


Halstead/Halsted Family History
The Genealogy of those with the Halstead, Halsted and related surnames or given names
Notes
Matches 351 to 400 of 108,535
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351 | Info on Robert Hubbs, Sr. and Elizabeth from Joan Wright. Jason Hubbs. Joan Wright history: Robert Hubbs * 1624 Gloucesher, England X Elizabeth------ ca. 1645, Newport, R.I. Married ca 1706, Hempstead, LI, NY. He sailed from England Nov. 20, 1635, Peter Blackler master, to go to Barbadoes, arrived Newport 1644 (Original Lists of Persons of Quality). He was in Newport, R.I. in 1644, Flushing, LI, NY, in 1661 and was one of the patentees of Hempstead, Madnan"s Neck (now Great Neck) in 1668. He was listed as a "Freeman" of Newport in 1655, and he and two of his sons as "Freeholders of Town of Hempstead" in 1685. Robert Hobs 24 acres, Robert Hobs, Jr. 25 acres, John Hubs 56 acres. On November 5, 1691, he married Elizabeth (Redman) Mott, widow of Adam Mott. On the above freeholders list, Adam Mott had 61 acres. There were six children by the first wife, none by the second. He was listed as a cooper and surgeon. John ca. 1646-1697 married Susannah Linnington, sons John and Robert. Sarah married Robert Godfree, children John and Elizabeth. Robert, Jr. ca. 1648-1704 married Hester------, sons Charles and Ellexander. Alexander ca 1653-1728, (see following). Ann - no data. Joseph - no data. Mary - married Thomas Daniels -- (info per Helen Hubbs Terry) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ From an article in the LONG ISLAND FORUM dated September 1949; The Hubbs Family, written by The Rev. B. E. Underwood, St. John's Rectory, 96 Rumford Avenue, Mansfield, Mass. Some kinfolk on Long Island have sent me occasional copies of "The Long Island Forum", which I have thoroughly enjoyed. On my mother's side I am descended from the following Long Island families: Hubbs, Denton, Seaman, Stevenson, Strickland, Lokerson-Kissam, Combes and Thorne. These I know, and there must be three others that I do not know. I am anxious that certain common genealogical errors be not repeated. I proved many years ago that the wife of William Thorne of Flushing, L.I., was named Susannah, and not "Sarah". Yet this original guess, for that is all it was, is continually finding its way into print. Again, the immigrant ancestor of the Hubbs Family is not John Hubbs, the patentee of Hempstead, or was John's wife named "Silence". John Hubbs married Susannah Linnington, daughter of Henry and Catherine (Ellison) Linnington of Hempstead. "Silence" is a misreading of Susannah, written with a long "s". The true immigrant ancestor of the Hubbs family was Robert Hubbs of Gloucestershire, England, who was in Newport, Rhode Island, as early as 1643, June, when he was 19 years of age. In 1647 he bought a house and land of Caleb Carr in Newport, and in 1648 he exchanged it for a house and land in Newport then owned by Marmaduke Ward. In 1654 he made a deposition before the Dutch authorities, signing it with his mark, "R H", and stating that he was "of Glostershire, about 30 years old". In 1661 he bought a house, garden, and orchard in Flushing, L.I. of William Hallett; but by 1668 he owned property on Madnans Neck (now Great Neck), Town of Hempstead, L.I. He died around 1700. He must have married in Newport, R.I., but we only know as yet that his first wife's name was Elizabeth......His second wife, whom he married in 1691, was Elizabeth (Redman) Mott, widow of Adam Mott (1620-1690). Her maiden name was not "Richbell". Most of his 6 children, and we know he had six children from a letter to the Dutch authorities, written in 1632 concerning a dispute over the owndership of his farm with William Hallet, were probably born in Newport, Rhode Island. Of these, John Hubbs (1646-1697) appears to have been the eldest, and he is the Patentee of Hempstead mentioned above. A younger son, Robert Hubbs, Jr., who married Hester........., is probably the ancestor of most of the present-day Hubbses through his son Alexander of Jericho, Oyster Bay, and his wife Amy..... I know the names of all but two of these six children, but can trace the descendants of John and Robert only. There are some seven of us Hubbs descendants who have been working on the Hubbs Family, and we have only recently got into touch with one another. However, I seem to be the only one who has concentrated on the first five generations. The 5th generation seems to be the key to all the rest. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- -----------------------------------------THEN in another article of the LONG ISLAND FORUM, December 1949, the Rev. writes another article: While I was gratified to see my letter of not so recent a date in the Forum, I could have given you some supplementary information on the Hubbs family, had I known that you still intended to publish it. About eight months ago I was in Jamaica and found proof that Alexander Hubbs was the son of Robert Hubbs, Sr. I had thought him the son of Robert Hubbs, Jr., as the Hempstead Census of 1698 lists him as a member of the latter's family. It also lists Charles Hubbs, who must be another son of Robert, Sr., as Charles Hubbs "of Madnans Neck" bought land of Caleb Shreve in freehold, New Jersey, in the following year. This Charles Hubbs is the ancestor of most of the New Jersey and Pennsylvania Hubbs. In Liber B., p. 2244-225, of Conveyances recorded at Jamaica Robert Hubbs, Sr., "now living at Madnans Neck", conveys land "unto my son Alexander Hubbs now living in the same place" under date of 8 June 1700, recorded 2 December 1706. (Query: Does this late recording mean that Robert Hubbs, Sr., died in 1706?) In Liber A., p. 206, "Robert Hubbs now living in Madnans Neck" conveys to Henry Allen "the full half of ye Milne which was between my brother Alexander and I" under date of 18 Feb. 1702; recorded 30 October 1702. In Liber B. 2, p. 716-717 Alexander Hubbs of Madnans Neck conveys to Henry Allen "a certain messuage or tract of land situate...upon Madnans Neck", "together with another tract of land" "including all of ye said Alexander Hubbs right title upon Madnans Neck excepting that tract of land whereon ye said Alexander Hubbs Sister Sarah now dwells" under date of 23 January 1714; recorded 5 April 1774. These three deeds prove that three of the children of Robert Hubbs, Sr. were Robert Hubbs, Jr., Alexander Hubbs, and Sarah Hubbs. I suspect that Sarah married Robert Godfrey, but have yet to prove my hypothesis. To these I can tentatively add five others: Lt. John Hubbs who married Susannah Linnington, Capt. Joseph Hubbs (last heard of in Freehold, N.J. in 1689), Charles Hubbs who married Martha..... (in Freehold in 1699; died in Philadelphia in 1746), Lt. Richard Hubbs (mentioned once as of Hempstead in 1700), and an Ann Hubbs who may have been a wife of either Joseph or Richard, or else an un-married daughter of Robert Hubbs, Sr. This Ann Hubbs was on a Friends' Committee on the marriage of John Prior and Elizabeth Bowne, at Flushing 2 November 1678. Perhaps some of our readers can supplement this information. B. E. Underwood. Any reader desiring more information on this subject might address the Rev. Byron Edw. Underwood, 96 Rumford Ave., Mansfield, Mass. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ REGISTER OF SOLOMON LACHAIRE, p 226 (translated by O'Callaghan) 1691 Robert married Elizabeth (Rodman) Mott, widow of Adam Mott (1620-1690). Elizabeth, daughter of _______ and Anne (Parsons) Redman. Anne had married a second time, to John Richbell (note: Adam Mott lived in Newport, R.I. when Robert was there in the 1640's). Controversy arose between Adam Mott, Jr. (a son of Adam Mott, Sr., by a previous wife) and his step mother and her new husband, Robert Hubbs. Settled by an agreement signed by Elizabeth Hubbs and her son, Richbell Mott, that the will of her deceased husband shall stand good...Hempstead Rec'ds Liber D p. 556. 1698 Hempstead Census: Robrd Hubs, Elizabeth Hubs, Mary Ann Mott, Elizabeth Mott, William Mott, Adam Mott (N.Y. Gen. and Biog. Record, v. 45, p. 62 (1914). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Recorded at Jamaica, L.I., Liber B. Pages 224-225, Date 1700, June 5: Entered "Ye 2nd Feber, 1706": Robert Hubbs, Senior of Madman's Neck (now Great Neck), Hempstead, L.I. "Unto my son Alexander Hubbs, now living in same place......aforesaid, a certain quantity of land being the East lot of the first division - twenty acres more or less as it was laid out at first by ye surveyor so appointed, ye sd lot of land bounded southward with ye line of William Scaddinos lot now in possession of Henry Allyn and westward butted with Mathew Garrisons Bay running Northeast Easterly by ye creek with all ye rights and privileges or commong therunto belonging to ye said lot of land" (signed) Robert Hubbs "R" his mark. Witness Joseph Sutton, John Treadwell ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | HUBBS, Robert Emigrant Progenitor Sr. (I31014)
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352 | Isaac and Sarah (Frost) Hicks lived in Milan, New York. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ [JhnHicks..FTW] ? 1810 Census Index - NY, Dutchess Co, Northeast, p 319 10010-22010 1820 Census Index - NY, Schoharie Co, Summit, p 234 (with Henry) 1830 Census Index - NY, Schoharie Co, Summit, p 171 (with Henry) 1840 Census Index - NY Schoharie Co, Summit, p 149 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | HICKS, Isaac (I35022)
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353 | Isaac Brush is listed in Weissenfell's levy, and again in Pawling's levy, both of which were organized late during the American Revolution. Again, an undated roll listed Isaac Brush as a deserter from Major Elias Benschoten's batallion of Colonel Willet's Regiment of men enlisted for two and three years. This occurred probably after the 1781 date when Major Elias Benschten joined Colonel Willet's levies. Apparently Isaac Brush was not a deserted, but had been made a prisoner by the British for later his name appears on a receipt roll for Weissenfell's levies in 6 Mar 1787 where Isaac was given credit for over twenty-one pounds. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Land records show that Isaac Brush removed at sometime to Maiden Head (now Lawrenceville) Henterdon Co., NJ. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ There is a suggestion that he may have removed once more to Irville, Muskingum Co., OH. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, Isaac (I25080)
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354 | Isaac Doty's name first appears in deeds, 1695, in Oyster Bay, Long Island, NY. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Merged General Note: Isaac Doty's name first appears in deeds, 1695, in Oyster Bay, Long Island, NY. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | DOTY, Isaac II (I37328)
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355 | Isaac lived at Mill River Neck, Long Island. He removed to the Main Land, settling at Crom Pond and then Clinton, N. Y. He d. in Clinton after 1798. He left Long Island in 1763. In 1741 Charles Wright and his mother sold to Isaac Frost 47 acres with buildings on the west side of Mill River Neck, now the estate of Smith Underhill. In 1758 Nicholas and Townsend Weekes sold land to Isaac Frost. In 1763 Isaac and Mary Frost sold to John Underhill 111 acres all the above premises. Witness to his will: Benjamin Townsend, who married Betty, daughter of George Frost, and Joseph Cock, who married Rhoda, daughter of Isaac Frost. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | FROST, Isaac [3] (I34516)
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356 | Isaac Purdy died in battle probably as a member of the 2nd. Regiment of Westchester Co. Militia, part of the middle battallion of Patriot Westchester Militia. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | PURDY, Isaac (I28163)
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357 | Isaac Smith was of Somers, New York. His will was proven on 4 Apr 1827. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | SMITH, Isaac (I34929)
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358 | Isabel Brush died while young. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, Isabel (I37466)
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359 | Isabel Weeks was of Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | WEEKS, Isabella "Isabel" (I37451)
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360 | Isaiah Sickles Carman was a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Isaiah Sickles (I36194)
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361 | Israel Brush removed to Hopewell, Hunterdon Co., NJ, by 18 Sep 1757. He removed to Crum Elbow, Dutchess Co., NY by 1760. Sometime thereafter he returned to Hopewell. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Israel Brush served from 23 Oct to 31 Oct 1777 in Captain William Tucker's Hopewell Company of the First Hunterdon County militia, being mustered as "a substitue on duty." On 28 May 1778 he enlisted for nine months from the First Hunterdon Militia in Captain John Polemus' Company of the First Regiment of the New Jersey Line, commanded by Colonel Matthias Ogden. He was described as five feet, eleven inches, fair complexion and grey eyes. He was ill at Elizabethtown, New Jersey on 14 Jul 1778 and continued ill in the hospital until 2 Feb 1779. He was discharged 28 Feb 1779. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, Israel (I25057)
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362 | Israel Seaman lived at Saw Pit, now Rye, NY. His will was dated October 12, 1809; proved 5/4/1810. According to Davis, Norman in "Westchester Partiarchs..." Israel, a Tory, left Sawpit and removed to Canada 1779. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | SEAMAN, Israel Sr. (I30325)
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363 | Israel [5], b. 1771, grocer of New York, and later of White Plains, married Charity Haviland and died in1859, leaving sons William [6], Solomon [6], John [6], and Israel A. [6]. 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. 8. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | MOTT, Israel (I29999)
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364 | Israel [6],... left N.Y. in a schooner for Key West in Nov., 1834, and was never again heard from. 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. 8. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | MOTT, Israel (I30008)
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365 | Issue: Two girls and then one boy followed by another daughter. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ARNOLD, Lydia H. (I35150)
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366 | It has been stated that Jacob Saylor immigrated to America about 1750, b ut that has not been firmly established. Was in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania prior to Somerset County, Pennsylvan ia. He obtained a land warrant in Bedford County, Pennsylvania dated 15 De cember 1774. His farm was known as "CHERRYBURGH". He was formerly from the Amish Church and became dissatidfied for some rea son and joined the Mennonite religion. He was the first Mennonite minist er in the Casselman Valley Region on the Allegheny Conference. He made his will in 1790, but the day and month is unknown. On a trip to Pennsylvania in July 1998, an attempt was made to visit the S aylor Cemetery, but due to road construction was not able to gain acce ss to it. | SAYLOR, Jacob (I62824)
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367 | It is highly probable that Isaac Doty of Oyster Bay, NY was the son of Edward Doty the Pilgrim, but no documentation making this connection has been found. Isaac's father, Edward Doty, died in 1655, when Isaac was a child of six [Plymouth Colony Records 8:17]. Presumably he lived with his mother after that, probably until about the time she remarried in 1667 [Mayflower Descendancy 3:87-90]. His movements for the next few years are not known, but [Ethen Allen] Doty speculates [in The Doty Doten Family in America descendants of Edward Doty, an emigrant by the Mayflower, 1620,] that he may not have moved north to Marshfield with his mother and her new husband, but instead went to live in Sandwich, some twenty miles south of Plymouth, as his brother Joseph was later to do. It would have been there that he met and was befriended by Anthony Wright, who became his benefactor later in Oyster Bay, NY, and who would have been influential in Isaac Doty's decision to move to Oyster Bay. The deposition in 1728 of Isaac Doty of Oyster Bay [Doty Genealogy, p. 499] that he was then about 79 years of age is consistent with the birthdate of Edward Doty's son Isaac, lending support to the hypothesis. It is further noted that three of Isaac Doty's six sons bore the names of Edward Doty's sons: Joseph, Samuel, and Isaac's own namesake. On 5 July 1672 Isaac Dotey alias Doughty, sold the land willed to him by his father, Edward Dotey, to John Smith [Plymouth Colony LF 3:261] Isaac Doty first appears in Oyster Bay, NY records on 23 June 1669, when he was selected as one of four men to maintain a water fence on Hog Island in Oyster Bay, NY. [Oyster Bay Town Records 1:210]. At a town meeting held at Oyster Bay NY 22 Jan 1672/3, a piece of land for a house lot was allocated to Isaac Dottie [Oyster Bay Town Records 1:221]. On Feb. 19th following, he and James Townsend received an allotment of 16 acres [Oyster Bay Town Records 1:79]. From Anthony Wright he received by deed of gift a piece of meadow land on 26 June 1675 [Oyster Bay Town Records 1:102]. And the will of Anthony Wright bequeathed "unto Isaack Dotye, one cow" [NYGBR 3:37] Isaac Doty m. prob. ca. 1671 Elizabeth England, b. prob. Portsmouth, RI ca. 1649, dau. of William and Elizabeth (______) England [Rhode Island Genealogical Dictionary p.72]. On 14 Feb. 1688, Elizabeth Doughty executed a deed in Oyster Bay NY with Isaac Doughty [Oyster Bay Town Records 1:535] The will of Hugh Parsons of Portsmouth, RI (who m. Elizabeth (England) Doty's widowed mother), dated 10 Jan 1683 proved 14 Mar 1683, mentioning, among others, his wife Elizabeth and his wife's two daughters, Susannah Carpenter and Elizabeth Doughty, both of Long Island [Rhode Island Genealogical Records 3:25]. On 29 Mar 1697 Isaac Doughty gave a farm to son Isaac Doughty, Jr. [Oyster Bay Town Records 2:217]. On 19 June 1704 he have a farm to son Joseph [Oyster Bay Town Records 4:361], and another to son Jacob [Oyster Bay Town Records 4:165-7]. ON 25 Mar 1723 he gave his son Samuel Doty a farm adjoining those of Samuel's brothers Jacob, Joseph, Isaac, and James [Oyster Bay Town Records 4:254]. Solomon Doughty witnessed Isaac Doughty's sale of land to his son Joseph Doughty. Although no deed of land from Isaac Doty to Solomon Doty has been found, it is clear from other land records that Solomon owned land adjacent to Samuel's property [Oyster Bay Town Records 4:373,376], suggesting that Solomon Doty came to possess land that had been part of the holdings of Isaac Doty, Dr.; and that Solomon was most likely a son of Isaac Doty, Sr. On 20 Oct 1715, Samuel Doughty witnessed a deed [Oyster Bay Town Records 3:613]; hence he was born no later than 20 Oct. 1694. Since his brother James is known to have been born on 21 Dec. 1693 [grave stone, Christ Episcopal Church, Oyster Bay, NY], or only about ten months earlier, it is likely that Samuel was born before James. [From: Hill, Peter B., compiler, Edward Doty of the Mayflower: Mayflower Families in Progress, Third Edition, (Plymouth, Mass: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1996 p. 13-15). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | DOTY, Isaac [2] Sr. (I37320)
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368 | It is most remarkable that the daughters, Margaret and Sarah, of Walter and Sarah (Hewlett) Frost would be born on the same day, making them twins, and both die on the same day, their birthday forty-four years later. I suspect this was an error in copying dates and not a reality. 30 May 2001 QLE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | FROST, Margaret (I38097)
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369 | It is presumed that Joseph Saylor was of the Mennonite religion in th at he used the signs of the zodiac in listing the dates of birth of his ch ildren. Joseph's two son's, Daniel and Jacob who survived to adulthood came to Am erica. No information is available on the two daughter's who apparent ly lived to adulthood. | SEILER, Joseph Jacob (I62826)
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370 | It is presumed that Michael Sanner was born in Philadelphia County, Pennsy lvania as were his preceeding siblings. The will of Michael Sanner is in this writer's file. It consist's of 1 08 pages so is quite a lengthy document. The grave site was visited in July 1998 and the stone's were fou nd to be in good condition and very legible. Photo's were taken and a re in the personal files of this writer. This writer visited the grave site again of Michael Sanner in September 20 00 and also in September of 2001 and the stone is still in good condition . | SANNER, Michael ,Sr. (I62837)
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371 | Jacob (Cocks) Cock, in his will, dated 10th of 9th mo., 1811, and proven Dec. 5, 1816, spells his name Cox. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | COCK, Jacob (I34545)
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372 | Jacob and Jemima Seaman were twins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jacob Seaman was mentioned in will of his father, Jacob Seaman of Jericho, Town of Oyster Bay, Queens [now Nassau] Co., NY. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jacob and Jemima Seaman were twins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jacob Seaman was mentioned in will of his father, Jacob Seaman of Jericho, Town of Oyster Bay, Queens [now Nassau] Co., NY. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | SEAMAN, Jacob [twin] (I47296)
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373 | Jacob and Jemima Seaman were twins. Jemima died while she was young. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jacob and Jemima Seaman were twins. Jemima died while she was young. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | SEAMAN, Jemima [twin] (I29908)
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374 | Jacob and Rachael (Weeks) Carman, were of Coxsackie, New York. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Jacob I (I23420)
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375 | Jacob Brush was referred to as of Cold Spring, Long Island, New York. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Diane's gedcom: William Cosby, Esq., Captain-General and Governor. Whereas, JACOB BRUSH, of Huntington, in Suffolk County, died intestate, Letters of Administration are granted to his wife Mary, September 14, 1732. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, Jacob (I35507)
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376 | Jacob Carman, III, died while young. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Jacob III (I24566)
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377 | Jacob Doughty, Jr., probably died while young. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | DOUGHTY, Jacob [child] Jr. (I37836)
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378 | Jacob Frost was a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | FROST, Jacob (I34690)
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379 | Jacob Ludlam was a Tory during the American Revolution. He removed during the war to Nova Scotia and that is where he died. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | LUDLAM, Jacob (I34426)
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380 | Jacob [3], Amos [3], and Benjamin [3], the third, fourth and fifth. sons of Charles [2] Mott, all died before 1748 without issue. 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, Jacob (I28322)
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381 | Jacob [3], Amos [3], and Benjamin [3], the third, fourth and fifth. sons of Charles [2] Mott, all died before 1748 without issue. 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, Amos (I28323)
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382 | Jacob [4], the third son of Jacob [3], born June 30, 1756, was of New York, and an alderman, married Deborah Lawrence, and died Aug. 16, 1823. He had four sons, William Lawrence [5], grocer, of New York, and the grandfather of Rev. George S. [7] Mott, of Newark. Richard Lawrence [5], of New York, Jacob Lawrence [5], Quaker preacher of Tarrytown (bought in 1826, and occupied, the house there made famous by Irving, in which Ichabod Crane courted Katrina van Tassel), and Jordan Lawrence [5], of New York, the father of the present Jordan L. [6], of Mott Haven. 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 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | MOTT, Jacob Jr. (I30041)
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383 | Jacobus and Sarah (Willets) De Kay (Dekey) had issue. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | WILLETS, Sarah (I33322)
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384 | James and Catherine A. (Humphrey) Carman had no issue. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | HUMPHREY, Catherine A. (I26800)
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385 | James and Deborah (Carman) Hedgar had no issue. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Deborah (I26784)
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386 | James and Lucene (Carman) McCullough had no issue. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Lucene (I26294)
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387 | James Brush, unlike his brother, Shubel, must have been a Whig. His taxes were abated in 1783 due to the plundering of his property by the British. It was brother against brother during the war. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The will of James Brush was dated in Greenwich on 8 Mar 1811, and proved on 20 Jun 1812. He mentioned his wife, Martha; children, Edward, Rachel, James, and Sarah Van Cleeck with her husband, Henry Van Cleeck. Executors: his sons, Edward and James, and Jonathan Finch. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, James Sr. (I35535)
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388 | James C. Carman attained the age of 101. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, James C. Sr. (I25832)
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389 | James Carman was a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, James (I26239)
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390 | James Cock, Jr. was a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | COCK, James Jr. (I33177)
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391 | James G. and Elizabeth (Carman) Meddaugh had no issue. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Elizabeth (I26575)
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392 | James Jackson died at age twenty-one. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | JACKSON, James (I37225)
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393 | James Jackson, married 1694, Rebecca Hallet, daughter of William Hallet of Halletts Cove. They settled at Rockaway in the Town of Flushing, and had twenty one children. Bunker, Mary Powell "Long Island Genealogies" [originally published 1895 republished by Charles E. Tuttle Co., Rutland, VT:1988] p220 cites this marriage in 1730. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rebecca Hallet was born at Hallet's Cove, now Astoria, Long Island, August 31, 1675. She was married near the first of the year 1694. Her life history is told by the remarkable family that she bore. If our dates are correct, then she bore her first child when she was 19 years, 3 months and 3 days old, and in the succeeding 24 years 7 months and 22 days, 19 more children were born, twenty in all and each a single birth. The longest period between any two births was 2 years and 19 days and the shortest was 11 months and 17 days. And the average interval was one year, 3 months and 17 days. Only one of those children died in infancy and but two predeceased the mother. Hence, we may conclude that they were remarkably healthy and that she was a capable mother. I hope those children so lived that their mother was, in some measure, compensated for their bearing and rearing. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | HALLETT, Rebecca (I37313)
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394 | James M. Prior died a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | PRIOR, James M. (I22064)
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395 | James met Mamie Gnagey at the Train Station in Abilene, Kansas. They w ere married by the Probate Judge , T.J. Supple, in Salina, Kansas, licen se #5057 on file in the Saline County Courthouse. A copy is in person al files. The house located at 1303 Greeley Ave, Salina, Kansas was owned by J.E. a nd Mamie Hardesty. This home is where they spent most of their married l ife. Memories recalled by a granddaughter, Audrey Hardesty-Hall is that one exp erience that she remember's is that there was a flood in Salina and Grand pa loaded up his old pickup truck with some household good's and dro ve up to Indian Rock Park which was just east of the home where they live d. He pitched a tent and this is where they lived until the flood water 's receded. James worked as a painter and paper hanger , with the oldest daughter, Opa l, assisting him from time to time. He suffered a stroke and Mamie to ok care of him at home until he was placed in the Salina Nursing Home loca ted on South Santa Fe Ave.in Salina. He died at this facility. Stran ge as it may seem it was this very facility that I got my first job in a n ursing home working after school and on the weekends in the kitchen as a d ishwasher. This facility was torn down many years ago. When he was younger, a portion of the large toe on the Right foot was ac cidently cut off by his brother, Charles Noah Hardesty. For a peri od of time he ambulated with the aid of a cane. A copy of the death certificate, obituary, and marriage certifica te is in the personal files of this writer. In September 2001, I travel ed to Salina, Kansas and from the Salina Public Library which has the Sali na Journal on microfilm obtained a copy of the obituary. This co py is in the personal files of this writer. Obituary from the following newspaper. See transcription below. SALINA JOURNAL SALINA, KANSAS Wednesday, November 4, 1942 J.E. HARDESTY DEAD Long Illness Ends for Salina Painter James Elmer Hardesty, 56, died at the Salina Nursing Home shortly after mi dnight Tuesday night, following a long illness. The family home is on ro ute three, east of Salina. The deceased was born March 29, 1886, in Ande rson County, and had lived in Salina since October 1910. He was a paint er and paperhanger by trade. Surviving relatives are the widow, Mrs. Mamie Hardesty; five daughters, Mr s. Lee Hardesty; Salina, and Goldie, Faye, Ruby, and Freda Hardesty, a ll of the home; four brothers, Charles and Roy Hardesty of Salina, Mart Ha rdesty of Steel City, Neb., and Frank Hardesty, of Prairie Grove, Ark.; a nd a sister, Mrs. Ella Shinn, of this city. The body was taken to the Ryan Mortuary to lie in state until the funera l, which will be held at the mortuary Friday afternoon at two oclock wi th Rev. B.R. Lantz in charge. Notes by : Patsy Hardesty-Sutton 29500 West 109th Street North Mount Hope, Kansas 67108 | HARDESTY, James Elmer (I51425)
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396 | James moved from Hyde Park, N. Y., to Wayne County, N. Y., and then to Wayne, Mich. James and Lydia had removal certificate from Creek M. M. to Hector, N. Y., May 21, 1824 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | FROST, James (I34868)
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397 | James Pine was of Huntington, Long Island, New York. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | PINE, James Sr. (I37458)
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398 | James Townsend was a member of the Assembly and a trustee of Kings College. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | TOWNSEND, James * (I36598)
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399 | Jane Feake died while young. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | FEAKE, Jane (I32963)
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400 | Jane H. Carman was a spinster. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Jane H. (I26254)
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