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Generation No. 1
1.
MATTHEW1
MARVIN1,2,3,4
was born 1600 in Great Bentley, Essex, England, and died Abt. January
25, 1680/81 in Norwalk, Fairfield County, Connecticut. He married
ELIZABETH GREGORY5,5,6
1623 in Great Bentley, Essex, England. She was born 1604, and died Bet.
1640 - 1646 in Hartford, Hartford Co., Connecticut.
Notes for M ATTHEW
MARVIN:
Roger and William Buck, Thomas Kilbourn and his
family, and Matthew Marvin and his family, embarked in the ship
Increase, Robert Lea, master, from England, in 1635. Matthew and his
family lived in Hartford, Connecticut until the settlement of Norwalk,
about 1651, when he and his family removed and settled there.
FROM: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~bucknum/Pa16.html
Matthew was not named as one of the "thirty
approved families" mentioned in the Agreement, 19 June, 1650, with
Roger Ludlow, then of Fairfield, CT. In the Deed made with Runckinheage
and other "Norwake" Indians, 15 Feb., 1652, his name is the
eleventh. The consideration was "thirty fathum of Wampum," and
various other articles, including kettles, coats, pipes, needles, etc.
His home-lot fronted on the road to Stamford, having the meeting-house
lot on the east, his father's lot as its rear northern boundary, and
Daniel Kellogg's lot on the west. His estate of "lands and
accommodations," in 1665, was oe339;135 .. 10. He is frequently
called "Mr." on the Town Records, and was often intrusted with
important matters of public business, in church and civil affairs. He
was town clerk in 1660, '61 and '62; townsman or selectman in 1660 and
1679, and perhaps in other years. He was "accepted to be made
free" 13 Oct., 1664; the freeman's oath was ordered to be taken in
the following May. 2 June, 1666, "Thomas Seymour, Matthew Marvin,
Jr., Daniel Kellogg and John Bouton were granted all that creek lying
between Thos. Seymour's barn and barren marsh, for which said persons
were to procure a highway to Bouton's Island." At the town meeting
22 Jan'y, 1670, "Mr. Thomas Fitch and Matthew Marvin junior, are
desired and apointed, and it is left to their discretion, to treat with
the Indians touching the lands between the West branch of Norwalk river
and Saketuk river." He was again appointed on a similar committee,
in June, 1670. At the town meeting February 21, 1671, "Matthu
Junior, was chosen to swepe the meating-house, and to have 20s. for his
pains." From duties connected with the church assigned to him at a
later period, it is thought that he was one of the deacons, but the
church records have been destroyed. On March 09, 1685, "Mathew
Marven is freed from trayning not from watching and warding," at a
Court held in Fairfield. (Fairfield rec., I: 194.) On December 04, 1688,
the town voted that "a fence shall be made and sett up for ye
taking in of a winter wheat field .... the first lott should begin att
ye gate; which first lott was drawn by Matthew Marvin Senr.(Upon his
father's death and his son Matthew's birth, he assumed the moniker Sr)
Some of the records are missing, but apparently, by his signature as
witness to a deed, on 15 April, 1694, he again was serving as Town
Clerk. There were thirty-one lots, and "Matthew, Jr.," drew
No. 23. 20 Feb., 1695, he was the chairman of a committee with full
powers to repair the old bridge across the Norwalk river, or to build a
new one as they might deem expedient. 16 Jan'y, 1695, he was on a
"Towne committee," of which his brothers-in-law, Sergt. John
Bouton and Samuel Smith, were also members, "to Exercise their best
prudence to look out for, and to endeavor what in them lyeth, in the use
of all lawful meanes, for to obtaine a faithfull Minister and Dispenser
of the word of the Gospell to us in this place." They obtained the
Rev. Stephen Buckingham, and 8 Oct., 1697, Matthew was appointed, with
James Olmstead, "for to signifie unto the Reverend Elders at ye
time of ordination, ye desire and good agreemt of ye towne with ye
Church in ye ordayning" of that clergyman. The same month he was
chairman of the committee of five "who are by ye Towne desired to
take care for ye providing of a comfortable entertaynement for ye
Reverend Elders and Messengers when heare at ye time of ordination; ye
charge of their entertaynment to be payd by ye inhabitants of ye towne."
14 Jan'y, 1703, the "towne did by vote grant and allow unto Matthew
Marvin, liberty to sitt in ye Deacon's seat before ye Pulpitt, for ye
benefitt of his hearing ye word preached." He owned large parcels
of land in various parts of the town, described in the deeds of gift,
and there are frequent references on the records to transfers. On March
28, 1707, Matthew made deeds of gift of all his estate to his sons
Samuel and John, providing for their mother Mary's support. He left no
will, and the deeds mention only his daughter Hannah and a child of
Elizabeth: they cover several pages in Norwalk Land Rec. (IV: 155 et
seq.)
FROM: "The American Genealogist," Whole
Number 69, Volume XVIII, No. 1, July 1941, "Notes on the Ancestry
of Reinold and Matthew Marvin," by John Insley Coddington, A.M., of
Olivet, MI, pg 12.
"He [Matthew Marvin] and his family sailed for
New England on the Increase from London in April 1635, and they
apparently landed early in June."
Descendants fo Reinhold and Matthew Marvin of
Hartford, CT, 1638 and 1635 Sons of Edward Marvin of Great Bentley,
England, by George Franklin Marvin and William T.R. Marvin (Boston: T.R.
Marvin & Son, 1904).
"WILL OF MATTHEW MARVIN
"To all Christian people to home these presents
shall come greeting--I, Mathew Marvin Senr., of Norwalk, in the County
of Ffairfield, in the Colleny of Connecticot being aged fourscore years
or ther aboute though weake and feeble in body, yet through the mercy of
God of perfect mind and Memory, disallowing, disowning, cancelling and
making void all former wills and wrightings of this kind hitherto made
by me, doe make ordayne and appoint this present wrighting to be my last
Will and Testament. First I doe bequeath and resigne up my soul unto God
who gave it and doe commit my body to the duste from whence it came, to
be Interred by desent and comely buriall, hoping and Trusting in the
Lord of a happy Resurrection at the Last day: and as for the Temporal
effect wherewith the Lord hath blessed me I doe will and dispose thereof
as followeth--
"IMPMS. I doe will and bequeath unto my dear
beloved wife Alice Marvin the sum of Twenty pounds as her owne true and
proper estate, for her to will order and dispose as shee pleaseth and
alsoe I doe give will and bequeath unto my sd dearly beloved wife the
use of all other my estate whatsoever during her natural Life. Item. I
doe give and bequeath unto my son Mathew Marvin of Norwock aforesaid all
my right of the Devission of Lands on the east side of Sagatuck River to
have, hold, possess and enjoy to him and his heirs to forever: Item. I
doe will and bequeath unto my grand childe Mathew Marvin, sonn to my
sonn Mathew Marvin aforesaid my now dwelling house with half my orchyard
and home Lot the same to Lye Legthwise as it now Lyeth, next to his
fathers dwelling lot partly to the Town Land to have , hold, possess and
enjoy to him and his heirs forever after my decease and the decease of
my boloved wife aforesaid provided always my will is that my said Grand
childe and his heirs Successively doe at all times allowe and aknowledg
free egress and regress unto my sonn Samuel Smith and his heirs to and
from the barn (which is in the Lot aforesaid) with Carts or any other
way without any hinderance Let or Molestation.
"But yf my said Grand child or his heirs at any
time shall refuse or deny the aforesaid liberty unto Samll Smith shall
have the whole barn yard to him and his heirs forever.
"Moreover I doe give Will and bequeath unto my
said Grand child Mathew Marvin one peece of Meadowe Lying and being
between his fathers Meadowe and the Meadowe of Samll Campfield at a
place or near a place comonly called fruitful Spring; and further I doe
give, will and bequeath unto my said Grand child Mathew Marvin my Stony
Hill Lot of upland as it now Lyeth and is bounded, all which the
premises to the said Mathew Marvin my Grand son my will is it shall be
to him and his heirs forever.
"Item. I doe give will and bequeath unto my sonn
John Bowton and to my daughter Abigail his wife one parcel of Meadowe of
mine which is adjoyning to the meadowe of the said John Bowton Lying at
Sagatuck brooke.
"Item. I doe give and bequeath unto my Grand
childe Richard Bushnell the sum of Ten pounds.
"Item. I doe give and bequeath unto Francis
Bushnell of Norwalk aforesaid four Acres of Land which is granted me for
a house Lot near Standford path together with Ten pounds Comonage to him
and his heirs forever.
"Item. I doe give and bequeath unto the Reverent
Mr. Thomas Handford Pastor of the Church of Norwock the sum of five
pounds. Moreover my will is that after my due debts and Legasies
together with funeral rights be discharged, what estate, Lands, Chattles,
goods whatsoever shall remaine after mine and my wives deceass (to whom
as aforesaid I give and bequeath the use of my whole estate during her
Natural Life) I said it is my will that all such estate (which is not
disposed off by will or deed of gift under my hand and seal:) shall be
equally devided amongst my four daughters (viz) Mary Adgate of Norwich,
Hanna Semer (abating her Twelve pound for a pair of oxen already payd)
Abigail Bowton of Norwocke and Rebecca Clarke of farmington this
destribution my will is shall be made by the discreation of my Executors
& Overseers: By whom my Will and desire is all Controversies amongst
my Children (yf any shall arise) about this my Will shall be decided.
And farther it is my Will and desire that my Children rest satisfyed in
[their] decission. Furthermore my Will and desire is and I doe hereby
make, appoint and ordayne after mine and my wives deceass my sonn John
Bowton and John Platt the executors of this my Last Will &
Testament. I also doe request and desire the Reverend Mr. Thos. Handford
and Lieut. Richard Olmsteed to be overseers of this my said Last Will
and Testament; And my will and desire is that the said executors and
overseers of this my Last Will and Testament be payd out of my estate to
each man Three pounds (that is to say) the sum of Twelve pounds in all
for their care and pains they shall be at in ye behalf of the servises.
"And that this is my true intent and meaning in
this my last Will and Testament: for the True and full Confirmation of
this my Last Will and Testament as my own Act and deed I have hereunto
set my hand & seale this six and Twentyeth day of decembr Anno
Domenij 1678.
"Signed and sealed in the presence
of us--
Thomas Handford. The Marke of
James Cornish. MATHEW (X) MARVIN Senier [SEAL]
Christo: Cumstocke
More About M ATTHEW
MARVIN:
Baptism: March 26, 1600, St. Mary's Church, Great
Bentley Parish, Essex, England
Burial: Hartford, Hartford Co., Connecticut
Fact1: Owned property Edons alias Dreybocks, Great
Bentley, County Essex, England
Immigration: April 15, 1635, London England
Religion: 1621, Sydeman of the Parish fo Great
Bentley, County Essex, England
Resided: August 1633, Great Bentley, County Essex,
England
Will Dated: December 26, 1678
Will Probated: January 25, 1680/81
Child of M ATTHEW
MARVIN and ELIZABETH GREGORY
is:
2. i. ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, b. 1636, Hartford, Hartford Co., Connecticut; d. December
1680, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
Generation No. 2
2.
ABIGAIL2
MARVIN (MATTHEW1)7,8,9,10
was born 1636 in Hartford, Hartford Co., Connecticut, and died December
1680 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut11. She married
SERGT. JOHN BOUTON11,12,13
January 01, 1655/56 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut, son of JOHN
BOUTON and ALICE KELLOGG.
He was born October 1636 in Hartford, Hartford Co., Connecticut, and
died January 1705/06 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
Notes for A BIGAIL
MARVIN:
FROM: Catalogue of the Names of the First Puritan
Settlers of Connecticut. (Continued.) [Marvin Family.]
Abigail Marvin, daughter of Matthew, sen'r., m. John
Bouton, of Norwalk, Jan. 1656, and had children, John, Matthew, Rachel,
Abigail, and Mary. John, his son, had two sons, Jakin and
Joseph--perhaps others.
FROM: John Insley Coddington, "Notes on the
Ancestry of Reinold and Matthew Marvin", in The American
Genealogist 18:1-13 (July 1941).
It contains abstracts of the wills of Thomas Merveyn
of Ramsey, co. Essex, who died in 1503, and his son John Mervyn who died
in 1533, and follows their lines to New England.
Abigail's aunt Mary , wife of Reinhold, According to
an article in TAG 13:12, Mary's death in the summer of 1661 was
attributed to witchcraft on the part of Nicholas Jennings of Saybrook
and his wife Margaret.
FROM: http://www.law.gonzaga.edu/people/dewolf/perry/chapter3.htm
Nicholas and Margaret Jennings of "Sea
Brook" are indicted "for not haveing the feare of God before
their eyes," "having entertained familiarity with Satan, the
great enemy of God and mankind, and by his help done works above the
course of nature, ye loss of ye lives of severall p'sons, in p'ticuler
ye wife of Reynolds Marvin with ye child of Baalshar de Wolf with other
soceries;" the child is spoken of as "bewitched to
death."
Notes for S ERGT.
JOHN BOUTON:
FROM: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~bucknum/Pa16.html
John was in Norwalk, 1655, and was one of the earliest
proprietors, though his name does not appear in the Ludlow agreement.
His lot of four acres was opposite Matthew Marvin, Jr.'s, a little
further west, on the corner of the Stamford road, with the minister's
and John Ruscoe's on the east. Thomas Lupton was on the south, who sold
to Platt in 1665, and in 1674 Bouton purchased of Platt. In 1675 his
estate of "commonage" was oe339;100, and in 1687, oe339;184.,
15. He was chosen "survaior" in 1670; was selectman in 1671,
'74, '79, '83, '84, '85 and '89, and represented Norwalk in the General
Court in 1671, '73, '74, '75, and again some years later, until 1685. In
1678 he was on a "comite chosen to oversee the work about the
meting-house," and one of those to entertain the gentlemen called
to settle the differences about moving that building. In 1686 he was on
the committees to seat the new meeting-house, and to "settle the
differences about the head-lynes," and 16 Jan'y, 1695, to obtain a
minister. He was "serjeant" of the Norwalk train-band. John
"of Norwalk" mentions in his will, then wife Mary; sons
Matthew, Joseph, Thomas and Richard; daughters Rachel Sension, Abigail
Smith, Hannah Betts, Elizabeth Warrin and Mary Bouton; grandchild John
Bouton, of Danbury; it was witnessed by William Haines and John Gregory.
Joseph his son, and Mary his widow, approved it when presented, but
"Matthew Sension, Edman Warrin and James Betts, sons-in-law to the
deceased John Bouton, agrieved, appealed." Joseph approved the
inventory 18 Feb., 1707. The will as allowed was recorded 7 Feb., 1709.
John Bouton was among the first settlers of Norwalk.
He was a French Protestant, and it is said there are many of the same
name still living in France and Germany, and that a great similarity
exists between the families there and here. He had five children after
his marriage as here recorded, viz. John, Matthew, Rachel, Abigail, and
Mary.
***
Somehow daughter Elizabeth Bouton b.1681 is
overlooked. Birth, death & burial data for Elizabeth Bouton from
Jacobus(1), p. 4. Birthplace from LDS 8726104/23, which says born in
1673. Marriage date could be Oct. 16, 1698.
***
Sergt. John Bouton 2d (John1) was born in 1636. He
married (1) Abigail Marvin, daughter of Matthew Marvin and Elizabeth
Gregory, on 1 January 1656/57 in Norwalk, Fairfield County, CT. He
married Mary after November 1689 (Mary was the widow of (1) Thomas Allen
and (2) Jonathan Stevenson). He died after 27 January 1706/7 and before
25 December 1709 in Norwalk, Fairfield County, CT.
The John Bouton who received a home lot in Norwalk
seems to have been the son -- widow Alice remarried by 1647 and Norwalk
was not settled until 1650. He was one of the first settlers of Norwalk.
He was Deputy to the Connecticut Legislature between 1669 and 1685 from
Norwalk, Fairfield County, CT, and Sergeant of the Norwalk Trainband.
The will of John Bouton Sr. of Norwalk is dated 25 December 1706;
probated 27 January 1706/7. He mentions wife Mary, grandchild John
Bowton of Danbury, sons Mathew and Joseph Bowton; daughter Rachel
Sension, son Thomas Bowton, daughter Elizabeth Warrin, son Richard
Bowton, daughter Mary Bowton; three sons: Joseph, Thomas and Richard;
Matthew Sension, "Edman Waren," and James Betts, sons-in-law
to the deceased. Appealed.
On 16 July 1720, Mary Bouton of Norwalk distributed
property to son Thomas Bouton, daughter Mary Morehouse, to "Thomas
and Richard," geese to Thomas Bouton, he to give one gander and two
geese to John Betts' wife; my three grandchildren Thomas Bouton, Richard
Bouton and Mary Morehouse land at "Compow in Fairfield"; my
grandchildren Mary Hayes, Ruth Bouton, and Gabriel Morehouse.
FROM: http://www.theellisons.net/ghtout/npr21.htm#rnn3524
On 13 October 1664, he was made a freeman. Once he was
enfranchised, he became active in town affairs. John served as a Deputy
to the Connecticut Legislature on many occasions. He was elected to that
position on October 1669, October 1671, October 1673, May 1674, May
1675, October 1676, May and October 1677, May 1678, October 1679, May
1680, May 1681, May and October 1682, May 1683, May and October 1685. He
was chosen Surveyor on 21 February 1670; and Selectman in 1671, 1674,
1679, 1683, 1684, and 1689.
On 2 June 1666, John and several others (including his
brother-in-law Daniel Kellogg) were granted all that creek lying between
Thomas Seymour's barn and the Barren Marsh, for which they were to
procure a highway to Bowton's Island. On 4 December 1668, he drew lot
number 26 in the division of the winter wheat field. In 1671, his land
was appraised at £100. In 1674, he purchased the lot to the immediate
south of his from a Mr. Platt, who had purchased it from Thomas Lupton
in 1665. In 1685, a "Cattelog of a division of land agreed to be
layd out at three acors to the hundred: with the severall lotts as they
were drawn by the inhabitants" listed John as John Bouton 16."
On 12 December 1687, town records show the following:
" All common land Over the River, leaving
sufficient for highways, to be laid out, to the inhabitants, according
to their estates. Three score acors of the same sequestered for the
Indians. A division granted of 20 Acres to the hundred. The number of
Lotts and the order as they were drawn, of that Division of Land over
Norwalk River below the path leading to Meadow field . . . John Bouton,
senr., 49."
By 3 January 1687, his land value had risen to
£184.15.00.
He also served on a number of committees, many of
which revolved around the town meeting house. On 31 January 1678, he was
named to a committee "chosen to oversee the work about the
meting-house," and to entertain the gentlemen called upon to settle
the differences about moving that building. In March 1678/9, it was
voted that the Committee "should goe on with the worke Comitted to
them, in refference to the meeting house, and to goe on with the worke
forthwith according to their best Discression." In 1686, he was on
a related committee formed to seat the new meeting house and to
"settle the differences about the head-lynes." Finally, on 16
Januray 1694/5, he was on a committee formed to "exercise their
best prudence for to look out for, and endeavorr what in them lyeth, in
the use of all lawfull meanes, for to obtaine a faithful Minister and
dispenser of the word of the Gospel to us in this place; and they are to
take care for his entertainment when obtained." He also served as a
sergeant in the Norwalk Train Band.
FROM: Will of John Bouton of Norwalk. (spelling as
interpreted in the original document)
In the name of God Amen, December the 25th and in the
Year of our Lord one thousand seaven hundred and six - I John Boutton
Senior of the Towne of Norwalk in the County of Faierfield Being by the
hand of God upon me weak and infirme of Body but of perfect mind and
memorye thanks be given unto God: Therefore calling unto mind the
Mortallyty of my body and Knowing that it is appoynted unto all men once
to dye Doe make and ordaine this my Last Will and Testament: Principally
and first of all: I give and Recommend my Soale into the hands of God
that gave it And my body I Recommend to the earth after Death to be
Decently and Christian Like Buried at the Discretion of my friends
nothing Doubting but at the Generall Resurrecttion I shall receive the
same againe by the mighty power of God; And as touching Such Worldly
Estate wherewith it hath pleased God to Bless me in this Life; I Give,
Demise and Dispose of the same In following maner and forme - after my
Just Debts and funerall charges payd and Leagacyes also payd and
Discharged;
Imprimis - I Doe give unto mary Boutton my Beloved
wife half my homlott and the whole house and half my Barnes that side of
the homlott next to John Benedick Senr. and the orchard on sayd Lott and
allso my Lott of Land at fruitfull spring and allso my Lott of Land at
pine hill and to Dispose of sayd parcells as she shall stand in need for
her [?] and in case she shall not stand in need for her nessesity to
sellor disspose of them; then she may Dispose of them to my chilldren by
her; as she shall see cause and allso I doe give to my sayd wife to cows
and all my moveable Estate as shall or may remaine when all Debts and
dues payd as abovesayd. Allso: my will is that what moveable Estate I
had of herrs at marriage with her shall not be Inventoried as the estate
but to remaine to her: all the above Estate I doe give unto her duering
her natireall life:
Item. I Doe give to my grandchild John Boutton, of
Danbury, the sume of five shillings,
Item. I Doe give unto my son Matthew Boutton: Besides
what I have allready given him as portion sum of five shillings.
Item. I Doe give to my son Joseph Boutton and to his
Assignes all my Right title and Intrest in Land Lying neere Ebenezar
camfields Land over the river in the bounds of norwalk: allso my part in
Barren Marsh Creek he paying to my Daughter Abigal smith; the sum of
five pounds.
Item. I doe give unto my Daughter Rachell Sension:
besides what she hath had as portion allready, the sum of five
shillings.
Item. I Doe give unto my Daughter Abigall smith the
sum of five pounds to be payd by Joseph Boutton as abovesayd.
Item. I Doe give unto my Daughter Hannah Betts the sum
of five pounds to be payd by my two sonns Thomas and Richard Boutton
equally Betwene them when they shall attaine to the age of twenty three
years.
Item. I Doe give to my sonn Thomas Boutton and his
Assignes my cow Lott, Allso half my Meadow Lying on the west of the Cove
over the river in the bounds of norwalk. Allso half my swamp in the
comon field. Allso one half of my Land Lying Betwene the parts of
Norwalk River neer the [staddles?] Being in quantity eighteene Acres and
half of Land: Allso seaven Acres of Land at crambery playne in the
Bounds of Norwalk; Allso two Acres of Land in the Indian field, Allso
half my Meadow above sillver mine so called.
Item; I Doe give unto my Daughter Elizabeth Warin to
be payd by my two sonnes Thomas and Richard Boutton equally betwene them
when she shall attaine to the age of twenty three years the sum of five
pounds:
Item; I Doe give to my sonn richard Boutton and his
Asignes that Lott Lying in the field behind noone so called neere the
swamp called Bouttons Swamp; Allso half my Meadow on the west of the
cove; Allso half my Land betwene the parts of the norwalk river; being
eighteene Acres and a half; Allso seaven Acres at Crambury playne; Allso
half My Meadow above sillver mine so called; Allso half of my swamp and
Meadow east of pine hill Lying in the comon field;
Item. I Doe give to my Daughter Mary Boutton the sum
of five pounds to be payd by my two sonns Thomas and Richard Boutton
when they shall attaine to the Age of twenty three Yeares.
Item. I Doe give to my three sonns Joseph and Thomas
and Richard Boutton; my whole Right of Bogge Lying on the Mill Brooke;
and all my comonage equally to be Divided between them.
Item. I doe give to my two sons Thomas and Richard
Boutton: twenty Acres of Land Lying on the east side of five mile river
wqually betwene them; And furthermore. I Doe make and ordaine my Beloved
wife: and my sonn Joseph Boutton: Administrator of this my will And that
this is my Last will and Testament: Revokeing and making voyd any and
all former wills and Testaments that may have beene by me made; In
testimonie wherof I: John Boutton Senior have sett to my hand and seale
the Day and Yeare Above written;
John Bouton [signature]
Signed and Sealed In presence of us wittneses:
William Hanes
the mark of ----------
Joseph [circular mark] Gregory senior
John Bouton Senior Did on the Day of the Date above;
Acknowledge the above written Instrument to be his Last will and his
free act Before James Olmsted, Justice of the Peace
A: Inventory of the Estate of Serjnt. John Boutton of
Norwalk: Late Deceased: taken this 28th of ffebruary 1706 [1706/7]
Inprimis. Waring Clothes 11 (at top of column: symbol
- lbs) - 10 ("s" - shillings) - 00 ("d" - pence)
Item: one old flock bed 00 - 02 - 00
Item: a feather Bolster 00 - 07 - 00
Item: 3 feather Pillowes 00 - 10 - 00
Item: 2 Home made Blanketts 01 - 11 - 00
Item: an old Rugg 00 - 06 - 00
Item: 2 pieces of Blankett, a peice of an old Rugg 00
- 02 - 00
Item: 2 sheetes 01 - 04 - 00
Item: an old sheett 00 - 03 - 00
Item: A pillow Beere(1) 00 - 00 - 06
Item: a table cloath 00 - 04 - 00
Item: one Homemade pillow Beere 00 - 03 - 00
Item: 2 Towells 00 - 01 - 00
Item: one Trundle Bed Stead 00 - 02 - 00
Item: one Bedstead one Cord 00 - 16 - 00
Item: half a Yard of Searge and a piece of Linin 00 -
04 - 00
Item: one white Earthen Pott 00 - 02 - 06
Item: A platter and salt seller 00 - 04 - 00
Item: 8 spoons 00 - 06 - 00
Item: in old peuter 00 - 08 - 06
Item: one old chamber pott 00 - 02 - 00
Item: one quart pott of peuter 00 - 13 - 00
Item: one Iron Pott with Leggs 00 - 18 - 00
Item: one Iron Kettle Leggs 00 - 08 - 00
Item: one old Iron Skillitt with 2 feett 00 - 01 - 06
Item: one frying pann 00 - 04 - 00
Item: one iron spitt 00 - 03 - 06
Item: a small Brass Kettle 00 - 05- 06
Item: old Irone 25 pound weight 00 - 08 - 00
Item: a tinn pan 00 - 02 - 00
Item: Tramell Iron, pot hookes 00 - 13 - 06
Item: fire [paile?] 4s [4 shillings], tongs 4s 00 - 08
- 00
Item: an Iron Hook 1s, sheeps sheares 2s 00 - 03 - 00
Item: 2 Iron Drawing Knives 00 - 03 - 00
Item: 3 Boxes for Cart wheeles 00 - 12 - 00
Item: one share iron(2) 00- 01 - 06
Item: 2 old narrow Axes 00 - 06 - 00
Item: plow Coulter(3) 00 - 05 - 00
Item: one Belle, ring 1s, a Round Share 1s 00 - 02 -
00
Item: one howell(4) 00 - 02 - 00
Item: a piece of horse fetters 00 -03 -00
Item: one old Chayne(5) 00 - 10 - 00
Item: an old share, collar and Bolt 00 - 05 - 00
Item: Cart and wheeles, Iron hoops, Boxes, 8 Extry
pinns, one [Linee?] pin, [Clang?], all 01 - 15 - 00
Item: horse geere[s?], and whiple tree chayne(6) 00 -
07 - 00
Item: yoake ring and staple 00 - 03 - 00
Item: one Chest 00 - [12?] - 00
Item: Long wheele, Iron spindle 00 - 07 - 00 Item: one
old Hetchell(7) 00 - 15 - 00
Item: a salt box and salt 00 - 01 - 00
Item: one old Chayer 00 - 01 - 06
Item: Leather, tand 00 - 05 - 00
Item: one old gun and sword and Lead 00 - 12 - 00
Item: 2 old sythes 00 - 02 - 00
Item: old wooden Lumber and old cask 00 - 05 - 00
Item: Indian corne ten bushells 01 - 05 - 00
Item: oates 8 bushells 01 - 05 - 00
Item: Tray and dishes 00 - 01 - 06
Item: woolen yarnes 00 - 12 - 00
Item: one water payle and Bayle 00 - 03 - 00
Item: one Tunnell [perhaps Funnell](8) 00 - 01 - 06
Item: [in?] feathers 00 - 04 - 00
Catell: one Browne ox 05 - 05 - 00
Item: one Black ox 04 - 15 - 00
Item: one Red pyed steere 03 - 15 - 00
Item: one Browne steere with a star on her forehead 03
- 05 - 00
Item: one White Cow 03 - 10 - 00
Item: a Red Cow 03 - 07 - 00
Item: a white heifer 03 - 05 - 00
Item: a Brown Cow 03 - 00 - 00
Item: one yerling Red with a star in the face 01 - 00
- 00
Item: one Red yerling 00 - 17 - 00
Item: one swine 05 - 00 - 00
Item: 2 more swine at 15 a piece 01 - 10 - 00
Item: eight sheep 04 - 00 - 00
Land: Item: Cove Lott 3 acres 13 - 10 - 00
Item: Homlott 6 Acres House Barn fences orchard all 75
- 00 - 00
Item: 2 Acres at fruitfull spring 12 - 00 - 00
Item: at pine hill 2 Acres one half 10 - 00 - 00
Item: 2 Acres one half behind noone 10 - 00 - 00
Item: 2 Acres in the Indian field 02 - 00 - 00
Item: fresh meadow east of pine hill 15 - 00 - 00
Item: Salt Marsh Meadow over the river nere the Cove
45 - 00 - 00
Item: Land on flax hill over the river 25 - 00 - 00
Item: Land Betwene the parts of the river 50 - 00 - 00
Item: Land above Cannoe hill 05 - 00 - 00
Item: Land at Crambury Playne 07 - 00 - 00
It: his creek at Barren Marsh 00 - 05 - 00
Item: Bogge up the Mill Brook on the west side 01 - 10
- 00
Land on [Mamachimars?] Island 03 - 00 - 00
Itm: Land neere sillver mine(9) 04 - 00 - 00
Item: Comonage 01 - 10 - 00
Wheat in the House 01 - 10 - 00
Item: Graynes wheat on the Land growing 06 - 00 - 00
Item: Rye on the Land growing 01 - 00 - 00
Itm: one feather Bed and flock
[values hereafter not included in my photocopy of the
inventory but will be added] Land over Sacotuck river(10)
Item: flax
(1) pillow case
(2) "share" as in plow share. This word is
used elsewhere, but it is not ever written clearly enough to be
absolutely certain of the spelling.
(3) a cutting attachment on the beam of a plow
separate from the share.
(4) a cooper’s plane.
(5) there is a small possibility that the
"n" is an "r," but given its occurrence among other
hardware, it was more likely a chain.
(6) the whipple or whiffletree is part of the
connection mechanism between cart and harness.
(7) a kind of hook.
(8) whether "T" or "F," either of
these words have been used to refer to a funnel-like item.
(9) north of Norwalk village, between that and/or in
what is now New Canaan.
(10) Saugatuck River.
Children of A BIGAIL
MARVIN and SERGT. BOUTON
are:
3. i. ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, b. 1673, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d. November
07, 1760, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
ii. THOMAS BOUTON14,15,
b. 1676, Norwalk, Fairfield County, Connecticut.
iii. JOHN BOUTON16,17,
b. September 30, 1659, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d.
January 03, 1704/05, Danbury, Connecticut; m. MARY HAYES, Abt. 1684;
b. Abt. 1667.
iv. MATTHEW BOUTON, b.
December 24, 1661, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d. Danbury,
Connecticut; m. ANNA WHITNEY ST. JOHN; b. Abt. 1660.
v. HANNAH BOUTON, b. 1675,
Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d. August 23, 1748, Wilton,
Connecticut; m. JAMES BETTS, Abt. 1705; b. 1663, Norwalk, Fairfield
Co., Connecticut; d. July 06, 1753, Wilton, Connecticut.
vi. RACHEL BOUTON, b.
December 15, 1667, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d. Wilton,
Connecticut; m. MATTHIAS ST. JOHN, Abt. 1680; b. Abt. 1660, Norwalk,
Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d. August 17, 1748, Wilton, Connecticut.
Notes for RACHEL BOUTON:
Article concerning Rachel
Bouton and her husband Matthias St. John
FROM: Those Four Early
Children of Matthias3 St. John: A Solution and a Challenge
Introduction
Matthias3 St. John was the
first person bearing that name to have been born in Norwalk,
Fairfield County, Connecticut, say about 1667.[1] His grandfather,
Matthias1, had been born in England, and lived at Dorchester,
Massachusetts and Windsor, Connecticut before moving to Norwalk
about 1654, where he died early in 1670. His father, Matthias2 St.
John, who was baptized New Windsor, Berkshire, England, on 30
November 1628,[2] died at Norwalk in December 1728. Matthias3 St.
John died at Wilton, Connecticut (still the Wilton parish of Norwalk
until 1802) on 17 August 1748.[3]
The standard 1907 genealogy
of the St. John family lists ten children for the marriage of
Matthias3 St. John and his wife Rachel Bouton, namely: Ebenezer,
John, Matthew, Samuel, Nathan, Matthias, Benjamin, Rachel, Hannah,
and Elizabeth, and gives estimated birth dates and spouses names for
each.[4] However, four these children are stated to have been born
before Matthias3 married Rachel. Earlier, the Rev. Charles M.
Selleck had given his own list of only five children for this
marriage, namely: Matthew, John, Benjamin, Rachel and Matthias.[5]
Still earlier, the Rev. Edwin Hall had published a list of four sons
of Matthias3 St. John as being John, Benjamin, Matthias and Samuel.
He cited as his source an aged descendant living in Wilton in 1847,
and did not mention any daughters at all.[6] All authors were
handicapped by the complete absence of any birth records for these
St. John families in the surviving Norwalk vital or church records.
This article re-examines
the available evidence and presents the solution to the riddle of
the four early children. It then challenges you to verify the
proposed listing of the children of Matthias3 and Rachel (Bouton)
St. John of Norwalk.[top]
vii. ABIGAIL BOUTON, b.
April 01, 1670, Norwalk, Fairfield County, Connecticut; m. EBENEZER
SMITH, October 1691; b. July 11, 1668, Hadley, Massachusetts.
viii. MARY BOUTON, b. May
26, 1671, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d. May 1694, Norwalk,
Fairfield Co., Connecticut; m. JOHN ANDREWS.
ix. JOSEPH BOUTON, b. Abt.
1674, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d. December 20, 1746,
Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; m. MARY GREGORY; b. December
05, 1669, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d. 1774, Norwalk,
Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
x. THOMAS BOUTON17,
b. Abt. 1676, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
xi. JACHIN BOUTON17.
xii. RICHARD BOUTON17,
b. Abt. 1680, Norwalk, Fairfield County, Connecticut; m. MERCY
PLATT.
Generation No. 3
3.
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON (ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)18,19,20,21
was born 1673 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut22,23,
and died November 07, 1760 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut24,25,26.
She married SR. EDMUND WARING27,28,29
October 06, 1698 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut30,31,
son of RICHARD WARING and LYDIA ACKLEY.
He was born Abt. 1673 in Brookhaven, Suffolk Co., New York32,33,34,
and died August 05, 1749 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut35,36.
Notes for E LIZABETH
BOUTON:
Was name Bouton, Bounton or Boughton? Birth, death
& burial data from Jacobus(1), p. 4. Birthplace from LDS 8726104/23,
which says born in 1673. Marriage date could be Oct. 16, 1698.
Ancestral File has birth 1673, Norwalk; death 5 Aug
1749, Fairfield Co., CT. Christopher Waring GED has birth 1681, Oyster
Bay; death 7 Nov 1760, Norwalk.
Alt Birth: 1674
[horrocks.ged]
Was name Bouton, Bounton or Boughton? Birth, death
& buria l data from Jacobus(1), p. 4. Birthplace from LDS 8726104/2
3, which says born in 1673. Marriage date could be Oct. 16 , 1698.
Ancestral File has birth 1673, Norwalk; death 5 Aug
1749, F airfield Co., CT. Christopher Waring GED has birth 1681, O yster
Bay; death 7 Nov 1760, Norwalk.
Alt Birth: 1674[horrocks.ged]
Was name Bouton, Bounton or Boughton? Birth, death
& buria l data from Jacobus(1), p. 4. Birthplace from LDS 8726104/2
3, which says born in 1673. Marriage date could be Oct. 16 , 1698.
Ancestral File has birth 1673, Norwalk; death 5 Aug
1749, F airfield Co., CT. Christopher Waring GED has birth 1681, O yster
Bay; death 7 Nov 1760, Norwalk.
Alt Birth: 1674
More About E LIZABETH
BOUTON:
Burial: Rowayton, Fairfield Co., Connecticut, Rowayton
Ave.36
Record Change: September 05, 200236
Notes for S R.
EDMUND WARING:
FROM: SOUTHERN NEW YORK- Volume 1
Edmund Waring, youngest son of Richard Waring, or
Warren, was born at Brookhaven, Or Oyster Bay, Long Island, in 1673,
died August 5, 1749. He removed from Huntington, Long Island, to
Norwalk, Connecticut, in 1703, and owned a large tract of land on Roton
Hill and Five Mile River. He built a pier in the harbor of Norwalk,
which leads to the interference that he was engaged in mercantile
pursuits, probably a lumber merchant, as he made large purchases of
timber land. At his death at the age of seventy-six he was survived by
his entire family, wife, eight sons, and "four loving
daughters", to whom he beqiested a considerable landed estate. He
married, October 6, 1698, Elizabeth Bouton, born in 1670, daughter of
Jean or John Bouton, a Huguenot, born in France, 1615, came to America,
1635, died at Norwalk, Connecticut, in 1704. John Bouton married
(third), January 1, 1673, Mary Stevenson, who bore his four children,
Elizabeth being the third, and the tenth child of her father. The name
Bouton has had various spellings, namely: Boughton, Bowten, Bowtin,
Boutin. Edmund and Elizabeth (Bouton) Waring had twelve children, all
but the youngest born in Ouster Bay, Long Island: 1. Edmund, born
September 16, 1700, 2. Isaac, June 13, 1702, 3. John, December 21, 1704,
4. Solomon, April 24, 1707, 5. Mary, December 22, 1708, 6. Nathan,
February 6, 1711. 7. Jacob, January 15, 1713, 8. Michael, July 10, 1718;
married Elizabeth Scofield, 9. Eliakim, mentioned below, 10. Elizabeth,
March 8, 1720, 11. Abigail, April 19, 1723, 12. Hannah, born in Norwalk,
Connecticut, September 7, 1725.
FROM:
Birth, marriage, death & burial data from
Jacobus(1), p. 4 . Rowayton between Norwalk and Darien. Marriage data
also f rom Torrey, p. 780, Edmund from Norwalk, CT, & Elizabeth fr
om Oyster Bay, NY. Also recorded in Torrey as Edmund Warren . Place of
marriage from LDS 7222323/69, name Edmund Warein g. Waring, p. __ , says
Edmund Waring & family moved from O yster Bay to Norwalk in 1703.
MacKenzie, Vol. 1, p. 558, sa ys moved to Norwalk for permanent
residence 28 Feb 1707.
Ancestral File has death in Oyster Bay.
***
Norwalk," by Rev. Charles M. Selleck, A.M.,
Norwalk CT 1896 . (Norwalk Public Lib. R974.6/SEL. Pg 268. (Code
hereafter : Norwalk)
"God's Country" by Jay Harris, Pg 470:
"(Michael's) brother Edmond moved from Oyster Bay to Norwalk in
1704 and married Elizabeth Bouton...of Norwalk." (Code hereafter:
Harr is)
(We have a conflict here between Selleck's and Harris
' marriage date for Edmond and Elizabeth Bouton. Since Sel leck says
first child was born in 1700 we will accept his 1 698 wedding date;
Harris is a little oblique here anyway.)
Jacobus NYBGR: Pg 5: Marriage took place 1698. Will
dated 28 Jan 1748/9, proved 21 Aug 1749, lists son Edmond JR ( and Jr's
sons Joseph, Edmond and Enoch) and other eleven
children. F irst 2 children born at Oyster Bay, last 10 born at Norwalk.
Abstract of Darien Church Records, Index, by Mead (FH
L #4041): "Darien was formerly part of the town of Stamford and was
at first called Middlesex. Created a Parish by th e General Assembly in
1737. Formally organized 5 June 1744 . As early as 1734 petitions were
presented to the Genera l Assembly for the creation of the above Parish
which wer e signed by the following inhabitants of town of Norwalk .
List includes Edmond, Edmond Jr., Jacob, John and Nathan Waring...i.e.,
Edmond and his sons.
***
1673 Edmund Waring (1673 - 5AUG1749) is born at
Brookhaven or Oyster Bay to Richard Waring. He married 6OCT1698 Eliz
abeth Bouton (1681 - 1760), born in Oyster Bay, daughter o f John (Jean)
Bouton of Norwalk, CT, he came to Boston in 1 635 embarking from
Gravesend, England on the ship Assurance , died at Norwalk 1704 and
(1)Abigail Marvin (dau. of Matth ew Marvin). John Bouton married third
1JAN1673 Mary Stevens on. Edmund Waring removed from Huntington, L.I. to
Norwal k in 1703 and on the last day of winter 1706-7 bargained wi th
the
father of Gov. Thomas Finch for a large tract of land
as center-remote perhaps as Saugatuck, but which formed a portio n of
the eligible height once ruled by the Sachem Runckingh eage, and since
known by the name of "Roton (Rhoten) Hill " on Five Mile
River. He resided in that part of the town n ow called Rowayton. His
home was on top of Roton Hill. He also owned extensive tracts of land in
Berkshire County, MA . Both he and his son, Edmund, Jr. were large
subscribers t o St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Norwalk, founded in 1737; o
f which church he was among the first vestrymen. He buil t a stone pier
still in existence in the harbor of Norwalk , which leads to the
inference that he was engaged in merca ntile pursuits, probably a lumber
merchant, as he made large purchases of timber land. At his death at the
age of 76 , he was survived by his entire family, wife, eight sons, a nd
"four loving daughters", to whom he bequeathed a conside rable
landed estate. The ancient tombstones of Edmund and his wife were found
at Norwalk, CT, in 1862. Edmund Waring h ad children, mostly born on
Long Island: 1) Edmund, Junior (16SEP1700), 2) Isaac (13JUN1702), 3)John
(21DEC1704-176? ) (Katherine Tuttle), 4) Solomon (24APR1707), 5) Mary
(22DE C1708) (Henry Henman), 6) Nathan (6FEB1710-11), 7) Jacob (1
5JAN1712-13-176?) (Mary Selleck (1717-1802), 8) Michael (16 JUL1715-)
(1.Elizabeth Scofield, 2.Sarah Holly), 9) Eliaki m (8JUL1717-5AUG1779)
(Anne Reed), 10) Elizabeth (8MAR1719- 20) (Edward Nash), 11) Abigail
(19APR1723) (Samuel Richards , Jr.), 12) Hannah born in Norwalk,CT
(7SEP1725) (James Richards).[horrocks.ged]
Birth, marriage, death & burial data from
Jacobus(1), p. 4 . Rowayton between Norwalk and Darien. Marriage data
also f rom Torrey, p. 780, Edmund from Norwalk, CT, & Elizabeth fr
om Oyster Bay, NY. Also recorded in Torrey as Edmund Warren . Place of
marriage from LDS 7222323/69, name Edmund Warein g. Waring, p. __ , says
Edmund Waring & family moved from O yster Bay to Norwalk in 1703.
MacKenzie, Vol. 1, p. 558, sa ys moved to Norwalk for permanent
residence 28 Feb 1707.
Ancestral File has death in Oyster Bay.
***
Norwalk," by Rev. Charles M. Selleck, A.M.,
Norwalk CT 1896 . (Norwalk Public Lib. R974.6/SEL. Pg 268. (Code
hereafter : Norwalk)
"God's Country" by Jay Harris, Pg 470:
"(Michael's) bro ther Edmond moved from Oyster Bay to Norwalk in
1704 and married Elizabeth Bouton...of Norwalk." (Code hereafter:
Harr is)
(We have a conflict here between Selleck's and Harris
' marriage date for Edmond and Elizabeth Bouton. Since Sel leck says
first child was born in 1700 we will accept his 1 698 wedding date;
Harris is a little oblique here anyway.)
Jacobus NYBGR: Pg 5: Marriage took place 1698. Will
dat ed 28 Jan 1748/9, proved 21 Aug 1749, lists son Edmond JR ( and Jr's
sons Joseph, Edmond and Enoch) and other eleven
children. F irst 2 children born at Oyster Bay, last 10 born at Norwalk.
Abstract of Darien Church Records, Index, by Mead (FH
L #4041): "Darien was formerly part of the town of Stamfor d and
was at first called Middlesex. Created a Parish by th e General Assembly
in 1737. Formally organized 5 June 1744 . As early as 1734 petitions
were presented to the Genera l Assembly for the creation of the above
Parish which wer e signed by the following inhabitants of town of
Norwalk . List includes Edmond, Edmond Jr., Jacob, John and Natha n
Waring...i.e., Edmond and his sons.
***
1673 Edmund Waring (1673 - 5AUG1749) is born at
Brookhave n or Oyster Bay to Richard Waring. He married 6OCT1698 Eliz
abeth Bouton (1681 - 1760), born in Oyster Bay, daughter o f John (Jean)
Bouton of Norwalk, CT, he came to Boston in 1635 embarking from
Gravesend, England on the ship Assurance , died at Norwalk 1704 and
(1)Abigail Marvin (dau. of Matth ew Marvin). John Bouton married third
1JAN1673 Mary Stevens on. Edmund Waring removed from Huntington, L.I. to
Norwal k in 1703 and on the last day of winter 1706-7 bargained wi th
the
father of Gov. Thomas Finch for a large tract of land
as ce nter-remote perhaps as Saugatuck, but which formed a portio n of
the eligible height once ruled by the Sachem Runckingh eage, and since
known by the name of "Roton (Rhoten) Hill " on Five Mile
River. He resided in that part of the town n ow called Rowayton. His
home was on top of Roton Hill. He also owned extensive tracts of land in
Berkshire County, MA . Both he and his son, Edmund, Jr. were large
subscribers t o St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Norwalk, founded in 1737;
of which church he was among the first vestrymen. He buil t a stone pier
still in existence in the harbor of Norwalk , which leads to the
inference that he was engaged in merca ntile pursuits, probably a lumber
merchant, as he made larg e purchases of timber land. At his death at
the age of 76 , he was survived by his entire family, wife, eight sons,
a nd "four loving daughters", to whom he bequeathed a conside
rable landed estate. The ancient tombstones of Edmund and h is wife were
found at Norwalk, CT, in 1862. Edmund Waring had children, mostly born
on Long Island: 1) Edmund, Junio r (16SEP1700), 2) Isaac (13JUN1702),
3)John (21DEC1704-176? ) (Katherine Tuttle), 4) Solomon (24APR1707), 5)
Mary (22DE C1708) (Henry Henman), 6) Nathan (6FEB1710-11), 7) Jacob (1
5JAN1712-13-176?) (Mary Selleck (1717-1802), 8) Michael (16 JUL1715-)
(1.Elizabeth Scofield, 2.Sarah Holly), 9) Eliaki m (8JUL1717-5AUG1779)
(Anne Reed), 10) Elizabeth (8MAR1719- 20) (Edward Nash), 11) Abigail
(19APR1723) (Samuel Richards , Jr.), 12) Hannah born in Norwalk,CT
(7SEP1725) (James Ric hards).FROM:
1673 Edmund Waring (1673 - 5AUG1749) is born at
Brookhaven or Oyster Bay to Richard Waring. He married 6OCT1698
Elizabeth Bouton (1681 - 1760), born in Oyster Bay, daughter of John
(Jean) Bouton of Norwalk, CT, he came to Boston in 1635 embarking from
Gravesend, England on the ship Assurance, died at Norwalk 1704 and
(1)Abigail Marvin (dau. of Matthew Marvin). John Bouton married third
1JAN1673 Mary Stevenson. Edmund Waring removed from Huntington, L.I. to
Norwalk in 1703 and on the last day of winter 1706-7 bargained with the
father of Gov. Thomas Finch for a large tract of land as center-remote
perhaps as Saugatuck, but which formed a portion of the eligible height
once ruled by the Sachem Runckingheage, and since known by the name of
"Roton (Rhoten) Hill" on Five Mile River. He resided in that
part of the town now called Rowayton. His home was on top of Roton Hill.
He also owned extensive tracts of land in Berkshire County, MA. Both he
and his son, Edmund, Jr. were large subscribers to St. Paul's Episcopal
Church, Norwalk, founded in 1737; of which church he was among the first
vestrymen. He built a stone pier still in existence in the harbor of
Norwalk, which leads to the inference that he was engaged in mercantile
pursuits, probably a lumber merchant, as he made large purchases of
timber land. At his death at the age of 76, he was survived by his
entire family, wife, eight sons, and "four loving daughters",
to whom he bequeathed a considerable landed estate. The ancient
tombstones of Edmund and his wife were found at Norwalk, CT, in 1862.
Edmund Waring had children, mostly born on Long Island:
Norwalk," by Rev. Charles M. Selleck, A.M.,
Norwalk CT 1896. (Norwalk Public Lib. R974.6/SEL. Pg 268. (Code
hereafter: Norwalk)
"God's Country" by Jay Harris, Pg 470:
"(Michael's) brother Edmond moved from Oyster Bay to Norwalk in
1704 and married Elizabeth Bouton...of Norwalk." (Code hereafter:
Harris)
(We have a conflict here between Selleck's and Harris'
marriage date for Edmond and Elizabeth Bouton. Since Selleck says first
child was born in 1700 we will accept his 1698 wedding date; Harris is a
little oblique here anyway.)
Jacobus NYBGR: Pg 5: Marriage took place 1698. Will
dated 28 Jan 1748/9, proved 21 Aug 1749, lists son Edmond JR (and Jr's
sons Joseph, Edmond and Enoch) and other eleven
children. First 2 children born at Oyster Bay, last 10 born at Norwalk.
Abstract of Darien Church Records, Index, by Mead (FHL
#4041): "Darien was formerly part of the town of Stamford and was
at first called Middlesex. Created a Parish by the General Assembly in
1737. Formally organized 5 June 1744. As early as 1734 petitions were
presented to the General Assembly for the creation of the above Parish
which were signed by the following inhabitants of town of Norwalk. List
includes Edmond, Edmond Jr., Jacob, John and Nathan Waring...i.e.,
Edmond and his sons.
FROM: MacCALLUM SMITH BENNETT POST Database
Edmund sailed frequently to Norwalk Ct and settled
there Feb 28, 1707. He purchased land and accumulated real estate,
including extensive lands in Bershire Co Maine. He was a large
subscriber to St Paul's Episcopal Church in Norwalk, founded in 1737. He
also engaged in mercantile pursuits and made large purchases of timber
land. His will, dated Jan 28, 1748, was inventoried Sep 18, 1749.
FROM: Hudson-Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs,
Warren
Edmund, youngest son of Richard Waring (Warren) was
born at Brookhaven, or Oyster Bay, Long Island, in 1673, died August 5,
1749. He removed from Huntington, Long Island, to Norwalk, Connecticut,
in 1703, and owned a large tract of land on Roton Hill and Five Mile
River. He built a pier in the harbor of Norwalk, which leads to the
inference that he was engaged in mercantile pursuits, probably a lumber
merchant, as he made large purchases of timber land. At his death at the
age of seventy-six, he was survived by his entire family, wife, eight
sons and "four loving daughters," to whom he bequeathed a
considerable landed estate. He married, October 6, 1698, Elizabeth
Bouton, born 1679, daughter of Jean (John) Bouton, a Huguenot, born in
France, 1615, came to America 1635, died at Norwalk, Connecticut, 1704.
John Bouton married, January 1, 1673 (third wife), Mary Stevenson, who
bore him four children, Elizabeth being the third, and tenth child of
her father. The name Bouton has had various spellings, namely: Boughton,
Bowten, Bowtin, Boutin. Edmund and Elizabeth (Bouton) Warren had twelve
children, all but the youngest born in Oyster Bay, Long Island;
Edmund, born September 16, 1700;
Isaac, June 13, 1702;
John, December 21, 1704;
Solomon, April 24, 1707;
Mary, December 22, 1708;
Nathan, February 6, 1711;
Jacob, January 15, 1713;
Michael, July 16, 1715, married Elizabeth Scofield;
Eliakim, of further mention;
Elizabeth, March 8, 1720;
Abigail, April 19, 1723;
Hannah, born in Norwalk, Connecticut, September 7,
1725.
The ancient tombstones of Edmund and his wife were
found at Norwalk, Connecticut, in 1862.
More About S R.
EDMUND WARING:
Burial: Rowayton, Fairfield Co., Connecticut, Rowayton
Ave.37,38
Fact1: also known as Edmond WAREING
Fact2: Lived on Roton Hill and five mile river
Inventory: September 18, 1749, Norwalk Township,
Fairfield Co., Connecticut39,40
Will: January 28, 1747/48, Norwalk Township, Fairfield
Co., Connecticut41,42
Children of E LIZABETH
BOUTON and EDMUND WARING
are:
4. i. JOHN4
WARING, b. December 21, 1704, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut;
d. 1766, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
ii. JR. EDMUND WARING43,44,
b. September 16, 1700, Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., New York44;
d. 1784, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut44.
Notes for JR. EDMUND
WARING:
[horrocks.ged]
Data from Jacobus(1), pp.
5-6. Huntington p. 310, says Edmu nd & Elizabeth charter members
Congregational Church, Darie n, 5 Jun 1744. Will dated 30 Oct 1765,
probated 15 Nov 178 4 (Fairfield Probate, 21:53). LDS 7933003/63
says name War ren.
More About JR. EDMUND
WARING:
Record Change: September
05, 200244
iii. ISAAC WARING45,46,
b. January 13, 1702/03, Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., New York46;
d. 1766, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut46.
Notes for ISAAC WARING:
[horrocks.ged]
Data from Jacobus(1) , p.
6. Inventory of estate 7 July 176 6, Stephen Warren, administrator;
distribution 14 May 1767 . (Fairfield Probate, 15:327-330; 16:3,
36-37, 165-171), LD S 7450374/0 says birth 13 Jan 1702 in Norwalk,
name Wareing ; LDS 7933003/62 says Warren.
***
An Isaac Waring appears in
Hale Collection, died 1766 at 6 2 yrs, New Canaan 411, Cem 5, Pg 14.
Same man?? New Canaa n sounds wrong.
More About ISAAC WARING:
Record Change: September
05, 200246
iv. MARY WARING47,48,
b. December 22, 1708, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut48;
d. Unknown48; m. HENRY INMAN.
Notes for MARY WARING:
[horrocks.ged]
LDS 7450374/0 says birth
Norwalk Township., CT, name Warein g; LDS 7933003/62 says birth
Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., NY. na me Warren. Jacobus(1), p. 5, say
husband's name INMAN; Wari ng, p. __ , says husband's name Henman.
More About MARY WARING:
Record Change: September
05, 200248
v. NATHAN WARING49,50,51,52,53,
b. February 06, 1710/11, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut54,55,56,57;
d. 1782, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut58,59,60,61.
Notes for NATHAN WARING:
[horrocks.ged]
See p. 10 of D. L. Jacobus,
"Notes on Richard Waring Family ", THE NEW YORK
GENEALOGICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD, Vol . 102, pp. 1-15 (1971).
Inventory of estate 23 May 1782, ad ministrator Nathan Waring [son?]
(Fairfield Probate, 22:95- 99). LDS 7450374/0 shows birth 6 Feb
1710, in Norwalk Towns hip., CT, name Wareing; LDS 7933003/62 shows
birth 6 Feb 17 11, in Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., NY. name Warren.
McKenzie, V ol. __ , p. __ , says birth 1711, name Warren.
More About NATHAN WARING:
Record Change: September
05, 200261
vi. MICHAEL WARING62,63,
b. July 16, 1715, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut63;
d. 1754, Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut63.
Notes for MICHAEL WARING:
[horrocks.ged]
See Jacobus article, p. 12.
LDS 7450374/0 shows birth in No rwalk Township., CT, name Wareing;
LDS 7933003/61 shows bir th at Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., NY, name
Warren.
More About MICHAEL WARING:
Record Change: September
05, 200263
vii. SR. ELIAKIM
WARING64,65,
b. April 08, 1717, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut65;
d. 1797, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut65; m. ANN
READ, December 07, 1738, Norwalk, Fairfield County, Connecticut; b.
1716, Norwalk, Fairfield County, Connecticut; d. 1764, Norwalk,
Fairfield County, Connecticut.
Notes for SR. ELIAKIM
WARING:
FROM: SOUTHERN NEW YORK-
Volume 1
Eliakim, son of Edmund and
Elizabeth (Bouton) Waring, was born at Oyster Bay, Long Island, July
8, 1717, died at Norwalk, Connecticut, August 5, 1779. He was
probably associated with his father and brother in business, but the
records do not give any information as to his occupation or
business. He married, December 7, 1738, Ann, daughter of John (2)
Reed, an officer in the army of Cromwell. John (1) Reed died in New
England at the advanced age of ninety-eight. Children, born in
Norwalk, Connecticut: 1. Zaccheus, October 19, 1741, 2. Jesse. June
14, 1744, 3. Eliakim, mentioned below. At a meeting Of the
Association of Western Churches (Congregational) at Fairfield
County, convened at Middlesex, June 6, 1744, Edmund and Eliakim
Warren were chosen Middlesex delegates, and their wives were at that
time added to the church by letter of recommendation. A Norwalk
cousin, Joseph (2), son of Joseph (1), and great-grandson of Edmund
(1), was a personal friend of Major-General Joseph Warren, and
showed with pride the general's sword, left in his keeping, calling
the Revolutionary hero his cousin. This Joseph (2) Warren was in
1798 the owner of the Norwalk and New York packet line, which
comprised two sloops, "Griffin" and
"Republican."
FROM: [horrocks.ged]
See p. 10 of D. L. Jacobus,
"Notes on Richard Waring Family ", THE NEW YORK
GENEALOGICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD, Vol . 102, pp. 1-15 (1971).
LDS 7450374/0 shows birth in Norwalk Township., CT, name Wareing;
LDS 7933003/61 shows birth a t Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., NY, name
Warren. Estate not distr ibuted until 19 Apr 1768 (Fairfield
Probate, 13:369; 17:77- 80). Death date from Jacobus(1), p. 12.
Waring chart 25 & 2 7 says death 1779; MacKenzie, Vol. 1, pp.
558-560, says dea th 1797. Huntington, p. 310, says Eliakim &
Anne Waring (not Warren) charter members Congregational Church,
Darien, CT , 5 June 1744.
Eliakim Waring / Warren had
several very prominent derscendants living close to Wilson and
Marcus Shaw in Albany and Rensselaer, NY. They would all be cousins
of his wife Emily, Marcus' wife. Several are listed below
FROM:
http://www.usgennet.org/usa/topic/historical/southernnewyork
/s_ny_55.htm
1. Eliakim (2) Warren, son
of Eliakim (1) and Ann (Reed) Waring, was born February 9, 1747,
died September 4, 1824. Eliakim married his neighbor, Phebe Bouton,
daughter of Esaias Bouton, January 17, 1771. Before his marriage he
had belonged to the Congregational Church, but his wife, Phebe
Bouton, was an ardent Episcopalian, and persuaded him to join that
church. In 1787 he was elected vestryman of St. Paul's Church of
Norwalk, and there is extant record of an auction of pews where he
and others tossed pennies for seats. Elia-
Page 356
Eliakim II had three sons:
1. Esaias, 2. Nathan, and 3. Stephen. On the advice of Esaias they
decided to remove to Troy, a thriving village at the head of
navigation on the Hudson River. the Warren family sailed out of
Norwalk harbor in May, 1798, and made the entire trip to Troy by
water. They had just had a sailing vessel built for them at Rowayton,
a sloop named, "The three Brothers". It was fifty feet
keel, twenty feet beam, and sixteen feet hold, and rated at
sixty-four tons. In 1796 Esaias, the eldest son, has purchased a lot
on East River Street, between First and Albany Streets, Troy, and
there erected a two-story wooden building for a dwelling and a
store. Eliakim and Esaias, with the second son, Nathan, engaged in
merchandising under the firm name of Esaias Warren & Company. In
1799 the firm removed their business to the west side of River
Street (now No. 217), and began a retail and wholesale business in
dry goods, groceries and hardware. A feature of their business was
the purchase and shipping of wheat and country produce. They safely
invested their profits in real estate. After three years residence
in Troy, April 6, 1801, Eliakim sold out the old Norwalk property
and employed the proceeds in his sons' interests. Esaias being the
eldest and then Twenty-seven years of age took the lead in all
matters, and their early prosperity was largely due to his
enterprise and sagacity. Troy at this period contained eight hundred
houses, and one thousand eight hundred and two inhabitants. In due
time Eliakim Warren retired from the firm and his place was taken by
his third son, Stephen. Eliakim Warren was a devout Christian, and
believed that a share of his fortune should be devoted to the
service of God. This was one of his articles of faith and he so told
his sons. In Troy he found no Episcopal Church. For two years,
however, Sunday services had been held according to the Book of
Common Prayer. Philander Chase, a young graduate of Dartmouth
College, (later Bishop of Ohio) had been sent up regularly from
Albany by Dr. Ellison, the rector of St. Peter's parish and an
Englishman, to minister to the little band of Episcopalians. But
Phebe Warren was a noble woman, and owing to her initiative and
persevering effort, ST. Paul's Church was built in 1804 on the
northwest corner of Third and Congress Streets, and according to her
wish was modeled exactly after St. Paul's Church at Norwalk. Trinity
Church, New York City, contributed two thousand dollars to its
erection. The Rev. David Butler, of Reading, Connecticut, was chosen
by the vestry, and in his letter of acceptance, he said: "I
shall endeavor to make myself ready to remove with my family
whenever it may be convenient for Mr. Warren to come down with his
vessel." Dr. Butler in his youth had served as a soldier in the
Revolutionary War. He was a man of learning and ability, and sat as
deputy from the diocese of New York State in the general convention
of 1820, and in several succeeding conventions. He was a man of
commanding presence and aristocratic manner, and wore until the
close of his life the small clothes, buckles, shoes and long skirted
coat of the earlier period. He served his people faithfully for
thirty years. One part of St. Paul's Church was quaintly denominated
"Norwalk", as there sat the Warrens, Boutons, Kelloggs,
Crafts, and Cannons. The warren family payer book was on the altar.
At the first recorded administration of the Holy Communion, three
lay members partook thereof, Eliakim and Phebe Warren, and Lemuel
Hawley. In 1813 the number of regular communicants had increased to
eighty-four, and in 1824 a new and larger church, (the present St.
Paul's) was erected on the northeast corner of Third and State
Streets. Mr. Warren was one of the first two elected wardens
(senior), Jeremiah Pierce being the junior warden, and he continued
to hold this office until his death. In 1815 his wife, Phebe
(Bouton) Warren, formed in the parish a Saturday sewing class for
poor girls, which she conducted until her death in 1835. It was then
carried on b y her daughter-in-law, Mary, wife of Nathan Warren.
From this sewing class grew the "Church of the Holy
Cross."
Mr. Warren lived a life of
great usefulness, and was universally loved and respected. He never
had a lawsuit and avoided religious controversy. When the British
attack was made on Norwalk during the Revolution, he joined with his
townsmen in the defense of their homes and beat the British off,
not, however, until nearly all the dwellings were burnt. A tablet,
erected by the vestry, in St. Paul's Church, is inscribed: "In
memory of Eliakim Warren, senior warden of this church from
2. Nathan, second son of
Eliakim II and Phebe (Bouton) Warren, was born in Norwalk,
Connecticut, May 11, 1777, died at Troy, New York, August 13, 1834.
He was of the firm of Esaias Warren & Company, Troy, 1798,
continuing until March 1, 1827. He was one of the proprietors of the
"Earthern Conduit Company", formed to "supply the
inhabitants with water". E was one of the first board of
mangers of the Troy Savings Bank in 1823. He was an original
incorporator of the Troy Steamboat Company in 1825, vestryman of St.
Paul's Church, 1827, and in the same year erected the "Mansion
House", at the corner of Second and Albany Streets, Troy. He
was an incorporator of the Troy & Bennington Turnpike Company,
in 1827, and an incorporator and one of the first directors of the
Rensselaer & Saratoga Railroad Company in 1832. He married,
April 24, 1808, mary, daughter of Nathan and Abigail (Burlock)
Bouton, born April 21, 1789, died February 8, 1859, a descendant of
John Bouton, the Huguenot. She continued the Saturday Sewing class
founded by Mrs. Phebe (Bouton) Warren, her mother-in-law, and after
the death of the latter, continued it into a day school. After she
had been left a widow Mrs. Warren gave her time almost entirely to
church and philosophic work. She was the founder and donor of the
"Church of the Holy Cross", Troy, in 1844, "A house
of prayer for all people, without money and without price". The
girls' day school was incorporated by act of Legislature, March 19,
1846. By it Mary Warren, the founder, the Rev. John Ireland Ticker,
and Amos S. Perry, became a corporate body, by name "The Warren
Free Institute", for "the purpose of maintaining and
conducting a free school", December 7, 1849, the Rev. John
Ireland Tucker was ordained to the priesthood and became the first
rector of the Church of the Holy Cross, April 5, 1849. The name of
the Warren Free Institute was changed by act of legislature to
"The Mary Warren Free Institute of the City of Troy". In
1889 the church was handsomely improved, Dr. Nathan B., Stephen E.,
and George henry Warren contributing the necessary funds. The
enlarged chancel was dedicated December 24, 1889, on which occasion
the choirmen of the church wore for the first time an ecclesiastical
habit. This church was one of the earliest of the free churches of
the Episcopal communion built in the United States. In it was first
introduced the choral service, and mainly through the liberality of
Dr. Nathan B. Warren. The girls who composed the choir were dressed
in a uniform of long scarlet cloaks and black hats. The children of
Mary (Bouton) Warren were the donors of the organ; the chime of
bells, and the richly colored windows. Others of the family
contributed the beautiful brass lectern, a fac-simile of the one in
Exeter Cathedral, England, and the brass corona. A stone tablet set
in the west wall of the ante-chapel reads: "This church, free
to all people, was founded by Mary, widow of Nathan Warren, S. D.,
MDCCCVLIV. The ante-chapel contributed by the founder was built by
her children as a memorial to their venerable mother, who on the
XIII day of February, A. d. MDCCCLIX in the LXX year of her age
entered into that rest which remains for the people of God".
3. George Henry, son of
Nathan and Mary (Bouton) Warren, was born in Troy, New York,
November 18, 1823. He was a graduate of Union College, and a member
of the New York State Bar, becoming in course of time a noted
lawyer. He was engaged in financial operations as well as in the
practice of the law in New York throughout his life. He was the
originator of the Metropolitan Opera House. He married, in New York
City, April 29, 1851, Mary Carolina, daughter of Jonas Phillip and
Mary (Whitney) Phoenix. She was a sister of Lloyd Phoenix, Phillips
Phoenix, and also of Stephen Whitney Phoenix, the antiquarian and
genealogist, who died in 1881. Children: 1. Mary ida, married Robert
Percy Alden, of New York City. 2. Harriet Louise, married Robert
Goelet, of New York City. 3. George Henry Jr., mentioned below. 4.
Emmeline Whitney Dore. 5. Whitney Phoenix, died March 22, 1863. 6.
Edmund Warren, deceased. 7. Whitney W., married Charlotte A. Tooker,
and resides at New York and Newport, Rhode Island. 8. Anna Phoenix,
twin of Whitney W., died August 9, 1865. 9. Edith Caroline, married
William Starr Miller, of New York City. 10. Lloyd Elliot, graduate
of Columbia College, 1888.
Troy Financial Corporation
(NASDAQ:TRYF), headquartered in Troy, New York, is the holding
company for The Troy Savings Bank and The Troy Commercial Bank.
Founded in 1823, Troy Savings is the oldest state chartered savings
bank in New York. The Bank observed its 175th Anniversary in 1998
and has been at its Main Office in Downtown Troy for over 125 years.
The Main Office also is home to The Troy Savings Bank Music Hall,
one of the most celebrated musical auditoriums in the world. Its
tradition of musical excellence is known worldwide. The Bank has 21
offices serving eight New York counties - Albany, Greene,
Rensselaer, Saratoga, Schenectady, Schoharie, Warren, and
Washington. The Troy Savings Bank has been and continues to be a
community-based, full-service financial services organization
offering a wide variety of business and consumer banking products
and services. The Bank and its subsidiaries also offer a full range
of trust, insurance and investment services.
4. George Henry (2), son of
George Henry (10 and Mary (Phoenix) Warren, was born in Troy, New
York, October 17, 1855. He is a stock broker, having also been
educated as a lawyer, and is a graduate from Columbia College Law
School. He is one of the directors of the Metropolitan Opera House
in New York and director of various railroads. He is a member of the
Bar Association, the Metropolitan and Union clubs, and was a member
of the New York Stock Exchange. He married, May 14, 1885, George
Williams, of Stonington, Connecticut. Children: 1. Constance
Whitney, born in New York City, January 17, 1888; married, December
19, 1912, at 924 Fifth Avenue, New York City, Conte Guy de Lasteyrie,
eldest son of the Marquis de Lasteyrie, a descendant of Several La
Fayette of Revolutionary fame. 1. George Henry, born at Newport,
Rhode Island, July 29, 1889. Mr. George henry Warren lived at 924
Fifth Avenue, New York City, and has a country place at Newport,
Rhode Island.
4. Esaias Warren, Justice
of the Village of Troy 1814-1816, and Mayor of the City of Troy,
1816-24, in which capacity he received Lafayette on his visit to
Troy. Sept. 18, 1824. He was first President of the Bank of Troy.
More About SR. ELIAKIM
WARING:
Record Change: September
05, 200265
viii. ABIGAIL WARING66,67,
b. April 19, 1723, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut68,69;
d. July 23, 178469.
Notes for ABIGAIL WARING:
[horrocks.ged]
LDS 7450374/0 shows birth
19 Apr 1722 in Norwalk Township. , CT, name Wareing; LDS 7933003/60
shows birth 19 Apr 172 3 at Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., NY, name Warren.
***
Daniel Roach, Tampa, Fl.
NOTES: Seems to be confusion betwe en Samuel Richards or Daniel
Richards being the spouse of A bigail, I feel it's Samuel Richards.
(Jacobus NYGBR: Pg 5)
More About ABIGAIL WARING:
Record Change: September
05, 200269
ix. SOLOMON WARING70,71,
b. April 24, 1707, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut71;
d. Abt. 1760, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut71.
Notes for SOLOMON WARING:
[horrocks.ged]
Will dated 1 July 1760,
admitted to probate 2 Sept 1760, li sts brother, Isaac, of Norwalk,
executor; heirs: wife, Temp erance; daughters, Temperance &
Lydia; grandson, Sealy Bett s, orphan child of daughter, Anna; &
sons, Thomas, Dan, Sol omon & Shubael (Fairfield Probate,
12:475-477). See Jacobus (1), pp. 8-9. LDS 7450374/0 says birth
Norwalk Township, CT , name Wareing; LDS 7933003/62 says birth
Oyster Bay, Nassa u Co., NY. name Warren.
x. JACOB WARING72,73,
b. January 15, 1712/13, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut73;
d. 1762, Stamford, Fairfield Co., Connecticut73.
Notes for JACOB WARING:
[horrocks.ged]
See Jacobus article, p. 10.
LDS 7450374/0 shows birth 15 Ja n 1712 in Norwalk Township., CT,
name Wareing; LDS 7933003/ 62 shows birth 15 Jan 1713 at Oyster Bay,
Nassau Co., NY, name Warren. Administrator of estate to Mary
Wareing 7 Sep t 1762, with distribution 28 Apr 1763 (Stamford
Probate, 3: 6, 76). MacKenzie, Vol. __ , p. __ , says birth 15 Jan
1713 , name Warren.
xi. ELIZABETH WARING74,75,
b. March 08, 1719/20, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut75;
d. Unknown75.
Notes for ELIZABETH WARING:
[horrocks.ged]
LDS 7450374/0 shows birth
in Norwalk Township., CT, name Wa reing; LDS 7933003/61 shows birth
at Oyster Bay, Nassau Co. , NY, name Warren.
xii. HANNAH WARING76,77,78,79,80,
b. September 07, 1725, Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut81,82,83,84;
d. March 25, 1787, New Canaan, Fairfield Co., Connecticut85,86,87,88.
Generation No. 4
4.
JOHN4
WARING (ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)89,90
was born December 21, 1704 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut90,
and died 1766 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut90. He
married KATHARINE TUTTLE, daughter of DAVID TUTTLE and MARY REED.
She was born January 02, 1709/10 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
Notes for J OHN
WARING:
1704 John Waring (21DEC1704-176?) is born to Edmund
Waring and Elizabeth Bouton. Lived on the estate of his father .
Several of his sons were among the pioneers of that par t of Duchess
County now called Putnam County, New York. H e was one of the founders
of the Congregational Church at Darien, CT, 1744. John Waring married
Catherine Tuttle dau . of David Tuttle and Mary Reed (dau. of John Reed
and An n Derby)) and had children: John, Thaddeus, Abraham, James ,
Hannah, Stephen, Samuel, Catherine, Martha, Esther, Mary , Rebecca.FROM:
Data from Jacobus(1), p. 7. Huntington, p. 310 says
John & Katherine charter member Congregational Church [Middlesex
Church], Darien, 5 June 1744. Inventory of estate 4 Dec 1766,
administrator, John Warren [son?] (Fairfield Probate, 15:339-342);
distribution 14 Dec 1767 (Fairfield Probate, 16:126-128). LDS 7450374/0
says birth Norwalk Township., CT, name Wareing; LDS 7933003/62 says
birth Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., NY, name Warren.
More About J OHN
WARING:
Burial: 1766, Probably Norwalk, Fairfield Co.,
Connecticut
Children of J OHN
WARING and KATHARINE TUTTLE
are:
5. i. THADDEUS5
WARING, b. July 28, 1744, Darien, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d. May
02, 1822, Berne, Albany Co., New York, (formerly Ft. Orange and
Beverwijck of the Colony of New Amsterdam).
ii. JOHN WARING, b. Abt.
1735, Probably Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d. February 17,
1809, Southeast Twn., Dutchess Co., New York; m. (1) MARY ELWELL; m.
(2) JOANNA TUTHILL.
Notes for JOHN WARING:
FROM:
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op
=GET&db=:246890&id=I12708713
He removed to southeast
Dutchess County (now Putnam Co.) with his brothers Thadeus and
Samuel about 1750. His children may have used the Warren suranme.
Refer to # 6987 who might be one & the same.
FROM:
Jacobus(1), p. 7, says
Lieut. Wicks(1), p. 285, says Pvt. May 1777 to 1 Jan 1778 in Capt.
Samuel Hait's Company, Col. Philip Bradley's Regiment; re-enlisted
for 3 yrs. on 3 Jan 1778; transferred June 1778 to Light Infantry,
under Capt. John St. John, 5th CT Battalion, under Col. Bradley;
transferred 1 July 1780 to 2nd. Company under Lt. Col. Jonathan
Johnson. John & Thaddeus Waring conveyed 26 Mar 1788 to William
St. John father's homestead at Rowayton (sp. Rhoton). Possibly is
the John Waring who is Hdhs in Frederick town, Dutchess Co, 1790
census, 4-4-5-0-0. Frederick town. now in Putnam Co. Patindex, p.
717 says Pvt. NY. Lineage, Vol. 101, pp. 49-136, say Pvt, Dutchess
Co. militia under Col. John Field, as does Roberts(2), p. 140, where
name Waring & in 3rd Reg. Burial data from Buys, p. 322.
More About JOHN WARING:
Burial: Sears Burying
Ground, Southeast Township, Putnam Co., New York
iii. HANNAH WARING, d. Abt.
1781; m. DR. DAVID CHICHESTER, Bef. March 15, 1770; b. Abt. 1759.
Notes for HANNAH WARING:
Hannah probably died soon
after the Baptism of her second daughter, Hannah, (between September
2, 1781 and August 27, 1782), for all land transactions from then on
concerning the property that had been held jointly by the couple,
Hannah and David, was sold by David without mention of his wife
Hannah.
Notes for DR. DAVID
CHICHESTER:
FROM:
http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/v/o/l/
Paul-E-Volpp/GENE3-0002.html?
Welcome=1036985796
DAVID was of Danbury,
Fairfield Co, CT during and before the Revolutionary War. Records of
that time and place were casualties of the war. During the Battle of
Ridgefield in 1777, in which so many of the CHICHESTERS of CT were
involved, the residents of Danbury were forced to flee their homes.
The entire area was pillaged and burned by the British. Town, Church
and Family records perished. The only documents concerning the town
and its inhabitants to survive were land records that were filed,
fortunately, in other places. New Fairfield and Danbury are
alternately shown as places of residence.
Certainly DAVID lived and
married in Danbury.
Family tradition says that
he was a Doctor and served in the Revolution. No official record
proves it, but, just after the War, two of his children, listed as
the children of "Dr. CHIDESTER", were baptized in Weston,
Fairfield Co, CT.
"It can be ASSUMED
that David moved his family to Weston to the care of relatives
during the destruction and rebuilding of the town of Danbury".
(CHB p52).
NOTE #1: It is also
probable that he moved to Huntington, Suffolk Co, L.I., NY. during
this same period and stayed with relatives there as the following
will show. (PEV). See NOTE #2 following.
1770; On March 15, 1770,
DAVID CHICHESTER and his wife HANNAH, of Danbury, Fairfield Co, CT,
sold to THADDEUS WARING a parcel of land in Norwalk, CT., that
Hannah had inherited from her father, JOHN WARING. THADDEUS was her
brother. (Grantor Deeds, Fairfield Co, CT. - B 1 14 pg 376).
HANNAH must have died soon
after the baptism of her last daughter, for all land transactions
from then on cocerning the property that had been held jointly by
the couple was sold by DAVID with no mention of his wife.
1782; On August 27, 1782,
Rev. JOSEPH PECK released and quit claimed property to "DAVID
CHIDESTER and MARY his wife", of Norfield. (Deeds - Danbury,
CT, V2 pg 86). This particular bit of property had been willed to
MARY PECK, now the second wife of DAVID CHIDESTER, by her maternal
grandmother, ELIZABETH STARR CHURCH, 17 April 1778. At that time
MARY was a minor and the property was given to her father to care
for. By 1782 she had either reached her majority or marriage had
given her adult status. MARY was probably about 18 years of age at
this time, (1782), which would give her a birthdate of about 1764.
According to these
documents we know that DAVID was an adult by the year 1770; That
sometime before 15 March 1770 he married HANNAH WARING, the daughter
of JOHN WARING and KATHERINE TUTTLE, natives of Norwalk, Faifield
Co, CT.
iv. STEPHEN WARING.
v. KATHERINE WARING, m.
CHICKCHESTER, Bef. August 23, 1769.
vi. MARTHA WARING, m. HOYT.
vii. ESTHER WARING, b.
Darien, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
viii. ABRAHAM WARING, m.
MARY PATCH.
ix. JAMES WARING.
x. MARY WARING, b. July 26,
1752, Darien, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; d. December 28, 1769,
Darien, Fairfield Co., Connecticut.
xi. REBECCA WARING, b.
January 16, 1757, Darien, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; m. FREDERICK
VAN WICKLE.
Generation No. 5
5.
THADDEUS5
WARING (JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)91
was born July 28, 1744 in Darien, Fairfield Co., Connecticut, and died
May 02, 1822 in Berne, Albany Co., New York, (formerly Ft. Orange and
Beverwijck of the Colony of New Amsterdam). He married (1) RUTH W.. She
was born Abt. 174992, and died April 27, 1837 in Probably
Berne, Albany Co., New York92. He married (2) TRYPHENA93
1765. She was born Abt. 1745, and died August 22, 1801 in Probably
Berne, Albany Co., New York, (formerly Ft. Orange and Beverwijck of the
Colony of New Amsterdam).
Notes for T HADDEUS
WARING:
Thaddeus Waring appears on tax rolls of Dutchess Co.
1764-1770. He apparently removed with brothers, John and Samuel, to
Dutchess Co. in 1750. He was listed in the 1790 Frederickstown, Dutchess
County, New York Federal census. Frederickstown became known as Carmel,
Putnam County, New York.
FROM:
Birth & death data from Patindex, p. 717, which
says Pvt. NY, & Lineage, Vol. 76, p. 242, which says in Capt. Joel
Mead's Company, Col. Henry Luddington's Regiment., Dutchess Co. Militia.
Baptismal data from Jacobus(1), p. 8, & Wicks(1), p. 289. Called
himself of Dutchess Co. in 1788 deed. Roberts(2), p. 152 says in 7th
regiment, Dutchess Co. Militia. Hdhs in Frederick town, Dutchess Co, NY
[now Patterson Town, Putnam Co.] 1790 census, 2-1-8-0-0. Waring, p. 16,
says went to Dutchess Co. with brother John & later moved to Albany.
Marriage data from Lineage, Vol. ___ , p. __ .
Source: DAR lineage book 145, p. 314. Served as
private in Captain Joel Mead's company, Col. Henry Ludington's regiment,
Dutchess County New York militia.
FROM: Grantor Deeds, Fairfield Co, CT. - B 1 14 pg 376
1770; On March 15, 1770, David Chichester and his wife
Hannah, of Danbury, Fairfield Co, CT, sold to THADDEUS WARING a parcel
of land in Norwalk, CT., that Hannah had inherited from her father, JOHN
WARING. THADDEUS was her brother.
FROM: Genealogical Records: New York, 1675-1920 , J.
B. Lyon Co.
Thaddeus Waring found in:
Genealogical Records: New York, 1675-1920
Event: Lived in: 1776
County: Dutchess
Comments: Seventh Regiment
Source: New York in the Revolution as Colony and
State, Vol. I - Extracts
Publisher: J. B. Lyon Co.
Publication Information: Albany, NY, 1904
Page: 152 Province: New York
FROM: Lineages of Hereditary Society Members,
1600s-1900s
Thaddeus Waring found in:
Family History: Lineages of Hereditary Society
Members, 1600s-1900s
Listed in: Lineage Books of the N.S.D.A.R. Vol IV
Page number: 398
Thaddeus Waring found in:
Family History: Lineages of Hereditary Society
Members, 1600s-1900s
Listed in: Lineage Books of the N.S.D.A.R. Vol II
Page number: 417
More About T HADDEUS
WARING:
Burial: Probably Turner Burying Ground, Berne, Albany
Co., New York
Census1: 1790, US Federal census Frederickstown,
Dutchess County, New York (which became Carmel, Putnam Co., New York)
Christening: August 12, 1744, Darien, Fairfield Co.,
Connecticut
Fact1: Probably buried at Turner Burying Ground,
Berne, Albany Co., New York, next to his second wife Ruth W.
Served: American Revolution in Capt. Joel Mead's
Company, Col. Henry Luddington's Regiment., Dutchess Co. Militia
Notes for R UTH
W.:
Headstone Inscription taken at Turner Burying Ground
Ruth W., wife of Thaddeus Waring, died April 27 1837,
aged 88 years.
More About R UTH
W.:
Burial: Turner Burying Ground, Berne, Albany Co., New
York94
More About T RYPHENA:
Burial: Baptist Church Burying Ground, Berne, Albany
Co., New York
Children of T HADDEUS
WARING and TRYPHENA
are:
6. i. CLARK6
WARING, b. September 12, 1788, Southeast Putnam Co., New York; d.
December 26, 1857, Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
ii. ESTHER WARING, b. 1775;
d. 1864; m. JOHN PHILLIPS, 1793; b. 1765.
iii. ABIGAIL WARING95,
b. April 05, 1766, New York; d. May 04, 1854, Wilmington, Clinton
Co., Ohio; m. JOSHUA NICKERSON, February 19, 1786, Dutchess Co., New
York; b. November 22, 1755, Dutchess Co., New York; d. October 12,
1834, Wilmington, Clinton Co., Ohio.
Notes for ABIGAIL WARING:
The Nickerson Family Part
I-III by The Nickerson Family Association in Chatham, Massachusetts.
She was the daughter of
Thadeus and Tryphena Warring.
More About ABIGAIL WARING:
Burial: Springfield
Cemetery, Ogden Co., Ohio
Fact: Named her first born
son Clark in honor of her brother.
Resided: Clinton County,
Ohio
Notes for JOSHUA NICKERSON:
FROM: The Nickerson Family
Part I-III by The Nickerson Family Association in Chatham,
Massachusetts.
He was a Quaker but not a
good one and moved to Ohio in 1804.
More About JOSHUA
NICKERSON:
Burial: Springfield
Cemetery, Ogden Co., Ohio
Generation No. 6
6.
CLARK6
WARING (THADDEUS5,
JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)96,97,98,99,100,101,102
was born September 12, 1788 in Southeast Putnam Co., New York103,
and died December 26, 1857 in Kendall, Orleans County, New York103.
He married (1) PHILENA BALCOM ST. JOHN104,105,106,107,
daughter of MATTHEW ST. JOHN and JEMIMA PELLHAM. She was born May 13,
1803 in Jefferson, Schoharie, New York, and died March 07, 1886 in
Carlton, Orleans County, New York108. He married (2) SIBYL
CROCKER109,110,111
September 26, 1809, daughter of DAVID CROCKER.
She was born 1794, and died May 13, 1834.
Notes for C LARK
WARING:
FROM:
New York Military Equipment Claims, War of 1812
Index of Awards on Claims of the Soldiers of the War
of 1812
page 518
No.: 967
NAME OF APPLICANT.: Waring, Clark,
RESIDENCE OF APPLICANT.: Kendall, New York,
AMOUNT ALLOWED.: 11 50
More About C LARK
WARING:
Burial: Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of Kent, Town of
Carlton, Orleans County, New York112
Census1: 1820, United States Federal Census for Berne,
Albany Co., New York
Census2: 1830, United States Federal Census for Berne,
Albany Co., New York
Census3: 1840, United States Federal Census for
Arcadia, Wayne Co., New York
Census4: 1850, United States Federal Census for
Arcadia, Wayne Co., New York
Occupation: Farmer
Religion: Methodist Episcopal (?)
Served: August 24, 1812, Served in the War of 1812,
enlisted 24 Aug 1812 in Capt Jesse Woods 12th Regiment (Van Dalfsen's)
More About P HILENA
BALCOM ST. JOHN:
Burial: Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of Kent, Town of
Carlton, Orleans County, New York
More About S IBYL
CROCKER:
Fact: Had 11 other children
Children of C LARK
WARING and PHILENA ST. JOHN
are:
i. WILBER F.7
WARING113,114,
b. March 1842, Arcadia, Wayne Cty, New York115,116,117;
d. December 17, 1865, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York118.
More About WILBER F.
WARING:
Burial: Kent Cemetery,
Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New York
Census1: 1865, Carlton New
York
ii. LIEUT. ALBERT
AUGUSTUS WARING119,120,
b. June 23, 1836, Renselaerville, New York121,122; d.
October 26, 1865, Elsie, Michigan; m. TAYLOR.
More About LIEUT. ALBERT
AUGUSTUS WARING:
Burial: Kent Cemetery,
Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New York
Census1: United States
Federal Census for Kendall Orleans Co., New York
Census2: 1865, Carlton New
York
Fact: Survived 52 battles
and skirmishes, discharged 26 Jun 1865
Served: Civil War Lieut.
151 New York Regt S.S. Vols, GAR
Children of C LARK
WARING and SIBYL CROCKER
are:
7. iii. EMILY7
WARING, b. Probably Berne, Albany Co., New York; d. February 16,
1849, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
8. iv. CLARK WARING, b. May
03, 1827; d. October 25, 1913, Winnesboro, South Carolina.
9. v. TERESSA WARING, b.
May 1813, Berne, Albany Co., New York; d. March 27, 1888, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York.
vi. LORAIN WARING123,124,
b. October 06, 1823, New York125; d. May 05, 1888125.
Generation No. 7
7.
EMILY7
WARING (CLARK6,
THADDEUS5,
JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)126
was born in Probably Berne, Albany Co., New York, and died February 16,
1849 in Carlton, Orleans Co., New York. She married WILSON SHAW126,127,128,129,130
January 01, 1827131, son of ELIJAH SHAW and BETHIAH STOREY.
He was born September 15, 1806 in Berne, Albany Co., New York132,133,134,135,
and died June 20, 1869 in Carlton, Orleans Co., New York136.
More About E MILY
WARING:
Burial: Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of Kent, Town of
Carlton, Orleans County, New York137
Notes for W ILSON
SHAW:
FROM: A history of the Hinmans and Kindred Families,
1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin of Nina Shaw Dunfee
"WILSON SHAW, son of Elijah Shaw and wife Bethiah
Storer, was born at Berne, Albany County, N.Y. Sept 15th, 1805. He
married Emily, oldest daughter of Clark Waring and wife, Sybil Crocker,
on Jan 1, 1827, and had the following children: Rufus, Henrietta, b. Jan
2, l831, d. Jan 9, 1850. EMMA. Marcus, Clark, b. June 4, 1838, d. Dec.
1, 1860. Chester C. Wilson and Emily Shaw lived in Albany County till
1837,
when they removed to Carlton, Orleans County, N.Y.
Emily Waring Shaw died...." (Unfortuntely I am missing second page)
More About W ILSON
SHAW:
Burial: Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of Kent, Town of
Carlton, Orleans County, New York137
Census1: 1830, United States Federal Census for
Rensselaerville, Albany Co., New York
Census2: 1850, United States Federal Census, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York (listed as a mason)
Census3: 1855, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York (listed
as a mechanic)
Fact1: Wilson Shaw was a stone mason by trade.138
Fact2: 1837, Wilson and Emily moved from Albany Co.,
to Carlton, Orleans Co., New York139
Children of E MILY
WARING and WILSON SHAW
are:
10. i. MARCUS8
SHAW, b. August 09, 1835, Albany Co., New York; d. September 18,
1921, Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri.
ii. RUFUS SHAW140,141,
b. Abt. 1829, New York142; d. May 13, 1855.
More About RUFUS SHAW:
Burial: Kent Cemetery,
Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New York
iii. HENRIETTA SHAW143,144,
b. January 02, 1831144; d. June 09, 1850, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York144.
More About HENRIETTA SHAW:
Burial: Kent Cemetery,
Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New York144
11. iv. EMMA J SHAW, b. Abt.
1832, Albany Co., New York; d. 1911.
v. CLARK SHAW145,146,147,148,
b. Abt. 1837, Orleans Co., New York149,150; d. December
01, 1860, Carlton, Orleans County, New York.
More About CLARK SHAW:
Burial: Kent Cemetery,
Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New York
12. vi. CHESTER C. SHAW, b.
Abt. 1842, Orleans Co., New York.
13. vii. WILLIAM D. SHAW,
b. December 28, 1845, Orleans Co., New York; d. November 29, 1919,
Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
viii. EMILY P. SHAW150,151,
b. October 26, 1848, New York151,152,153; d. April 09,
1851, Orleans County, New York153.
More About EMILY P. SHAW:
Burial: Kent Cemetery,
Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New York153
8.
CLARK7
WARING (CLARK6,
THADDEUS5,
JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)154,155
was born May 03, 1827155, and died October 25, 1913 in
Winnesboro, South Carolina156. He married (1) MALVINA SARAH
BLACK156156,
daughter of JOHN BLACK and ELIZABETH SHEPPARD. She was born November 12,
1842 in Newberry, South Carolina, and died December 06, 1930 in
Columbia, South Carolina. He married (2) UNKNOWN.
Notes for C LARK
WARING:
Resided at 1428 Laurel Street, Columbia, South
Carolina
More About C LARK
WARING:
Burial: Probably Elmwood Cemetery, Columbia Co., South
Carolina
Notes for M ALVINA
SARAH BLACK:
FROM:
* From Mrs. Clark Waring, A Confederate Girl's Diary,
quoted in Smythe, Poppenheim and Taylor, South Carolina Women in the
Confederacy, State Committee Daughters of the Confederacy, Columbia, SC,
1903, p. 279.
Malvina Black Gist married Clark Waring in 1867 and
lived for the remainder of her life in Columbia, South Carolina. She
produced numerous short stories and volumes of poetry, and three novels.
At her death in 1930 at the age of 88, she was survived by three
children. (This biographical information was obtained from Katharine M.
Jones, Editor, Heroines of Dixie: The Winter of Desperation, Ballantine
Books, New York, 1955, p. 194.)
Malvina Black Gist Waring was a central figure in the
organization of the Daughters of the American Revolution in the state of
South Carolina. She served as the Organizing Regent for the Columbia
Chapter, which is the first chapter in the state. She later served as
the second State Regent for South Carolina and then Vice President
General from South Carolina. The portrait of Mrs. Waring at left is
provided by the Columbia Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution,
from a 1994 edition of the National D. A. R. magazine commemorating the
centennial of the Columbia Chapter's organization under Mrs. Waring's
leadership.
Malvina's first husband, William M. Gist, was Major
and later Lieutenant Colonel, commanding, of the 15th South Carolina
Volunteer Infantry. Son of Gov. William H. Gist (see the Gist home, Rose
Hill Plantation State Historic Site, Union, SC), he died in action near
Knoxville in November 1863, about 11 months after he and Malvina Black
were wed. (This biographical note was provided by Kirk Johnston, Andrew
Jackson State Park, Lancaster, SC.)
TITLE: Malvina Black Gist: Civil Worker in Civil War
By Patricia B. Mitchell
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In early 1865, Malvina Black Gist, a young war widow,
employed by the Confederate Note Department in Columbia, South Carolina,
left that state capital to move with her government department to the
"safety" of Richmond, Virginia.
As Malvina and other war refugees crowded into
Richmond, food shortages became more severe. On March 8, 1865, Malvina
wrote in her journal:
March 8. — Wish I had been taught to cook instead of
how to play on the piano. A practical knowledge of the preparation of
food products would stand me in better stead at this juncture than any
amount of information regarding the scientific principles of music. I
adore music, but I can't live without eating — and I'm hungry! I want
some chicken salad, and some charlotte russe, and some oxpalate, and
corn muffins! These are the things I want; but I'll eat anything I can
get. Honestly, our cuisine has become a burning question. *
Nowadays we are not in the difficult straits Malvina
found, but it is helpful to know how (and why) to cook.
FROM: Favorite DIshes, A Columbian Autograph Cookery
Book, Compiled by Carrie V. Shuman, 1893
Two recipes submitted by Malvina ("Mrs. Clark
Waring")
GEORGIE'S CAKE.
From MRS. CLARK WARING, of South Carolina, Alternate
Lady Manager.Three teaspoonfuls of soda; one cup butter; one cup
molasses; two cups brown sugar; two cups sour milk; four eggs; four and
one-half cups flour; one tablespoonful mixed spices; two pounds dates,
weeded and chopped fine; rub the butter and sugar to a cream, add the
molasses, then the sour milk, break one egg in at a time and beat well;
sift the soda in the flour and add, saving a little to dust the dates;
add the spices and last of all add the dates; bake slowly like a fruit
cake.
PRUNE ROLL
From MRS. CLARK WARING, of South Carolina, Alternate
Lady Manager. Soak two pounds of prunes in cold water over night; drain
through a colander and seed them. Make your puff paste; roll it out;
place your prunes on the paste, sprinkling with a little sugar on top;
then roll
smoothly. Bake in a steady heat and serve hot with
hard butter sauce, or very rich wine sauce.
More About M ALVINA
SARAH BLACK:
Burial: Elmwood Cemetery, Columbia Co., South Carolina
Fact1: Bet. 1901 - 1904, Founder and Vice President
General of the Daughters of the American Revolution South Carolina
Chapter.
Occupation: Treasurer, Confederate States Of America
Children of C LARK
WARING and MALVINA BLACK
are:
i. CLARK8
WARING157,
b. January 07, 1887; d. August 02, 1909; m. ELIZABETH FRANCES.
Notes for CLARK WARING:
Clark III and Elizabeth had
no children.
14. ii. GEORGE WALKER
WARING, b. May 04, 1864; d. April 06, 1943.
15. iii. ROBERT STEWART
WARING, b. November 19, 1867; d. October 20, 1952, Columbia, South
Carolina.
iv. WILBUR AUGUSTUS WARING,
b. Columbia, South Carolina; d. February 06, 1868.
Notes for WILBUR AUGUSTUS
WARING:
FROM: Columbia, South
Carolina Obituaries, 1859-77, Record of Deaths in Columbia South
Carolina, page 101
Wilbur Augustus, eldest son
of Mr. Clark Waring, died in Col'a So. Ca., Feby 6, 1868
v. ELIZABETH SHEPHERD
WARING, b. June 22, 1869; d. March 27, 1971; m. FITZ HUGH MCMASTER;
b. July 22, 1867.
Notes for ELIZABETH
SHEPHERD WARING:
Had no children.
16. vi. AMY MALVINA WARING,
b. January 31, 1872, Columbia, South Carolina; d. April 02, 1971.
vii. FRANCES MATHER WARING,
b. June 20, 1881; d. October 03, 1961.
9.
TERESSA7
WARING (CLARK6,
THADDEUS5,
JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)157
was born May 1813 in Berne, Albany Co., New York158, and died
March 27, 1888 in Carlton, Orleans Co., New York. She married WILLIAM
VANNESS STEBBINS158
January 09, 1836 in Rensselaerville, New York. He was born August 11,
1811 in Broome, New York, and died December 17, 1858 in Carlton, Orleans
Co., New York.
Notes for T ERESSA
WARING:
Alpheus Crocker age 25 was living in their household
on the 1855 Orleans Co., New York Census. I imagine he is some relation
to Sybil Crooker the wife of David Waring the brother of Teressa Waring.
More About T ERESSA
WARING:
Burial: Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of Kent, Town of
Carlton, Orleans County, New York
Notes for W ILLIAM
VANNESS STEBBINS:
1855 Carlton Co., Newy York Census
STEBBINS, WILLIAM 44 M SCHOHARIE FARMER 26-D1
TERESSA 42 F WIFE ALBANY
SYBIL 17 F CHILD SCHOHARIE
CROCKER, ALPHEUS 26 M BOARDER ALBANY MECHANIC
More About W ILLIAM
VANNESS STEBBINS:
Burial: Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of Kent, Town of
Carlton, Orleans County, New York
Child of T ERESSA
WARING and WILLIAM STEBBINS
is:
i. ISAAC NEWTON8
STEBBINS, b. January 17, 1840, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York; d.
Carlton, Orleans Co., New York; m. CHARLOTTE A. GASSMAN, January 09,
1867, Rensselaerville, Albany Co., New York; b. March 21, 1846,
Rensselaerville, Albany Co., New York; d. Carlton, Orleans Co., New
York.
Generation No. 8
10.
MARCUS8
SHAW (EMILY7
WARING, CLARK6,
THADDEUS5,
JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)159,160,161,162,163,164,165,166,167
was born August 09, 1835 in Albany Co., New York168,169,170,171,
and died September 18, 1921 in Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri172.
He married (1) CORDELIA WHITING173
October 05, 1856 in Mills Co., Iowa173, daughter of CHARLES
WHITING and MARTHA HURLBURT. She was born Abt. 1836, and died Aft. 1856
in Possibly Mills Co., Iowa. He married (2) SARAH JANE ROCKWELL REED174
August 12, 1858 in Mills Co., Iowa174, daughter of ORRIN
ROCKWELL and LUANA BEEBE. She was born March 25, 1841 in Nauvoo, Hancock
Co., Illinois175, and died October 12, 1922. He married (3)
ELIZA ANN STUART176,177,178,179,180,181,182,183
Abt. 1886 in Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri184,185,
daughter of CHARLES STUART and PENNELIA ELLIOTT.
She was born February 08, 1850 in Hamilton Township, Van Buren Co.,
Michigan186,187, and died July 04, 1919 in Independence,
Jackson Co., Missouri188.
Notes for M ARCUS
SHAW:
Eliza Stuart was first married to David M. Bentley and
later remarried to Marcus Shaw. While living in Missouri Marcus Shaw
filed and collected a Civil War pension as a guardian of David's
children. U.S. Federal Census, Civil War Pension Index
FROM: The family record of Linda A. Ellsworth, taken
from "History of Otter Tail Co., MN by John Mason
1868 Marcus Shaw appointed by the Governor to be one
of two first county commissioners. Sept. 12, meeting held at the home of
Marcus to conduct county business. Marcus Shaw became Otter Tail Co., MN
county treasurer after May 20, 1869 and resigned July 3, 1873
FROM: The family record of Linda A. Ellsworth
"In 1895 he is in Lamoni, Decorah Co., Iowa which
is where Graceland College is located. Marcus was a stone mason,
plasterer, etc. I have often wondered if he helped in the construction
of the college. I believe he was in Independence, MO by 1900. After
Eliza died he moved to Ottumwa, Wapello co., IA where his step-daughter
Lilly Bentley Ammenhauser lived."
FROM THE BOOK: Church History Volume 4, Chapter 13,
1878
April 7, Elder Marcus Shaw, of Detroit, Minnesota,
wrote in behalf of Mrs. Lois Cutler, wife of Alpheus Cutler, as follows:
(page 219)
In order to perform a duty that our late Sr. Lois
Cutler had in her mind to attend to before she died, but failed to do
it, I write.
After she had united with the Reorganized Church, she
asked for additional testimony; and she promised in her prayer that she
would make it known unto the world. Her prayer was about as follows:
"Lord, if the present Joseph, the son of the
martyred prophet, is truly his father's successor by right, and has been
called by thine own power to the presidency of the church, and is
accepted of thee as a prophet, wilt thou witness unto me in this manner,
by taking this lump off from my finger that has been here for a long
time. If this be done, I shall then know that the Reorganized Church is
the church, and that Joseph is thy prophet, and I covenant to tell the
same to the world."
The facts are as follows: She had a lump on one of her
fingers about the size of a large hazlenut, of a bony substance, which
had been there some fourteen years, and truly she could ascribe it to
some unseen power if it was removed. The good Lord answered her prayer,
for it remained only a few days afterward. She had thought for a long
time that she would write to the Herald of this miracle, but neglected
to do so. And now, to be obedient unto the Spirit, I write for her, and
add my testimony, as I was knowing to the fact that the lump was on her
finger for several years and that it went away, and I believe that it
was in answer to her prayer. Near three years ago she was miraculously
healed by the laying on of hands; and also by the laying on of hands and
prayer her eyesight was restored.-The Saints' Herald, vol. 25, p. 172.
FROM THE BOOK: Church History Volume 4, Chapter 11,
1877
Bro. Marcus Shaw, of Detroit, Becker County,
Minnesota, writes that the Saints there are all doing well, but have
some trials. No traveling elder visits them. He is preaching the gospel
and expects to devote most of his time this winter to the work.
FROM: History of the Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints, Volume 4, CHAPTER 31. 1887
The Quorums of High Priests, Seventy, and several of
the quorums of elders reported, showing changes in the quorums as
follows:
The Seventy had expelled John S. Patterson from the
quorum.
The First Quorum of Elders had enrolled Thomas J.
Beatty, James Moler, L. W. Torrence, Charles Coombs, John Taylor,
Ephraim Thomas, David S. Holmes and Marcus Shaw.
FROM: Mud Creek Township 1860 Census (Now Anderson
Twp.) Mills County, Iowa
Page 791
Shaw, Marcus, 25 / m / carpenter / NY
Shaw, Sarah J., 20 / f / IL
Shaw, Henrietta A., 4/12 / f / IA
Also found on the Mud Creek Township 1860 Census, just
a few doors down was Orin Rockwell Jr., the son of Orrin Porter Rockwell
Sr. The inlaws of Orin Porter Rockwell Sr. (The Beebe family.) can also
be found close to the Shaw home.
More About M ARCUS
SHAW:
Burial: September 1921, Mound Grove Cemetery,
Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri
Census1: 1850, United States Federal census Orleans
Co., New York with his father Wilson
Census2: 1855, Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York,
listed as a mechanic
Census3: 1860, United States Federal census, Mud Creek
Twp., Mills Co., Iowa
Census4: 1870, United States Federal census, Otter
Tail Co., Minnesota
Census5: 1880, United States Federal census, Becker
Co., Minnesota
Fact1: 1864, Marcus was a followers of Culter who
removed to Otter Tail, Minnesota
Fact2: County commissioner of Otter Tail Co.,
Minnesota189,190
Fact3: Bet. May 20, 1869 - July 03, 1873, County
treasurer of Otter Tail Co., Minnesota191,192
Occupation: Brick Maker (1880 Census, Becker Co.,
Minnesota)
Notes for C ORDELIA
WHITING:
Little is known about Marcus Shaw's first wife
Cordelia other than a marriage record in Mills Co. Iowa. It is not
believed that they ever had children. Cordelia was the daughter of
Charles Whiting and Martha Manna Hurlburt. The Whiting family were
longtime Mormon/RLDS Church members for many generations. Several of the
Whiting descendants would move to the Independence Mo. area and are
buried at Mound Grove Cemetery including Alonzo, Lurette, Editha Ann and
Louisa Lida. These would all be first cousins of Cordelia Whiting. The
Whitings would eventually follow Adolphus Cutler and his movement to
Iowa and Minnesota as Marcus Shaw did.
FROM: http://www.cutlerite.org/history.htm
(Information concerning Chauncey Whiting the uncle of
Cordelia Whiting and his association with The Church of Jesus Christ,
Cutlerites which later moved to Independence Mo.)
Alpheus Cutler died August 10, 1864, and was succeeded
in office by Chauncey Whiting. Shortly after Cutler's death the church
moved to Minnesota where they established a thriving community at
Clitherall or Old Town, as it is now known. During this next 10 year
period they were visited by missionaries of a different restoration
group who offered an easier way of life and lead off those who were weak
in the faith, and many young members.
Chauncy Whiting passed away in 1902 and was followed
by his son, Isaac, in church leadership. Isaac continued in his office
until his death in 1922, at which time Emery Fletcher assumed the role
of President. About 1912, the Order of Enoch, having been discontinued,
for a time, due to the reluctance of some in turning in the homesteads
they had proved out upon, it was decided to again set up the Order as
originally instituted, and it has been maintained to the present day.
FROM:
http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:H129cn-bowEC:solomonspalding.com/Lib/2000
Adam.htm+%22Charles+Whiting%22+%2B+%22mormon%22&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
Andrew J. Simmonds (1943-1995), in his 1995 Nauvoo
Journal article, ("'Thou and all Thy House:' Three Case Studies of
Clan and Charisma in the Early Church") tried to link D. P. with
two of the daughters-in-law of Mormons "Sally Hulet Whiting, [and]
her husband Elisha Whiting, Jr." Simmonds says that "the
Hulets were a Massachusetts family settled in Lee, Berkshire County, who
moved to Nelson Township, Portage County, Ohio, in the Western Reserve
in 1814." In his 1979 unpublished Mormon History Association paper,
"John Noah and the Hulets: A Study in Charisma in the Early
Church," Simmonds identifies these daughter-in-law as sisters Lydia
B. Hurlbut, who in 1830 married William E. Whiting (1807-1834) and
Martha Mana Hurlbut, who, on Sept. 16, 1835 was married by Joseph Smith,
Jr. to Charles Whiting (1811-1841). Lydia remarried Charles English
after the death of William in 1841, and after Charles' death in 1839 she
married John J. Babcock. Lydia appears to have died on the Iowa trail c.
1847-48. Martha was born at Burlington, Vermont on Aug. 27, 1814. She
remarried the infamous Mormon outlaw Jackson Redding (1817-aft. 1850)
after the death of Charles Whiting in 1841; she died at Winter Quarters
on March 15, 1847.
FROM: http://www.swcp.com/~jhafner/whithurlhy.htm
(information concerning Cordelias family including her uncles and
cousins)
Friction between the Missourians and Mormons continued
in Caldwell County resulting in armed conflicts. In the fall of 1838,
Missouri Governor Lilburn W. Boggs issued his infamous order to the
militia to drive the Mormons out of the state or kill them in the
process. By March 1839, the Mormons had abandoned all settlements in
Missouri and had moved into Illinois and Iowa. Probable routes are shown
on the following map entitled "LDS Winter Exoduss from Missouri,
1838-1839." It seems likely that Lydia and her five children, and
Charles English, if still alive, traveled to Illinois with Elisha
Whiting, Sally, and other Whitings.
Accordig to Christensen, the Whitings came to the
"Morley Settlement" near Lima, Illinois. Also:
William E. Whiting's family was found in the record of
membership of Lima Stake. The record showed Lydia B. Babcock with
children; Edmond W., Mary M. and Martha B. Whiting. Mary and Martha, the
twins, were listed as under eight years; also Morenda, A. English and
Charles H. English were under eight years. That pointed to the fact that
Lydia had been widowed a second time and had married a third husband
named Babcock. She and her children were listed as members of the Lima
Stake when it was organized in 1840.
Although the earlier settlers in Illinois had
initially welcomed the Mormons driven from Missouri, once again there
was friction and mob violence. In the fall of 1845, the Mormons began to
gather in Nauvoo for protection and to prepare for a westward migration
in the spring. The exodus began in March, 1846. According to
Christensen:
The people known to have been traveling in that
immediate group which left Nauvoo were: Elisha and Sally Hulet Whiting
with their unmarried sons, Sylvester, Almond, and Francis Lewis. Also
with Elisha were his widowed daughters-in-law, the former wives of
William and Charles Whiting. Their families were composed of William's
three children, plus two sons born to Lydia by her second husband,
Charles English. Also, Martha Hurlburt Whiting and her three children
went along. Chancey and Editha Ann Morley Whiting, with their children
were in the group. So were Amos and Philena Morley Cox and their three
children. Orville and Elvira Cox and two children were part of the
group. F. Walter and Emeline Whiting Cox were there with their five
children. In the wagon with Edwin Whiting rode Mary Cox Whiting and
Jemima Losee Cox.
An incident in the Journal History is quoted as
follows:
28 March 1846. The main camp still remained on
Chariton River… A boy by the name of Edmund Whiting shot an otter at
the bend of the river; he afterwards discovered that the otter was
caught in a trap; he took off the skin and carried it to camp, leaving
the trap on the bank. In the course of the day the trapper, who lived a
short distance off, came into camp and stated that he had eight traps in
the neighborhood, and had lost six of them, intimating that the Camp had
stolen them; but this was not believed. In the evening, the Council
heard what the boy had done with the otter skin and called him into the
post office with the skin, when he related all his doings concerning the
matter.
The council were satisfied that he meant no harm and
instructed him to go early in the morning and bring the trap, and take
it and the skin to the trapper in company with Stephen Markham.
President Young instructed Brother Markham to say to the man that if one
of his traps were found in the camp within one thousand miles of the
place, it should be sent back to him with the man that took it.
30 March 1846. Stephan Markham reported that he could
not find Edmund Whiting, the boy that shot the otter in the trap and
that he had returned the skin to Mr. Davis, the trapper, who was
satisfied with the actions of the officer of the Camp.
Note that there is no mention of John Babcock, nor his
children.
The Whitings and related families went on west to a
temporary camp they called "Mt Pisgah" (near present Talmage,
IA, about 170 miles west of Nauvoo).
A sizable tract of ground at Mt. Pisgah was fenced,
the ground was plowed and planted to crops. The families went to work to
build temporary homes. Walter Cox built two huts for his family. The
Whitings again built a chair shop. Walter Cox cut down trees, split the
trunks and made benches for a little school in a grove. The lower
benches were for seats and the higher benches for desks.
Christensen mentions Edmond Whiting several times. In
response to a request from Mormon leaders for volunteers to serve in the
war with Mexico, Edmond and his uncle Almon were mustered into service
at Council Bluffs on July 16, 1846. After their return from service in
the "Mormon Battalion" (5), presumably 1847, they helped
establish a new settlement called Silver Creek or Cutler's Settlement
(between present day Silver City and Malvern). Chauncey, Sylvester, and
Lewis Whiting were also among those involved. Neither Edmond nor Almon
is mentioned in the 1850 US census of Pottawatomie Co, IA, but Chauncey
and his family are, as is a group of young Whiting people living
together: Sylvester - 24, Louis - 22, Abner - 20, Mary - 17, Martha -
16, Cordelia - 14, (wife of Marcus Shaw) and Elisha - 12. The last three
seem likely to be the children of Martha Manna Hurlburt Whiting, who
died at Winter Quarters, near present day Omaha, during the spring of
1847. We have wondered if the Mary - 17 could be 'our' Mary, but, if so,
where was her twin sister Martha? According to Christensen, Edmond
Whiting married Augusta McConoughly on July 19, 1857. His family is
listed in the Federal Censuses of 1860 for Fremont Co and in the 1870,
1880, and 1900 censuses for Page Co. He died June 12, 1908 in
Shenandoah, IA. According to Christensen, he spent one winter in
Minnesota, presumably with other "Cutlerites" in Clitherall,
but then returned to southwestern Iowa. His oldest son, William Elisha
Whiting was born in Manti on Jan. 25, 1862, became a physician, and in
1890 moved to Brush, CO, the home of his first cousin, Rena Bell
McGinnis, and her husband, John. The Colorado State Business Directories
for 1895 and 1896 list him as physician and postmaster, and also in the
drug business with McGinnis. Dr. Whiting died of typhoid fever on Feb
11, 1896, and was buried near the graves of Rena and John McGinnis in
the Brush Cemetary.
FROM:
http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:aHZs15Ut8TQC:www.ldsworld.com/gems/
150/display/0,2576,6800,00.html+%22Jackson+Redding%22+%2B+%22mormon%
22&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
(Information concerning Jackson Redding the brother in
law of Cornelia through her sister Martha.)
It was becoming very urgent for the pioneers to
complete their journey and to plant a crop as soon as possible in the
Salt Lake Valley. The Twelve directed Orson Pratt to lead an advance
company of 42 men and 23 wagons to proceed through the mountains. They
were instructed to make roads to enable the main company to follow
later. Heber C. Kimball returned to The Needles. At 3 p.m., this company
started their journey and traveled about eight miles down Red Fork.
[The company consisted of Orson Pratt, Orrin Porter
Rockwell, Jackson Redding, Stephen Markham, Nathaniel Fairbanks, Joseph
Egbert, John S. Freeman, Marcus B. Thorpe, Robert Crow, Benjamin B.
Crow, John Crow, William H. Crow, William P. Crow, George W. Therlkill,
James Chesney, Lewis B. Myers, John Brown, Shadrack Roundy, Hans C.
Hanson, Levi Jackman, Lyman Curtis, David Powell, Oscar Crosby, Hark
Lay, Joseph Matthews, Gilbert Summe, Green Flake, John S. Gleason,
Charles Burke, Norman Taylor, Alexander P. Chesley, Seth Taft, Horace
Thornton, Stephen Kelsey, James Stewart, Robert Thomas, Charles D.
Barnam, John S. Eldredge, Elijah Newman, Francis Boggs, Levi N. Kendall,
David Grant.
More About C ORDELIA
WHITING:
Burial: Possibly Mills Co., Iowa
Census1: 1850, Pottawatomie Co, Iowa (living with her
uncle Chauncey Whiting and family)
Fact1: Her parents were wed in Ohio by Joseph Smith
Jr. the Mormon Prophet.
Fact2: Cordelia's sister Martha married Erastus Cutler
the grandson of Adolphus Cutler. Martha also married Jackson Redding the
well known Mormon Danite who often rode with Orrin Rockwell. Orrin
Rockwell was also the father in law of Marcus Shaw.
Fact3: Mills Co. marriage records list Cordely Whiting
as the wife of Marcus Shaw
Marriage Notes for M ARCUS
SHAW and CORDELIA WHITING:
Mills Co. marriage records list Cordely Whiting as the
wife of Marcus Shaw
Notes for S ARAH
JANE ROCKWELL REED:
FROM: Linda in Oregon (a cousin through Marcus Shaw)
" I have seen that information about Sarah Shaw
being the daughter of Orrin Porter Rockwell. However, the marriage
records of Mills Co., IA says Marcus married Sarah Jane REED on Aug. 12,
1858. In the 1856 Mills Co., IA census a Noah and Sarah Reed are living
in the household of Luana Perry (Luana Hart Beebe Rockwell Perry
Baldwin)who was married to Orrin Porter Rockwell. Before that Marcus was
married to Cordelia Whitling. Marcus was a follower of Adolfus
Cutler."
Linda stated that Marcus or his children had submitted
lineage to the book: A history of the Hinmans and Kindred Families, 1907
at sometime during its production that had many verifiable facts. The
connection of Marcus' wife Sarah Jane as a daughter of Orrin Porter
Rockwell was also submitted. As so many know Marcus as the husband of
Sarah Jane Rockwell and with the production of the book, it is believed
that possibly Sarah Jane listed as Reed on the Mills Co. marriage record
had previously married a Reed and hence explaining the confusion with
the last names.
Marriage Notes for M ARCUS
SHAW and SARAH REED:
marriage performed by Squire Eggelston MG
Notes for E LIZA
ANN STUART:
Eliza Stuart died due to a fall from her bedroom
window July 4th 1919. It seems she was sleeping and became hot and
leaned out of the top floor window of her home for fresh air. It is
assumed that she became faint as well from heart disease which she
suffered from at the time. Eliza fell from the window and hit her head,
passing days later in a coma. Her home was located in what is now the
rear parking of the RLDS Temple in Independence Mo. Eliza's death made
frontpage news in the local paper, the Examiner. She was buried at Mound
Grove Cemetery, Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri.
FROM THE WEBSITE: The Bingleman Story
Excerpts:
" Memories " by Wilfrid Knisley Bingleman
1903 - 1998, written: December 1989
Mother was the youngest of a family of three. Her
older sister, Eliza, married a man by the name of Shaw and continued to
live in the U S A and a brother Merrit became a sailor on the Great
Lakes.
More About E LIZA
ANN STUART:
Burial: July 1919, Mound Grove Cemetery, Independence,
Jackson Co., Missouri
Fact: 1911, Was a nurse193
Children of M ARCUS
SHAW and SARAH REED
are:
i. CLARK A.9
SHAW194,195,196,
b. October 05, 1862, Mills Co., Iowa197; d. August 30,
1925, Alameda Co., California197,198; m. MABEL EVELINE
BENTLEY199,
March 07, 1888, Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri199;
b. February 09, 1870, Lawrence, Van Buren Co., Michigan199;
d. March 03, 1947, Los Angeles Co., California199.
ii. HENRIETTA ARVILLA
SHAW200,
b. April 1860, Iowa; d. Bef. September 18, 1921.
iii. CHARLES E. SHAW200,
b. 1865, Minnesota; d. of Chicago, Illinois.
Notes for CHARLES E. SHAW:
As per Marcus Shaw
obituary, his son Charles E. Shaw is living in Chicago Illinois when
Marcus dies in Missouri.
iv. WILLIE SHAW200,
b. Abt. 1867, Minnesota.
v. WALTER SHAW200,
b. Abt. 1871, Minnesota; d. Bef. September 18, 1921.
vi. CHESTER J. SHAW200,201,202,
b. 1876, Minnesota203; d. Aft. 1920; m. MARTHA204.
Notes for CHESTER J. SHAW:
As per Marcus Shaw's
obituary, his son Chester C. Shaw is living in Joliet, Illinois when
Marcus dies in Missouri.
Minnesota land grants
listed at St. Cloud about 10 miles from Becker Minnesota, 1903
SHAW, CHESTER J
Land Office: ST CLOUD
Sequence #:
Document Number: 20108
Total Acres: 80
Misc. Doc. Nr.: Signature:
Yes
Canceled Document: No Issue
Date: July 11, 1903
Mineral Rights Reserved: No
Metes and Bounds: No
Survey Date: Statutory
Reference: 3 Stat. 566
Multiple Warantee Names: No
Act or Treaty: April 24, 1820
Multiple Patentee Names: No
Entry Classification: Sale-Cash Entries
Legal Land Description:
# Aliquot Parts Block #
Base Line Fractional Section Township Range Section #
1 SWSE 5TH PM No 145 N 34 W
22
2 NWNE 5TH PM No 145 N 34 W
27
vii. WILBUR J. SHAW205,
b. Abt. 1875, Minnesota205; m. ROSINA W.205;
b. Abt. 1876, Iowa205.
Notes for WILBUR J. SHAW:
As per Marcus Shaw's
obituary, his son Wilbur Shaw is living in Buhl, Idaho when Marcus
dies in Missouri.
More About WILBUR J. SHAW:
Census1: 1920, United
States Federal Census for Twin Falls Buhl Co., Idaho
Child of M ARCUS
SHAW and ELIZA STUART
is:
viii. NINA L.9
SHAW206,207,208,
b. 1890, Kansas City, Jackson Co., Missouri209; d. 1950,
Jackson Co., Missouri209; m. ORIN JEFFERSON DUNFEE SR.210,
March 03, 1908, St. Joseph, Buchanan Co., Missouri211; b.
1887, Nebraska212; d. 1960, Jackson Co., Missouri212.
More About NINA L. SHAW:
Burial: 1950, Mound Grove
Cemetery, Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri212
Fact1: Died from Dropsy
More About ORIN JEFFERSON
DUNFEE SR.:
Burial: 1960, Mound Grove
Cemetery, Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri212
Marriage Notes for NINA
SHAW and ORIN SR.:
Marriage was performed by
V. M. Goodrich, "Minister of the Gospel". Witnessed and
permission given by Mrs. Eliza Ann Shaw and Mrs. Laura May Bailey.
Mark Smith submitted a certified copy of their marriage license.
From this document we learn the full name of Orin's mother Laura.
11.
EMMA J8 SHAW (EMILY7
WARING, CLARK6,
THADDEUS5,
JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)213,214,215
was born Abt. 1832 in Albany Co., New York216,217,218,219,
and died 1911220. She married ABNER HINMAN
II220,221,222 February 14, 1854. He was born July 10, 1828 in
Phelps, Ontario Co, New York223,224, and died 1913 in Oswego
Co, New York225.
More About E MMA
J SHAW:
Burial: Greenwood Cemetery, Town of Kendall, Orleans
County, New York225
More About A BNER
HINMAN II:
Burial: Greenwood Cemetery, Town of Kendall, Orleans
County, New York225
Census1: 1865, United States Federal Census for
Orleans Co., New York
Census2: 1880, United States Federal Census for
Kendall, Orleans Co., New York
Occupation: Stone Mason226
Children of E MMA
SHAW and ABNER HINMAN
are:
i. WILLIS URBAN9
HINMAN227,228,
b. July 01, 1856, Kendall, Orleans Co., New York229,230;
d. May 10, 1902, Stillwater, Saratoga Co., New York231;
m. MARY EMMA WALL231;
b. 1854231; d. 1935231.
More About WILLIS URBAN
HINMAN:
Burial: Greenwood Cemetery,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York231
More About MARY EMMA WALL:
Burial: Greenwood Cemetery,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York231
ii. ABNER WARD HINMAN231,232,
b. March 11, 1863, Phelps, Ontario Co., New York233; d.
1944233; m. MINNIE VIOLA ARMSTRONG233,
March 11, 1891; b. March 01, 1872233; d. 1966233.
More About ABNER WARD
HINMAN:
Burial: Greenwood Cemetery,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York233
More About MINNIE VIOLA
ARMSTRONG:
Burial: Greenwood Cemetery,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York233
iii. CLARK EUGENE
HINMAN234,235,236,
b. October 02, 1858, Phelps, Ontario Co., New York237,238;
m. ROSE ELLEN WALL.
iv. ALBERT WARING
HINMAN239,240,241,
b. January 16, 1861, Phelps, Ontario Co., New York242; d.
March 1938, Braddock, Pennsylvania; m. GRACE ELLEN BULLARD243,
October 29, 1885; b. July 26, 1865, Hamlin, New York; d. , Braddock,
Allegheney Co, Pennsylvania243.
v. WARD A. HINMAN244,245,246,
b. Abt. 1863, Ontario Co., New York247.
vi. EARLE CHESTER
HINMAN248,249,250,
b. August 24, 1865, Kendall, Orleans Co., New York250; m.
GERTRUDE L. BARBER, November 17, 1886; b. August 01, 1868.
vii. ELMER LLEWELLYN
HINMAN251,252,
b. January 16, 1868, Kendall, Orleans Co., New York252;
m. KATHERINE VAN BENSCHOTE; b. July 12, 1864, Newark, New York.
viii. DR ADIN VINCENT
HINMAN253,254,
b. October 03, 1872, Kendall, Orleans Co., New York255;
d. August 26, 1952, Warren, Trumbull Co., Ohio255; m.
SENA AUGUSTA MACCATHRON, June 06, 1898; b. January 25, 1874.
More About DR ADIN VINCENT
HINMAN:
Fact1: Practiced Medicine
in Youngstown, Pennsylvania
Fact2: Authored the book,
"History of the Hinmans" in 1907
12.
CHESTER C.8
SHAW (EMILY7
WARING, CLARK6,
THADDEUS5,
JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)256,257,258
was born Abt. 1842 in Orleans Co., New York259,260. He
married ELIZABETH261.
She was born Abt. 1842 in New York261.
Notes for C HESTER
C. SHAW:
Chester C Shaw
Service Record: Promoted to Full Sergeant
Enlisted as a Corporal on 07 May 1861 at the age of 18
Enlisted in Company H, 18th Infantry Regiment New York
on 17 May 1861.
Discharged Company H, 18th Infantry Regiment New York
on 28 May 1863 in Albany, NY
More About C HESTER
C. SHAW:
Census1: 1860, United States Federal Census for
Cohoes, Albany Co., New York
Census2: 1880, United States Federal Census for
Albany, Albany Co., New York
Occupation: Tailor261
Served: Civil War, Union Forces, New York Infantry.
Child of C HESTER
SHAW and ELIZABETH
is:
i. CHRIS F.9
SHAW261,
b. Abt. 1867, New York261.
13.
WILLIAM D.8
SHAW (EMILY7
WARING, CLARK6,
THADDEUS5,
JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)262,263,264,265,266
was born December 28, 1845 in Orleans Co., New York267,268,
and died November 29, 1919 in Kendall, Orleans Co., New York269.
He married FIDELIA T. STACY269,270,271,272,273,
daughter of RUSSELL STACY and TERRISSA.
She was born August 10, 1841 in New York274,275,275, and died
July 08, 1921 in Kendall, Orleans Co., New York276.
Notes for W ILLIAM
D. SHAW:
William served in the Union Forces, New York, wife
Fidelia T. Shaw files and receives a pension in New York for his
service, December 1919 (Application 1150,027)
More About W ILLIAM
D. SHAW:
Burial: Greenwood Cemetery, Orleans Co., New York276
Census1: 1880, United States Federal Census for
Kendall, Orleans Co., New York (Living with James Shelry)
Occupation: Farmer277
Served: Union Forces, Civil War
More About F IDELIA
T. STACY:
Burial: Greenwood Cemetery, Orleans Co., New York
Census1: 1880, United States Federal Census for
Kendall, Orleans Co., New York (Living with William Shaw and James
Shelry)
Census2: 1920, United States Federal Census for
Kendall, Orleans Co., New York (Living with her son Milo J. Shaw)
Child of W ILLIAM
SHAW and FIDELIA STACY
is:
i. MILO J.9
SHAW278,279,
b. March 14, 1881, probably New York280,281; d. 1921,
probably Kendall, Orleans Co., New York282; m. MABEL M.282,283,284;
b. 1882, New York285; d. 1940, probably Kendall, Orleans
Co., New York285.
More About MILO J. SHAW:
Burial: Greenwood Cemetery,
Orleans Co., New York285
Census1: 1920, Kendall,
Orleans Co., New York
Occupation: Farm Labor286
More About MABEL M.:
Burial: Greenwood Cemetery,
Orleans Co., New York287
Census1: 1920, United
States Federal Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York
Census2: 1930, Head of
household, United States Federal Census for (Kendall Road South)
Kendall, Orleans Co., New York
14.
GEORGE WALKER8
WARING (CLARK7,
CLARK6,
THADDEUS5,
JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)288
was born May 04, 1864, and died April 06, 1943. He married MINNIE LEE
WRIGHT March
05, 1889.
Notes for G EORGE
WALKER WARING:
FROM: The family record of Frank Aronoff
George Walker Waring attended South Carolina and
graduated from Coopers Union in Architecture …. Children: George
Wingate Waring graduated from South Carolina and was a lawyer. Elmar
Stebbins Waring was an MD and Elmar Jr was a career navy officer, class
of '38 from Annapolis
Children of G EORGE
WARING and MINNIE WRIGHT
are:
i. GEORGE WINGATE9
WARING, b. January 13, 1892.
ii. ELMAR STEBBINS WARING,
b. October 17, 1893.
15.
ROBERT STEWART8
WARING (CLARK7,
CLARK6,
THADDEUS5,
JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)288,289
was born November 19, 1867, and died October 20, 1952 in Columbia, South
Carolina. He married ELIZABETH MINNEHAHA DUVAL289
August 08, 1894 in Fort Smith, Arkansas289.
Notes for R OBERT
STEWART WARING:
FROM: The family record of Frank Aronoff
Robert Stewart Waring attended South Carolina and
worked in the railroad industry. His two sons both graduated from South
Carolina. Robert was a Civil Engineer, Clark played football at USC,
went into the service after college and later worked in the cotton
industry. Elizabeth married an army lawyer and was an artist.
More About R OBERT
STEWART WARING:
Graduate: South Carolina College, Columbia, South
Carolina
Occupation: Railroad Executive
Religion: Presbyterian
Children of R OBERT
WARING and ELIZABETH DUVAL
are:
i. ROBERT DUVAL9
WARING.
ii. CLARK DUVAL WARING.
iii. ELIZABETH CALDWELL
WARING.
16.
AMY MALVINA8
WARING (CLARK7,
CLARK6,
THADDEUS5,
JOHN4,
ELIZABETH3
BOUTON, ABIGAIL2
MARVIN, MATTHEW1)
was born January 31, 1872 in Columbia, South Carolina, and died April
02, 1971. She married CHARLES STANLEY BLACKBURN
July 29, 1896. He was born Abt. 1870.
Notes for A MY
MALVINA WARING:
FROM: The family record of Frank Aronoff
Amy Malvina Waring married a Presbyterian minister and
traveled to Persia where her first two children were born. They returned
to the US in 1905 and lived in So Carolina. …. Children: William
Maxwell Blackburn was a Rhodes Scholar earning his BA & MA at Oxford
and his PhD from Yale in English. He spent most of his career at Duke.
George S Blackburn graduated from Yale '26 and taught at prep schools
…. Malvina was a nurse and worked for the US government in Washington,
Clark also graduated from Yale and was a well renowned expert in social
services.
FROM: Fishers & More database, www.rootsweb.com
Housewife And Missionary, Medical School (Withdrew Due
To IllnessSet out for Urumiah, Persia on 29 Sept. 1896, and stayed until
the fall of 1904. They were there as missionaries under the Board of the
Northern Presbyterian Church.
Children of A MY
WARING and CHARLES BLACKBURN
are:
i. WILLIAM MAXWELL9
BLACKBURN, b. April 20, 1899, Urumia, Persia (Iran); d. December 09,
1972, Durham, North Carolina; m. ELIZABETH CHENEY BAYNE, December
28, 1926, Cheney Homestead, Manchester, Connecticut; b. October 16,
1898; d. December 23, 1994, Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Notes for WILLIAM MAXWELL
BLACKBURN:
FROM Fishers & More
database, www.rootsweb.com
Became a famous teacher of
creative writing at Duke Among his students were, William Stryon,
Mac Hyman, Reynolds Price Ann Tyler. The William Blackburn Visiting
Professorship in Literature was established in his name at Duke in
1995. BA, MA Oxford (Rhodes Scholar), PhD English,Yale University
ii. GEORGE STEBBINS
BLACKBURN, b. August 15, 1901; d. April 19, 1988.
iii. MALVINA WARING
BLACKBURN, b. June 30, 1905; d. September 30, 1995.
iv. CLARK WARING BLACKBURN,
b. November 15, 1908; d. January 25, 2003; m. VIRGINIA MITCHELL,
June 15, 1935.
Endnotes
1. History and Genealogy of the
Families of Old Fairfield, compiled and editied by Donald Lines Jacobus,
vol II.
2. Colonial and Revolutionary
lineages of America: a collection ofgenealogical studies, completely
documented, and appropriatelyillustrated, bearing upon.
3. Descendants of Reinold and
Matthew Marvin.
4. Notes the Ancestry of
Reinold and Matthew Marvin in the American Genealogist 18:1-13 (July
1941).
5. History and Genealogy of the
Families of Old Fairfield, compiled and editied by Donald Lines Jacobus,
vol II.
6. Descendants of Reinold and
Matthew Marvin.
7. History and Genealogy of the
Families of Old Fairfield, compiled and editied by Donald Lines Jacobus,
vol II.
8. Note: TITL Colonial and
Revolutionary lineages of America: a collection ofgenealogical studies,
completely documented, and appropriatelyillustrated, bearing upon
notableearly American lines andtheir collateral connections.Repository:
Call Number: Media: BookPage: Vol. 7, page 39.
9. Marvin, George Franklin and
William T.R.Publication: T.R. Marvin & Son, Boston, MA 1904Media:
Book
10. Notes the Ancestry of
Reinold and Matthew Marvin in the American Genealogist 18:1-13 (July
1941).
11. History and Genealogy of
the Families of Old Fairfield, compiled and editied by Donald Lines
Jacobus, vol II.
12. Marvin, George Franklin and
William T.R.Publication: T.R. Marvin & Son, Boston, MA 1904Media:
Book
13. Notes the Ancestry of
Reinold and Matthew Marvin in the American Genealogist 18:1-13 (July
1941).
14. History and Genealogy of
the Families of Old Fairfield, compiled and editied by Donald Lines
Jacobus, vol II.
15. Descendants of Reinold and
Matthew Marvin.
16. History and Genealogy of
the Families of Old Fairfield, compiled and editied by Donald Lines
Jacobus, vol II.
17. Descendants of Reinold and
Matthew Marvin.
18. Chestnut, Lucille, Betts
Genealogy, 22 Feb 2002; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <luseann@excite.com>.
19. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
20. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
21. Marvin, George Franklin and
William T.R.Publication: T.R. Marvin & Son, Boston, MA 1904Media:
Book
22. Intellectual Reserve, Inc.,
FamilySearch Ancestral File, www.familysearch.org, last updated
3/22/1999..
23. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
24. Chestnut, Lucille, Betts
Genealogy, 22 Feb 2002; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <luseann@excite.com>.
25. Edington, Kristi, Edington-
Arnold Family Tree, 26 May 2002; http://www.worldconnect.rootsweb.com;
<buckaroo@somethingorother.com>.
26. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
27. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
28. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
29. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
30. Benedict, Robert A., Leaves
from a Tree: Ancestry of Aaron Jehu Benedict, a New York State farmer,
30 Nov 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <benedict@dialup.ws>.
31. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
32. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
33. Benedict, Robert A., Leaves
from a Tree: Ancestry of Aaron Jehu Benedict, a New York State farmer,
30 Nov 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <benedict@dialup.ws>.
34. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
35. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
36. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
37. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
38. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
39. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
40. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
41. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
42. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
43. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
44. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
45. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
46. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
47. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
48. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
49. Townsley, Rubye,
Townsley.ged, 25 Aug 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <townsley@alaska.net>.
50. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
51. Benedict, Robert A., Leaves
from a Tree: Ancestry of Aaron Jehu Benedict, a New York State farmer,
30 Nov 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <benedict@dialup.ws>.
52. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
53. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
54. Townsley, Rubye,
Townsley.ged, 25 Aug 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <townsley@alaska.net>.
55. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
56. Benedict, Robert A., Leaves
from a Tree: Ancestry of Aaron Jehu Benedict, a New York State farmer,
30 Nov 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <benedict@dialup.ws>.
57. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
58. Townsley, Rubye,
Townsley.ged, 25 Aug 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <townsley@alaska.net>.
59. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
60. Benedict, Robert A., Leaves
from a Tree: Ancestry of Aaron Jehu Benedict, a New York State farmer,
30 Nov 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <benedict@dialup.ws>.
61. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
62. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
63. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
64. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
65. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
66. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
67. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
68. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
69. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
70. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
71. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
72. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
73. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
74. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
75. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
76. Townsley, Rubye,
Townsley.ged, 25 Aug 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <townsley@alaska.net>.
77. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
78. Benedict, Robert A., Leaves
from a Tree: Ancestry of Aaron Jehu Benedict, a New York State farmer,
30 Nov 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <benedict@dialup.ws>.
79. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
80. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
81. Townsley, Rubye,
Townsley.ged, 25 Aug 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <townsley@alaska.net>.
82. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
83. Benedict, Robert A., Leaves
from a Tree: Ancestry of Aaron Jehu Benedict, a New York State farmer,
30 Nov 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <benedict@dialup.ws>.
84. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
85. Townsley, Rubye,
Townsley.ged, 25 Aug 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <townsley@alaska.net>.
86. Holcombe, Jon, The
MacCallum - Bennett Families and Collateral Lines Database, 21 Dec 2001;
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <holcombe1@gisco.net>.
87. Benedict, Robert A., Leaves
from a Tree: Ancestry of Aaron Jehu Benedict, a New York State farmer,
30 Nov 2001; http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com; <benedict@dialup.ws>.
88. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
89. Roach, Daniel, Waring,
Christopher and descendants, Gedcom, Daniel Roach, roach@danielsden.com,
9 Apr 1999.
90. horrocks.ged, Date of
Import: Nov 10, 2002.
91. Family Record of Frank
Aronoff.
92. Ruth W. Waring headstone,
Turner Burying Ground, Berne, Albany Co., New York.
93. Family Record of Frank
Aronoff.
94. Ruth W. Waring headstone,
Turner Burying Ground, Berne, Albany Co., New York.
95. http://home.sc.rr.com/mattox/isely/frances.html.
96. Online transcribes of the
Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New
York.
97. Family Record of Frank
Aronoff.
98. 1820 United States Federal
Census for Berne, Albany Co., New York.
99. 1830 United States Federal
Census for Berne, Albany Co., New York.
100. 1840 United States Federal
Census for Arcadia, Wayne Co., New York.
101. 1850 United States Federal
Census for Arcadia, Wayne Co., New York.
102. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
103. Online transcribes of the
Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New
York.
104. Family Record of Frank
Aronoff.
105. 1865 Carlton New York
Census..
106. Headstone Kent Cemetery,
Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New York.
107. 1850 United States Federal
Census for Arcadia, Wayne Co., New York.
108. Headstone Kent Cemetery,
Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New York.
109. 1820 United States Federal
Census for Berne, Albany Co., New York.
110. 1830 United States Federal
Census for Berne, Albany Co., New York.
111. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
112. Online transcribes of the
Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New
York.
113. 1865 Carlton New York
Census..
114. 1850 United States Federal
Census for Arcadia, Wayne Co., New York.
115. Family Record of Frank
Aronoff.
116. Headstone Kent Cemetery,
Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New York.
117. 1850 United States Federal
Census for Arcadia, Wayne Co., New York.
118. Headstone Kent Cemetery,
Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New York.
119. 1865 Carlton New York
Census..
120. 1850 United States Federal
Census for Arcadia, Wayne Co., New York.
121. Family Record of Frank
Aronoff.
122. 1850 United States Federal
Census for Arcadia, Wayne Co., New York.
123. Family Record of Frank
Aronoff.
124. 1850 United States Federal
Census for Arcadia, Wayne Co., New York.
125. Family Record of Frank
Aronoff.
126. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
127. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
128. 1855 Census, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York.
129. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
130. History of the Hinmans
1907 by AV Hinman.
131. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
132. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
133. 1855 Census, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York.
134. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
135. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
136. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
137. Online transcribes of the
Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New
York.
138. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
139. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
140. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
141. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
142. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
143. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
144. Online transcribes of the
Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New
York.
145. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907.
146. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
147. 1855 Census, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York.
148. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
149. 1855 Census, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York.
150. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
151. Orleans County Vital
Statistics, 1847-1850.
152. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
153. Orleans County Vital
Statistics, 1847-1850.
154. Periodical: A Short
History of th Family of Black and Kindred Families, Author: Edgar O.
Black & Beverly Mary Black (Belser).
155. Family Record of Frank
Aronoff.
156. Periodical: A Short
History of th Family of Black and Kindred Families, Author: Edgar O.
Black & Beverly Mary Black (Belser).
157. Family Record of Frank
Aronoff.
158. Kent Cemetery, Hamlet of
Kent, Town of Carlton, Orleans County, New York.
159. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
160. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
161. 1855 Census, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York.
162. " Memories " by
Wilfrid Knisley Bingleman 1903 - 1998, written: December 1989 ( a first
cousin of Nina Shaw Dunfee).
163. The Bingleman Story
Website.
164. Family Record of Dorothy
Mae Dunfee Thompson.
165. Family Record of Helen
Bingleman.
166. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
167. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Detroit, Becker Co., Minnesota (M. Shaw head of house).
168. Gravestone, Mound Grove
Cemetery, Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri.
169. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
170. 1855 Census, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York.
171. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
172. Gravestone, Mound Grove
Cemetery, Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri.
173. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
174. Marriage records of Mills
Co., Iowa.
175. 1860 United States Federal
Census, Mud Creek Township (Now Anderson Twp.) Mills County, Iowa.
176. Van Buren Co., Michigan,
Index of Marriages, Compiled by Jack & Marianne Dibean.
177. " Memories " by
Wilfrid Knisley Bingleman 1903 - 1998, written: December 1989 ( a first
cousin of Nina Shaw Dunfee).
178. Family Record of Dorothy
Mae Dunfee Thompson.
179. " Memories " by
Wilfrid Knisley Bingleman 1903 - 1998, written: December 1989 ( a first
cousin of Nina Shaw Dunfee).
180. Family Record of Helen
Bingleman.
181. The Bingleman Story
Website.
182. Family Record of Helen
Bingleman, Rootsweb..
183. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
184. Family Record of Dorothy
Mae Dunfee Thompson.
185. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
186. Family Record of Helen
Bingleman, Rootsweb.
187. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
188. Gravestone, Mound Grove
Cemetery, Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri.
189. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
190. History of Otter Tail Co.,
Minnesota by John Mason.
191. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
192. History of Otter Tail Co.,
Minnesota by John Mason.
193. Resided at 800 Lydia Ave.,
Kansas City, Missouri.
194. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907.
195. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
196. California Death
Certificate.
197. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
198. California Death
Certificate.
199. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
200. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907.
201. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Detroit, Becker Co., Minnesota (M. Shaw head of house).
202. 1920 United States Federal
Census for Joliet, Will Co., Illinois.
203. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Detroit, Becker Co., Minnesota (M. Shaw head of house).
204. 1920 United States Federal
Census for Joliet, Will Co., Illinois.
205. 1920 United States Federal
Census for Twin Falls Buhl Co., Idaho.
206. 2001 Obituary of Mildred
Dunfee Keown.
207. Family Record of Dorothy
Mae Dunfee Thompson.
208. The family record of Linda
A. Ellsworth.
209. Headstone Mound Grove
Cemetery, Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri.
210. 2001 Obituary of Mildred
Dunfee Keown.
211. Marriage License of Orin
Dunfee and Nina Shaw, 1908.
212. Headstone Mound Grove
Cemetery, Independence, Jackson Co., Missouri.
213. United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
214. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
215. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
216. Greenwood Cemetery Index,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
217. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
218. United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
219. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
220. Greenwood Cemetery Index,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
221. United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
222. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
223. Greenwood Cemetery Index,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
224. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
225. Greenwood Cemetery Index,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
226. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
227. Greenwood Cemetery Index,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
228. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
229. Greenwood Cemetery Index,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
230. United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
231. Greenwood Cemetery Index,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
232. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
233. Greenwood Cemetery Index,
Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
234. United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
235. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
236. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
237. United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
238. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
239. United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
240. History of the Hinmans
1907 by AV Hinman.
241. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
242. United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
243. History of the Hinmans
1907 by AV Hinman.
244. United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
245. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
246. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
247. United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
248. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
249. 1910 United States Federal
Census for Summit Co., Ohio.
250. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
251. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
252. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
253. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
254. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
255. History of the Hinmans
1907 by AV Hinman.
256. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
257. 1855 Census, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York.
258. A history of the Hinmans
and Kindred Families, 1907, by Dr Adin Vincent Hinman the first cousin
of Nina Shaw Dunfee.
259. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
260. 1855 Census, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York.
261. 1880 United States Federal
Census for Albany, Albany Co., New York.
262. Greenwood Cemetery
Records, Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
263. 1855 Census, Carlton,
Orleans Co., New York.
264. 1900 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
265. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
266. 1892 Census Orleans
County, New York.
267. Greenwood Cemetery
Records, Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
268. 1850 United States Federal
Census, Carlton, Orleans Co., New York.
269. Greenwood Cemetery
Records, Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
270. 1900 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
271. 1892 Census Orleans
County, New York.
272. 1920 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
273. 1880, United States
Federal Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York (Living with William
Shaw and James Shelry).
274. Greenwood Cemetery
Records, Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
275. 1920 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
276. Greenwood Cemetery
Records, Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
277. 1900 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
278. Greenwood Cemetery
Records, Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
279. 1920 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
280. Greenwood Cemetery
Records, Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
281. 1900 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
282. Greenwood Cemetery
Records, Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
283. 1920 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
284. 1930 United States Federal
Census for (Kendall Road South) Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
285. Greenwood Cemetery
Records, Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
286. 1900 United States Federal
Census for Kendall, Orleans Co., New York.
287. Greenwood Cemetery
Records, Town of Kendall, Orleans County, New York.
288. Family Record of Frank
Aronoff.
289. A Short History of the
Family of Black and Kindred Families, by Edgar O. Black & Beverly
Mary Black (Belser).
|