Matches 101,701 to 101,750 of 122,413
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101701 | Name: John Vernon Mercer Birth Date: 28 Sep 1850 Birth Place: Ohio Death Date: 11 Dec 1943 Death Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Burial Date: 13 Dec 1943 Burial Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Cemetery Name: Vermont Cemetery Death Age: 93 Occupation: Retired Farmer Race: White Marital Status: M Gender: Male Residence: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Father Name: John Mercer Mother Name: Jane 1st wife: Sarah R. Stafford, married Mar 13, 1873 in Fulton County, Illinois. She preceeded him in death. 2nd wife; Effie (maiden name unknown) They were married late in life in the mid 1930's. | MERCER, John Vernon (I123236)
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101702 | Name: John Vernon Mercer Birth Date: 28 Sep 1850 Birth Place: Ohio Death Date: 11 Dec 1943 Death Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Burial Date: 13 Dec 1943 Burial Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Cemetery Name: Vermont Cemetery Death Age: 93 Occupation: Retired Farmer Race: White Marital Status: M Gender: Male Residence: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Father Name: John Mercer Mother Name: Jane 1st wife: Sarah R. Stafford, married Mar 13, 1873 in Fulton County, Illinois. She preceeded him in death. 2nd wife; Effie (maiden name unknown) They were married late in life in the mid 1930's. | MERCER, John Vernon (I123236)
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101703 | Name: John Vernon Mercer Birth Date: 28 Sep 1850 Birth Place: Ohio Death Date: 11 Dec 1943 Death Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Burial Date: 13 Dec 1943 Burial Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Cemetery Name: Vermont Cemetery Death Age: 93 Occupation: Retired Farmer Race: White Marital Status: M Gender: Male Residence: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Father Name: John Mercer Mother Name: Jane 1st wife: Sarah R. Stafford, married Mar 13, 1873 in Fulton County, Illinois. She preceeded him in death. 2nd wife; Effie (maiden name unknown) They were married late in life in the mid 1930's. | MERCER, John Vernon (I123236)
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101704 | Name: John Vernon Mercer Birth Date: 28 Sep 1850 Birth Place: Ohio Death Date: 11 Dec 1943 Death Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Burial Date: 13 Dec 1943 Burial Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Cemetery Name: Vermont Cemetery Death Age: 93 Occupation: Retired Farmer Race: White Marital Status: M Gender: Male Residence: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Father Name: John Mercer Mother Name: Jane 1st wife: Sarah R. Stafford, married Mar 13, 1873 in Fulton County, Illinois. She preceeded him in death. 2nd wife; Effie (maiden name unknown) They were married late in life in the mid 1930's. | MERCER, John Vernon (I123236)
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101705 | Name: John Vernon Mercer Birth Date: 28 Sep 1850 Birth Place: Ohio Death Date: 11 Dec 1943 Death Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Burial Date: 13 Dec 1943 Burial Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Cemetery Name: Vermont Cemetery Death Age: 93 Occupation: Retired Farmer Race: White Marital Status: M Gender: Male Residence: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Father Name: John Mercer Mother Name: Jane 1st wife: Sarah R. Stafford, married Mar 13, 1873 in Fulton County, Illinois. She preceeded him in death. 2nd wife; Effie (maiden name unknown) They were married late in life in the mid 1930's. | MERCER, John Vernon (I123236)
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101706 | Name: John Vernon Mercer Birth Date: 28 Sep 1850 Birth Place: Ohio Death Date: 11 Dec 1943 Death Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Burial Date: 13 Dec 1943 Burial Place: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Cemetery Name: Vermont Cemetery Death Age: 93 Occupation: Retired Farmer Race: White Marital Status: M Gender: Male Residence: Vermont, Fulton, Illinois Father Name: John Mercer Mother Name: Jane 1st wife: Sarah R. Stafford, married Mar 13, 1873 in Fulton County, Illinois. She preceeded him in death. 2nd wife; Effie (maiden name unknown) They were married late in life in the mid 1930's. | MERCER, John Vernon (I123236)
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101707 | Name: Joseph Cook Given Name: Joseph Surname: Cook Sex: M Note: The Cook family left Douglas for Hardwick, MA shortly after Joseph was born. His two sisters were born there. By 1788 Joseph Cook was married and living in Cummington /Plainfield, MA. Leah Beal, his mother-in-law was recovering from a near drowning in the Conway River;and the Cooks become guardian of the youngest brother Joseph Beal from1784 to 1788 and took him into their home in Plainfield, MA. This is from a letter Beal wrote in 1861. The Cooks resided in Plainfield until at least 1789. While living there he met Caleb Agard, a landbroker, from whom he purchased farm acreage in Pawlet, VT First of several farm lands in Pawlet, VT purchased in 1790 from Philip Reed, followed by a second purchase of land in Pawlet 1791 fromCaleb Agard [who had married Lydia Ford of Plainfield, MA.]. Admitted into membership of the Pawlet Congregational Church on March 31, 1796, and baptised as an adult with his sons the following July. Chosen a town juror in 1796. Signed a petition in Aug 1, 1812 with thirteen others to the pastor of the Pawlet Congregational Church to protest the formation of a secret society to 'overthrow the gov't' by eight fellow parisioners. The society turned out to be the Freemasons with sympathies to the short-lived Wahington Benevolant Society; and the Pastor was one of them. 1814- Joseph Cook and family moved from Pawlet, VT to Williamson,Ontario Co. (later Wayne Co), NY in stages between 1813-1815. 1816 Joseph Cook dies in Williamson, Ontario Co, NY, but his widow ELEANOR - not Sarah - petitions the court to name his sons John and Seth Beal to handle the estate as the nearest relatives. Sarah Cook was still alive, and whether this was a mistake or that they divorced and he remarried is not known. He appears on the Williamson tax rollsof 1815, but the tax rolls of 1816 indicate his lands had been distributed to unnamed heirs. Birth: 11 NOV 1760 in Douglas, Worcester Co., MA Death: SEP 1816 in Williamson, Ontario Co., NY CHRA: JUL 1795 Congregational Church, Pawlet, VT Occupation: mainly a farmer, but also operated a saw mill and a grist mill. BET 1796 AND 1808 Dorset, Bennington Co., VT PROP: 127 acres valued at $882.00 and taxed for $3.98 1816 Williamson, Ontario Co., NY Event: Petition 6 OCT 1797 Note: as one of many local signatories to plead against the creation of a planned new town north of Pawlet, as it would create too much competition. Father: John Cook b: 28 DEC 1727 in Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., MA Mother: Anna b: ABT 1729 Marriage 1 Sarah Beal b: ABT 1761 in Conway, Franklin Co., MA Married: ABT 1783 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Children Amos Cook b: ABT 1786 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Seth Beal Cook b: 1788 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA John Cook b: 1790 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Joseph Cook b: ABT 1793 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Samuel Fowler Cook b: 16 JUN 1795 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Bernard Cook b: 1797 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Chester Cook b: 1800 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Sarah (Sally) Cook b: 1803 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT | COOK, Joseph (I113214)
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101708 | Name: Joseph Cook Given Name: Joseph Surname: Cook Sex: M Note: The Cook family left Douglas for Hardwick, MA shortly after Joseph was born. His two sisters were born there. By 1788 Joseph Cook was married and living in Cummington /Plainfield, MA. Leah Beal, his mother-in-law was recovering from a near drowning in the Conway River;and the Cooks become guardian of the youngest brother Joseph Beal from1784 to 1788 and took him into their home in Plainfield, MA. This is from a letter Beal wrote in 1861. The Cooks resided in Plainfield until at least 1789. While living there he met Caleb Agard, a landbroker, from whom he purchased farm acreage in Pawlet, VT First of several farm lands in Pawlet, VT purchased in 1790 from Philip Reed, followed by a second purchase of land in Pawlet 1791 fromCaleb Agard [who had married Lydia Ford of Plainfield, MA.]. Admitted into membership of the Pawlet Congregational Church on March 31, 1796, and baptised as an adult with his sons the following July. Chosen a town juror in 1796. Signed a petition in Aug 1, 1812 with thirteen others to the pastor of the Pawlet Congregational Church to protest the formation of a secret society to 'overthrow the gov't' by eight fellow parisioners. The society turned out to be the Freemasons with sympathies to the short-lived Wahington Benevolant Society; and the Pastor was one of them. 1814- Joseph Cook and family moved from Pawlet, VT to Williamson,Ontario Co. (later Wayne Co), NY in stages between 1813-1815. 1816 Joseph Cook dies in Williamson, Ontario Co, NY, but his widow ELEANOR - not Sarah - petitions the court to name his sons John and Seth Beal to handle the estate as the nearest relatives. Sarah Cook was still alive, and whether this was a mistake or that they divorced and he remarried is not known. He appears on the Williamson tax rollsof 1815, but the tax rolls of 1816 indicate his lands had been distributed to unnamed heirs. Birth: 11 NOV 1760 in Douglas, Worcester Co., MA Death: SEP 1816 in Williamson, Ontario Co., NY CHRA: JUL 1795 Congregational Church, Pawlet, VT Occupation: mainly a farmer, but also operated a saw mill and a grist mill. BET 1796 AND 1808 Dorset, Bennington Co., VT PROP: 127 acres valued at $882.00 and taxed for $3.98 1816 Williamson, Ontario Co., NY Event: Petition 6 OCT 1797 Note: as one of many local signatories to plead against the creation of a planned new town north of Pawlet, as it would create too much competition. Father: John Cook b: 28 DEC 1727 in Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., MA Mother: Anna b: ABT 1729 Marriage 1 Sarah Beal b: ABT 1761 in Conway, Franklin Co., MA Married: ABT 1783 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Children Amos Cook b: ABT 1786 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Seth Beal Cook b: 1788 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA John Cook b: 1790 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Joseph Cook b: ABT 1793 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Samuel Fowler Cook b: 16 JUN 1795 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Bernard Cook b: 1797 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Chester Cook b: 1800 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Sarah (Sally) Cook b: 1803 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT | COOK, Joseph (I113214)
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101709 | Name: Joseph Cook Given Name: Joseph Surname: Cook Sex: M Note: The Cook family left Douglas for Hardwick, MA shortly after Joseph was born. His two sisters were born there. By 1788 Joseph Cook was married and living in Cummington /Plainfield, MA. Leah Beal, his mother-in-law was recovering from a near drowning in the Conway River;and the Cooks become guardian of the youngest brother Joseph Beal from1784 to 1788 and took him into their home in Plainfield, MA. This is from a letter Beal wrote in 1861. The Cooks resided in Plainfield until at least 1789. While living there he met Caleb Agard, a landbroker, from whom he purchased farm acreage in Pawlet, VT First of several farm lands in Pawlet, VT purchased in 1790 from Philip Reed, followed by a second purchase of land in Pawlet 1791 fromCaleb Agard [who had married Lydia Ford of Plainfield, MA.]. Admitted into membership of the Pawlet Congregational Church on March 31, 1796, and baptised as an adult with his sons the following July. Chosen a town juror in 1796. Signed a petition in Aug 1, 1812 with thirteen others to the pastor of the Pawlet Congregational Church to protest the formation of a secret society to 'overthrow the gov't' by eight fellow parisioners. The society turned out to be the Freemasons with sympathies to the short-lived Wahington Benevolant Society; and the Pastor was one of them. 1814- Joseph Cook and family moved from Pawlet, VT to Williamson,Ontario Co. (later Wayne Co), NY in stages between 1813-1815. 1816 Joseph Cook dies in Williamson, Ontario Co, NY, but his widow ELEANOR - not Sarah - petitions the court to name his sons John and Seth Beal to handle the estate as the nearest relatives. Sarah Cook was still alive, and whether this was a mistake or that they divorced and he remarried is not known. He appears on the Williamson tax rollsof 1815, but the tax rolls of 1816 indicate his lands had been distributed to unnamed heirs. Birth: 11 NOV 1760 in Douglas, Worcester Co., MA Death: SEP 1816 in Williamson, Ontario Co., NY CHRA: JUL 1795 Congregational Church, Pawlet, VT Occupation: mainly a farmer, but also operated a saw mill and a grist mill. BET 1796 AND 1808 Dorset, Bennington Co., VT PROP: 127 acres valued at $882.00 and taxed for $3.98 1816 Williamson, Ontario Co., NY Event: Petition 6 OCT 1797 Note: as one of many local signatories to plead against the creation of a planned new town north of Pawlet, as it would create too much competition. Father: John Cook b: 28 DEC 1727 in Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., MA Mother: Anna b: ABT 1729 Marriage 1 Sarah Beal b: ABT 1761 in Conway, Franklin Co., MA Married: ABT 1783 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Children Amos Cook b: ABT 1786 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Seth Beal Cook b: 1788 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA John Cook b: 1790 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Joseph Cook b: ABT 1793 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Samuel Fowler Cook b: 16 JUN 1795 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Bernard Cook b: 1797 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Chester Cook b: 1800 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Sarah (Sally) Cook b: 1803 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT | COOK, Joseph (I113214)
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101710 | Name: Joseph Cook Given Name: Joseph Surname: Cook Sex: M Note: The Cook family left Douglas for Hardwick, MA shortly after Joseph was born. His two sisters were born there. By 1788 Joseph Cook was married and living in Cummington /Plainfield, MA. Leah Beal, his mother-in-law was recovering from a near drowning in the Conway River;and the Cooks become guardian of the youngest brother Joseph Beal from1784 to 1788 and took him into their home in Plainfield, MA. This is from a letter Beal wrote in 1861. The Cooks resided in Plainfield until at least 1789. While living there he met Caleb Agard, a landbroker, from whom he purchased farm acreage in Pawlet, VT First of several farm lands in Pawlet, VT purchased in 1790 from Philip Reed, followed by a second purchase of land in Pawlet 1791 fromCaleb Agard [who had married Lydia Ford of Plainfield, MA.]. Admitted into membership of the Pawlet Congregational Church on March 31, 1796, and baptised as an adult with his sons the following July. Chosen a town juror in 1796. Signed a petition in Aug 1, 1812 with thirteen others to the pastor of the Pawlet Congregational Church to protest the formation of a secret society to 'overthrow the gov't' by eight fellow parisioners. The society turned out to be the Freemasons with sympathies to the short-lived Wahington Benevolant Society; and the Pastor was one of them. 1814- Joseph Cook and family moved from Pawlet, VT to Williamson,Ontario Co. (later Wayne Co), NY in stages between 1813-1815. 1816 Joseph Cook dies in Williamson, Ontario Co, NY, but his widow ELEANOR - not Sarah - petitions the court to name his sons John and Seth Beal to handle the estate as the nearest relatives. Sarah Cook was still alive, and whether this was a mistake or that they divorced and he remarried is not known. He appears on the Williamson tax rollsof 1815, but the tax rolls of 1816 indicate his lands had been distributed to unnamed heirs. Birth: 11 NOV 1760 in Douglas, Worcester Co., MA Death: SEP 1816 in Williamson, Ontario Co., NY CHRA: JUL 1795 Congregational Church, Pawlet, VT Occupation: mainly a farmer, but also operated a saw mill and a grist mill. BET 1796 AND 1808 Dorset, Bennington Co., VT PROP: 127 acres valued at $882.00 and taxed for $3.98 1816 Williamson, Ontario Co., NY Event: Petition 6 OCT 1797 Note: as one of many local signatories to plead against the creation of a planned new town north of Pawlet, as it would create too much competition. Father: John Cook b: 28 DEC 1727 in Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., MA Mother: Anna b: ABT 1729 Marriage 1 Sarah Beal b: ABT 1761 in Conway, Franklin Co., MA Married: ABT 1783 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Children Amos Cook b: ABT 1786 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Seth Beal Cook b: 1788 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA John Cook b: 1790 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Joseph Cook b: ABT 1793 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Samuel Fowler Cook b: 16 JUN 1795 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Bernard Cook b: 1797 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Chester Cook b: 1800 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Sarah (Sally) Cook b: 1803 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT | COOK, Joseph (I113214)
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101711 | Name: Joseph Cook Given Name: Joseph Surname: Cook Sex: M Note: The Cook family left Douglas for Hardwick, MA shortly after Joseph was born. His two sisters were born there. By 1788 Joseph Cook was married and living in Cummington /Plainfield, MA. Leah Beal, his mother-in-law was recovering from a near drowning in the Conway River;and the Cooks become guardian of the youngest brother Joseph Beal from1784 to 1788 and took him into their home in Plainfield, MA. This is from a letter Beal wrote in 1861. The Cooks resided in Plainfield until at least 1789. While living there he met Caleb Agard, a landbroker, from whom he purchased farm acreage in Pawlet, VT First of several farm lands in Pawlet, VT purchased in 1790 from Philip Reed, followed by a second purchase of land in Pawlet 1791 fromCaleb Agard [who had married Lydia Ford of Plainfield, MA.]. Admitted into membership of the Pawlet Congregational Church on March 31, 1796, and baptised as an adult with his sons the following July. Chosen a town juror in 1796. Signed a petition in Aug 1, 1812 with thirteen others to the pastor of the Pawlet Congregational Church to protest the formation of a secret society to 'overthrow the gov't' by eight fellow parisioners. The society turned out to be the Freemasons with sympathies to the short-lived Wahington Benevolant Society; and the Pastor was one of them. 1814- Joseph Cook and family moved from Pawlet, VT to Williamson,Ontario Co. (later Wayne Co), NY in stages between 1813-1815. 1816 Joseph Cook dies in Williamson, Ontario Co, NY, but his widow ELEANOR - not Sarah - petitions the court to name his sons John and Seth Beal to handle the estate as the nearest relatives. Sarah Cook was still alive, and whether this was a mistake or that they divorced and he remarried is not known. He appears on the Williamson tax rollsof 1815, but the tax rolls of 1816 indicate his lands had been distributed to unnamed heirs. Birth: 11 NOV 1760 in Douglas, Worcester Co., MA Death: SEP 1816 in Williamson, Ontario Co., NY CHRA: JUL 1795 Congregational Church, Pawlet, VT Occupation: mainly a farmer, but also operated a saw mill and a grist mill. BET 1796 AND 1808 Dorset, Bennington Co., VT PROP: 127 acres valued at $882.00 and taxed for $3.98 1816 Williamson, Ontario Co., NY Event: Petition 6 OCT 1797 Note: as one of many local signatories to plead against the creation of a planned new town north of Pawlet, as it would create too much competition. Father: John Cook b: 28 DEC 1727 in Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., MA Mother: Anna b: ABT 1729 Marriage 1 Sarah Beal b: ABT 1761 in Conway, Franklin Co., MA Married: ABT 1783 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Children Amos Cook b: ABT 1786 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Seth Beal Cook b: 1788 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA John Cook b: 1790 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Joseph Cook b: ABT 1793 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Samuel Fowler Cook b: 16 JUN 1795 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Bernard Cook b: 1797 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Chester Cook b: 1800 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Sarah (Sally) Cook b: 1803 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT | COOK, Joseph (I113214)
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101712 | Name: Joseph Cook Given Name: Joseph Surname: Cook Sex: M Note: The Cook family left Douglas for Hardwick, MA shortly after Joseph was born. His two sisters were born there. By 1788 Joseph Cook was married and living in Cummington /Plainfield, MA. Leah Beal, his mother-in-law was recovering from a near drowning in the Conway River;and the Cooks become guardian of the youngest brother Joseph Beal from1784 to 1788 and took him into their home in Plainfield, MA. This is from a letter Beal wrote in 1861. The Cooks resided in Plainfield until at least 1789. While living there he met Caleb Agard, a landbroker, from whom he purchased farm acreage in Pawlet, VT First of several farm lands in Pawlet, VT purchased in 1790 from Philip Reed, followed by a second purchase of land in Pawlet 1791 fromCaleb Agard [who had married Lydia Ford of Plainfield, MA.]. Admitted into membership of the Pawlet Congregational Church on March 31, 1796, and baptised as an adult with his sons the following July. Chosen a town juror in 1796. Signed a petition in Aug 1, 1812 with thirteen others to the pastor of the Pawlet Congregational Church to protest the formation of a secret society to 'overthrow the gov't' by eight fellow parisioners. The society turned out to be the Freemasons with sympathies to the short-lived Wahington Benevolant Society; and the Pastor was one of them. 1814- Joseph Cook and family moved from Pawlet, VT to Williamson,Ontario Co. (later Wayne Co), NY in stages between 1813-1815. 1816 Joseph Cook dies in Williamson, Ontario Co, NY, but his widow ELEANOR - not Sarah - petitions the court to name his sons John and Seth Beal to handle the estate as the nearest relatives. Sarah Cook was still alive, and whether this was a mistake or that they divorced and he remarried is not known. He appears on the Williamson tax rollsof 1815, but the tax rolls of 1816 indicate his lands had been distributed to unnamed heirs. Birth: 11 NOV 1760 in Douglas, Worcester Co., MA Death: SEP 1816 in Williamson, Ontario Co., NY CHRA: JUL 1795 Congregational Church, Pawlet, VT Occupation: mainly a farmer, but also operated a saw mill and a grist mill. BET 1796 AND 1808 Dorset, Bennington Co., VT PROP: 127 acres valued at $882.00 and taxed for $3.98 1816 Williamson, Ontario Co., NY Event: Petition 6 OCT 1797 Note: as one of many local signatories to plead against the creation of a planned new town north of Pawlet, as it would create too much competition. Father: John Cook b: 28 DEC 1727 in Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., MA Mother: Anna b: ABT 1729 Marriage 1 Sarah Beal b: ABT 1761 in Conway, Franklin Co., MA Married: ABT 1783 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Children Amos Cook b: ABT 1786 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Seth Beal Cook b: 1788 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA John Cook b: 1790 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Joseph Cook b: ABT 1793 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Samuel Fowler Cook b: 16 JUN 1795 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Bernard Cook b: 1797 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Chester Cook b: 1800 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Sarah (Sally) Cook b: 1803 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT | COOK, Joseph (I113214)
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101713 | Name: Joseph Cook Given Name: Joseph Surname: Cook Sex: M Note: The Cook family left Douglas for Hardwick, MA shortly after Joseph was born. His two sisters were born there. By 1788 Joseph Cook was married and living in Cummington /Plainfield, MA. Leah Beal, his mother-in-law was recovering from a near drowning in the Conway River;and the Cooks become guardian of the youngest brother Joseph Beal from1784 to 1788 and took him into their home in Plainfield, MA. This is from a letter Beal wrote in 1861. The Cooks resided in Plainfield until at least 1789. While living there he met Caleb Agard, a landbroker, from whom he purchased farm acreage in Pawlet, VT First of several farm lands in Pawlet, VT purchased in 1790 from Philip Reed, followed by a second purchase of land in Pawlet 1791 fromCaleb Agard [who had married Lydia Ford of Plainfield, MA.]. Admitted into membership of the Pawlet Congregational Church on March 31, 1796, and baptised as an adult with his sons the following July. Chosen a town juror in 1796. Signed a petition in Aug 1, 1812 with thirteen others to the pastor of the Pawlet Congregational Church to protest the formation of a secret society to 'overthrow the gov't' by eight fellow parisioners. The society turned out to be the Freemasons with sympathies to the short-lived Wahington Benevolant Society; and the Pastor was one of them. 1814- Joseph Cook and family moved from Pawlet, VT to Williamson,Ontario Co. (later Wayne Co), NY in stages between 1813-1815. 1816 Joseph Cook dies in Williamson, Ontario Co, NY, but his widow ELEANOR - not Sarah - petitions the court to name his sons John and Seth Beal to handle the estate as the nearest relatives. Sarah Cook was still alive, and whether this was a mistake or that they divorced and he remarried is not known. He appears on the Williamson tax rollsof 1815, but the tax rolls of 1816 indicate his lands had been distributed to unnamed heirs. Birth: 11 NOV 1760 in Douglas, Worcester Co., MA Death: SEP 1816 in Williamson, Ontario Co., NY CHRA: JUL 1795 Congregational Church, Pawlet, VT Occupation: mainly a farmer, but also operated a saw mill and a grist mill. BET 1796 AND 1808 Dorset, Bennington Co., VT PROP: 127 acres valued at $882.00 and taxed for $3.98 1816 Williamson, Ontario Co., NY Event: Petition 6 OCT 1797 Note: as one of many local signatories to plead against the creation of a planned new town north of Pawlet, as it would create too much competition. Father: John Cook b: 28 DEC 1727 in Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., MA Mother: Anna b: ABT 1729 Marriage 1 Sarah Beal b: ABT 1761 in Conway, Franklin Co., MA Married: ABT 1783 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Children Amos Cook b: ABT 1786 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Seth Beal Cook b: 1788 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA John Cook b: 1790 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Joseph Cook b: ABT 1793 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Samuel Fowler Cook b: 16 JUN 1795 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Bernard Cook b: 1797 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Chester Cook b: 1800 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Sarah (Sally) Cook b: 1803 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT | COOK, Joseph (I113214)
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101714 | Name: Joseph Cook Given Name: Joseph Surname: Cook Sex: M Note: The Cook family left Douglas for Hardwick, MA shortly after Joseph was born. His two sisters were born there. By 1788 Joseph Cook was married and living in Cummington /Plainfield, MA. Leah Beal, his mother-in-law was recovering from a near drowning in the Conway River;and the Cooks become guardian of the youngest brother Joseph Beal from1784 to 1788 and took him into their home in Plainfield, MA. This is from a letter Beal wrote in 1861. The Cooks resided in Plainfield until at least 1789. While living there he met Caleb Agard, a landbroker, from whom he purchased farm acreage in Pawlet, VT First of several farm lands in Pawlet, VT purchased in 1790 from Philip Reed, followed by a second purchase of land in Pawlet 1791 fromCaleb Agard [who had married Lydia Ford of Plainfield, MA.]. Admitted into membership of the Pawlet Congregational Church on March 31, 1796, and baptised as an adult with his sons the following July. Chosen a town juror in 1796. Signed a petition in Aug 1, 1812 with thirteen others to the pastor of the Pawlet Congregational Church to protest the formation of a secret society to 'overthrow the gov't' by eight fellow parisioners. The society turned out to be the Freemasons with sympathies to the short-lived Wahington Benevolant Society; and the Pastor was one of them. 1814- Joseph Cook and family moved from Pawlet, VT to Williamson,Ontario Co. (later Wayne Co), NY in stages between 1813-1815. 1816 Joseph Cook dies in Williamson, Ontario Co, NY, but his widow ELEANOR - not Sarah - petitions the court to name his sons John and Seth Beal to handle the estate as the nearest relatives. Sarah Cook was still alive, and whether this was a mistake or that they divorced and he remarried is not known. He appears on the Williamson tax rollsof 1815, but the tax rolls of 1816 indicate his lands had been distributed to unnamed heirs. Birth: 11 NOV 1760 in Douglas, Worcester Co., MA Death: SEP 1816 in Williamson, Ontario Co., NY CHRA: JUL 1795 Congregational Church, Pawlet, VT Occupation: mainly a farmer, but also operated a saw mill and a grist mill. BET 1796 AND 1808 Dorset, Bennington Co., VT PROP: 127 acres valued at $882.00 and taxed for $3.98 1816 Williamson, Ontario Co., NY Event: Petition 6 OCT 1797 Note: as one of many local signatories to plead against the creation of a planned new town north of Pawlet, as it would create too much competition. Father: John Cook b: 28 DEC 1727 in Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., MA Mother: Anna b: ABT 1729 Marriage 1 Sarah Beal b: ABT 1761 in Conway, Franklin Co., MA Married: ABT 1783 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Children Amos Cook b: ABT 1786 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Seth Beal Cook b: 1788 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA John Cook b: 1790 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Joseph Cook b: ABT 1793 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Samuel Fowler Cook b: 16 JUN 1795 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Bernard Cook b: 1797 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Chester Cook b: 1800 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Sarah (Sally) Cook b: 1803 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT | COOK, Joseph (I113214)
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101715 | Name: Joseph Cook Given Name: Joseph Surname: Cook Sex: M Note: The Cook family left Douglas for Hardwick, MA shortly after Joseph was born. His two sisters were born there. By 1788 Joseph Cook was married and living in Cummington /Plainfield, MA. Leah Beal, his mother-in-law was recovering from a near drowning in the Conway River;and the Cooks become guardian of the youngest brother Joseph Beal from1784 to 1788 and took him into their home in Plainfield, MA. This is from a letter Beal wrote in 1861. The Cooks resided in Plainfield until at least 1789. While living there he met Caleb Agard, a landbroker, from whom he purchased farm acreage in Pawlet, VT First of several farm lands in Pawlet, VT purchased in 1790 from Philip Reed, followed by a second purchase of land in Pawlet 1791 fromCaleb Agard [who had married Lydia Ford of Plainfield, MA.]. Admitted into membership of the Pawlet Congregational Church on March 31, 1796, and baptised as an adult with his sons the following July. Chosen a town juror in 1796. Signed a petition in Aug 1, 1812 with thirteen others to the pastor of the Pawlet Congregational Church to protest the formation of a secret society to 'overthrow the gov't' by eight fellow parisioners. The society turned out to be the Freemasons with sympathies to the short-lived Wahington Benevolant Society; and the Pastor was one of them. 1814- Joseph Cook and family moved from Pawlet, VT to Williamson,Ontario Co. (later Wayne Co), NY in stages between 1813-1815. 1816 Joseph Cook dies in Williamson, Ontario Co, NY, but his widow ELEANOR - not Sarah - petitions the court to name his sons John and Seth Beal to handle the estate as the nearest relatives. Sarah Cook was still alive, and whether this was a mistake or that they divorced and he remarried is not known. He appears on the Williamson tax rollsof 1815, but the tax rolls of 1816 indicate his lands had been distributed to unnamed heirs. Birth: 11 NOV 1760 in Douglas, Worcester Co., MA Death: SEP 1816 in Williamson, Ontario Co., NY CHRA: JUL 1795 Congregational Church, Pawlet, VT Occupation: mainly a farmer, but also operated a saw mill and a grist mill. BET 1796 AND 1808 Dorset, Bennington Co., VT PROP: 127 acres valued at $882.00 and taxed for $3.98 1816 Williamson, Ontario Co., NY Event: Petition 6 OCT 1797 Note: as one of many local signatories to plead against the creation of a planned new town north of Pawlet, as it would create too much competition. Father: John Cook b: 28 DEC 1727 in Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., MA Mother: Anna b: ABT 1729 Marriage 1 Sarah Beal b: ABT 1761 in Conway, Franklin Co., MA Married: ABT 1783 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Children Amos Cook b: ABT 1786 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Seth Beal Cook b: 1788 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA John Cook b: 1790 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Joseph Cook b: ABT 1793 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Samuel Fowler Cook b: 16 JUN 1795 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Bernard Cook b: 1797 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Chester Cook b: 1800 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Sarah (Sally) Cook b: 1803 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT | COOK, Joseph (I113214)
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101716 | Name: Joseph Cook Given Name: Joseph Surname: Cook Sex: M Note: The Cook family left Douglas for Hardwick, MA shortly after Joseph was born. His two sisters were born there. By 1788 Joseph Cook was married and living in Cummington /Plainfield, MA. Leah Beal, his mother-in-law was recovering from a near drowning in the Conway River;and the Cooks become guardian of the youngest brother Joseph Beal from1784 to 1788 and took him into their home in Plainfield, MA. This is from a letter Beal wrote in 1861. The Cooks resided in Plainfield until at least 1789. While living there he met Caleb Agard, a landbroker, from whom he purchased farm acreage in Pawlet, VT First of several farm lands in Pawlet, VT purchased in 1790 from Philip Reed, followed by a second purchase of land in Pawlet 1791 fromCaleb Agard [who had married Lydia Ford of Plainfield, MA.]. Admitted into membership of the Pawlet Congregational Church on March 31, 1796, and baptised as an adult with his sons the following July. Chosen a town juror in 1796. Signed a petition in Aug 1, 1812 with thirteen others to the pastor of the Pawlet Congregational Church to protest the formation of a secret society to 'overthrow the gov't' by eight fellow parisioners. The society turned out to be the Freemasons with sympathies to the short-lived Wahington Benevolant Society; and the Pastor was one of them. 1814- Joseph Cook and family moved from Pawlet, VT to Williamson,Ontario Co. (later Wayne Co), NY in stages between 1813-1815. 1816 Joseph Cook dies in Williamson, Ontario Co, NY, but his widow ELEANOR - not Sarah - petitions the court to name his sons John and Seth Beal to handle the estate as the nearest relatives. Sarah Cook was still alive, and whether this was a mistake or that they divorced and he remarried is not known. He appears on the Williamson tax rollsof 1815, but the tax rolls of 1816 indicate his lands had been distributed to unnamed heirs. Birth: 11 NOV 1760 in Douglas, Worcester Co., MA Death: SEP 1816 in Williamson, Ontario Co., NY CHRA: JUL 1795 Congregational Church, Pawlet, VT Occupation: mainly a farmer, but also operated a saw mill and a grist mill. BET 1796 AND 1808 Dorset, Bennington Co., VT PROP: 127 acres valued at $882.00 and taxed for $3.98 1816 Williamson, Ontario Co., NY Event: Petition 6 OCT 1797 Note: as one of many local signatories to plead against the creation of a planned new town north of Pawlet, as it would create too much competition. Father: John Cook b: 28 DEC 1727 in Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., MA Mother: Anna b: ABT 1729 Marriage 1 Sarah Beal b: ABT 1761 in Conway, Franklin Co., MA Married: ABT 1783 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Children Amos Cook b: ABT 1786 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Seth Beal Cook b: 1788 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA John Cook b: 1790 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Joseph Cook b: ABT 1793 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Samuel Fowler Cook b: 16 JUN 1795 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Bernard Cook b: 1797 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Chester Cook b: 1800 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Sarah (Sally) Cook b: 1803 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT | COOK, Joseph (I113214)
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101717 | Name: Joseph Cook Given Name: Joseph Surname: Cook Sex: M Note: The Cook family left Douglas for Hardwick, MA shortly after Joseph was born. His two sisters were born there. By 1788 Joseph Cook was married and living in Cummington /Plainfield, MA. Leah Beal, his mother-in-law was recovering from a near drowning in the Conway River;and the Cooks become guardian of the youngest brother Joseph Beal from1784 to 1788 and took him into their home in Plainfield, MA. This is from a letter Beal wrote in 1861. The Cooks resided in Plainfield until at least 1789. While living there he met Caleb Agard, a landbroker, from whom he purchased farm acreage in Pawlet, VT First of several farm lands in Pawlet, VT purchased in 1790 from Philip Reed, followed by a second purchase of land in Pawlet 1791 fromCaleb Agard [who had married Lydia Ford of Plainfield, MA.]. Admitted into membership of the Pawlet Congregational Church on March 31, 1796, and baptised as an adult with his sons the following July. Chosen a town juror in 1796. Signed a petition in Aug 1, 1812 with thirteen others to the pastor of the Pawlet Congregational Church to protest the formation of a secret society to 'overthrow the gov't' by eight fellow parisioners. The society turned out to be the Freemasons with sympathies to the short-lived Wahington Benevolant Society; and the Pastor was one of them. 1814- Joseph Cook and family moved from Pawlet, VT to Williamson,Ontario Co. (later Wayne Co), NY in stages between 1813-1815. 1816 Joseph Cook dies in Williamson, Ontario Co, NY, but his widow ELEANOR - not Sarah - petitions the court to name his sons John and Seth Beal to handle the estate as the nearest relatives. Sarah Cook was still alive, and whether this was a mistake or that they divorced and he remarried is not known. He appears on the Williamson tax rollsof 1815, but the tax rolls of 1816 indicate his lands had been distributed to unnamed heirs. Birth: 11 NOV 1760 in Douglas, Worcester Co., MA Death: SEP 1816 in Williamson, Ontario Co., NY CHRA: JUL 1795 Congregational Church, Pawlet, VT Occupation: mainly a farmer, but also operated a saw mill and a grist mill. BET 1796 AND 1808 Dorset, Bennington Co., VT PROP: 127 acres valued at $882.00 and taxed for $3.98 1816 Williamson, Ontario Co., NY Event: Petition 6 OCT 1797 Note: as one of many local signatories to plead against the creation of a planned new town north of Pawlet, as it would create too much competition. Father: John Cook b: 28 DEC 1727 in Hopkinton, Middlesex Co., MA Mother: Anna b: ABT 1729 Marriage 1 Sarah Beal b: ABT 1761 in Conway, Franklin Co., MA Married: ABT 1783 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Children Amos Cook b: ABT 1786 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA Seth Beal Cook b: 1788 in probably Plainfield, Hampshire Co., MA John Cook b: 1790 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Joseph Cook b: ABT 1793 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Samuel Fowler Cook b: 16 JUN 1795 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Bernard Cook b: 1797 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Chester Cook b: 1800 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT Sarah (Sally) Cook b: 1803 in Pawlet, Rutland Co., VT | COOK, Joseph (I113214)
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101718 | Name: Joseph Patrick Mallon Race: white Address: 1211 Laurens St., Baltimore Birth Place: Baltimore, Md. Birth Date: 29 Jul 1898 Comment: NRF 9/12/18 app sea; yeo 3c 12/1/18, 1 Sec 5 Naval Dist 10/23/18, Inact 1/22/19 Maryland in the World War 1917-1919 Military and Naval Service Records In Two Volumes and Case of Maps Volume II | Mallon, Joseph P. Micheal J. (I24)
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101719 | Name: Kemper Winsborough YANCEY 1 Sex: M Birth: 2 JUN 1887 in VA Death: 17 FEB 1957 Residence: Washington DC Census: 1900 Harrisonburg, Rockingham Co., VA, age 12 Census: 1910 Harrisonburg, Rockingham Co., VA, age 22 Census: 1930 Houston, Harris Co., TX, age 42, Life Insurance Agent Burial: Woodbine Cemetery, Harrisonburg, Rockingham Co., VA Father: William Lewis YANCEY b: 24 NOV 1860 in VA Mother: Mary Ashby GIBBONS b: 16 MAR 1862 in VA Marriage 1 Edith January STAFFORD b: 1 OCT 1890 in TX Married: 15 OCT 1912 in Harris Co., TX Children Mary Elizabeth YANCEY b: 12 SEP 1913 in VA Laura YANCEY b: ABT. 1924 in DC | YANCEY, Kemper Winsborough (I67274)
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101720 | Name: Leslie J Stafford Age: 50 Estimated birth year: abt 1890 Gender: Male Race: White Birthplace: Kentucky Marital Status: Married Relation to Head of House: Head Home in 1940: Catlettsburg, Boyd, Kentucky Map of Home in 1940: View Map Street: Oakland Avenue House Number: 1332 Inferred Residence in 1935: Catlettsburg, Boyd, Kentucky Residence in 1935: Same House Sheet Number: 6A Number of Household in Order of Visitation: 149 Occupation: Proprietor House Owned or Rented: Owned Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented: 2500 Attended School or College: No Highest Grade Completed: Elementary school, 8th grade Hours Worked Week Prior to Census: 60 Class of Worker: Employer Weeks Worked in 1939: 52 Income: 0 Income Other Sources: Yes Neighbors: View others on page Household Members: Name Age Leslie J Stafford 50 Florence Stafford 48 Charles E Stafford 20 George C Stafford 16 Paul Stafford 14 | Family F28229
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101721 | Name: Leslie J Stafford Age: 50 Estimated birth year: abt 1890 Gender: Male Race: White Birthplace: Kentucky Marital Status: Married Relation to Head of House: Head Home in 1940: Catlettsburg, Boyd, Kentucky Map of Home in 1940: View Map Street: Oakland Avenue House Number: 1332 Inferred Residence in 1935: Catlettsburg, Boyd, Kentucky Residence in 1935: Same House Sheet Number: 6A Number of Household in Order of Visitation: 149 Occupation: Proprietor House Owned or Rented: Owned Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented: 2500 Attended School or College: No Highest Grade Completed: Elementary school, 8th grade Hours Worked Week Prior to Census: 60 Class of Worker: Employer Weeks Worked in 1939: 52 Income: 0 Income Other Sources: Yes Neighbors: View others on page Household Members: Name Age Leslie J Stafford 50 Florence Stafford 48 Charles E Stafford 20 George C Stafford 16 Paul Stafford 14 | Family F28229
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101722 | Name: Leslie J Stafford Age: 50 Estimated birth year: abt 1890 Gender: Male Race: White Birthplace: Kentucky Marital Status: Married Relation to Head of House: Head Home in 1940: Catlettsburg, Boyd, Kentucky Map of Home in 1940: View Map Street: Oakland Avenue House Number: 1332 Inferred Residence in 1935: Catlettsburg, Boyd, Kentucky Residence in 1935: Same House Sheet Number: 6A Number of Household in Order of Visitation: 149 Occupation: Proprietor House Owned or Rented: Owned Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented: 2500 Attended School or College: No Highest Grade Completed: Elementary school, 8th grade Hours Worked Week Prior to Census: 60 Class of Worker: Employer Weeks Worked in 1939: 52 Income: 0 Income Other Sources: Yes Neighbors: View others on page Household Members: Name Age Leslie J Stafford 50 Florence Stafford 48 Charles E Stafford 20 George C Stafford 16 Paul Stafford 14 | Family F28229
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101723 | Name: Leslie J Stafford Age: 50 Estimated birth year: abt 1890 Gender: Male Race: White Birthplace: Kentucky Marital Status: Married Relation to Head of House: Head Home in 1940: Catlettsburg, Boyd, Kentucky Map of Home in 1940: View Map Street: Oakland Avenue House Number: 1332 Inferred Residence in 1935: Catlettsburg, Boyd, Kentucky Residence in 1935: Same House Sheet Number: 6A Number of Household in Order of Visitation: 149 Occupation: Proprietor House Owned or Rented: Owned Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented: 2500 Attended School or College: No Highest Grade Completed: Elementary school, 8th grade Hours Worked Week Prior to Census: 60 Class of Worker: Employer Weeks Worked in 1939: 52 Income: 0 Income Other Sources: Yes Neighbors: View others on page Household Members: Name Age Leslie J Stafford 50 Florence Stafford 48 Charles E Stafford 20 George C Stafford 16 Paul Stafford 14 | Family F28229
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101724 | Name: Leslie J Stafford Age: 50 Estimated birth year: abt 1890 Gender: Male Race: White Birthplace: Kentucky Marital Status: Married Relation to Head of House: Head Home in 1940: Catlettsburg, Boyd, Kentucky Map of Home in 1940: View Map Street: Oakland Avenue House Number: 1332 Inferred Residence in 1935: Catlettsburg, Boyd, Kentucky Residence in 1935: Same House Sheet Number: 6A Number of Household in Order of Visitation: 149 Occupation: Proprietor House Owned or Rented: Owned Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented: 2500 Attended School or College: No Highest Grade Completed: Elementary school, 8th grade Hours Worked Week Prior to Census: 60 Class of Worker: Employer Weeks Worked in 1939: 52 Income: 0 Income Other Sources: Yes Neighbors: View others on page Household Members: Name Age Leslie J Stafford 50 Florence Stafford 48 Charles E Stafford 20 George C Stafford 16 Paul Stafford 14 | Family F28229
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101725 | Name: Lyman Ephraim PELTON Sex: M Birth: 28 MAR 1807 in Otis, MA Death: 19 APR 1903 in Highgate, VT Note: This remarkable man lived for 96 years. As a child with his parents and siblings he lived on the island in Lake Champlain in a town called South Hero, VT. He was a school master for a few years then read law with L . Hazen of Alburg, VT. Admitted to the bar in 1832 he practiced law for more than 50 years winning a case at the age of 92. His first wife was Lucy Alice Hazard whom he married in 1840 she being about 15 years his junior. They had two children the eldest my gr. grfather Myron. Lucy and her third child both died during its birth in 1845. Lyman remarried in 1856 having several more children one a well known physician Rollin Pelton who was born the same year as Lyman's first granddaughter Birtha in 1865, child of Myron. His family photo taken at abt 90 years shows him with a full head of white hair and handsome jawbone beard. Father: Ephraim PELTON b: 22 APR 1771 in Granville, MA Mother: Statira HOLCOMBE b: 1 JUN 1773 in Simsbury, Conn Marriage 1 Lucy Alice HAZARD b: 8 FEB 1821 in Hancock, MA Married: 18 JUN 1840 in Sheldon, Vermont Children Myron Hazard PELTON b: 19 AUG 1841 in Highgate, VT Elsa Delia PELTON b: 2 DEC 1844 Listed as a lawyer with second wife Julina M. and their children. | PELTON, Lyman Ephriam (I62825)
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101726 | Name: Lyman Ephraim PELTON Sex: M Birth: 28 MAR 1807 in Otis, MA Death: 19 APR 1903 in Highgate, VT Note: This remarkable man lived for 96 years. As a child with his parents and siblings he lived on the island in Lake Champlain in a town called South Hero, VT. He was a school master for a few years then read law with L . Hazen of Alburg, VT. Admitted to the bar in 1832 he practiced law for more than 50 years winning a case at the age of 92. His first wife was Lucy Alice Hazard whom he married in 1840 she being about 15 years his junior. They had two children the eldest my gr. grfather Myron. Lucy and her third child both died during its birth in 1845. Lyman remarried in 1856 having several more children one a well known physician Rollin Pelton who was born the same year as Lyman's first granddaughter Birtha in 1865, child of Myron. His family photo taken at abt 90 years shows him with a full head of white hair and handsome jawbone beard. Father: Ephraim PELTON b: 22 APR 1771 in Granville, MA Mother: Statira HOLCOMBE b: 1 JUN 1773 in Simsbury, Conn Marriage 1 Lucy Alice HAZARD b: 8 FEB 1821 in Hancock, MA Married: 18 JUN 1840 in Sheldon, Vermont Children Myron Hazard PELTON b: 19 AUG 1841 in Highgate, VT Elsa Delia PELTON b: 2 DEC 1844 Listed as a lawyer with second wife Julina M. and their children. | PELTON, Lyman Ephriam (I62825)
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101727 | Name: Lyman Ephraim PELTON Sex: M Birth: 28 MAR 1807 in Otis, MA Death: 19 APR 1903 in Highgate, VT Note: This remarkable man lived for 96 years. As a child with his parents and siblings he lived on the island in Lake Champlain in a town called South Hero, VT. He was a school master for a few years then read law with L . Hazen of Alburg, VT. Admitted to the bar in 1832 he practiced law for more than 50 years winning a case at the age of 92. His first wife was Lucy Alice Hazard whom he married in 1840 she being about 15 years his junior. They had two children the eldest my gr. grfather Myron. Lucy and her third child both died during its birth in 1845. Lyman remarried in 1856 having several more children one a well known physician Rollin Pelton who was born the same year as Lyman's first granddaughter Birtha in 1865, child of Myron. His family photo taken at abt 90 years shows him with a full head of white hair and handsome jawbone beard. Father: Ephraim PELTON b: 22 APR 1771 in Granville, MA Mother: Statira HOLCOMBE b: 1 JUN 1773 in Simsbury, Conn Marriage 1 Lucy Alice HAZARD b: 8 FEB 1821 in Hancock, MA Married: 18 JUN 1840 in Sheldon, Vermont Children Myron Hazard PELTON b: 19 AUG 1841 in Highgate, VT Elsa Delia PELTON b: 2 DEC 1844 Listed as a lawyer with second wife Julina M. and their children. | PELTON, Lyman Ephriam (I62825)
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101728 | Name: Lyman Ephraim PELTON Sex: M Birth: 28 MAR 1807 in Otis, MA Death: 19 APR 1903 in Highgate, VT Note: This remarkable man lived for 96 years. As a child with his parents and siblings he lived on the island in Lake Champlain in a town called South Hero, VT. He was a school master for a few years then read law with L . Hazen of Alburg, VT. Admitted to the bar in 1832 he practiced law for more than 50 years winning a case at the age of 92. His first wife was Lucy Alice Hazard whom he married in 1840 she being about 15 years his junior. They had two children the eldest my gr. grfather Myron. Lucy and her third child both died during its birth in 1845. Lyman remarried in 1856 having several more children one a well known physician Rollin Pelton who was born the same year as Lyman's first granddaughter Birtha in 1865, child of Myron. His family photo taken at abt 90 years shows him with a full head of white hair and handsome jawbone beard. Father: Ephraim PELTON b: 22 APR 1771 in Granville, MA Mother: Statira HOLCOMBE b: 1 JUN 1773 in Simsbury, Conn Marriage 1 Lucy Alice HAZARD b: 8 FEB 1821 in Hancock, MA Married: 18 JUN 1840 in Sheldon, Vermont Children Myron Hazard PELTON b: 19 AUG 1841 in Highgate, VT Elsa Delia PELTON b: 2 DEC 1844 Listed as a lawyer with second wife Julina M. and their children. | PELTON, Lyman Ephriam (I62825)
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101729 | Name: Lyman Ephraim PELTON Sex: M Birth: 28 MAR 1807 in Otis, MA Death: 19 APR 1903 in Highgate, VT Note: This remarkable man lived for 96 years. As a child with his parents and siblings he lived on the island in Lake Champlain in a town called South Hero, VT. He was a school master for a few years then read law with L . Hazen of Alburg, VT. Admitted to the bar in 1832 he practiced law for more than 50 years winning a case at the age of 92. His first wife was Lucy Alice Hazard whom he married in 1840 she being about 15 years his junior. They had two children the eldest my gr. grfather Myron. Lucy and her third child both died during its birth in 1845. Lyman remarried in 1856 having several more children one a well known physician Rollin Pelton who was born the same year as Lyman's first granddaughter Birtha in 1865, child of Myron. His family photo taken at abt 90 years shows him with a full head of white hair and handsome jawbone beard. Father: Ephraim PELTON b: 22 APR 1771 in Granville, MA Mother: Statira HOLCOMBE b: 1 JUN 1773 in Simsbury, Conn Marriage 1 Lucy Alice HAZARD b: 8 FEB 1821 in Hancock, MA Married: 18 JUN 1840 in Sheldon, Vermont Children Myron Hazard PELTON b: 19 AUG 1841 in Highgate, VT Elsa Delia PELTON b: 2 DEC 1844 Listed as a lawyer with second wife Julina M. and their children. | PELTON, Lyman Ephriam (I62825)
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101730 | Name: Lyman Ephraim PELTON Sex: M Birth: 28 MAR 1807 in Otis, MA Death: 19 APR 1903 in Highgate, VT Note: This remarkable man lived for 96 years. As a child with his parents and siblings he lived on the island in Lake Champlain in a town called South Hero, VT. He was a school master for a few years then read law with L . Hazen of Alburg, VT. Admitted to the bar in 1832 he practiced law for more than 50 years winning a case at the age of 92. His first wife was Lucy Alice Hazard whom he married in 1840 she being about 15 years his junior. They had two children the eldest my gr. grfather Myron. Lucy and her third child both died during its birth in 1845. Lyman remarried in 1856 having several more children one a well known physician Rollin Pelton who was born the same year as Lyman's first granddaughter Birtha in 1865, child of Myron. His family photo taken at abt 90 years shows him with a full head of white hair and handsome jawbone beard. Father: Ephraim PELTON b: 22 APR 1771 in Granville, MA Mother: Statira HOLCOMBE b: 1 JUN 1773 in Simsbury, Conn Marriage 1 Lucy Alice HAZARD b: 8 FEB 1821 in Hancock, MA Married: 18 JUN 1840 in Sheldon, Vermont Children Myron Hazard PELTON b: 19 AUG 1841 in Highgate, VT Elsa Delia PELTON b: 2 DEC 1844 Listed as a lawyer with second wife Julina M. and their children. | PELTON, Lyman Ephriam (I62825)
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101731 | Name: Lyman Ephraim PELTON Sex: M Birth: 28 MAR 1807 in Otis, MA Death: 19 APR 1903 in Highgate, VT Note: This remarkable man lived for 96 years. As a child with his parents and siblings he lived on the island in Lake Champlain in a town called South Hero, VT. He was a school master for a few years then read law with L . Hazen of Alburg, VT. Admitted to the bar in 1832 he practiced law for more than 50 years winning a case at the age of 92. His first wife was Lucy Alice Hazard whom he married in 1840 she being about 15 years his junior. They had two children the eldest my gr. grfather Myron. Lucy and her third child both died during its birth in 1845. Lyman remarried in 1856 having several more children one a well known physician Rollin Pelton who was born the same year as Lyman's first granddaughter Birtha in 1865, child of Myron. His family photo taken at abt 90 years shows him with a full head of white hair and handsome jawbone beard. Father: Ephraim PELTON b: 22 APR 1771 in Granville, MA Mother: Statira HOLCOMBE b: 1 JUN 1773 in Simsbury, Conn Marriage 1 Lucy Alice HAZARD b: 8 FEB 1821 in Hancock, MA Married: 18 JUN 1840 in Sheldon, Vermont Children Myron Hazard PELTON b: 19 AUG 1841 in Highgate, VT Elsa Delia PELTON b: 2 DEC 1844 Listed as a lawyer with second wife Julina M. and their children. | PELTON, Lyman Ephriam (I62825)
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101732 | Name: Lyman Ephraim PELTON Sex: M Birth: 28 MAR 1807 in Otis, MA Death: 19 APR 1903 in Highgate, VT Note: This remarkable man lived for 96 years. As a child with his parents and siblings he lived on the island in Lake Champlain in a town called South Hero, VT. He was a school master for a few years then read law with L . Hazen of Alburg, VT. Admitted to the bar in 1832 he practiced law for more than 50 years winning a case at the age of 92. His first wife was Lucy Alice Hazard whom he married in 1840 she being about 15 years his junior. They had two children the eldest my gr. grfather Myron. Lucy and her third child both died during its birth in 1845. Lyman remarried in 1856 having several more children one a well known physician Rollin Pelton who was born the same year as Lyman's first granddaughter Birtha in 1865, child of Myron. His family photo taken at abt 90 years shows him with a full head of white hair and handsome jawbone beard. Father: Ephraim PELTON b: 22 APR 1771 in Granville, MA Mother: Statira HOLCOMBE b: 1 JUN 1773 in Simsbury, Conn Marriage 1 Lucy Alice HAZARD b: 8 FEB 1821 in Hancock, MA Married: 18 JUN 1840 in Sheldon, Vermont Children Myron Hazard PELTON b: 19 AUG 1841 in Highgate, VT Elsa Delia PELTON b: 2 DEC 1844 Listed as a lawyer with second wife Julina M. and their children. | PELTON, Lyman Ephriam (I62825)
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101733 | Name: Lyman Ephraim PELTON Sex: M Birth: 28 MAR 1807 in Otis, MA Death: 19 APR 1903 in Highgate, VT Note: This remarkable man lived for 96 years. As a child with his parents and siblings he lived on the island in Lake Champlain in a town called South Hero, VT. He was a school master for a few years then read law with L . Hazen of Alburg, VT. Admitted to the bar in 1832 he practiced law for more than 50 years winning a case at the age of 92. His first wife was Lucy Alice Hazard whom he married in 1840 she being about 15 years his junior. They had two children the eldest my gr. grfather Myron. Lucy and her third child both died during its birth in 1845. Lyman remarried in 1856 having several more children one a well known physician Rollin Pelton who was born the same year as Lyman's first granddaughter Birtha in 1865, child of Myron. His family photo taken at abt 90 years shows him with a full head of white hair and handsome jawbone beard. Father: Ephraim PELTON b: 22 APR 1771 in Granville, MA Mother: Statira HOLCOMBE b: 1 JUN 1773 in Simsbury, Conn Marriage 1 Lucy Alice HAZARD b: 8 FEB 1821 in Hancock, MA Married: 18 JUN 1840 in Sheldon, Vermont Children Myron Hazard PELTON b: 19 AUG 1841 in Highgate, VT Elsa Delia PELTON b: 2 DEC 1844 Listed as a lawyer with second wife Julina M. and their children. | PELTON, Lyman Ephriam (I62825)
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101734 | Name: Lyman Ephraim PELTON Sex: M Birth: 28 MAR 1807 in Otis, MA Death: 19 APR 1903 in Highgate, VT Note: This remarkable man lived for 96 years. As a child with his parents and siblings he lived on the island in Lake Champlain in a town called South Hero, VT. He was a school master for a few years then read law with L . Hazen of Alburg, VT. Admitted to the bar in 1832 he practiced law for more than 50 years winning a case at the age of 92. His first wife was Lucy Alice Hazard whom he married in 1840 she being about 15 years his junior. They had two children the eldest my gr. grfather Myron. Lucy and her third child both died during its birth in 1845. Lyman remarried in 1856 having several more children one a well known physician Rollin Pelton who was born the same year as Lyman's first granddaughter Birtha in 1865, child of Myron. His family photo taken at abt 90 years shows him with a full head of white hair and handsome jawbone beard. Father: Ephraim PELTON b: 22 APR 1771 in Granville, MA Mother: Statira HOLCOMBE b: 1 JUN 1773 in Simsbury, Conn Marriage 1 Lucy Alice HAZARD b: 8 FEB 1821 in Hancock, MA Married: 18 JUN 1840 in Sheldon, Vermont Children Myron Hazard PELTON b: 19 AUG 1841 in Highgate, VT Elsa Delia PELTON b: 2 DEC 1844 Listed as a lawyer with second wife Julina M. and their children. | PELTON, Lyman Ephriam (I62825)
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101735 | Name: Lyman Ephraim PELTON Sex: M Birth: 28 MAR 1807 in Otis, MA Death: 19 APR 1903 in Highgate, VT Note: This remarkable man lived for 96 years. As a child with his parents and siblings he lived on the island in Lake Champlain in a town called South Hero, VT. He was a school master for a few years then read law with L . Hazen of Alburg, VT. Admitted to the bar in 1832 he practiced law for more than 50 years winning a case at the age of 92. His first wife was Lucy Alice Hazard whom he married in 1840 she being about 15 years his junior. They had two children the eldest my gr. grfather Myron. Lucy and her third child both died during its birth in 1845. Lyman remarried in 1856 having several more children one a well known physician Rollin Pelton who was born the same year as Lyman's first granddaughter Birtha in 1865, child of Myron. His family photo taken at abt 90 years shows him with a full head of white hair and handsome jawbone beard. Father: Ephraim PELTON b: 22 APR 1771 in Granville, MA Mother: Statira HOLCOMBE b: 1 JUN 1773 in Simsbury, Conn Marriage 1 Lucy Alice HAZARD b: 8 FEB 1821 in Hancock, MA Married: 18 JUN 1840 in Sheldon, Vermont Children Myron Hazard PELTON b: 19 AUG 1841 in Highgate, VT Elsa Delia PELTON b: 2 DEC 1844 Listed as a lawyer with second wife Julina M. and their children. | PELTON, Lyman Ephriam (I62825)
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101736 | Name: Martha Worrell Gender: Male Spouse: Uriah Wise Spouse Gender: Female Marriage Date: 10 Aug 1851 Marriage County: Wayne Marriage State: North Carolina Source Vendor: County court records located in Goldsboro, North Carolina or Family History Library Catalog # 975.6395 V2s | Family F26593
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101737 | Name: Martha Worrell Gender: Male Spouse: Uriah Wise Spouse Gender: Female Marriage Date: 10 Aug 1851 Marriage County: Wayne Marriage State: North Carolina Source Vendor: County court records located in Goldsboro, North Carolina or Family History Library Catalog # 975.6395 V2s | Family F26593
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101738 | Name: Martha Worrell Gender: Male Spouse: Uriah Wise Spouse Gender: Female Marriage Date: 10 Aug 1851 Marriage County: Wayne Marriage State: North Carolina Source Vendor: County court records located in Goldsboro, North Carolina or Family History Library Catalog # 975.6395 V2s | Family F26593
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101739 | Name: Martha Worrell Gender: Male Spouse: Uriah Wise Spouse Gender: Female Marriage Date: 10 Aug 1851 Marriage County: Wayne Marriage State: North Carolina Source Vendor: County court records located in Goldsboro, North Carolina or Family History Library Catalog # 975.6395 V2s | Family F26593
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101740 | Name: Martha Worrell Gender: Male Spouse: Uriah Wise Spouse Gender: Female Marriage Date: 10 Aug 1851 Marriage County: Wayne Marriage State: North Carolina Source Vendor: County court records located in Goldsboro, North Carolina or Family History Library Catalog # 975.6395 V2s | Family F26593
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101741 | Name: Martha Worrell Gender: Male Spouse: Uriah Wise Spouse Gender: Female Marriage Date: 10 Aug 1851 Marriage County: Wayne Marriage State: North Carolina Source Vendor: County court records located in Goldsboro, North Carolina or Family History Library Catalog # 975.6395 V2s | Family F26593
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101742 | Name: Martha Worrell Gender: Male Spouse: Uriah Wise Spouse Gender: Female Marriage Date: 10 Aug 1851 Marriage County: Wayne Marriage State: North Carolina Source Vendor: County court records located in Goldsboro, North Carolina or Family History Library Catalog # 975.6395 V2s | Family F26593
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101743 | Name: Mattie L Redwine Race: White Age: 88 Date of Birth: 1871 Date of Death: 28 Jan 1959 Death County: Stanly Death State: North Carolina Source Vendor: NC State Archives. North Carolina Deaths, 1908-67 | TAYLOR, Martha Lou (I125024)
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101744 | Name: Mattie L Redwine Race: White Age: 88 Date of Birth: 1871 Date of Death: 28 Jan 1959 Death County: Stanly Death State: North Carolina Source Vendor: NC State Archives. North Carolina Deaths, 1908-67 | TAYLOR, Martha Lou (I125024)
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101745 | Name: Mattie L Redwine Race: White Age: 88 Date of Birth: 1871 Date of Death: 28 Jan 1959 Death County: Stanly Death State: North Carolina Source Vendor: NC State Archives. North Carolina Deaths, 1908-67 | TAYLOR, Martha Lou (I125024)
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101746 | Name: Morrison W. Burney Spouse: Jane Brown Marriage Date: 17 Oct 1840 Marriage County: Coweta Marriage State: Georgia 1860 Coweta Co., Georgia census, entry 905/786 Jane Burney age 41, born GA Martha age 17, born GA Francis J. age 15, born GA David L. age 14, born GA William L. age 8, born GA Sarah C. age 6, born GA | BROWN, Jane (I589)
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101747 | Name: Morrison W. Burney Spouse: Jane Brown Marriage Date: 17 Oct 1840 Marriage County: Coweta Marriage State: Georgia 1860 Coweta Co., Georgia census, entry 905/786 Jane Burney age 41, born GA Martha age 17, born GA Francis J. age 15, born GA David L. age 14, born GA William L. age 8, born GA Sarah C. age 6, born GA | BROWN, Jane (I589)
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101748 | Name: Morrison W. Burney Spouse: Jane Brown Marriage Date: 17 Oct 1840 Marriage County: Coweta Marriage State: Georgia 1860 Coweta Co., Georgia census, entry 905/786 Jane Burney age 41, born GA Martha age 17, born GA Francis J. age 15, born GA David L. age 14, born GA William L. age 8, born GA Sarah C. age 6, born GA | BROWN, Jane (I589)
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101749 | Name: Nelson Franklin CARR Sex: M Birth: 2 SEP 1844 in Wilton, Saratoga County, New York Death: 3 NOV 1925 in Bartlesville, Oklahoma Note: "As eventful and colorful a story as can be found in this history of a family is the story of the life and adventures of Nelson F Carr. Mr Frank M Carr has written a sketch of the life of his father. This is much too lengthy for such a work as this but to it I wish to acknowledge my indebtedness for the information given here. Left fatherless at four years of age Nelson's start was indeed the hard way. Not much time for education, none at all for play when at nine years old he began to shoulder the family responsibility. At fifteen he was the main support of his mother and two sisters. It was when he was fifteen (April of 1859) that the family decided to seek better fortune in the exciting new west. By rail as far as it then went and beyond by ox team they journeyed until after four months of travel they settled near Ft Scott, Kan. Here they took up 320 acres of homestead land and began life anew. Realizing his lack of education Nelson returned to Saratoga Springs in 1860 for a year in school. This year he must have used to tremendous advantage as he returned to a book keeping position in Ft Scott. During the Civil War he served with distinction in Co B of the 6th Kansas Cavalry from 1862 to 1865. The fifteen years of his life after the war was a period of adventure and frontier fortune making such as we expect to find only in fiction. Love and marriage, the raising of a fine family, fur trading, founding towns, traversing game filled, primitive country, building grist mills, building and supporting a school, lumbering and farming were among the adventures. His marriage was interesting and fortunate. Meeting the lovely daughter of his friend, the highly honored Cherokee scout Hilliard Rogers, he promptly fell in love as did she. Their marriage soon took place. For nearly sixty years they lived and worked together. Oswego, Kansas was founded by Nelson Carr. He founded its first business (a trading post) and served as its first postmaster. Bartlesville, Okla is another city which owes its beginnings largely to Nelson Carr. The family removed from Oswego, Kan to Bartlesville, Okla in Sept of 1867. After 1875 he gave most of his time to agriculture. At one time he owned about 5000 acres of excellent grazing and cropping land near Bartlesville, Okla. In ____________ oil was discovered on the Carr farm and a fortune for him and his family resulted. Nelson F Carr was a member of Old Parker Lodge F & A M of Coffeyville, Kan and later of a lodge in Bartlesville, Okla. Both Nelson and his wife died in Bartlesville where since 1909 they had maintained a fine home. They are both buried in a Mausoleum in White Rose Cemetery." Source: The Carr Book, by Arthur Carr, pp 449-450, plus photo opposite pg 449. NELSON F. CARR Posted by Earline Sparks Barger on Mon, 26 Oct 1998 Surnames: CARR, CLANCY, BRIDMAN, BENT, ROGERS, FOYAL, BARTLES, JOHNSON, BROWER, BRADY, KEELER NELSON F. CARR Vol. 3, p. 1191-1192 Book has photo of family It is with the title of "The Pioneer of Big Caney" that Nelson F. Carr has long been known to the people of Bartlesville and Washington County. He was the first white settler of any real importance along that river, and nearly fifty years have elapsed since he and Mrs. Carr, his noble wife, began housekeeping in the wilderness which has since been transformed by civilization and is now one of the richest sections in the Southwest, with its great oil and grain fields and with the great development of railroads, cities and general industrialism. He was born in Wilton, Saratoga County, New York, September 2, 1844, a son of William Henry and Sarah M. (CLANCY) Carr. His father was born in New York State and his mother in Vermont. The father died in September, 1848, at the age of thirty-one, and of him Nelson F. Carr has only a faint recollection. In 1859 the widowed mother brought her son and two daughters to the western frontier. Mr. Carr was fifteen years of age at the time and was born only sixteen years after the first railroad was put in operation in the United States. When the family came out to Fort Scott, Kansas, in the year 1859, they rode a railroad train only as far as Pleasant Hill, Missouri, then the terminus of the Missouri Pacific. From there they journeyed by stage as far as the present Kansas City and Mr. Carr's active lifetime covers the entire period of railroad development in the country west of Missouri. Mr. Carr's mother remained a widow for sixty years, and died at the age of eighty-nine in California. Her two daughters were: Anna BRIDMAN, now deceased; and Jennie BENT, of Colorado, who has two sons and one daughter. Nelson F. Carr grew up on a farm with his mother at Fort Scott, Kansas, and both of them entered a quarter section of land there. Nelson F., according to the land laws, entered his quarter section as the head of a family, although only fifteen years of age. He was only sixteen when he enlisted for service at Fort Scott in July, 1861, in Company B of the Sixth Kansas Regiment. In March, 1862, the regiment became the Sixth Kansas Cavalry, under Col. W. R. Judson. He is one of the last survivors of this noted Kansas regiment. After his active military service he was employed in store at Fort Scott, and in 1865, he returned to Kansas schools. In September, 1865, he returned to Kansas and was employed in a store at Fort Scott until February, 1866. He then became one of the first settler of Oswego, Kansas, and built the first log house in the town and put in a stock of goods. He owned a half interest in this trading post, and he still has a copy of the document signed by the postmaster general which records his appointment on October 4, 1866, as postmaster of Oswego. He was the first to have charge of the postoffice in that town. One year later he resigned the office, which had paid him only a nominal salary. The Carr store was the social center of the town and the surrounding country, and among those who came to trade there was a Cherokee Indian named Rogers, who lived at Timber Hill, eight miles south of Chetopah and about seventy miles from the present City of Bartlesville. Hillard Rogers was a native of Georgia, a quarter-blood Cherokee, a well educated man, and a descendant of one of the greatest Cherokee chieftains. Hillard Rogers died near Bartlesville at the age of fifty years in September, 1870, and his wife passed away on January 18, 1870, at the age of forty-two. She was a native of Tennessee, and was sixteen years of age when she married Mr. Rogers. At the age of seventeen Hillard Rogers acted as Indian interpreter for Generals Scott and Taylor in Florida during the Seminole Indian war. He was one of the prominent members of the tribe, and a man of fine character. Between this Cherokee and the Indian trader Mr. Carr, there grew up a friendship, and in the course of time Mr. Carr came to hear much of Annie ROGERS, the daughter of the Timber Hill resident. She had many unusual accomplishments even for an Indian girl, and in September, 1866, when Mr. Carr first visited the Rogers home he fell in love with the young woman, and on the following 25th of August they were married. Soon after their marriage they removed from Oswego to the Big Caney. They were almost the first people after the war to locate in that section, and for almost forty years Mr. and Mrs. Carr had their home on a farm three miles north of the present City of Bartlesville. In the early days Mr. Carr traded supplies to the Indians for furs and buffalo robes and sold the latter at Leavenworth, Kansas. He was frequently away from home, and Mrs. Carr was left with her own children and with her young orphan brother William Rogers, who now lives in Dewey. At one time they remained in the lonely cabin eight days while Mr. Carr was away on one of his trips, and in the many dangers and discomforts of pioneer life Mrs. Carr was a participant as well as her husband. A year or so ago an interesting little story was told and published in a monthly magazine, the subject of which was Mrs. Carr and her experience as a pioneer on the Big Caney. It contains a well deserved tribute to this splendid pioneer woman of Oklahoma, and a portion of the article, beginning with her experiences when she came as a bride to her new home, is quoted herewith: "The young bride took possession of the home prepared for her with as happy a laugh as if the rude logs had been blocks of stone and the dirt floor a carpet of plush. All the hardships endured in the little cabin did not conquer the laugh that bubbled forth from the brave spirit of the Indian maid. One-fourth of the blood in her veins came from a race keen in intellect as well as strong in body. From her Cherokee father she brought to the lonely plains a spirit of never failing courage and cheerfulness. Her own father, descended from the great chief FOYAL, who invested a wonderful Indian alphabet of eighty-six letter, was prominent man of his tribe and had been United States interpreter for General Harvey. The life of the pioneer is ever lonely, but to have been the first in a country so rich in natural resources and in future possibilities is recompense for many hardships. Mr. Carr's trading post drew other white people to settle in the vicinity, and the homes that soon dotted the river bank made life seem almost gay to the young trader and his wife. Thus it was that Mrs. Carr was instrumental in the foundation of one of Oklahoma's industrial centers. His business prospered too and more comforts crept into the little cabin. Lumber for a floor was brought from the Spadmore hills east of Grand River and later a new home was built. For almost forty years the devoted woman lived on the site of the log trading station and reared her splendid family. Hardships gradually became but a memory to her and so broad and noble her nature that they are a pleasant memory. About 1907 Mr. Carr built a comfortable home in Bartlesville and the ideal home life begun in the rude cabin shed a broader influence. Still more recently a handsomer home was purchased. There Mrs. Carr, still strong in all her faculties, with her happy vivacious personality permeating her household, surrounded by noble sons, beautiful daughters, and lovely grandchildren, occupies a position that queens might envy, her throne a home on the spot that she watched grow from a lonely plain into a thriving county seat, with magnificent business blocks, churches, schools and homes. The achievements of a woman of Mrs. Carr's nature cannot be measured in material things. She was placed in a hard situation and her strength was sufficient to meet it and to make of the hardships a joy. To be able to make a home in a cabin as well as in a mansion, to fill it with laughter, to rear children to honor the humble home and her who made this is the greatest work of woman's life." In 1868 during a raid from the Arapahos Mr. Carr's store was robbed, and after that he gave most of his attention to farming. In addition to his own claim he bought other lands which gave his a ranch of 1,200 acres under fence, and in time he bought 800 acres of this under cultivation. In 1868 he paid $2.50 for a bushel of seed Indian corn, and his own energetic example was an important factor in promoting the general agricultural industry. About that time Mr. Carr built the first grist mill on the Caney just across the river from the present site of Bartlesville. He dug a tunnel across a neck of land around which the river flowed and thus secured a fall of eight feet, which was sufficient to turn his mill wheel. Later he sold this mill to J. H. BARTLES, who replaced it with a modern flour mill. After that Mr. Carr gave his entire attention to farming and stock raising until 1907, when he removed to the City of Bartlesville. He still owns more than 200 acres three miles northwest of Bartlesville, including the land on which he first settled when he came to what is now Washington County. Mr. Carr is a member of the Baptist Church and belongs to the Grand Army of the Republic and has been a Mason since 1866, having affiliation with Keystone Lodge, No. 102, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, at Coffeyville, Kansas. He and his wife take pardonable pride in their fine family of children. Their son, Edward R., the first born, died at the age of nine years. Ida J. is the wife of John JOHNSON, now living on the old Carr farm near Bartlesville. Grace Maude died at the age of seventeen. William A. lives in Mound Valley, Kansas. Frank Marvin is a resident of Washington County. Sarah Louise is the wife of William KEELER of Washington County. Josie May married L. J. BROWER, of Washington County. Beulah Mabel is the wife of S. C. BRADY, of Bartlesville. They are also twelve grandchildren. Since Mr. Carr married prior to 1874, he was placed on the roll as an Indian, and he and his family have received the usual allotments of land and money with other members of the Cherokee tribe. Mr. Carr has witnessed every improvement made in the hands of civilized man in the vicinity of Bartlesville. In many ways he has helped in this development, and his own example has been a potent factor to increasing the complete utilization of the splendid resources found in the soil and climate of Northern Oklahoma. Both he and his wife have traveled extensively, but with all their observations of other countries and states they remain extremely loyal to Oklahoma, which represents to them the greatest as well as the fairest portion of the Globe, and in all the "beautiful land" the spot most sacred to them is the site of the rude log cabin as it stood half century ago and in which the joys of young married life were sweetened and accentuated by the hardships and adversities of frontier existence. Transcribed by: Earline Sparks Barger, October 24, 1998 Title: The Carr Book, by Arthur A Carr Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: 310, 449 (photo opposite pg 449) Title: The Carr Book, by Arthur A Carr Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: 449 Father: William Henry CARR b: 11 MAR 1818 in Wilton, Saratoga County, New York Mother: Sarah Mable CLANCY b: 6 DEC 1819 in Wallingford, Rutland County, Vermont Marriage 1 Sarah Ann ROGERS\RODGERS b: 3 NOV 1848 in Honey Creek, Delaware District, Cherokee Nation, Indian Territory, Oklahoma Children Josie May CARR b: 22 DEC 1884 Edward Rogers\Rodgers CARR b: 30 AUG 1868 Ida Jane CARR b: 31 DEC 1869 Grace Maud CARR b: 18 NOV 1871 William Arthur CARR b: 4 DEC 1873 Frank Marvin CARR b: 20 MAY 1878 Lula B CARR b: 22 NOV 1881 Beulah Mable CARR b: 11 JUL 1892 Copyright © 1998-2010, MyFamily.com Inc. | CARR, Nelson Franklin (I112379)
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101750 | Name: Nelson Franklin CARR Sex: M Birth: 2 SEP 1844 in Wilton, Saratoga County, New York Death: 3 NOV 1925 in Bartlesville, Oklahoma Note: "As eventful and colorful a story as can be found in this history of a family is the story of the life and adventures of Nelson F Carr. Mr Frank M Carr has written a sketch of the life of his father. This is much too lengthy for such a work as this but to it I wish to acknowledge my indebtedness for the information given here. Left fatherless at four years of age Nelson's start was indeed the hard way. Not much time for education, none at all for play when at nine years old he began to shoulder the family responsibility. At fifteen he was the main support of his mother and two sisters. It was when he was fifteen (April of 1859) that the family decided to seek better fortune in the exciting new west. By rail as far as it then went and beyond by ox team they journeyed until after four months of travel they settled near Ft Scott, Kan. Here they took up 320 acres of homestead land and began life anew. Realizing his lack of education Nelson returned to Saratoga Springs in 1860 for a year in school. This year he must have used to tremendous advantage as he returned to a book keeping position in Ft Scott. During the Civil War he served with distinction in Co B of the 6th Kansas Cavalry from 1862 to 1865. The fifteen years of his life after the war was a period of adventure and frontier fortune making such as we expect to find only in fiction. Love and marriage, the raising of a fine family, fur trading, founding towns, traversing game filled, primitive country, building grist mills, building and supporting a school, lumbering and farming were among the adventures. His marriage was interesting and fortunate. Meeting the lovely daughter of his friend, the highly honored Cherokee scout Hilliard Rogers, he promptly fell in love as did she. Their marriage soon took place. For nearly sixty years they lived and worked together. Oswego, Kansas was founded by Nelson Carr. He founded its first business (a trading post) and served as its first postmaster. Bartlesville, Okla is another city which owes its beginnings largely to Nelson Carr. The family removed from Oswego, Kan to Bartlesville, Okla in Sept of 1867. After 1875 he gave most of his time to agriculture. At one time he owned about 5000 acres of excellent grazing and cropping land near Bartlesville, Okla. In ____________ oil was discovered on the Carr farm and a fortune for him and his family resulted. Nelson F Carr was a member of Old Parker Lodge F & A M of Coffeyville, Kan and later of a lodge in Bartlesville, Okla. Both Nelson and his wife died in Bartlesville where since 1909 they had maintained a fine home. They are both buried in a Mausoleum in White Rose Cemetery." Source: The Carr Book, by Arthur Carr, pp 449-450, plus photo opposite pg 449. NELSON F. CARR Posted by Earline Sparks Barger on Mon, 26 Oct 1998 Surnames: CARR, CLANCY, BRIDMAN, BENT, ROGERS, FOYAL, BARTLES, JOHNSON, BROWER, BRADY, KEELER NELSON F. CARR Vol. 3, p. 1191-1192 Book has photo of family It is with the title of "The Pioneer of Big Caney" that Nelson F. Carr has long been known to the people of Bartlesville and Washington County. He was the first white settler of any real importance along that river, and nearly fifty years have elapsed since he and Mrs. Carr, his noble wife, began housekeeping in the wilderness which has since been transformed by civilization and is now one of the richest sections in the Southwest, with its great oil and grain fields and with the great development of railroads, cities and general industrialism. He was born in Wilton, Saratoga County, New York, September 2, 1844, a son of William Henry and Sarah M. (CLANCY) Carr. His father was born in New York State and his mother in Vermont. The father died in September, 1848, at the age of thirty-one, and of him Nelson F. Carr has only a faint recollection. In 1859 the widowed mother brought her son and two daughters to the western frontier. Mr. Carr was fifteen years of age at the time and was born only sixteen years after the first railroad was put in operation in the United States. When the family came out to Fort Scott, Kansas, in the year 1859, they rode a railroad train only as far as Pleasant Hill, Missouri, then the terminus of the Missouri Pacific. From there they journeyed by stage as far as the present Kansas City and Mr. Carr's active lifetime covers the entire period of railroad development in the country west of Missouri. Mr. Carr's mother remained a widow for sixty years, and died at the age of eighty-nine in California. Her two daughters were: Anna BRIDMAN, now deceased; and Jennie BENT, of Colorado, who has two sons and one daughter. Nelson F. Carr grew up on a farm with his mother at Fort Scott, Kansas, and both of them entered a quarter section of land there. Nelson F., according to the land laws, entered his quarter section as the head of a family, although only fifteen years of age. He was only sixteen when he enlisted for service at Fort Scott in July, 1861, in Company B of the Sixth Kansas Regiment. In March, 1862, the regiment became the Sixth Kansas Cavalry, under Col. W. R. Judson. He is one of the last survivors of this noted Kansas regiment. After his active military service he was employed in store at Fort Scott, and in 1865, he returned to Kansas schools. In September, 1865, he returned to Kansas and was employed in a store at Fort Scott until February, 1866. He then became one of the first settler of Oswego, Kansas, and built the first log house in the town and put in a stock of goods. He owned a half interest in this trading post, and he still has a copy of the document signed by the postmaster general which records his appointment on October 4, 1866, as postmaster of Oswego. He was the first to have charge of the postoffice in that town. One year later he resigned the office, which had paid him only a nominal salary. The Carr store was the social center of the town and the surrounding country, and among those who came to trade there was a Cherokee Indian named Rogers, who lived at Timber Hill, eight miles south of Chetopah and about seventy miles from the present City of Bartlesville. Hillard Rogers was a native of Georgia, a quarter-blood Cherokee, a well educated man, and a descendant of one of the greatest Cherokee chieftains. Hillard Rogers died near Bartlesville at the age of fifty years in September, 1870, and his wife passed away on January 18, 1870, at the age of forty-two. She was a native of Tennessee, and was sixteen years of age when she married Mr. Rogers. At the age of seventeen Hillard Rogers acted as Indian interpreter for Generals Scott and Taylor in Florida during the Seminole Indian war. He was one of the prominent members of the tribe, and a man of fine character. Between this Cherokee and the Indian trader Mr. Carr, there grew up a friendship, and in the course of time Mr. Carr came to hear much of Annie ROGERS, the daughter of the Timber Hill resident. She had many unusual accomplishments even for an Indian girl, and in September, 1866, when Mr. Carr first visited the Rogers home he fell in love with the young woman, and on the following 25th of August they were married. Soon after their marriage they removed from Oswego to the Big Caney. They were almost the first people after the war to locate in that section, and for almost forty years Mr. and Mrs. Carr had their home on a farm three miles north of the present City of Bartlesville. In the early days Mr. Carr traded supplies to the Indians for furs and buffalo robes and sold the latter at Leavenworth, Kansas. He was frequently away from home, and Mrs. Carr was left with her own children and with her young orphan brother William Rogers, who now lives in Dewey. At one time they remained in the lonely cabin eight days while Mr. Carr was away on one of his trips, and in the many dangers and discomforts of pioneer life Mrs. Carr was a participant as well as her husband. A year or so ago an interesting little story was told and published in a monthly magazine, the subject of which was Mrs. Carr and her experience as a pioneer on the Big Caney. It contains a well deserved tribute to this splendid pioneer woman of Oklahoma, and a portion of the article, beginning with her experiences when she came as a bride to her new home, is quoted herewith: "The young bride took possession of the home prepared for her with as happy a laugh as if the rude logs had been blocks of stone and the dirt floor a carpet of plush. All the hardships endured in the little cabin did not conquer the laugh that bubbled forth from the brave spirit of the Indian maid. One-fourth of the blood in her veins came from a race keen in intellect as well as strong in body. From her Cherokee father she brought to the lonely plains a spirit of never failing courage and cheerfulness. Her own father, descended from the great chief FOYAL, who invested a wonderful Indian alphabet of eighty-six letter, was prominent man of his tribe and had been United States interpreter for General Harvey. The life of the pioneer is ever lonely, but to have been the first in a country so rich in natural resources and in future possibilities is recompense for many hardships. Mr. Carr's trading post drew other white people to settle in the vicinity, and the homes that soon dotted the river bank made life seem almost gay to the young trader and his wife. Thus it was that Mrs. Carr was instrumental in the foundation of one of Oklahoma's industrial centers. His business prospered too and more comforts crept into the little cabin. Lumber for a floor was brought from the Spadmore hills east of Grand River and later a new home was built. For almost forty years the devoted woman lived on the site of the log trading station and reared her splendid family. Hardships gradually became but a memory to her and so broad and noble her nature that they are a pleasant memory. About 1907 Mr. Carr built a comfortable home in Bartlesville and the ideal home life begun in the rude cabin shed a broader influence. Still more recently a handsomer home was purchased. There Mrs. Carr, still strong in all her faculties, with her happy vivacious personality permeating her household, surrounded by noble sons, beautiful daughters, and lovely grandchildren, occupies a position that queens might envy, her throne a home on the spot that she watched grow from a lonely plain into a thriving county seat, with magnificent business blocks, churches, schools and homes. The achievements of a woman of Mrs. Carr's nature cannot be measured in material things. She was placed in a hard situation and her strength was sufficient to meet it and to make of the hardships a joy. To be able to make a home in a cabin as well as in a mansion, to fill it with laughter, to rear children to honor the humble home and her who made this is the greatest work of woman's life." In 1868 during a raid from the Arapahos Mr. Carr's store was robbed, and after that he gave most of his attention to farming. In addition to his own claim he bought other lands which gave his a ranch of 1,200 acres under fence, and in time he bought 800 acres of this under cultivation. In 1868 he paid $2.50 for a bushel of seed Indian corn, and his own energetic example was an important factor in promoting the general agricultural industry. About that time Mr. Carr built the first grist mill on the Caney just across the river from the present site of Bartlesville. He dug a tunnel across a neck of land around which the river flowed and thus secured a fall of eight feet, which was sufficient to turn his mill wheel. Later he sold this mill to J. H. BARTLES, who replaced it with a modern flour mill. After that Mr. Carr gave his entire attention to farming and stock raising until 1907, when he removed to the City of Bartlesville. He still owns more than 200 acres three miles northwest of Bartlesville, including the land on which he first settled when he came to what is now Washington County. Mr. Carr is a member of the Baptist Church and belongs to the Grand Army of the Republic and has been a Mason since 1866, having affiliation with Keystone Lodge, No. 102, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, at Coffeyville, Kansas. He and his wife take pardonable pride in their fine family of children. Their son, Edward R., the first born, died at the age of nine years. Ida J. is the wife of John JOHNSON, now living on the old Carr farm near Bartlesville. Grace Maude died at the age of seventeen. William A. lives in Mound Valley, Kansas. Frank Marvin is a resident of Washington County. Sarah Louise is the wife of William KEELER of Washington County. Josie May married L. J. BROWER, of Washington County. Beulah Mabel is the wife of S. C. BRADY, of Bartlesville. They are also twelve grandchildren. Since Mr. Carr married prior to 1874, he was placed on the roll as an Indian, and he and his family have received the usual allotments of land and money with other members of the Cherokee tribe. Mr. Carr has witnessed every improvement made in the hands of civilized man in the vicinity of Bartlesville. In many ways he has helped in this development, and his own example has been a potent factor to increasing the complete utilization of the splendid resources found in the soil and climate of Northern Oklahoma. Both he and his wife have traveled extensively, but with all their observations of other countries and states they remain extremely loyal to Oklahoma, which represents to them the greatest as well as the fairest portion of the Globe, and in all the "beautiful land" the spot most sacred to them is the site of the rude log cabin as it stood half century ago and in which the joys of young married life were sweetened and accentuated by the hardships and adversities of frontier existence. Transcribed by: Earline Sparks Barger, October 24, 1998 Title: The Carr Book, by Arthur A Carr Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: 310, 449 (photo opposite pg 449) Title: The Carr Book, by Arthur A Carr Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: 449 Father: William Henry CARR b: 11 MAR 1818 in Wilton, Saratoga County, New York Mother: Sarah Mable CLANCY b: 6 DEC 1819 in Wallingford, Rutland County, Vermont Marriage 1 Sarah Ann ROGERS\RODGERS b: 3 NOV 1848 in Honey Creek, Delaware District, Cherokee Nation, Indian Territory, Oklahoma Children Josie May CARR b: 22 DEC 1884 Edward Rogers\Rodgers CARR b: 30 AUG 1868 Ida Jane CARR b: 31 DEC 1869 Grace Maud CARR b: 18 NOV 1871 William Arthur CARR b: 4 DEC 1873 Frank Marvin CARR b: 20 MAY 1878 Lula B CARR b: 22 NOV 1881 Beulah Mable CARR b: 11 JUL 1892 Copyright © 1998-2010, MyFamily.com Inc. | CARR, Nelson Franklin (I112379)
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