Asylum

Bradford County, PA

Dinah Swift

Female 1669 - 1688  (19 years)


Generations:      Standard    |    Compact    |    Vertical    |    Text    |    Register    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Dinah Swift 15 Jan 1669 Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA; 05 Nov 1688Stoughton, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA.

    Dinah Benjamin Perry 1695Massachusetts, USA. Benjamin (son of Ezra Perry and Elizabeth Burgess) 15 Jan 1670 Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA; 25 Aug 1740Stoughton, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA; Dudley, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Susannah Perry  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 3. Benjamin Perry  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 4. Nathaniel Perry  Descendancy chart to this point
    4. 5. Josiah Perry  Descendancy chart to this point
    5. 6. Seth Perry  Descendancy chart to this point
    6. 7. Eliakim Perry  Descendancy chart to this point 08 May 1716.
    7. 8. Remembrance Perry  Descendancy chart to this point 13 Mar 1696 Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA; 1789Pittsford, Rutland, Vermont, USA.
    8. 9. Meribah Perry  Descendancy chart to this point
    9. 10. Abner Perry  Descendancy chart to this point


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Susannah Perry Descendancy chart to this point (1.Dinah1)

  2. 3.  Benjamin Perry Descendancy chart to this point (1.Dinah1)

  3. 4.  Nathaniel Perry Descendancy chart to this point (1.Dinah1)

  4. 5.  Josiah Perry Descendancy chart to this point (1.Dinah1)

  5. 6.  Seth Perry Descendancy chart to this point (1.Dinah1)

  6. 7.  Eliakim Perry Descendancy chart to this point (1.Dinah1) 08 May 1716.

  7. 8.  Remembrance Perry Descendancy chart to this point (1.Dinah1) 13 Mar 1696 Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA; 1789Pittsford, Rutland, Vermont, USA.

    Remembrance Thomas Tupper, IV 1717Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA. Thomas (son of Thomas III Tupper and Mary Stocklen) 25 Jul 1693 Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA; 20 Feb 1739Stoughton, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 11. Mayhew Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1718; 1778.
    2. 12. Joana Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1723; 1794.
    3. 13. Reuben Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1725; 1776.
    4. 14. Simeon Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1730 Stoughton, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA; 1812Parishville, St Lawrence, New York, USA.
    5. 15. Levi Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1731 Stoughton, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA; 1774Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA.
    6. 16. Judah Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1734; unk.
    7. 17. General Benjamin Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1738 Plymouth, MA; Jun 1792Marietta, OH.
    8. 18. Mary Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1740; unk.

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 19. Simeon Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1730 Stoughton, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA; 1812Parishville, St Lawrence, New York, USA.

  8. 9.  Meribah Perry Descendancy chart to this point (1.Dinah1)

  9. 10.  Abner Perry Descendancy chart to this point (1.Dinah1)


Generation: 3

  1. 11.  Mayhew Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) 1718; 1778.

  2. 12.  Joana Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) 1723; 1794.

  3. 13.  Reuben Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) 1725; 1776.

  4. 14.  Simeon Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) 1730 Stoughton, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA; 1812Parishville, St Lawrence, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    Simeon Tupper Sr. was born in 1729 in Stoughton Massachusetts (15 miles SW of Hingham). He had seven brothers (Mayhew, Seth, Reuben, Judah (died as baby), Levi, Judah, and Benjamin) and one sister (Joanna).

    Simeon Tupper Sr. married a lovely young lady from Dorchester Massachusetts named Anne Capen. Simeon Sr. was a cordwainer by trade. A cordwainer (or cordovan) is somebody who makes shoes and other articles from fine soft leather. The word is derived from "cordwain", or "cordovan", the leather produced in Cordoba, Spain. Historically, there was a distinction between a cordwainer, who made shoes, and a cobbler, who repaired them.

    Simeon and Anne had four sons ( Simeon Tupper Jr., Thomas, Ebenezer, and John) and four daughters (Elizabeth, Hannah Susan and Lois). In 1762 the family moved to Pittsfield Vermont. Simeon Jr. was born in 1765. In January 20, 1777 Thomas Tupper joined the Continental Army mustering in the town of Ashuelot Equivalent. He was recruited by Truman Wheeler, who was the Muster Master for the county. He entered the army as a private under Colonel John Bailey's 2nd Massachusetts regiment. He enlisted for two years. His company camped at Valley Forge in the winter of 1777/1778. The army was poorly supplied and ill equipped for the winter. They suffered hardship and many did not survive the winter. He died serving his country in battle at the age of 24.

    Simeon Tupper Sr. had enlisted early in the war, on August 4, 1775, and his first mission was to March from Pittsfield to Canada. The regiment was dismissed on December 30, 1775 after 22 weeks and 2 days of service. Just before Thomas' death, Simeon Tupper Sr re-enlisted along with his son Simeon Jr., joining the Continental Army in 1781. Simeon Sr was 51 years old and Simeon Jr. was 16 years old. Simeon Jr. was only 5' 3" when he enlisted. They joined in early 1781 both for a three year enlistment. They were assigned to a regiment commanded by Colonel Benjamin Tupper (Simeon Srs. brother). Benjamin was in the army for six years, and the most noteworthy events for his regiment were Ticonderoga and Valley Forge. The conflict ended in 1783 and the Tuppers returned to their home in Pittsfield Vermont.

    Source: Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution Volume 16, pages 148-149


    Died:
    Age: 82


  5. 15.  Levi Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) 1731 Stoughton, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA; 1774Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA.

    Levi Eunice Crandall 21 Nov 1752Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA. Eunice (daughter of Samuel Crandall and Sarah Worden) 24 Jan 1737 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; 1759Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 20. Eunice Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point about 1753 New London, Connecticut, USA; 26 Apr 1838Genoa, Cayuga County, New York, USA; Venice Center, Cayuga Co., New York, USA.
    2. 21. Nathaniel Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 15 Apr 1755 Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA; 08 Feb 1815Rush, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA.

  6. 16.  Judah Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) 1734; unk.

  7. 17.  General Benjamin TupperGeneral Benjamin Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) 1738 Plymouth, MA; Jun 1792Marietta, OH.

    Notes:

    ******************************
    * From Ohio History Central
    *****************************
    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.

    **********************
    * RevWarTalk.com Bio *
    **********************
    During 1788, Benjamin Tupper and other pioneers of the Ohio Company of Associates arrived at the confluence of the Ohio and Muskingum rivers to establish Marietta, Ohio as the first permanent American settlement in the Northwest Territory. In August 1788, he invented a screw propeller, positioned in the stern of a boat, and turned with a crank. Manasseh Cutler wrote about the propeller that “It succeeded to admiration, and I think it a very useful discovery.” During September 1788, Benjamin Tupper and Rufus Putnam were the justices of the first civil court in the Northwest Territory. Benjamin Tupper was a prominent member of the pioneer settlement of Marietta. He was a member of the Society of the Cincinnati, and an original member of the American Union Lodge No. 1 of Freemasons at Marietta, along with several others including his son Anselm Tupper, William Stacy, and Rufus Putnam.

    Benjamin Tupper’s sons were Maj. Anselm Tupper, Gen. Edward W. Tupper, and Col. Benjamin Tupper, Jr. His daughters were Sophia, Minerva, and Roewena, who married Gov. Winthrop Sargent in the first marriage ceremony in the Northwest Territory. Another daughter, Huldah, died young.

    Benjamin Tupper died in June 1792. A visitor to the Marietta settlement witnessed the funeral, and wrote that: Gen. Tupper, who had died the day before, was buried on the 17th. In consideration of the four different offices which he held, firstly as General in the service of the United States in the late war; secondly as member of the Cincinnati order; thirdly as director of the Ohio Company; and fourthly as master among the Freemasons, therefore, because of these positions, great honors were shown his remains at the funeral.”

    Benjamin Tupper is buried with many other Revolutionary War soldiers and pioneers at Mound Cemetery in Marietta.

    *************
    * From https://www.washingtongov.org/228/History-of-Washington-County
    **************
    Appropriated Lands & The Ohio Company

    In 1776, Congress appropriated lands to officers and soldiers of the army. In 1783 the Newburgh Petition of 285 Continental Army officers was presented to Congress asking for western lands to be located in the country which is now approximately the eastern one-half of the State of Ohio.

    Following this General Putnam and Gen. Benjamin Tupper founded the Ohio Company which met in Boston March 1, 1786 when they decided to raise funds in continental certificates for buying western lands in the Western Territory and making a settlement.

    Rev. Dr. Manasseh Cutler, one of the Directors of the Company, was employed to purchase of Congress land for the Company and in July 1787 went to Continental Congress. He helped frame the Ordinance of 1787 which allowed for the purchase of 1,500,000 acres located on the Ohio and Muskingum Rivers. Marietta, the county seat, was settled on April 7, 1788 as a result.

    Benjamin Huldah White 18 Nov 1762Plymouth, MA. Huldah 1739; 1812Marietta, OH. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 22. Major Anselm Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1763 Plymouth, MA; 1808Marietta, OH.

  8. 18.  Mary Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) 1740; unk.

  9. 19.  Simeon Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) 1730 Stoughton, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA; 1812Parishville, St Lawrence, New York, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 20.  Eunice Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (15.Levi3, 8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) about 1753 New London, Connecticut, USA; 26 Apr 1838Genoa, Cayuga County, New York, USA; Venice Center, Cayuga Co., New York, USA.

  2. 21.  Nathaniel TupperNathaniel Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (15.Levi3, 8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) 15 Apr 1755 Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA; 08 Feb 1815Rush, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Moved: 1793, Franklin, Delaware County, NY; Nathan is one of the founders of the First Baptist Church in Franklin NY 16 Jan 1793
    • Moved: 1796, Unadilla, NY; Nathan Tupper is elected an officer at founding of town of Unadilla

    Notes:

    “Lathrop History” (From the Collection of Susquehanna County Historical Society, Montrose, PA)HISTORY

    Dea. William Lathrop married Sarah Brown February 8, 1796. She died August 18, 1839. They had fourteen(?) children, the last two being twins. He married for a second wife Sarah Fairbrother February 2, 1840. They had one child, Anson, born May 31, 1841…Dea. William Lathrop died April 18, 1865. His second wife died December 9, 1884. He moved from Unadilla, New York to Rush, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, in the winter of 1800-1801, with an ox team, passing through what is now Montrose – was then all woods.

    The year 1799 witnessed a rapid increase in the number of settlers on the East Branch, or main stream of the Wyalusing. Nathan Tupper and William Lathrop came together, from Unadilla, NY, locating at what is now Grangerville. They cut their road a part of the distance…Deacon Lathrop’s cabin had only a blanket for a door, and he was obliged to pile up wood against it at night to keep out the wolves. His location was at the mouth of Lake Creek. He lived here until his death in 1865, in his ninetieth year. Of the ten children of Wm. Lathrop, only two, Nelson and Catherine (widow of Eben Picket of Jessup), are living in Susquehanna County.

    ***************************************************
    -Nathan is one of founders of First Baptist Church
    ***************************************************
    FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

    The organization of the First Baptist Church of Franklin took place on the 15th day of January, 1793, at the house of Gad Merrick. The meeting was opened by singing, followed by prayer. Elder Adam Hamilton was chosen moderator, and Hugh Thompson clerk. The moderator then read the articles of faith and church covenant of the church in Westville, Mass., and they were unanimously adopted by the meeting. The moderator then gave the right hand of fellowship to the following named persons, constituting them a "Baptist church of Christ:" Nathan Tupper, James Webster, Asa Turner, Gad Merrick, Archelaus Green, Solomon Green, Levi Bride, Abel Buell, Hugh Thompson, Chauncey Parker, Oliver Abell, Polly Case, Patty Clark, Isabel Turner, Sarah Parker, Polly Andrews, Abigail Tupper, Ruth Wattles, Lucy Hughston and Mary Thompson.
    --------------------------
    From Delaware County NY Genealogy and History Site

    The History of Delaware County
    W.W. MUNSELL 1797-1880

    THE TOWN OF FRANKLIN

    **********************************
    - Notes on first wife and children
    **********************************
    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.)

    Nathaniel Beulah Hartshorn 23 Aug 1778Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA. Beulah (daughter of Eben Hartshorn and Miream Hartshorn) 28 Sep 1754 Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA; 31 Jul 1784Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA; 02 Aug 1784Franklin, New London, Connecticut, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 23. Hiel Jahiel Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 27 Dec 1779 New London, New London, Connecticut, USA; 19 Jan 1865Rush, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; Birchardville, Susquehanna Co, Pennsylvania, USA.
    2. 24. Eunice Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 14 Dec 1781 Shaftsbury, Bennington, Vermont, USA.

    Nathaniel Abigail Bingham 1785Pawling, Dutchess, New York, USA. Abigail 1760; 09 Jun 1840Rush, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 25. Beulah Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1798 Birchardville, Susquehanna Co, Pennsylvania, USA; 18 May 1840Herrick Center, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA; Birchardville, Susquehanna Co, Pennsylvania, USA.
    2. 26. Loring C Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 30 Mar 1791 Unadilla, Otsego, New York, USA; 11 Aug 1878Rush, PA; Devine Ridge Cemetery, Rush, PA.
    3. 27. Clarissa Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 19 Sep 1788 Rush, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA; Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.
    4. 28. Harry Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 5 Aug 1786 Unadilla, Otsego County, New York; 9 Dec 1826Bradford County, Pennsylvania; Stevensville Cemetery Stevensville, Bradford County, Pennsylvania.
    5. 29. Caroline Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 6 Mar 1796 Montrose, PA; 6 Dec 1863.
    6. 30. Sophorina Tupper  Descendancy chart to this point 1866Rush, Susquehanna County, PA.

  3. 22.  Major Anselm Tupper Descendancy chart to this point (17.Benjamin3, 8.Remembrance2, 1.Dinah1) 1763 Plymouth, MA; 1808Marietta, OH.

    Notes:

    *************
    * From The Marietta Times December 12, 2019
    ***************

    He was more than an officer and a gentleman. He was a scholar and a poet, and he was Marietta’s first teacher.

    Anselm Tupper was one of the 48 original pioneers who made their way along the rivers and mountains of New England to the confluence of the Ohio and Muskingum rivers to establish the first permanent settlement in the Northwest Territory. He’s buried in Marietta’s Mound Cemetery.

    “He was a man of intellectual ability, and especially in mathematics had the reputation of being a good scholar,” according to “Williams’ History of Washington County, 1788 to 1881.” “He is said to have a refined and polished address and was of fine personal appearance and military bearing. … He was the favorite of the officers of the garrison (Campus Martius), especially of Colonel Sproat,” and was quite the poet.

    In one incident, Sproat and Dr. Story, the minister, were engaged in a race, and Story left Sproat in the dust. To commemorate the event, Tupper wrote:

    “It was a point, they all gave in,/Divinity could outstrip sin.”

    As is the case with many of the pioneers who settled Marietta, Tupper also had an impressive American Revolutionary War record. As a young boy of 11, he enlisted and joined Capt. Robert West’s Chesterfield company, assigned to Col. John Fellows’ regiment (17th Massachusetts Bay Provincial Regiment), after the first shots were fired in 1775 at Lexington and Concord, Mass. Anselm’s father, Benjamin Tupper, was already major.

    In 1779, Tupper was named adjutant in the regiment of fellow pioneer Col. Ebenezer Sproat. Later that year, Anselm was promoted to ensign at age 16

    Although the rank of ensign is today a naval term, it would be the equivalent of a second lieutenant, said Scott Britton, executive director of The Castle in Marietta.

    “It’s hard to imagine taking orders from a 16-year-old,” Britton said. “They obviously had a lot of respect for him.”

    Tupper even had the honor of getting a recommendation from Gen. George Washington.

    “He’s in with his father, who has experience before the Revolution,” Britton said. “Part of that was due to his upbringing. You don’t get the recommendation of George Washington just because of who your dad is. A lot of that was well earned on his own merit.”

    After the Ohio Company of Associates had been formed by Rufus Putnam and Benjamin Tupper, the father-and-son team took on a survey of the Seven Ranges in the Ohio Country. That area covers today’s Monroe, Harrison, Belmont and Jefferson, and portions of Carroll, Columbiana, Tuscarawas, Guernsey, Noble and Washington counties.

    In fact, according to “Williams History of Washington County,” Tupper and John Matthews were the only ones of the original 48 to have seen the area around what would become Marietta.

    Near the fortification of Campus Martius, the pioneers dug a well 80 feet deep to supply the settlers with water. Near that well, Tupper placed a large sundial he made. It wasn’t until 1788 that Tupper’s parents and other siblings arrived at the Marietta settlement.

    Once Campus Martius was built, Anselm Tupper was put in charge of all the defense of the garrison.

    “That says a lot about his merit, not his father’s,” Britton said. “Out of all the seasoned military men (Rufus Putnam, Ebeneezer Sproat etc), they chose Anselm Tupper to protect their families.”