


Halstead/Halsted Family History
The Genealogy of those with the Halstead, Halsted and related surnames or given names
Notes
Matches 451 to 500 of 108,535
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451 | Jonathan Haven was of Shelter Island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | HAVENS, Jonathan (Haven) Sr. (I35666)
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452 | Jonathan Lewis with his wife and step-children removed to Huntington, Suffolk Co., NY. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | LEWIS, Jonathan - 2nd husband - (I25040)
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453 | Jordan and Amy (Underhill) Frost lived at Rensselaerville, New York. His vocation was that of a tailor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Memorial of Rensselaerville Monthly Meeting, concerning our Friend, Jordan Frost, deceased. Being sensibly affected with the loss we have sustained, in the removal from works to rewards of this our beloved friend, we feel our minds engaged to give forth the following testimony concerning him: He was born at Oyster Bay, on Long Island, in the 2nd month, 1754. Although our information respecting his early life is imperfect, yet it appears that he was of a sober and sedate turn of mind from his childhood. By yielding to religious impressions he felt himself drawn to join in memberships with Friends, about the twentieth year of his age; according to the testimony of those who knew him, he was at this early period engaged for the promotion of truth and righteousness in the earth, being an example of simplicity and uprightness. He very early evinced a religious concern in relation to the use of ardent spirits, and was zealously engaged, both by example and precept, to discourage the vending and consuming of this article. About the twenty-seventh year of his age he married Amy, daughter of Jacob and Amy Underhill, and removed within the compass of Nine Partners Monthly Meeting. He was soon after appointed an Elder. This important trust he continued to exercise, we believe, with faithfulness for more than fifty years, until his death. He had a clear view of the importance and excellency of a sound and living ministry. His concern for the welfare of society, as well as for the growth of individuals in true religious experience, joined to the natural tenderness of his feelings, made him a sympathizing fellow-helper to those in the ministry, and qualified him to speak a word in due season, by way of counsel or encouragement, to the exercised traveller. In the year 1799, he experienced a close trial in the death of his wife, which he bore with Christian fortitude and resignation. In 1803 he removed within the limits of this Monthly Meeting, then a branch of Coeymans. Here a field of labor was opened for his usefulness. He stood many years in the capacity of overseer, for which service he was eminently qualified. To his own Monthly and Quarterly Meeting he was a diligent. servant, often riding many miles to attend to appointments, for which he was particularly qualified. He was remarkable for his diligence in attending religious meetings, believing it to be a solemn duty, and his deportment in them was solid and weighty. He loved peace, and often usefully exerted himself promoting it; and, being much beloved, he was eminently useful in settling difficulties, not only in his own Society, but among his neighbors. He was a true sympathizer with the afflicted, often visiting the members of his own Meeting in their respective families, administering counsel and encouragement suited to their several circumstances. He having himself derived much consolation from the perusal of the Scriptures of Truth, he was concerned to encourage others in the reading of them. He was not officious in religious matters, but, when he expressed a sentiment, possessing uncommon diffidence, great weight was attached to it. The degraded condition of the African race was early an object of his concern--his sympathetic mind was engaged to promote their freedom; and it is believed to have been much through this early exercise that the slaves in his father's house were manumitted. He continued to maintain this important testimony through life, having for many years abstained from the use of the produce of slave labor, often expressing a desire that no act of his might contribute to the calamity, that he believed would overtake the nation if the practice of slavery were persisted in. In relation to his own Society he was heard to remark, a short time previous to his death, that he did not see that the Society could advance without greater faithfulness in this important particular. The last Meeting he attended was on a First-day, a little more than a week before his death, in which he was observed to be much affected with tenderness. His last illness was short, through which his mind was calm and evidently centered in God. Although his mental faculties were somewhat impaired, he was sensible his end was approaching, and expressed his resignation in either life or death. Thus, without apparent pain, he gradually declined, and departed this life on the twenty-ninth of fourth month, 1835, in the eighty-second year of his age, and we doubt not is now permitted to enjoy the reward of a well-spent life. Anna Frost Clapp, born 1825, says: "Uncle Jordan lived at Rensselaerville, N. Y. I remember his coming to see grandfather. He was a small man and wore drab 'small clothes,' or breeches." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | FROST, Jordan (I34301)
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454 | Joseph Bedell was a farmer and a fuller (a person who fulls or compacts cloth). He had a fulling mill on the Rockaway River. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BEDELL, Joseph (I38557)
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455 | Joseph Brown was of Southold. He may have been the son of Walter Brown or of Joseph Brown who died 11 Dec 1739. He had a brother named Daniel. His will mentions his wife, Dorothy; his brother, Daniel; five sons; his married daughters, but only one of his unmarried daughters, Dorothy. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BROWN, Joseph (I35802)
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456 | Joseph Brush Sr., was a cordwainer in Huntington. As a younger man he apparently followed the sea. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The will of Joseph Brush, Sr., was dated 19 Aug 1756 and proved 13 Oct 1756. He mentioned his wife, Rebecca; sons, Edward and Joseph; daughters, Esther, Jemima and Elizabeth. Executors: John Whitman and Nehemiah Whitman, and Nehemiah's wife, Elizabeth. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, Joseph Sr. (I35523)
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457 | Joseph Carman, Jr., was a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Joseph Jr. (I25904)
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458 | Joseph Carman, Sr., served in the 5th Militia Brigade of Dutchess County during the Revolution. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Joseph Sr. (I25794)
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459 | Joseph Clowes was of Hempstead, Queens (now Nassau) Co., NY. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CLOWES, Joseph (I23518)
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460 | Joseph Cole imported the first lion ever seen in this country. His home was in Carmel, N. Y., but about 1830 he and his family moved to Beaver Dams, N. Y. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | COLES, Joseph (Cole) Jr. (I34983)
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461 | Joseph Frost was a witness to the will of James Cock of Oyster Bay, dated June 11, 1746. In 1732, Joseph was left land by his father "to ye south." In 1745, Joseph bought land of Penn Townsend, 120 acres on the north side and 26 acres on the south side of the road west of the Meeting House. In 1767, Joseph sells to Daniel Cock and Phiany Cock, Daniel's sister, 116 3-4 acres, part of the aforesaid. The home of Joseph was one-half mile west of the Matinecock Meeting House, and there may be seen to-day a "print" of the old cellar. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ EXTRACTS FROM THE WILL OF JOSEPH FROST. "In the name of God, Amen, Oct. 15, 1773. I, Joseph Frost, of the Manor of Cortlandt, in Westchester County." "My south farm known by the name of the Boucher (or Bancker) farm to be sold, and debts paid with the money." I leave to my son Wright Frost, the west end of my dwelling house, with the cellar, and six acres of meadow north of the house. I leave to my daughter Elizabeth 30 pounds and a cow, and a bed with full furniture." To my daughter Hannah 30 pounds and a cow and a bed. To my daughter Sarah 30 pounds. To my daughter Anne, wife of Benjamin Lewis, 21 pounds. To my son Wright, the oldest yoke of oxen and a horse. I leave to my sons Micha and Jacob, "the east end of my dwelling house, being the new house," and a pair of oxen. My North farm being the remainder of my land, I leave to my three sons Wright, Micha and Jacob. All the rest of my moveable estate to my four sons, Wright, Micha, Caleb and Jacob. I make John Underhill, son of Daniel Underhill of Oyster Bay, and my sons Wright and Jacob, executors. Witnesses, Robert Cock, James Travis (son of James), Joseph Strang. Proved Feb. 10, 1774. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | FROST, Joseph (I8097)
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462 | Joseph Haydock removed from Rahway,NJ to Smithland Ky in 1823. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ RESEARCH NOTE: Note that UNION County was formed from ESSEX County in 1857. Research for Haydocks in Census', etc. will need to be done for Rahway in ESSEX County. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | HAYDOCK, Joseph (I36744)
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463 | Joseph Powell was a carpenter, lived at Bethpage. Huntington Records give an account of a verbal Will made in 1789 after a severe injury caused by the giving way of a ladder upon which Joseph Powell was standing while engaged in building a house; his death followed soon and the will was allowed. [From: Bunker, Mary Powell "Long Island Genealogies" p. 34] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | POWELL, Joseph Jr. (I27713)
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464 | Joseph Prior [5] was of Auburn, N.Y., father of Rev. William Lucas [6] Mott of Modesto, Cal. 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. 7 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | MOTT, Joseph Prior (I28816)
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465 | Joseph Sackett, IV, practiced medicine in Newtown until the outbreak of the American Revolution. He became a Whig and flew to Paramus, New Jersey. He remained in the United States after the war and died in New York. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | SACKETT, Joseph IV, Doctor (I34462)
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466 | Joseph Skinner was a Sea Captain; he followed the sea for over 50 years. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | SKINNER, Joseph Sr., Captain (I28702)
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467 | Joseph Valentine enlisted 26 Oct 1776 Poughkeepsie, Dutchess Co., NY. He was mustered out 26 Nov 1779. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | VALENTINE, Joseph Jr. (I19237)
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468 | Joseph Valentine was mentioned in hisfather's will, Ephraim Valentine of Hempstead, Queens Co., NY, written 11 Apr 1759. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | VALENTINE, Joseph (I36629)
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469 | Joseph [2] (probably the fifth) son of Adam [1] Mott, was of Cow Neck, a vestryman of St. George's parish, and had wife Mariam. His Will was made Mar. 24, 1734-5 and was proved in Feb. following. His children were Mariam [3] married Samuel Cornell, Jane [3] mar. Benj. Seamans, and three sons, Joseph [3], Samuel [3] and Jacob [3] (the last born Aug. 9, 1714 or '15). All had 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. 3 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | MOTT, Joseph Sr. (I24846)
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470 | Joseph [4] married Abigail Thorne and d. 1801, leaving Joseph S. [5], and a posthumous dau. Susan [5], who mar. Isaac S. Allen. 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, Joseph (I28287)
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471 | Josephine Bevier was a stenographer at Kalamazoo, Michigan. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Josephine Bevier was a stenographer at Kalamazoo, Michigan. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BEVIER, Josephine (I34810)
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472 | Joshua and Malinda (Bebee) Carman had no issue. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BEBEE, Malinda (Bebees) (I24184)
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473 | Joshua Barnes, another son in law [of John Jackson], was born in Southampton, April 8, 1683. He was the son of Samuel Barnes who married Patience, daughter of Robert Williams, who was the proprietor of Robert Williams' "Purchase," now Jericho, in Queens County. They were married November 9, 1676. Samuel Barnes was the son of Joshua Barnes, of Southampton, who lived on the homestead now owned by William S. Pelletreau. Joshua Barnes (son of Samuel) sold the homestead to his brother-in-law, Captain Jeckomiah Scott, and went to Queens County. He afterward removed to Westchester, and some of the families of that name are descended from him.--William S. Pelletreau] [from: Heritage Books Inc., New York Abstracts of Wills, 1665-1801 (CD #9), (Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1997), "CD-ROM," 2:326.] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The will of Joshua Barnes was written 30 Sep 1756 and proved 26 Aug 1763. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BARNES, Joshua (I1444)
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474 | Joshua Brush applied on 21 May 1872 for a pension as a veteran of the War of 1812. He served in the Company of Volunteers of Captain Holmes from 15 Sep 1813 to 17 Nov 1813. He also served in Captain Asa Wilkin's Company and was Company Commander in lieu of the Commander for 10 days. He became ill in service and was discharged. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ He resided at Fairfax, Vermont. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, Joshua Captain (I37594)
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475 | Joshua Carman was a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Joshua (I25909)
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476 | Joshua Pell Treadwell died intestate in 1819 and was probably a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | TREADWELL, Joshua Pell (I28697)
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477 | Josiah Brush removed to Bennington, Vermont, before the beginning of the Revolution. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In Apr 1777 he volunteered under Captain Samuel Herrick of Bennington, and marched to Saratoga and Fort Edward to secure Tories. He fought at Bennington under Captain Samuel Robinson, and at Saratoga under Colonel Nathaniel Brush. He served at the fort at Castleton, Vermont in 1779, and later under Captain Joseph Safford, watching over Lake Champlain. He served as a private and as a corporal. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ After the Revolution Josiah and Betsey (Hathaway) Brush removed to Fairfax, Vermont where they lived for 27 years. Then they removed to Swanton, Vermont. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Josiah Brush was an inn keeper for 47 years after the Revolution. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Josiah Brush ordered his five sons to enlist in the War of 1812. They all did. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Hemenway, writing before 1870, stated that at that time the number of descendants of Josiah Brush numbered 371. That is probably glum news for the compiler of this database. If the other Brushes did as well, and if the other Long Island families were as prolific, this is going to be one rather large database. 7 Aug 2001 QLE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, Josiah Sr. (I37478)
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478 | Josiah Brush served in Captain James Taylor's Company of 30 U.S. Infantry during Jul and Aug 1812, and from 6 May 1813 to 24 May 1814. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Josiah and Harriet (Murray) Brush lived at St. Albans, Vermont until 1850. They then removed to Fairfax, Vermont. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, Josiah Jr. (I37611)
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479 | Josiah Cock was a bachelor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | COCK, Josiah (I33163)
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480 | Kate A. Carman was a spinster. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Kate A. (I24179)
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481 | Lee Carman died while young. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Lee (I24567)
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482 | Lemuel Brush removed with his father, Reuben, to Amenia, Dutchess Co., NY, before 1769. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ He signed the Association in June or July of 1775. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Lemuel Brush was a Justice of the Peace for Dutchess County during the Revolution. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, Lemuel (I37462)
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483 | Lieutenant Richard Brown was of Southold, Long Island, New York by 1658. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ He was a Sergeant in 1670, an Ensign at Southold 13 Jun 1685, and a Lieutenant of a Foot Company of Suffolk County Militia on 8 Oct 1686. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BROWN, Lieutenant Richard (Browne) [1] Emigrant Progenitor Sr. (I35571)
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484 | Lieutenant William Brush removed with his father, Reuben, to Dutchess County New York and signed the Association there in June of July of 1775. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ He joined the 2nd Company of Amenia Precinct Militia of Captain Brinton Paine, and was elected Ensign, his commission being issued in October of 1775. He served as Lieutenant in Captain Samuel Robinson's Company of Colonel Samuel Herrick's Vermont Regiment, which was called out on alarm from the North. He also served in Captain Isaac Tichenor's Company of Colonel Eben Wallbridge's Vermont Regiment ordered to Saratoga in August of 1781. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ He was still of Dutchess County in April of 1778, but the Census of 1790 showed that he had removed to Vergennes, Addison Co., VT., where he apparently had lived during the later years of the Revolution. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In 1786 he became an Associate Justice of Addison County. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ He removed to Hopkinton, St. Lawrence Co., NY about 1804. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ At his death newspaper notices referred to him as Colonel William Brush, and an American hero. Hemenway's Gazateer referred to him as Captain Brush. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | BRUSH, William (I37465)
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485 | Lloyd Nitzel [Lillian] Midland, Merrick, NE abt 1897 Nebraska Head Lillian Nitzel Lloyd Midland, Merrick, NE abt 1900 Wife | NITZEL, Raymond (I71303)
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486 | Louis A. Carman enlisted in 1862 in Company A, 24th Iowa Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War. He was wounded at the Battle of Winchester in 1864, and died 14 November of 1864 from his wound. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Louis A. (I26062)
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487 | Lucas Terry was a sea captain. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | TERRY, Lucas Captain (I26945)
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488 | Lyman and Paulina (Frost) Haviland lived at Crum Elbow, Long Island, New York. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | HAVILAND, Lyman Sr. (I34848)
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489 | Marcellite Thorne drowned at the capsizing of the yacht "Mohawk" in N. Y. Harbor, June, 1876 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | THORNE, Marcellite (I33243)
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490 | Margaret A. Carman was a spinster. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Margaret A. (I24175)
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491 | Margaret Carman was a spinster. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Margaret (I36257)
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492 | Margaret Chichester was a spinster. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CHICHESTER, Margaret (I24908)
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493 | Margaret in 1820 belonged to the Friends' Society in New York City. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CUMMINGS, Margaret (I34907)
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494 | Maria Carman was a spinster. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Maria (I25903)
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495 | Maria Drake Carman died as an infant. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Maria Drake (I35944)
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496 | Maria Louisa and Martha Janel were twins providing the database generously provided to me is accurate, but that database usually states instances where siblings are twins. 9 17 01 QLE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Martha Jane (I36197)
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497 | Maria Louisa Carman died while young. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | CARMAN, Maria Louisa (I36193)
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498 | Marrha (sic) Cock was a spinster. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | COCK, Marrha (I33173)
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499 | Married at the home of her Father , Isaac Bartlett, Dover, Lee County, Iow a marriage recorded in (Book 1, Page 69) Burial was in the Canton-Judy cemetery 5 miles north east of Garnett, Ande rson County, Kansas. Matilda Bartlett-Bealer married second to James B. Adams 24 January 1874 | BARTLETT, Matilda (I62486)
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500 | Martha and Mary Jackson were twins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The children of John Jackson, II, and Elizabeth Seaman are an important juncture in the relationships of the Hempstead families. The information is often confusing and contradictory among the various but limited sources available to me. The two databases that are most reliable, but not in agreement are those of Dr. Carolyn M. Seaman and Jim Rubins. I am going to enter this note in each of the children's entries and then point out the variation in data where it occurs. I will also give my reason for my choice as to what the correct information might be. 28 Mar 2001 QLE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | JACKSON, Mary (I22226)
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