USA > West Virginia > Ritchie County > History of Ritchie County, with biographical sketches of its pioneers and their ancestors, and with interesting reminiscences of revolutionary and Indian times > Part 19
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The Ross family, though not so early as the others men - tioned, have been worthy citizens here for, perhaps, sixty years.
Robert Ross was born on Booth creek, in Harrison coun- ty, in 1810, and being left an orphan at the age of fourteen years, went to Tennessee to live with a married sister. At this age of the world, it was the custom for the farmers to "boat" their products to New Orleans for market, and while here, he made several trips to the Crescent city on a flat boat. He served as a soldier in the Mexican war, having enlisted from Harrison county, and at the close of hostilities, again returned to his native county, where he was married to Miss Elizabeth Starks, and after spending the first few years of their married life there, they came to Goose creek, where they established a permanent home. Mr. Ross died in January, 1880, and Mrs. Ross, in April, 1886.
They were the parents of nine children; viz., Francis B. Ross, Jehu, James, Meshiac, Joseph (who lost his life in his burning dwelling early in the year 1910), Mrs. Phoebe Rine- hart, Mrs. Martha Webb, Mrs. Luna Williams, all of Goose creek ; and Mrs. Sophia Smith, of Washburn.
CHAPTER XV
Middle Fork Settled
HOMAS IRELAND, son of Alexander, was the first pioneer to find a home on the Mid- dle fork of Hughes river. In October, 1820, he was married to Miss Katherine Lowther, daughter of Robert, the eldest son of Col. William; and shortly after this event, took up his residence on this river, near its con- fluence with the South fork, on the farm that is now the property of his son, G. M. Ireland; and here the remainder of his life was spent.
Thomas and Sarah Lowther Ireland.
As is well known, the forest at this time was full of wild animais of various species, and not long after his arrival here, he killed a large panther, which had come close to the house
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and raised a disturbance with the hogs. At another time, he shot a young panther, and fearing an attack from the mother beast, lost no time until he had reached home in safety. He aiso killed two huge bears at different times with his "trusty rifle."
He was a man of unalloyed integrity, and of strong re- ligious convictions, and was one of the corner-stones of the White Oak Methodist Episcopal church, he and his wife being among the charter members. And beneath the shadow of this church, side by side, they lie in their last sleep.
Their children were twelve in number: . Robert, Alex- ander, John C., Albert, Mortimer, George M., Thomas W., J. Franklin, Elizabeth, Cathrine, Susan and Sarah.
Robert went to Kansas, where he died in 1870, and where his family still live.
Alexander resides in Ohio. John C. passed away in Dodridge county. Albert died in childhood (in 1849), and Elizabeth, at a ripe old age.
Mortimer is now a superannuated minister of the Method- ist Protestant church, and his home is at Worthington, Marion county.
George M., the only one that remains here, has long been a prominent figure in Sunday school and Farmers' Institute circles, as well as in business affairs. He served as a soldier of the Union in the Civil war and rose to the rank of Captain.
Thomas W., who was identified among the teachers of this county in former years and served one term as County Superintendent, is now a prominent minister of the Methodist Protestant church, and Morgantown is his home.
J. Franklin went to Colorado many years ago, where he still lives.
Cathrine and Susan make their home with their brother. G. M., at Pullman : and Sarah is Mrs. Maulsby, of West Union.
This family, like many of the other pioneer families, has produced a host of prominent young people. Among them are the Rev. A. L. Ireland, of the Methodist Episcopal church : A. D. Ireland, of Parkersburg: Miss Addie Ireland, teacher of art in the Fairmont schools ; and many others that might be mentioned.
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Archibald Lowther was the second pioneer on the Mid- dle fork of Hughes river. Harrison county was the place of liis nativity, and near the little town of West Milford, on May 17, 1811, he first saw "the light of day." On September 23. 18344, he was married to Miss Charlotte Williard, who was born of German parentage in Greene county, Pennsylvania. on January 29, 1813; and in 1836, they came to Holbrook, and settled on the farm that is now owned by William Adams. and Mr. Townsend -- the site of the original cabin being near the Townsend residence. Here, for more than forty years, the family resided (until 1876, when they sold the farm to the late John Coburn) ; here, Mr. Lowther suddenly fell asleep, on October 29, 1874; and here, on the old homestead, surrounded by the silent dust of five generations of the family. beside liis wife, he lies at rest.
When Mr. and Mrs. Lowther arrived, their nearest neigh- bors were at Oxford, and at the mouth of the river; and though they did not keep a house of public entertainment, their home was known far and wide for its hospitality to strangers, and it was a general stopping place for travelers.
After the old homestead had passed into other hands, Mrs. Lowther lived with her children, until her death, on April 6, 1895. She was a woman of strong physique, and of no ordinary degree of intellect, and her whole life was char- acterized by kind and helpful deeds.
The children of this family were seven in number ; viz., Elizabeth Jane, the first born, died at the age of seventeen years : Robert, the third son, in childhood ; and Margaret C., who was the late Mrs. T. E. Nutter, of Holbrook, in 1905.
William George, the eldest son, resides at Fonsoville ; Alexander S., at Peabody, Kansas; John Marshall, near Au- burn ; and Sarah Ann is Mrs. C. W. Leggett, of Pullman.
W. G. and Alexander were soldiers of the Union army during the late Civil war.
The next arrivals were Mr. Lowther's parents, William and Margaret Morrison Lowther,1 and his widowed sister, Mrs. Sudna Willard, and her three daughters. The elder
1For history of William Lowther see first chapter.
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HISTORY OF RITCHIE COUNTY
Lowther and his wife remained as members of the household of their son until they passed from earth ; and Mrs. Willard took up her residence on the Lowther homestead, where she reared her little family.
Mrs. Sudna Lowther Willard, was the only daughter of William and Margaret Morrison Lowther that married and reared a family. She was born near West Milford, on April 10. 192, and in her early womanhood, she was married to George Willard, brother of Mrs. Archibald Lowther; and, while on a visit with her brother, Alexander Lowther, at Ox- ford, a short time before the family removed to this county, Mr. Willard died, and was laid at rest on the Flannagan farm, above Berea.
She died full of years at the home of her daughter, Mrs. M. A. Neal, and, at Pullman, she slumbers.
Her daughters were Margaret, Rebecca, and Charlotte Willard ..
Margaret married Wilson Watson, of Otterslide, and was the mother of three children: John, the only son, died in in- fancy : Sudna Jane was the first wife of the late A. M. Wade : and Charlotte is Mrs. Ai Kelley, of Otterslide.
Rebecca Willard married William R. Brown, and was the mother of William R. Brown, ex-Prosecuting Attorney of Doddridge county ; and of Hon. T. A. Brown, of Parkersburg ; and of the late Mrs. Ozenia Lipscomb, and the late Mrs. Mary Hodge.
Charlotte, the youngest and only surviving daughter, is Mrs. M. A. Neal, of Pullman. Her children are, Homer and the late Clarke Neal, of Colorado; Mrs. Alice Hawkins Cor- bin, and the late Mrs. Louella Peirpoint, Mrs. Jane Musgrave. the late Olive Neal, and Miss Isa Neal, who holds a position as teacher in the Fairmont schools.
The Willards are of German origin. George Willard came from the Fatherland late in the eighteenth century, and settled in Greene county, Pennsylvania. He married Mrs. Elizabeth Hume Ghanz, the widow of a Frenchman, but a native of Germany, before leaving the land of his birth, and they were the parents of four sons and three daughters ; viz.,
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Elias was the father of Porter E. Willard, of Cameron ; Jacob settled in Kanawha county, but went from there to California during the gold excitement, and was never heard of again; Isaac rests at "Brown's mill," in Monongalia county ; George. the progenitor of the Ritchie county family, in this county : Elizabeth became Mrs. Schenk and went to Illinois, where she spent her last hours, and where her descendants live ; Dorothea was another daughter; Mrs. Hannah Ghantz Jen- kins, of Illinois, was the half-sister; and Mrs. Charlotte Low- ther was the youngest, and the only member of the family that was not taught to read and to speak the German lan- guage. When she was but a small child, her father removed to the Monongalia side-his farm lying across the Virginia and Pennsylvania line. Here Mrs. Lowther grew to woman- hood ; here she was married ; and here her parents sleep.
Though the connection cannot be made clear owing to the burning of the Willard records in Colonial days in Mass- achusetts, there is but little doubt that this family and that of the late Frances E. Willard are descended from the same race. Her ancestors, who were of German lineage, came from England to the Massachusetts colony during the seventeenth century, and became prominently identified with colonial affairs. (A letter dictated by her in person not long before her death is before us.)
The love that bound her (Miss Frances Willard) to the land that gave her fore-fathers birth, she so beautifully ex- pressed in the following language. on one occasion, when the pride of nationality was being discussed :
"First, I am a Christian, then, I am a Saxon; then I am an American ; and when I get home to Heaven, I expect to register from Evanston."
The Zinns .- After the Lowthers and the Willards came the Zinns. This family trace their ancestry to the Fatherland. George Zinn and his wife, Mary Saylor Zinn, with her brother, William Saylor, emigrated from Germany to America in the year 1776. It is not positively known where they first estab- lished their home, but they removed from Hagerstown, Mary- land, to Preston county (West) Virginia and from there to
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HISTORY OF RITCHIE COUNTY
Harrison county, where they spent the remnant of their days. These venerable pioneers were the parents of eleven children ; nameiy, Jacob, Elizabeth, John, George, Michael, Henry. Alexander, William, Samuel, Peter, and Mary Zinn.
Elizabeth, the eldest daughter, married Henry Grimm and removed to Indiana ; and Mary became Mrs. Bland and remained in Harrison county ; Henry and George lived in Ohio, and the rest probably remained in this state.
John Zinn, the second son, whose history concerns us most, married Miss Ruth Gandy, and they, with their family, and their married son, J. W. Zinn, came from Preston county late in the thirties, and settled on the farm that is now the home of H. C. Zinn-the son of J. W. Zinn. Here the re- mainder of their lives were spent, and in the Baptist church- yard, at Oxford, they sleep.
The elder Zinn was a tanner by trade, and he opened the first tannery in this part of the county; and his son run a horse-mill for the convenience of the public.
John and Ruth Gandy Zinn were the parents of thirteen children, twelve of whom married and reared families of their own; and not a few of the substantial citizens of this, and sister counties, are descended from this worthy couple. Their children were as follows :
Samuel, George Q., Manley, J. W., Granville, Preston, Rachel. Narcissus. Fernandez, Amelia, Delila, Elizabeth, and Thomas, who died at the age of fourteen years.
J. Wesley Zinn, who, with his father, settled the H. C. Zinn farm, was born on August 14, 1814, and died in 1852. and was laid in the Oxford churchyard. He married Miss Eliza Hoskins, of Preston county, and they were the parents of-\\. B. Zinn, Mrs. Mary E. (Taylor) Cox, of Wirt county ; Mrs. Sebra (Thomas) Law, Edward D., and C. N. Zinn, of the West ; and H. C. Zinn, of Holbrook.
Q. Manley Zinn, some time after the arrival of the fam- ily, married Miss Lucy Ann Wilson, sister of Isaac Wilson. and settled at the mouth of Bear run, on the farm that is now the property of his son, M. B. Zinn. Here he passed away in 1868, at the age of fifty-four years, and in the Baptist churchi-
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yard at Oxford he sleeps by the side of his wife, who survived him by many years. (Manly and J. Wesley Zinn were twins.)
He was the father of C. L. Zinn, of Auburn, who is prom- inently known in political circles, and who has twice repre- sented his native county in the Legislature, at Charleston. His other children are: Newton Zinn, of Glenville; M. B., of Holbrook; Worthington, of Oxford; Noah, of Clarksburg : Grant, of Parkersburg; Victoria, wife of the late Granville Hall, Colorado; Mrs. Palestine Wilson, Toledo, Ohio; Mrs. Alice Childers, and Mrs. Magdalena Nutter (mother of At- torney Bruce Nutter), both of Buckhannon ; and Martha, who died in the "beauty of her youth."
George Zinn and his wife, Mrs. Sarah Gray Zinn, came with the rest of the family, from Preston county, and settled just across the Doddridge county line ; but, a little later, they removed to the Oxford vicinity to the farm that is now the home of their son, Granville Zinn. Here their last hours were spent, and, with the other pioneers of their name, they rest in the Baptist churchyard at Oxford.
Their children were the late James, of Oxford; John, of Lewis county ; Thomas, of Harrisville ; Granville, above men- tioned ; Milroy, and Q. M. Zinn, who resides with his sister, Mrs. E. A. Leggett, at Oxford; Mrs. Mary J. Marsh, Lewis county ; Mrs. Elizabeth Douglass, of the West; Ruth, who first married Mr. Bumgarnt, is now Mrs. James Carter, of West Union ; and Delia, who died in youth.
Samuel Zinn, the eldest son of John and Ruth Gandy Zinn, was first married to Miss Miranda Weaver, who died ere long, leaving five children; viz., Elizabeth, Columbus, Minerva, Rachel (who is now Mrs. E. M. Brown, of Auburn), and Worthington. His second wife was Miss Ann Dawson, and the twelve children of this union, which are scattered in different parts of the West, were as follows: Elizabeth, William, Elijah, Sarah, Preston, Eliza, Martha, David B., Mary, Laura, Jerusha, and Ella Zinn. (Married names tin- known to us.)
Rachel Zinn (daughter of John and Ruth Gandy Zinn) married Thomas Gray, and they settled just across the
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HISTORY OF RITCHIE COUNTY
Doddridge county line, near one-half mile from the Oxford post-office, on the farm that is still in the hands of their de- scendants-the children of their late son, Charter, being the heirs. Here they lived and died, and in the Baptist church cemetery at Oxford they lie at rest.
Their children were eleven in number: viz .. Jane, the first born, married John Stinespring, and Mrs. J. E. Day, of Doddridge county, is her only child. Thomas died in child- hood; William, in young manhood; Amelia and Erminia, in early womanhood; James was a soldier of the Union army. and not long after his return home (late in the '60's) he passed on : Elizabeth is Mrs. John M. Gribble, of West Union : Sarah was the late Mrs. F. A. Nutter, of Oxford; Narcissus is is Mrs. Charles B. Cleavenger, of Oxford; Lucia, who first married the late Wilson B. Lowther, of Oxford, is now Mrs. L. C. Morris ; and Charter, the only son that left a family, married Miss Hannah Bee.
Narcissus Zinn (daughter of John and Ruth Gandy Zinn) married Samuel Rogers, but she died early in life, and Mr. Rogers married again. The family resided in the Oxford vicinity for a time in pioneer days, but returned to Preston county. Two of her children were Thomas and Preston, but here our authentic information ends.
Delila Zinn (daughter of John and Ruth Gandy Zinn) married David Fortney, and remained in Preston county. Her children's first names only are at hand: Eugene, Fernandez, Lycurgus, Charlotte, Ashford, Caroline, Silas, and Orpha Fort- ney. Mr. Fortney, of Leatherbarke, is descended from her.
Elizabeth Zinn (daughter of John and Ruth Gandy Zinn) married Thomas Brown, and remained in Preston county. And her children were, Adaline, Buckner, William, Charles. Virgil and Cloa Brown.
Preston Zinn (son of John and Ruth Gandy Zinn) mar- ried Miss Nancy Rogers. (See Berea settlers.) And the family of Amelia Zinn, who first married Thomas E. Davis, senior, and later Eli Heaton, will be found in a subsequent chapter.
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BEAR RUN SETTLED.
Granville Zinn, the remaining son of John and Ruth Gandy Zinn, married Miss Rosetta Lowther, and settled on Bear run, on the farm that is now the home of Delaine Tharpe. in 1843.
This stream, which is a small tributary of the Middle fork, took its name from a huge black bear that came to its death here at the hands of Mrs. Zinn's father and brother, Wm. B., and Wm. R. Lowther, and Wm. K. Lowther, while in this section on a hunting expedition years before the date of this settlement.
Mr. Zinn lived and died where he settled, and some time, after he was laid in the Oxford Baptist churchyard, his widow and son, Samuel, removed to Harrisville, where they still re- side. Mrs. Zinn celebrated her ninetieth birthday in February, 1910.
Besides the son mentioned, their children were as iol- lows: The late William, the Rev. Lemuel, and the late George, of Salem; Mrs. Margaret Harbert, Harrison county ; Albert Zinn. Tollgate; and Ellen and Sophia, who died in childhood.
George Griffin was the second settler on Bear run. He was born in Harrison county, on February 16, 1828; and on February 22, 1849, he was married to Miss Juan Fernandez Zinn (daughter of John and Ruth Gandy Zinn), who was born on November 30, 1828; and in 1852, they settled on what is known as the Roger's farm, on the Ritchie and Doddridge county line, and in 18:3, they removed to Holbrook to the old homestead, where their remaining years were spent. Here, in January, 1909, Death, for the first time, invaded this family circle and claimed Mrs. Griffin, who was a noble type of womanhood. Mr. Griffin then went to the home of his son, Charles G. Griffin, in Ohio, and there, near two months later, Death overtook him. His remains were brought back and laid in the South fork Baptist churchyard, by the side of the companion that had traveled with him so far down the "decliv- ity of time."
These pioneers were the parents of ten children, who are
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HISTORY OF RITCHIE COUNTY
all living and who are all the heads of respected families ; viz., A. Virginia is Mrs. James K. Wilson, of West Union; M. Caroline is Mrs. W. B. Hayden, of Centreville, Washington ; J. Franklin, is of Wood county ; Thomas J., of Holbrook ; John Woofter, of California ; Charles G., of Ohio; Mrs. Laura Crofton, of Idaho: Mrs. Lucetta J. (S. L.) McClain, of West Union ; Ella is Mrs. Gilbert Hayden, of Auburn ; and Homer Griffin is of Wirt county.
Several members of this family were at different times identified in the profession of teaching here and elsewhere.
The Griffins are of Welsh descent. John Griffin crossed from Wales some time during the latter part of the eighteenth century, and settled in Maryland. His son, Samuel, married Miss Sarah Scarf, of Hartford county (Maryland), and set- tled in Talbott county : and from there, near the year 1804, they migrated to Harrison county, (W.) Virginia, where they spent the remaining years of their lives.
They were the parents of eleven children; viz., Nancy, John, Henry S., Susana, Edward, William S .. Joshua H .. James S., Benjamin S., George G., and Martha Griffin. Several of these sons were soldiers of the war of 1812.
James S. Griffin, the progenitor of the Ritchie county family, married Miss Martha Harbert, and settled at Lumber- port, in Harrison county. He was one of the pioneer minis- ters of the Baptist church in what is now West Virginia, his field of labor being in Harrison. Ritchie and the adjoining counties, reaching as far as Kanawha county. He was the first Moderator of the Mt. Pisgah Baptist church, in Gilmer county, being elected to this office at its organization, on Octo- ber 27, 1854. He rests in Harrison county.
His children were-Joshua, John, Allison, Benjamin. Luther C., Charlotte (Mrs. Jeremiah Robey). Jane (Mrs Christian Davis), Permilla (who married Anthony Winter- mine, and went to Oregon), and George G. Griffin. All the rest of the family remained in Harrison county except the last two mentioned. Benjamin and Luther were soldiers of the Civil war.
H. B. Tharpe, shortly after his marriage to Miss Eliza- beth Wass, sister of Harrison Wass, in 1847, made the first
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settlement on the old homestead, where he and his aged com- panion are quietly spending the eventide of their lives. Per- haps, this remarkable instance can hardly be duplicated in the county. One by one they have followed their five children to the grave, and only three of their grandchildren survive ; viz., Mrs. Dora Pritchard Cox, who resides with them: Por- ter Tharpe, of Clarksburg ; and Mrs. Ora Bush, of Troy-the latter being the children of the late Harrison Tharpe.
Their only daughter, Eliza Ellen, was the late Mrs. An- drew Pritchard. John died in childhood, and Irvin and George Tharpe, in their young manhood.
The Nutters .- The year 1849 was marked by the coming of Christopher N. Nutter to the farm that is now the home of . liis son, C. W. Nutter ; and two years later, his father, Thomas Nutter, made the first improvement, on the farm that was until recently the home of his grandson, T. E. Nutter-now owned by M. B. Zinn.
The elder Nutter (Thomas), who was a native of the Clarksburg vicinity, married Miss Lois Parks, and was the father of-W. H. H. Nutter, of lowa ; G. Hamilton, of Ohio: Daniel, of Barbour county ; Mrs. Thomas Scoonover, of Ran- dolph ; Sarah, who became the wife of the Rev. Thomas Hat- field, of Ohio: Mrs. Mary (Wm.) Douglass, and Mrs. Belinda (Levi) Douglass, both of Barbour county : and Lois, who went to California, and there married.
Mrs. Nutter died and was laid to rest in Harrison county, before he came to Ritchie county. Here on the Middle fork, he passed from earth, and in the Lowther cemetery, he sleeps.
Christopher N. Nutter married Miss Sarah Swisher. daughter of Isaac Swisher-a pioneer of Lost creek, Harrison county, and from the time of their arrival until they were laid in the Lowther cemetery (in 1883 and '94, respectively ) they were among the substantial citizens of this community.
Their children were John A. Nutter, who lost his life in the Confederate cause : the late Mrs. Frances (G. W.) Brown, who sleeps at Holbrook; Mrs. Mary A. (A. S.) Lowther, of Peabody, Kansas; the late T. E., of Parkersburg : and C. W., of Holbrook, who is now a member of the honorable County court.
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HISTORY OF RITCHIE COUNTY
M. Bruce Nutter, who is a prominent attorney at Buck- hannon, belongs to this family, he being the grandson of Han- ilton, and the son of Thomas.
Andrew Nutter, an early pioneer of the Oxford vicinity, whose descendants in this county are not a few in number, also, belonged to this family, he being a first cousin of Thomas Nutter.
He was a native of Harrison county and a veteran of the war of 181? ; he having enlisted at the age of seventeen years, and was in the engagement of Ft. Defiance on the Maumee river. He married Miss Malinda Willis (sister of Robert Willis, of Oxford; of Mrs. Peter Pritchard, of White Oak; and of Mrs. William Elder), and they were the parents of Willis, John, Andrew, junior, and Mrs. Julia Warren, of Ox- ford ; Mrs. Nancy Hart, Mrs. Malinda Hart, and Mrs. Eliza- beth Hart, of Pleasants county ; and Mrs. Sallie Watson, of Roane county ; all of whom have passed on, except Mrs. War- ren, who is now a nonegenarian, and possibly another one or two.
Willis Nutter married Miss Julia Richards, of Harrison county, and his son, Thomas, married Miss Sarah A. Allender, daughter of the late Jacob Allender, of Oxford, and they were the parents of ex-Sheriff Okey E. Nutter; of Emma, the wife of Lee Prunty, of Oxford : of Mrs. Lola (Ben) Wilson, of Toll- gate; Mrs. Bessie (Fred) Ross, of Pennsboro; and of Mrs. Eva Tharpe, of Oklahoma city.
WV. M. Nutter, of Eva; M. B., of Oxford; and W. J., of Pennsboro, are the other descendants of Andrew, senior, they being the sons of Andrew (III), of Oxford.
John Nutter, brother of Andrew, senior, and his wife, Mrs. Emily Vincient Nutter, were early settlers just across the Doddridge county line; but they removed from there to Leatherbrake, in the early fifties, and there spent their last days : and on the old homestead. near Iris, they sleep. They were the parents of several children : Jacob and Andrew, Mrs. Julia (Lewis) Rogers, Mrs. Mary (Henry) Smith, and Cassie, who married and lived in Ohio, have all passed on. Nelson lives in California : Thomas, in Kansas; Mrs. Ellen (\m.)
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Connolly, in Virginia : and Dorinda, who never married, on Leatherbarke.
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