USA > New York > Suffolk County > Southold > Griffin's journal : first settlers of Southold, the names of the heads of those families, being only thirteen at the time of their landing; first proprietors of Orient, biographical sketches > Part 19
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' When shall I wake and find me there ?'
"I must say a word concerning my prospects, and hastily close. My practice, for the last month, has been sufficient to keep me busy. God has blessed the means which I have used, and my patients have all done well. The people seem much attached to me, and I am gaining their confidence in a good degree. I hope to justify their good opinion by constant endeavors to merit it-by faithfully doing my duty. Pray for me, my dear grand-parents, that I may copy the virtues of my father, and that my last end may be like his. With love to all, and a renewed assurance of my devoted affection, I remain, &c."
EXTRACT FROM ANOTHER LETTER FROM THE SAME.
" At present, not knowing the number of strands in the thread of my life, and even guessing being out of the question, I calmly await developments. The fates
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never get far out of our way, and the scissors of Atro- pos are ever ready for active duty. One of the sisters, you will recollect, spins out the thread of life. In my case, I am disposed to think she has stopped her spin- ning operations, and it is my care to reel off the same without too much precipitancy. Just now it comes from the spindle a good round thread ; to-morrow, a strand may part, and force me to confess that 'union is strength ;' but while the gossamer tissue lasts, how many interests cluster around it; while one filmy, atomy band remains, it sustains the fearful weight of the hopes, the affections, and the joys of home. Of what use is this poor, decayed, helpless body ; one breath only removed from the work which chem- istry does for all mortal. When unconcerned, we say-'Let it go; what matter a few days? Cor- ruption and oblivion will make it all the same!' Ah! your life is many volumed ; who would lose a tome ? Your family tree has its well-poised and fitting number of branches. Who would see that tree despoiled of its beauties ? Who would rob the sick oyster of its pearl, or scatter the golden bonds of affec- tion, by ruthlessly breaking the woolen string which holds them together ? But I am taking up too much space. If it avails to show my appreciation of your tender remembrance, I shall not regret the pleasant hour thus employed."
Zachariah Greene, now of Hempstead, was born Jan. 11, 1760, in the town of Stafford, Hartford (now Tolland) county, Conn. His mother was the daughter of Robert and Jane White, first settlers of Stafford, and nearly
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allied to the celebrated Hugh White, after- whom Whitestown, N. Y., was named.
Parson Greene is the familiar name by which our hero is known and distinguished from all other men through- out the length and breadth of Long Island. He is the only parson in Hempstead, at least; all the other par- sons are only ministers. In many respects, Goldsmith's description of the " Vicar of Wakefield" portrays the person and accomplishments of Parson Greene. Per- haps the Vicar's habits of contentment never reached the same happy summit as is realized in "our own" Parson. The Parson is the more interesting, as he is a living book-all fact and no fiction : he can be read in conversation. He speaks of sermons in the pulpit and battles in the Revolutionary struggle with like affability and ease. He is not easily alarmed, and laughs heartily at the story of Brooks running away with the national archives, and dissolving the Union. He listens with his left ear, but looks penetratingly with both eyes, while he speaks fluently, with the affectionate authority of a father, and commends everything he says to the sons, and particularly to the daughters of his hearers. He looks hale, plump, and hearty, and always says he is well. He detests grumbling, and is easily satisfied. He is the happiest man on Long Island. He entertains the prospect of death with the same pleasure as the re- ception of a friend. In his own words, "whether living or dead, he is the Lord's." In short, he is the gentle- man, the scholar, the patriot, and the Christian.
At the age of sixteen years, just at the time of his leaving school, the cause of his country called him from private life, and with a beloved brother he entered the
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army under Capt. Amos Walbridge, in Col. Reed's regiment, Brigadier Glover's brigade, and joined it at Roxbury. George Washington was Commander-in- Chief, and headed an army of men who were soldiers from patriotic motives-men determined to have a place in national representation, as well as national taxation- men whose souls had been tried by the tyranny of kings and the petty despotism of kings' courtiers. It was under these circumstances that Zachariah Greene en- tered the ranks of the Revolutionary army under Wash- ington, and for these reasons that he fought in its battles.
He aided in the erection of the fort at Dorchester, which was commenced one evening at sundown, and at sunrise next morning his party had cannon playing upon Boston, and succeeded in driving the British out of Boston, from whence they sailed down the bay to Castle William; here they run ashore and burned all the buildings in Dorchester Neck. They cannonaded the Neck the whole night with grape-shot and chain- shot, firing over the American troops, ultimately suc- ceeding in destroying a poor man's orchard. He moved with the army under Washington from Roxbury to New York, and landed there in April, where he aided in the erection of the fort on Brooklyn Heights. He left New York with the army when it evacuated, and went above Kingsbridge. When the British arrived at Throggs Point the battle commenced, and lasted till the armies were separated by the messenger of the great Arbiter, darkness. Soon after this he was in the battle of White Plains, in 1776. In 1777 the same company was joined to Capt. Webb's company in Connecticut.
26
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GRIFFIN'S JOURNAL.
He was with the party which was sent to take the fort at Brookhaven, which was built round the Presbyterian Church, of which, twenty-one years after, he was in- stalled pastor. He was in the body of men who marched into the region of Philadelphia, and was at the battle of White Marsh. During the engagement he received a wound in the left shoulder, on the 7th day of Sep- tember, 1777, his shoulder-blade being shattered. He was three days drenched in blood before having any attention paid to his wound, at the end of which time he applied to Dr. Robinson, a gentleman who had been taken prisoner, to attend to his wants. He told Dr. R. that he would compensate him. Dr. R. asked him if he was not afraid to trust an enemy. He replied, "I can trust a gentleman." Dr. R. attended to his case, and succeeded in healing up the wound. Mr. Greene put his right hand, containing the compensation, be- hind his back, and told the doctor to shake hands with him in that attitude. The doctor thanked him, and expressed a great desire to have his wife and children on this side of the Atlantic, saying that if they were here he should stay altogether.
The above is the result of Mr. Greene's experience, as stated by himself. Being of little more service in the army, as he was no longer able to bear arms, at the request of his father, and by order of Gen. Washington, he was discharged from the army, having, with a good, patriotic heart and manly soul, aided the cause of his country in several of its hardest battles. When Ameri- cans look upon such a man, they truly
" Behold that eye which shot immortal hate,
Crushing the despot's proudest bearing."
During the winter of 1780, in the month of January,
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he walked sixteen miles, on a pair of snow-shoes, for the purpose of procuring a small Latin book which he required to aid him in his preparation for college. He had now entered, according to his own words, “an army in which he was determined to fight for a better Declaration of Independence than the last." He re- solved to be a soldier of Christ. He had fought under Gen. Washington ; he was now going to "fight under and for King Jesus."
In the year 1782 he entered Dartmouth College, but had been engaged in study but a short time, when, owing to bad health, he was compelled for a season to withdraw. After a considerable recess, he assumed the cares of a student once more. He studied one quar- ter under Dr. Huntington, of Coventry, Conn. He afterwards went to New Jersey, and studied with Dr. Greene. He subsequently studied theology with Amzi Lewis, of Orange county, N. Y.
Having passed through all the preliminary and ini- tiatory steps necessary to prepare him for the Gospel ministry, he was duly licensed to preach on the 1st day of February, 1785. On the 28th of June, 1786, he was ordained pastor of a Presbyterian Church at Cutchogue, L. I., and is now the senior pastor of the First Presby- terian Church at Brookhaven, or Setanket, where he was settled on the 27th of September, 1797.
In the year 1800, he visited the scene of his first col- legiate experience, at Dartmouth, N. H., and upon his return the Faculty of that institution honored him with a diploma. which he has prized very highly through life.
From the time of his ordination, till within the last few years, he has labored, "in season and out of sea-
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son," in the ministry, pursuing an even course, and do- ing much good to his fellow-men in all the realities of life. During this period of service, he endeavored, by special effort, to increase the happiness of two thousand individuals, by uniting them (one thousand couples) in the holy bands of matrimony.
" Whither shall I go from Thy spirit, or whither shall I flee from Thy presence ?
"The ubiquity of God-how baffling to any finite comprehension ! to think that above us, and around us, and within us, there is nothing but Deity-the invisible footprints of an omniscient, omnipresent One ! 'His eyes are on every place ;' on rolling planets and tiny atoms ; on the bright seraph and the lowly worm; roaming in searching scrutiny through the tract of immensity, and reading the occult and hidden page of the heart ! ‘All things are naked and opened to the eyes of Him with whom we have to do. O, God! shall this, Thy omni- presence, appal me? Nay, in my seasons of sadness, sorrow, and loneliness, when other comforts and com- forters have failed; when, it may be, in the darkness and silence of some midnight hour, in vain I have sought repose : how sweet to think ' my God is here !' I am not alone; the omniscient One, to whom the darkness and the light are both alike, is hovering over my sleepless pillow. ' He that keepeth Israel, neither slumbers nor sleeps !'
"O, thou eternal Sun! it cannot be darkness, or loneliness, or sadness where thou art. There can be no night to the soul which has been cheered with Thy glo- rious radiance !
"'Lo! I am with you alway !' is Thy legacy of part-
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ing love. In the midst of Thy church, till the end of time, ever present-omnipresent! The true 'pillar of cloud' by day, and fire by night, presiding and encamp- ing by us, in every step of our wilderness journey. My soul, think of Him at this moment-in the mysterious- ness of His Godhead nature, and yet with all the exqui- sitely tender sympathies of a glorified humanity, as ever present with every member of the family. He has re- deemed with his blood; aye, and as much present with every individual soul as if he had none other to care for, but as if that one engrossed all His affection and love! The great Builder, surveying every stone and pillar of His spiritual temple-the great Shepherd, with his eye on every sheep of His fold-the great High Priest and Elder Brother, marking every tear drop, noting every sorrow, listening to every prayer, knowing the peculiarities of every case ; no number perplexing Him; no variety bewildering Him; able to attend to all ; myriad wants drawing hourly on His treasury, and yet no diminution-that treasury ever emptying, and yet ever filling and always full!
"Lord, thy perpetual and all-pervading presence turns darkness into day. I am not left unbefriended to weather the storms of life if Thy hand be, from hour to hour, piloting my frail bark. Gracious antidote to every earthly sorrow, 'I have set the Lord always be- fore me !' Even now, as night is drawing its curtains around me, be this my closing prayer :
"'Blessed Saviour! abide with me, for it is toward evening, and the day is far spent!' Under the over- shadowing wings of Thy presence and love, ' I will lay me down in peace, and sleep !'"
26*
List of Subscribers.
New York & Brooklyn.
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do.,
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do ,
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do.,
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do.,
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-1
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do.,
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307
APPENDIX.
Rev. Samuel King, N. Y., 1 Thos. A. Terry, 1
Henry W. Penny, do., -1 Jeremiah Goldsmith, 1
Erastus Genin, N. Y., John N. Genin, do., 1
1 Daniel Terry, 1
Fredk K. Terry,
1
John H. Boisseau, 1
W. M. Robins, w'h Moore & Co., 1 A. M. Corwin, · do. do.,
1
Hutchinson H. Case,
1
Mrs. Goliff, N. Y , 1
R. T. Goldsmith, 1
Mrs. Jas. Wilkie, N. Y., 1 Capt Benjamin Wells, 2
Capt. J. W. Patterson, W'msb'h, 1
Joseph H. Goldsmith, 2
Robert Sears, N. Y.,
1
Wm H. Wells,
1
Jas. Wilkie, jr., do., 1
Wm. Y, Fithian,
1
Warren Griffin, Mad'n st., N.Y., 1
George P. Horton,
1
Hon. Wm. H. Tuthill, Tipton, Cedar co., Iowa,
5
Charles O. Horton,
1
John B. Booth, 1
Southold, L. I.
J. Wickham Case,
1
Rev. E. Whitaker,
1
N. H. Cleveland, 1
Moses C. Cleveland, 1
Israel Peck 1
Mr». Maria L. Prince,
1
James B. Downs,
1
Daniel H. Goldsmith,
1
Wm. D. Cochran,
1
Mrs. Henry Tuthill, 1
Don Alonzo Miller,
1
Jonathan S. Overton, 1
John Howell,
1
Austin Horton, 1
James D. Vail,
1
James E. Horton,
1
Jonathan Horton.
1
Erastus Moore, 1
Daniel H. Goldsmith,
1
Mrs. As& Smith,
1
Mrs. Sarah C. Folk,
1
F. N. Terry,
1
Charles H. Paine,
1
Hiram Terry,
1
A. M. Yonng,
1
Thomas S. Lester,
1
Walter A. Wells, 1
Albert Albertson,
1
J Albert Tillinghast,
1
Charles Merrill,
1 Phineas Fanning,
1
Benjamin R. Prince,
1
Miss Martha D. Horton, 1
Elam P. Horton,
1 Matthew B. Akerly, 1
Capt. Daniel Beebe,
1 Lawrens Horton, 1
1
Wm C. Salmon,
1
Daniel E. Terry,
1
Stephen O. Salmon, 1
Silas Horton, 1
D. T. Terry,
1
J. Henry Cochran, 1
Wm H. H Glover, 1
Wm. Albertson, jr.,
James B. Worth,
1
C. W. & J. T. Moore, N. Y., 2
J. Caso, Hermatage, 1
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GRIFFIN'S JOURNAL.
Thomas E. Prince,
1 Nicholas D. Hutchinson, 1
Daniel T. Glover,
1 James H. Skidmore, 1
Jonathan G. Horton,
1 F. O. Phelps, 1
D. Philander Horton,
1 Dr. Chas. Rice,
1
J. Albert Wells,
1
Dr. George Howell,
1
Lorenzo D. Osborn,
1 David C. Wells,
1
Miss Eliza A. Corwin,
1
C. M. Hempstead,
1
Henry W. Prince,
1 Charles E. Vail,
1
Albert G. Case,
1
Dr. A. H. Luce,
1
Stuart T. Terry,
1
William H Brown,
1
Wm. Horace Case,
1
Chas. Hallett,
1
Russel Vail,
1
O. H. Griffin,
1
David Carpenter,
1
F. D. Mosier, 1
1 Robert Carman,
1
John F. Jennings,
1
George S. Skidmore,
1
Jeremiah Byrnes,
1
Richard Albertson,
1
Charles Vail,
1
Samuel Griffin,
1
Wells Griffin,
1
B. F. Corwin,
1
Daniel H. Osborn,
1
Thomas D. Winters,
1
John Corwin, jr.,
1
Francis C. Terry,
1
Scepter Luce,
1
Isaac Sweezy,
1
George L. King,
1
Parmenus Terry,
1
Nathan Corwin,
1
Martin V. Squires,
1
Joshua L. Wells,
1 George Hill,
1
Harrison Corwin,
1
Joshua Corwin, jr.,
1
Abel Ketchum,
1
John C. Davis, 1
Hubbard Corwin,
1
Charles H Conley,
1
George F. Carman,
1
John V. Pugsley,
1
Andrew J. Racket,
1
Wilmot Scudder,
1
Sidney Beebe,
1
R. H. Benjamin,
1 Grant B. Racket, 1
1
D. B. Foster,
1 George F. Glover,
1
Wm. H. Hill,
1 Jonathan Truman, 1
H. Youngs,
1 Elias T. King, 1
Joshua H. Wells,
1 Francis Norton,
1
1
Silas S. Terry,
Israel Case Terry,
Alanson Hullock,
Riverhead, L. I.
Spicer D. Dayton,
1
Daniel H. Corwin,
1
Orient, N. Y.
William Walkman,
1 John B. Youngs, merchant.
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APPENDIX.
Henry H. Terry,
1 Moses Latham, 1
Capt. Marcus B. Brown,
1 Andrew H. Latham, 1
John O. Terry,
1 David Youngs,
1
Chas. B. Moore,
1 Andrew J. Beebe,
1
Rev. Albert Fitch,
1 Rev. Henry W. Clark, 1
Capt. Warren Beebe,
1
Capt. Ezekiel N Glover, 1
Capt. David Beebe,
1 Wm. T. Conklin,
1
D. Lodowick Beebe,
1 David A. Tuthill,
1
Jasper Y. Tuthill,
1 Francis R. Youngs,
1
Elisha Mulford,
1 Capt. Henry Dyer, 1
Lewis A. Edwards,
10
H. E. Bradford,
1
Rev. Henry Glover,
2 Joseph Latham,
3
Capt. E. P. Brown,
5 Moses J. Terry,
2
T. Henry Youngs,
1 Daniel T. Terry,
1
J. H. Terry,
1 David Petty,
1
Orange D. Petty,
1
George M. Vail,
1
David A. Petty,
1 Capt. Wm. T. Terry,
1
Calvin M. King,
J
Capt. Lester B. Terry,
1
Joseph C. Havens,
1 Mrs Julia Dyer,
1
Benjamin M. Youngs,
1
Capt. Thomas Pool,
1
H. Alexander Holmes,
1 William Young,
Robert Thompson,
1
Benjamin Terry,
3
David T. Glover,
1
William S. Hobart,
1
Peter W. Tuthill.
5
Noah Tuthill,
1
Thomas H. Petty,
1 Samuel K. Terry,
1
Wm. W. Youngs,
2 Seth B. Taber,
2
Henry M. Vail,
2 Capt. Jeremiah Youngs,
1
James H. Young,
2
Capt. Absalom King,
1
Benjamin K. Mulford,
1 Thomas V. Youngs,
2
Elisha H. Mulford,
2 Joseph L. Tuthill,
1
Smith Dewey,
1 James W. Youngs,
1
John B. Youngs,
2 Seth L Tuthill,
1
Capt. Elisha S. Racket,
1 Lorenzo D. Dyer,
1
Thomas Rockwell,
1 Francis E. King,
1
Nathan Champlin,
1 David Terry, 1
Sidney L. King,
1 Wm. Potter, jr.,
1
Benjamin Harlow,
1
Thomas A. Terry,
1
Elias Terry,
1
Wm H. Tuthill,
1
Lewis B. King,
1
Isaac Edwards,
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GRIFFIN'S JOURNAL.
Hempstead & Jamaica. James C. Townsend, Hempst'd, 3
Augustus R. Griffin, 1
Geo. S. Williams, Hempstead, 10
John K. Townsend, do., 25
A. W. Jerome, do., 1
Stephen Johnson, do., 1
Samuel H. Denton, do,, 1
John W. Hallock, do , 1
Mrs Hewlet Smith, Jamaica, 1
Mrs. Henry Johnson, do., 1
John H. Sutphen, do., 1
Sidney J. Youngs, do., 3
Henry Onderdonk, jr., do., 1
Lew. W. Angevine, Hempstead, 1 John Spader, Jamaica, 1
S. L. Spader, do., 1
Silas Carl, Hempstead, 1
Hon. Henry Loop, do., 1
Alex. Townsend, Cedar Swamp,
Hempstead, 1
Clara Townsend, do., 1
Harriet Townsend, do., 1
Jane E. O., niece to John K.
Townsend, Hempstead, 1
A. Cortelyou, do .. 2
S. Cortelyou, do , 1
Laurens Reeve, Jamaica, 2
James H Reeve, do., 1
Isaac T Reeve, do.,
1
George Skidmore, do.,
1
Latham M Jagger, do.,
Chas. Welling, do., 1
Jeremiah Keeler, do.,
Edwin J. Crane, do.,
Miss Phebe Reeve, do., 1 John Orin Terry, 1
James P. Brown, do., 1 Adison Brown, 1
George M. Paff, Hempstead, 1 Jeremiah J. Havens, 1
Madison Griffin, Hicksville, 1 Wm. A. Booth, 1
- Titus, Hempstead,
- Titus, Farmingdale,
Richard Brower, do., 1
Elmira, N. Y.
Green M. Tuthill, 2
Samuel Jones, 1
Myron Raplee, 1
S. S. Raplee, 1
Jefferson Raplee,
1
Nehemiah Raplee, 1
Hiram Tuthill, 2
Lydia T. Reynolds, 1
Mrs. Jessie Foster, 1
A. H. Fink, 1
Mrs. W. H. Thorne,
1
Mrs. W. M. Gibson, 1
Mrs. W. W. Bennet, 1
Elizabeth Smith, 1
4
S. Benjamin, John K. Terry,
1
O. P. Terry, 1
D. H. Tuthill, 4
S. Leverich, 1
Gabriel Sayre, 1
Charles G. Tuthill, 5
An order to Henry H. Terry, of Orient, for others, 10 .
Greenport, L. I.
Jonathan Preston, 1
1 Oliver Penny, 1
James F. Webb, 1
1 Philetas Havens, 1
1 Albert P. Corwin, 1
1 Levi Preston, 1
1 John Youngs, 1
311
APPENDIX.
Jesse C. King,
1 William Roberts, 1
George W. Harris,
1 B. C. Tuthill,
1
Ebenezer Clark,
1 John M. Griffin, 1
Parker W. Paine,
1 Richard M. Brooks, 1
John F. Booth,
1 Capt. George Tuthill,
4
Luther Moore, ...
1
Jeremiah Racket,
1
S. B. Tuthill,
1
James C. Corwin,
1
Oliver K. Buckley,
1
John T. K. Youngs,
1
Joshua T. Youngs,
1
Thomas H. Vail,
1
Henry T. King,
1
Samuel W. Hill, 1
Henry Fordam,
1
Edward B. Hill,
1
Samuel H. Townsend,
1
John Sherry,
1
George T. Monroe,
1
William R. Slate, 1
William R. Williamson, 1
W. G. Youngs,
1
William W. Thompson, 1
Orring H. Cleves,
1
Thomas P. Ripley,
1
George W Young,
1
Jonathan Havens and sons, 1
William Fithian,
1
Chas. T. Dearing, 1
1
George W. Lyons,
1
Mrs. - Starr,
1
Hon. Frederick W. Lord,
1
Miss Ellen Griffin,
1
Orin F. Brown,
1
Theodore P. Havens,
2
John Adams,
1
James Winters,
1
Thomas Wiggins,
1 Henry J. Redfield,
1
Fred. Chase, Shelter's Island,
1
William V. Schellinger,
1
Dr. T. L. Ireland,
1
John H. Hunt,
1
Sidney P. Racket,
5
Gilbert H. Cooper,
1
Mrs. John Clark,
1
Geo. W. Dickerson,
1
East Marion, L. I.
S. H. Edwards,
1
Charles Sherrill,
1
H. L. Topping, 1
John P. Clark,
1
William H. Cooper, 1
John Jerome,
1 John M. Stewart, 1
Samuel K. Racket, 1 Henry Stewart, 1
William Hollis Griffin, 1
Sag Harbor, L. I.
Jonathan A. Youngs,
1
Austin Havens, 1
John H. Conklin,
1
William W. Stewart, 1
John O. Ireland,
.1
G. H. Corwin,
1
Samuel Fithian,
1
Lewis Thompson, 1
Charles Wiggins,
1
Major John Hobart,
Peter W. Griffin, I
Capt. James Tuthill, 1
C. A. Gardner, 1
312
GRIFFIN'S JOURNAL.
1
Miss Caroline Raymond, 1
Gen. D. Williamson, Ja'sport,
1
John Fordam,
1
Joshua Cleves,
do.,
1
Mrs. Julia A. Proud,
2
John Hubbard,
do.,
1
Lester T. King,
do.,
1
Cutchogue, Mattituck, Jamesport and Acque- Hamptonburgh, Orange bogue.
County, N. Y.
Joseph Wells, Franklinville, 1
Deacon Ira Tuthill, Mattituck, 1
Ira B. Tuthill,
do.,
1
Peter Fanning.
do.,
1
Barnabas Osborn,
do.
1
Barnabas Corwin,
do.,
1
James W. Reeve, do.,
1
Barnabas Wines,
do.,
1
D V. Horton, Cutchogue, 1
John Horton, Jamesport, 1
Albert Youngs, do.,
1
E. H. Aldrich,
do.,
1
James Aldrich,
do.,
N. W. Hammond, do., 1
C. W. Fanning, Cutchogue, 1
Samuel Fanning, Jamesport, 1
T. Reeve,
do.,
1
John P. Mowbray 1
Lydia E. Palmer, 1
L. A. Andrews, 1
Mrs. Hannah L. Brown, 1
M. T. Hallock, 1
Cromline Brown,
1
Dr. Daniel T. Brown, 1 Charles Reeve, 1
Hannah M. Brown,
1
Promiscuous.
1 Abraham Legget, North P't, L.I., 1 T. V. Tuthill, Rochester, N.Y., 1 Gilbert Pratt, Albany, N. Y., 1 Philip C. Hay, Orange, N. J., 1 Henry W. Vail, Islip, L. I., 1
Benjamin Conklin.
do.,
1
Chas. A. Griffin, Hart'd, Conn., 10
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