Colonial families of Philadelphia, Volume II, Part 109

Author: Jordan, John Woolf, 1840-1921, ed
Publication date: 1911
Publisher: New York : Lewis Pub. Co.
Number of Pages: 978


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WILLIAM WHITE, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was born March 24, 1747, 1). S., April 3, 1747, N. S. He graduated at the College of Philadelphia, May, '765, and studied divinity with Dr. Peters and Dr. Duché. On October 15, 1770, he sailed for England in the ship, "Britannia," from Chester, and was ordained Deacon, December 23. 1770. in the Royal Chapel, London, by Lord Bishop of Norwich. In June, 1772. he was ordained priest by the Lord Bishop of London. He left London on his return, July 22, 1772, in the ship, "Pennsylvania Packet," and arrived in Philadelphia. September 13, 1772; soon after he was elected assist- ant minister of Christ Church and St. Peter's Church in that city. On February 11, 1773, he married Mary, daughter of Capt. Henry Harrison, of Lancashire, England, one of the Wardens of Christ Church, and at one time Mayor of Phila- delphia. He took sides with the Colonies in the contest with Great Britain, and upon the publication of the Declaration of Independence, he ceased to use the form of prayer for the King, and shortly after took the oath of allegiance to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, being the second person who did so. In Sep- tember, 1777, he was chosen Chaplain of the Continental Congress, and continued Chaplain for that and the Congress of the United States until the latter moved to New York. On its return to Philadelphia, he was elected Chaplain and officiated as such until the removal of Congress to Washington in 1801. In April, 1779, lie was elected Rector of Christ Church and St. Peter's. In the summer of 1782 he completed a pamphlet entitled, "The Case of the Episcopal Churches Considered," with the object of stating and meliorating the difficulties in the way of the estab- lishment of the Ordinances and Worship of the English Church in America, which arose upon the breach between the American and English bodies, the for- mer up to the time of the Revolution having derived its ecclesiastical power as well as much of its financial support from the latter, and these having been with- held as a consequence of the Revolution. This pamphlet "exerted a most import- ant effect on the organization and the very existence of the American Church."


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Its publication was rendered unnecessary by the opening of negotiations for peace with England. "The communication of Sir Guy Carleton and Admiral Digby to the American Congress changed at once the aspect of affairs. The pamphlet was at once withdrawn from sale, and such copies as were within the author's reach were destroyed. Some had been distributed among friends and were consequently in circulation ; and early the following year some additional copies were issued from the press, evidently to enable persons whose curiosity had been excited, to judge as to the nature of the propositions advanced by the writer of the work." On September 14, 1786, he was unanimously elected Bishop of Pennsylvania, and sailed for England on the second of the following November, arriving in London on the 21st of that month. On February 4, 1787, he was consecrated Bishop in Lambeth Chapel, by Archbishop of Canterbury, assisted by Archbishop of York, Bishop of Bath and Wells, and Bishop of Peterborough. On the 17th of the same month, he sailed for New York on the "Prince William Henry," and arrived there on Easter Sunday, April 8.


From January, 1783, he was most active in the work of organizing and building up the Episcopal church in this country. When he was twenty-six years of age he was elected one of the trustees of the College of Philadelphia, now the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, and held that office for over sixty-two years. He was one of the founders of the Episcopal Academy, a preparatory school in Philadel- phia, which is still flourishing. He preached his last sermon in St. Peter's Church, Sunday, June 26, 1836; was taken sick on July 2, and died July 17, in the eighty- ninth year of his age. His body is interred in the chancel of Christ Church in Philadelphia. His funeral was attended by twenty thousand persons.


"The personal career of Bishop White was unique among Americans. Younger in years than most of the men with whom he was associated, he was from the first their peer in range of outlook, in ability to see what ought to be done, and in ripe and comprehensive judgment. He had the statesman's gift of working wisely when he had a great end in view. No other man appeared among Churchmen in the American colonies who had the same ability at a great crisis to decide prompt- ly what to do and how to do it. When he was hardly thirty-five years of age, with the exception of Dr. Seabury, he was the most conspicuous clergyman, the one to whom all eyes instinctively turned in the American colonies. He had made the impression of a man who had the qualities and gifts of leadership, though he had not been called upon to show forth all that he could do. His wealth, his social position, his thorough education, and a certain maturity of mind and thought which impressed all who came in contact with him, contributed to his eminence. Though the junior of Washington in years, he was not only his pastor but his equal in social rank and distinction. In any community Bishop White would have been a man of note, and in the political and religious crisis which was brought to a head in the American Revolution, he had the qualities of courage and foresight which made him a man of mark.


"He was born to enjoy the confidence of his fellow-men, and exercise leader- ship over them. He did this not by assuming to lead, but by the superiority of his gifts, which impressed all who came in contact with him. He gained the confi- dence of others by their conviction of his largeness of mind and heart. He lived in many respects a double life. In one character he fulfilled his round of duty as the Bishop of Pennsylvania and the rector of his united churches in Philadelphia,


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and in these positions he felt most at home. In the other character he stood forth as the patriarch of the American Church, the one man who had a full knowledge of the Anglican Church in the United States from the beginning, and to whom all momentous questions in ecclesiastical affairs were constantly referred as they arose. He took the initiative in the organization of the American Church."


"Every one revered the tall and venerable man who walked the streets of Phila- delphia with slow and measured step, and he was beloved, as never before, in his office of chief pastor and in his character as a citizen. It was remarked after his death that he, was one of the three perfect men that America had so far produced, Washington and Marshall being the other two. Everybody wished to have his blessing ; little children paused in the street for his kindly greeting and to pay him respect ; and his weight of years and his kindness to all made him, what Bishop Fraser was recently called, 'the Bishop of all denominations.' That he enjoyed this distinction is not to be doubted, but it rather increased his humility than min- istered to his pride. In the councils of the Church he had the same pre-eminence. He was deferred to as the only one who had known all things from the beginning, and at the General Convention and in the public work of the Church, he was the central figure and the most influential factor."


"The story of our progress from a condition of dependency upon the Mother Church of England to independence and autonomy as a branch of Christ's Holy Catholic Church, is told in the life-history of William White, who for upwards of half a century was the guiding spirit and the judicious head of the Communion he had done so much to found and shape."


Doctor McConnell described him thus : "None of his contemporaries surpassed and few equalled him in sagacity. When the war ended he was thirty-five years old. He was well born, well bred, and well educated, both in this country and abroad. In England he was a friend of Dr. Johnson ; had him for his guest at his inn ; chatted with him while he watched him at work on his lexicon ; supped with him at Kensington ; and wrote him when he came back to Philadelphia. He was on familiar terms with Goldsmith, visited him, praised his work, and condoled with him that so clever a man should have to harness his genius to a cart to earn his daily bread. He was ordained in England; became Assistant, and soon after Rector of Christ Church, Philadelphia; was chosen Chaplain of Congress; and, when the war ended, was next after Franklin, the leading citizen of the State. While Dr. Smith, of Maryland, was engrossed with the small economies of a struggling college, and Dr. Seabury was observing the petty routine of an infantry harracks, Dr. White was unconsciously learning the statecraft which guided the founders of the Protestant Episcopal Church."


Issue of Bishop White:


Daughter, b. Nov. 27, 1773, "born and died immediately unbaptized";


Elizabeth, b. Jan. 28, 1776; m., March 9, 1803, Gen. William Macpherson, of Phila .; she d. Nov. 7, 1831 ; Gen. Macpherson d. Nov. 5, 1813; issue :


Esther White, b. Aug. 22, 1804: m. April 30, 1839, Thomas Harris, M. D., U. S. N .; she d. May 24, 1858;


Elizabeth, b. July 17, 1806; m., March 20, 1838, Rev. Edwin Wilson Wiltbank; issue :


Elizabeth White, b. Feb. 12, 1839;


William White, one of the Judges of the First Judicial District of Pa., b. March 27, 1840; m., Sept. 10, 1863, Edith, dau. of Hon. Ferree Brinton, of Lancaster, Pa .; issue :


1749


WHITE


Esther Macpherson, b. Dec. 17, 1865; William Macpherson, b. Oct. 25, 1869; Gertrude, b. Nov. 2, 1872; Marian Ferree, b. March 26, 1875. Mary White, b. May 7, 1841; m., Dec. 28, 1863, Rev. Charles Augustus Lewis Richards, M. D,; issue : Etheling Gardiner, b. Aug. 16, 1867;


Guy, b. Dec. 30, 1868; d. Sept. 29, 1869:


John Wolcott, b. March 15, 1871;


Margaret Weston, b. July 20, 1873; Dorothy May, b. March 23, 1877; Elizabeth Leigh, b. April 1, 1878.


George, b. Jan. 4, 1843; m., June 6, 1871, Frances Lowndes, dau. of William Ellis, of Phila .; issue :


George, b. Feb. 17, 1873;


Elizabeth, b. June 18, 1875; d. Dec. 16, 1875;


Mary, b. Aug. 28, 1777; m., Dec. 4, 1804, Enos Bronson, of Phila .; she d. Nov. 17, 1826; issue :


Mary Harrison, b. July 3, 1808; d. Aug. 9, 1830;


Ann Emily, b. Oct. 21, 1809; d. Sept. 27, 1854;


Elizabeth White, b. Aug. 15, 1812; m., Sept. 8, 1834, Henry Hope Reed, LL. D., of Phila .; issue :


Mary Bronson, b. March 17, 1841 ;


Elizabeth, b. April 25, 1843; d. Feb. 19, 1844;


Esther DeBerdt, b. March 2, 1845; d. March 5, 1848;


Henry, b. Sept. 22, 1846; in., April 27, 1876, Charlotte Frances, dau. of William B. Foster, Jr., of Phila .;


Anne, b. Oct. 17, 1848; m., Oct. 21, 1869, William Bowdoin Robins, of Phila .; issue :


Elizabeth White, b. May 29, 1871;


Emma Davis, b. July 5, 1872;


Henry Reed, b. Feb. 22, 1875; William Bowdoin, b. Aug. 10, 1876.


Arthur DeBerdt, b. March 4, 1853; d. March 6, 1854.


Hetta Atwater, b. July 16, 1814; m., Sept. 18, 1838, Rev. Alfred Alexander Miller; she d. March 7, 1844; issue :


Mary Bronson, b. March 29, 1840; d. Sept. 7. 1841 ;


William White, b. Dec. 14, 1841; d. Dec. 3, 1858;


Alfred, b. July 22, 1843; d. June 19, 1844.


Sophia Hall, b. Oct. 12, 1815; d. 1822 (bur. May 24) ;


William White, b. Dec. 7, 1816; m., May 6, 1841, Mary Chapman, dau. of Thomas Ash, of Phila .; issue :


Thomas Ash, b. June 3, 1842; m., Nov. 28, 1865, Anna Louisa, dau. of El- nathan H. Sears, of New York; she d. March 4, 1876;


Mary White, b. Aug. 3, 1844; d. July 12, 1845;


Sarah Chapman, b. May 19, 1846; d. Oct. 20, 1873;


William White, b. Dec. 9, 1848;


Charles Kirkham, b. Jan. 5, 1851; d. April 26, 1859.


Bird Wilson, b. 1820; d. 1821 (bur. July 25).


Thomas, b. Nov. 12, 1779; m., Oct. 1, 1804, Mary Key, dau. of Daniel Charles Heath, of Md .; he d. Oct. 15, 1859;


Mary Harrison, b. Nov. 9, 1805; m., May 30, 1827, Rev. James Montgomery, D. D., of Phila .; she d. Aug. 2, 1875; issue :


William White, b. May 21, 1828; m., April 15, 1857, Gaynor Smith, dau. of Peter Lazarus, of Sunbury, Pa .; issue :


James, b. March 1, 1858; d. March 3, 1858; James Henry, b. Feb. 24, 1859;


William Wallis, b. Junie 22, 1861; d. March 7, 1865;


Thomas Harrison, b. April 20, 1866; d. April 22, 1866.


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Thomas Harrison, h. Feb. 23, 1830; m., Oct. 31, 1860, Anna, dau. of Samuel George Morton, M. D., of Phila .; issue :


Rebecca Morton, b. June 29, 1862:


Mary White, b. Aug. 7, 1864; James Alan, b. June 13, 1866: Samuel George Morton, b. May 11, 1868: Anna Morton, b. Feb. 7, 1870;


Thomas Harrison, b. March 5, 1873;


William White, b. Oct. 28, 1874; Charles Mortimer, b. Oct. 23, 1876.


John Henry Hobart, b. Aug. 26, 1831; d. Oct. 16, 1831 :


Austin, b. Jan. 1, 1833; d. April 13, 1834.


Rebecca Heath, b. Aug. 15, 1808;


William, b. July 1, 1810; m., Dec. 29, 1831, Sarah Frederica, dau. of John Hill Brinton, of Phila .; he d. Dec. 20, 1858; Mrs. White d. May 12, 1869; issue :


William, b. Dec. 5, 1832;


George Brinton, b. Sept. 28, 1836; d. Dec. 25, 1836;


Maria Heath, b. Oct. 27, 1837;


John Brinton, b. March 20, 1840; m., April 9, 1863, Jane Dundas, dau. of Hon. David Francis Gordon, of Reading, Pa .; issue :


Lydia Biddle, b. April 8, 1864; Sarah Frederica, b. Oct. 31, 1865;


William, b. March 17, 1868;


Margaret Brinton, b. July 9, 1870 ;


Louisa Tucker, b. July 25, 1872:


Harrison, b. June 7, 1875; Clara Gordon, b. July 1, 1877.


Catharine Ann, b. May 18, 1842;


Harrison, b. Jan. 14, 1844; d. Sept. 17, 1862;


Sarah Frederica, b. Oct. 4, 1845; m., Nov. 1, 1861, Thomas Biddle, of Phila .; she d. July 18, 1870, of yellow fever, in Havana; issue :


Caldwell Keppele, b. Jan. 3, 1863; Harrison White, b. May 16, 1864; Sarah, b. Jan. 9, 1867;


James Cornell, b. July 3, 1868:


Elizabeth Caldwell, b. Jan. 28, 1870.


Charlotte, b. Nov. 3, 1847; Thomas Harrison, b. June 8, 1849;


Upton Heath, b. Dec. 16, 1850.


George Harrison, b. June 26, 1812; m., Nov. 8, 1838, Margaret Wharton, dau. of Jacob Ridgway Smith, of Phila .; he d. Nov. 18, 1867; issue :


Isaac Wharton, b. Sept. 8, 1839;


William, b. Feb. 26, 1842;


George Harrison, b. March 4, 1845;


Alfred Henry, b. Feb. 11, 1847; d. Sept. 1, 1847:


Thomas Harrison, b. May 21, 1849; Charles Eugene, b. July 31, 1851 ; d. April 17, 1853.


Richard Heath, b. Dec. 30, 1813; d. July 6, 1814. Ann, b. Feb. 8, 1781; d. Jan. 23, 1787;


Henry Harrison, b. March 3, 1782; d. May 26, 1783;


William, b. June I, 1784; d. Jan. 22, 1787;


Henry Harrison. b. June 17. 1785; d. July 17. 1788.


ERRATA


Crispin, p. 391 ; among children of Henry and Emma (Burdsall) Craven, for Edoth read Edith.


Syng, p. 853, et seq., for Mansfieldtown, read Mansfieldstown. P. 858, at end of parag. beginning "A child, posthumous," read George Syng, son of Rev. Joseph and Anne (Ashe) Synge.


P. 863, in parag. beginning Philip Syng Physick Conner: Mr. Conner d. at Octorara, Md., Nov. 27, 1910.


P. 864, after line 4, add, children of Philip Syng Physick and his wife, Eliza- beth Emlen :


Edmund Emlen Physick, b. Sept. 22, 1804, d. July, 1805.


Samuel Physick, b. July 8, 1805, d. Dec. 27, 1806.


Philip Physick, Esq., of the Bar of Philadelphia, b. Nov. 12, 1807; m. Caroline Eliza, d. of Major William Jackson, U. S. Army, who served in the Revolutionary War, was Assistant Secretary of War, 1782, and Secretary to President Washington. Mr. Physick was a Guardian of the Poor and a Director of the Public Schools; he d. Feb. 7, 1848; his widow, on the 26th of July, 1877, thus surviving her husband and children. Issue:


Philip Physick, died under age, s. p.


Elizabeth Physick, died under age, s. p.


Elizabeth Physick, died in infancy.


Emlen Physick, Colonel and Aide-de-Camp to the Governor of Pennsylvania, born Sept. 15, 1812, died April 24, 1859, leaving by his wife Frances Mary, daughter of Charles Theodore and Ellen (Harte) Parmentier, a son:


Emlen Physick, M. D., of Cape May, New Jersey.


P. 867, in last line, Ist parag., for Halifax, N. S., read Halifax, N. C.


Yorke-Stille, p. 1607; in issue of Thomas and Martha ( Potts) Yorke, for birth date of Stephen Yorke, read 1738.


Whitaker, Reuel, p. 1690; correct birth date 1786.


INDEX


Addicks, 726; Florence, 726; John E., 726; J. Edward, 723; Laura W,, 723.


Acton, 1069; Benjamin, 1069; Benjamin, Jr .. 1070; Clement, 1070; John, 1070.


Allen, 814, 1483; Elizabeth J., 814; Jedediah, 1484; Nathan, 1484: Ralph, 1484; Samuel. 814.


Anderson, Alfred, 1696; Henrietta L., 1696. Andrews, Jacob, 1694; Lydia A., 1694.


Ashmead, 506; John, 506, 507; John, Capt., 507. Ashton, 1130; Daniel R., 1139; Isaac, 1131; James W., 1140; Jonathan, 1131; Joseph H., 1139; Samuel K., M. D., 1135; Thomas G., 1136; William, 1131; William E., Rev., 1132.


Atkinson, 815; Anna, 815; Emily Q., 817; Thomas, 817; Wilmer, 815.


Atlee, 918; Edwin A., Dr., 922; Edwin P., M. D., 923; Samuel J., Col., 919; William, 918; William A., Judge, 920.


Awbrey, 139; Stiant, 139.


Babcock, Ichabod, 1652: James. 1651; John, 1652; John, Capt., 1652.


Bacon, 590; James, 590; John, 591; Randolph, 590.


Baird. 1541; Edgar W., 1544; Matthew, 1541; Matthew, Jr., 1545; R. Loper, 1196; Will- iam J., 1545.


Baker, George A., 1658; Hilarius, 1658; Johann C., 1658; Johann H., 1657; Hilary, Hon., 1384; John H., 1384.


Balch, 132; James, 132; John, 132; Lewis P. W., 134; Stephen B., D. D., 132; Thomas, 134; Thomas, Capt., 132; Thomas W., 135. Bancroft, 1296; Daniel E., Capt., 1218: Jacob. 1297; John, 1296, 1297. 1298, 1299, 1300; Joseph. 1300; Mary A., 1301; Mary E., 1218; Napoleon, 1299; Olivia, 1218; Sam- uel, Jr., 1301; Sarah, 1301; William P .. 1301.


Banes, Ervin, 1212; Joseph, 1211, 1212; Jo- sephine, 1210; Mathew, 1212; William, 1211.


Barksdale. Ethel Du Pont, 1277; Hamilton M .. 1277.


Bell, Alexander, 1218; Emily, 144; Samuel, 1218: Samuel W., 1217; Samuel W., 1218. Bennet, Edward A., 1634; Ellen D., 1634; Will- iam H., 1634.


Betts, 677; Edward, 679: Jesse, 679: Mahlon, 679; Richard, Capt .. 677; Thomas, 678; Zachariah, 679.


Bevan. 136; Barbara, 139: John, 138.


Biddle, 161; Alexander, 184; Arthur, 187; Charles, 165; Christine W., 182; Christine W., 184; Clement, 176; Clement, 181; Clem- ent C., Col., 186; Craig, 170; Edward, 165; George W., 187; Henry I., 183; James, 164; James, Com., 171; Jonathan W., 184: John, 164; John, 172; John, 179; John W., 181; Julia, 187; Louis A., 184: Mary S., 163; Nicholas, 168; Nicholas, Capt., 170; Owen, 172; Owen, 175; Samuel, 181;


Thomas, M. D., 185; Thomas A., 183; Thomas A. M., 182; William, 161; William, 161, 162, 180; William C., 176.


Bird, John B., 1301.


Bishop, Anna, 1693; Daniel, 1695; Ichabod, 1694; Leonard W., 1696; Lucius W., 1695; Nathaniel W., 1695: Permelia A., 1695; Preston, 1693, 1696.


Black, Mary Ellen (Nellie), 1116.


Blackshaw, 300; Captain, 300: Randall, 300.


Blizzard, Henry, 1687; Mary C., 1687.


Bower, Lucretia K., 1642.


Bowie, Ralph, 1701; Richard A., 1702; Richard H. B., 1703; Thomas L., 1701.


Bradbury, 1217; Jacob, 1217; Moses, 1218; Nehemiah, 1218; Thomas, 1217, 1218; Will- iam, 1217.


Bradford, 601; James H., M. D., 615; Samuel F., 612; Thomas, Col., 610; Thomas H., M. D., 616; William, 601; William, Jr., 602. Brice, John, Capt., 1664: John, Chief Justice, 1664; John, Judge, 1665; John H., 1667; Nicholas, 1667; Nicholas, Judge, 1666.


Bringhurst, 1141; Edward, 1149; Edward, Jr., 1149; George, 1145; James, 1146; John, 1142, 1144; Joseph, M. D., 1147; Thomas, Dr., 1141.


Brinton, 1451; Adam, 1451; Adam, 1451; Dan- iel G., M. D., 1457; George, 1454, 1455: John, 1452; John H., 1454; Joseph, 1454; Joseph H., 1455; Lewis, 1457; William, 1452; William, Jr., 1453.


Brock, 1163; Arthur, 1172; Charles H., 1174: Emma, 1170; Horace, 1174; Hubert, 1177: John, 1167, 1169; John P., 1170; John W .. 1174; Julia W. H., 1175; Richard, 1165; Richard S., 1170; Robert C. H., Col .. 1175; William P .. 1169.


Brooke, 798, 1188; Benjamin, Capt., 1188; Francis M., 1189; Hugh J., Hon., 1189; Hunter, 1189; James, 1188; John, 1188: Jonathan, 1188; Mary A .. 1189; Richard. 798: Robert, 800; Roger. 800; Roger, Ir .. 801; Roger (3d), 801; Thomas, 799; Thomas, 800.


Brown, Alexander P., 1705; Frances B .. 1324; Henry I., 1324; Henry W., 1324; John. 1704; Madeline V .. 1324: Reynolds D., 1324; William, 1704.


Buckley, Clement A., 1095; Hannah A .. 62: Sarah, 1096.


Budd, 1415; Thomas, 1415.


Bunting, 241, 864: Joshua. 241, 866, 868; Philip S., 241, 864.


Burd. Edward, 106; James, Col., 106; Sarah, 106.


Burdsall, 389: Dorothy, 389; Frank H .. 391; lra, 390; Wills. 389.


Burr, 1102; Henry, Jr., 1102; John, 1102.


Burroughs, Caroline. 1673; Horatio N., 1672; John, 1669, 1670; Joseph, 1670; Joseph H., 1676.


Burton, Eliza E., 417; John, 417; Rohert, 417.


1754


INDEX.


Butcher, 706; Amos W., 711; Amos W., 713;


Anne, 706; Henry C., 727; Henry C., 732; Howard, 732; Job, 710; John, 707, 708, 710; Thomas T., 712; Washington, 718. 732.


Buzby, 1215; John, 1215; Nicholas, 1215; Thomas, 1216.


Campbell, Alexander D., 218; Mary W., 218; St. George T., 218.


Canby, 1074; Anna T., 1078; Edward, 1620; James, 1079; Marriott, 1077; Oliver, 1075; Samuel, 1078, 1079; Thomas, 1074; Thomas, 1621; Thomas, Jr., 1622; William, 1076.


Carpenter, 469; Conrad, 1629; Edward, 473; George W., 1629; George W., Jr., 1633; Miles, 1629; Preston, 473; Richard, 471: Richard, Jr., 472; Samuel, 469: Samuel, Jr., 471; Thomas, 473.


Cavanagh, Antoinette, 145.


Chew, 509; Benjamin, 509; Benjamin, 510; John, 509; Samuel, 509; Samuel, Dr., 509; Sophia, 514.


Chapman, Nathaniel, M. D., 185; Rebecca C., 185.


Chichester, Gershom, 268; Sara E., 268.


Clark, 370; George, 370; George S., 371; Har- riet A., 1691; John, Lieut. Col., 371; John- son P., 1691; Sarah F., 370.


Clarkson, 894; David, Rev., 895; Gerardus, 904; Gerardus, Dr., 900; Joseph, Rev., 903; Matthew, 897, 899; Matthew, Jr., 897; Rob- ert, 894, 895; Samuel, 904; Virginia A .. 904; William. 894, 902.


Claypool, 1443; Abraham G., 1449; Adam, Esq., 1443; James, 1443, 1445, 1448; John. 1444, 1447.


Clement, 1102; Jacob, 1103; James, 1103; John B., 1102; Robert W., 1102; Samuel, 1103; Samuel M., 1102.


Clifford, 302; John, 303; Sarah, 302; Thomas. 302.


Closson, 1205 ; Christian, 1205; James H., Capt., 1210; James H., M. D., 1216; John, 1207, 1208; Mary E., 1217.


Coates, 649; George M., 657; George M., Jr., 658; Henry, 650; Josiah L., 656; Lawrence, 650; Mary. 658; Richard. 649; Samuel. 654, 655; Thomas, 650.


Cochran, Mary P., 92.


Coffin, 1398; Peter, 1398; Tristram, 1398, 1400; Tristram, Jr., 1400.


Collins, 47, 79, 1410; Charles. 1410; Frederic. 47, 79, 1416; Isaac, 1410; Isaac. Jr .. 1415; Margaret, 46.


Colkert, 1398; C. Howard, 1403; Peter, 1400; Tristram C., 1400.


Conard (Conrad), 1474; Cornelius, 1474; Sam- uel, 1475; Thones, 1474.


Conarroe, 187; George M., 187; Nannie, 187. Conyngham, 769; Alexander, 770; Alexander, Rev., 769; David, Capt., 770; David H .. 774; John B., Col., 779; John N., Hon., 776; Redmond, 771; William, 769; William D. D., 769.


Cookman, Elizabeth L., 580; James D. W., 580. Cooper, 833; Colin C., 834; Colin C., Dr .. 834; Joseph, 834; Samuel W., 836.


Cope, Henrietta, 241; Porter F., 241.


Corson, 938; Ann J., 937; Hiram. Dr .. 939; Jo- seph, 937; Rebecca J., 941; Richard, 940; Richard D., M. D., 940; Robert R., 941.


Cowgill, 297; Daniel C., 305; Ellen, 297; Henry, 305; John, 303, 305; Ralph, 298.


Cowperthwaite, Martha W., 438; William, 439. Craig, James, 1698; Lydia, 1698.


Craven, E. Edith, 391; Emma B., 391; Joseph H .. 391.


Cresson, 945; Anne H., 955; Benjamin, 951:


Benjamin F., 958; Caleb, 948, 950, 953, 957; Charles C., 957; Charles M., M. D., 958; Clement, 956; Emlen, 953; Ezra T., 956; Isabella, 957; Jacob, 956; Jacque, 945: James, 947, 949, 951, 954, 958; James C., 957; Jeremiah, 949; John, 948, 955; John B., 954; John C., 955; John E., 950, 956; John H., 952; Joseph, 952; Joshua, 949; Pierre, 945; Richard C., 951; Samuel, 951; Solomon, 946; Walter, 955; Warder, 953; William, 954; William H., 957; William L., 957; William P., 953.


Crispin, 347; Benjamin, 366, 386; Benjamin F., 368; Benjamin F., Jr., 369; C. G., 370; M. Jackson, 369; Paul, 387; Silas, 361, 365, 391; Thomas, 362; William, 392; William, Capt., 347.


Croskey, 508; Eliza, 508; George D., 508; Henry, 508.


Crozer, 1387; George K., 1397; James, 1388; John, 1388; John P., 1389; Samuel A., 1394. Cuthbert, 462, 684; Anthony, 467; Anthony,


Capt., 684; Joseph O., 468; Thomas, 466; Thomas, 466.


Dallas, Ellen M., 538; George M., 538; Tre- vanion B., 538.


Darlington, Joseph G., 731; Mary W., 731.


Davis, 377, 978; Amy, 379; John, 378; John, Gen., 378; Mary F., 977; Sussex D., 978: William, 377.


DeNemours, Eleuthere I., 1278; Pierre S., 1272; Victor M., 1274.


Diehl, George, 1735: Nicholas, 1729; Thomas, 1728; Thomas J., 1729; William H., 1732; William J., 1729.


Dixon, Ruth, 1688; Samuel A., 1688.


Dohan, Daniel, 798; Ellen, 798; Ignatius J., 798; James, 798.


Doran Ancestry, 249; Joseph I., 256; Joseph M., 256.


Dougherty, Anne. 803; Danle1, 803; D. Web- ster, 803.


Downs, 923; Norton, M. D., 923; Robert N., Dr., 923; Sarah, 923.


Drexel, Alice G., 768; Anthony J., 768; John R., 768; Joseph W., 535; Lucy W., 535.


Drinker, 872; Edward, 872; Henry, 873; Henry,




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