Asylum

Bradford County, PA

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Matches 151 to 200 of 1,621

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151 ***************************
** Notes on Find A Grave **
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Daughter of Capt. Benjamin Clark and his second wife Keziah (Yarrington) Gore Clark.

Wife of John Overton (1788-1828)
Children:

1. Mary Overton (abt 1812-?)
2. Elizabeth (Overton) Hays Thompson Bloom (abt 1814-1892)
3. Thomas Overton (abt 1815-?
4. Keziah (Overton) Banks Bloom (abt 1823-12/06/1860)

3rd wife of Joseph Passmore

Child with Joseph Passmore

5. John Passmore (1836-?) born Susquehanna County PA
 
Clark, Julia Ann (I3747)
 
152 ***************************
The will of “Margarett Clarke of Banham in the countie of Norfolk widow, late the wyfe of Rowlande Clarke deceased,” dated 23 January 1593, proved 10 April 1594, reads in part:

I doe give unto Margaret my daughter my best gowne. . . unto Francys Ayer my sonne in law my best cowe. . . upon this condition viz, that he. . . paye... [10s] to my neve Robert James I doe give to Alice my daughter One cowe and my chese presse. . . upon condition that she . . . paye.. . to Edward my sonne [10s]... unto Thomas my sonne one ewe & a Lamb and my Bed with the furniture . . to Edward my .sonne [2] payer of sheets. . . all the rest. . . to my daughter Anne Clarke. . . she. .. shall paye unto my sonne Whim Clarke. . . [30s] . . . I doe ordayne and make the executor of this my last will and testament Thomas my sonne. . . these wittoesses . . . Franncis Ayer & Thomas Lance.
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SOURCE:Christopher Gleason Clark, "The English Ancestry of Joseph Clark (1613-1683) of Dedham and Medfield, Massachusetts," in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 152(Jan 1998):3-23
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Micklewood, Margaret (I1910)
 
153 ****************************
* For thorough research on Sheffield-Clark connection, See:
https://www.americanancestors.org/uploadedfiles/media/the_register/nehgr_fall_2016_vol_170.pdf
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Sheffield, Mary (I3752)
 
154 ****************************
In his will dated 1 March 22 Eliz. [1579/80], witnessed by John Goiding­ham, Thomas Spink, Clement Warwick, John Morley, and John Dexter, and proved 10 April 15801281 in Attleborough, Rowland Clarke of Banham directed that his body be buried within the churchyard of Banham, and made bequests:
......unto the poore people of Banham aforesaid [6s 8d] to be parted amongste them wheare most nede is Item I will that Margaret my wife shall have the occupacion and profits of all my lands and tenements bothe free and bonde lyinge and beinge in Banham aforesaide for the terme of foure years next after and from the feast of Saint Michaell the archangel! next and [all his lands in Banham] after my decease upon these conditions that the said Margaret my wife within tenne dais next after my decease shall make a lawfull surrender to the use of Clement Clark my sonne after the terme of the foure yeares aforesaide which the said Margarett had of the gifte of Richard Miclewoode her father And also that the said Margaret shall keepe and bringe up all my children at her charge until they doe come unto lawfull years. . I will that William and Edward my sonnes shalle keepe at Scoole in Banham or Buckenham ore anye other towne neare unto Banham aforesaid Item if Margaret my wife doe refuse to performe these conditions aforesaide then I will that Clement my sonne shall enter presentlye after my decease into all my landes and tenements both free and bonde whiche weare Robert Clarkes my father to have and to hould to him and to his heyers for ever upon this condicion herafter followinge . that the said Clement his heyers Executors or Assigns doe paye . . . unto William Clark Thomas Clark and Edward Clark my sonnes unto everye one of them [£20].. as they shall come to ther like several! ages of Three and twentie years . . . Item I do give and bequeath unto Margaret Alice Elizabeth and Anne my daughters and to everye of them [£20] to be paide by my said wife unto everye of them at thear severall ages of two and twentie years . . . [two pages of conditions concerning survivors' legacies should any heirs die] . . . Margaret my wife . . . I doe ordayrie and make my sole executrix. . . which supervisors I ordeyne and make John Goldingham of Banham gentleman and Clement Warwicke my brother in lawe of this my testament and last will To whome I doe give full authoritie. . . to demande a good and law­ful! assurance of Edward Colbye of Banham gentleman from him and his heyers to the use of Clement my sonne and his heyrs of and in certeyne lands whiche the said Edward Colbye have bargained and sold unto me for divers years past.
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SOURCE: Christopher Gleason Clark, "The English Ancestry of Joseph Clark (1613-1683) of Dedham and Medfield, Massachusetts," in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 152(Jan 1998):3-23
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Clarke, Rowland (I1909)
 
155 *****************************
* From Find A Grave Site ****
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Sybil Lathrop was the daughter of Ezekiel Lathrop and Lydia Crocker of Bridgewater township, Susquehanna Co., PA. She married the Rev. William Lathrop Jr., the son of Dea. William Lathrop and Sarah Brown of Rush in Susquehanna county, PA. Although they shared the same last name, they were distant cousins (4th cousins once removed).

Their lineage compared:

(Wife) Sybil Lathrop < Ezekiel Lathrop II < Ezekiel Lathrop Sr. < Israel Lathrop Jr. < Israel Lathrop Sr. < Hon. Samuel Lathrop

(Husband) Rev. William Lathrop Jr. < Dea. William Lathrop Sr. < Ezra Lathrop Jr. < Lt. Ezra Lathrop Sr. < Samuel Lathrop III < Samuel II Lathrop < Hon. Samuel Lathrop

Sybil's husband William was pastor of the Rush Baptist Church before moving to Herrickville several miles west of Rush. Together they had several children, three sons who joined the Union army during the Civil War, two (Davis and William) of which never returned after losing their lives during the war.

Rev. William and Sybil Lathrop had several children including:

1) Cyril Peck Lathrop b. 1821
2) Anna Lathrop b. ca 1828
3) Davis Lathrop b. ca 1831 d. December 9, 1862 (lost his life in the Civil War as a Union Soldier - Co.D, 141st Infantry Regiment, PA Vol.)
4) Daniel Lathrop b. ca 1834
5) Eunice Lathrop b. ca 1836
6) Amanda Lathrop b. ca 1839
7) William Riley Lathrop III b. ca 1841 d. April 3, 1863 (lost his life in the Civil War as a Union Soldier Co.D, 141st Infantry Regiment, PA Vol.)

---------------------------------------
Census of 1850 Herrick, Bradford, PA
Wm Lathrop 52 NY "Farmer"
Sibyl Lathrop 52 CT
Davis Lathrop 18 PA "Blacksmith"
Daniel Lathrop 16 PA
Eunice Lathrop 14 PA
Amanda Lathrop 11 PA
Anna Lathrop 21 PA
Wm Lathrop 9 PA

Census of 1860 Herrick, Bradford, PA
Wm Lathrop 52 NY "Bap Clergyman"
Sybel Lathrop 52 CT
Wm R Lathrop 19 PA

Census of 1870 Herrick, Bradford, PA
Serrel P Lathrop 49 (marriage record of daughters spells father's name as "Cyril", which is the proper spelling)
Harriet Lathrop 47
Andrew J Lathrop 24
Ellie C Lathrop 22
William B Lathrop 22
Lydia J Lathrop 18
Sybel Lathrop 72
Louisa Lathrop 22 (was wife of Andrew J Lathrop)
Ida M Lathrop 3 (dau of Andrew and Louisa)
William D Lathrop 9/12 (son of Andrew and Louisa)
 
Lathrop, Sybil (I1169)
 
156 *****************************
Notes from Find A Grave posting
-
Bella married Julia A. Tupper
He was the son of Isaac Giffin and Julia Moore

He served in the Civil War: Company H 177 GAR soldier

Bela Giffin
in the Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1963
Name: Bela Giffin
Gender: Male
Race: White
Age: 88
Birth Date: 30 Nov 1831
Birth Place: Pennsylvania
Death Date: 13 Apr 1920
Death Place: Montrose, Sey Co, Pennsylvania, USA
Father Name: Isaac Giffin
Father Birth Place: New Hampshire
Mother Name: Jula Mare
Mother Birth Place: Pennsylvania
Certificate Number: 50734 
Griffin, Bela (I4507)
 
157 ******************************
* From email sent from Roy W. Pneuman (pneuma@wcoil.com)
* Rec'd 28 Aug 2000
*
Clarissa was born about 1821 to Spences Lathrop and Clarissa Tupper, and she married Harry S Clark 25 Dec 1845. Spencer was either the eldest of second eldest son of Ezekiel Lathrop and Lydia Crocker, who came to Susquehanna County in 1801 from New London, CT.....their daughter Lydia Lathrop (Spencer's sister) married John Pneuman about 1815 in Springville, Susquehanna County.

Spencer died very young on 12 Jan 1825 and Clarissa (Spencer's wife) must have struggled because their children Oliver, Polly and Clarissa appear on the annual tax lists as poor children which meant that the township paid for their schooling.

-------
Nehemiah Lathrop was a blacksmith and lived all his life in what became Dimock township.. he was the eldest son of Ezekiel and Lydia Lathrop born abour 1788 in CT. He came to PA with his parents in 1801 and later married Marcia Tupper. According to the 1830 census, they had 5 sons and 3 more daughters, and she was between 30 and 40 at the time. By 1840, they had 3 more daughters.

Nehemiah was alive in 1870 at the age of 82, and Marcia died "at her home near Elk Lake on 9 Sep 1881 aged 89" accordng to the national record

-------
Spencer was, I believe, the second son of Ezekiel and Lydia.He married Clarissa Tupper in Rush, Sep 1808. He was a farmer according to the Springville Tax records, but apparently didn't prosper. The republican reports his early death on 12 Jan 1825
---------
 
Lathrop, Spencer (I101)
 
158 ******************************
* From email sent from Roy W. Pneuman (pneuma@wcoil.com)
* Rec'd 28 Aug 2000
*
Clarissa was born about 1821 to Spences Lathrop and Clarissa Tupper, and she married Harry S Clark 25 Dec 1845. Spencer was either the eldest of second eldest son of Ezekiel Lathrop and Lydia Crocker, who came to Susquehanna County in 1801 from New London, CT.....their daughter Lydia Lathrop (Spencer's sister) married John Pneuman about 1815 in Springville, Susquehanna County.

Spencer died very young on 12 Jan 1825 and Clarissa (Spencer's wife) must have struggled because their children Oliver, Polly and Clarissa appear on the annual tax lists as poor children which meant that the township paid for their schooling.

-------
Nehemiah Lathrop was a blacksmith and lived all his life in what became Dimock township.. he was the eldest son of Ezekiel and Lydia Lathrop born abour 1788 in CT. He came to PA with his parents in 1801 and later married Marcia Tupper. According to the 1830 census, they had 5 sons and 3 more daughters, and she was between 30 and 40 at the time. By 1840, they had 3 more daughters.

Nehemiah was alive in 1870 at the age of 82, and Marcia died "at her home near Elk Lake on 9 Sep 1881 aged 89" accordng to the national record

-------
Spencer was, I believe, the second son of Ezekiel and Lydia.He married Clarissa Tupper in Rush, Sep 1808. He was a farmer according to the Springville Tax records, but apparently didn't prosper. The republican reports his early death on 12 Jan 1825 
Lathrop, Lydia (I582)
 
159 ******************************
* From email sent from Roy W. Pneuman (pneuma@wcoil.com)
* Rec'd 28 Aug 2000
*
Clarissa was born about 1821 to Spences Lathrop and Clarissa Tupper, and she married Harry S Clark 25 Dec 1845. Spencer was either the eldest of second eldest son of Ezekiel Lathrop and Lydia Crocker, who came to Susquehanna County in 1801 from New London, CT.....their daughter Lydia Lathrop (Spencer's sister) married John Pneuman about 1815 in Springville, Susquehanna County.

Spencer died very young on 12 Jan 1825 and Clarissa (Spencer's wife) must have struggled because their children Oliver, Polly and Clarissa appear on the annual tax lists as poor children which meant that the township paid for their schooling.

-------
Nehemiah Lathrop was a blacksmith and lived all his life in what became Dimock township.. he was the eldest son of Ezekiel and Lydia Lathrop born abour 1788 in CT. He came to PA with his parents in 1801 and later married Marcia Tupper. According to the 1830 census, they had 5 sons and 3 more daughters, and she was between 30 and 40 at the time. By 1840, they had 3 more daughters.

Nehemiah was alive in 1870 at the age of 82, and Marcia died "at her home near Elk Lake on 9 Sep 1881 aged 89" accordng to the national record

-------
Spencer was, I believe, the second son of Ezekiel and Lydia.He married Clarissa Tupper in Rush, Sep 1808. He was a farmer according to the Springville Tax records, but apparently didn't prosper. The republican reports his early death on 12 Jan 1825 
Lathrop, Nehemiah (I1172)
 
160 ******************************
* From email sent from Roy W. Pneuman (pneuma@wcoil.com)
* Rec'd 28 Aug 2000
*
Clarissa was born about 1821 to Spences Lathrop and Clarissa Tupper, and she married Harry S Clark 25 Dec 1845. Spencer was either the eldest of second eldest son of Ezekiel Lathrop and Lydia Crocker, who came to Susquehanna County in 1801 from New London, CT.....their daughter Lydia Lathrop (Spencer's sister) married John Pneuman about 1815 in Springville, Susquehanna County.

Spencer died very young on 12 Jan 1825 and Clarissa (Spencer's wife) must have struggled because their children Oliver, Polly and Clarissa appear on the annual tax lists as poor children which meant that the township paid for their schooling.

-------
Nehemiah Lathrop was a blacksmith and lived all his life in what became Dimock township.. he was the eldest son of Ezekiel and Lydia Lathrop born abour 1788 in CT. He came to PA with his parents in 1801 and later married Marcia Tupper. According to the 1830 census, they had 5 sons and 3 more daughters, and she was between 30 and 40 at the time. By 1840, they had 3 more daughters.

Nehemiah was alive in 1870 at the age of 82, and Marcia died "at her home near Elk Lake on 9 Sep 1881 aged 89" accordng to the national record

-------
Spencer was, I believe, the second son of Ezekiel and Lydia.He married Clarissa Tupper in Rush, Sep 1808. He was a farmer according to the Springville Tax records, but apparently didn't prosper. The republican reports his early death on 12 Jan 1825 
Family F1400
 
161 ******************************
* From Ohio History Central
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Benjamin Tupper was a prominent early settler of the Northwest Territory.

Tupper was born in Stoughton, Massachusetts, on March 11, 1738. As a young boy, he served as an apprentice to a tanner. He remained an apprentice until he reached the age of sixteen. Tupper then became a farm hand. In 1756, he enlisted in a military company and fought for the English in the French and Indian War. He married in 1762 and supported his family by teaching school. Once the American Revolution began, Tupper enlisted in the Continental Army. He fought in several major battles and attained the rank of brigadier general before retiring in 1783.

At the end of the Revolutionary War, Tupper was one of the 288 officers who signed the Newburgh Petition. These men hoped that the new government would pay its soldiers with land from the Ohio Country. Following the war, Tupper served in the Massachusetts legislature and assisted the state militia in putting down Daniel Shays' rebellion in 1786. In the same year, he helped Thomas Hutchins survey the Seven Ranges. He used the knowledge he gained while surveying to help the Ohio Company of Associates. The Company soon received permission from the Confederation Congress to establish settlements in the Ohio Country.

Tupper traveled west with the original Ohio Company settlers and helped found Marietta. He served on various committees responsible for building roads, determining where new settlements were to be founded, and where various flour and sawmills were to be located. On September 9, 1788, Tupper and Rufus Putnam became the first judges in the Northwest Territory. Tupper lived in the Northwest Territory for the remainder of his life. He died on June 7, 1792. 
Tupper, General Benjamin (I4514)
 
162 ******************************
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Biography

William was born in 1697. William Billings ... He passed away in 1733. W^hen the Rev. William Billings settled in the new parish he bought of Samuel Ashlev one hundred acres

Bethiah first married Rev. William Billings, son of Capt. William Billings (ca 1660-8 Jun 1728) & Hannah Sterry (18 Aug 1672-). Born on 16 Feb 1697 in Stonington, CT.345 William died in Hampton, CT, on 20 May 1733; he was 36. On 4 Jul 1734 when Bethiah was 30, she second married Rev. Samuel Moseley, son of Ebenezer Moseley (4 Sep 1673-19 Sep 1740) & Hannah Weeks (28 Feb 1678-27 Mar 1747).158 Born on 15 Aug 1708 in Dorchester, MA. Samuel died in Hampton, CT, on 26 Jul 1791; he was 82.

Samuel was ordained 15 May 1734 of the Second Church at Windham.

18 FOLKLORE AND FIRESIDES

of land from the tract which extended along the Nip- muck Path and Little River to the summit of the Hill above North Bigelow, and on the hillside facing the common built his dwelling.

Rev. Billings' pastorate was not all harmonious, as he seems to have had difficulty with his discipline, one man being brought before the church for saying, "I would rather hear my dog bark than hear Billings preach." Others were brought before the church for being "overtaken with strong drink." But innkeeper Hovey or Benjamin Bidlack, storekeeper, who furn- ished the drink were not dealt with.

Pastor Billings' work for the parish was cut short by his death in 1733, just ten years after he had so happily taken the charge. He left a widow and four small chil- dren. His estate consisted of:

£. S. D. £. S. D.

Clothes 24 4 2 Bedding 51 10

Books 48 10 7 Indian Girl 20

Horse 22 Farm & House 600

Stock 42 Brass 7

Furniture 20 Pewter 8 7

Cloth, yarn, flax 20 Iron 10 4

Alone, Mrs. Billings found it impossible to support herself and children, and the year following her hus- band's death, she requested to be allowed the balance on her husband's salary, which v/as granted; she had barely enough provisions to last a week. But her prob- lems were solved by marrying the second pastor, Sam- uel Mosley, a graduate of Harvard in the class of 1729. Mr. Mosley is said to have been a man of dignity,


THE FIRST ORDINATION 19

strict in discipline, and an able and earnest preacher. There is no record of the amount of his salary, but it is evident he looked well to his own good when he mar- ried the widow of his predecessor. A colonial minister had need of being a good business man as well as a scholar. All were obliged to till the soil, for "bread is earned by the sweat of the brow," and, "he that did not work, neither could he eat," were literal facts. Each man was dependent upon his harvests, and not upon the outside world.

MEMBERS OF THE FIRST CHURCH IN 1723

Members of the first church in 1723 were Rev. Wil- liam Billings; deacons, Nathaniel Kingsbury, and Wm. Durkee; members, Ebenezer Abbey, George Martin, Joseph Jennings, Nathaniel Hovey, Samuel Ashley, John Clarke, John Durkee, William Durkee, Jeremiah Durkee, Thomas Marsh, William Farnham, John Scrip- ture, Nathaniel Fline, Benjamin Bidlock. Within the next two years the following were united with the church, the community having grown rapidly: Daniel Holt, David Warren, Paul Abbot, Matthias Marsh, Wil- liam Averill, James Utley, Daniel Button, Timothy Pearl, Robert Willis, Jacob and John Preston, Ebenezer Crocker, Nathaniel W^oodard, Robert Holt, Ebenezer Martin, Joseph Badcock, Philip Abbot, Stephen Fuller, Nathaniel Parker, William Shaw, Jon. Hendee, Thomas Durkee, Samuel Colburn, Joshua Holt, Joseph Lasalle, Nathaniel Ford, Robert Colburn, Samuel Blanchard, Benjamin Preston, and David and Isaac Canada, sons of the first settler; his widow, Margaret's name is found on the lists, as well as a large number of wives and fam-

20 FOLKLORE AND FIRESIDES

ilies of the above. There was also a number of resi- dents not connected with the church.

Discipline was strict in the parish. In 1725 they voted, "We look upon every baptized person to be a subject of church discipline and ought to be called to an account by some church or other, whenever they offend."

Schools were established, and were held in private homes in different parts of the parish, a few weeks at a time; the teacher was paid a small sum for each day the child attended. The parish had its own selectmen and surveyors, so needed to go to Windham Center only for town meetings.

CHAPTER IV REV. SAMUEL MOSLEY'S PASTORATE, 1734 - 1791 | Early Homesteads of Pomfret Vermont area
Sources

Dexter, Franklin Bowditch. Biographical Sketches of the Graduates of Yale College (Holt, 1885) Vol.1, Page 215


See also:

Find-A-Grave Memorial #78447891 in North Cemetery, Hampton, Windham County, Connecticut, USA. Plot: Possibly Buried here?
Colonial Collegians: Biographies of Those Who Attended American Colleges before the War for Independence (subscription). CD-ROM. Boston, Mass.: Massachusetts Historical Society : New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2005. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2008.) Vol. Yale page 120
Richard Anson Wheeler, History of the town of Stonington, county of New London, Connecticut, from its frist settlement in 1649 to 1900, New London, Conn.: Press of the Day, 1900, (http://archive.org/details/historyoftownofs01whee.)

Bethiah Otis. Born on 20 Nov 1703 in Scituate, MA.49 Bethiah died in Hampton, CT, on 29 May 1750; she was 46.

Children of William and Bethiah (Otis) Billings: i. William Billings, b. 18 Mar 1724/5; ii. Bethiah Billings, b. 4 Nov 1727; iii. Hannah Billings, b. 8 Nov 1729; iv. Patience Billings, b. 3 Jun 1731; and v. Patience Billings, b. 8 Apr 1733.

Children of Samuel and Bethiah (Otis) (Billings) Moseley, born at Windham: i. Hannah Moseley, b. 31 Mar 1735/6; ii. Elizabeth Moseley, b. 15 Nov 1737; iii. Samuel Moseley, b. 27 Apr 1739; iv. Ebenezer Moseley, b. 19 Feb 1740/1; v. Mary Moseley, b. 13 Nov 1743; vi. Anne Moseley, b. 23 May 1746; vii. John Moseley, b. 27 Feb 1747; and viii. Bethiah Moseley, b. before 29 May 1750.

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FROM https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Billings-607
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Billings, Reverend William (I26)
 
163 ******************************
From https://robsgenealogy.com/robsgenealogy/getperson.php?personID=42078976&tree=tree1


John McNeely son of Jonathan (John) married Elinor Hart. This marriage is supported by Hart family location and association and is further supported by the fact that John had daughter named Elinor and a son named Samuel, Samuel Hart was Elinor’s father.

The dates of land ownership assist us in determining migration groups. It appears that Adam’s family migrated with him in what we have termed the first increment, we do not know the dates of birth of his children; we know Adam Sr. died in 1766.

Jonathan (John I) migrated same increment. His family is with him except John Junior, Archibald and Margaret. They had married by this time and remained in PA for a short period. The time line shows Archibald and John signing petition in Bucks County, PA in 1763 with Archibald having a child baptized at Tinicum Presbyterian Church, PA in 1770. Hence it is doubtful either of them came with first increment.

We believe John Jr., Archibald, James and Margaret (McNeely) Hughes (four siblings), Elinor’s sisters families and possibly her nephew Samuel migrated prior to the Revolutionary war, probably around 1772. They are not listed on the 1775 associate list of Bedminster Township, Bucks County, PA.

An interesting tidbit of Hart family lore, some of the children went south for the purpose of horse breeding. They have found no support for this lore but later some of John McNeely’s family is involved in horse-trading in North Carolina and South Missouri.

By process of elimination and examination of available documents it appears that Jonathan (John) McNeely of Bucks County, PA is the Ireland immigrant John, who migrated to North Carolina around 1760. It also supports him as being the John who appears as landowner in 1765 in Rowan County, North Carolina along with Adam McNeely landowner same year. The family association in Rowan County provides reasonable support for him to be the father of the siblings mentioned in Isaac’s will, John, Archibald, Isaac, James and Margaret.


It is a challenge tracing the McNeelys. The continue to use the same names over and over. For instance, there are 3 generations named John.


From the book "History of the Presbyterian Church of Deep Run 1725-1975, by Dorothy Cameron, pg 8-9.

Robert McNeely, [uncle of this James] who came to this country from County Tyrone in 1732, was of pure Irish lineage. Influenced by the Scotch immigration into north Ireland, the McNeelys became Presbyterian and the clan O'Neale, with an eight century authentic genealogy in Ireland, gave its name the Scottish form.

The McNeelys were active in the affairs of Deep Run through the early 1800s. This family produced a Presbyterian minister; he was the son of the widow of the Rev. James Grier by her marriage to a McNeely.
The following researched by Maurice Mcneely in his book "Mcneelys of Northwest Missouri:"

Three brothers, Robert, John. and Adam McNeely were born in Tyrone County, Ireland (in what is now Northern Ireland) – Robert, the oldest, about 1690; John and Adam were born by 1700. I have not been able to determine the names of their parents.

They migrated to America and are in Bucks County, PA by 1741. Bedminster Township in Bucks County is about 30 miles north from downtown Philadelphia.


We find the McNeely’s first mentioned in history and records in the township of Bedminster. Hanna, in his “The Scotch-Irish”, tells us that Deep Run Presbyterian Church in Bedminster township was established in 1726.


"The History of Bedminster, Bucks County, Pennsylvania" states: “In the early I700 ’s there was a migration of Scotch-Irish from Northern Ireland This was due not from famine, but as a result of the Trade and Navigation Act passed by Parliament in I696. This Act classified Northern Ireland as if it were one of the colonies, as far as taxation was concerned. Many people faced complete financial ruin. The end result was a migration into the colonies. They preferred the wilderness to the cities. Not so much for the privacy, but to get away from the sight and sound of the British and British law which they felt had betrayed them.

They journeyed out into the wilderness and finding land they liked which was unoccupied they squatted. They felt that God did not like idle land and if the Proprietors were not doing anything with the land why, then they would. And so they became squatters. They moved in, then had to be removed when the land was legally sold. This was one of William Allen's (a land proprietor) big problems...as land was sold to speculators, squatters who had the means could get a mortgage and buy their plot if they wished. We know that Isaac Norris used a plan whereby a man could pay a sum each year for twenty years. Then on the twenty first year the land became his, and he received a deed It is not known if William Allen used this plan, but we do know he had some sort of contractual arrangement with those buying his land " (Early Families, page 5, History of Bedminster, Bucks County, PA, fourth printing, September 1999, by Bedminster Historical Society, Pauline Cassel, 1976)

“Active in the Deep Run Presbyterian Church in early time was ROBERT McNEELY. He settled on I53 acres of land north of church site. His brother JOHN (Jonathan in some records) McNEELY settled above him on I90 acres of land...both brothers are on Allen land. They probably settled here AFTER 1741. There may have been a purchase agreement sat up with William Allen, but it never came into fruition. Allen ’s Estate sold...in 1801... And so, sixty years of hard work and heavy taxation went down the drain. The tax list of I782 and I783 show both McNeely’s are on the Allen Estate. The end of the revolution proprietary land was now commonwealth land There would be patents and warrants issued into the mid eighteen hundreds in this area. As for the land that had been William Allen ’s the American government had confiscated it. A court battle ensued to regain the land by his estate, headed by Ann Penn Greenleaf Granddaughter of William Allen. She and her family succeeded in regaining control of what was William Allen ’s land. Many families on that land did not have a deed to their property. It may be they had a purchase agreement with William Allen which became void after I776, when Allen went to England They had paid their taxes on the land to the Continental Government during the war on the basis that the land was theirs by default. Now the estate came along with purchase demands. It is not known if these families were given first chance to purchase their land from the estate or if they could not meet the price set by the estate, however, we do know that the unsold land of William Allen ’s Estate went on public auction several times. The auctions held in I800 and 1801 took place at John Shaw’s Tavern in Dublin. This was the former Robert Robinson Tavern Helm and Archibald McNeely were witness for Robert Robinson on his application for tavern in 1770). Men such as ROBERT McNEELY who had held over 300 acres in I782 were sold out. The land was re-plotted. Property lines changed and new people settled on land that had been farmed by another for over forty years.” (Early Families, page 37, History of Bedminster, Bucks County, PA, fourth printing, September I999, by Bedminster Historical Society, Pauline Cassel, I976). 
McNeely, II, John (I89)
 
164 *******************************
1860 Census of Lawrence County - Shows wife Abigail, age 39 living..must have been second wife, as Caroline died 1858

Link = https://lawrence.illinoisgenweb.org/census/1860/178.HTM

 
Bailey, James (I4330)
 
165 *******************************
Obituary from Find A Grave ****
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Carrie 'Elizabeth' Clark, 74, of Athens RR 1, PA, formerly of Towanda, died Saturday, November 5, 1994 at the home of her daughter and son-in-law, Linda and Ralph Hobbie, following an extended illness. Born April 13, 1920 in Terry Township, PA, she was a daughter of the late Cameron D. and Carrie Johnson Gowin. Mrs. Clark was a member of the Earl T. Fulmer VFW Post 6072, Durell and of the Athens Senior Citizens. She was employed by Sayre Lingerie and later by Towanda Corset Factory. Surviving are daughters and sons-in-law, Linda and Ralph Hobbie of Athens RR 1 and Patricia and Keith Haight of Canton; a son and daughter-in-law, John and Linda Clark of Troy; seven grandchildren and one great-grandson; brothers, William Gowin of Mountain Lake and Walter Gowin of New Albany; sisters, Lillian Turner of Athens, Florence Smith of Towanda, June Cory of Wysox and Marjie McElwee of Wyalusing; several nieces, nephews and cousins. She was preceded in death by her husband, John F. Clark, in 1985; two sisters and five brothers. Funeral services were held at the Maryott-Bowen Funeral Home in Towanda on November 7 with the Rev. Paul West, pastor of the Ulster Village Presbyterian Church officiating and interment to be in the Rome Cemetery, Rome, PA. Memorials may be directed to Guthrie Hospice, RR 4, Box 60-A, Towanda, PA 18848 in Mrs. Clark's memory. 
Gowin, Carrie Elizabeth (I4271)
 
166 ********************************
* Genealogy.com **
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Ezekiel & Abigail Lyon Lathrop m.abt 1752/3 & son, ASA b 1756
By Virginia Terry November 24, 2003 at 04:25:42

Ezekiel Lathrop b Sept 5, 1724 is the son of Israel Lathrop, Jr. & Mary Fellows. Israel b 2/01/1686/7 Norwich CT; & Mary babt 1688. Israel's parents are Israel Lathrop, Sr. & Rebecca Bliss. Ezekiel m. Abigail Lyon on 10/18/1753.

Ezekiel & Abigail are thought to have come to Susquehanna Co., PA -- Huntington's Lathrop Family Memoirs have Ezekiel once just "Pennsylvania."In another place #225 on pg 69, it gives Ezekiel's birth and marriage dates to Abigail.

Ezekiel & Abigail have the following children and a lot of their names ape the names Zebdiel Lathrop and wife Abigail Harris gave their sons. Remember that Zebdiel's children ranged in age from 2 years (or possibly once month) to 16 years of age--and so did not have their own households in 1800.Census records, here in Susquehanna Co. PA are confusing because of the duplication of names.

Ch: of Abigail & Ezekiel Lathrop (b1724):
1] Nehemiah Lathrop b 8/3/1754 Norwich CT
2] Asa Lathrop b 2/2/1756 Norwich CT
3] Ezekial Lathrop (Jr.) b 11/16/1757 Norwich CT
4] James Lathrop 5/16/1761 family search says he died 1793 apparently in CT -- There is a James Lathrop in Susquehanna Co. PA. early Census of 1800/10/20.
5] Sybil Lathrop b 4/11/1762 Norwich CT

You will note here that Asa Lathrop b 2/2/1756 is the Asa of Susquehanna Co. PA and buried in Lathrop Cem. in Susquehanna Co. PA.

In 1810, an Asa Lathrop, James Lathrop, Ezekiel Lathrop, Spencer Lathrop, Benjamin Lathrop & a Walter Lathrop appear in Bridgewater Twp or Borough -- which today is largely Montrose, PA--the County Seat.

And, there were some other Lathrops.If I can be of some help please e-mail me directly at gsleepert@epix.net

Virginia Sleeper-Terry

In 1820, a Nemehiah Lathrop appears in Tunkhannock Twp of Sus. Co.; A James and a Ezekiel appear in Springville Twp., Sus. Co. 
Lathrop, Ezekiel I (I1166)
 
167 ********************************
** Trinity Alumni Magazine, 1961
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KAPP CLARK who has been director of research at Smith, Kline and French and a member of many key committees in the develonment of magic drugs is now chief executive officer of SK&F's Research and Development Division. Kapp and Peggy along with their 5 children, divided 3 to 2 in favor of Trin- ity prospects, live in Wynnewood Park in suburban Philadelphia 
Clark, John Kapp MD (I2)
 
168 ********************************
In his will, dated 24 September 1548 and proved 15 January 1550/1 at Besthorpe, Robert Clarke of Banham referred to his father, John Clarke, indicating that he had held land in the same parish. After the customary preamble, Robert bequeathed “my soule to god ailmyghtie our Ladye sainte Marie & all the holye companye of heaven and my body to be buryed in the churche yarde” of Banham. He made bequests as follows:
for the sustentation of the poore . . . xijd . . . to Thomas Clarke my sonne & to his heires my free tenement sometyme John Clarke my ffather with all the lands free & bonde that to the said ten[emen}tte belonge except twoo acres & a [half] in hooke upon thys condicion that the said Thomas shall paye unto Katherine my daughter [33s 4d] at the daye of her marriage.. . to Rowlande my son, twoo acres & a [half] of land free lyeinge in the hooke [upon the condition] that the said Rowlande paie to Katherine my daughter at the daye of her marriage [33s 4d]
to the saide Rowlande my sonne xl acres & a halfe and a half a rode of lande & medowe bonde wt a tent[emen]te called Silverns in westgate the whyche I pur­sheased of John Plowman to hold to the sayde Rowlande & to his heyres for ever after the decease of Alyce my wyffe . to Alyce my wyffe my close that I per­cheased of Rycharde Leye terme of her lyef/And after her decease I will the said close to remayne to Thomas my son and to his heirs for ever/Itm. to Rowlande my son half an acre of land bonde, lyeinge at the [illegible] plane ende in the valeye & one rode & a halfe lyeinge in the same fairlonge and abbutt upon the lande of John Clarke towards the sowthe... /Itm. . . to Thomas Clarke my son one roode & a half of lande lyeing in Swete hyll medowe & half an acre lyeinge in the same medowe . ./I wyll yf I chance to dye seised in the twoo acres & a half of free lande lyeing in the hooke, that Thomas my sonn after the decease of Alyce my wyff shall gyve estate to Rowlande my sonne of the twoo acres & a half of lande in the hooke aforesayde . . And yf the sayde Thomas my sonne will not gyve to Rowlande my sonne estate of the twoo acres and a half of lande lyeing in the hooke That then I wyll & gyve to Rowlande my sonne that close whyche I pur­cheased of Richarde Leye of Banham /I gyve to Johane Huntinge my daughter [40s] the whyche I wyll that Thomas & Rowlande my sonnes shall paye unto her after my decease . . . Itm I gyve to Isabell Sharpynye [20s] to be payde to her at the day of her maryage/Itm I gyve to Robert Rowse my godson [12d] /And I gyve Alyce Rowse [12d]/Itm I gyve to John Huntynge my daughters sonne [12d] And to Johan Huntynge, Margaret Huntynge, Elizabeth Huntynge the chyldren of Johanne my daughter. I give to evrye of them [12~] /ltm I give & bequeath to evry godchyld of myne iiijd/The Residue. . . I give them to Alyce my wyfe whome I ordayne & make myne executrixe...
Witnesses were “Rycharde Lee and Thomas Blaxstone of Banham and John Collyns of Wilbye.”
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Source:Christopher Gleason Clark, "The English Ancestry of Joseph Clark (1613-1683) of Dedham and Medfield, Massachusetts," in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 152(Jan 1998):3-23
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Clarke, Robert Williamson (I2210)
 
169 *********************************
* From https://www.joycetice.com/heverly/h1p190.htm
* Pioneer and Patriot Families of Bradford County, Heaverly
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Page 202

James Campbell, a native of Blandford, Mass., who had been a soldier in the Revolutionary war, removed from Massachusetts with his family, 1791, and settled in the wilderness on Sugar Creek in Burlington.

He had married Jane Knox, their children being John, James, David, Cephas, William, Eleanor, Rachel, Cynthia, Jane, Betsy and Sally. John, James and David were soldiers in the struggle for Independence.

Mr. Campbell died upon his farm, December 28, 1813, in his 75th year. Notice of his death says, "He was the father of 5 sons, 6 daughters, 6 sons-in-law, 93 grandchildren and 22 great-grandchildren, making in all 137.

He was a member of the Methodist society and was much respected for his virtues." He was of Scotch descent. The farm he settled is still owned and occupied by his descendants. His wife, born February 3, 1744, died October 16, 1840. Both are buried in the family plot upon the homestead. Of the children:

John and James removed early to Indiana and died there.

David, born at Blandford, Mass., enlisted January 1, 1782, and served until December, 1783, as a private under Captain Pearsey and Col. Marinus Willet. He obtained a pension upon the ground that in the expedition to Oswego one of his feet was frozen, causing permanent lameness. He died in Burlington, December 15, 1848, aged 83 years, leaving children: Harry, James, David, Hannah (1st Mrs. Isaac Ayers, 2nd Mrs. Jesse Beals), Almira (Mrs. Isaac Marcellus), Almenia (Mrs. Clark).

Cephas, born March 29, 1777, married first Sarah, daughter of Chester Bingham of Ulster; she died, 1821, in her 35th year; married second Ellen Miller, born January 28, 1788, died January 29, 1875. Mr. Campbell died March 5, 1857 in Burlington.

Children: Josephus, who married Asenath Miller; James married Anna Robbins; Chester married Mary Ann Pratt; Owen married 1st Celinda Foster, 2nd Almira York. Letitia married Orry Burns.

William, born August 10, 1779, married Polly Miller, settled on Tom Jack Creek, West Burlington, where he died, 1854. His wife, born March 14, 1788, died March 16, 1847. Children: Alanson, George Washington, William, Lucy, Derrick, Leticia, Lenora.

Eleanor married Gamaliel Jaqua, Burlington.

Rachel married Stephen Wilcox, North Towanda.

Cynthia married John T. Clark, Burlington.

Jane married George Head, Burlington.

Betsy married 1st Oliver Sherman, 2nd Stephen Smith.

Sally married Jeremiah Miller, Burlington.
 
Campbell, James Sr. (I4327)
 
170 *********************************
* Notes on Find A Grave

From Gleaning of Richland and Clay Counties, Illinois

W.C. Rickard died at his residence January 13, 1890.
He was an old Civil War Veteran having served in Col. Wilders Brigade as a 1st Lieut.in Co.B 98th Illinois Infantry.

January 17, 1890

The sudden death of W.C. Rickard last Monday morning cast a gloom over the Community.
Cause of death was heart disease. "Clark" Rickard was a resident for thirty years.
He leaves a wife and two sons; William Nesbit Rickard and Edward Clark Rickard.

Olney Advocate

Mr. Rickard was the son of Samuel Rickard and Mary Treadway Rickard. His first married to Elizabeth Nesbit, September 10, 1861. His second marriage was to Laura Rictor, May 6, 1884; the daughter of James Rictor and Catherine Yates.

March 11, 1886 an infant daughter Bula of William C. and Laura Rickard died. Olney Times 
Rickard, William Clark (I4520)
 
171 *********************************
** Benjamin Clark was a wheelwright. He married Dorcas Morse in 1665, and in 1668 received a grant for a house lot "on the way as you go out at Nantasket." The original well is reputed to still be in use. He was burned out by the Indians in 1676, but rebuilt upon the same spot. What is called the "Peak House" (picture on p348, History of Medfield) is an addition subsequently made to his second house, in or about 1762. After the decay of the old part, it was moved to its present location. Its unique shape has attracted much attention, and it is even popularly believed to be one of the original houses left standing by the Indians. Benjamin was a prominent man in town affairs, served on the board of selectmen seventeen times, and as a representative two years. He died 1 Dec. 1724, his widow the following year. (Tilden)
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FROM http://sciway3.net/clark/clark/benjaminclark1644.html
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Clarke, Benjamin (I30)
 
172 **********************************
*

Buried in Gustin Cemetery, Burlington Township, Bradford Co., PA. Inscription reads "In memory of Cynthia Clark w/o Eliphalet Gustin, Jr."


'Married on March 31, in Burlington, by Rev. Anthony McReynolds, Eliphalet Gustin, Jr. and Miss Cynthia, daughter of John T. and Cynthia (Campbell) Clark." (Pioneer & Patriot Families by Heverly Records from 1830 to 1840)

Bradford Star, May 19, 1898--"Cynthia Clark Gustin, wife of the late Eliphalet Gustin, died April 6, 1898, at son of Seth P., Burlington. Born May 13, 1815. Had 10 children--6 sons, 4 daughters. Five sons in Civil War. Sons Seth P., Volney H. (died Libby Prison), Burton K., Ethan A., Judson, Judge (died at siege of Charleston.) Survived by S.P. of Burlington, B.K. of East Smithfield, Mrs. G.L. Overpeck of Herrick (Ethalinda), Mrs. Martin Rockwell (Mary) of Herrick, Mrs. O.E. Kendall (Ersula) of Batavia, NY.
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Clark, Cynthia (I4291)
 
173 **********************************
* From Heverly Pioneer and Patriot Families of Bradford County *
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James Campbell, a native of Blandford, Mass., who had been a soldier in the Revolutionary war, removed from Massachusetts with his family, 1791, and settled in the wilderness on Sugar Creek in Burlington.

Page 202

He had married Jane Knox, their children being John, James, David, Cephas, William, Eleanor, Rachel, Cynthia, Jane, Betsy and Sally. John, James and David were soldiers in the struggle for Independence. Mr. Campbell died upon his farm, December 28, 1813, in his 75th year. Notice of his death says, "He was the father of 5 sons, 6 daughters, 6 sons-in-law, 93 grandchildren and 22 great-grandchildren, making in all 137. He was a member of the Methodist society and was much respected for his virtues." He was of Scotch descent. The farm he settled is still owned and occupied by his descendants. His wife, born February 3, 1744, died October 16, 1840. Both are buried in the family plot upon the homestead. Of the children:

John and James removed early to Indiana and died there.

David, born at Blandford, Mass., enlisted January 1, 1782, and served until December, 1783, as a private under Captain Pearsey and Col. Marinus Willet. He obtained a pension upon the ground that in the expedition to Oswego one of his feet was frozen, causing permanent lameness. He died in Burlington, December 15, 1848, aged 83 years, leaving children: Harry, James, David, Hannah (1st Mrs. Isaac Ayers, 2nd Mrs. Jesse Beals), Almira (Mrs. Isaac Marcellus), Almenia (Mrs. Clark).

Cephas, born March 29, 1777, married first Sarah, daughter of Chester Bingham of Ulster; she died, 1821, in her 35th year; married second Ellen Miller, born January 28, 1788, died January 29, 1875. Mr. Campbell died March 5, 1857 in Burlington.

Children: Josephus, who married Asenath Miller; James married Anna Robbins; Chester married Mary Ann Pratt; Owen married 1st Celinda Foster, 2nd Almira York. Letitia married Orry Burns.

William, born August 10, 1779, married Polly Miller, settled on Tom Jack Creek, West Burlington, where he died, 1854. His wife, born March 14, 1788, died March 16, 1847. Children: Alanson, George Washington, William, Lucy, Derrick, Leticia, Lenora.

Eleanor married Gamaliel Jaqua, Burlington.

Rachel married Stephen Wilcox, North Towanda.

Cynthia married John T. Clark, Burlington.

Jane married George Head, Burlington.

Betsy married 1st Oliver Sherman, 2nd Stephen Smith.

Sally married Jeremiah Miller, Burlington.
 
Campbell, Cynthia (I2109)
 
174 **********************************
* From notes on Find A Grave *****
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John Ward Treadway was born in Bradford County, Pa. August 30, 1810 to Samuel Treadway and Ursula Clark Treadway. He removed to Lawrence County, Illinois in the mid 1830's. On December 22, 1837 he married Rachel Neal the daughter of Walter Neal and Dianna Wood Neal. They were the parents of 8 children: Charles Wesley (Wes); infant girl, Martha Jane (Matt); Ursula, William Walter (Watt); Lucinda (Lu) Caroline (Cad) and Mary E.

They removed to Olney, Richland County, Illinois by 1870 where John was at one time President of the Old Settlers Association and was also a Justice of the Peace.
He is buried next to his wife and son Wes. All of his children are buried in Haven Hill Cemetery, Olney except Lucinda Chauncy who is buried in Iowa. 
Treadway, John Ward (I4332)
 
175 **********************************
- Notes on first wife and children
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Tupper, Nathan & Mrs. Beulah Hartshorn, married 23 Aug. 1778
Hiel, son of Nathan & Beulah, born 27 Dec. 1779
Eunice, daughter of Nathan & Beulah, born at Shaftsbury in Vermont
on 14 Dec. 1781
Beulah, wife of Nathan & daughter of Ebenezer Hartshorn Esq.,
died 31 July 1784

---------------------
From https://www.armchairgenealogist.com/norwichct-part-5-18

Nathan is also mentioned on page 86 of "The Hartshorn Families in America" by Derick S. Hartshorn, III. (Nathan's first wife was Beulah Hartshorn.) 
Tupper, Nathaniel (I103)
 
176 **********************************
3964. Joseph Clark, born before 11 April 1613 in Banham, Norfolk, England; died 06 January 1684 in Medfield, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States. He was the son of 7928. Thomas Clarke and 7929. Mary Canne. He married 15 April 1640 in Banham, Norfolk, England.
3965. Alice Fenn, born about 1619 in England; died 17 March 1710 in Medfield, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.

Children of Joseph Clark and Alice Fenn are:
* Joseph Clark (1642-1702), married 1663 Mary Allen (1641-1702).
* Benjamin Clark (1644-1724), married 1665 Dorcas Morse (1645-1725).
* Ephraim Clark (1646-1699), married 1669 Mary Bullen (1642-1726)
* Daniel Clark (1647-1676).
* Mary Clark (1649-1732), married 1673 Jonathan Bowden (1652-1732).
* Sarah Clark (1651-1704), married (1) John Bowers (1646-1676); (2) 1677 Samuel Smith (1641-1691).
* John Clark (1652-1720), married 1680 Mary Sheffield (1653-????).
* Nathaniel Clark (1658-1733), married 1704 Experience Hinsdale (1679-1754).
* Rebecca Clark (1660-1740), married 1679 John Richardson (1650-1697).

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Clarke, Joseph The Immigrant (I34)
 
177 **********************************
Now that Nathaniel had a farm, and a house, it was time to get married (according to the Covenant, he could only keep his full twelve acres if he was married.) He promptly did so 25 June 1639, marrying Priscilla Clarke.

Priscilla was born in 1613 in Banham, Norfolk, England, the 8th of 11 children of Thomas and Mary Clarke. She came to Dedham from Watertown with four siblings. Exactly when they emigrated is unclear, although the passenger list of the ship Abraham in 1635 includes a “Clark Jo” aged 20, the age of her brother John at the time. Her brother Rowland owned land in Dedham by 1637 but died the following year (some genealogies confuse their grandfather, also Rowland, with this brother; others confuse this Rowland Clark with another Rowland from Bedfordshire and say that he was her father.)

In emigrating together, the Clarke siblings were more typical Puritans than Nathaniel, who came without other family members. According to David Hackett Fischer, “By comparison with other colonies, households throughout Massachusetts and Connecticut included large number of children, small numbers of servants and high proportions of intact marital unions.” Ref Marital bliss was enforced by law: Puritans thought life in a “covenanted family” was the only proper way, and made it illegal to live alone. Officials would force a stubborn bachelor to either “settle himself with a family” or “settle himself” in the House of Correction.
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From http://www.clubmobile.org/Colburns/Nathaniel.html
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Clarke, Priscilla (I617)
 
178 ***********************************
Commemorative Biographical Record of Northeastern Pennsylvania: Including the Counties of Susquehanna, Wayne, Pike and Monroe, Page 547, Issue 1280 -



"Mrs. Amelia (Ladd) Lathrop was born October 10, 1819, at Albany, Bradford Co., Penn., daughter of Charles K. and Philinda (Allen) Ladd, 'of Connecticut, early settlers of Bradford county. She died in December, 1892, her remains being interred beside those of her husband in a cemetery in Gibson township, Susquehanna county. They had six children: Spencer, who died in 1892 at Buffalo, N. Y.; Howard and Hanlon, who died in infancy; \Vilbur F.; Philinda, wife of our subject; and Caroline, who married James L. Wilcox, of Buffalo, New York."
 
Ladd, Almelia (I2079)
 
179 ***********************************
In Memory of Mrs. Bethia wife to Mr. Theophilus Clark who died Sept 16 1791.
Married Theophilus Clark on Dec. 4, 1745 in Hampton, Connecticut.
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Billings, Bethiah (I25)
 
180 ***********************************
See Christopher Gleason Clark, "The English Ancestry of Joseph Clark (1613-1683) of Dedham and Medfield, Massachusetts," in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 152(Jan 1998):3-23
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Clarke, Joseph The Immigrant (I34)
 
181 ************************************
From the Baker Family Tree, Chapter 17, The Clarke Family:
http://bakerfamilytree.blogspot.com/2008/02/chapter-17-clarke-family_27.html
Retreived Jan. 15, 2011
THE FIFTH GENERATION: Benjamin Clark (1750-1834)

Benjamin did not remember his father; his father had died when he was only five years old. When Benjamin was twelve years old his mother remarried a Mr. Walden but Mr. Walden died suddenly after less than four years of marriage. His mother again remarried less than a year following her second husband’s death and this time she moved with her new husband to Norwick, Connecticut leaving behind Benjamin and his brothers in Ashford. Benjamin, then seventeen, went to work and live at his uncle Theophilus’ tavern on Ashford Green in the village of Ashford. Benjamin Clark met his future wife “Nabbe” from the nearby community of Tolland, shortly before his nineteenth birthday. When they married in early 1769 Nabbe was only sixteen and Benjamin had just turned nineteen. [“Nabbe” and Benjamin are our daughter-in-law’s 6th great grandparents. Unfortunately, we know little about the background of Nabbe. It is believed that her proper name was Abigail but her surname is not known. A number of sources give her name as Abigail Hunt which would be very exciting because Abigail Hunt’s great-great grandfather, Thomas Loring, was the sister of Welthean Loring who is our son’s 11th great grandmother. This, if it were true, would mean that our son and his wife, our daughter-in-law, share common ancestors, the parents of Thomas and Welthean Loring. It is also exciting because Abigail Hunt is a descendant of a Mayflower passenger. As is often the case, information found on Ancestry.com is often bogus and after some research I believe that it is unlikely that it was Abigail Hunt who married Benjamin Clark. For one thing she was born and died in a town in Massachusetts that is not located anywhere near where Benjamin lived. Furthermore, the date of her death does not match the known date of Nabbe’s death. New note added December, 2008: Based on reasearch provided by Paula Hart, a distant cousin of my daughter-in-law's and a Clark descendant, she determined that Abigail Hart actually married a cousin of Benjamin Clark's who also was named Benjamin Clark. Their fathers were brothers. This helps explain why some of the genealogists using Ancestry.com confused the names.

In Chapter 8 of our family’s history we write about two of our ancestor families, the Hammonds and the Tubbs. Both families relocated in the early 1770s from New London, Connecticut to the Wyoming Valley (along the Susquehanna River near the present day city of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania). The background for this move to the Wyoming Valley was described as follows: “In 1753, an association was formed in Connecticut, called the Susquehanna (Land) Company, the object of which was to plant a colony in the Wyoming Valley, a region claimed by Connecticut by virtue of an ancient but somewhat questionable Charter granted to it by the English Crown in the 1600s. . . In February 1769, the Susquehanna Company finally sent its first group of forty Connecticut settlers into the Wyoming Valley. They were followed in the spring of 1769 by another two hundred families . . . .” [More information about this new colony and its history in the Revolutionary War is described in Chapter 8]. The tempting offer of inexpensive and fertile farm land was enough to entice not only my ancestors, the Hammond and Tubbs families, to relocate but also Benjamin and his brother Samuel and their families, who in early 1770 made the long overland trip to this new community in the Wyoming Valley. Despite the fact that hundreds of Connecticut Yankees moved to this new community in northeastern Pennsylvania over the next four or five years, it is likely that the Clarks (our daughter-in-law’s ancestors) and the Hammonds and Tubbs (our son’s ancestors) were neighbors and well acquainted. In fact, in August of 1776 both Benjamin Clark and Samuel Tubbs enlisted together as privates in the Wyoming Company that was formed to join forces with the army of George Washington. Their Company marched to New Jersey and joined with Washington’s Continental Army on January 1, 1777. Nabbe was pregnant when Benjamin left with his regiment.

Benjamin and Nabbe Clark’s first son, John Theophilus Clark, was born on July 8, 1770 in their newly built two room log home constructed shortly after their arrival in the Wyoming Valley. In 1772, a second child, a daughter, was born to the couple and in 1774 the couple was blessed with a third child. On March 5, 1777, Nabbe gave birth to twin daughters, however the births of the twins did not go well, and her new babies died. The complications from the births were too much for Nabbe. Her husband was away at the war when she finally surrendered her life on March 12, 1777. She was just 24 years old. Benjamin was devastated when he learned a month later of his young wife’s death.

Benjamin Clark and the Connecticut Regiment from the Wyoming Valley played a very active role in the Revolutionary War. In 1777, they were engaged in actions at Milstone River and Bound Brook in New Jersey [home of another Revolutionary War patriot, our ancestor, Peter Harpending] and in battles at Brandywine and Germantown, before joining Washington’s army at Valley Forge in the winter of 1777-78. In the spring of 1778, some of their regiment having heard rumors of a threatened attack upon their community in the Wyoming Valley, returned home to assist in the protection of their homes. Benjamin however, elected to stay with the Continental Army and was not present at the Battle of Wyoming on July 3, 1778. [See Chapter 8 for more details]. In June of 1778, Benjamin’s regiment was engaged in the Battle of Monmouth in New Jersey. Shortly after the battle his troops were ordered to return to Wyoming however they failed to arrive before the Indian attack and the massacre of so many of their friends. Benjamin was discharged from duty on July 5, 1778. In the summer of 1779, Benjamin joined Sullivan’s expedition against the western Indians which took him as far north as Seneca Lake in Central New York. Further military records indicate that Benjamin served in the army from March 1781 through June 1783. In 1818 at the age of sixty-nine years old, Benjamin Clark then residing in the Township of Ulster in Bradford County, Pennsylvania, applied for and was awarded a pension for his service in the Revolutionary War. In his application for the pension he noted that his discharge papers from the military were lost in February 1793 when “his home was consumed by fire together with all his effects . . “ [Chapter 9 describes Peter Harpending’s involvement in the Battle of Monmouth, Chapter 12 has a section describing the Sullivan Expedition, and Chapter 15 outlines many of our ancestors who fought alongside Benjamin Clark in the American War for Independence. If only we could go back in time to see how often the Clark family and our family crossed paths in the course of our country’s early history. It would be a fascinating adventure.]

Somehow, between the time he was discharged in July of 1778 and the time he re-enlisted in the summer of 1779, Benjamin Clarke managed to get remarried. His new wife was 28 year old Keziah Yarrington. Keziah had lost her first husband, Silas Gore, the previous year at the Battle of Wyoming. Together they had four children born between the years 1781 and 1787. In the late 1780s, the Clark family including Benjamin’s brother and his family, moved north up the Susquehanna River to settle a new community in Ulster in present day Bradford County, Pennsylvania. Joining them was Benjamin’s oldest son, John Theophilus Clark, and John’s future bride, Cynthia Campbell. Benjamin lived to the ripe old age of 87 and he is buried alongside his second wife in Ulster. Their gravesite in Ulster is located about 67 miles south of our cottage on Seneca.
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Clark, Captain Benjamin (I348)
 
182 ************************************
From WikiTree
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Fidler-267
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Biography

Johann Henrich Fidler. [1]

Born 14 Feb 1723. Kniskernsdorf, Schoharie, New York, USA. [2]

Died 2 Nov 1777. Berks, Pennsylvania, USA. [3]

Buried Robesonia, Berks, Pennsylvania, USA. [4]

Henry /Fidler Birth 14 February 1723 New York Death 2 November 1777 Heidleberg Twp, Berks County, Pa

PARENTS Father Gottfried /Fidler/ Mother Anna Elisabeth /Salomon/

Spouse Magdalena /Schauer/ Marriage 13 June 1744 Berks County, Pa

Henry bought original farm from his father. He sold the farm to Valentine Unruh May 17, 1753. (Tulphehocken Twp) Book 4 Page 4 Berks County.

Henry bought the Thomas Lansiscus tract April 3, 1751. This being in what is Heidleberg Twp. This was in the far eastern part of the Manor of Plumpton. Lansiscus acquired this land Dec 20, 1743. This contained 224 acres. (Book A-6-153)

Orphans Court Records Berks County Book 2 Page 230 1778 Henry Fidler Heidelberg Deceased Adam Fidler petitioner Eldest Son. Widow deceased.

Children: Adam, Catharine (Henry Knob), Magdalena (John Bennitch), Henry,Eve Rosina, John, Elizabeth John Jacob

Farm eventually goes to Adam.

Henry is mentioned in 1770 deed (book 13 pages 93-96) as a miller.


Rebecca /Fidler -1873​ John /Fidler 1795-1872 Christian /Fidler 1797-1841 Jacob /Brown Magdalena /Fidler 1798- Peter /Fidler 1799-1875 UNKNOWN /Rebecca Elisabeth /Fidler 1800- Catharine /Fidler 1802-​ Daniel /Hoyer Sarah /Fidler 1804-​ Margaret /Fidler/ 1806-1873 Valentine /Ohmach Lydia /Fidler 1808- Philip /Fidler 1810-1815 Philip /Fidler 1765-1826 Catharine /Horn 1773-
 
Fidler, Johann Heinrich (I1611)
 
183 ************************************
The will for Thomas Clarke is published in "The New England Historical and Genealogical Register", Vol 152, January 1998, pg. 15, in an article by Christopher Gleason Clark, entitled "The English Ancestry of Joseph Clark (1613-1683) of Dedham and Medfield, Massachusetts".
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The will cites his grandaughter Marye Wheelock. This, along with other evidence presented in the article, strongly suggests the relationships among the Clarks, Wheelocks, and Barbers presented in this genealogy 
Clarke, Thomas (I1109)
 
184 *************************************
* See http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.692.6246&rep=rep1&type=pdf

* Descendants of Ralph Wheelock
of Medfield, Massachusetts
Rev. Ralph Wheelock
Descendants of
24 Jan 2015
Northborough, MA
Compiled by Roderick B. Sullivan, Jr
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Clarke, Joseph The Immigrant (I34)
 
185 *************************************
* See http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.692.6246&rep=rep1&type=pdf

* Descendants of Ralph Wheelock
of Medfield, Massachusetts
Rev. Ralph Wheelock
Descendants of
24 Jan 2015
Northborough, MA
Compiled by Roderick B. Sullivan, Jr
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Clarke, Rebecca Elizabeth (I1111)
 
186 *************************************
* See http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.692.6246&rep=rep1&type=pdf

* Descendants of Ralph Wheelock
of Medfield, Massachusetts
Rev. Ralph Wheelock
Descendants of
24 Jan 2015
Northborough, MA
Compiled by Roderick B. Sullivan, Jr
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Wheelock, Ralph (I1114)
 
187 *************************************
History of Allen and Woodson Counties, Kansas Edited and Compiled by L. Wallace Duncan and Chas. F. Scott. Iola Registers, Printers and Binders, Iola, Kan.: 1901
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JOHN FRANCIS—

In Norfolk, England, where had been born and buried generations of his family, John Francis, the subject of this sketch, saw the light of day on April 24, 1837. By the death of his father he was left at two years of age to the care of his mother, whose maiden name was Sarah Kitteringham. She was a woman of much energy and unusual strength of character and under her hand he was educated and brought to his majority.
It was then that the Kansas struggle was pending and the Free State and Pro-Slavery fight was being hearkened to half way round the world. The young man listened with the rest and his sympathies being strongly awakened he determined to come to America and have a hand in the strife. He left England for Kansas in 1858, coming to Osawatomie where were gathered many of the friends and followers of John Brown.

He remained there until March, 1859, when he removed to Allen county, pre-empted a claim, near his present home, and engaged in farming. The looked for crash came and in July, 1861, he enlisted in the Third Kansas Regiment, Colonel James Montgomery commanding.

In the spring of 1862 the company to which he belonged was transferred to the 5th Kansas Cavalry in which regiment he served in Missouri and Arkansas, making the march from Rolla to Helena. At Helena he was invalided and sent to the General hospital at Keokuk, Iowa, from which he was discharged in November, 1863, greatly broken in health.

He returned to Allen county and was elected County Clerk and re-elected in 1865, serving four years. He also held under appointment of Judge D. M. Valentine, then Judge of the District, the office of Clerk of the District Court, receiving this appointment in 1865 at the time the county-seat was moved from Humboldt to Iola.

At the expiration of his appointive term he was elected to the office which he resigned in 1868. Meanwhile he had found time to study law and was admitted to practice in 1867. In November of the same year, 1867, he was elected County Treasurer and re-elected in '69.

At the end of his term of service as County Treasurer he engaged in merchandising in Iola in which business he continued until July, 1877.

In 1873 he was appointed by Governor Thomas A. Osborn as one of the trustees of the Deaf and Dumb Asylum at Olathe. And on May 1st,1874, he was appointed State Treasurer of Kansas to fill the unexpired term of Josiah E. Hayes. Again in December, 1875, he was appointed to the same office to bring order out of chaos in the accounts of Samuel Lappin, who was in trouble.

In 1876 he went before the people as a candidate for State Treasurer and was elected, was reelected in 1878 and again re-elected in 1880.

After leaving the office of State Treasurer he engaged in bond business and banking in New York City. In 1892, his health again failing him, he moved to his farm at the northern edge of Allen county, where he now lives.

In 1898 he was elected Representative of his county and was made Chairman of the Committee on State Affairs. He was returned to the House in 1900 and appointed Chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means. Upon the adjournment of the Legislature he was appointed a member of the Tax Commission, authorized by the House and Senate of 1901, and was selected as its President.

John Francis is a Republican, a Mason and a Knight Templar. He became a member of the Iola Lodge, number 38 A. F. & A. M. in 1865 and filled successively its several offices including that of Master. He is a Churchman, having been confirmed in Norwich, England, at the age of fourteen, by Bishop Selwyn of New Zealand.

On February 23rd, 1862, while on furlough from his regiment, he was married to Lodeska Coffield, whose parents came to Allen county from Indiana in 1860.

Mrs. Francis is a lineal descendant of Adrial Simons, a Revolutionary patriot, son of Dutch parents who emigrated from Holland in 1700, also of Benjamin Clark, likewise a soldier of the Revolution.

They have three daughters and one son, Anna, Clara, Maude Elizabeth and John.

Few men in Kansas have a more distinguished and honorable record of public service than Hon. John Francis, and none is more highly esteemed or more universally respected. For thirty years he has been a conspicuous figure in the public life of Allen county and of the State of Kansas, and he is still vigorously engaged in the performance of the most responsible and important public duties.
 
Francis, John (I4609)
 
188 **************************************
* From Message Board "Wendts in Pennsylvania" at Ancestry.com

I am a descendent of Karl Wilhelm Wendt & Dorothea Pomerenke who came to the US from Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Germany in 1865. One of their children was Albert Joachim Christophel Wendt b. February 03, 1857 in Germany. The 1880 census indicates that Albert (age 24)was a boarder in the home of John & Joanna Ebert in Williamsport, PA. Also brother Paul (age 16) and a Charles Wendt (60) were listed in the same home. Paul L. Wendt, b. November 1862 in Germany married Mary Victoria Lowe who was born June 1861 in Pennsylvania and d. February 02,1942 in Williamsport. Many of the names are similar to the original request for information so there may be a relationship. My fraternal grandfather was Carl William Wendt who was born August 07, 1887 in Williamsport, PA, the son of Albert Wendt and Elizabeth Muschler.

* Posted 24 Oct 2009 by Virginia Kincade
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Wendt, Paul T (I1720)
 
189 **************************************
* From Message Board "Wendts in Pennsylvania" at Ancestry.com

I am a descendent of Karl Wilhelm Wendt & Dorothea Pomerenke who came to the US from Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Germany in 1865. One of their children was Albert Joachim Christophel Wendt b. February 03, 1857 in Germany. The 1880 census indicates that Albert (age 24)was a boarder in the home of John & Joanna Ebert in Williamsport, PA. Also brother Paul (age 16) and a Charles Wendt (60) were listed in the same home. Paul L. Wendt, b. November 1862 in Germany married Mary Victoria Lowe who was born June 1861 in Pennsylvania and d. February 02,1942 in Williamsport. Many of the names are similar to the original request for information so there may be a relationship. My fraternal grandfather was Carl William Wendt who was born August 07, 1887 in Williamsport, PA, the son of Albert Wendt and Elizabeth Muschler.

* Posted 24 Oct 2009 by Virginia Kincade
************************************************* 
Ebert, John William (I45)
 
190 **************************************
* From Message Board "Wendts in Pennsylvania" at Ancestry.com

I am a descendent of Karl Wilhelm Wendt & Dorothea Pomerenke who came to the US from Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Germany in 1865. One of their children was Albert Joachim Christophel Wendt b. February 03, 1857 in Germany. The 1880 census indicates that Albert (age 24)was a boarder in the home of John & Joanna Ebert in Williamsport, PA. Also brother Paul (age 16) and a Charles Wendt (60) were listed in the same home. Paul L. Wendt, b. November 1862 in Germany married Mary Victoria Lowe who was born June 1861 in Pennsylvania and d. February 02,1942 in Williamsport. Many of the names are similar to the original request for information so there may be a relationship. My fraternal grandfather was Carl William Wendt who was born August 07, 1887 in Williamsport, PA, the son of Albert Wendt and Elizabeth Muschler.

* Posted 24 Oct 2009 by Virginia Kincade
************************************************* 
Pomerenke, Helena (I1134)
 
191 **************************************
* From Message Board "Wendts in Pennsylvania" at Ancestry.com

I am a descendent of Karl Wilhelm Wendt & Dorothea Pomerenke who came to the US from Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Germany in 1865. One of their children was Albert Joachim Christophel Wendt b. February 03, 1857 in Germany. The 1880 census indicates that Albert (age 24)was a boarder in the home of John & Joanna Ebert in Williamsport, PA. Also brother Paul (age 16) and a Charles Wendt (60) were listed in the same home. Paul L. Wendt, b. November 1862 in Germany married Mary Victoria Lowe who was born June 1861 in Pennsylvania and d. February 02,1942 in Williamsport. Many of the names are similar to the original request for information so there may be a relationship. My fraternal grandfather was Carl William Wendt who was born August 07, 1887 in Williamsport, PA, the son of Albert Wendt and Elizabeth Muschler.

* Posted 24 Oct 2009 by Virginia Kincade
************************************************* 
Wendt, Johann Carl Christian (I1129)
 
192 **************************************
* From Message Board "Wendts in Pennsylvania" at Ancestry.com

I am a descendent of Karl Wilhelm Wendt & Dorothea Pomerenke who came to the US from Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Germany in 1865. One of their children was Albert Joachim Christophel Wendt b. February 03, 1857 in Germany. The 1880 census indicates that Albert (age 24)was a boarder in the home of John & Joanna Ebert in Williamsport, PA. Also brother Paul (age 16) and a Charles Wendt (60) were listed in the same home. Paul L. Wendt, b. November 1862 in Germany married Mary Victoria Lowe who was born June 1861 in Pennsylvania and d. February 02,1942 in Williamsport. Many of the names are similar to the original request for information so there may be a relationship. My fraternal grandfather was Carl William Wendt who was born August 07, 1887 in Williamsport, PA, the son of Albert Wendt and Elizabeth Muschler.

* Posted 24 Oct 2009 by Virginia Kincade
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Wendt, Otto (I1126)
 
193 ***************************************
Obadiah Newcomb Bush, b. Penfield, Monroe Co., N. Y., 28 Jan. 1797, d. en route from California ca. 1851
m. Rochester, N. Y., 8 Nov. 1821
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Bush, Obadiah Newcomb (I2682)
 
194 ****************************************
* Nephew of President Zachery Taylor *
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Taylor, Joseph Hancock (I4351)
 
195 ****************************************
In early 1629 the Massachusetts Bay Company received a royal charter that allowed the Com­pany to carry on the work, begun earlier in the decade by the Dorchester Company and then the New England Company, of developing per­manent settlements in New England. During 1629 the Massachusetts Bay Company sent set­tlers to Massachusetts Bay, mostly young, single men, servants either of the Company itself or of particular merchants and gentlemen associated with the Company. Included among these 1629 immigrants were three ministers of Puritan lean­ings, reflecting the religious beliefs of the Com­pany’s leaders.

By late 1629 John Winthrop of Groton, Suffolk, had been made Governor of the Company, and planning began in earnest for sending a larger group of settlers to New England. In the spring of 1630 Winthrop led more than a dozen vessels, with about seven hundred passengers, across the Atlantic. This small armada of 1630 has come to be known as the Winthrop Fleet. The somewhat broader settlement activities of 1629 and 1630, of which the Winthrop Fleet was the larger part, have been termed the Winthrop Migration.

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* FROM: https://shop.americanancestors.org/products/the-winthrop-fleet-massachusetts-bay-company-immigrants-to-new-england-1629-1630?pass-through=true
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Winthrop, Gov. John (I1356)
 
196 *****************************************
* Elinor married to John McNeely in Bucks Count around 1758

* From website https://robsgenealogy.com/robsgenealogy/getperson.php?personID=42078976&tree=tree1

-------------------------------

Jonathan (John) McNeely is immigrant John, brother of Robert and Adam. They migrated from Northern Ireland to Bucks County, Pennsylvania around 1740. There is an association with the Lancaster County, Pennsylvania McNeely’s, David is part of this association. Adam, Jonathan (John), Robert and David are the progenitors of the Rowan, lredell and Mecklenburg North Carolina McNeely’s.

John McNeely son of Jonathan (John) married Elinor Hart. This marriage is supported by Hart family location and association and is further supported by the fact that John had daughter named Elinor and a son named Samuel, Samuel Hart was Elinor’s father.

The dates of land ownership assist us in determining migration groups. It appears that Adam’s family migrated with him in what we have termed the first increment, we do not know the dates of birth of his children; we know Adam Sr. died in 1766. Jonathan (John I) migrated same increment. His family is with him except John Junior, Archibald and Margaret. They had married by this time and remained in PA for a short period. The time line shows Archibald and John signing petition in Bucks County, PA in 1763 with Archibald having a child baptized at Tinicum Presbyterian Church, PA in 1770. Hence it is doubtful either of them came with first increment.

We believe John Jr., Archibald, James and Margaret (McNeely) Hughes (four siblings), Elinor’s sisters families and possibly her nephew Samuel migrated prior to the Revolutionary war, probably around 1772. They are not listed on the 1775 associate list of Bedminster Township, Bucks County, PA.

An interesting tidbit of Hart family lore, some of the children went south for the purpose of horse breeding. They have found no support for this lore but later some of John McNeely’s family is involved in horse-trading in North Carolina and South Missouri.

By process of elimination and examination of available documents it appears that Jonathan (John) McNeely of Bucks County, PA is Ireland immigrant John who migrated to North Carolina around 1760. It also supports him as being the John who appears as landowner in 1765 in Rowan County, North Carolina along with Adam McNeely landowner same year. The family association in Rowan County provides reasonable support for him to be the father of the siblings mentioned in Isaac’s will, John, Archibald, Isaac, James and Margaret.

Our McNeelys were in Cape Girardeau County by the 1830s.

It is a challenge tracing the McNeelys. The continue to use the same names over and over. For instance, there are 3 generations named John.
From the book "History of the Presbyterian Church of Deep Run 1725-1975, by Dorothy Cameron, pg 8-9.

Robert McNeely, [uncle of this James] who came to this country from County Tyrone in 1732, was of pure Irish lineage. Influenced by the Scotch immigration into north Ireland, the McNeelys became Presbyterian and the clan O'Neale, with an eight century authentic genealogy in Ireland, gave its name the Scottish form.

The McNeelys were active in the affairs of Deep Run through the early 1800s. This family produced a Presbyterian minister; he was the son of the widow of the Rev. James Grier by her marriage to a McNeely.
The following researched by Maurice Mcneely in his book "Mcneelys of Northwest Missouri:"

Three brothers, Robert, John. and Adam McNeely were born in Tyrone County, Ireland (in what is now Northern Ireland) – Robert, the oldest, about 1690; John and Adam were born by 1700. I have not been able to determine the names of their parents.

They migrated to America and are in Bucks County, PA by 1741. Bedminster Township in Bucks County is about 30 miles north from downtown Philadelphia.


We find the McNeely’s first mentioned in history and records in the township of Bedminster. Hanna, in his “The Scotch-Irish”, tells us that Deep Run Presbyterian Church in Bedminster township was established in 1726.


"The History of Bedminster, Bucks County, Pennsylvania" states: “In the early I700 ’s there was a migration of Scotch-Irish from Northern Ireland This was due not from famine, but as a result of the Trade and Navigation Act passed by Parliament in I696. This Act classified Northern Ireland as if it were one of the colonies, as far as taxation was concerned. Many people faced complete financial ruin. The end result was a migration into the colonies. They preferred the wilderness to the cities. Not so much for the privacy, but to get away from the sight and sound of the British and British law which they felt had betrayed them. They journeyed out into the wilderness and finding land they liked which was unoccupied they squatted. They felt that God did not like idle land and if the Proprietors were not doing anything with the land why, then they would. And so they became squatters. They moved in, then had to be removed when the land was legally sold. This was one of William Allen's (a land proprietor) big problems...as land was sold to speculators, squatters who had the means could get a mortgage and buy their plot if they wished. We know that Isaac Norris used a plan whereby a man could pay a sum each year for twenty years. Then on the twenty first year the land became his, and he received a deed It is not known if William Allen used this plan, but we do know he had some sort of contractual arrangement with those buying his land " (Early Families, page 5, History of Bedminster, Bucks County, PA, fourth printing, September 1999, by Bedminster Historical Society, Pauline Cassel, 1976)

“Active in the Deep Run Presbyterian Church in early time was ROBERT McNEELY. He settled on I53 acres of land north of church site. His brother JOHN (Jonathan in some records) McNEELY settled above him on I90 acres of land...both brothers are on Allen land. They probably settled here AFTER 1741. There may have been a purchase agreement sat up with William Allen, but it never came into fruition. Allen ’s Estate sold...in 1801... And so, sixty years of hard work and heavy taxation went down the drain. The tax list of I782 and I783 show both McNeely’s are on the Allen Estate. The end of the revolution proprietary land was now commonwealth land There would be patents and warrants issued into the mid eighteen hundreds in this area. As for the land that had been William Allen ’s the American government had confiscated it. A court battle ensued to regain the land by his estate, headed by Ann Penn Greenleaf Granddaughter of William Allen. She and her family succeeded in regaining control of what was William Allen ’s land. Many families on that land did not have a deed to their property. It may be they had a purchase agreement with William Allen which became void after I776, when Allen went to England They had paid their taxes on the land to the Continental Government during the war on the basis that the land was theirs by default. Now the estate came along with purchase demands. It is not known if these families were given first chance to purchase their land from the estate or if they could not meet the price set by the estate, however, we do know that the unsold land of William Allen ’s Estate went on public auction several times. The auctions held in I800 and 1801 took place at John Shaw’s Tavern in Dublin. This was the former Robert Robinson Tavern Helm and Archibald McNeely were witness for Robert Robinson on his application for tavern in 1770). Men such as ROBERT McNEELY who had held over 300 acres in I782 were sold out. The land was re-plotted. Property lines changed and new people settled on land that had been farmed by another for over forty years.” (Early Families, page 37, History of Bedminster, Bucks County, PA, fourth printing, September I999, by Bedminster Historical Society, Pauline Cassel, I976). 
Hart, Elinor (I2935)
 
197 *****************************************
FSgt(Sgt)Co B, 207th Regt, PA Volunteers 
Nichols, Cullen F (I4318)
 
198 *****************************************
Julia Ann (?-?) married (1) John Overton & (2) Joseph Passmore, his second marriage. They moved to Lawrence Co with their combined children 
Clark, Julia Ann (I3747)
 
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Rev. James Smith Bush, b. Rochester, N. Y., 15 June 1825, in 1860 an Episcopalian Clergyman living in Orange, Essex Co., N. J., d. Ithaca, N. Y., 11 Nov. 1889
m. New York, N. Y., 24 Feb. 1859
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Bush, Rev. James Smith (I2671)
 
200 ******************************************
* NOTES ON FIND A GRAVE *
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Thomas was born in Sandwich in the house his father built, lived there all his life, and lies buried under a stone still standing by the pond in the beautiful old burying ground. When yet a young man, he became active in the affairs of the town, becoming a freeman at age 20 and in 1658, with his father, was listed as one of the largest landholders. He served on a jury in 1664; was one of two excisemen in 1667 and elected town constable in 1669. He early became one of the most prominent citizens, serving as selectmen for fourteen years, town clerk from 1675 to 1685, deputy to the General Court at Plymouth for eleven years; commissioner ìagainst the abuse of drinkers and liquerî; representative to the court in Boston and in 1680 was appointed lieutenant of the military company in Sandwich, becoming captain in 1690. After the absorption by the Massachusetts Bay Colony he was one of the first representatives sent to Boston. There is abundant evidence that he was one of the most influential men of this generation.

With the turn of the century swiftly changing social and economic conditions caused the surviving heirs of the ten original proprietors of Sandwich to insist their rights of ownership of the lands within the limits of the first grants as against the towns people in general, and the meadow and pasture lands held in common gradually came into their private ownership.

In 1680 Thomas Tupper II was appointed by the General Court at Plymouth to be lieutenant of the military company organized at Sandwich, and 10 years later he was commissioned captain, by which title he was commonly known after 1691.

He had strong religious convictions and for many years was a missionary among the Indians of the Mashpee and Herring Pond tribes.

The first child of Captain Tupper and his wife Martha, a daughter, was named Martha after her mother; the second child, a son, was named Thomas, a given name common for many generations in both the Tupper and Mayhew families. The other six sons received their names directly from the bible, evidence of the Puritan training of their father. Their second daughter was named Jane after her grandmother Mayhew; the third, Anne, after her grandmother Tupper, and the fourth after her motherís sister, Bethiah Mayhew.
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Tupper, Captain Thomas Henry (I3057)
 

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