USA > Wisconsin > Wisconsin Society, Sons of the American Revolution, 1896 > Part 6
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Daughter of Mary (Nye) Sears.
Daughter of James Nye.
Son of JOHN NYE : This last appears with rank of Ser- geant on a return of Captain Ward's company for service on a secret expedition to Rhode Island, in October, 1777. His residence was at Sandwich, Massachusetts.
Authority : Massachusetts Revolutionary War Archives.
Also :
Son of Celestia E. (Sears) Sloan.
Daughter of Francis Sears.
Son of Eleazer Sears.
Son of SETH SEARS: This last, who was born in Yar- mouth, Massachusetts, October 31, 1736, was a private in Cap- tain Azer Barnum's company of Colonel John Field's Third Duchess County, New York, regiment, and was engaged in active service in the war.
Authority : New York State Library Archives.
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90
92.
3692.
FRANK SLOSSON, Manufacturer, Kenosha.
Son of Sabra (Avery) Slosson.
Daughter of Russell Avery.
Son of THOMAS AVERY: This last was Second Lieu- tenant in Captain Isaac Gallup's company in the Tenth Conti- nental regiment in 1776. He was born in Groton, Connecticut, February 10, 1746.
Authority : Connecticut Men in the Revolutionary War.
I02. 9452.
BRYANT SMITH, Physician, Milwaukee. Son of Anna Wells (Smith) Smith.
Daughter of Theodore Smith.
Son of (Williams) Smith.
Daughter of OBADIAH WILLIAMS: This last was a Sur- geon in Colonel John Stark's regiment at Bunker Hill. He was a native of Sidney, New Hampshire, and died in Waterville, Maine, in 1799.
Authorities : Frothingham's The Battle of Bunker Hill, 95, 96, (Boston, 1890); History of Kennebec County, Maine; New Hampshire Revolutionary Records.
104. 9454.
CHARLES GAGER STARK, Merchant, Milwaukee.
Son of Jedediah Lathrop Stark.
Son of Olive (Lathrop) Stark.
Daughter of JEDEDIAH LATHROP: This last, born in Norwich, Connecticut, January 4, 1718, was a private in 1776 in Captain Frederick Huntington's company of Norwich, Fourth battalion Wadsworth's brigade, Colonel Samuel Selden com- manding. He was a man held in honor both in civil and mili- tary life. He died in Bozra, Connecticut, June 9, 1792.
Authorities : Connecticut Revolutionary Records; Hunting- ton's Lathrop Family Memoirs.
91
68.
3668.
GARDNER PERRY STICKNEY, Manufacturer, Milwaukee. Son of Niles Tilden Stickney.
Son of Daniel Balch Stickney.
Son of Daniel Stickney.
Son of THOMAS STICKNEY: This last, on April 19, 1775, was Lieutenant in Captain Nathan Gage's company of Bradford, Massachusetts, which marched on news of the battle of Lexington. He was Lieutenant of the same company in Colonel Fry's regiment at Bunker Hill, and was in service until December 12, 1777. His Captain being sick, he commanded his company in the regiment of his cousin, Colonel Stickney, at the battle of Bennington. In this battle he was wounded. He was born October 24, 1734, in Bradford, and died there Novem- ber 8, 1808.
Also :
Son of Eliza Hall (George) Stickney.
Daughter of Moses George.
Son of AMOS GEORGE : This last was First Lieutenant in the Tenth company of Colonel Johnson's regiment of Massa- chusetts militia. His commission, dated July 1, 1781, and signed by John Hancock, is now in the possession of Wallace T. George, Haverhill, Massachusetts.
Also :
Son of Eliza Hall (George) Stickney.
Daughter of Abigail (Ladd) George.
Daughter of NATHANIEL LADD: This last, in Decem- ber, 1775, enlisted for three months as a private in Captain Tim- othy Johnson's company, of Haverhill. He marched to Winter Hill, Charlestown, joined the army January 1, 1776, went to Boston under General Washington, and served until April I, 1776. He again enlisted the last of July, 1777, and joined the army at Stillwater, New York. He was wounded in the battle October 7, by a musket-ball in the left hip, and was carried to hospital at Albany, and thence home. He also served an en- listment in 1778, and another in 1779.
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Authorities : Massachusetts Archives, Vol. CXLVI; Revo- lutionary Reports, Lexington Alarm, Vol. XII; Various serv- ices, Vol. XVIII, Vol. XIX; Militia Officers, Vols. XXVII and XXVIII.
41. 3641.
WILLIAM WOLCOTT STRONG, Clerk, Kenosha.
Son of Adaline Sophia (Irwin) Strong.
Daughter of Hannah (Rees) Irwin.
Daughter of Mary (Reed) Rees.
Daughter of SETH REED: This last enlisted October 6, 1775, was at once made Lieutenant Colonel of the Twenty-sixth Massachusetts foot, John Patterson, Colonel, and served throughout the war. He was born at Uxbridge, Massachusetts, March 6, 1746, and died in Erie, Pennsylvania, March 19, 1796.
Authorities : Massachusetts Revolutionary War Archives, Vol. XLVI; Town Records of Uxbridge; Reed's Genealogical Manuscripts.
14. 3614.
WILLIAM CHESTER SWAIN, Printer, Milwaukee.
Son of Chipman Swain.
Son of Meliscent (Barrett) Swain.
Daughter of JAMES BARRETT.
Son of COLONEL JAMES BARRETT : This last, at Con- cord, Massachusetts, April 19, 1775, being then 64 years of age, gave the first order to an American force to march against and .engage the British. His wife, Rebecca Hubbard Barrett, con- cealed ammunition which had been collected for the use of the colonies in the attic of their house where it was not discovered. A view of their home, a fac simile of Colonel Barrett's auto- graph, and an account of his services at Concord may be seen in Lossing's Pictorial Field-book of the Revolution.
The above named James Barrett, son of Colonel James Barrett, assisted his father in the preparations to resist the British and participated in Concord fight. Through nearly all the war he was a member of the Revolutionary Committees of
93
Correspondence. His wife, Meliscent, born Estabrook, and his daughter Meliscent assisted in concealing ammunition. Colonel Barrett was born July 31, 1710, in Concord, and died there April 11, 1779. His son James was born January 4, 1733, in Concord, and died there October 30, 1799.
Authorities : Old families of Concord, Massachusetts ; pri- vate family papers ; Swain's Genealogy of the Swain Family.
Also :
Son of Chipman Swain.
Son of JOSEPH SWAIN: This last was sent, by Dr. Joseph Warren (his cousin by marriage), previous to the Con- cord fight, to take charge of the rebel armory and put the guns in repair. He afterwards served as an artisan during the Rev- olutionary War.
Authorities : Old Families of Concord; Swain's Genealogy of the Swain Family.
91. 3691.
SAMUEL HOBART TALLMADGE, Milwaukee.
Son of Samuel Wires Tallmadge.
Son of James Tallmadge.
Son of DANIEL TALLMADGE: This last was a mem- ber of the Seventeenth company or train band of, the Second regiment in the Colony of Connecticut prior to the Revolution, as appears by a copy of the muster rolls of said company. He was a Sergeant in the Second troop of Light Dragoons, Connecticut militia, and accompanied General Putnam's com- mand in its march up the Hudson River to guard against the landing, from the British fleet, of a portion of Clinton's troops, with a view of relieving Burgoyne. While in this service he crossed the river in an open boat under a severe fire from the fleet with dispatches from General Putnam. He was at the Battle of White Plains, and was very actively engaged in the fight at New Haven; and had the strap of his cartridge box cut by a musket ball. He was born in New Haven in 1746, and died in 1831.
Authorities : United States Pension Office ; Muster Roll.
94
20.
3620.
FRANK TAYLOR TERRY, Real Estate, Stocks and Loans, Milwaukee.
Son of Frank Henry Terry.
Son of Harriet (Taylor) Terry.
Daughter of Elizabeth (Terry) Taylor.
Daughter of COLONEL NATHANIEL TERRY: This last was a Captain of militia in his native town of Enfield, Connec- ticut. The day after the news of Lexington reached Enfield he was on his march to Boston at the head of his company of fifty- nine men. He was in the active service of his country until the end of the war, and sacrificed a large portion of his estate in support of the government. He was born June 3, 1730, in Enfield, and died there February 27, 1792.
Authority : Dwight's Descendants of John Dwight.
Also :
Son of Frank Henry Terry.
Son of Roderick Terry.
Son of JUDGE ELIPHALET TERRY: This last, for thirty-three successive years, was a member of the State Assem- bly of Connecticut. During the first four years of this service the War of the Revolution was in progress. In 1798 he was elected Judge of the County Court. He was born in Enfield in 1742, and died in 1812.
Same authority.
Also :
Son of Frank Henry Terry.
Son of Harriet (Taylor) Terry.
Daughter of the Rev. John Taylor. Son of HON. ELDAD TAYLOR: This last was a mem- ber of the Provincial Congress at Boston, and died at his post in 1777. He was from Westfield, Massachusetts, having been born there in 1708.
Authority : Taylor Chart of the Ancestors and Descendants of the Rev. John Taylor, printed in 1859.
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95
Also :
Son of Martha Ripley (Birge) Terry.
Daughter of Lucy (Ripley) Birge.
Daughter of Eliza (Coit) Ripley.
Daughter of CAPTAIN WILLIAM COIT: This last served with the Connecticut troops, and in 1780 was made a Captain. He was a native of Norwich, Connecticut, born Feb- ruary 23, 1735.
Authority : His Captain's commission.
56. 3656.
EDWARD CAPRON THIERS, Lawyer, Kenosha.
Son of Louisa Kerwin (Capron) Thiers.
Daughter of SETH CAPRON: This last, when 19 years of age, March 21, 1781, enlisted for three years from Norton, Massachusetts, as a private in Colonel William Shepard's regi- ment. During May, June, July and August, 1781, his name appears as a private in Captain Simon Larned's company of this regiment. On September 22, 1781, he became a Corporal and so appears in November and December and in January, 1782. He was at the siege of Newport, Rhode Island, where he was attached to General La Fayette's corps of light infantry. He fought at White Plains. He was afterwards ordered to the headquarters of the army at West Point, where he was attached to the non-commissioned staff of General Washington, under whom he served during the remainder of the war. He com -. manded the barge that conveyed General Washington to Eliza- bethtown Point after he bade farewell to his army at New York, and was the last man to receive the General's benediction when he landed.
When Seth Capron first entered the army he was too young to be subject to draft and too short to pass inspection, but man- aged to overcome the latter difficulty and pass muster, by stand- ing on his toes. He then made a show of five feet five inches.
Authorities : Massachusetts Revolutionary War Archives, Vols. XXXIV, L, LI; Durand's History of Oneida County, New York.
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58. 3658.
LOUIS MILTON THIERS, Photographer, Kenosha.
Full brother of Edward Capron Thiers, 56.
60. 3660.
CHARLES C. TOWNSEND, Lawyer, Benton.
Son of Addison Austin Townsend.
Son of Absolom Townsend.
Son of Samuel Townsend.
Son of EBER TOWNSEND : This last volunteered early in the war. He was wounded and taken prisoner when the British captured New York, and was one of the men whom the British intended to execute had they not been restrained by Washington's order to execute two British prisoners for every one of the Americans so treated. He seems to have been ex- changed, or otherwise restored to his own army, for he endured the hardships of Valley Forge and served until the end of the war.
Authorities : Private family records.
37. 3637.
HAROLD GREEN UNDERWOOD, Lawyer, Milwaukee.
Son of Marcia Deming (Green) Underwood.
Daughter of Daraxa (Foote) Green.
Daughter of FREEMAN FOOTE : This last served in the Vermont Volunteers under Colonel Ethan Allen for fifteen months. He was born in Simsbury, Connecticut, September 22, 1759, and died in Middlebury, Vermont, September 30, 1842.
Authority : Goodwin's Foote Family, Hartford, 1849.
28. 3628.
HERBERT WIGHT UNDERWOOD, Manufacturer, Milwau- kec.
Son of Sarah Smith (Wight) Underwood.
Daughter of Harviland Wight. Son of Peletiah Wight.
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Son of SIMEON WIGHT: This last, a student at Har- vard University, and a surgeon, left his family at West Wood- stock, Connecticut, entered the service, and was present at Bunker Hill. He was later a surgeon on ship, was injured in a naval battle off the Massachusetts coast, and died at Chatham, August 4, 1777, as a result of his wounds. He was born in Medford, Massachusetts, March 20, 1750.
Authority : The Wights; Rev. Henry Wight's Manuscript Genealogy.
89. 3689.
WILLIAM HENRY UPHAM, ex-Governor of Wisconsin, Marshfield.
Son of Alvin Upham.
Son of JONATHAN UPHAM : This last, a resident of Charlton, Massachusetts, enlisted July 5, 1780, in Captain Syl- vanus Smith's company of the Fifteenth Massachusetts regi- ment, Colonel Timothy Bigelow. His service was on the Hud- son River. He was discharged December 3, 1780. He was born in Charlton February 27, 1759, and died in Westminster, Massachusetts, April 2, 1840.
Authorities : Upham Genealogy; Massachusetts Revolu- tionary War Archives. 1
75. 3675.
ELLIS BAKER USHER, Editor and Publisher, La Crosse. Son of Isaac Lane Usher.
Son of Hannah (Lane) Usher. Daughter of ISAAC LANE.
Son of DANIEL LANE : This last enlisted in 1756 in pre- Revolutionary service, and fought at Crown Point and Quebec. His journal from July 8 to December 14, 1859, is printed in New England Historical and Genealogical Register, XXVI, 236, 333. He raised a company for the Continental Army that was attached to Colonel Brooks' regiment. He served at Ti-
7
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conderoga under General Schuyler, and later under General Gates. He was taken prisoner at Fort Edward, in 1777, and was paroled by General Burgoyne September 16, 1777.
The said Isaac Lane followed his father, Captain Daniel . Lane, to the front, and served in his company as a private. In the War of 1812 Isaac Lane was Colonel of the Thirty-third Massachusetts infantry. Captain Daniel Lane was born at Broad Bay, Maine, May 11, 1740, and died in Hollis, Maine, September 11, 18II.
Authorities : Goodwin's "Narragansett No. 1;" Buxton's Centennial, Lane Family, Vol. I.
Also :
Son of Isaac Lane Usher.
Son of Ellis Baker Usher.
,Son of ABIJAH USHER : This last enlisted from Merri- mack, New Hampshire, as a private in Captain William Bar- ron's company of Colonel Isaac Wyman's regiment, raised for Canada. He was mustered in July 16, 1776, at Amherst, New Hampshire, at the age of sixteen years. He lived after his ser- vice in Medford, Massachusetts, and in Hollis, York County, Maine, at which latter place he died in 1836.
33.
3633.
FRANK PRATT VAN VALKENBURGH, Lawyer, Mil- waukee.
Son of Franklin Butler Van Valkenburgh.
Son of Jacob Van Valkenburgh.
Son of BARTHOLOMEW JACOB VAN VALKEN- BURGH: This last enlisted November 21, 1776, in a New York regiment commanded by Colonel Goose Van Schaick, being a Second Lieutenant in the company of Captain Andrew Fink. On September 29, 1780, he was promoted to be First Lieu- tenant and served until he was discharged, January 21, 1781. He died August 4, 1831.
Authority : United States Pension Office.
99
6.
3606.
HENRY CORNELIUS VAN VECHTEN, Machinist, Racine.
Son of Cornelius Van Vechten.
Son of Walter Van Vechten.
Son of DERRICK VAN VECHTEN : This last, as appears by the roster of the regiment, dated October 20, 1775, was first Major in the Fourteenth regiment of New York state militia, John Knickerbocker, Colonel, which was composed of compa- nies organized in the districts of Hoosick and Schaghticoke. This regiment was attached to the Army of the North under Generals Schuyler and Gates. In 1777, previous to the battle of Bemis Heights, while on a scout across the Hudson to obtain information of the movements of the enemy, his band was fired upon by British and Indians. After having been several times slightly wounded, Major Van Vechten was mortally wounded by a ball which passed through his tobacco-box into his body. His companions succeeded in escaping and returned with rein- forcements to recover his body. In the meantime he had been scalped by the Indians. His body was finally removed to Albany for burial. The tobacco-box is now possessed by Henry Cornelius Van Vechten.
Authority : Manuscript Genealogy.
II. 36II.
JOHN BLACK VLIET, Civil Engineer, Milwaukee. Son of Garrett Vliet.
Son of JESPER VLIET: This last was a soldier in the Revolutionary Army, probably from New Jersey, and fought at Monmouth. Six of his brothers, sons of Daniel Van Vliet, also fought in the same war.
Authority : Manuscript written at dictation of Garrett Vliet, June 26, 1876.
100
84.
3684.
CHARLES LINCOLN WELLINGTON, Member Board of
Administration, Western Freight Association, Chicago, . Illinois.
Son of Joseph Dix Wellington.
Son of Isaac Wellington.
Son of JOSEPH WELLINGTON : This last was a private on the Lexington alarm roll of Captain Abraham Peirce's com- pany of Colonel Thomas Gardner's regiment, which marched on the alarm of April 19, 1775, from Waltham, Massachusetts, to Concord and Lexington. On March 4, 1776, he enlisted under the same Captain in Colonel Samuel Thatcher's regiment, which marched by order of General Washington on the taking of Dor- chester Heights. He served from July 1, 1777, to December 22, 1777, in Captain Ebenezer Newell's company of Colonel Danforth Keyes' regiment. He served until the end of the war. He was born in Watertown, Massachusetts, November 13, 1734.
Authority : Massachusetts Revolutionary War Archives, Vols. XIII, XXI, XXII.
I.
3601.
DON JOHN WHITTEMORE, Civil Engineer, Milwaukee.
Son of Albert Galatin Whittemore.
Son of John Whittemore.
Son of JOSEPH WHITTEMORE: Thislast, born in Salem, September 11, 1735, served for two days in the company of Cap- tain Samuel Epes, which marched from Danvers, Massachu- setts, April 19, 1775, to the battle of Lexington. He was a pri- vate in Captain Gideon Parker's company in Colonel Moses Little's Eleventh regiment of the Massachusetts line. After- wards he became Lieutenant in the Twelfth regiment, same line, under the same Colonel. Joseph Whittemore fought at Bunker Hill, and probably at White Plains, Trenton, and other memor- able fields, and was killed by a wound in the thigh in 1780.
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Authorities : Massachusetts Revolutionary War Records; Wyman's History of Charlestown; Whittemore's Genealogy of the Whittemore Family; United States Pension Office.
Also :
Son of Abby (Clark) Whittemore.
Daughter of Lois (Lawrence) Clark.
Daughter of ABRAHAM LAWRENCE : This last, ac- cording to the certificate of the Adjutant General of New Jer- sey, was a private in Washington's Army, from Somerset County, in that State. According to his own statement he en- listed as a Sergeant under Captain Swan in a company raised in the counties of Essex and Bergen, New Jersey, to serve five months under the command of Captain Philip Van Cortlandt. Upon the command going to New York City he became Quar- termaster Sergeant, and so continued for four months in New York and on Staten Island. He was with General Washing- ton's Army on its retreat, but was taken ill and obliged to go to his home at Springfield, New Jersey. Later, being still too ill for active service, he became Commissary's clerk, with a salary of $30 per month and an allowance of two rations a day. He was born in Springfield, New Jersey, in July, 1752.
Also :
Son of Albert Galatin Whittemore.
Son of Abigail (Olin) Whittemore.
Daughter of GIDEON OLIN : This last, while living in Shaftesbury, Vermont, was appointed Major of a militia regi- ment of Green Mountain Boys under Colonel Herrick and Lieu- tenant Colonel Ebenezer Walbridge, on June 6, 1778, and was in active service on the frontier on several occasions. He was one of the founders of Vermont, was Assistant Judge of Ben- nington County Circuit Court in 1781 and for twenty years after, and as a member of the General Assembly was active in raising troops. He was born in Rhode Island in 1743, and died in January, 1823.
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13. 3613.
WILLIAM WARD WIGHT, Lawyer, Milwaukee.
Son of William Ward Wight.
Son of Daniel Wight.
Son of Daniel Wight.
Son of PETER WIGHT: This last was a private in the company of Captain Fuller, regiment of Colonel Wheelock, which marched from Medway, Massachusetts, to Warwick, Rhode Island, on the alarm, December 8, 1776. He served until December 29, 1776 ; he was then more than 54 years of age. He was born in Medfield, Massachusetts, May 21, 1722, and died in Medway, March 16, 1800.
Authorities : Jameson's Medway ; The Wights.
Also :
Son of William Ward Wight. Son of Roxana (Kingsbury) Wight.
Daughter of Joseph Kingsbury.
Son of EBENEZER KINGSBURY: This last served in the Connecticut Legislature, by successive re-elections, from 1754 until 1780. His going from the Assembly at Hartford to his home in Coventry on a Saturday when the country was in danger, converting the leaden weight of the family clock into bullets and returning the next Monday with his saddle-bags full of missiles and edibles for the soldiers, was but one among the many instances of his energy and patriotism. He was born in Haverhill, Massachusetts, February 11, 1716, and died in Cov- entry, September 6, 1800.
Authorities : The Wights ; private letters.
15. 3615.
GERSHOM MOTT WILLIAMS, Protestant Episcopal Bishop, Marquette, Michigan. Son of Thomas Williams. Son of Mary (Mott) Williams.
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Daughter of GERSHOM MOTT; This last was a Captain in one of the four Continental regiments of the New York line, and afterwards a Captain in Colonel Lamb's regiment of artil- lery. He served in Canada and on the Hudson. After return- ing from Canada, his health being impaired, he did quarter- master duty, and died after the close of the war of disease con- tracted in the service. He received the brevet of major at the close of the war. His Captain's commissions, signed by John Hancock, are in the possession of Bishop Williams' mother.
29.
3629.
GEORGE WASHINGTON WING, Lawyer, Kewaunee.
Son of Rufus Leander Wing.
Son of Polly (Sweet) Wing.
Daughter of Benjamin Sweet.
Son of JOHN SWEET : This last, who was born near War- wick, Rhode Island, in 1753, enlisted at Batemantown, Dutchess County, New York, in Captain Benjamin Knoxon's company of Colonel Humphrey's regiment of New York troops and served six months and twenty-one days.
Authorities : United States Pension Office ; Austin's Gen- ealogical Dictionary ; Wing's Genealogy of the Wing Family.
Also :
. Son of Rufus Leander Wing.
Son of Polly (Sweet) Wing.
Daughter of Hannah (Stanton) Sweet.
Daughter of EBENEZER STANTON: This last, who was born in Preston, Connecticut, March 14, 1746, enlisted at Stonington, Connecticut, as an Ensign, February 22, 1777, in Captain Amos Stanton's company of Colonel Henry Sherburn's regiment of Connecticut troops, and served two years, ten months and five days. During the last eight months of this service he was lieutenant and paymaster of the regiment. He died July 21, 1811.
Authorities : United States Pension Office ; War Records of Connecticut ; Stanton's History of the Stanton Family.
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Also:
Son of Rufus Leander Wing.
Son of James Wing.
Son of William Wing.
Son of JOHN WING : This last, who was born in Fair Haven, Massachusetts, May 17, 1752, served in a Massachu- setts regiment during the Revolution, with no less than thirty relations of the same sirname.
Authority: Massachusetts War Records.
Also :
Son of Mary (Elliott) Wing.
Daughter of George Washington Elliott.
Son of Betsey (Benjamin) Elliott.
Daughter of JESSE BENJAMIN: This last, who was born at Preston, Connecticut, October 28, 1758, enlisted April 26, 1776, in Captain Bacon's company of Colonel John Durkee's regiment of Connecticut troops and served until the close of the war. He participated in the battles of Germantown, Mon- mouth and Fort Mifflin, and wintered with Washington at Mor- ristown and Valley Forge.
Authorities : United States Pension Office ; Town Records of Preston ; War Records of Connecticut.
Also : Son of Mary (Elliott) Wing.
Daughter of George Washington Elliott.
Son of Chester Elliott.
Son of DAVID ELLIOTT: This last enlisted July 12, 1781, as a fifer in his brother's (Captain Joseph Elliott's) com- pany of Colonel William Thomas' regiment of Massachusetts troops from Sutton, Massachusetts. He served four months and twenty-three days.
Authorities : War Records of Massachusetts ; Records of Sutton.
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34.
3634.
HIRAM DE WITT WING, Editor and Publisher, Kaukauna. Son of Ebenezer Wing. Son of Polly (Sweet) Wing. Daughter of Benjamin Sweet. Son of JOHN SWEET.
Also :
Son of Ebenezer Wing. Son of Polly (Sweet) Wing.
Daughter of Hannah (Stanton) Sweet.
Daughter of EBENEZER STANTON.
Also :
Son of Ebenezer Wing.
Son of James Wing.
Son of William Wing.
Son of JOHN WING.
See George Washington Wing, 29, for the services of John Sweet, Ebenezer Stanton and John Wing.
3. 3603.
URANUS OWEN BRACKETT WINGATE, Physician, Mil- waukee.
Son of David Wingate.
Son of David Wingate.
Son of DAVID WINGATE : This last was a militiaman from New Hampshire, his native state, in 1780.
Authority : Wingate's History of the Wingate Family.
49. 3649.
GURDON HORATIO WINSOR, Lawyer, West Superior. Son of Mary Helen (Munsel) Winsor.
Daughter of Zalma (Chase) Munsel.
Daughter of CALEB CHASE: This last signed an order to pay to Lieutenant Robert Taft a bounty coat, or its equiva- lent in money, due to said Caleb Chase for eight months' serv-
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