Halstead/Halsted Family History

The Genealogy of those with the Halstead, Halsted and related surnames or given names

Notes


Tree:  

Matches 251 to 300 of 110,835

      «Prev «1 ... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... 2217» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
251

Francis Carman died as an infant.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, Francis (I35964)
 
252

Frank Hamilton Carman was a bachelor.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, Frank Hamilton (I36566)
 
253

Frederick Cock was living in Texas as of 1912 with his family.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Frederick Cock was living in Texas as of 1912 with his family.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
COCK, Frederick (I34802)
 
254

From an abstract of the will of Samuel:

"Denton, Samuel, of Hempstead, Queens CO., yeoman. Inventory (Feb. 16,
1718/19) taken and appraised by Isaac Smith and John Searing and exhibited
on Oct. 10, 1720 by Samuel Emery, one of the executors. The largest item
listed was two Negro men - 50 Pounds. He mentions his wife but does not
name her. Child Ruth, a minor, single. 'brothers Joseph Denton and John
Denton, the son of Jonah." Executors Jonah Denton, and James Searing.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
DENTON, Samuel (I30740)
 
255

From Diane's Gedcom:
Jarvis, son of Philip Brush, was born January 6, 1797, and died in 1883.
He was a merchant in Brooklyn until 1835, when he retired from business
and made his home at Danbury, Connecticut, but in 1841 returned to
Brooklyn to live. He married Sarah Keeler, born at Ridgefield, Fairfield
county, Connecticut, June, 1797, daughter of Timothy and Lurany (DeForest)
Keeler. Children: Joseph Beale Brush, merchant in New York, born September
23, 1828, died July 23, 1869; George Jarvis.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
BRUSH, Jarvis (I37566)
 
256

From Diane's gedcom:
Joshua. son of Jonathan Brush, was born at Huntington and always lived
there. He married Margaret Ireland, of West Hills, Long Island. Among
their children was Philip.
-------------------------------------------
Know all men by these Presents that I, JOSHUA BRUSH, farmer, of Huntington
in Suffolk County, this fifth day of August, 1776, being sick and weak in
body. My executors to pay all my just debts and funeral charges. I leave
to my loving wife Margaret, one horse, saddle, and bridle, one cow, one
bed and furniture as she shall choose, and the use of my cupboard, so long
as she remains my widow. All except the cupboard I give to her free
disposal. There shall be flax, wool, and all other necessary provisions
for my family for one year after my decease. Unto my daughter Susannah ¶10
and my cupboard after my wife is done with the same. My wearing apparel
and two deer skins should be equally divided between my two eldest sons,
Abel and Philip. The ¶10 given to my daughter should be kept at interest
and paid to her with interest when she is eighteen years of age, or on day
of marriage. My executors are to sell all the remainder of my estate, and
the proceeds to be divided between my wife and my three sons, Abel,
Philip, and Jonathan. My executors to be guardians of my estate, and bind
out all my children to trades as they shall think proper. If either of my
children should die under age or without issue, then that part to be
equally divided between my surviving children. I make my good friends,
Jesse Brush, Esq., and Jesse Whitman, executors.
Witnesses, Joseph Ireland, Pearesan Brush, Solomon Ketcham, yeomen.
Proved, March 28, 1781.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
BRUSH, Joshua (I37476)
 
257

From Jim Rubins:
George Washington Seaman's birth occurred at the old homestead in the town
of Fishkill, Dutchess County; he was educated there in the common
schools. For eight years he clerked for Mr. Fletcher, later engaging in
business, in Patterson, with Seaman, Irish & Co., for several years. He
then embarked in business in New York, continuing same, for a time, but
traded his interests there for a hotel in Patterson, which he conducted
from October 14, 1868, to 1896, a period of twenty-eighth years. He has
now disposed of his business to John Cruthers. He then opened a meat
market, but sold that, and is now retired from active business. During
the Civil War Mr. Seaman was drafted, but on account of his business
interests he sent a substitute. In politics he is a Republican, has held
some town offices, and served as deputy postmaster for some time. He
married Miss Lydia A. Sloat, daughter of Edson. [from J.H.Beers p.979]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
SEAMAN, George Washington (I26221)
 
258

From Jim's gedcom:
[JhnHicks..FTW]

She is mentioned in the will of her father, Daniel Whitehead, as is her
son, Whitehead. (NY Historical Society, Abstracts of Wills, Vol 1, p
396-398)
" I leave to my wife, my negro woman Mary, for life, and then to my
daughter Deborah, wife of Thomas Hicks. I leave to my grand son,
Whitehead Hicks, the second son of my son in law, Thomas Hicks, the
husband of my daughter Deborah, all that my land and meadow lying and
being within the bounds and Township of Flushing, except the four 20 acre
lots given to my son Thomas, To him and his heirs, and in default of such
heirs, then to my daughter Deborah and her heirs."
--------------------------------------------
The contents of her own will are covered in a NEHGR article, Vol 113, July
1959 & Oct 1959 "The Fields of Flushing, Long Island" and is abstracted
in NY Historical Society Abstracts of Wills, vol 2, p 96. Page 157.
--DEBORAH HICKS.

I, Deborah Hicks, widow, late wife of Thomas Hicks, being weak in body but
well in understanding. I think it convenient to settle and dispose of that
estate my deceased husband left me, and make this my last will. Leaves ¶15
in money to Benjamin Field and Elizabeth his wife, with my youngest son,
Stephenson Hicks, to bring him up. I leave all the rest of my estate to my
seven children, Abigail,
Deborah, Mary, Elizabeth, Hannah, Martha and my son, Stephenson Hicks. My
daughter Martha I bequeath to my loving friend, Martha Thorne, and my
daughter Hannah I bequeath to my dear cousins, Robert and Phebe Field,
desiring them to bring up my dear children in the way of truth and fear of
God.

I appoint my loving friends, John Rodman, Robert Field, Francis Dougherty
and Samuel Bowne, executors.

Dated the 14th day of 4th month, 1712. Witnesses, James Scriven, James
Jacobsen, John Hasyter. Proved at Flushing, July 24, 1712, before John
Coe, Esq., Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and John....
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
WHITEHEAD, Deborah (I33272)
 
259

From Sue Denton's data:
History of the Sage and Slocum Families of England and America, by Henry
Whittemore, New York, 1908, p35.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
MITCHELL, Susannah (I27160)
 
260

From Sue Denton:
History of the Sage and Slocum Families of England and America, by Henry
Whittemore, New York, 1908, p36. "by his wife Susannah, he had eleven
children of whom Susanna was the sixth."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From Gary:
"Susannah Mitchell, b. 14 Oct 1627, South Ouram, Halifax, York County,
England, d. 1711 in Southampton, Suffolk Co., NY, and was buried in Old
Southend, Southampton, Suffolk Co., NY. She married John Howell, Sr., b
BEF 28 Nov 1624 in Marsh Gibbon, Buckinghamshire, England, baptized 28 Nov
1624, and d. 3 Nov 1693 in Southampton, Suffolk Co., NY, and was buried
there. Among other sources for the information on John Howell was Sue
Denton. She cited the "History of the Sage and Slocum Families of England
and America" by Henry Whittemore, New York, 1908, p36. "by his wife
Susannah, he had eleven children of whom Susanna was the sixth."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
HOWELL, John Sr. (I27159)
 
261

From the birth year it is probable that Emeline and Henry Morgan Purdy
were twins.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
PURDY, Emeline (I28193)
 
262

From the book: PHILADELPHIA COUNTY BIRTHS-1644-1765
by John T. Humphrey- Page 425

Sanger, Anna Margaretha born 19 August 1750
Parents: Georg Ludwig & Maria Eva ?

Church records:Reference #8
Records of St. Michaels Lutheran Church, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Bap tismal reregister begins 1742
A partial recordof this church was originally published in 1896 by the Pen nsylvania German Society in Volume V11 of the PENNSYLVANIA GERMAN SOCIE TY PROCEEDINGS. These records were republished in 1983 by the Genealogic al Publishings Company in Volume 1 of PENNSYLVANIA GERMAN CHURCH RECORDS. 
SANNER, Anna Margaretha (I62849)
 
263

From the book: PHILADELPHIA COUNTY BIRTHS-1644-1765 by John T. Humphrey-Pa ge 424.

Surname- SANDER

Georg Ludwig, born 13 December 1754, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania.

Reference from the above book.

Church Records:
#8- Records of St. Michael's Lutheran Church, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Baptismal Register begins in 1742.

It is presumed that Ludwig Sanner was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvan ia as the preceeding three children were. 
SANNER, Ludwig (I63229)
 
264

From the Feake database in the FTM-CD on the Long Island families, it
states that John and Abigail (Barker) Wright were the parents of the
Abigail Wright who married John Feake. However, in the corrections to the
Ludlam data in the same FTM-CD it states that her parents were Gideon and
Margaret (Urquhart) Wright. My computer frowns when I try to give some
child two sets of parents. I chose John and Abigail as daughters were
often named after their mothers. So Gideon and Margaret have to be
satisfied with an appearance in this note.
6 Jul 2001 QLE
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
WRIGHT, Abigail (I34277)
 
265

From:
THE HEBRON JOURNAL
HEBRON, NEBRASKA
01 December 1905

CARLETON
From the Leader
Moses Nagey and wife , of Hebron, attended the funeral of her mother, Mr s. F. Sanner last Saturday. 
SANNER, Eliza Victoria (I62791)
 
266

Frost Carpenter was a bachelor.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARPENTER, Frost (I27554)
 
267

Gabriel and Effiam (Carman-Niblo-Grey) Decker had no issue.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
DECKER, Gabriel (I23157)
 
268

George Ellis and William Carman were twins.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, William (I26152)
 
269

George Ellis and William Carman were twins.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, George Ellis (I26153)
 
270

George J. Hume was a farmer in Lansing, Michigan.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
George J. Hume was a farmer in Lansing, Michigan.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
HUME, George J. (I34814)
 
271

George Warren Carman was a bachelor.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, George Warren (I36546)
 
272

George was a miller and farmer and lived on or near Shoe Brook. Dependants
are eligible to the Mayflower Society.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
FROST, George (I34522)
 
273

George Washington Carman died while yet an infant.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, George Washington (I36128)
 
274

Gershom [2], the youngest son of Adam [l] Mott by his first wife, had
removed to Monmouth, N.J., before 1685, married Catherine Bowne, was
high-sheriff and member of the Provincial Assembly, and died about 1733.
None of his descendants appear later in Long Island. The late General
Gershom [6] Mott was the great grandson of his son William [3]. A notice
of this branch of the family is in the N. Y. Gen. & Biographical Record of
1894.
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. 5
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
GershomMott Girshom (I24866)
 
275

Gershom [3], the second son of Charles [2] Mott, was also a settler at
Kakiat, with his wife Ruth. He died 1758-9, and his Will tells us his
issue were Solomon [4], Gershom [4], Mary [4],the wife of Peter Lott,
Elizabeth [4], the wife of a Clark, Charles [4] and Benjamin [4], all of
whom were alive in 1758.
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, Gershom Sr. (I28321)
 
276

Gershom [4] was also at Kingwood, and later at Baltimore, where he died in
1772. 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, Gershom Jr. (I28339)
 
277

Gideon Wright died bef 1750 unmarried.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
WRIGHT, Gideon (I34202)
 
278

Gilbert Colden Willets was one of three Willets in Queens County
petitioning for Royal favor in October of 1776. He was a Captain in
DeLancey's Battalion, stationed in Queens County.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
WILLETS, Gilbert Colden Captain (I33343)
 
279

Giles L.Seaman was a bachelor.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
SEAMAN, Giles L (I26219)
 
280

Hannah (Griffen) Stratton died the year her last child, Phineas, was born.
She may well have died in childbirth or from a subsequent puerperal
infection.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
GRIFFEN, Hannah (I33427)
 
281

Hannah Doughty probably died early.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
DOUGHTY, Hannah (I37845)
 
282

Hannah, Patience and Abigail were triplets.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
After marrying Thomas Cranmer in 1716, Abigail and Thomas removed to New
Jersey.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
WILLETS, Abigail (I29375)
 
283

Hannah, Patience and Abigail were triplets.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
WILLETS, Hannah (I29373)
 
284

Hannah, Patience and Abigail were triplets.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
WILLETS, Patience (I29374)
 
285

Harlem Coles died a bachelor.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
COLES, Harlem (I34987)
 
286

Harriet and Ruth B. Powell were most probably twins.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
POWELL, Ruth B. (I24575)
 
287

Harriet and Ruth B. Powell were most probably twins.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
POWELL, Harriet (I24576)
 
288

Harriet Stratton was a spinster.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
STRATTON, Harriet (I33431)
 
289

Hary J. Bevier was a farmer at Augusta, Michigan.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hary J. Bevier was a farmer at Augusta, Michigan.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
BEVIER, Harry J. (I34812)
 
290

He moved to Mile Square from Buckram in 1758, selling his farm to Daniel
Kirby.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
COCK, Josiah (I27993)
 
291

He moved to Mile Square from Buckram in 1758, selling his farm to Daniel
Kirby.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
COCK, Josiah (I34542)
 
292

He was a blacksmith; lived at East Norwich, L. I.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
John Wright served in Col. Smith's Long Island Regiment, also prob. with
the CT troops.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
WRIGHT, John (I30264)
 
293

He was a Quaker.
---------------------------------------------------------------------- ----
---------------------------------------- Gary Halstead, Dwight Halstead
and CL Frost all have his birth as about 1761. Anne Epperson has a
specific date, 16 Jan 1766. I have entered her date.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Stephen Halstead served in Westchester Co. Militia, 3rd Regiment.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
He was a Quaker.
---------------------------------------------------------------------- ----
---------------------------------------- Gary Halstead, Dwight Halstead
and CL Frost all have his birth as about 1761. Anne Epperson has a
specific date, 16 Jan 1766. I have entered her date.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Stephen Halstead served in Westchester Co. Militia, 3rd Regiment.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
HALSTEAD, Stephen [6] [HALSTED] Jr. (I1963)
 
294

He was a religious zealot revolting against the established Church of
England, and an interesting individual. He was married and had at least
eight children, but only four are positively identified, and their
information is cloaked in doubts and conjecture. As there is no known or
proven offspring of his children I have elected not to clutter up this
database with the suppositions.
2 May 2001 QLE
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
FEAKE, Christopher (I33996)
 
295

He was known as "Pilgrim John Tuthill" of Southold, Colony of New Haven in
1640, where he was appointed the first civil magistrate. He was a widower
in 1637. He returned to England, remarried and left descendants there.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
TUTHILL, John (I35865)
 
296

He was known as "Rodger HAYDOCK of Bogburn," and as "Roger of Coppull". He
obtained the lease on Langtree Hall in 1652. Although he was baptized in
the Standish Church, he became a Quaker and initiated the Langtree
Meeting.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
HAYDOCK, Roger Sr. (I36755)
 
297

Henry (Tuthill) Tuttle was of Tharston, Norfolk Co., England and
immigrated to Hingham, Massachusetts and later removed to Southold. His
wife, Bridget survived him and married William Wells of Southold,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
TUTHILL, Henry Jr. (I35867)
 
298

Henry and Bethany (Carpenter) Barmore were of Union Vale, New York.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
BARMORE, Henry (I36800)
 
299

Henry and Rachel (Heustis) Frost moved, probably from Danby, Vermont, in
1802 to Dutchess Co., N. Y., and at one time lived in Richmond, Ontario
Co., N. Y.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
According to an old Bible, Benjamin and Rose Frost must have lived in
Danby, Vermont, in 1801, and Henry, too, as the latter's oldest child was
buried there.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There was a Henry Frost that served in the Revolutionary War, Sixth
Regiment, Dutchess County, Militia.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Friends' "Creek" Records have the following minute: "Rachel Frost,
wife of Henry, removed to Bristol from Ninepartners the 16th of 8th mo.,
1810."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
FROST, Henry Sr. (I34558)
 
300

Henry Brush was admitted to the bar in 1803.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In 1803 he removed to Chillicothe, Ohio, and was a State Representative
from there in 1810, and a State Senator in 1814.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
He was elected Captain of the Ross County Ohio Volunteers in 1812. He was
in command of a relief force of 250 on their way to relieve General Hull
at Detroit when he surrendered to the British. Although included in the
terms of the capitulation he was able to avoid capture. He was later
promoted to Colonel of the Ohio Militia.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
He removed to London, Ohio, and served as a State Representative from 1819
to 1821. He became an Ohio Supreme Court Justice in 1828.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
BRUSH, Henry Colonel, Justice Supreme Court of O (I37521)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... 2217» Next»

This site powered by The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding v. 14.0.3, written by Darrin Lythgoe © 2001-2025.

Maintained by John Hanson. | Data Protection Policy.