in the public schools of his native county and fitted for college. He was a schoolmate of Bishop Wadhams. first bishop of Ogdensburg. Mr. Hale taught school in Addison county, Vermont, for a time, and in 1833 was appointed teacher of the village school at Canton. Two years later his father came to Canton with his family and located on a farm two miles south of the village. Horace continued to teach school winters and to help his father on the farm. He succeeded to the home- stead and lived upon it until December, 1879. He was a strong. Abolitionist, in his youth. and cast his first vote with the Free-soil party. He was a Republican from the or- ganization of the party, though he voted with the Greeley Republicans in 1872. He was active in public affairs and honored with many offices of trust and responsilsil- ity. He was president of the board of edu- cation : for nine years a town assessor : four years superviser. and a facter in county polities : and commissioner of United States


Deposit Fund for some fifteen years. He was a prominent member and earnest sup- porter of the Baptist church of Canton. He married. in 1845. Betsey Russell Lewis, born in Cornwall, Addison county, Ver- mont. November 20, 1814. died at Canton. July 19, 1907, daughter of Alanson and Polly ( Russell) Lewis.


(IX) Ledyard Park, son of Horace Win- throp Hale, was born at Canton, May 1 ;. 1854. He spent his youth on his father's farm. and attended the district schools and the old Canton Academy. He entered St. Lawrence University, from which he grad- uated in the class of 1876. He studied for his profession in the law school of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. receiving his degree in 1878. He was admitted to the bar in Wisconsin in 1877, and for three years after graduation practiced law at Madison, Wis- consin. Then he returned to New York. where he was admitted to the bar in 18SI. and since then he has had his office in his native town. He was appointed assistant district attorney January 1. 1882, and held that office six years. He was president of the village of Canton in 1886-87 : supervisor of the town of Canton four years ( 1890- 93). and took an active part in preventing the removal of the county seat to Ogdens- burg when the court house was burned in the winter of 1893, and was on the building committee of the new court house. He was elected district attorney in November, 18 3 and re-elected in 1896. In October, 1002. he was appointed county judge by G wer " Odell to fill a vacancy. and the following year was elected for the full term of six years. Between 1881 and 1905. excep: when he was supervisor, he served on the board of education and was its president for many years. He has been a trustee of S. Lawrence University since 1884, and a mem ?- ber of the executive committee of the board since 1885.


He was appointed commissioner of the State Board of Charities from the F. !!! Judicial District by Governor Hughes :"


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May, 1907. He was appointed counsel to the Public Service Commission for the Sec- ond District in April. 1908, and resigned as county judge and member of the State Board of Charities. His office is in Al- bany. He is a member of Canton Lodge of Free Masons, and of the Beta Theta Pi fra- ternity.


He married, May 21, 1879, Ettie Bachel- ler, born March 21. 1850, daughter of Charles L. and Amelia ( Brownell ) Bach- eller, of Pierpont, New York. Children : I. Irma, born in Canton. August 8. 1881 : grad- uated from St. Lawrence University. class of 1903; graduate student at University of Wisconsin, 1904-05: took B. S. degree in home economies at Clarkson School of Technology in 1906 : married. June 23. 1900. Carl Frederick Pfund, a real estate broker at Madison, Wisconsin. 2. Horace Charles, born February o. 1858, in Canton : prepared for college at Phillips Exeter Academy, 1003-06: graduated A. B. at St. Lawrence University. 1900: student at Harvard Law School.


HALE Samuel Hale, or Hales, immi- grant ancestor, was born in 1610. He was an early settler of Wethersfieldl, Connecticut, and was there in 1637. He served in the Pequot war and received a grant of sixty acres of land for his services in that war. In 1639 he was in Hartford, where he owned a lot on the east side of the river. In 1942 he returned to Wethersfield, ant was selectinan there in 1047. He was me of the first proprietors · f Norwalk. in 1054. and was deputy to the general court from that town from 1636 to 1650. In 1660 he returned again to Weth- ersfield, and let-ed the estate of Governor Welles. on the east side of the river. In Hijo he was chosen on a mmittee of three to repair the meeting house. He died at Glastonbury, November o. 1693. He mar- ried Mary -- , who died January 10, 1711- 12. Children. I. Martha, Forn October 2. 1743. 2. Samuel. February 12. 1644-45. 3.


John. February 21. 1646-47. 4. Mary, April 29. 1649. 5. Rebecca, October 29. 1651. 6. Thomas, 1653, mentioned below. 7. Ebenezer, July 29, 1661. 8. Dorothy.


( II) Thomas Hale, son of Samuel Hale, or Hales, was born in 1653, died in Glaston- bury, December 23. 1723. He married, Oc- te ber 30, 1679, Naomi, born 1656, died May 17. 1735. daughter of John and Naomi Kil- bourn. Children: 1. Naomi. born Sep- tember 30, 108o. 2. Mary, November 20. 1682. 3. Thomas, September 17. 1684. mentioned below. 4. Timothy. 1692. 5. Nathaniel, 1694. 6. Ruth. ;. Eunice.


( III ) Thomas (2), son of Thomas ( 1) Hale, was born in Glastonbury, September 17, 1684, and resided there. He was killed by lightning. July 4. 1750. He marrie 1. January 11. 1721-22, Susannah, daughter of Nathaniel and Esther Smith, of Hartford. Children: 1. Susanna, born March 21. 1722-23. 2. Merey, November 3, 1724. 3. Thomas, July 25, 1726. 4. Moses, June 20. 1729, mentioned below. 3. Jerusha, Au- gust 8. 1730. 6. Mabel. July 17. 1732. 7. Nathaniel. August 30. 1734. 8. Ashbell, April 6, 1737. 9. Naomi, May 13, 1739.


( IV) Moses, son of Thomas (2) Hale. was born in Glastonbury, June 29. 1729. He married, July 29, 1752. Mary Edwards, ci Cromwell, Connecticut. He removed th Lanesborough, Massachusetts, 1758, and thence to Rutland, Vermont, 177, and was one of the first settlers of that town. He died there at the age of ninety one years. In the census of I'm three of his sons were heads of families at Rutland, Asa, who had a son over sixteen and five females in his family: William, who seems to have been living alone, perhaps on the homestead, and Thomas, who had a son over sixteen, two under that age and five females in his fan- ilv. Moses and son Asa were both soldiers in the revolution in Ethan Allen's Green Mountain Bovs. Children: 1. Asa, mar- ried Dorcas Mead: their daughter Mary married Rev. Chever Felch, and their daughter. Sarah Felch, married Asa H.


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Hale, who is mentioned below. 2. William. 3. Thomas. 4. Moses, who is mentioned below.


(V) Moses (2). son of Mo-es ( I) Hale. was born about 1760. He removed from Rutland, Vermont, to St. Lawrence county. New York, about 1830. with seven adult sons, and all except Asa H. lived in the towns of Stockholm and Norfolk. He died at Stockholm, New York. Children: I. William, Moses. Aaron. Alvin, Luther. Emina, Nancy, Asa HIilan, who is mentioned below.


(V1) Asa Hilan, son of Moses (2) Hale. was born in 1814 at Rutland, Vermont, died at Norwood. New York, INON. He had a common school education in his native town. He learned the trade of shoemaker in Ver- mont. He came from Vermont to Stock- holm, New York, whence he went to Bata- via and Rochester, New York. Later he went to Ogdensburg. New York, for a short time, locating finally in Norwood. He


worked at his trade in all these towns. He married in western New York, 1839, Sarah, born 1817, died 1893. daughter of Rev. Che- ver and Mary ( Hale , Felch, granddaughter of Asa Hale, of Rutland. greit-granddaugh- ter of Moses Hale, mentioned above. Na- than Felch, father of Rev. Chever Felch. was a soldier in the revolution on the Lex- ington alarm, and later in the Massachusetts Line in Westchester county. New York. Dorcas ( Mead) Hale, mother of Mary ( Hale) Felch, was daughter of Colorel James Mead, of Rutland, who commanded a regiment of Vermont troops during the revolutionary war. From this family Charles Mead Hale is named. Children of Asa HI. Hale :


I. Mary, lives in Brooklyn, New York. 2. Edward W. employed in the sub-treasury in New York City: married Minna Field: children: Frank S .. Alice I ... Ella C. and William Asa. 3. Frances H .. lives in Brooklyn, New York: widow of David 7. Brockett. 4. Agne- L .. graduate of Pats- dam Normal school, teacher of higher math-


ematics in the Girls' High School of Brook- lyn, New York. 5. Elizabeth, principal vi public school No. 98. Manhattan. New York. 6. Charles Mead. mentioned be- low.


(VII ) Charles Mead, son of Asa Hilan Hale, was born in Ogdensburg, New York. June 26, 1858. He was about a year old when his parents moved to Norwood, an:1 he was educated in the public schools of that town. He studied law in the ofice of Stillman Foote in Ogdensburg. After four years he was admitted to the bar. He opened an office and began to practice in Madrid. New York. After nine years he removed to Gouverneur, New York, where he practiced for eight years, being also clerk of the surrogate's court of St. Lawrence . county. He removed to Canton, the county seat, in 1900, and has been clerk of the sut- rogate's court since then. For twenty-five years he was clerk of the board of super- visors of St. Lawrence county. For six years he was bookkeeper for the county treasurer while at Gouverneur, and for the past four years has assisted the county treasurer in the same capacity : he was police justice in Gouverneur for several years. He is an active and loyal Republican. He is a member of the Masonic Lodge of Gouver- neur, and of the lodges of Odd Fellows and Independent Order of Foresters. He mar- ried. June 26, 1805. Grace E., daughter of Thomas M. and Jeanne B. Robinson. of Gouverneur. She was educated at the Ga :- verneur Wesleyan Seminary ; she studied law and was admitted to the bar in St. Law- rence county. Obed Robinson, her grand- father, was born in Swanton. Vermont ISO1, son of Amos, a native of Connecticut. and- - ( Butler ) Robinson ; he came t Gouverneur, New York. 1820, went theree to Hammond. New York, where he died in 1870: married Charlotte Purdy. Thon- M. Robinson was born in Hammond in 1836. removed to Gouverneur in (8St. and has since resided there: married Jeanre B Reddell, a native of Glasgow, Scotland.


Jonathan A. Hale


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Jonathan Hale was born Oeto- ried (first) in February, 1853, Harriet L.,


HALE ber 12. 1786: died May 12, born March 24. 1836, daughter of Timothy and Sally ( Bradley ) Shurtleff. of Pierre- pont. He married (second) Eliza E. (Smith) Brown, widow of Tyler Brown. Children of Tyler and Eliza E. Brown: Al- len L., Harmony and Orrin Brown : the lat- ter is deceased. Children of Jonathan .1. and Harriet L. Hale: I. Alvinza Hav- wood. born 1853. died August 23. 1865. 2. Harry J. December 28, 1855. farmer in Pierrepont : married Luella Zoller : children : Florence, Erwin, and Iva. 3. Charity L .. married George H. Sackett. farmer at Pots- dam: children: George and Harley H. . Sackett. 4. Abigail W., married Elmer E. Kimball. farmer, residing at Haswell. Colo- rado. 5. James E., lives on the oldl home- stead in Pierrepent : married I-abelle Ben- son: child. Elmer, student in the Potsdam high school. 6. Minnie Elizabeth, married James A. Magnan, of Roxbury, Massachu- setts. now part of Boston.


1857. at Pierrepont, New York. His school education was limited, and from an early age he was employed in the lumber- ing business in the Mohawk Valley, rafting timber. When he was twenty years old he came to Canton. New York, where he worked on a farm. In 1839 he settled at Pierrepont, where he spent the remainder of his days. He was a well-to-do farmer and a useful citizen. Though he had little schooling he was a student of the Bible and read many books. He married ( first ) Ma- dina Farwell; (second ) Abigail Waterman ( Wood ) Hayward. born in Barnard. Ver- mont, January 29. 1799. died March 24. 1877. daughter of Samuel Wood and widow of Charles Hayward. by whom she had one son. Children of first wife: 1. Esther. married Tyler Brown. 2. John F., married Lydia Brown. 3. Abigail B., married Lewis Richardson, of Nicholville. 4. Eliz- abeth. Children of second wife: 5. Mary Ann, born March 15, 1827. died March 16. 1827. 6. Lavinia. June 13. 1828, died Feb- ruary 1. 1835. 7. Jonathan A., mentioned below.


( II ) Jonathan .A., son of Jonathan Hale. was born in Canton. March 13. 1830. He went to Pierrepont with his parents when he was three years old, and was educated there in the little log school-house. He as- sisted his father on the farm when a boy. and continued to follow farming in his later years. He succeeded to the homestead after his father died. To the original one hundred and thirteen acres he added from time to time until he owned some seven hun- dred acres of land. He retired and came to Potsdam to live in ISTI, and since that time has lived on a seven-acre place in the village. He has been a trustee of the school district in Pierrepont. He is a member of Raquette Lodge. No. 213. Free and Ac- cepted Masons, to which he has belonged since 1869. He is a member of Potsdam Grange. Patrons of Husbandry. He mar-


The Hartwell family in HARTWELL, England is traced back to the days of William the Conqueror, who allotted land to one of his followers in Normandy by the name of Hartwell, perhaps the progenitor of all the English families of that name. He must have been born as early as 1050 .A.D. Al- though the American progenitor's ancestry is not definitely known. he is probably a de- scendant of this ancient family, and he is undoubtedly the ancestor of all the Ameri- can families of that name.


(I) William Hartwell. immigrant ances- tor, was born in England about 1613. He was among the first settlers of Concord, in New England. in 1636, and was admitted a freeman, May 18. 1042. He signed a pe- tition for the grant of Chelmsford in 1653. He was commissioned a corporal in 1671 and a quartermaster in 1673. He had a homestead in Concord. a mile east of the common on the road to Lexington, lately recupel ly E. W. Bull. In toon he owned


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two hundred and forty-seven acres of land. and was among the largest taxpayers of the town. He died March 12. 1090, aged seventy-seven years. His wife Jazan de- posed May 11, 1675. that she was sixty- seven years old, which would fix her birth- day in 1608. She died August 5, 1695. Children : I. Sarah, died Jak S. 1974: married. April 18. 1661, Benjamin Parker. of Billerica. 2. John, mentioned below. 3. Mary, born about 1643. died February 13. 1695-96; married Jonathan Hill. 4. Sam- uel, born March 26, 1645. 5. Martha, born May 25. 1649. died before 1690.


(II ) John, son of William Hartwell, was born December 23. 1640, at Concord. Mas- sachusetts, died January 12. 1702-03. Ile was a soldier in King Philip'- war under Captain Thomas Wheeler, and was in the fight at Brookfield. Massachusetts. He was admitted a freeman, March 21. 1080-90. He married (first) June 1. 1004. Priscilla. daughter of Edward and Elizabeth Wright. She died March 3. 1980-SI. He married (second ). August 23. 1682. her sister. Ehiz- abeth Wright. Children of first wife, born in Concord : I. Ebenezer, February 28. 1665-66. 2. John. April 15, 1667: men- tioned below. 3. Samuel. October 9. 1073. 4. Sarah, February 22, 1678. 5. Josepl .. January 16, 1680. o. William. (Tildren of second wife: ;. Elizabeth. S. J na- than. o. Edward. 1689.


(III) John 121. son of John via Hart- well, was born at Concord. April 15. 2007. He settled in Leb non, C mectient, Janine a farm in the south part of the town of Saw Mill river. He married. June 7. 1007. Sarah Shepard. of Concrl. Children : I. John, born July o. mos, had a grandson. Dr. Thomas. it is thought, of Heasick Falls. New York. 2. Sarah. July 28. 1;02. 3. Mary. December 23. 1505. 4. Hep-ibalı. September 2. 1709. 5. Peter, mentioned below.




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