


Halstead/Halsted Family History
The Genealogy of those with the Halstead, Halsted and related surnames or given names
Notes
Matches 101 to 150 of 110,835
# | Notes | Linked to |
---|---|---|
101 | Anna Vail, wife of Solomon Frost, was sister to Aaron Vail who was appointed by our government during the Presidency of Washington to take the place of the appointed Ambassador to France. The first minister went over, but being unable to speak French was recalled and Aaron Vail, being a linguist, was sent in his place and was termed "American Consul." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | VAIL, Anna (I34719)
|
102 | Anthony Wirght dated his will 20 May 1673, an it was proven Dec. 8, 1680. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | WRIGHT, Anthony (I28015)
|
103 | Apparently Barak, John and Joshua Cornell may have been triplets. John and Joshua may have died as infants as I don't see their names in the will of their father, Samuel Cornell. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CORNELL, Barak (I26508)
|
104 | Apparently Barak, John and Joshua Cornell may have been triplets. John and Joshua may have died as infants as I don't see their names in the will of their father, Samuel Cornell. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CORNELL, John (I26511)
|
105 | Apparently Barak, John and Joshua Cornell may have been triplets. John and Joshua may have died as infants as I don't see their names in the will of their father, Samuel Cornell. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CORNELL, Joshua (I26512)
|
106 | Apparently died as an infant. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | HICKS, Samuel (I32016)
|
107 | Apparently Petrus De Milt died young. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | DE MILT, Petrus (I36935)
|
108 | Apparently this child was born after the death of her father as I find her give name as "Posthume." I doubt that she was give that term as a given name, but the compiler of the database, Cal Owen, so listed her. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Apparently this child was born after the death of her father as I find her give name as "Posthume." I doubt that she was give that term as a given name, but the compiler of the database, Cal Owen, so listed her. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Apparently this child was born after the death of her father as I find her give name as "Posthume." I doubt that she was give that term as a given name, but the compiler of the database, Cal Owen, so listed her. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUNDAGE, Posthume (I28060)
|
109 | April 3, 1764, mentioned in land transaction in Ulster Co., NY "Articles of agreement made and concluded Apr. 3, 1764, by and between Benjamin Brown, Juner, and Adam Seaman, James Seaman, and Israel Seaman all three sons of Adam Seaman late of Rye, dec'd., concerning a tract of land in Ulster Co., conveyed to Adam Seaman, dec'd., by Benjamin Brown, Junr., with the reservation of one half; the sd. Adam Seaman, James Seaman, Israel Seaman and Samuel Seaman another son under age, shall each have an equal one fifth share with him n what lands are recovered." Source: New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, "New York Genealogical and Biographical Record," New York:: 58:108-109, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | SEAMAN, James (I30324)
|
110 | Aryslia and Selah Frost were twins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | FROST, Selah (I34963)
|
111 | Aryslia and Selah Frost were twins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | FROST, Aryslia (I34964)
|
112 | As of 1881 George White Carman was still a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, George White (I26632)
|
113 | As Samuel T. and Thomas Powell were both born in 1774 they were probably twins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | POWELL, Thomas (I27845)
|
114 | As Samuel T. and Thomas Powell were both born in 1774 they were probably twins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | POWELL, Samuel T. (I27846)
|
115 | Ashel G. Carman served in Company E., Regiment 17 Indiana Infantry, GAR, and was killed in battle near Selma, Alabama. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Ashel G. (I24675)
|
116 | Barnabas Tuttle (Tutill) was a Captain in the French and Indian War, and a Major in the 4th New York Regiment during the American Revolution. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | TUTHILL, Barnabas (Tutill) Major (I35842)
|
117 | Because of the site of his interment it may safely be inferred that George Augustus Carman served in the Union Army during the Civil War. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, George Augustus (I25014)
|
118 | Benjamin and Samuel Seaman were twins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Benjamin and Samuel Seaman were twins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | SEAMAN, Benjamin [twin] (I29909)
|
119 | Benjamin and Samuel Seaman were twins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Samuel Seaman moved to Nova Scotia in 1783. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Benjamin and Samuel Seaman were twins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Samuel Seaman moved to Nova Scotia in 1783. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | SEAMAN, Samuel [twin] (I29910)
|
120 | Benjamin b. Mar 5 1752, m. Abigail Mitchell of Elizabeth, d. June 6 1842. She was born 1755, d. Nov 2 1843. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | JACKSON, Benjamin (I37247)
|
121 | Benjamin Brush applied for a pension on 14 Sep 1832 stating in Apr or May of 1780 he enlisted for seven months in the Connecticut Rangers commanded by Captain David Wood of Greenwich, and that he participated in several skirmishes. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, Benjamin Sr. (I35544)
|
122 | Benjamin Brush removed to Stanwich Parish, Greenwich, Connecticut, and was the progenitor of the Greenwich Brush lines. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The will of Benjamin Brush was signed 19 May 1759 and probated on 4 Jan 1759/1760. He mentioned his wife, Mary; children Bemjamin, Edward, Shubel, James, Mary and Anna. Executors: wife, Mary and son, Edward. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, Benjamin I (I35525)
|
123 | Benjamin Carman fought in the Revolutionary War as an American patriot. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Benjamin Jr. (I23411)
|
124 | Benjamin Carman, Jr., died of yellow fever. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Benjamin Jr. (I25813)
|
125 | Benjamin Carpenter was a saddler. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The will of Benjamin Carpenter was dated 26 Sep 1769 and proved 25 Jan 1783. He mentioned his wife, Lydia; his daughters, Rosannah Kirby and Ruth Carpenter; his sons, Zeno and Caleb, and his grandson, Edward Colwell. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Capt. Wright Frost in 1746 issued a warrant for Benjamin Carpenter for not appearing at training and fined him 11 shillings which Carpenter refused to pay, and Capt. Frost took seven pounds of wool as an equivalent March 28, 1746. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARPENTER, Benjamin (I31097)
|
126 | Benjamin Treadwell was crossing a mill flue while alone, and he fell in and was drowned. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | TREADWELL, Benjamin Sr. (I28521)
|
127 | Benjamin Tredwell Kissam lived in Flushing, Queens (now Nassau) Co., NY. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | KISSAM, Benjamin Tredwell (I28607)
|
128 | Benjamin Valentine Clowes resided in Hempstead, Queens (now Nassau) Co., NY, and became a prominent and respected citizen of that community. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CLOWES, Benjamin Valentine (I22624)
|
129 | Benjamin Wright was baptised by Rev. Silas Constant at 85 years of age. He was a farmer at Yorktown, New York. His will, dated July 20, 1812. He was the son of Abraham Wright, whose cattle mark was recorded in Cortland Manor Dec. 16, 1766, and whose will, dated Dec. 16, 1766, was proven Nov. 25, 1795, and mentions David and James, sons of Abraham, Jr., Millicent Wright, also Martha, wife of Joseph Osborne, also heirs of Sylvanus Reynolds. Martha, mentioned in above will, was born March 21, 1744, d. March 9, 1835. Joseph Osborne, her husband, b. Ridgefield, Conn., June 11, 1737, moved to West Somers, N. Y., and d. Somers, Sept. 26, 1796. Their children were: (1) Samuel; (2) David, b. April 11, 1769; m. June 9, 1791, Elizabeth Haight, b. May 30, 1773, d. Aug. 12, 1826; (3) Ozias, b. Feb. 11, 1771, d. Feb. 13, 1823; m. Dec. 28, 1793, Sarah, daughter of Elnathan Haight of Yorktown. Sarah died Nov. 4, 1849. Buried at Yorktown, N. Y. (4) Benjamin; (5) Elizabeth; m. July 19, 1797, Cornelius Brown of Peekskill; (6) Ebenezer, b. April 30, 1774, d. Nov. 4, 1849, buried at Yorktown; m. Aug. 25, 1799 (142) Hannah, daughter of Ephraim and Philena (Frost) Bedell. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | WRIGHT, Benjamin I (I37163)
|
130 | Benjamin [4], associated in business in N.Y. with his brother Joseph [4], married Elizabeth AkerIy and d. 1816 leaving, Benjamin A. [5], Alfred A. [5], and Eliza A. [5], who mar. Win. H. Titus. For a complete account of his branch of the family see article by the writer in N. Y. Gen. & Biog. Record, XXXVI, p. 239. from: Harris, Edward Doubleday "The Descendants of Adam Mott of Hempstead, Long Island, NY" [Lancester, PA: The New Era Printing Co., 1906] Revised Edition, p. 6 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | MOTT, Benjamin (I28288)
|
131 | Bennett and Amy C. (Carman) Rew had no issue. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Amy C. (I36134)
|
132 | Bunker, Mary Powell. Long Island Genealogies. (1895) Mary (Marvin) Rowland in 1776 wills property to son Marvin, provided he is a true and Loyal subject of King George III and a true friend to good government. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | MARVIN, Mary (I29494)
|
133 | Byron Frost served in the Union Army during the Civil War. He was taken prisoner, sent to the prison at Florence, South Carolina and died there in the fall of 1864. He was unmarried. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | FROST, Byron (I27598)
|
134 | Cal Owen found the birth date as about 1708. He made the statement that this was impossible considering the dates of his children and his marriage to Mary, so he entered "Abt. 1689." Interestingly he left the date of birth for the second spouse of Jonathan Owen, Jr., as "Abt. 1708." As the second marriage occured in 1718, and the first child for this second union was 27 October 1718, Rachel would have been ten years old when she was married and had her first child. She also must have been born about 1689. 20 Jul 2001 QLE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | OWEN, Jonathan (I33064)
|
135 | Caleb Carman died while an infant. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Caleb (I35915)
|
136 | Caleb OWEN (1057), born before 1720 at Windsor, CT or Lebanon, CT, died 1772, son of Joseph OWEN (1457) and Esther OSBORN (1452). THIRD GENERATION Caleb Owen [3] (Joseph [2], John [1]), son of Joseph and Esther (Osborn) Owen, was born in Windsor or Lebanon in the year .... and died 1772. He married at Lebanon June 20, 1740 Elezabeth Brewster, probably the daughter of Ebanezer Brewster, who was descended from Elder William Brewster of the Mayflower. In 1738 his father, Joseph Owen, gave him 60 acres of land in Lebanon. In the same year he bought from his brother Joseph 20 acres of Lebanon Common rights. In 1759 he acquired from Jacob Redington 25 acres in Lebanon. Other conveyances to and from him, as a resident of Lebanon, are dated in 1759, 1760, and 1762. On November 17, 1761 at Windham, CT, lots were drawn for Hartford, Windsor County, VT Caleb Owen or his son Caleb Owen Jr. drew Lot No. 18 south of the White River. It contained 58 1/4 acres. (Tucker's History of Hartford, VT, p. 60) He died at Lebanon 1772, as is proved by a bond executed in 1773 by Caleb Owen Jr. Married 20 Jun 1740, Elizabeth BREWSTER (979). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This note and this entry are obviously the son of Joseph and Esther (Osborne) Owen rather than the son of Jonathan and Mary (Brewster) Owen by the information in the note itself. It is obvious from the spouses that the two Owen families, each with an immigrant progenitor were very close. It is possible that those immigrant progenitors were brothers, father and son, or possibly cousins, but I lack the information to make that connection. It is also increasingly obvious that Cal Owen became confused at this point in his entries and have the children for this generation entered in the wrong family. It becomes a jigsaw puzzle trying to piece the families together correctly with the few clues available. 20 Jul 2001 QLE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | OWEN, Caleb Sr. (I33069)
|
137 | Caleb Owen, Jr.[4] (Caleb [3], Joseph [2], John [1]), son of Caleb and Elizabeth (Brewster) Owen, was born at Lebanon, CT, May 20, 1741 and died in Windham County, VT. He married August 16, 1759 at Bozrah, New London County, CT, Priscilla Throope, who was born at Lebanon, CT July 1, 1741, daughter of Captain William and Elizabeth (Stansbury) Throope. (New York Gen. and Biog. Record, Vol. 36, p. 134.) When lots in Hartford, Windsor County, VT were drawn by lottery November 17, 1761 at Windham, CT, Lot No. 18 South of White River was drawn by Caleb Owen. It contained 58 1/4 acres. (Tucker's History of Hartford, VT p. 60.) Caleb Owen was grantee of Grand Isle, VT, chartered October 27, 1779 under the name of the "Two Heroes" in honor of General Ethan and Col. Ira Allen, and comprised Grand Isle together with North and South Hero. Caleb Owen's name does not appear on the petition of inhabitants of Cumberland County, NY dated December 7, 1772 as printed in O'Callaghan's Documentary History of New York 4/816. On June 6. 1774 Abigail Smith of Lebanon conveyed land to Caleb Owen, late of Lebanon, then of Halifax, Cumberland County, NY, now VT. He settled there after 1722. His name appears in the 1790 Census for Halifax Township, Windham County, VT thus: 1-1-4-1 (ie. one male over 16 years; 1 male under 16 years; four females; one other person, probably his mother) Married 16 Aug 1759 at Bozrah, New London County, CT, Priscilla THROOPE (764), born 1 Jul 1741 at Lebanon, CT, daughter of Capt. William THROOPE (765) and Elizabeth STANSBURY (766). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | OWEN, Caleb Jr. (I33071)
|
138 | Caleb Seaman was a resident of Jericho, Long Island, NY married and had four sons. "The record of Caleb Seaman, his land and meadow given to him by his brother, David Seaman, October 29, 1709." [from: Seaman, Mary Thomas, The Seaman Family in America..., (1928), 55.] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | SEAMAN, Caleb I (I30629)
|
139 | Caleb Valentine was a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | VALENTINE, Caleb (I24356)
|
140 | Caleb was granted land in Bastard Township [Ontario, Canada], but later moved back to the U.S. where he settled in Rochester [NY]. Except for William, who lived in Theresa, NY, all of the children of Caleb and Polly, settled in Rochester. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A curious note. Caleb II was married to Martha Jackson, and Caleb III was married to Nancy Stevens. The wife of Caleb I is unknown. Which spouse was referred to as "Polly"? My guess is "Polly" was a nickname for Martha Jackson. 9 Apr 2001 QLE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | SEAMAN, Caleb III (I30762)
|
141 | Capt. Isaac S. Coe when a boy learned the trade of wheelwright and worked a few years in New York City. In 1843 he bought a farm at Ramapo, [now Rockland Co.] NY, where he remained eight years and was commissioned captain of militia. In 1851 he went West and was a wheelwright for ten years, successively at Fullersburg, Ill., Faribault, Minn., and Syracuse, Mo. Early in the Civil War, on Oct. 4, 1861, he enlisted as sergeant in Gen. Sigel's scouts, and on Aug. 13, 1862, re-enlisted in the 33d Mo. Vols., was successively promoted to sergeant-major, second-lieutenant, and on Dec. 23, 1863 to first-lieutenant in which office he served until the close of the war. After the war he went to Allen Co., Kansas, where he engaged in farming nearly a score of years, and then in 1885 settled in the Town of La Harpe, Allen Co., Kan., was appointed postmaster in 1893 and d. April 18, 1908. [frpm: Bartlett, J. Gardner, Robert Coe, Puritan: His ancestors and descendants 1340-1910, (Boston, MA: privately published, 1911), 151.] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | COE, Isaac S. Captain (I30840)
|
142 | Captain Daniel Patrick (or Kirkpatrick) was slain by a soldier in 1644. He was a neighbor of the Feake families and his life was intertwined with the Feake dynesty. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ At the time of his marriage Daniel Patrick was characterized as a bachelor from England. Very shortly after his marriage the family removed, along with Captain John Underhill in the Winthrop Fleet of 1630, to the Massachusetts Bay Colony. The two military officers were hired by John Winthrop to train militia. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Captain Daniel Patrick was shot and killed in 1643/1644 at the house of Captain John Underhill at Stanfort (sic, Stamford, Connecticut) in New England by a Dutch soldier, Hans Frederick. His widow then married, about 1645, Tobias Feacks (sic) and she died in Flushing, New Netherland, in April of 1656. She had four children by Captain Patrick, and one by Tobias Feacks who appeared before a notary: Anna Patrick wife of Bartholomew Applegate, living in Gravesend; Patience Patrick, wife of Arent Cornelius of Flushing, Zeeland, and living in Flushing, Long Island; Daniel Patrick, living in Middleburg, Long Island; Samuel Patrick, living in Gravesend, all villages in the jurisdiction of New Netherland, and James Feacks son of her second husband Tobias Feacks. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | PATRICK, Daniel Sr., Captain (I34026)
|
143 | Captain Richard Carman, of the schooner "Lucy" was living in New Jersey when he died at sea. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Richard Captain (I25811)
|
144 | Carman Lawson was a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | LAWSON, Carman (I26103)
|
145 | Caroline Augusta Cornell (Cornwell) died while yet an infant. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CORNELL, Caroline Augusta (Cornwell) (I24756)
|
146 | Caroline Carman was a spinster. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Caroline (I26797)
|
147 | Carolyn M. Seaman had the date of their marriage as 30 Mar 1779. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | Family: SEAMAN, Israel / ROWLAND, Sarah (F10581)
|
148 | Catharine Clowes was a spinster. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CLOWES, Catharine (I22589)
|
149 | Catharine Thorne wrote her will 19 Oct 1801 and it was proved 12 Aug 1805. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | THORNE, Catharine (I33142)
|
150 | Catherine Carman died while young. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Catherine (I36215)
|