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110001 Richard Warren appears to have been a merchant, who resided in London, and became associated with the Pilgrims and the Mayflower through the Merchant Adventurers. Richard Warren participated in several of the early explorations made by the Pilgrims in 1620, while looking for a place to settle. He appears by land records to have been fairly well-to-do.

When he came over on the Mayflower, he left behind his wife and five daughters, planning to have them sent over after things were more settled in the Colony. His wife and daughters arrived in America in 1623, on the ship Anne.

Nathaniel Morton wrote in his book New England's Memorial, first published in 1669, the following about Richard Warren:

This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth.

Richard Warren is an ancestor to many famous Americans. Among them are Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American in space and fifth man to walk on the moon. A published lineage showing Winston Churchill as a descendant of Richard Warren has a questionable generation and is most likely in error. However, Winston Churchill does appear to be a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland's brother Arthur.



---------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------
SOURCES:
Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families in Progress: Richard Warren for Four Generations (Plymouth: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1991).

Ruth Berg Walsh, "The Search for Pilgrim Richard Warren's Parentage," Mayflower Quarterly, 51:109-112.

Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony, Its History and Its People, 1620-1691 (Salt Lake City: Ancestor Publishers, 1986).

Nathaniel Morton, New England's Memorial (Cambridge, 1669).

William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, ed. Samuel Morison (New York: Random House, 1952).

Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered in December 2002 by Edward Davies. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order), and that they were born c1610, c1612, and c1614, so this put the nail in the coffin and we can say with near certainty that Richard Warren of the Mayflower married in Great Amwell, Hertford to Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker. Additional research is currently being sponsored by MayflowerHistory.com to see if anything further can be learned about these families.

Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628, the only record of his death being found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth."

All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon.


http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/Passengers/RichardWarren.php



Richard Warren appears to have been a merchant, who resided in London, and became associated with the Pilgrims and the Mayflower through the Merchant Adventurers. Richard Warren participated in several of the early explorations made by the Pilgrims in 1620, while looking for a place to settle. He appears by land records to have been fairly well-to-do.

When he came over on the Mayflower, he left behind his wife and five daughters, planning to have them sent over after things were more settled in the Colony. His wife and daughters arrived in America in 1623, on the ship Anne.

Nathaniel Morton wrote in his book New England's Memorial, first published in 1669, the following about Richard Warren:

This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth.

Richard Warren is an ancestor to many famous Americans. Among them are Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American in space and fifth man to walk on the moon. A published lineage showing Winston Churchill as a descendant of Richard Warren has a questionable generation and is most likely in error. However, Winston Churchill does appear to be a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland's brother Arthur.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOURCES:
Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families in Progress: Richard Warren for Four Generations (Plymouth: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1991).

Ruth Berg Walsh, "The Search for Pilgrim Richard Warren's Parentage," Mayflower Quarterly, 51:109-112.

Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony, Its History and Its People, 1620-1691 (Salt Lake City: Ancestor Publishers, 1986).

Nathaniel Morton, New England's Memorial (Cambridge, 1669).

William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, ed. Samuel Morison (New York: Random House, 1952).


Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered in December 2002 by Edward Davies. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order), and that they were born c1610, c1612, and c1614, so this put the nail in the coffin and we can say with near certainty that Richard Warren of the Mayflower married in Great Amwell, Hertford to Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker. Additional research is currently being sponsored by MayflowerHistory.com to see if anything further can be learned about these families.

Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628, the only record of his death being found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth."

All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon.


http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/Passengers/RichardWarren.php 
WARREN, Richard (I25450)
 
110002 Richard Warren appears to have been a merchant, who resided in London, and became associated with the Pilgrims and the Mayflower through the Merchant Adventurers. Richard Warren participated in several of the early explorations made by the Pilgrims in 1620, while looking for a place to settle. He appears by land records to have been fairly well-to-do.

When he came over on the Mayflower, he left behind his wife and five daughters, planning to have them sent over after things were more settled in the Colony. His wife and daughters arrived in America in 1623, on the ship Anne.

Nathaniel Morton wrote in his book New England's Memorial, first published in 1669, the following about Richard Warren:

This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth.

Richard Warren is an ancestor to many famous Americans. Among them are Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American in space and fifth man to walk on the moon. A published lineage showing Winston Churchill as a descendant of Richard Warren has a questionable generation and is most likely in error. However, Winston Churchill does appear to be a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland's brother Arthur.



---------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------
SOURCES:
Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families in Progress: Richard Warren for Four Generations (Plymouth: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1991).

Ruth Berg Walsh, "The Search for Pilgrim Richard Warren's Parentage," Mayflower Quarterly, 51:109-112.

Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony, Its History and Its People, 1620-1691 (Salt Lake City: Ancestor Publishers, 1986).

Nathaniel Morton, New England's Memorial (Cambridge, 1669).

William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, ed. Samuel Morison (New York: Random House, 1952).

Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered in December 2002 by Edward Davies. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order), and that they were born c1610, c1612, and c1614, so this put the nail in the coffin and we can say with near certainty that Richard Warren of the Mayflower married in Great Amwell, Hertford to Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker. Additional research is currently being sponsored by MayflowerHistory.com to see if anything further can be learned about these families.

Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628, the only record of his death being found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth."

All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon.


http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/Passengers/RichardWarren.php



Richard Warren appears to have been a merchant, who resided in London, and became associated with the Pilgrims and the Mayflower through the Merchant Adventurers. Richard Warren participated in several of the early explorations made by the Pilgrims in 1620, while looking for a place to settle. He appears by land records to have been fairly well-to-do.

When he came over on the Mayflower, he left behind his wife and five daughters, planning to have them sent over after things were more settled in the Colony. His wife and daughters arrived in America in 1623, on the ship Anne.

Nathaniel Morton wrote in his book New England's Memorial, first published in 1669, the following about Richard Warren:

This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth.

Richard Warren is an ancestor to many famous Americans. Among them are Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American in space and fifth man to walk on the moon. A published lineage showing Winston Churchill as a descendant of Richard Warren has a questionable generation and is most likely in error. However, Winston Churchill does appear to be a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland's brother Arthur.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOURCES:
Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families in Progress: Richard Warren for Four Generations (Plymouth: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1991).

Ruth Berg Walsh, "The Search for Pilgrim Richard Warren's Parentage," Mayflower Quarterly, 51:109-112.

Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony, Its History and Its People, 1620-1691 (Salt Lake City: Ancestor Publishers, 1986).

Nathaniel Morton, New England's Memorial (Cambridge, 1669).

William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, ed. Samuel Morison (New York: Random House, 1952).


Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered in December 2002 by Edward Davies. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order), and that they were born c1610, c1612, and c1614, so this put the nail in the coffin and we can say with near certainty that Richard Warren of the Mayflower married in Great Amwell, Hertford to Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker. Additional research is currently being sponsored by MayflowerHistory.com to see if anything further can be learned about these families.

Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628, the only record of his death being found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth."

All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon.


http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/Passengers/RichardWarren.php 
WARREN, Richard (I25450)
 
110003 Richard Warren appears to have been a merchant, who resided in London, and became associated with the Pilgrims and the Mayflower through the Merchant Adventurers. Richard Warren participated in several of the early explorations made by the Pilgrims in 1620, while looking for a place to settle. He appears by land records to have been fairly well-to-do.

When he came over on the Mayflower, he left behind his wife and five daughters, planning to have them sent over after things were more settled in the Colony. His wife and daughters arrived in America in 1623, on the ship Anne.

Nathaniel Morton wrote in his book New England's Memorial, first published in 1669, the following about Richard Warren:

This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth.

Richard Warren is an ancestor to many famous Americans. Among them are Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American in space and fifth man to walk on the moon. A published lineage showing Winston Churchill as a descendant of Richard Warren has a questionable generation and is most likely in error. However, Winston Churchill does appear to be a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland's brother Arthur.



---------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------
SOURCES:
Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families in Progress: Richard Warren for Four Generations (Plymouth: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1991).

Ruth Berg Walsh, "The Search for Pilgrim Richard Warren's Parentage," Mayflower Quarterly, 51:109-112.

Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony, Its History and Its People, 1620-1691 (Salt Lake City: Ancestor Publishers, 1986).

Nathaniel Morton, New England's Memorial (Cambridge, 1669).

William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, ed. Samuel Morison (New York: Random House, 1952).

Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered in December 2002 by Edward Davies. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order), and that they were born c1610, c1612, and c1614, so this put the nail in the coffin and we can say with near certainty that Richard Warren of the Mayflower married in Great Amwell, Hertford to Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker. Additional research is currently being sponsored by MayflowerHistory.com to see if anything further can be learned about these families.

Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628, the only record of his death being found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth."

All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon.


http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/Passengers/RichardWarren.php



Richard Warren appears to have been a merchant, who resided in London, and became associated with the Pilgrims and the Mayflower through the Merchant Adventurers. Richard Warren participated in several of the early explorations made by the Pilgrims in 1620, while looking for a place to settle. He appears by land records to have been fairly well-to-do.

When he came over on the Mayflower, he left behind his wife and five daughters, planning to have them sent over after things were more settled in the Colony. His wife and daughters arrived in America in 1623, on the ship Anne.

Nathaniel Morton wrote in his book New England's Memorial, first published in 1669, the following about Richard Warren:

This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth.

Richard Warren is an ancestor to many famous Americans. Among them are Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American in space and fifth man to walk on the moon. A published lineage showing Winston Churchill as a descendant of Richard Warren has a questionable generation and is most likely in error. However, Winston Churchill does appear to be a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland's brother Arthur.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOURCES:
Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families in Progress: Richard Warren for Four Generations (Plymouth: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1991).

Ruth Berg Walsh, "The Search for Pilgrim Richard Warren's Parentage," Mayflower Quarterly, 51:109-112.

Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony, Its History and Its People, 1620-1691 (Salt Lake City: Ancestor Publishers, 1986).

Nathaniel Morton, New England's Memorial (Cambridge, 1669).

William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, ed. Samuel Morison (New York: Random House, 1952).


Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered in December 2002 by Edward Davies. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order), and that they were born c1610, c1612, and c1614, so this put the nail in the coffin and we can say with near certainty that Richard Warren of the Mayflower married in Great Amwell, Hertford to Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker. Additional research is currently being sponsored by MayflowerHistory.com to see if anything further can be learned about these families.

Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628, the only record of his death being found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth."

All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon.


http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/Passengers/RichardWarren.php 
WARREN, Richard (I25450)
 
110004 Richard Warren appears to have been a merchant, who resided in London, and became associated with the Pilgrims and the Mayflower through the Merchant Adventurers. Richard Warren participated in several of the early explorations made by the Pilgrims in 1620, while looking for a place to settle. He appears by land records to have been fairly well-to-do.

When he came over on the Mayflower, he left behind his wife and five daughters, planning to have them sent over after things were more settled in the Colony. His wife and daughters arrived in America in 1623, on the ship Anne.

Nathaniel Morton wrote in his book New England's Memorial, first published in 1669, the following about Richard Warren:

This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth.

Richard Warren is an ancestor to many famous Americans. Among them are Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American in space and fifth man to walk on the moon. A published lineage showing Winston Churchill as a descendant of Richard Warren has a questionable generation and is most likely in error. However, Winston Churchill does appear to be a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland's brother Arthur.



---------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------
SOURCES:
Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families in Progress: Richard Warren for Four Generations (Plymouth: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1991).

Ruth Berg Walsh, "The Search for Pilgrim Richard Warren's Parentage," Mayflower Quarterly, 51:109-112.

Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony, Its History and Its People, 1620-1691 (Salt Lake City: Ancestor Publishers, 1986).

Nathaniel Morton, New England's Memorial (Cambridge, 1669).

William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, ed. Samuel Morison (New York: Random House, 1952).

Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered in December 2002 by Edward Davies. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order), and that they were born c1610, c1612, and c1614, so this put the nail in the coffin and we can say with near certainty that Richard Warren of the Mayflower married in Great Amwell, Hertford to Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker. Additional research is currently being sponsored by MayflowerHistory.com to see if anything further can be learned about these families.

Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628, the only record of his death being found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth."

All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon.


http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/Passengers/RichardWarren.php



Richard Warren appears to have been a merchant, who resided in London, and became associated with the Pilgrims and the Mayflower through the Merchant Adventurers. Richard Warren participated in several of the early explorations made by the Pilgrims in 1620, while looking for a place to settle. He appears by land records to have been fairly well-to-do.

When he came over on the Mayflower, he left behind his wife and five daughters, planning to have them sent over after things were more settled in the Colony. His wife and daughters arrived in America in 1623, on the ship Anne.

Nathaniel Morton wrote in his book New England's Memorial, first published in 1669, the following about Richard Warren:

This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth.

Richard Warren is an ancestor to many famous Americans. Among them are Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American in space and fifth man to walk on the moon. A published lineage showing Winston Churchill as a descendant of Richard Warren has a questionable generation and is most likely in error. However, Winston Churchill does appear to be a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland's brother Arthur.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOURCES:
Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families in Progress: Richard Warren for Four Generations (Plymouth: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1991).

Ruth Berg Walsh, "The Search for Pilgrim Richard Warren's Parentage," Mayflower Quarterly, 51:109-112.

Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony, Its History and Its People, 1620-1691 (Salt Lake City: Ancestor Publishers, 1986).

Nathaniel Morton, New England's Memorial (Cambridge, 1669).

William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, ed. Samuel Morison (New York: Random House, 1952).


Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered in December 2002 by Edward Davies. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order), and that they were born c1610, c1612, and c1614, so this put the nail in the coffin and we can say with near certainty that Richard Warren of the Mayflower married in Great Amwell, Hertford to Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker. Additional research is currently being sponsored by MayflowerHistory.com to see if anything further can be learned about these families.

Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628, the only record of his death being found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth."

All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon.


http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/Passengers/RichardWarren.php 
WARREN, Richard (I25450)
 
110005 Richard Warren appears to have been a merchant, who resided in London, and became associated with the Pilgrims and the Mayflower through the Merchant Adventurers. Richard Warren participated in several of the early explorations made by the Pilgrims in 1620, while looking for a place to settle. He appears by land records to have been fairly well-to-do.

When he came over on the Mayflower, he left behind his wife and five daughters, planning to have them sent over after things were more settled in the Colony. His wife and daughters arrived in America in 1623, on the ship Anne.

Nathaniel Morton wrote in his book New England's Memorial, first published in 1669, the following about Richard Warren:

This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth.

Richard Warren is an ancestor to many famous Americans. Among them are Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American in space and fifth man to walk on the moon. A published lineage showing Winston Churchill as a descendant of Richard Warren has a questionable generation and is most likely in error. However, Winston Churchill does appear to be a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland's brother Arthur.



---------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------
SOURCES:
Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families in Progress: Richard Warren for Four Generations (Plymouth: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1991).

Ruth Berg Walsh, "The Search for Pilgrim Richard Warren's Parentage," Mayflower Quarterly, 51:109-112.

Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony, Its History and Its People, 1620-1691 (Salt Lake City: Ancestor Publishers, 1986).

Nathaniel Morton, New England's Memorial (Cambridge, 1669).

William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, ed. Samuel Morison (New York: Random House, 1952).

Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered in December 2002 by Edward Davies. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order), and that they were born c1610, c1612, and c1614, so this put the nail in the coffin and we can say with near certainty that Richard Warren of the Mayflower married in Great Amwell, Hertford to Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker. Additional research is currently being sponsored by MayflowerHistory.com to see if anything further can be learned about these families.

Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628, the only record of his death being found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth."

All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon.


http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/Passengers/RichardWarren.php



Richard Warren appears to have been a merchant, who resided in London, and became associated with the Pilgrims and the Mayflower through the Merchant Adventurers. Richard Warren participated in several of the early explorations made by the Pilgrims in 1620, while looking for a place to settle. He appears by land records to have been fairly well-to-do.

When he came over on the Mayflower, he left behind his wife and five daughters, planning to have them sent over after things were more settled in the Colony. His wife and daughters arrived in America in 1623, on the ship Anne.

Nathaniel Morton wrote in his book New England's Memorial, first published in 1669, the following about Richard Warren:

This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth.

Richard Warren is an ancestor to many famous Americans. Among them are Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American in space and fifth man to walk on the moon. A published lineage showing Winston Churchill as a descendant of Richard Warren has a questionable generation and is most likely in error. However, Winston Churchill does appear to be a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland's brother Arthur.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOURCES:
Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families in Progress: Richard Warren for Four Generations (Plymouth: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1991).

Ruth Berg Walsh, "The Search for Pilgrim Richard Warren's Parentage," Mayflower Quarterly, 51:109-112.

Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony, Its History and Its People, 1620-1691 (Salt Lake City: Ancestor Publishers, 1986).

Nathaniel Morton, New England's Memorial (Cambridge, 1669).

William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, ed. Samuel Morison (New York: Random House, 1952).


Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered in December 2002 by Edward Davies. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order), and that they were born c1610, c1612, and c1614, so this put the nail in the coffin and we can say with near certainty that Richard Warren of the Mayflower married in Great Amwell, Hertford to Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker. Additional research is currently being sponsored by MayflowerHistory.com to see if anything further can be learned about these families.

Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628, the only record of his death being found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth."

All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon.


http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/Passengers/RichardWarren.php 
WARREN, Richard (I25450)
 
110006 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. GIBBONS, Richard Leo (I15331)
 
110007 Richard was Called Captain for his position in the locan militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life.

Richard was called Captain for his position in the local militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life. 
HART, Capt. Richard (I24458)
 
110008 Richard was Called Captain for his position in the locan militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life.

Richard was called Captain for his position in the local militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life. 
HART, Capt. Richard (I24458)
 
110009 Richard was Called Captain for his position in the locan militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life.

Richard was called Captain for his position in the local militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life. 
HART, Capt. Richard (I24458)
 
110010 Richard was Called Captain for his position in the locan militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life.

Richard was called Captain for his position in the local militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life. 
HART, Capt. Richard (I24458)
 
110011 Richard was Called Captain for his position in the locan militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life.

Richard was called Captain for his position in the local militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life. 
HART, Capt. Richard (I24458)
 
110012 Richard was Called Captain for his position in the locan militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life.

Richard was called Captain for his position in the local militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life. 
HART, Capt. Richard (I24458)
 
110013 Richard was Called Captain for his position in the locan militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life.

Richard was called Captain for his position in the local militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life. 
HART, Capt. Richard (I24458)
 
110014 Richard was Called Captain for his position in the locan militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life.

Richard was called Captain for his position in the local militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life. 
HART, Capt. Richard (I24458)
 
110015 Richard was Called Captain for his position in the locan militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life.

Richard was called Captain for his position in the local militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life. 
HART, Capt. Richard (I24458)
 
110016 Richard was Called Captain for his position in the locan militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life.

Richard was called Captain for his position in the local militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life. 
HART, Capt. Richard (I24458)
 
110017 Richard was Called Captain for his position in the locan militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life.

Richard was called Captain for his position in the local militia during the Indian Wars. He was a farmer in Little Compton most of his life. 
HART, Capt. Richard (I24458)
 
110018 Richard's children were all Methodists or Presbyterian. EARLL, Richard (I26515)
 
110019 Richard's children were all Methodists or Presbyterian. EARLL, Richard (I26515)
 
110020 Richard's children were all Methodists or Presbyterian. EARLL, Richard (I26515)
 
110021 Richard's children were all Methodists or Presbyterian. EARLL, Richard (I26515)
 
110022 Richard's children were all Methodists or Presbyterian. EARLL, Richard (I26515)
 
110023 Richard's children were all Methodists or Presbyterian. EARLL, Richard (I26515)
 
110024 Richard's children were all Methodists or Presbyterian. EARLL, Richard (I26515)
 
110025 Richard's children were all Methodists or Presbyterian. EARLL, Richard (I26515)
 
110026 Richard's children were all Methodists or Presbyterian. EARLL, Richard (I26515)
 
110027 Richard's children were all Methodists or Presbyterian. EARLL, Richard (I26515)
 
110028 Richard's children were all Methodists or Presbyterian. EARLL, Richard (I26515)
 
110029 Richard, age 11, is listed as son on the 1910 Franklin Co., Illinois census in the HH of George W. & Laura Webster.

1920 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 21, Illinois
Golda, wife 20, Illinois

1930 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 32, Illinois
Goldia, wife a ge 30
Bifford, son age 10
Jerreldeen, dau. age 8

SSDI
Richard Webster died Jan 1974, West Frankfort, Franklin, Illinois
born 22 Apr 1898 
WEBSTER, Richard (I118403)
 
110030 Richard, age 11, is listed as son on the 1910 Franklin Co., Illinois census in the HH of George W. & Laura Webster.

1920 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 21, Illinois
Golda, wife 20, Illinois

1930 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 32, Illinois
Goldia, wife a ge 30
Bifford, son age 10
Jerreldeen, dau. age 8

SSDI
Richard Webster died Jan 1974, West Frankfort, Franklin, Illinois
born 22 Apr 1898 
WEBSTER, Richard (I118403)
 
110031 Richard, age 11, is listed as son on the 1910 Franklin Co., Illinois census in the HH of George W. & Laura Webster.

1920 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 21, Illinois
Golda, wife 20, Illinois

1930 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 32, Illinois
Goldia, wife a ge 30
Bifford, son age 10
Jerreldeen, dau. age 8

SSDI
Richard Webster died Jan 1974, West Frankfort, Franklin, Illinois
born 22 Apr 1898 
WEBSTER, Richard (I118403)
 
110032 Richard, age 11, is listed as son on the 1910 Franklin Co., Illinois census in the HH of George W. & Laura Webster.

1920 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 21, Illinois
Golda, wife 20, Illinois

1930 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 32, Illinois
Goldia, wife a ge 30
Bifford, son age 10
Jerreldeen, dau. age 8

SSDI
Richard Webster died Jan 1974, West Frankfort, Franklin, Illinois
born 22 Apr 1898 
WEBSTER, Richard (I118403)
 
110033 Richard, age 11, is listed as son on the 1910 Franklin Co., Illinois census in the HH of George W. & Laura Webster.

1920 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 21, Illinois
Golda, wife 20, Illinois

1930 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 32, Illinois
Goldia, wife a ge 30
Bifford, son age 10
Jerreldeen, dau. age 8

SSDI
Richard Webster died Jan 1974, West Frankfort, Franklin, Illinois
born 22 Apr 1898 
WEBSTER, Richard (I118403)
 
110034 Richard, age 11, is listed as son on the 1910 Franklin Co., Illinois census in the HH of George W. & Laura Webster.

1920 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 21, Illinois
Golda, wife 20, Illinois

1930 Franklin Co., Illinois census
Webster, Richard age 32, Illinois
Goldia, wife a ge 30
Bifford, son age 10
Jerreldeen, dau. age 8

SSDI
Richard Webster died Jan 1974, West Frankfort, Franklin, Illinois
born 22 Apr 1898 
WEBSTER, Richard (I118403)
 
110035 Richard, Duke of York, and his brother Edward V are the Princes in the
Tower. 
RICHARD, Duke of York (I10659)
 
110036 Richmond, age 6, is listed as son on the 1910 Davidson Co., NC census i n the HH of Reed Stafford.

Richmond, age 16, is listed as son on the 1920 Davidson Co., NC census i n the HH of Reed Stafford.

North Carolina Death Record
Name: Richmond Reid Stafford
Gender: Male
Race: White
Age: 61
Birth Date: 23 Oct 1903
Birth Place: Davidson, North Carolina, United State s
Death Date: 2 Aug 1965
Death Location: Asheboro, Randolp h
Spouse's name: Dorothy Garner
Father's Name: Reid Stafford
Mother's Name: Minnie Everhart
Residence: Asheboro, Randolph, North Carolina 
STAFFORD, Richmond Reid (I124949)
 
110037 Richmond, age 6, is listed as son on the 1910 Davidson Co., NC census i n the HH of Reed Stafford.

Richmond, age 16, is listed as son on the 1920 Davidson Co., NC census i n the HH of Reed Stafford.

North Carolina Death Record
Name: Richmond Reid Stafford
Gender: Male
Race: White
Age: 61
Birth Date: 23 Oct 1903
Birth Place: Davidson, North Carolina, United State s
Death Date: 2 Aug 1965
Death Location: Asheboro, Randolp h
Spouse's name: Dorothy Garner
Father's Name: Reid Stafford
Mother's Name: Minnie Everhart
Residence: Asheboro, Randolph, North Carolina 
STAFFORD, Richmond Reid (I124949)
 
110038 Richmond, age 6, is listed as son on the 1910 Davidson Co., NC census i n the HH of Reed Stafford.

Richmond, age 16, is listed as son on the 1920 Davidson Co., NC census i n the HH of Reed Stafford.

North Carolina Death Record
Name: Richmond Reid Stafford
Gender: Male
Race: White
Age: 61
Birth Date: 23 Oct 1903
Birth Place: Davidson, North Carolina, United State s
Death Date: 2 Aug 1965
Death Location: Asheboro, Randolp h
Spouse's name: Dorothy Garner
Father's Name: Reid Stafford
Mother's Name: Minnie Everhart
Residence: Asheboro, Randolph, North Carolina 
STAFFORD, Richmond Reid (I124949)
 
110039 Richmond, John, Oxford township; merchant and farmer; post office, Evansbu
rgh, Ohio; son of Edward and Martha (Nott) Richmond; was born March 1, 181
7, inSalina, New York. He came to this state with his parents in 1822 a
nd locatedin Morgan county. His parents formerly came from Vermont. Whi
le in Salina his father was engaged in the salt trade. He also sold good
s. After they came to Morgan county he was engaged in the carpenter trad
e. Mr. Richmond came to this county with his parents in June 1824, and loc
ated on the banks of the Walhonding six miles above Roscoe. In 1826, th
ey moved to Roscoe. Mr. Richmond'sfather was engaged as a stone-cutter, a
nd boarded hands engaged in the construction of the Walhonding canal. In J
une, 1828 the family moved to Oxford township and engaged in the buildi
ng of the Ohio canal. Mrs. Richmond's mother died in March, 1829. His fath
er kept tavern and a station on the Ohio canal from that time up to his de
ath in 1846.
Mrs. Richmond was married March 3, 1836 to Miss Elizabeth Reed, of this co
unty. They became the parents of six children, viz: Catherine A., George U
., John E., Mary E., James J. and William H.Mr. Richmond had followed boa
ting from his boyhood until he married. He thenpurchased a boat and follo
wed boating for fifteen years During that time he was also engaged in t
he dry goods and grain business. In April 1850, Mr. Richmond start
ed on an overland journey to California, as captain of a company offifte
en men. They were on the road four months and fifteen days. While in Calif
ornia he was engaged in mining and trading. He returned by vessel Ju
ly 5, 1852, via Panama. Mrs. Richmond died in February 1852. He married No
vember 28, 1852 Miss Elizabeth Higbee, daughter of J. C. Higbee, Esq. Th
ey became the parents of five children, Viz: Elizabeth N., Jesse F., Charl
es H., Francis A., and Lottie C. His wife died in June 1864. His third mar
riage took place in January 1865 to Mary J. McClain, of this county. Mr. R
ichmond has been engaged in farming and mercantile business. He has amass
ed a fortune. Staring in the world a poor boy, meeting reverses after reve
rses, he nevertheless by hisown honest labor accumulated a fortune. He h
as always worked hard, and has been regarded as honest and upright in h
is dealings, thereby gaining the esteem of all who knew him. He operates l
argely in grain and wool. He owns a splendid farm of over 600 acres, a d
ry goods store, a ware-house, and town property in the town of Orange. M
r. Richmond had two sons who served In he rebellion. James J. was a memb
er of Company C., Fifty-first Regiment, O. V. I. He diedat Green Lake, Te
xas and was buried there. John E. was a member of Company H. Eighty-Eigh
th Regiment, O.V. I. He served three months, and was then discharged on ac
count of sickness.
SOURCE: History of Coshocton County, Ohio 1740-1881- Biographical Sketche
s. p-774
FROM the biography of John E. Richmond, source below.
John Richmond, the father of our subject, was born in Onondaga county, N
ew York, March 1, 1817, and was therefore but eleven years of age whenh
is father settled in this county. In early manhood he wedded Elizabeth Ree
d, who was born in this township, April 10, 1817, and the young couple set
tled on a farm. Later he bought a canal boat, which he ran for a numb
er of years. Five children were born to this union, of whom our subje
ct is now the onlyone living. On April 1, 1850, the father, in company wi
th a party of others,started for the gold fields by the overland route, a
rriving there September 15. He returned home July 15, 1852, by way of t
he water route, stopping in New York for two weeks and sending his gold nu
ggets to the mint at Philadelphia, where they were assayed and run into fi
fty dollar slugs. He evidently considered it unwise to inform his young ch
ildren as to the amount he thus acquired, although they were not without c
uriosity in t

-- MERGED NOTE ------------

Richmond, John, Oxford township; merchant and farmer; post office, Evansburgh, Ohio; son of Edward and Martha (Nott) Richmond; was born March 1, 1817, in Salina, New York. He came to this state with his parents in 1822 and located in Morgan county. His parents formerly came from Vermont. While in Salina his father was engaged in the salt trade. He also sold goods. After they came to Morgan county he was engaged in the carpenter trade. Mr. Richmond came to this county with his parents in June 1824, and located on the banks of the Walhonding six miles above Roscoe. In 1826, they moved to Roscoe. Mr. Richmond's father was engaged as a stone-cutter, and boarded hands engaged in the construction of the Walhonding canal. In June, 1828 the family moved to Oxford township and engaged in the building of the Ohio canal. Mrs. Richmond's mother died in March, 1829. His father kept tavern and a station on the Ohio canal from that time up to his death in 1846.

Mrs. Richmond was married March 3, 1836 to Miss Elizabeth Reed, of this county. They became the parents of six children, viz: Catherine A., George U., John E., Mary E., James J. and William H. Mr. Richmond had followed boating from his boyhood until he married. He then purchased a boat and followed boating for fifteen years During that time he was also engaged in the dry goods and grain business. In April 1850, Mr. Richmond started on an overland journey to California, as captain of a company of fifteen men. They were on the road four months and fifteen days. While in California he was engaged in mining and trading. He returned by vessel July 5, 1852, via Panama. Mrs. Richmond died in February 1852. He married November 28, 1852 Miss Elizabeth Higbee, daughter of J. C. Higbee, Esq. They became the parents of five children, Viz: Elizabeth N., Jesse F., Charles H., Francis A., and Lottie C. His wife died in June 1864. His third marriage took place in January 1865 to Mary J. McClain, of this county. Mr. Richmond has been engaged in farming and mercantile business. He has amassed a fortune. Staring in the world a poor boy, meeting reverses after reverses, he nevertheless by his own honest labor accumulated a fortune. He has always worked hard, and has been regarded as honest and upright in his dealings, thereby gaining the esteem of all who knew him. He operates largely in grain and wool. He owns a splendid farm of over 600 acres, a dry goods store, a ware-house, and town property in the town of Orange. Mr. Richmond had two sons who served In he rebellion. James J. was a member of Company C., Fifty-first Regiment, O. V. I. He died at Green Lake, Texas and was buried there. John E. was a member of Company H. Eighty-Eighth Regiment, O.V. I. He served three months, and was then discharged on account of sickness.

SOURCE: History of Coshocton County, Ohio 1740-1881- Biographical Sketches. p-774

FROM the biography of John E. Richmond, source below.
John Richmond, the father of our subject, was born in Onondaga county, New York, March 1, 1817, and was therefore but eleven years of age when his father settled in this county. In early manhood he wedded Elizabeth Reed, who was born in this township, April 10, 1817, and the young couple settled on a farm. Later he bought a canal boat, which he ran for a number of years. Five children were born to this union, of whom our subject is now the only one living. On April 1, 1850, the father, in company with a party of others, started for the gold fields by the overland route, arriving there September 15. He returned home July 15, 1852, by way of the water route, stopping in New York for two weeks and sending his gold nuggets to the mint at Philadelphia, where they were assayed and run into fifty dollar slugs. He evidently considered it unwise to inform his young children as to the amount he thus acquired, although they were not without curiosity in the matter, and our subject, then ten years of age, recalls conducting a quiet investigation in his own behalf on one occasion when his father was asleep, when he went into his bedroom and found the buckskin belt in which he carried his gold, and it was so heavy he could not lift it. The mother of our subject died in February, 1852, while the father was away. On his return from California he bought a farm of one hundred and twenty-one acres, which is now owned by his son Frank, a sketch of whose life appears elsewhere in this edition. Later in partnership with John Peck, of Coshocton, the father bought from a Mr. Davis a general merchandising store which they conducted for a number of years and which Mr. Richmond conducted alone for a long time after the death of his partner. He also ran a hotel at Orange and engaged in the grain business. Politically, he was a stanch republican. His second wife was Miss Elizabeth Higby, who was born in this county. Five children were born to this union, of whom but two are now living, Frank A., and Lottie, the wife of John Goudy, of Bisbee, Arizona. The mother died on May 22, 1864, and the father was again married, his third union being with Mary McClain, a native of this county, who died in 1890, having survived her husband, who passed away in 1887, for three years.

SOURCE: Centennial History of Coshocton Co., Ohio 1909
by William J. Bahmer, Vol 1 page 297-299





Submitted by: Dale & Muriel White

Joseph C. Higbee, from Trenton, New Jersey, settled on his military section about 1820, and remained there until
his death, about 1873, in the seventy-fourth year of his age. It is said his death was hastened, if not caused, by a violent abuse he received from some one who, it is believed, purposed robbery. His first wife was Miss Hackinson. One of his daughters was married to Rev. Mr. Southard, who was for a time a minister of Trinity Church, New York. Another is said to have married Mr. Hay, a lawyer, in Pittsburg. John Richmond, of Orange, married a daughter by the second wife. As illustrating "the style" of the man, the story was long current in the neighborhood, that, when he first came to the country, then in comparatively a wilderness condition, he brought with him six dozen ruffled shirts.











 
RICHMOND, John (I105058)
 
110040 Rillah H., age 12, is listed as daughter on the 1900 Larkin, Jackson Co., Ala. census in the HH of Netherland C. Crowell.

On the 1910 Jackson Co., Ala. census, William J., & Rilla H. Arnold are listed as married 2 yrs. 
CROWELL, Rillah H. (I121936)
 
110041 Rillah H., age 12, is listed as daughter on the 1900 Larkin, Jackson Co., Ala. census in the HH of Netherland C. Crowell.

On the 1910 Jackson Co., Ala. census, William J., & Rilla H. Arnold are listed as married 2 yrs. 
CROWELL, Rillah H. (I121936)
 
110042 Rillah H., age 12, is listed as daughter on the 1900 Larkin, Jackson Co., Ala. census in the HH of Netherland C. Crowell.

On the 1910 Jackson Co., Ala. census, William J., & Rilla H. Arnold are listed as married 2 yrs. 
CROWELL, Rillah H. (I121936)
 
110043 Rillah H., age 12, is listed as daughter on the 1900 Larkin, Jackson Co., Ala. census in the HH of Netherland C. Crowell.

On the 1910 Jackson Co., Ala. census, William J., & Rilla H. Arnold are listed as married 2 yrs. 
CROWELL, Rillah H. (I121936)
 
110044 Rillah H., age 12, is listed as daughter on the 1900 Larkin, Jackson Co., Ala. census in the HH of Netherland C. Crowell.

On the 1910 Jackson Co., Ala. census, William J., & Rilla H. Arnold are listed as married 2 yrs. 
CROWELL, Rillah H. (I121936)
 
110045 Rillah H., age 12, is listed as daughter on the 1900 Larkin, Jackson Co., Ala. census in the HH of Netherland C. Crowell.

On the 1910 Jackson Co., Ala. census, William J., & Rilla H. Arnold are listed as married 2 yrs. 
CROWELL, Rillah H. (I121936)
 
110046 Ritter, age 2, is listed on the 1850 Jackson Co., Tenn. census in the HH of Jefferson & Helin Roberts.

Rita, age 11, is listed on the 1860 Jackson Co., Tenn. census in the HH of Jefferson & Hellen Roberts.

1880 Jackson Co., Tenn. census, entry 158/203
Trisdale, Thos. age 26
Jane, wife age 32
Joan D., dau. age 8
Jefferson, son age 4

1900 Jackson Co., Tenn. census, entry 171/175
Trisdale, Thomas born Mar 1855, age 45, married 20 yrs.
Rettie Jane, wife born Jan 1848, age 52, mar.20yrs.,mother of 2, 2 living
Joe Ann, dau. born Aug 1872, age 27, single, mother of 3, 3 living
Ben Minor, gr-son born Jan 1890, age 10
Clay Evans, gr-son born Mar 1895, age 5
Robert Taylor, gr-son Feb 1898, age 2

Description: Tennessee, Death Records
Name: Rettie Jane Trisdale
[Rettie Jane Roberts]
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 8 Jan 1848
Birth Place: Tennessee
Age: 82
Death Date: 26 Apr 1930
Death Place: Monterey, Putnam, Tennessee
Father's Name: Jeff Roberts
Mother's Name: Heland Turner 
ROBERTS, Rita Jane (I119625)
 
110047 Ritter, age 2, is listed on the 1850 Jackson Co., Tenn. census in the HH of Jefferson & Helin Roberts.

Rita, age 11, is listed on the 1860 Jackson Co., Tenn. census in the HH of Jefferson & Hellen Roberts.

1880 Jackson Co., Tenn. census, entry 158/203
Trisdale, Thos. age 26
Jane, wife age 32
Joan D., dau. age 8
Jefferson, son age 4

1900 Jackson Co., Tenn. census, entry 171/175
Trisdale, Thomas born Mar 1855, age 45, married 20 yrs.
Rettie Jane, wife born Jan 1848, age 52, mar.20yrs.,mother of 2, 2 living
Joe Ann, dau. born Aug 1872, age 27, single, mother of 3, 3 living
Ben Minor, gr-son born Jan 1890, age 10
Clay Evans, gr-son born Mar 1895, age 5
Robert Taylor, gr-son Feb 1898, age 2

Description: Tennessee, Death Records
Name: Rettie Jane Trisdale
[Rettie Jane Roberts]
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 8 Jan 1848
Birth Place: Tennessee
Age: 82
Death Date: 26 Apr 1930
Death Place: Monterey, Putnam, Tennessee
Father's Name: Jeff Roberts
Mother's Name: Heland Turner 
ROBERTS, Rita Jane (I119625)
 
110048 Ritter, age 2, is listed on the 1850 Jackson Co., Tenn. census in the HH of Jefferson & Helin Roberts.

Rita, age 11, is listed on the 1860 Jackson Co., Tenn. census in the HH of Jefferson & Hellen Roberts.

1880 Jackson Co., Tenn. census, entry 158/203
Trisdale, Thos. age 26
Jane, wife age 32
Joan D., dau. age 8
Jefferson, son age 4

1900 Jackson Co., Tenn. census, entry 171/175
Trisdale, Thomas born Mar 1855, age 45, married 20 yrs.
Rettie Jane, wife born Jan 1848, age 52, mar.20yrs.,mother of 2, 2 living
Joe Ann, dau. born Aug 1872, age 27, single, mother of 3, 3 living
Ben Minor, gr-son born Jan 1890, age 10
Clay Evans, gr-son born Mar 1895, age 5
Robert Taylor, gr-son Feb 1898, age 2

Description: Tennessee, Death Records
Name: Rettie Jane Trisdale
[Rettie Jane Roberts]
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 8 Jan 1848
Birth Place: Tennessee
Age: 82
Death Date: 26 Apr 1930
Death Place: Monterey, Putnam, Tennessee
Father's Name: Jeff Roberts
Mother's Name: Heland Turner 
ROBERTS, Rita Jane (I119625)
 
110049 Ritter, age 2, is listed on the 1850 Jackson Co., Tenn. census in the HH of Jefferson & Helin Roberts.

Rita, age 11, is listed on the 1860 Jackson Co., Tenn. census in the HH of Jefferson & Hellen Roberts.

1880 Jackson Co., Tenn. census, entry 158/203
Trisdale, Thos. age 26
Jane, wife age 32
Joan D., dau. age 8
Jefferson, son age 4

1900 Jackson Co., Tenn. census, entry 171/175
Trisdale, Thomas born Mar 1855, age 45, married 20 yrs.
Rettie Jane, wife born Jan 1848, age 52, mar.20yrs.,mother of 2, 2 living
Joe Ann, dau. born Aug 1872, age 27, single, mother of 3, 3 living
Ben Minor, gr-son born Jan 1890, age 10
Clay Evans, gr-son born Mar 1895, age 5
Robert Taylor, gr-son Feb 1898, age 2

Description: Tennessee, Death Records
Name: Rettie Jane Trisdale
[Rettie Jane Roberts]
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 8 Jan 1848
Birth Place: Tennessee
Age: 82
Death Date: 26 Apr 1930
Death Place: Monterey, Putnam, Tennessee
Father's Name: Jeff Roberts
Mother's Name: Heland Turner 
ROBERTS, Rita Jane (I119625)
 
110050 Ritter, age 2, is listed on the 1850 Jackson Co., Tenn. census in the HH of Jefferson & Helin Roberts.

Rita, age 11, is listed on the 1860 Jackson Co., Tenn. census in the HH of Jefferson & Hellen Roberts.

1880 Jackson Co., Tenn. census, entry 158/203
Trisdale, Thos. age 26
Jane, wife age 32
Joan D., dau. age 8
Jefferson, son age 4

1900 Jackson Co., Tenn. census, entry 171/175
Trisdale, Thomas born Mar 1855, age 45, married 20 yrs.
Rettie Jane, wife born Jan 1848, age 52, mar.20yrs.,mother of 2, 2 living
Joe Ann, dau. born Aug 1872, age 27, single, mother of 3, 3 living
Ben Minor, gr-son born Jan 1890, age 10
Clay Evans, gr-son born Mar 1895, age 5
Robert Taylor, gr-son Feb 1898, age 2

Description: Tennessee, Death Records
Name: Rettie Jane Trisdale
[Rettie Jane Roberts]
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 8 Jan 1848
Birth Place: Tennessee
Age: 82
Death Date: 26 Apr 1930
Death Place: Monterey, Putnam, Tennessee
Father's Name: Jeff Roberts
Mother's Name: Heland Turner 
ROBERTS, Rita Jane (I119625)
 

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