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Bradford County, PA

Bethiah Otis

Bethiah Otis

Female 1703 - 1750  (46 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Bethiah OtisBethiah Otis 20 Nov 1703 Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts, USA; 29 May 1750Hampton, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 1750Hampton, Windham, Connecticut, USA.

    Notes:

    *******************************************
    ** Bethiah Otis married twice. William Billings was first
    ***
    *** Reverend Samuel Moseley was second husband

    Rev Samuel Moseley
    Born 15 Aug 1708 in Dorchester, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial Americamap
    Ancestors ancestors
    Son of Ebenezer Moseley and Hannah (Weeks) Maudesley
    Brother of Ebenezer Moseley [half] and Nathaniel Moseley
    Husband of Mary (Clark) Moseley — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
    Husband of Bethia (Otis) Moseley — married 4 Jul 1734 in Hampden Windham Connecticutmap
    Descendants descendants
    Father of Hannah (Moseley) Curtis, Samuel Moseley, Anna (Moseley) Dunham and Abigail (Moseley) Clark
    Died 26 Jul 1791 in Hampton, Windham, Connecticut, United Statesmap
    Profile manager: Karen Willliams private message [send private message]
    Profile last modified 3 Jul 2018 | Created 10 Jul 2012
    This page has been accessed 388 times.
    Contents
    [hide]

    1 Biography
    2 Children
    3 Sources
    3.1 Acknowledgments

    Biography

    Samuel was the s/o Ebenezer Maudesley and Hannah Weeks.

    Samuel married Bethiah Otis. Born on 20 Nov 1703 in Scituate, MA.

    Bethiah died in Hampton, CT, on 29 May 1750; she was 46. She is buried at the North Cemetery in Hampton.

    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,

    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 graduated from Harvard in 1729 and was ordained 15 May 1734 of the Second Church at Windham

    After Bethiah's death in 1750, Samuel re-married to the widow Mary Clark Gaylord on April 1, 1752, in Hampton, Windham County, Connecticut.

    Mary Clark was born in Connecticut on July 11, 1720. She had previously been married to Aaron Gaylord at Hartford, CT. on July 7, 1841. Aaron Gaylord had also died in 1750.

    Mary Clark Gaylord Moseley died on March 10, 1794, in Hampton, and is buried in the North Cemetery at Hampton, as is her husband Samuel Moseley



    Children

    Children of William and Bethiah (Otis) Billings:

    1. William Billings, b. 18 Mar 1724/5;

    2. Bethiah Billings, b. 4 Nov 1727;

    3. Hannah Billings, b. 8 Nov 1729;

    4. Patience Billings, b. 3 Jun 1731; and

    5. Patience Billings, b. 8 Apr 1733.


    Children of Samuel and Bethiah (Otis) (Billings) Moseley, born at Windham:

    1.Hannah Moseley, b. 31 Mar 1735/6;

    2. Elizabeth Moseley, b. 15 Nov 1737;

    3 .Samuel Moseley, b. 27 Apr 1739;

    4. Ebenezer Moseley, b. 19 Feb 1740/1;

    5. Mary Moseley, b. 13 Nov 1743;

    6. Anne Moseley, b. 23 May 1746;

    7. John Moseley, b. 27 Feb 1747; and

    8. Bethiah Moseley, b. before 29 May 1750.

    From website https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Moseley-201


    Birth:
    Age: 0

    Buried:
    North Cemetery; Hampton Cemetery

    Bethiah Reverend William Billings 1725Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA. William (son of Capt William Billings and Hannah Sterry) 15 Feb 1697 Preston City, New London, Connecticut, USA; 20 Apr 1733Hampton, Windham, Connecticut, USA; Hampton, Windham, Connecticut, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Elizabeth Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 05 Jan 1713 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; 25 Aug 1791Groton, New London, Connecticut, USA.
    2. 3. Dorothy Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 05 Feb 1702 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; 1734.
    3. 4. Sarah Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 16 Sep 1705.
    4. 5. Samuel Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 18 Aug 1699 Campbell, Franklin, Nebraska, USA; 21 Sep 1727Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA.
    5. 6. Capt Roger Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 19 Mar 1708 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; 27 Jan 1792Griswold, New London, Connecticut, USA; Griswold, New London, Connecticut, USA.
    6. 7. Rachel Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 25 Mar 1704 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; 1720.
    7. 8. John Siegfried Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 01 Nov 1730 Ansbach, Bayern, Germany; 30 Jan 1801Rowan, North Carolina, USA.
    8. 9. Patience Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 03 Jun 1731 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 07 Dec 1732Connecticut, USA; Hampton, Windham County, Connecticut, USA.
    9. 10. Bethiah Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 04 Nov 1727 Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 15 Oct 1791Canterbury, CT; Cleaveland Cemetery Canterbury, Windham County, Connecticut, USA .
    10. 11. Ichaboo Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 05 Sep 1710.
    11. 12. William Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 18 Mar 1725 Connecticut, USA; 28 Nov 1813Preston City, New London, Connecticut, USA.
    12. 13. Hannah Billings  Descendancy chart to this point 09 Nov 1729 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; Nov 1821River Phillip, Phillip, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Bethiah Rev Samuel Moseley 04 Jul 1734Hampton, Windham, Connecticut, USA. Rev 15 Aug 1708 Dorchester, Suffolk, Massachusetts, USA; 26 Jul 1791Hampton, Windham, Connecticut, USA; Hampton, Windham County, Connecticut, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 14. Samuel Moseley  Descendancy chart to this point 27 Apr 1739 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA.
    2. 15. Elizabeth Moseley  Descendancy chart to this point 15 Nov 1737 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 19 Jul 1769Lebanon, New London, Connecticut, USA.
    3. 16. Hannah Moseley  Descendancy chart to this point 31 Mar 1735 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 27 Feb 1814Canterbury, Windham, Connecticut, USA.
    4. 17. Ebenezer Moseley  Descendancy chart to this point 19 Feb 1741 Hampton, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 20 Mar 1825Hampton, Windham, Connecticut, USA.
    5. 18. John Moseley  Descendancy chart to this point 27 Feb 1748 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 20 Nov 1768.
    6. 19. Anna Mosley  Descendancy chart to this point 23 May 1746 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 06 Mar 1815.
    7. 20. Mary Moseley  Descendancy chart to this point 13 Nov 1743 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 28 May 1810.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Elizabeth Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 05 Jan 1713 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; 25 Aug 1791Groton, New London, Connecticut, USA.

  2. 3.  Dorothy Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 05 Feb 1702 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; 1734.

  3. 4.  Sarah Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 16 Sep 1705.

  4. 5.  Samuel Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 18 Aug 1699 Campbell, Franklin, Nebraska, USA; 21 Sep 1727Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA.

  5. 6.  Capt Roger Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 19 Mar 1708 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; 27 Jan 1792Griswold, New London, Connecticut, USA; Griswold, New London, Connecticut, USA.

  6. 7.  Rachel Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 25 Mar 1704 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; 1720.

  7. 8.  John Siegfried Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 01 Nov 1730 Ansbach, Bayern, Germany; 30 Jan 1801Rowan, North Carolina, USA.

  8. 9.  Patience Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 03 Jun 1731 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 07 Dec 1732Connecticut, USA; Hampton, Windham County, Connecticut, USA.

  9. 10.  Bethiah Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 04 Nov 1727 Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 15 Oct 1791Canterbury, CT; Cleaveland Cemetery Canterbury, Windham County, Connecticut, USA .

    Notes:

    ***********************************
    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.
    ***********************************

    Hale Collection - Cleveland Cemetery Records. Town of Canterbury CT
    ****************************************\
    CLARK, Bethiah, wife of Theophilus, died Sept. 16, 1791, age 56.
    ******************************************

    link = http://www.hale-collection.com/503-2-windham-canterbury-cleveland.htm

    Bethiah Theophilus Clark, II 05 Dec 1745Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA. Theophilus (son of Theophilus Clark, I and Elizabeth Underwood) 19 Apr 1722 Medway, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA; 24 Nov 1760Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA; . [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 21. Capt Samuel Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 09 Nov 1752 Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 23 Oct 1809Ulster, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.
    2. 22. Ebenezer Martin Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 1754.
    3. 23. Captain Benjamin Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 15 Sep 1747 Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 09 Aug 1834Ulster, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; 10 Aug 1834Ulster Cemetery, Ulster, PA.
    4. 24. William Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 19 Nov 1746 Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA.
    5. 25. Theophilus Clark, III  Descendancy chart to this point 12 Aug 1748 Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA; Vermont, USA.

    Bethiah Elijah Edgerton 06 Sep 1766New Haven, Connecticut, USA. Elijah 12 Dec 1715 Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA; 1769. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 26. Bradford Edgerton  Descendancy chart to this point 11 Feb 1769 Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA; 1813Painted Post, Steuben Co, New York, USA.
    2. 27. Sarah Edgerton  Descendancy chart to this point 27 May 1767 Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA.
    3. 28. Walden Edgerton  Descendancy chart to this point

    Bethiah Nathan Walden, Sr. 27 Dec 1759Lisbon, New London, Connecticut, USA. Nathan about 1720 Connecticut, USA; Dec 1761. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 29. Daniel Walden  Descendancy chart to this point 1765 South Carolina, USA; 1835Georgia, USA.
    2. 30. Bethia Otis Walden  Descendancy chart to this point 14 Aug 1760 Medway, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA; before 1770USA.
    3. 31. Nathan Walden, Jr  Descendancy chart to this point 14 Jan 1762 Westfield, Hampden, Massachusetts, USA; 23 May 1855Le Roy, Genesee, New York, USA; Le Roy, Genesee, New York, USA.

  10. 11.  Ichaboo Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 05 Sep 1710.

  11. 12.  William Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 18 Mar 1725 Connecticut, USA; 28 Nov 1813Preston City, New London, Connecticut, USA.

  12. 13.  Hannah Billings Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 09 Nov 1729 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; Nov 1821River Phillip, Phillip, Nova Scotia, Canada.

  13. 14.  Samuel Moseley Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 27 Apr 1739 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA.

  14. 15.  Elizabeth Moseley Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 15 Nov 1737 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 19 Jul 1769Lebanon, New London, Connecticut, USA.

  15. 16.  Hannah Moseley Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 31 Mar 1735 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 27 Feb 1814Canterbury, Windham, Connecticut, USA.

  16. 17.  Ebenezer Moseley Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 19 Feb 1741 Hampton, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 20 Mar 1825Hampton, Windham, Connecticut, USA.

  17. 18.  John Moseley Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 27 Feb 1748 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 20 Nov 1768.

  18. 19.  Anna Mosley Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 23 May 1746 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 06 Mar 1815.

  19. 20.  Mary Moseley Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bethiah1) 13 Nov 1743 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 28 May 1810.


Generation: 3

  1. 21.  Capt Samuel ClarkCapt Samuel Clark Descendancy chart to this point (10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 09 Nov 1752 Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 23 Oct 1809Ulster, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Event 1: 23 Oct 1809, Wysox, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; Samuel accidentally Shot by neighbor https://pawchs.org/1809-luzerne-county-federalist/

    Notes:

    17 Nov 1809 - Luzerne County Federalist: Melancholy Accident — On Oct. 23rd last, Nathan COON, of Sugar Creek, in this county, took his rifle and went into the woods in pursuit of venison. Having hunted some time, he started three deer, which run round a hill near where the new state road crosses the line of Claverack Township. Mr. COON immediately crossed the hill with the view of meeting the deer as they should come round the point of the hill. Having proceeded a little distance he heard a noise of rustling in the bushes in the direction that he expected the deer to come, and eager for the game, stepped hastily forward, and seeing something move through the leaves, he fired, and the object fell. On approaching the spot, lo! Instead of a deer — a man had fallen, and was writhing in the most excruciating agonies. Capt. Samuel CLARK of Claverack had contracted to open a part of the state road, and was at work upon it alone, when the ball struck him near the right shoulder blade and penetrated to the spine of the back. When Mr. COON came in with the sad intelligence, measures were immediately taken for bringing Capt. CLARK to his place of residence at Capt. GREGORY’S. He received his wound about one o’clock P. M. and retained his senses perfectly, while he survived, which was until about eight o’clock in the evening, when he expired. Capt. CLARK was a respectable and worthy man, about 55 years of age, and has left five children to mourn his untimely death. Mr. COON appeared exceedingly afflicted; there was no doubt that the wound was entirely accidental; but such accidents occur so frequently, that it is impossible not to consider the persons who are the causes of them, if not guilty, at least extremely reprehensible for their carelessness. Hunters form such fatal consequences, ought to learn to exercise more prudence and caution for the future.

    From Heaverly;s Pioneers and Patriot Families of Bradford County, Page 187: Samuel Clark came to Ulster soon after his brother, Capt. Benjamin Clark. In the census of 1790 his family is given as consisting of five males and three females. Mr. Clark met a tragic death on Christmas, 1808. He had a contract for building a section of the State Road, crossing the county from east to west, and while engaged on the Gregg place in clearing away brush, was shot in mistake for a deer by a neighbor. But little is known of his family. One son, Ebenezer P. Clark, was for a number of years a resident of Towanda and did teaming for Col. Harry Spalding. Harry S. Clark, son of Ebenezer P., born 1823, is still a resident of Towanda.

    ***
    Nathan Coon lived up Sugar creek about a mile above Mr. Rutty's. He probably left about 1809. His property described as a house, seventeen acres of improved land, one hundred and twenty unimproved, and a valuation of $153,which, on the assessment, is marked transferred to Andrew Gregg.

    ***********

    Samuel Clark of Claverack lived at Capt. Gregory's in Wysox. Gregory was a licensed Inn Keeper in 1802


    504 HISTORY OF BRADFORD COUNTY.

    Ebenezer B. Gregory came here through the influence of Mr. Means. At all events he accompanied liim on his return trip from
    Northumberland where he had gone after his sister, Nancy (Mrs. Dr.Warner). He lived in a double log house near the river, a little north-
    east of the present residence of I. O. Blight, on the same lot. The building was used as a house of entertainment, and Mr. Gregory was
    licensed a ''taverner" in 1802. lie seems to have also engaged in the mercantile business for a short time, being marked "merchant" on the assessment roll of 1814:. Mr. Gregory was a man of education
    and "very much of a gentleman." His wife was an accomplished ladv, and'as early as 1810 or 1811 established a boarding school at her
    own house for young ladies and girls. Mr. Gregory was one of the original proprietors of Towanda, and donated from his portion two
    lots for an academy, which were subsequently appropriated to private uses. In about 1817 he removed to Owego, and died
    ********************************************

    ***************************
    * From FamilySearch.org
    ***************************
    Name: Samuel Clark
    Gender: Male
    Birth Date: 09 Nov 1752
    Birthplace: ASHFORD TWP,WINDHAM,CONNETICUT
    Father's Name: Theophilus Clark
    Mother's Name: Bethiah

    Indexing Project (Batch) Number: 7450316
    System Origin: Connecticut-ODM
    GS Film number: unknown

    Citing this Record
    "Connecticut Births and Christenings, 1649-1906," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F742-Q54 : 11 February 2018), Bethiah in entry for Samuel Clark, 09 Nov 1752; citing ; FHL microfilm unknown.

    *************************
    The following is extracted from Clement F. Heverly, Pioneer and Patriot Families of Bradford County, 1770-1800, Vol. 1, Bradford Star Print, 1913

    EARLY MARRIAGES, JUSTICES AND MINISTERS IN BRADFORD COUNTY

    Records From 1766 to 1811

    --
    1798 June 26, in Sheshequin, by Judge Obadiah Gore, Ebenezer B. Gregory of Wysox (Towanda) and Mrs. Celinda (Bingham) Taylor.

    ** Samuel Clark living at Captain Gregory's at time of accident
    ********************************

    Wysox Assessment* 1796.


    Wysox Assessment, 1796 13

    William Dobin as a carpenter ; and Samuel Surlerhill as
    a blacksmith. The following were the taxables :

    Benjamin Ackley John Cranmer

    John Bennett Samuel Cole

    Joshua Bowman James Gurnet

    Amos Bennett, Jr. William Dauherty

    Joseph Ballard Paul DeWiU

    Henry Bunnell John Dorman

    Charles Bartley William DeWitt

    Amos Bennett William Dohin

    John Blanden Widow MeDale

    Henry Birney Frederick Eiklor

    Charles Bologhone Nathaniel Edsall

    Stephen Baliard Solomon Franklin

    Joseph Bennett Rudolph Fox

    Nathan Bull Jehial Fat is

    Feris Bod well Rufus Foster

    Joshua Bailey Jehial Franklin

    Thomas Bennett Isaac Foster

    David Baringtou Philip Fox

    Gideon Bennett Abraham Foster

    Samuel Cranmer Jacob Gibson

    Samuel Clark Richard Gough

    Michael Crows Jacob Granteer

    Ehenezer Cindle Francis Gullow

    Moses Coolbaugh Richard Griffin

    Moses Calkins Thomas Gibson

    Amy Cranmer Daniel Hoi ley

    Abisha Cole Peter Huyck

    John Cole Luther Hinman

    Usual Carter Elijah Head

    Samuel Covel George Head, Sr.

    Noadiah Cranmer John Hinman

    W T illiam Coolbaugh Elisha Hurlhut

    Barnabas Clark William Huyck

    John Clark Nathaniel Heacock


    Died:
    shot by deer hunter

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

    Children:
    1. 32. Ebenezer Pemberton Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 18 Jul 1781 Newport, Newport, Rhode Island, USA; 11 Oct 1861Wyalusing, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; Wyalusing Cemetery, Wyalusing, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.

  2. 22.  Ebenezer Martin Clark Descendancy chart to this point (10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 1754.

  3. 23.  Captain Benjamin ClarkCaptain Benjamin Clark Descendancy chart to this point (10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 15 Sep 1747 Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA; 09 Aug 1834Ulster, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; 10 Aug 1834Ulster Cemetery, Ulster, PA.

    Notes:

    ********************************************************
    From ROSTER OF REVOLUTIONARY ANCESTORS, p. 121:

    Clark, Benjamin, b. 1747, Tolland, Conn., died 9 aug., 1834, Ulster Pa., m. 1769, (1) Nabbe (Abigail) Clark, b. 1753, d. 12 March 1777, (2) Mrs. Silas Gore (Keziah Y.) of Ulster, Pa. SERVICE: Enlisted at Wyoming, PA, 6 Sept. 1776 and served as pvt. in Capt. Robert Durkee's Independent Co. In Sept. 1777, the company was attached to Col. John Durkee's Conn. Reg. In Feb. 1778, he was Corp in same Co. then commaned by Capt. Simon Spalding in same regt. In summer of 1779, the Co. was attached to Col. Hubley's Expedition against the Indians, and in Feb. or March, 1781, the co. was restored to Col. John Durkee's Conn. Regt. and he later served in Cols. Thomas Grosvenor and Zebulon Butler's Conn. Regt. and was discharged 7 June 1783. CHILDREN: John Theophilus Clark, b. 8 July 1770, m. Cynthia Campbell; Polly (Mary) Clark, b. 3 March 1774; m. ? Blanchard; Sally and Milly CLark, b. 5-3-1777. Above children are from first marriage to Nabbe Clark. Lucinda Clark, m. Nathaniel Hovey; Ursula Clark, m. Samuel Treadway; William, m. Sylvia Niles, daugh of Ezra; Julia Ann, m. John Overton (1 mar.) Niles Passmore (2 mar.). Last 4 children are of Benjamin Clark and Keziah Yarrington.

    ************************************
    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.
    **************************************************


    Westmoreland's Independent Companies
    (Wyoming Independent Companies)

    Authorized 23 August 1776 in the Continental Army as the 1st and 2d Independent Westmoreland Companies.
    Organized 26 August-21 September 1776 in Westmoreland County, Connecticut, Captains Robert Durkee and Samuel Ransom commanding, and assigned to the Middle Department.

    Relieved 12 December 1776 from the Middle Department and assigned to the Main Army.

    Relieved 15 June 1778 from the Main Army and assigned to the Western Department. Consolidated 23 June 1778 and consolidated unit redesignated as the WyomingIndependent Company, Captain Simon Spaulding commanding.

    .
    Disbanded 1 January 1781 at Fort Wyoming, Connecticut.
    Engagements
    Northern New Jersey
    Defense of Philadelphia
    Philadelphia-Monmouth
    Iroquois 1778
    Iroquois 1779
    ----------------------------------------------
    From https://revolutionarywar.us/continental-army/connecticut/
    -------------------------------------

    *********************************************************

    From Ulster Township History (Tri-Counties site):

    About the same time (if not together, from Wyoming) that Colonel Spalding and others went to Sheshequin in 1783 and 1784, settlers came into Ulster. Of these may be mentioned as one of the pioneers, Captain Benjamin Clark, who was among the very first to build a house on the "town-plot," of Wilkes-Barre, having emigrated from Tolland County, Connecticut. He was a Corporal in the First Independent Company of Wyoming, under Captain Robert Darkee, and served seven years in the Revolutionary war. In the battle of Mud Fort, the man in front of him had his head shot off by a cannon ball. He was one of the detachment sent for the relief of the citizens of Wilkes-Barre, and was only a day too late--to save the inhabitants from the fate of the tomahawk, and the fiendish tortures of the red men. He was in the army of General Sullivan, which devastated the Indian country in 1779. In connection with General Sullivan’s expedition, Mr. Clark gave the following among his recollections: "At the battle of Newtown, (near where Elmira now is) after the engagement had actively opened, and the Indians were being hard pressed, they knocked down a cow which they had in their possession, cut her up in pieces without skinning her, then took to their heels and made their escape. This they would not have accomplished had General Poore completed his circuit in closing the circle surrounding them. However, the Indians were easily tracked, from the blood which dropped from the cow’s flesh. They were very wrathful at their defeat, and to express it they withed together young hickories."

    Mr. Clark received for his services a pension of $96 per year. Subsequently he was appointed captain of militia, and was known by the old settlers as "Captain Clark." After peace, Captain Clark remained in Wyoming one year. In the spring of 1784 he moved to the place now called Frenchtown, (Bradford County) and in the year after came up to Ulster, built a log house on the bank of the river on what is known as the "Watkins place," and moved his family into it in the spring of 1785. It will be remembered that an unusually severe rain fell in October, 1786, causing an unusual rise in the river, called the "pumpkin freshet," from the large quantity of that vegetable that floated down the river. Captain Clark’s house stood on the low flat near the river. The water began to rise rapidly, the family became alarmed and fled to the hills and Mr. Clark commenced moving his goods from the house; and so rapidly did the water rise that across a low place between his house and the hillside, where was dry ground when he went for his last load of goods, he was compelled to swim his oxen on the return. The water came up to the eaves of the house, but the building resisted the force of the current, and after the flood subsided the family moved back into it.

    The winter before the great ice freshet (1784) Mr. Clark was at Sheshequin, and in company with Sergeant Thomas Baldwin, went down to Wilkes-Barre in a canoe. There had been a thaw accompanied with rain, and the river was bank full when the weather became suddenly cold. It was with great effort, the two men could keep from freezing. The reached Wilkes-Barre that same day, but so intensely cold had the weather become that, high as the river was, it froze over that night.

    Like other Connecticut settlers, Captain Clark took up his farm in Ulster under the Connecticut title, but this proving worthless, he purchased the State title through Thomas Overton. Mr. Clark occupied what is now known as the "Watkins place" until 1816, when he moved to other lands of his, now included in the farm of Benjamin Ross. Here in 1817, he erected a frame dwelling which is yet standing; and our esteemed friend, Rev. S. C. Hovey, a grandson of Mr. Clark, who kindly pointed out the old land-marks for us--rode the horse when a boy nine years old that was hitched in front of the ox-team that drew the logs to the mill for this building. here Mr. Clark lived until the time of his death, which occurred in August, 1834, at the age of eighty-seven years.

    Captain Clark was an ardent Federalist and a member of the Methodist church. His house was a place of entertainment for travelers, and the home of the Methodist itinerant for many years, and in it the first preaching was held in Sheshequin. Here in 1810 the preaching of Rev. Loring Grant, H. B. Bascom, late Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, was converted and received into the Church. It may be said that Mr. Clark kept the first hotel in Ulster.

    ************************************************************

    *******************************************************
    From message-board posting on Ancestry.com
    ( https://www.ancestry.co.uk/boards/thread.aspx?m=932&p=surnames.clark&dc=25 )
    *******************************************************



    Their children were Lucinda, Ursula, William and Julia Ann.
    Lucinda married Nathaniel Hovey and stayed in Luzerne/Bradford Co.

    Ursula was born 10 Jun 1781. She married Samuel Treadway. She died 4 Oct 1845 in Denison Twp, Lawrence Co., Ill.

    Julia Ann (?-?) married (1) John Overton & (2) Joseph Passmore, his second marriage. They moved to Lawrence Co with their combined children.

    William Clark was born 5 Sep 1789. He married Sylvia Niles 6 May 1810. William moved to Lawrence Co, about 1818.
    Children were:
    Charles Wesley b. 26 Jun 1811 mar. Mary Neal
    Fidelia (twin) b. 13 Dec 1813 mar. John Lukin
    Croelia(?Celia) (twin) b. 13 Dec 1813
    William Asbury b. 20 Apr 1816 mar. Mrs. Mary Ann French
    Sylvia Ann b. 6 Aug 1818 mar. (1) Chauncy P. Durkee (2)--Simons
    Keziah b. 6 Sep 1820 mar. Charles Passmore
    Hester Ann b. 12 Apr 1823 mar. ?William Mieure
    Mary b. 15 Nov 1825
    Margaret Curry b. 17 Feb 1828 mar. ?James s. Barbee
    Benjamin H.C. b. 8 Oct 1830 mar. ? Martha M. -----
    John Fletcher b. 9 Feb 1833 mar. Margaret McMahan (this is my line)
    Emily J. b. 6 Jul 1835 mar. (1)William True (2)Joseph H. Bertrand

    Sylvia Niles Clark died after 1850. Benjamin married 27 August 1853, Jane (Adams) Lemmons. He died after 1770 and before 1879. Jane died 3 Mar 1879, a widow at that time.
    Lemmons is spelled Lemmon, Limon, Lyman, etc. Not sure what the spelling was meant to be of Janes first husband Samuel.

    ********************************************************
    From ROSTER OF REVOLUTIONARY ANCESTORS, p. 121:

    Clark, Benjamin, b. 1747, Tolland, Conn., died 9 aug., 1834, Ulster Pa., m. 1769, (1) Nabbe (Abigail) Clark, b. 1753, d. 12 March 1777, (2) Mrs. Silas Gore (Keziah Y.) of Ulster, Pa. SERVICE: Enlisted at Wyoming, PA, 6 Sept. 1776 and served as pvt. in Capt. Robert Durkee's Independent Co. In Sept. 1777, the company was attached to Col. John Durkee's Conn. Reg. In Feb. 1778, he was Corp in same Co. then commaned by Capt. Simon Spalding in same regt. In summer of 1779, the Co. was attached to Col. Hubley's Expedition against the Indians, and in Feb. or March, 1781, the co. was restored to Col. John Durkee's Conn. Regt. and he later served in Cols. Thomas Grosvenor and Zebulon Butler's Conn. Regt. and was discharged 7 June 1783. CHILDREN: John Theophilus Clark, b. 8 July 1770, m. Cynthia Campbell; Polly (Mary) Clark, b. 3 March 1774; m. ? Blanchard; Sally and Milly CLark, b. 5-3-1777. Above children are from first marriage to Nabbe Clark. Lucinda Clark, m. Nathaniel Hovey; Ursula Clark, m. Samuel Treadway; William, m. Sylvia Niles, daugh of Ezra; Julia Ann, m. John Overton (1 mar.) Niles Passmore (2 mar.). Last 4 children are of Benjamin Clark and Keziah Yarrington.
    *******************************************************

    From Bradford Reporter, October 18, 1883
    ****************************************
    Captain [Benjamin] Clark was twice married. In the Westmoreland town records are the following entries: Births of the children of Benjamin Clark and Nabbie his wife, John Theophilus, born July 8, 1770; Poly, born February 24, 1772; Nabby, born March 3, 1774; Sally and Milly (twins) born March 5, 1777, Nabbie, wife of Benjamin Clark departed this life March 12, 1777, in the twenty-fourth year of her age.
    *****************************************


    *********************************************************
    Bradford Reporter, Towanda, Pa.,
    October 18, 1883, ULSTER TOWNSHIP
    *********************************************************
    What is now Ulster township was originally a part of Sheshequin, but the latter town was soon of such importance that it was deemed best for Ulster to separate which it early did. It was settled about 1784, and among the settlers of early date may be mentioned Captain Benjamin Clark, Nathaniel Hovey, Adrial Simons, Solomon Tracy, Eli Holcomb, Isaac Cash, Abram Parmeter, Chester Bingham, Thomas Overton, Elijah Granger, Leonard Westbrook, and Joseph C. Powell. Nearly all of these men, if not all have descendants now living in Bradford County.

    Among the descendants of settlers of "ye olden time" are S. C. Hovey, a descendant of Benjamin Clarke, the third settler at Ulster, who came with General Sullivan in his famous march.

    About the same time (if not together, from Wyoming) that Colonel Spalding and others went to Sheshequin in 1783 and 1784, settlers came into Ulster. Of these may be mentioned as one of the pioneers, Captain Benjamin Clark, who was among the very first to build a house on the "town-plot," of Wilkes-Barre, having emigrated from Tolland County, Connecticut. He was a Corporal in the First Independent Company of Wyoming, under Captain Robert Darkee, and served seven years in the Revolutionary war. In the battle of Mud Fort, the man in front of him had his head shot off by a cannon ball. He was one of the detachment sent for the relief of the citizens of Wilkes-Barre, and was only a day too late--to save the inhabitants from the fate of the tomahawk, and the fiendish tortures of the red men. He was in the army of General Sullivan, which devastated the Indian country in 1779. In connection with General Sullivan’s expedition, Mr. Clark gave the following among his recollections: "At the battle of Newtown, (near where Elmira now is) after the engagement had actively opened, and the Indians were being hard pressed, they knocked down a cow which they had in their possession, cut her up in pieces without skinning her, then took to their heels and made their escape. This they would not have accomplished had General Poore completed his circuit in closing the circle surrounding them. However, the Indians were easily tracked, from the blood which dropped from the cow’s flesh. They were very wrathful at their defeat, and to express it they withed together young hickories."

    Mr. Clark received for his services a pension of $96 per year. Subsequently he was appointed captain of militia, and was known by the old settlers as "Captain Clark." After peace, Captain Clark remained in Wyoming one year. In the spring of 1784 he moved to the place now called Frenchtown, (Bradford County) and in the year after came up to Ulster, built a log house on the bank of the river on what is known as the "Watkins place," and moved his family into it in the spring of 1785. It will be remembered that an unusually severe rain fell in October, 1786, causing an unusual rise in the river, called the "pumpkin freshet," from the large quantity of that vegetable that floated down the river. Captain Clark’s house stood on the low flat near the river. The water began to rise rapidly, the family became alarmed and fled to the hills and Mr. Clark commenced moving his goods from the house; and so rapidly did the water rise that across a low place between his house and the hillside, where was dry ground when he went for his last load of goods, he was compelled to swim his oxen on the return. The water came up to the eaves of the house, but the building resisted the force of the current, and after the flood subsided the family moved back into it.

    The winter before the great ice freshet (1784) Mr. Clark was at Sheshequin, and in company with Sergeant Thomas Baldwin, went down to Wilkes-Barre in a canoe. There had been a thaw accompanied with rain, and the river was bank full when the weather became suddenly cold. It was with great effort, the two men could keep from freezing. The reached Wilkes-Barre that same day, but so intensely cold had the weather become that, high as the river was, it froze over that night.

    Like other Connecticut settlers, Captain Clark took up his farm in Ulster under the Connecticut title, but this proving worthless, he purchased the State title through Thomas Overton. Mr. Clark occupied what is now known as the "Watkins place" until 1816, when he moved to other lands of his, now included in the farm of Benjamin Ross. Here in 1817, he erected a frame dwelling which is yet standing; and our esteemed friend, Rev. S. C. Hovey, a grandson of Mr. Clark, who kindly pointed out the old land-marks for us--rode the horse when a boy nine years old that was hitched in front of the ox-team that drew the logs to the mill for this building. here Mr. Clark lived until the time of his death, which occurred in August, 1834, at the age of eighty-seven years.

    Captain Clark was an ardent Federalist and a member of the Methodist church. His house was a place of entertainment for travelers, and the home of the Methodist itinerant for many years, and in it the first preaching was held in Sheshequin. Here in 1810 the preaching of Rev. Loring Grant, H. B. Bascom, late Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, was converted and received into the Church. It may be said that Mr. Clark kept the first hotel in Ulster.

    **********************************************************
    From the Baker Family Tree, Chapter 17, The Clarke Family:
    http://bakerfamilytree.blogspot.com/2008/02/chapter-17-clarke-family_27.html
    **********************************************************
    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.


    ****************************************************
    Born ‎ 1747 at Tolland Co., Connecticut, died ‎ aug 9, 1834 at Ulster, Bradford Co., Pennsylvania‎, 86 or 87 years, buried ‎ at Ulster Cemetery, Ulster, Bradford Co., Pennsylvania
    Benjamin Clark, a native of Tolland, Connecticut, removed to the Wyoming Valley, and was among the very first to build a house on the town-plat of Wilkes-Barre. He was a corporal in the First Independent Company of Wyoming, under Capt. Robert Durkee, and served seven years in the Revolutionary War. He was one of the detachment sent for the relief of Wyoming after the fatal battle, and was in the army of General Sullivan against the Indians. For his services he received a pension of $96 per year. Subsequently, he was appointed a captain of militia, and was known by the older settlers as "Captain Clark." In 1784 he removed from Wyoming to Asylum, and the next year settled in Ulster on what is known as the Ross farm. His house was a place of entertainment for travelers and a home of the Methodist itinerant for many years, and in it the first preaching was held in "Old Sheshequin." Captain Clark was an ardent Federalist and a member of the Methodist church. He took an active interest in public affairs, and for years filled the most important local offices. He died at Ulster, August 9, 1834, aged 87 years.

    Captain Clark was twice married. The Westmoreland town records contain the following: "Births of the children of Benjamin Clark and Nabbe, his wife--John Theophilus, born July 8, 1770; Polly, born March 3, 1774; Sally and Milly (twins), born March 5, 1777. Nabbe, wife of Benjamin Clark, departed this life, March 12, 1777, in the 24th year of her age." Their children selected partners as follows:

    John T. married Cynthia, daughter of James Campbell, and settled in Burlington, where he died. They had 12 children who married as follows: Billings to Charlotte Nichols; James to Sally Simons; Cephas to Sally Wilcox; Benjamin died, aged 19, from being kicked by a horse; Sally to Timothy C. Wheeler; Betsey to Abraham Reeves; Ursula to Earl Nichols; Celestia to Harry L. Ross; Polly, first to Amos Alexander, second to Zepheniah Lane; Jane died unmarried; Cynthia to Eliphalet Gustin; Melissa to Mortimer Knapp.

    Polly (Mary) married a Mr. Blanchard.

    Nabby (Abigail) married George Culver and moved to the Lake country.

    For his second wife, Captain Clark married Keziah Yarrington, widow of Silas Gore, who was slain at the battle of Wyoming. She died August 12, 1837, aged 91 years, and lies beside her husband in the Ulster cemetery. Their four children, who married as follows, were:

    Lucinda, to Nathaniel Hovey, an officer in the War of 1812, who died at Sackett's Harbor in 1814.

    Ursula, to Samuel Treadway and removed to Illinois.

    William, to Sylvia, daughter of Ezra Niles and removed to Cairo, Illinois.

    Julia Ann, first to John Overton, and after his death to a Mr. Passmore, with whom she moved West.
    ****************************************************

    ****************************************************


    History and geography of Bradford County, Pennsylvania, 1615-1924
    Chapter XVIII. Ulster Township Page 209

    Benjamin Clark, a native of Tolland, Connecticut, removed to the Wyoming Valley and was among the first to build a house on the town-plot of Wilkes-Barre. He was a Corporal in the first Independent Company of Wyoming under Capt Robert Durkee and served seven years in the Revolutionary War. He was one of the detachment sent for the relief of Wyoming after the fatal battle and was in the army of General Sullivan against the Indians.

    In 1784, he removed from Wyoming to Asylum, and the next year, settled in Ulster on what is known as the Ross Farm. His house was the place of entertainment for travelers and the home of Methodist itinerants who held religious meetings there.

    He was an ardent Federalist, captain of militia and popularly known as Captain Clark.

    By his first wife, Nabbe, he had children:
    John T, Polly (Mrs Blanchard) and Abigail (Mrs George Culver).

    He married second, Keziah Yarrington, widow of Silas Gore, who was slain at the Battle of Wyoming, and had children:
    Lucinda (Mrs Nathaniel Hovey), Urusula (Mrs Samuel Treadway), William and Julia Ann (1st Mrs John Overton, 2nd Mrs Joseph Passmore).

    Captain Clark died, 1834, aged 87 years.
    ****************************************************

    ****************************************************
    From Genealogy Message Board - 2007 (user = nabbe68:
    Benjamin Clark was born 15 Jun 1750 in Ashford, Bradford Co, Conn. His parents were Theophilus Clark (1722-?1754) and Bethiah Billings (1727-17--, don't have that with me right now).
    Benjamin married about 1769, Nabby ????. They had five children, the last two twin girls born 5 Mar 1777. Nabby died 12 Mar 1777 in the Wyoming Valley,Pennsylvania.(The place is a long story). Benjamin became a soldier in the Revolutionary War.
    Keziah Yarrington was born 24 Jun 1751 in Stonington, New London, Connecticut. She married Silas Gore (1747 -1778). They had three daughters. Silas was killed at the Battle of Wyoming in July, 1778.
    It is not clear when Benjamin and Keziah married. Probably 1783 after Benjamin was released from the army.
    Their children were Lucinda, Ursula, William and Julia Ann.
    Lucinda married Nathaniel Hovey and stayed in Luzerne/Bradford Co.
    Ursula was born 10 Jun 1781. She married Samuel Treadway. She died 4 Oct 1845 in Denison Twp, Lawrence Co., Ill.
    Julia Ann (?-?) married (1) John Overton & (2) Joseph Passmore, his second marriage. They moved to Lawrence Co with their combined children.
    William Clark was born 5 Sep 1789. He married Sylvia Niles 6 May 1810. William moved to Lawrence Co, about 1818.
    Children were:
    Charles Wesley b. 26 Jun 1811 mar. Mary Neal
    Fidelia (twin) b. 13 Dec 1813 mar. John Lukin
    Croelia(?Celia) (twin) b. 13 Dec 1813
    William Asbury b. 20 Apr 1816 mar. Mrs. Mary Ann French
    Sylvia Ann b. 6 Aug 1818 mar. (1) Chauncy P. Durkee (2)--Simons
    Keziah b. 6 Sep 1820 mar. Charles Passmore
    Hester Ann b. 12 Apr 1823 mar. ?William Mieure
    Mary b. 15 Nov 1825
    Margaret Curry b. 17 Feb 1828 mar. ?James s. Barbee
    Benjamin H.C. b. 8 Oct 1830 mar. ? Martha M. -----
    John Fletcher b. 9 Feb 1833 mar. Margaret McMahan (this is my line)
    Emily J. b. 6 Jul 1835 mar. (1)William True (2)Joseph H. Bertrand
    Sylvia Niles Clark died after 1850. Benjamin married 27 August 1853, Jane (Adams) Lemmons. He died after 1770 and before 1879. Jane died 3 Mar 1879, a widow at that time.
    Lemmons is spelled Lemmon, Limon, Lyman, etc. Not sure what the spelling was meant to be of Janes first husband Samuel.
    ****************************************************

    Died:
    Age: 91

    Benjamin Nabbe 1810. Nabbe (daughter of Ezra Niles) after 1750 unknown; 12 Mar 1777Pennsylvania. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 33. William Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 1790 Ulster, PA; 1850Cairo, IL.

    Benjamin Keziah Yarrington 1784. Keziah 24 Jun 1751 Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; 12 Aug 1837Ulster, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA; 13 Aug 1837Ulster, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 34. Ursula Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 10 Jun 1781 Ulster, PA; 04 Oct 1845Lawrence County, Illinois; 4 Oct 1845Denison Cemetery Lawrence County, Illinois, USA .
    2. 35. Julia Ann Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 1792 Ulster, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA; 1846Lawrence County, Illinois, USA.
    3. 36. John Theophilus Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 08 Jul 1770 Tolland, Tolland County, Connecticut, USA; 6 Sep 1849Burlington, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA; 7 Sep 1849Luthers Mills Cemetery Towanda Bradford County Pennsylvania, USA.
    4. 37. Lucinda Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 1785; 08 Oct 1854Ulster, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA; Ulster, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA.

  4. 24.  William Clark Descendancy chart to this point (10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 19 Nov 1746 Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA.

  5. 25.  Theophilus Clark, III Descendancy chart to this point (10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 12 Aug 1748 Ashford, Windham, Connecticut, USA; Vermont, USA.

  6. 26.  Bradford Edgerton Descendancy chart to this point (10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 11 Feb 1769 Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA; 1813Painted Post, Steuben Co, New York, USA.

  7. 27.  Sarah Edgerton Descendancy chart to this point (10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 27 May 1767 Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA.

  8. 28.  Walden Edgerton Descendancy chart to this point (10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1)

  9. 29.  Daniel Walden Descendancy chart to this point (10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 1765 South Carolina, USA; 1835Georgia, USA.

  10. 30.  Bethia Otis Walden Descendancy chart to this point (10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 14 Aug 1760 Medway, Norfolk, Massachusetts, USA; before 1770USA.

  11. 31.  Nathan Walden, Jr Descendancy chart to this point (10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 14 Jan 1762 Westfield, Hampden, Massachusetts, USA; 23 May 1855Le Roy, Genesee, New York, USA; Le Roy, Genesee, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    Buried:
    Myrtle Cemetery

    Died:
    Age: 93



Generation: 4

  1. 32.  Ebenezer Pemberton ClarkEbenezer Pemberton Clark Descendancy chart to this point (21.Capt3, 10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 18 Jul 1781 Newport, Newport, Rhode Island, USA; 11 Oct 1861Wyalusing, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; Wyalusing Cemetery, Wyalusing, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Notes:

    *******************************************
    Ebenezer P. Clark was assessed in Towanda in 1812. He lived near Myer's Mills, and afterwards in Towanda, thence moved down the river opposite Wyalusing.
    **********************************************
    FROM Page 81 of book History of the Towandas, 1770-1886 : including the aborigines, Pennamites and Yankees together with biographical sketches and matters of general importance connected with the county seat by Clement Ferdinand Heverly
    *************************************************************
    *************************************************************

    Most people familiar with Towanda history know that the borough's oldest house is located at 1 York Avenue, at the bend with Main Street. An example of Federal architecture, it was built in 1812 and was originally built as a combination tavern and home by Col. Harry Spalding. It was a stagecoach stop when York Avenue was known as Post Road and once even contained a ballroom for dancing during one phase of its 192 years of service. As is the case with most of these homes, it still serves as a home and retains its historic look.

    ********************************************
    ** 1815 Petition for road construction ****

    Road from Breakneck Run to State Road—
    At a court of quarter sessions, county of Bradford, May 1815, the petition of John Spalding, Zephon Flower, David Paine, Lodawick Carner, Henry Boyer, Ebenezer P. Clark, Wm. Coolbaugh, David Eiklor, Wm. Fergason, Walter Wheeler, Moses Warfold, David S. Blackman, Asa Stevens, Elijah Horton, Wm. W. Spalding, Elijah Towner, Franklin Blackman, Thomas Bull, John Lent, Wilber Bennett, Ebenezer Shaw, Jonathan Stevens, Joseph Kinney and Wm. Myer, inhabitants of Ulster and Wysox, was presented, setting forth that "it would be practicable to make a road along the narrows below where the road turns off at the lower end of Breakneck to go over the mountain to Wysox: that such road would not only save traveling over a very bad mountain, but would shorten the distance a quarter of a mile and be of great public utility; that it may not be improper to inform the court that it is the expectation of the inhabitants of Ulster and Wysox to open the road (if laid out) by subscription; therefore petitioners pray for the appointment of viewers," etc.

    Whereupon the court appoint Joseph Kingsbury, Richard Horton, Elijah Horton, Jr., Adonijah Warner, Stephen Patrick and Robert Ridgway.

    At September sessions viewers report "that they have viewed the ground and are of the opinion that it is practicable for a road, and have accordingly laid one out agreeably to the courses and distances and plot hereto annexed, and believe the same will be of public utility."

    This road began on the State road, opposite the court house, about 50 rods from the river, running nearly north along the side of the mountain toward the river to what is now the present road, about one-half mile south of the railroad bridge. From here the course of the road was the same as now along the river to Breakneck run at the Johnson place. The report was finally confirmed at December sessions and road ordered to be opened of the breadth of 30 feet.
    ********************
    FROM History of Sheshequin 1777---1902
    C. F. Heverly
    pub.1902, Towanda, Pa.
    *********************
    **************************************************

    Ebenezer P Clark did teaming work for Col Harry Spalding. Col. Spalding married Lemira Saterlee) Hence the naming of 2 children in his honor (Harry Spalding Clark, and Lemira Satterlee Clark)

    William Myer, born February 8, 1780, was the eldest son of Jacob Myer. In 1800 he went to Wysox, purchased a mill site and secured the right to control the flow of water from Lake Wysauking. He put up a hewed log house into which his father and family moved the next year. Working together, they built a grist-mill, which was supplied by water power from Wysox creek and Lake Wysauking. They soon after built a saw-mill that was run entirely by water from Wysox creek. He early took an active part in public affairs, being commissioned a justice of the peace, 1807. Upon the formation of Bradford county, he was elected one of the first county commissioners, 1812, and again elected to the same office, 1819. He was chosen a member of the Pennsylvania assembly in 1822 and also served his townsmen in many civil capacities. He married Joanna, daughter of Nathaniel Hickok, died May 15, 1842. She was born, 1783, died April 15, 1825. Their children were: Harriet, Elizabeth, Sarah, Emeline Esther, Mary Ellen, Susan, Elijah Reed and Helen Maria. Mr. Myer married for his second wife, Mrs. Lemira (Satterlee) Spalding, widow of Col. Harry Spalding. ** From Heverley Pioneer and Patriot Families of Bradford County, Page 314

    Samuel Clark came to Ulster soon after his brother, Capt. Benjamin Clark. In the census of 1790 his family is given as consisting of five males and three females. Mr. Clark met a tragic death on Christmas, 1808. He had a contract for building a section of the State Road, crossing the county from east to west, and while engaged on the Gregg place in clearing away brush, was shot in mistake for a deer by a neighbor. But little is known of his family. One son, Ebenezer P. Clark, was for a number of years a resident of Towanda and did teaming for Col. Harry Spalding. Harry S. Clark, son of Ebenezer P., born 1823, is still a resident of Towanda. .... FROM Pioneer & Patriot Families of Bradford County PA 1770-1800
    Vol. I - Clement F. Heverly - Page 187

    Had a grandson named Ebenezer Pemberton Stranger (1837 - 1862)


    Census record for his dau Adelaide Corson says her father born in Rhode Island. Same for Harry S. Clark

    Died:
    Age 54

    Ebenezer Polly Smith 01 Sep 1814Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA. Polly (daughter of Jesse Smith and Jane Miller) 30 Jul 1797 Norwich, New London, Connecticut, USA; 19 Aug 1867; Wyalusing Cemetery, Wyalusing, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 38. Cyrus Mungo Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 23 Dec 1816 Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.
    2. 39. Samuel Bateman Clark  Descendancy chart to this point about 1817 Bradford County, PA; 02 Aug 1897Birchardville, Susquehanna Co, Pennsylvania, USA; Montrose Cem, Montrose, Susquehanna Co., Pennsylvania, USA.
    3. 40. Sarah Jane Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 10 Nov 1818 Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; before 1880Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.
    4. 41. Harry DY Spalding Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 30 Sep 1821 Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; 18 Oct 1822Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.
    5. 42. Harry Spalding Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 14 Sep 1823 Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; 22 Oct 1916Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; 25 Oct 1916Wyalusing Cemetery, Wyalusing, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.
    6. 43. Ebenezer Benjamin Clark, DY  Descendancy chart to this point 27 Aug 1826 Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; 17 Jul 1830Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.
    7. 44. Lemira Satterlee Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 06 Mar 1828 Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; 31 Oct 1882Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.
    8. 45. Ebenezer Benjamin Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 02 Nov 1830 Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; 04 May 1864City Point, Hopewell, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.
    9. 46. Matilda Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 21 Nov 1832 Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; after 1850Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.
    10. 47. Mary Ellen Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 23 Apr 1835 Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; 21 Aug 1904Charlotte, Eaton, Michigan, USA; Charlotte, Eaton, Michigan, USA.
    11. 48. Adelia Lewis Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 09 Nov 1836 Wyalusing, Bradford Co., Pennsylvania, USA; 17 Jan 1915Monroe, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA; Monroeton, Bradford, Pennsylvania, USA.

  2. 33.  William Clark Descendancy chart to this point (23.Benjamin3, 10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 1790 Ulster, PA; 1850Cairo, IL.

    Notes:

    *
    ***************************
    * From ROSTER OF REVOLUTIONARY ANCESTORS, p. 121:

    Clark, Benjamin, b. 1747, Tolland, Conn., died 9 aug., 1834, Ulster Pa., m. 1769, (1) Nabbe (Abigail) Clark, b. 1753, d. 12 March 1777, (2) Mrs. Silas Gore (Keziah Y.) of Ulster, Pa. SERVICE: Enlisted at Wyoming, PA, 6 Sept. 1776 and served as pvt. in Capt. Robert Durkee's Independent Co. In Sept. 1777, the company was attached to Col. John Durkee's Conn. Reg. In Feb. 1778, he was Corp in same Co. then commaned by Capt. Simon Spalding in same regt. In summer of 1779, the Co. was attached to Col. Hubley's Expedition against the Indians, and in Feb. or March, 1781, the co. was restored to Col. John Durkee's Conn. Regt. and he later served in Cols. Thomas Grosvenor and Zebulon Butler's Conn. Regt. and was discharged 7 June 1783.
    CHILDREN: John Theophilus Clark, b. 8 July 1770, m. Cynthia Campbell; Polly (Mary) Clark, b. 3 March 1774; m. ? Blanchard; Sally and Milly CLark, b. 5-3-1777. Above children are from first marriage to Nabbe Clark. Lucinda Clark, m. Nathaniel Hovey; Ursula Clark, m. Samuel Treadway; William, m. Sylvia Niles, daugh of Ezra; Julia Ann, m. John Overton (1 mar.) Niles Passmore (2 mar.). Last 4 children are of Benjamin Clark and Keziah Yarrington.

    William Sylvia Mills 6 May 1812Bradford County, PA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 34.  Ursula Clark Descendancy chart to this point (23.Benjamin3, 10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 10 Jun 1781 Ulster, PA; 04 Oct 1845Lawrence County, Illinois; 4 Oct 1845Denison Cemetery Lawrence County, Illinois, USA .

    Other Events:

    • Moved: 1835, Lawrence County, IL; Moved with husband Samuel and 4 children

    Notes:

    Ursula was born 10 Jun 1781. She married Samuel Treadway. She died 4 Oct 1845 in Denison Twp, Lawrence Co., Ill.

    ***

    "Knox and Daviess County History published in 1886 in the biographical sketch, pages 309 & 310:

    Ursula Clark Treadway was born June 10, 1781 near Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania. She was the daughter of Benjamin Clark and his second wife Keziah Yarrington Gore.
    Keziah was first married to Silas Gore who was killed July 3, 1778 at the Wyoming, Massacre. When Benjamin and Keziah married they were already the parents of eight children. Four additional children were born to them: Lucinda, Ursula, William and Julia Ann.

    Ursula Clark married Samuel Treadway before 1808 when their oldest daughter Caroline was born. A son John was born in 1810 and another daughter Mary was born about 1817. Ursula removed to Lawrence County, Illinois before 1837 with Caroline, John and Mary. Ursula had at least two other children who remained in Pennsylvania. Samuel Treadway was alive in 1813 when he was listed as one of the early settlers of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania. By 1820 Ursula was listed in Ulster Township in Bradford County, Pennsylvania.

    Ursula Clark Treadway died in Lawrence County, Illinois October 4, 1845 and is buried in the Denison Cemetery south of Bridgeport Illinois. Her daughter Caroline Treadway married James Bailey in Pennsylvania and they were the parents of at least six children. Caroline died in 1858 and is buried next to her mother. Her husband removed to Texas after her death.

    Her daughter Mary married Samuel Rickard (# i64546582) in 1834 in Pennsylvania. He died in Lawrence County in 1841 and she then married Joseph Passmore. She lived in Olney for many years but removed to Memphis, Tennessee after the death of Joseph Passmore. John Ward Treadway married Rachel Neal in Lawrence County and they removed to Olney in the 1870's where they died.

    In addition to her children Caroline, John and Mary two of Ursula's siblings removed to Lawrence County. William Clark and Julia Ann Overton Passmore.

    Caroline Treadway Bailey was born in Pennsylvania in 1808 the daughter of Samuel and Ursula Clark Bailey. She married James Bailey and was the mother of of at least six children. She died in 1858 and is buried next to her mother Ursula Treadway in the Denison Cemetery in Lawrence County, Ilinois.

    Ursula Samuel Treadway before 1808Bradford County, PA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 49. Caroline Treadway  Descendancy chart to this point 1808 Ulster, Bradford County, PA; 2 Mar 1858Lawrence County, Illinois; Denison Cemetery Lawrence County, Illinois, USA .
    2. 50. John Ward Treadway  Descendancy chart to this point 10 Aug 1810 Burlington, Bradford County, PA; 4 Nov 1879Olney, Richland County, Illinois; Haven Hill Cemetery Olney, Richland County, Illinois, USA.
    3. 51. Mary Treadway  Descendancy chart to this point 1815 Ulster, Bradford County, PA; 3 Jan 1899Shelby County, Tennessee, USA; Forest Hill Cemetery Midtown Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee, USA .

  4. 35.  Julia Ann Clark Descendancy chart to this point (23.Benjamin3, 10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 1792 Ulster, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA; 1846Lawrence County, Illinois, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Moved: After 1835, Illinois

    Notes:

    ***************************
    ** Notes on Find A Grave **
    ***************************

    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


    *************************************************************
    Benjamin Clark, a native of Tolland, Connecticut, removed to the Wyoming Valley and was among the first to build a house on the town-plot of Wilkes-Barre. He was a corporal in the first Independent Company of Wyoming under Capt. Robert Durkee and served seven years in the Revolutionary War. He was one of the detachment sent for the relief of Wyoming after the fatal battle and was in the army of General Sullivan against the Indians.

    In 1784 he removed from Wyoming to Asylum , and the next year, settled in Ulster on what is known as the Ross farm. His house was the place of entertainment for travelers and the home of Methodist itinerants who held religious meetings there. He was an ardent Federalist, captain of militia and popularly known as Captain Clark.

    By his first wife, Nabbe, he had children John T., Polly (Mrs. Blanchard) and Abigail (Mrs. George Culver).

    He married, second, Keziah Yarrington, widow of Silas Gore, who was slain at the battle of Wyoming, and had children: Lucinda (Mrs. Nathaniel Hovey) , Ursula (Mrs. Samuel Treadway) , William and Julia Ann (1st. Mrs. John Overton, 2nd, Mrs. Joseph Passmore). Captain Clark died, 1834, aged 87 years.

    *****************************************
    Julia Ann (?-?) married (1) John Overton & (2) Joseph Passmore, his second marriage. They moved to Lawrence Co with their combined children

    ******************************************************
    Married – At Sheshequin, on the 4th of July, by Jared HOLCOMB, Esq., John OVERTON to Miss Julia-Ann CLARK.

    Julia John Overton 14 Jul 1815Bradford County, PA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Julia Joseph Passmore 1835Bradford County, PA. Joseph 25 Mar 1792 Smithfield, RI; 31 Aug 1869Sumner, IL. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  5. 36.  John Theophilus ClarkJohn Theophilus Clark Descendancy chart to this point (23.Benjamin3, 10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 08 Jul 1770 Tolland, Tolland County, Connecticut, USA; 6 Sep 1849Burlington, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA; 7 Sep 1849Luthers Mills Cemetery Towanda Bradford County Pennsylvania, USA.

    Notes:

    John T. Clark came to Burlington in 1798, and located where Dr. Tracy now resides. When a child, Mr. Clark lived with his parents in the Wyoming valley, and was there at the time of the "massacre." His father being in the service, he was placed in the fort for protection and made his escape with a lady in a canoe down the river. For more than a year Mr. Clark did not know the whereabouts of his son. At the close of the war Mr. Clark, whose name was Benjamin, moved to the "Sheshequin Flats," in what is now know as Ulster and located on the place of Benjamin Ross, where he lived until the time of his death.

    John T. was a young man when he came to Burlington, and share din a commendable manner the hardships of a new country. He remained a citizen of Burlington until the close of his life. After a short residence at Burlington Centre, he moved to the place now occupied by Z. Morgan, where he spent the remainder of his days. Mr. Clark had a family of twelve children, three of whom are yet living. These are Mrs. E. Gustin, Mrs. E. Nichols and Mrs. Z. Lane. Of the Clark name only B. M. Clark, a grandson, is yet living in the township.

    In 1799 and 1800 another lot of emigrants from Connecticut arrived, among them Jeremiah Taylor, Moffitt and Benjamin Saxton.

    Alexander Lane moved to the township of Burlington in 1801 from Ulster where he had lived for a short time, having originally moved from Poughkeepsie, N.Y. While living in Ulster in 1800, he and a gentleman by the name of Rundall marked trees in from that township to Columbia, picked out a location, the same as now owned by the Besley brothers, and erected a log cabin each, and would have gone there to live had not Mrs. Lane emphatically refused going so far in the wilderness to live. Mr. Lane then purchased the possession right of Abiel Foster, and moved thereon in 1801. He occupied this place until the time of his death, which occurred in 1844. Since then it has been occupied by his son, Rev. Alexander Lane. Mr. Lane had a family of thirteen children, these were William, Zephaniah, Alexander, Daniel, Sally, Hannah, Betsey, Ruth, Charlotte, Maria, Alvira, Anna and Emily. Of these Alexander, Daniel and Charlotte are yet living.

    In 1803, Eliphalet Gustin came to Sugar Creek and located on the place no occupied by his son, E. Gustin. Mr. Gustin was a native of Vermont, and was born in 1766. When a young man he left home as a "journeying shoemaker," traveling through the Eastern States. He married in New Jersey, and lived there for a short time. Thence, removing his family to Pennsylvania, near Wilkes-Barre, where he in 1792 embarked his wife, two children and a few effects (all that he had) in a canoe, and paddled up the Susquehanna, landing at the mouth of Horn Brook, which took its name from the fact of his finding a remarkably large horn in that stream. Mr. Gustin took up land, a part of which is now included in the Isaac Horton place, also the lands occupied by the Horn Brook church, and began clearing up until about 1800 when he sold his improvements, and moved across the river to the mouth of Hemlock Run where he lived for about three years. Again desiring a change he placed his household goods and family in a canoe and paddled up Sugar Creek. Finding a recess in the bank near the creek, across which a tree had fallen, he covered it with bark and transferred his family hither where they lived the greater part of the summer. He built a log cabin on the "Rundall flats" and lived there for six or eight years, then crossed the creek and built on the place now owned by his son. Mr. Gustin occupied the place which he took up, making valuable improvements until the time of his death, which occurred in 1860 at the age of ninety-four years.



    *****************************************************
    * Born ‎ jul 8, 1770 at Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne Co., Pennsylvania, died ‎ sep 6, 1849 at Burlington, Bradford Co., Pennsylvania‎, 79 years

    John T. married Cynthia, daughter of James Campbell, and settled in Burlington, where he died. They had 12 children who married as follows:

    1. Billings to Charlotte Nichols;

    2. James to Sally Simons;

    3. Cephas to Sally Wilcox;

    4. Benjamin died, aged 19, from being kicked by a horse;

    5. Sally to Timothy C. Wheeler;

    6. Betsey to Abraham Reeves;

    7. Ursula to Earl Nichols;

    8. Celestia to Harry L. Ross;

    9. Polly, first to Amos Alexander, second to Zepheniah Lane;

    10 Jane died unmarried;

    11 Cynthia to Eliphalet Gustin;

    12 Melissa to Mortimer Knapp.
    ********************************************************

    Born ‎ 1747 at Tolland Co., Connecticut, died ‎ aug 9, 1834 at Ulster, Bradford Co., Pennsylvania‎, 86 or 87 years, buried ‎ at Ulster Cemetery, Ulster, Bradford Co., Pennsylvania
    Benjamin Clark, a native of Tolland, Connecticut, removed to the Wyoming Valley, and was among the very first to build a house on the town-plat of Wilkes-Barre. He was a corporal in the First Independent Company of Wyoming, under Capt. Robert Durkee, and served seven years in the Revolutionary War. He was one of the detachment sent for the relief of Wyoming after the fatal battle, and was in the army of General Sullivan against the Indians. For his services he received a pension of $96 per year. Subsequently, he was appointed a captain of militia, and was known by the older settlers as "Captain Clark." In 1784 he removed from Wyoming to Asylum, and the next year settled in Ulster on what is known as the Ross farm. His house was a place of entertainment for travelers and a home of the Methodist itinerant for many years, and in it the first preaching was held in "Old Sheshequin." Captain Clark was an ardent Federalist and a member of the Methodist church. He took an active interest in public affairs, and for years filled the most important local offices. He died at Ulster, August 9, 1834, aged 87 years.

    Captain Clark was twice married. The Westmoreland town records contain the following: "Births of the children of Benjamin Clark and Nabbe, his wife--John Theophilus, born July 8, 1770; Polly, born March 3, 1774; Sally and Milly (twins), born March 5, 1777. Nabbe, wife of Benjamin Clark, departed this life, March 12, 1777, in the 24th year of her age." Their children selected partners as follows:

    John T. married Cynthia, daughter of James Campbell, and settled in Burlington, where he died. They had 12 children who married as follows: Billings to Charlotte Nichols; James to Sally Simons; Cephas to Sally Wilcox; Benjamin died, aged 19, from being kicked by a horse; Sally to Timothy C. Wheeler; Betsey to Abraham Reeves; Ursula to Earl Nichols; Celestia to Harry L. Ross; Polly, first to Amos Alexander, second to Zepheniah Lane; Jane died unmarried; Cynthia to Eliphalet Gustin; Melissa to Mortimer Knapp.

    Polly (Mary) married a Mr. Blanchard.

    Nabby (Abigail) married George Culver and moved to the Lake country.

    For his second wife, Captain Clark married Keziah Yarrington, widow of Silas Gore, who was slain at the battle of Wyoming. She died August 12, 1837, aged 91 years, and lies beside her husband in the Ulster cemetery. Their four children, who married as follows, were:

    Lucinda, to Nathaniel Hovey, an officer in the War of 1812, who died at Sackett's Harbor in 1814.

    Ursula, to Samuel Treadway and removed to Illinois.

    William, to Sylvia, daughter of Ezra Niles and removed to Cairo, Illinois.

    Julia Ann, first to John Overton, and after his death to a Mr. Passmore, with whom she moved West.

    From Baker Family Tree:
    *************************************************
    THE SEVENTH GENERATION: James Clark (1794-1878)

    James Clark, the second oldest child of John T. Clark and Cynthia Campbell, was born in Bradford County in 1794. He married Sarah Simmons in 1818 and together they had at least nine children born between the years 1818 and 1835. All of their children were born in Burlington, Pennsylvania.

    Sometime in late 1837, the family moved westward ultimately arriving in Fairmount Township, Grant County, Indiana in February of 1838. In a history of Fairmount it is written: “The Clark family came in two wagons, one drawn by horses and the other by an ox team.” What motivated James Clark to move his family 600 miles from Burlington, Pennsylvania to Grant County, Indiana can only be assumed. Perhaps it was to seek a better life for himself and his children; perhaps it was just in his genes to migrate. James’ 4th great grandfather, Joseph, had journeyed from England to America in 1637, his 2nd great grandfather, Theophilus, had moved from Massachusetts to Connecticut in 1733, His grandfather, Benjamin, had relocated his family from Connecticut to Pennsylvania in 1770, and now he, James Clark, had crossed 600 miles of wilderness to start over again in Indiana. The Clark family continued to display an incredible pioneer spirit.
    *******************************************************

    From Bradsby, 1891
    B. M. CLARK, undertaker, Rome, was born July 22,1845, on the farm owned by his brother, and is a son of Harry and Ellen (Brown) Clark, natives of this county. His boyhood was passed on his father’s farm, and in attending school in Rome and Orwell; he afterward learned the trade of mason. His first farm was the old homestead which contained one hundred and twenty acres, which he sold to his brother, and in 1876 he built his present residence – an elegant house containing all modern conveniences. He was united in marriage October 20, 1868, with Eliza Vought, daughter of John and Esther (Horton) Vought (the former born at Standing Stone and the latter in Sheshequin), whose family consisted of six children of which Mrs. Clark is the second. Mr. and Mrs. Clark have an adopted child, May, now in her twelfth year; the family worships at the Baptist Church. Mr. Clark is an unswerving Republican in politics, and has held the office of township commissioner for two years, besides other local offices. The Clark family are well-known and highly respected by a large circle of friends.

    From Bradford Reporter, October 18, 1883
    Captain [Benjamin] Clark was twice married. In the Westmoreland town records are the following entries: Births of the children of Benjamin Clark and Nabbie his wife, John Theophilus, born July 8, 1770; Poly, born February 24, 1772; Nabby, born March 3, 1774; Sally and Milly (twins) born March 5, 1777, Nabbie, wife of Benjamin Clark departed this life March 12, 1777, in the twenty-fourth year of her age.

    John T. married and settled in Burlington where he died. His history will be found interesting. Mary married a Blanchard, and Abagail married a Culver; both left the State.

    From Bradford Reporter, July 17, 1884:
    John F. [sic] Clark came to Burlington in 1798, and located where Dr. Tracy now resides. when a child, Mr. Clark lived with his parents in the Wyoming valley, and was there at the time of the "massacre." His father being in the service, he was placed in the fort for protection and made his escape with a lady in a canoe down the river. For more than a year Mr. Clark did not know the whereabouts of his son. At the close of the war Mr. Clark, whose name was Benjamin, moved to the "Sheshequin Flats," in what is now known as Ultster and located on the place of Benjamin Ross, where he lived until the time of his death.

    John T. was a young man when he came to Burlington, and shared in a commendable manner the hardships of a new country. He remained a citizen of Burlington until the close of his life. After a short residence at Burlington Centre, he moved to the place now occupied by Z. Morgan, where he spent the remainder of his days. Mr. Clark had a family of twelve children, three of whom are yet living. These are Mrs. E. Gustin [Cynthia], Mrs. E. Nichols [Ursala], and Mrs. Z. Lane. of the Clark name only B.M. Clark, a grandson, is yet living in the township.

    A John Clark listed in 1810 census of Burlington Township, Luzerne County (later Bradford), at age between 26 and 44, with 1 male under 10, 1 male 10 to 15, 2 males 16 to 15, 4 females under 10, and 1 female between 26 and 44.

    From Baker Family Tree, Chapter 17, The Clarke Family
    http://bakerfamilytree.blogspot.com/2008/02/chapter-17-clarke-family_27.html
    Retrieved Jan. 15, 2011
    THE SIXTH GENERATION: John Theophilus Clark (1770-1840)

    John Theophilus Clark was only eight years old when the Indians and Tories attacked the Wyoming community in July of 1778 in what historians are now referring to as the “Wyoming Massacre.” Fortunately, John was with the other civilian inhabitants who fled into the forest when the militia surrendered the fort where they were living. John was in his late teens when his father and step mother moved to Bradford County further up the Susquehanna River in the late 1780s. Here he married Cynthia Campbell, of Scottish descent, in 1790 and together they parented twelve children between the years 1792 and 1824. He remained in this area as a prominent farmer for the remainder of his life. John died in 1840. Cynthia died in 1864. Cynthia Campbell’s grandfather, David Campbell, immigrated to America from Scotland in 1720. The family first settled near Boston. David’s son, James Campbell (our daughter-in-law’s 6th great grandfather), was a 2nd Lieutenant in the Massachusetts’ militia during the American Revolution. His name is included in the DAR Patriot listing which is a benefit to any of his female descendants who might be interested in joining the Daughters of the American Revolution. In 1790, he moved his family including Cynthia to Burlington, Pennsylvania. They are considered to be one of the earliest pioneer families in Burlington.

    John Cynthia Campbell 1792Bradford County. Cynthia (daughter of James Campbell, Sr. and Jane Knox) 23 Jun 1772 Blandford Hampden County Massachusetts, USA; 18 Jan 1864Burlington PA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 52. James H. Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 10 Feb 1794 Burlington, Bradford County, PA; 23 May 1878Fairmount Twp, Grant County, Indiana; 25 May 1878Riverside Cemetery, GrantCounty Indiana.
    2. 53. Benjamin Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 27 Jul 1799 Burlington, Bradford County, PA; 30 Aug 1819Luthers Mills, PA; Campbell Family Cemetery Luthers Mills, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA .
    3. 54. Billings Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 7 Mar 1792 Burlington, Bradford County, PA; 2 Mar 1836Burlington, Bradford County, PA; Luther's Mills, PA.
    4. 55. Cephas Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 1796 Burlington, Bradford County, PA; 1877Burlington, Bradford County, PA.
    5. 56. Sally Clark  Descendancy chart to this point
    6. 57. Betsey Clark  Descendancy chart to this point
    7. 58. Ursula Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 9 Oct 1802 Burlington, Bradford County, PA; 29 Apr 1885Burlington, Bradford County, PA; Luthers Mills Cemetery Towanda, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA.
    8. 59. Celestia Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 28 Aug 1806 Bradford County, PA; 20 Aug 1871Tuscola County, Michigan; Wahjamega Cemetery Caro, Tuscola County, Michigan.
    9. 60. Polly Clark  Descendancy chart to this point
    10. 61. Jane Clark  Descendancy chart to this point
    11. 62. Cynthia Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 13 May 1815 Burlington, PA; 6 Apr 1898Burlington, PA.
    12. 63. Melissa Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 23 Jan 1820 Burlington, Bradford County, PA; 15 Apr 1874Burlington, Bradford County, PA; Luthers Mills Cemetery Towanda, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA.
    13. 64. Elizabeth Clark  Descendancy chart to this point 18 Oct 1808 Burlington, Bradford County, PA; 23 Jan 1858Jonesboro, Grant County, Indiana; Bethel Cemetery Jonesboro, Grant County, Indiana, USA .

  6. 37.  Lucinda Clark Descendancy chart to this point (23.Benjamin3, 10.Bethiah2, 1.Bethiah1) 1785; 08 Oct 1854Ulster, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA; Ulster, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Family/Spouse: Nataniel Hovey. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 65. Simmons Clark Hovey  Descendancy chart to this point 8 Jan 1807 Ulster, Bradford County, PA; 19 Nov 1886Ulster, Bradford County, PA; Ulster Cemetery Ulster, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA .
    2. 66. William M Hovey  Descendancy chart to this point 20 Feb 1814 Ulster; 4 Oct 1850Ulster.
    3. 67. Hannah Hovey  Descendancy chart to this point