Halstead/Halsted Family History

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

Notes


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Matches 401 to 450 of 108,535

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
401

Jeremiah Nan Smith described himself as "of Merricks" in his will.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
SMITH, Jeremiah Nan Sr. (I26370)
 
402

Jesse Frost was a peach farmer at Smyrna, Michigan.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
FROST, Jesse (I27591)
 
403

Jessie Carman was a bachelor.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, Jessie (I26791)
 
404

Jim Rubins shows the parents of John Doughty to be Francis and Mary
(Palmer) Doughty. This is unlikely. They had eleven children all well
documented with dates and other information recorded in the Friend's
meeting attended by Francis and Mary Doughty. If they had been the
parents of John I am certain that information would have been recorded.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Research reveals that John Doughty was the son of Francis Doughty, Jr.,
son of the Francis Doughty mentioned above. Thus Francis Doughty, Sr.,
and Mary Palmer were the grandparents of John Doughty.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
DOUGHTY, John Sr. (I30327)
 
405

Jim Rubins' database shows Mary Mudge as the daughter of Moses Mudge, but
he missed a generation. Mary was the granddaughter of Moses Mudge by his
son Jarvis Mudge, Sr.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
MUDGE, Mary (I25106)
 
406

Joan and John Rowland Carman were twins.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, Jonah Rowland (I25993)
 
407

Joan and John Rowland Carman were twins.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, Joan (I25994)
 
408

Joanna Thorne was a spinster.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
THORNE, Joanna (I33131)
 
409

Joel and Mary (Brush) Sutherland removed to Dutchess Co., NY
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
BRUSH, Mary (I35541)
 
410

Johannis Britt was of Westchester Co., NY. His will, signed 29 Aug 1781,
mentions Christiana among his children.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
BRITT, Johannis (I38112)
 
411

John Alburtis (Burtis) was a blacksmith living in Cowsneck, New York and
held many prominent positions in Hempstead.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
BURTIS, John * 9 dr (I30951)
 
412

John Allen (Alling) was a shoemaker.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The will of John Allen was dated 12 Jun 1762, and proved 12 Oct 1762. He
mentioned his wife, Violetta, and all four sons by name.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
ALLEN, John (I37655)
 
413

John Bedell on 4 Apr 1677 sued Timothy Halstead and Samuel Denton for the
value of two loads of hay which they had accidentally burned, and for
which he recovered.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The will of John Bedell was dated 26 Feb 1715/1716, and proved 3 Apr 1716.
He mentioned his wife, Sarah; his children, John, Samuel, Jacob, Benjamin,
Martha, Elizabeth and Phebe.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
BEDELL, John Sr. (I38550)
 
414

John Brush removed to Huntington before 2 Dec 1679 when his name appeared
to an Indian receipt for Huntington's payment for a deed.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
BRUSH, John Sr. (I35500)
 
415

John Brush was a bachelor.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
BRUSH, John (I24983)
 
416

John Carman died while he was young.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, John (I25011)
 
417

John Carman removed to Dutchess Co., NY, between 1732/1735.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, John Esquire (I26490)
 
418

John Carman served and fought in the War of 1812. He was a bachelor.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, John (I23679)
 
419

John Carman was known as "Jersey Blue" to distinguish him from other John
Carmans whom he lived near at different times as he removed frequently
during his life time. The name was derived from his service during the
Revolutionary War in which he served in the New Jersey Blue Regiment of
the New Jersey Militia. He fought at the battles of Elizabethtown and
Monmouth.
As he removed frequently his children were born in several different
locations.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, John "Jersey Blue" (I25777)
 
420

John Embree and Mary Doughty had children.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
DOUGHTY, Charity (I37677)
 
421

John Feake did not accompany his father to the Colonies, but did come
later.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
FEAKE, John (I32969)
 
422

John Frost enlisted in the French War and was at Montreal one or two
winters under General Wolfe and was present at the taking of Quebec.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
John Frost was 20 years old when he enlisted, May 1, 1760, with Capt.
Richard Rea's Company, and also served under Capt. Dickenson, according to
authentic records.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
John Frost was a Private in the Revolutionary War, Fredericksburg
Precinct, Dutchess County, serving under Colonel Henry Luddingtonin the
company of Captain Nathniel Scribner.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
John Frost settled at the head of Gilead Pond, Carmel, N. Y., and was a
tanner and currier besides a farmer. He was a man of great piety and
patriotism, and was taken prisoner at the capture of Forts Clinton and
Montgomery, on the Hudson, by the British, Oct. 5, 1777.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This branch of the family once owned the land where the Yorktown, N. Y.,
Presbyterian Church now stands, and tradition in their family tells that
the British soldiers came there and either murdered their slaves or
carried them off and how Huldah (Munson) Frost rode 20 miles on horseback
with the British chasing her. They did not catch her although she was
hampered by having two children with her.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mrs. Henry Birdsall, a descendant, now living in Peekskill, N. Y., has a
candlestick which was picked up after the French had encamped on one of
her ancestral homes.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
John signed the call to Rev. Ebenezer Knibloe at Gilead, in 1755
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
FROST, John Jr. (I34536)
 
423

John Frost was a cabinet maker and had a farm at "ye spring," now known as
Mutton town or Spring Hill, Oyster Bay Township.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
FROST, John - 1st husband - Sr. (I34524)
 
424

John Frost was a farmer and shoemaker.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
FROST, John (I34651)
 
425

John Hawxhurst dated his will on 5 Aug 1823. It was proved at Jamaica on
18 Aug 1823. 
HAWXHURST, John (I25286)
 
426

John Hawxhurst dated his will on 5 Aug 1823. It was proved at Jamaica on
18 Aug 1823. 
HAWXHURST, John (I37656)
 
427

John Haydock, Jr., was a member of the Society of Friends.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As this family emigrated from the New York/New Jersey area to Kentucky it
no longer relates to the Long Island families which are the primary focus
of this database. Also, the compiler of the database from which I derived
this infromation decidedly has tunnel vision and only enters the details
on the particular line he desires to follow. The other siblings are
listed for each family, but all with an identical approximated date of
birth, no dates of death, and no spousal relationships. It is rather
meager information.
21 Jun 2001 QLE
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
HAYDOCK, John Jr. (I36732)
 
428

John Henry Clowes died in 1847, and his parents married in 1843, so he
must have been an infant of two or three years.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CLOWES, John Henry (I22520)
 
429

John Hicks Frost died a bachelor.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
John Hicks Frost died a bachelor.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
FROST, John Hicks (I34771)
 
430

John Hoit could well be the progenitor of the subsequent entries whose
surnames are either Haight of Hoyt. There is a slim chance I may find the
connection.
13 Apr 2001 QLE
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
HAIGHT, John (Hoit) [1] Sr. (I28053)
 
431

John Jackson settled at Jerusalem south; m. Thesia Mott, of Great Neck.
[from: Seaver, J. Montgomery. Jackson Family Records. American
Historical-Genealogical Society. Philadelphia. 1929] p. 27]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
JACKSON, Justice John 4th (I28382)
 
432

John Kissam was a farmer who resided at Flower Hill, Hempstead. He and his
wife, Phebe Allen, had one child.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
KISSAM, John Major (I28592)
 
433

John Murray sailed to South America. He died intestate in 1816 and was
probably unmarried.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
TREADWELL, John Murray (I28695)
 
434

John Pearsall was mentioned in father's will, Daniel Pearsall of
Hempstead, written 2 Apr 1703.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
PEARSALL, John (I21873)
 
435

John Peter Carman was a bachelor.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, John Peter (I26611)
 
436

John S. Coe removed to Fullersburg, Dupage Co., Illinois, where
descendants remain of whom no details have been secured. [from: Bartlett,
J. Gardner, Robert Coe, Puritan: His ancestors and descendants 1340-1910,
(Boston, MA: privately published, 1911), 151.]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
COE, John S. (I30835)
 
437

John Smith died while young.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
SMITH, John (I23604)
 
438

JOHN STRICKLAND'S FAMILY was from County Westmoreland, England.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
He was an original settler of Charlestown in 1629-30. Made Freeman of
Massachusetts in 1631. Became a member of the church at Watertown,
afterwards was at Weathersfield and Fairfield, Conn. His son Thwaite
settled at Weathersfield.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Son Samuel came to Long Island Of his daughters one, Elisabeth married
Captain John Seaman.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Joanna m. Jonas Wood from Halifax.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In 1644. The Charter of Hempstead was granted unto John Strickland, Robert
Fordham, John Ogden, John Carman, John Lawrence and James Wood.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In 1647. John Strickland shared in the first division of land. In 1650,
Mr. Strickland of Hempstead, by his deputy, Jonas Wood, his son-in-law,
drew a three hundred pound lot in Southampton.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In 1653. Mr. Strickland, Mr. Washburne and Mr. Gildersleeve were
appointed by the authorities at Fort Amsterdam to administer the law and
justice in the village of Hempstead to the best of their knowledge and
information in accordance with their privileges and the laws of New
Netherland.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1663. Strickland was of Jamaica, he died 1672, a widower. He was in
Dedham, Mass., in 1631. The children of his son THWAITE and wife
Elisabeth, born in Dedham were Elisabeth b. 1647, John b. 1648, Joseph b.
1654, Jonathan b. 1657.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

JOHN STRICKLAND'S FAMILY was from County Westmoreland, England.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
He was an original settler of Charlestown in 1629-30. Made Freeman of Massachusetts in 1631. Became a member of the church at Watertown, afterwards was at Weathersfield and Fairfield, Conn. His son Thwaite settled at Weathersfield.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Son Samuel came to Long Island Of his daughters one, Elisabeth married Captain John Seaman.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Joanna m. Jonas Wood from Halifax.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In 1644. The Charter of Hempstead was granted unto John Strickland, Robert Fordham, John Ogden, John Carman, John Lawrence and James Wood.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In 1647. John Strickland shared in the first division of land. In 1650, Mr. Strickland of Hempstead, by his deputy, Jonas Wood, his son-in-law, drew a three hundred pound lot in Southampton.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In 1653. Mr. Strickland, Mr. Washburne and Mr. Gildersleeve were appointed by the authorities at Fort Amsterdam to administer the law and justice in the village of Hempstead to the best of their knowledge and information in accordance with their privileges and the laws of New Netherland.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1663. Strickland was of Jamaica, he died 1672, a widower. He was in Dedham, Mass., in 1631. The children of his son THWAITE and wife Elisabeth, born in Dedham were Elisabeth b. 1647, John b. 1648, Joseph b.
1654, Jonathan b. 1657.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
STRICKLAND, John Sr. (I22232)
 
439

John Thorne wrote his will on 2 Jun 18 and it was proved 29 Oct 1893. He
mentioned his sister, Joanna, and his brother, Joseph, but did not mention
his wife or children. His wife was deceased, and I find no record of issue
for this union.
14 May 2001 QLE
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
THORNE, John Jr. (I33129)
 
440

John Tredwell's funeral service was conducted by Bishop Seabury (his
wife's cousin) at St. George's Church, Hempstead, Queens (now Nassau) Co.,
NY. He was burried in the churchyard there.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
TREADWELL, John (I38694)
 
441

John Vandewater's "...boyhood was spent on the old homestead farm of his
father Peter, and after his marriage to Phoebe Titus he settled on this
spot and engaged in his chosen occupation of farming. John received the
property from his father, consisting of about 100 acres, which in later
years he sold to his son George, and removed to the nearby town of
Bethpage, where he purchased a farm of some 60 acres, and with his oldest
son Elkanah cultivated the common crops after the old fashioned methods.

He also raised stock and sheep. This property was situated on the old
road from South Oyster Bay to Farmingdale. After his death the property
was sold to outside parties who occupied the premises until the homestead
was destroyed by fire, accidentally set by boys on July 4th.

John Van De Water was the large type of man, tall in stature, and fine
face. He was very social and active, strict in his habits concerning his
home and his church. He was greatly respected by all who knew him. His
wife Phoebe was a most remarkable woman, energetic, capable, and greatly
beloved by all, particularly her children. She and her husband were well
known Friends, both being members of the Meeting at Westbury, and are
interred in the old burial ground there. He married Phoebe Titus, born
I744 died 1838, at Westbury, Long Island, daughter of Peter Titus.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
VAN DE WATER, John (I38591)
 
442

John W. and Deborah H. (Carman) Davis had no issue.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, Deborah H. (I26256)
 
443

John Willets was one of the pioneers of the Upper Township of Cape May,
New Jersey. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
John Willets was a Judge of the Court for many years. In 1743/1744 he
served in the New Jersey Stage Legislature
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The will of John Willets was dated 2 Jan 1775 and proved 11 Aug 1777.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
WILLETS, John Judge (I29370)
 
444

John [3], the seventh son of Charles [2], was alive in 1748 with two
children, Mary Ann [4] and Benjamin [4], but nothing further is known of
father or children. The fact that this Benjamin [4] inherited lands at
Cape Fear, N.C., from his bachelor uncle Benjamin [3] suggests the thought
that the Wilmington, N.C., Motts of to-day may be his descendants.
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, John (I28328)
 
445

John [4], the youngest son of Henry [3], born Apr. 17, 1748, was of Far
Rockaway. He was married twice, first to Martha Sammis, and last to Lucy
Nichols. He was the owner of large real estate and the father of Sammis
[5], David [5], Daniel [5], William [5], Richard [5], Calvin H. [5], John
[5], and Benjamin Birdsall [5]. Most of the Motts of Far Rockaway are of
this stock. 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. 3
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The information above does not determine which spouse bore which of the
children. I have shown them all with the union with Martha Sammis as none
of the children were given either the name of Lucy or Nichols.
10 Apr 2001 QLE
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
MOTT, John Sr. (I29943)
 
446

John [5], second son of Samuel [4], born 1745, died 1824, married Abigail
Hall. Their son John [6], born 1783, married Hannah Townsend and died
1848, leaving many descendants.
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, John Sr. (I29922)
 
447

John [6], born 1783, married Hannah Townsend and died 1848, leaving many
descendants.
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, John Jr. (I28535)
 
448

John [6], born 1783, married Hannah Townsend and died 1848, leaving many
descendants.
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, John Jr. (I29923)
 
449

Jonathan Carman enlisted in the Union Army. He served in the Fifty-second
Regiment, Company G, of the Ohio Infantry Volunteers. Near Atlanta.
Georgia during Sherman's "march to the sea" Jonathan was wounded during a
skirmish. He was sent to the Union Army Hospital at Chattanooga where he
succumbed to his wounds.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, Jonathan (I36000)
 
450

Jonathan G. and Martha (Carman) Graham had no issue.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
CARMAN, Martha (I26725)
 

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