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Matches 6,001 to 6,250 of 12,200

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6001 He arrived in Canada as a very young man, about age 15, give or take. His origins in Poland are unknown. He eventually changed his name to “Galt.” Galdzinski, John (I15373)
 
6002 He arrived in New Orleans in 1809 after the evacuation of Cuba, "former dealer in the office of the paymaster of the Cape; liquor dealers; not proprietor."

There are probate documents in 1816 following his death in New Orleans; they mention his wife Catherine LaCoste as tutor to their children at his death. 
Mahé-Desportes, Jean Baptiste (I13634)
 
6003 He arrived in Texas in June, 1878; before that he had been a Prussian officer. His family had apparently been of some note in Prussia.

In Texas he became a Marshal and a lawyer.

In WWI, his only brother was apparently the "Commading General of the Saxon Army Corps of the German Empire," (S 35), which obviously caused a great deal of regret and worry.

[This is perhaps Adolph von Carlowitz, known as a "Saxon officer," who was later a War Minister for Germany?] 
von Carlowitz, Georg Christoph (I483)
 
6004 He arrived in Virginia, to the James River, in the 1620s, and so is one of the earliest immigrant ancestors of the families of the "Anne Arundel gentry." Gater, John (I8956)
 
6005 He arrived with his brother Robert to the Plymouth colony in about 1628-30. According to Barker, he and his brother "set out from Plymouth colony to make homes for themselves, going by boat along the coast until they came to the North River (near Cape Cod) sailing down this, they reached what is now part of Pembroke, Mass. known as Herringbrook.
Here they camped for the winter and the following spring ground was broken and the house built.
John lived in that part of Plymouth which was set off in 1637 as Duxbury. He was a brickmason and agreed to teach Wm. Barden the trade of a bricklayer, as the end of his time giving him (Wm) ‘20 bushels of corn, 2 suits of apparel and an ewe goat's lamb.'
In 1628 he moved to Marshfield, Mass. and bought a ferry at the Jones River, where he covenanted to keep it ‘at two pence a person until a bridge is built.' In 1643 he was a member of the Marshfield Military Co. under Lt. Nathaniel Thomas; in 1648, he had some disagreement with a neighbor about a buildary line. The court requested John Alden and Miles Standish to ‘set at rights such differences as are betwixt them'" (231).

According to Deane, "He was drowned, 1652. [He had purchased the ferry (now [1850] Little's Bridge] of John Brewster, son of Elder Brewster, 1641, and was there drowned]." 
Barker, John Sr. (I10392)
 
6006 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Private (I26)
 
6007 He attended St. Emma's Industrial and Agricultural College in Virginia, and was there in about 1915; for more see here: http://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/items/show/39

He was the only one of his three siblings who stayed in Louisiana; the other three moved to Chicago.

His brother Henry seems to have been buried in St. Roch as well. 
Degrange, George Leon Sr. (I747)
 
6008 He attended St. John's College, Annapolis, and then Dickinson College in Carlisle, PA. This is his Dickinson College Alumni record, where he was the class of 1858:

Marriott, Henry - Born July 12, 1838, at West River, Anne Arundel County, Md; A.B. 1858; studied medicine at the University of Pennsylvania; 1861-65, in Confederate States army; 1866, druggist in Baltimore, Md; 1868, removed to California and practiced medicine in San Francisco; surgeon, Pacific Mail Steamship Line; B.L. Society (Belles Lettres Society). Died October 7, 1879, in San Francisco, California.

Family tradition has it that he lived at Essex Farm in Maryland, with the family of his uncle Dr. Franklin Waters Sr., for at time after the War. In any event many items of his remained there, including a sewing kit, a set of chess pieces he carved, a small book of his lecture notes from a series of lectures on medicine or science, and about 20 or 30 books, especially of Greek and Latin classics, with ex librii in them. 
Marriott, Dr. Henry (I3615)
 
6009 He attended Tulane.

He is mentioned in correspondence about two Cooper portraits left in the estate of Helen DeGrange McLellan (Weenie). He may have gotten them after her death, in 1963, or they may have been sold at auction; the documentation is not clear. I would love to know where they are now. 
Cooper, Asahel Walker III (I6350)
 
6010 He bought the "Tauerhollen" and "Holwigshof" Estates; he inherited "Wintzhiem"; and he bought "Eckitten" outside of Memel, which was kept until the 1849 emigration. von Rosenberg, Friedrich Wilhelm (I3186)
 
6011 He brought a certificate from Paslow Monthly Meeting in Cumberland to Maryland. He was a member of the South River Club in 1742. Cowman, Capt. Joseph (I10195)
 
6012 He brought his family to America in 1687.

His will and story are recorded in Harlan. He had 9 children. I record just one line her, via Aaron, because it converged with the Gregg family several generations later. 
Harlan, George (I2151)
 
6013 He built "Cedar Park" in West River. Galloway, Richard Jr. (I8018)
 
6014 He built a large brick house across High street from his brother Hugh's house, which still stands there. McLellan, Stephen (I115)
 
6015 He came from London as an indentured servant in 1675. According to Newman, "Although records show that William Griffith was in Maryland by 1675, he was probably a minor for he remained unmarried until about 1687 and did not receive his first warrant for land until 1694." Griffith, William (I8419)
 
6016 He came into the colonies abt 1678 with several others into Calvert Co., Maryland. He may have been born in Wales, and may have died in Prince George's Co., Maryland, intestate. Williams, Baruch Sr. (I10070)
 
6017 He came to Calvert Co., Maryland; he was there by 1689. Hilleary, Thomas (I10072)
 
6018 He came to Texas when he was very young, in 1821. He joined the Army, and died in Mexico.

According to family history, “The younger brother of the pioneer father, Peter Carl Johann von Rosenberg, named Ernst Christoph Ludwig von Rosenberg, was born at Eckitten Estate in 1800. His parents were divorced when he was three years old. He spent his youth in the service of the Russian army and later was a Prussian artillery lieutenant, but he relinquished his commission and came to America in 1821.
“He landed on the Texas coast about October, 1821. The party was known as Long’s Expedition. They took possession of La Bahia (Goliad) and then were taken prisoners by Mexican troops. They were released upon promising that they would settle peacefully in the country.
“Ernst Christoph joined the Mexican Army and became a lieutenant colonel, but espoused the cause of Iturbide. He may have been shot upon the downfall of Iturbide, because he was never heard from again.” 
von Rosenberg, Ernst Ludwig Christoph (I5449)
 
6019 He came to Virginia before 1643 and later went to Maryland, where in 1661 he bought to estates in St. Mary's Co.

See, I assume: Prall, Richard D., "Eleanor Nuthall of Prince George's County, MD," MGSB 39.4 (Fall 1998) 535-541. 
Nuthall, John (I10067)
 
6020 He captained the famous brig "Boxer" in 1815.

He had 9 children, one of whom was Jacob, Mayor of Portland during the Civil War, who also wrote a brief manuscript on Bryce McLellan in 1870; another was George W. McLellan, who wrote a key 1870 letter to his brother Jacob discussing family history. I have not seen either of these: if anyone has, or knows where to get them, please get in touch and let me know!

His portrait is owned by the Maine Historical Society:
Attribution: John Brewster, Jr., 1766 - 1854
Date of Work: c. 1800
Medium: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 99.5cm x 80.1cm (39 3/16" x 31 9/16"), Accurate
Acquisition Date: 1920
Ref. 722 B

(see http://www.mainememory.net/ for information) 
McLellan, Capt. William Jr. (I1218)
 
6021 He cites sources well! Unfortunately, this site now seems to have disappeared. Source (S580)
 
6022 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Private (I102)
 
6023 He did not marry.

"John Waters" appears in Dr. Samuel Waters register, fol. 20, for 1803-05. 
Waters, John (I359)
 
6024 He died a bachelor.

That this is him in Chestnut Grove Cemetery is confirmed because the stone gives "42y, 6m, 18d," which gives the date of his birth known from other sources.

There are two infant Lansdales also buried at Chestnut ridge: an "infant daughter," d. 5 Oct. 1858; and John A. Lansdale, b. 16 Apr. 1860, d. 3 Sept. 1860. These may be the children of one of his siblings. 
Lansdale, Isaac (I3859)
 
6025 He died aged 66. Love, Alexander (I13220)
 
6026 He died as an infant. Luce, Cornelius (I1670)
 
6027 He died at age 17, by drowning in the Mississippi River. Bowie, David (I8932)
 
6028 He died at age 65. Gilbert, Abner (I10011)
 
6029 He died at the home of his brother Allen Dorsey. Dorsey, Isaac (I324)
 
6030 He died before his parents, according to their obituaries. Weysham, Richard Joseph (I6466)
 
6031 He died by drowning. Thormin, Douglas Anthony (I14108)
 
6032 He died during the 1867 yellow fever outbreak in Texas and Louisiana. Griffin, Brig. Gen. Charles (I10333)
 
6033 He died during the first winter. Tilley, John (I13566)
 
6034 He died for sure before 1915, according to his daughter Louise's obit, and probably before 1900 when his children were living with his grandmother.

On his marriage record he is described as a stage-coach driver, the same profession as Thomas, according to Thomas' 1935 obituary. 
Tyler, Preston "Press" (I6086)
 
6035 He died in a farm accident; see the appended obituary. Riggs, Robert Darrington (I4961)
 
6036 He died in Cuba, en route to Texas. Umland, Erik Christian (I4194)
 
6037 He died in Phips' Canada Expedition, according to Deane. He and his wife Mary Barstow had 9 children, of whom Amos was the youngest. Sylvester, Capt. Joseph (I10474)
 
6038 He died in Stockholm after 40 years of government service. Springer, Carl Christopher (I10976)
 
6039 He died in the 1867 yellow fever epidemic. Griffin, Brig. Gen. Charles (I10333)
 
6040 He died in the 1918 flu epidemic. Duckett, Allen Bowie (I15738)
 
6041 He died in the airport of a heart attack. Degrange, Prof. Elmore Joseph (I11319)
 
6042 He died less than three months after his wedding. Dorsey, Hammond Pendleton (I12305)
 
6043 He died of Bright's disease. Lansdale, Thomas Franklin (I32)
 
6044 He died of Leukemia. Hadden, Brady Fayssoux (I2165)
 
6045 He died of pneumonia just after turning 42; he was much missed by his children. There is also an un-named daughter with this family in the 1900 census, born abt. 1899 (aged "8/12," eight months, at the census taken on June 14th). Apparently she did not live. von Rosenberg, William Carl (I554)
 
6046 He died of smallpox after 11 days of illness. Schmidt, Samuel Ludwig Friedrich (I12987)
 
6047 He died of tuberculosis. Iglehart, Thomas Sellman Jr. (I6561)
 
6048 He died of typhoid fever. Gulick, Henry Hamilton (I7374)
 
6049 he died of typoid fever according to the census mortality schedule. Mannen, John (I4242)
 
6050 He died of yellow fever in New Orleans, but his body was exhumed and returned to Thomaston 11 years later. Howard, Samuel (I3578)
 
6051 He died of yellow fever in New Orleans. Healy, T. Halsey Jr. (I1319)
 
6052 He died of yellow fever. Stockett, William Shippen (I6712)
 
6053 He died on his plantation near Nottingham in PG County. Ghiselin, Dr. Reverdy (I4058)
 
6054 He died on the boat during the trip to New England from Ireland. Craige (I4732)
 
6055 He died on the way to London, or in London.

Much on the Galloway and Chew families of West River can be found in J. Reaney Kelly, Quakers in the Founding of Anne Arundel County, Maryland (Baltimore: Maryland Historical Society, 1963). 
Galloway, Samuel Sr. (I7948)
 
6056 He died quite young, only a few years after being married.

Addison papers are at the MHS. There is apparently a chart of Addison family records in Maryland Historical Magazine 14. 
Addison, Thomas (I4249)
 
6057 He died without being baptized, so presumable on the same day as birth. Pitard, Anonime (I8237)
 
6058 He died young. Couret, Leonce Thomas (I3335)
 
6059 He died young. He is the only of the children of Stephen and Grace who is not mentioned in Stephen's will. Hall, Josiah (I15854)
 
6060 He died “after a brief illness, of pneumonia.” Duckett, Allen Bowie (I15738)
 
6061 He died, apparently, in a plane crash scouting out a silver mine. Degrange, Edward James Jr. (I13036)
 
6062 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4728)
 
6063 He does not appear in the New Orleans birth indices.

He's called Robert Mayorga in the 1930 census, but this pretty clearly seems to be him, living with his mother Mary and his father Joseph Mayorga's three children Robert, Lolita, and William, from Guatemala.

He arrived to the U.S. in a 27 July 1931 immigration record. He is 21, traveling with Carlota Mayorga (18) and Lolita Mayorga (11) from Puerto Barrios, Guatemala, to New Orleans. He is described as “U.S. Citizen traveling with stepsisters.”

I can't find him on the 1940 census. He may have been living abroad with his family; his sister Leonarda seems to have been.

His mother is called "Mrs. J.D. Mayorga" when he is married to Shelby Faget in 1942. Leonarda Mayorga in her obituary is called his sister. She would technically be the half-sister. Leonarda is also named Mary Byrne Mayorga's daughter in her obituary. See notes under entry here for some confusion about dates. 
Pitard, Robert John (I14255)
 
6064 He does not appear in the NOLA birth indices, though his brother does.

Note this death record for someone else of about the same birth year:

Notice, Times-Picayune, 14 Feb. 1936, p4, under "Records of the Day-Deaths":

Joseph Druilhet, 63, Charity hospital.

The NOLA death record for this person is vol. 201, page 555; died Feb. 1936, aged 63. I'm not sure who this would be. 
Druilhet, Joseph Montfort Jr. (I8245)
 
6065 He does NOT appear in The Thomas Book; he appears only that I've seen in S611, the colonial dames application. According to this, he lived in Elk Ridge, Maryland. Murray, Francis Key (I13001)
 
6066 He does not appear on the 1900 census with his wife and children. Donn, George William Jr. (I11421)
 
6067 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4755)
 
6068 He does not appear with her on the 1860 census. Keene, Capt. Samuel (I2083)
 
6069 he does not appear with his family in the 1920 census Howell, Jay C. (I5547)
 
6070 He does not appear with his family on any census after 1850, and there are no children born to his wife after that date (Maskell is the last), so I assume that he had died by then. His children were born in Virginia, so the family must have lived there for a while. Ewing, Maskell Cochran III (I8551)
 
6071 He drowned as a child. Taormina, Samuel (I14107)
 
6072 He drowned at his ferry over the Jones River. Barker, John Sr. (I10392)
 
6073 He drowned while crossing the Potomac river Mason, George III (I2181)
 
6074 He edited vol. II of the von Rosenberg Family Record (designated S109).

He was close to his first cousin Alma Julie, who compiled the first von Rosenberg family record. He lived in D.C. for much of his life, and would visit family. He was apparently a charming man. 
von Rosenberg, Charles Wilburn (I611)
 
6075 He emigrated from Ireland in 1715, renoucing his Catholicism for the Church of England on arriving in Maryland.

He was a distant cousin of Charles Carroll of Carrollton (1737-1832). 
Carroll, Dr. Charles (I9754)
 
6076 He fought in WWI. Welch, Benjamin Allein Jr. (I11070)
 
6077 He gave a plot of his land in Manassas over to be a "Manassas Cemetery" in which he, his wife, and other Hixsons are buried. He built, in 1865, the "White House" on Main Street in Manassas. (There is also apparently a "white house" in Hixson, Tennessee, which must be related somehow?) Hixson, George Washington (I2906)
 
6078 He gave his body to science; a memorial is placed at St. David's with his wife Helen. Pitard, Gustave Jean Baptiste (I5)
 
6079 He graduated from the U of Maryland in 1829 in Medicine. Another biography, though, is this correct?: "M.D. University of Maryland, 1826; M.D. University of Pennsylvania, 1838. Of Prince George Co., Md."

Both his mother's and his wife's names were Mary Waters. He was also the cousin (2nd cousin, once removed) of his wife Rachel--which means they have a common great-grandfather.

From the 1830s, when Samuel Franklin drowned and left Essex to his four sisters, until 1851, Essex was owned partly by the sisters. During the 1850s, when Dr. Franklin Waters moved from Anne Arundel County, he gradually bought out the other heirs until he and Rachel Waters owned the entire farm. He is the man who built the original house at Essex in 1852. He built the core of the present house during 1852-53, and he moved there in 1853 from Prince George's County, near Holy Trinity Church.

Living in his household in 1850 along with his wife and children are two of his wife's sisters and Mary Louisa Franklin, a cousin.

The censuses from 1850 to 1900 show that Mary, Samuel, Olivia, Franklin, and Alice all stayed living together, all unmarried. In 1900, Samuel becomes the HOH, as the oldest male sibling. Mary dies before the 1910 census; then they are four. From then until 1934, when Aunt Jig the last daughter of Rachel Franklin died and passed it on to John Lansdale, it was owned by Waters.

In 1870, there is a "Richard Waters" living with him, aged 61 (b. about 1809), "no occupation"; I don't know who this is. He is also there in 1880 as "Richard W" [that is, Richard W. Waters?], aged 71.

His children are recorded in his family Bible. There is one name recorded there I cannot place: "Richard H. Waters died September 28th 189[?2], aged 85," which would make him born abt. 1808. 
Waters, Dr. Franklin Sr. (I3415)
 
6080 He had 1 child with his first wife, and 5 with his second. Worthington, Thomas (I9095)
 
6081 He had 10 children between his two wives. Hammond, Col. William (I11902)
 
6082 He had 10 children with his first wife Jane, and 10 more with his second wife Elizabeth! Gaither, John (I8653)
 
6083 He had 10 children with his wife Violinda. Lynn, James Fristoe (I7238)
 
6084 He had 10 children. Waters, Aquilla (I5365)
 
6085 He had 10 children. Waters, Thomas (I8789)
 
6086 He had 11 children, and two wives, but it is not known by which wife he had what children (see Newman 2.421-22). Waters, Ignatius (I5309)
 
6087 He had 17 children between his two wives. Webb, Ezekiel (I11382)
 
6088 He had 2 children by Anne Whyte, and one that Newman records with his second wife, Asnath Graham of Calvert Co. Harwood, Capt. Thomas III (I4219)
 
6089 He had 2 wives; his first is unknown. He was a clothier. His will states that he would want to be buried "in the churchyard of the parish of Tyverton aforesaid as close as possible to the place where his first wife was buried."

He mentiones a daughter "Alice Skinner" in his will, Alice Cornish, the wife of Aquilla. 
Cornish, James (I8970)
 
6090 He had 3 children by his first wife, and 4 by his second. Waters, Edward Edwards (I5364)
 
6091 He had 3 children by his first wife, and 5 by his second (S205, p. 206). Gassaway, Thomas (I9256)
 
6092 He had 4 children with his wife Hannah. He was a devout Quaker. According to Newman, "During the Revolution he refused to bear arms against Great Britain, not as a Tory, but as a conscientious objector." He was a member of Indian Springs meeting, and later Baltimore.

The certificate of marriage read "Edward Waters (Watters), son of Samuel, of Prince George's County, m. 25th day of 12th month called December, 1788, to Hannah Moore Snowden, dau. of William Hopkins of Harford County, at Indian Sring." 
Waters, Edward (I3767)
 
6093 He had 4 children, by an unknown wife (Newman 2.493). Waters, George Washington (I8456)
 
6094 He had 5 children with his first wife, and one with his second. Cromwell, William (I12097)
 
6095 He had 5 children with his first wife. Yarnall, Amos (I11016)
 
6096 He had 5 children, by an unknown wife.

As described in Barnes, "Richard Robyns of ‘Long Bugby' d. leaving a will dated 20 Oct. 1582, proved 4 Nov. 1584." 
Robins, Richard (I8985)
 
6097 He had 6 children by Mary Cheyney, and 5 with Elizabeth Gaither. Iiams, Richard (I5395)
 
6098 He had 6 children with Ariana Worthington, as her second husband (Newman 1.338). Iiams, John (I6739)
 
6099 He had 6 children with his first wife, Sarah Griffith, and 2 with his second, Susanna Magruder. Warfield, Azel (I8764)
 
6100 He had 6 children with his first wife, Sarah, and none with his second. Pratt, Joseph (I2539)
 
6101 He had 8 children all by his first wife. He is included on the Quaker Ancestors page.

This is Cope's biography of him:

"CALVIN COOPER was a taxable in Birmingham in 1732, and in 1734 was one of the overseers of the poor for that township. About this time he purchased a tract of land on the Octarara, at or near the site of Christiana, where he erected a mill. He was a fuller, or "cloth-worker," as given in old records. He died 9, 15, 1779.
His first wife was Phebe, daughter of Samuel Hall, of Kennet, to whom he was married 4, 29, 1732; she died 6, 18, 1757, and a year later he married a widow, Elizabeth Jefferis.
His children were as follows: 1. William, b. 9, 5, 1734; d. 2, 20, 1821; m. 12, 5, 1759, Elizabeth Pyle, daughter of John and Rachel, of Kennet. They settled in West Bradford, at a fulling-mill late belonging to Daniel Temple. 2. George, b. 2, 28, 1737; d. 1, 14, 1820; m. 10, 15, 1761, Susanna, daughter of Thomas and Ann Truman, of Sadsbury; second marriage, 5, 24, 1787, to Hannah Dixson. 3. John, b. 12, 9, 1739; d. 2, 15, 1811; m. 10, 24, 1764, Rebecca Moore, daughter of James and Ann, of Sadsbury. 4. Hannah, b. 10, 3, 1742, probably died young. 5. Mary, b. 12, 17, 1744; d. 9, 18, 1806; m. 3, 24, 1773, to John Dixson, and 11, 28, 1781, to James Phillips, of Hockessin. 6. James, b. 2, 14, 1747; m. 11, 8, 1775, Rachel, daughter of Andrew and Rebecca Moore, of Sadsbury. He married a second wife, Catharine Powell, and removed to Northumberland County, Pa. 7. Phebe, b. 6, 6, 1750, probably died young. 8. Sarah, b. 12, 12, 1753; m. to Thomas Dixson.
Calvin's Cooper's residence was in Lancaster County, of which he was a commissioner, justice of the Common Pleas, and several times a representative in Assembly. His descendants are very numerous in this and adjoining counties. There were Coopers in Oxford and other townships, who are not supposed to be related to the above." 
Cooper, Calvin (I4780)
 
6102 He had 8 children in all, with Martha his second wife, not with Margaret. William, the Revolutionary War veteran, seems to have been the youngest. Dye, Joseph (I9429)
 
6103 He had 8 children, described in Needles, with family. Haddaway, Thomas L. (I12084)
 
6104 He had 8 children, of whom Samuel was the youngest. One son, James Houston (b. 1756), died in the Revolution at Paoli. Houston, John (I6049)
 
6105 He had 8 children. He immgrated from Gloucester, England to Philadelphia in 1700.

Was he perhaps related to the Quaker Anne Webb who married Samuel Galloway, in Maryland?

According to Cope and Fulthey,

"WEBB, RICHARD, a settler in Birmingham, 1704, came from the city of Gloucester to Philadelphia in 1700. His wife, Elizabeth, a noted minister, had visited this country in 1697–98, and in 1710 paid a religious visit to her native land. (See also Birmingham Meeting, p. 234.)
Richard Webb died in 1719. He had been a justice of the peace and an active citizen. His children were William, m. 1, 22, 1709–10, to Rebecca Harlan, and died about 1753; Mary, m. 1713, to George Brown, afterwards to John Willis, Jr., and Thomas Smith, died 1743; Esther, m. 1718 to Jacob Bennett; Sarah, m. to William Dilworth; Daniel, m. 9, 8, 1727, to Mary Harlan; Benjamin, m. 1725, to Rachel Nicklin; Elizabeth, d. young; James, b. 11, 19, 1708–9, d. 10, 26, 1785, married three times, and removed to Lancaster County.
William Webb settled in Kennet, and was an active man in public affairs, a justice of the peace, and for many years a member of Assembly. His son William, born 11, 13, 1710, married 9, 23, 1732, Elizabeth, daughter of Daniel Hoopes, of Westtown, and had children,— William, b. 9, 26, 1736, d. 6, 7, 1773, m. Sarah Smith; Stephen, b. 12, 23, 1738, d. 9, 8, 1787, m. Hannah Harlan, 9, 17, 1766; Rebecca, b. 5, 25, 1741, d. 7, 22, 1775, m. Benjamin Taylor; Ezekiel, b. 6th mo., 1747, d. 5, 26, 1828, m. Cordelia Jones and Elizabeth Hollingsworth; Jane, m. to William White, Jr.
With Richard Webb came his sisters Mary and Rachel, unmarried, who lived among their relatives here. John Webb produced a certificate to Philadelphia Monthly Meeting, 12, 28, 1700, from Gloucester Quarterly Meeting, held 6, 27, 1700, as did also Richard Webb, but we know nothing further of him. John Lea, wool-comber (baptized July 12, 1674), late of the parish of Christian Malford, in the county of Wilts, son of John and Joane Lea, of the same place, was married, 12, 1, 1697, at Gloucester Meeting, to Hannah Webb, of the latter place, widow of Joseph Webb. These also came over at the same time as Richard and John Webb. The children of Joseph and Hannah Webb were Hannah, b. 3, 31, 1687, m. Nathaniel Allen; Mary, b. 9, 26, 1688, m. Edward Pilkington; Ann, b. 8, 12, 1691; Sarah, b. 3, 21, 1693, buried in Philadelphia, 5, 2, 1714; Joseph, who died before 1735, leaving children,— Hannah, Joseph, and Sarah." 
Webb, Richard (I11363)
 
6106 He had 8 chlidren with his wife Rachel. Warfield, John (I10264)
 
6107 He had 9 children in all. Pitre, Jean (I2434)
 
6108 He had 9 children with his first Wife, Honour, and none with his second Mary Hyland. Stetson, Cornet Robert (I10503)
 
6109 He had 9 children, according to Jordan (S207, p. 19). Plummer, Philemon Sr. (I5816)
 
6110 He had 9 children. Plummer, John (I5823)
 
6111 He had 9 children. Mercer, John Francis Jr. (I12421)
 
6112 He had a lumber yard in Bellville. Where he might be on the 1860 and 1870 censuses is a mystery. His father was only 19 when he was born. By 1860 he would have been 9 years old. A biography appears in the Historical Review of Southeast Texas.

I cannot find him, or his mother, on the 1860 or 1870 censuses. 
Tomlinson, Edgar Austere (I22)
 
6113 He had a number of children, by his first, second, and fourth wives. Osgood, Christopher (I4665)
 
6114 He had a plantation on the Severn River. Hammond, Col. Charles (I5973)
 
6115 He had a son named Justinian who, like his uncle, also died in 1699. Tennison, John (I12314)
 
6116 He had aboiut a dozen children with her husband Dr. Arthur Pue. Dorsey, Sarah Sally (I11995)
 
6117 He had at least four children with Sarah Maccubin. Reynolds, Thomas (I8618)
 
6118 He had been transported to Maryland by William Burgess in 1650, where he had begun as an indentured servant and then set out on his own, and prospered well. He became and convinced Quaker in Maryland. Samuel Galloway, among others, was an executor of his will.

Names of his children are from his will, in the order that he names them.

He was married twice. His first wife is unknown. His second was Isabel Parsons, whom he must have married after 1683 when her father, Thomas Parsons, mentions here as "Isabel Parsons" in his will. Later, Anthony Holland in his will (made 12 Feb. 1702) mentions his "dec'd wife Isabell," so she must have died by then.

Because it's not clear when she married Anthony, or whose children might be her's, I've only included her as this note. 
Holland, Anthony (I8384)
 
6119 He had died by the time his first wife Sophia's successio was opened on that date. Tomlinson, Jesse (I17145)
 
6120 He had for a while a store in Germantown, Kentucky, but by 1850 he was in Cincinnati. There with his wife Julia in 1850 he is living with 6 children, the oldest of which is Damaris, aged 21, clearly a child of his first wife. Gregg, John Matkin (I2082)
 
6121 He had four children by his first wife, and two by his second. His will was probated by John Marriott, John Druce, and John Marriott Jr. Warfield, Richard (I2628)
 
6122 He had immigrated by 1755 as an indentured servant, and worked his way up to be an architect and builder in Virginia and Maryland. He worked on, for instance, the Hammond-Harwood house in Annapolis. He even had his portrait painted by Charles Willson Peale. Buckland, William (I13423)
 
6123 He had no children by either of his first two wives (who were sisters); by his third he had 12, include a pair of twins. McLellan, Samuel (I3251)
 
6124 He had no children by his first marriage. Moore, William (I13155)
 
6125 He had no children, but a lawsuit filed by heirs of his wife about his holdings in Cuba dragged on for over 100 years. Laporte, Pierre (I15292)
 
6126 He had no children. Giles, John (I11890)
 
6127 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Private (I2159)
 
6128 He had some kind of mental disability; in 1900 he is on the census in Pennsylvania at the Pennsylvania Training School for Feeble Minded Children. This was later re-named the Elwyn school. Pitard, Arthur Jr. (I184)
 
6129 He had the unfortunate distinction of contracting leprosy while he was in the army. He was badly mistreated in the army when he was mis-diagnosed for a time in 1919-1920. A number of newspaper articles in 1920 and 1921 describe his journey. He was transferred to washington D.C. for treatement, but they would not keep or treat him, so he seems to have protested his treatement, taking it to the surgeon general. He was shipped back to Louisiana, where he died a number of years later. Centlivre, Willard (I15909)
 
6130 He had three chiidren by his first wife Hannah, 1 by his second wife Anne, and 5 by his third wife Margarey. Howard, Joseph (I8645)
 
6131 He had three children with Ann (unknown). Plummer, Abiezer (I5821)
 
6132 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I12349)
 
6133 He had two children by his third wife. Dorsey, Joshua W. (I8675)
 
6134 he had two children with his first wife, and five with his second. Dorsey, Ely (I12008)
 
6135 He had two children, according to Frazee (S22). Hamilton, Theodore Samuel (I2093)
 
6136 He had two other wives before Ida. He was a Royal Russian Lieutenant and pawnbroker in Gilsen. von Rosenberg, Gustav Gotthard Hieronymus (I5446)
 
6137 He had two wives, but by which wife which of his 7 children were born is not known in Welsh. Welsh, Rev. Henry (I11530)
 
6138 He had two wives; Hannah was his first.

Note: there is also a William Tureman who m. Elizabeth Dimmitt in Kentucky in 1839. She was apparently originally named “Remey,” and was first married to a James Dimmitt. This might be that James Dimmitt. 
Dimmitt, James (I12679)
 
6139 He has 8 children on the 1850 census. Hodges, Charles (I666)
 
6140 He has a number of descendants in Baltimore/Harford Co. described by Barnes. Gilbert, Garvis (I11154)
 
6141 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I195)
 
6142 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I5015)
 
6143 He has the same name as the son of the famous Daniel Boone? Boone, Daniel Morgan (I3293)
 
6144 He has three children on the 1920 census. Fogarty, Thomas Francis (I15133)
 
6145 He he was from "Ivy Neck," and later (Nov, 1877) purchased "Tulip Hill," apparently for $100.00. Murray, Henry Maynadier (I7978)
 
6146 He immigrated by 1671. Stephenson, Edward (I10170)
 
6147 He immigrated from County Antrim, in Ireland, in 1723. Passmore includes narratives written by him about his family.

He is included on the Quaker Ancestors page. 
Moore, James (I4389)
 
6148 He immigrated from County Antrim, Ireland in about 1730, not far from the time that the McLellans crossed the Atlantic.

His wife's maiden name was "Huston." 
Elder, Samuel (I6158)
 
6149 He immigrated in 1682 on the "Bristol Factor." He was received in Philadelphia Monthly Meeting with a certificate from Ross Monthly Meeting in Herefordshire. He was active in Abington Meeting, Chester Co., for many years. I've seen that he died in Bucks Co.--perhaps boundaries were changed at some point?

He is included on the Quaker Ancestors page. 
Bolton, Everard (I10016)
 
6150 He immigrated with one brother. He was a Justice for the Peace in Middlesex Co., NJ.

This couple had 13 children, 5 boys and 8 girls.

His father may be Robert Hutchinson, a Scots-Irish immigrant who landed in 1685.

Richard Hutchinson, the pre-eminent researcher for this family, found and recorded the gravesite for Richard and Ann Hutchinson. I've included here excerpts from his narrative about the location of the gravesite; I'd refer the reader to his site for the full narrative.

"The following story appeared in the Village Record, of Hightstown, New Jersey, dated 20 Nov 1857:

"Mr. Editor: On the farm now owned by Isaac Goldy, near Milford, about 2 1/2 miles from Hightstown, there is an ancient burial ground, wherein several of the old owners of the soil thereabout found the last resting place of their earthly remains. From a tombstone in that place I copy the following, verbatim et literatu: "Sacred to the Memory of Ann Hutchinson, Relict of Wm Hutchinson Esqr. departed this Life Jany. 4th 1801. Aged 101 years 9 Months and seven days. She was mother of 13 children, and Grand Mother and great grand mother, & great great Grand Mother of 375 Persons.

"By applying the rule of compound subtraction, or more properly subtraction of denominate numbers, and making allowance for the difference between Old and New Style, we perceive that she was born on the 17th day of March 1699, and consequently lived in three different centuries, i.e. she was born on the 17th, lived through the whole 18th, and died in the 19th century. A very lengthy article might be written upon the times, the scenes, and changes through which she passed, and which she witnessed; but those conversant with history can fill up the great space of her life with general incidents to suit themselves. I will only mention a few facts in connection with her history, and that of her family. She was the wife of Wm. Hutchinson, Esq, a Justice of the Peace under the crown and government of England. This William Hutchinson took up from the government all the land bounded easterly by or near the Earl of Perth's Patent, (at the corner of the farm now owned by Mr. Wesley Sill,) and bounded northerly by Rocky Brook, and extending westerly to at or about the farm now owned by Thomas Mount, (son of Hiram Mount, dec'd); and extending southerly also to the Ely tract, (a tract of 1500 acres taken up by John Ely, my great grandfather,) at or about the property now owned by Abijah J. Chamberlin. You will perceive then, Mr. Editor, that your office, and all of Hightstown south of Rocky Brook, stands on the tract of this old lady's husband. [ . . . ] J.J.E. [Joseph J. Ely]"

Richard Hutchinson then adds another letter:

"In the Village Record on the following week of the 27th Nov 1857, a response to the above article was made by a great-grandson, Daniel P. Hutchinson, of William & Ann:

"Mr. editor - Having noticed an article in your paper of the 20th inst., relative to the history of William and Ann Hutchinson, their burial place, and descendants, and thinking it may be interesting to some of your readers who may have lost the knowledge of their ancestors, I ask your indulgence while I speak of some matters connected with these things.

"William Hutchinson and one of his brothers came from England to this county early in the 18th century. The maiden name of his wife Ann, was Simpson. Their family of children, thirteen in number, as is recorded on Ann Hutchinson's tombstone, consisted of five boys and eight girls. From these branches have sprung numerous families, bearing the name of Tindall in the neighborhood of Hamilton Square; English and Laird in Englishtown; Ely, Wilson, Moore, Taylor, and others, of this vicinity; Kannan [Kinnan], Bennett and others, of New Brunswick. The marriages into families of these names took place about one century ago. With later generations come in the names of Cubberly, Dey, Moore, Taylor, James, Hartman, and many others down to the present time, and now beside hundreds of Hutchinsons in this vicinity, these descendants may be found in almost every resident name among us. Although the date of the woman's birth reaches back a period of about one hundred and sixty years, and her descendants are numbered in the thousands, yet if she were living to-day in your borough, she might receive daily visits from a grand-daughter who is now in the middle age of life, while in other branches of the family she might look upon children with a string of greats too long for any but a clear-headed person to mention.

"In the old burying ground alluded to, this host may look upon the final resting place of their time-honored ancestors- their first parents of this western world. But it would be a sad sight to many, for the plough has already broken the sod over many graves of this ancient burial place, and unless steps be speedily taken, there will soon be left no mark to designate the sacred spot where these first breakers of the soil rest.

"I would ask if some plan may not be devised by which the remaining graves shall be religiously protected, so that future generations may read this headstone. We presume the present owner of the land would sell the lot to the descendants for a trifling amount - That such graves should be thoughtlessly trampled upon seems to us a burning shame; and from the personal knowledge we have of many of the descendants, we believe that a sufficient amount of money could be raised to do it in a permanent manner. D.P.H. [Daniel P. Hutchinson]"

Richard Hutchinson continues, about this gravesite:

"Today, this ancient cemetery still exists off of Cedarville Road but with only the two existing stones of Ann (Simpson) Hutchinson and her husband William plus pieces of other fieldstones used as grave markers. I'm afraid that nothing was done after the above article to preserve it and nothing has been done since. Recently, many members of the community thought that site had been protected by East Windsor Township due to the work of the East Windsor Township Preservation Commission several years ago. This was work in which I participated to a limited degree and even received written thanks from the Commission for helping preserve the site. However, after many years, I was among the many surprised residents who found out through various news articles in the local Hightstown, New Jersey papers that this ancient burial ground was not protected and had not been so protected as had been proclaimed by the Commission. After having found this gravesite, many years ago, I have walked through the fields to the site and tended to this ancient cemetery each November in an attempt to keep it open. I have planted numerous bulbs near the stones and have even introduced it to my grandson, aged 5, who would help me. This is the oldest known cemetery, with existing stones, in East Windsor Township and it should be protected from further destruction. The blade of the farmer's plow in the field currently passes over those two remaining burials while the farm nearby uses the site as a place to discard various materials. It would be a worthy project of the Hightstown-East Windsor Historical Society to clean it up, put a fence around it, and try to gain the proper preservation of the site for the future generations. It would be a great project for the Society to complete the job that the East Windsor Township Preservation Commission failed to finish.

"William is buried in field to the right of the big bend in the road from Etra to Roosevelt, after leaving Etra, by Feldsher Road. The two trees in the field to the right mark the spot of these two graves.

"I found unauthored notes & material on the Hutchinson family in the New Jersey Historical Society in 1980s in an uncataloged cardboard box. I was given access to this material that appeared to have been given to the Society from a family. It contained newspaper clips, notes, and many pages of handwritten family sheets. I believe that this material MAY have come from Elmer Tindall Hutchinson, who was an officer of the Society and a well known author and historian. In this material, was information on the William and Ann (Simpson) Hutchinson family, which indicated that an Isaac Hutchinson of Three Hills Run, NJ, had the family record material on William and Ann." 
Hutchinson, William (I764)
 
6151 He in 1666 deeded property in Tiverton, Devon to his daughter Alice. He, like the Robins family, came from Tiverton as well. He was a magistrate in Tiverton in 1641.

Saunders indicates that "the will of George Puddington in Anne Arundel County, Maryland called Augustine Skinner ‘kinsman.'" Perhaps all three of these families immigrated from Devon, and knew each other before they arrived.

According to Saunders, "Aquila Skuynner married on 5 May 1651 at West Farleigh, Kent, England to Mrs. Elizabeth Franklin, widow. Aquila and Elizabeth had two children, baptized at St. Giles without Cripplegate in London - Augustin and Elizabeth. 
Skinner, Aquilla (I8973)
 
6152 He includes the section of Newman (1933) dealing with this family; some details of this work have been superseded. Source (S185)
 
6153 He inherited "Bridge Hill" from his parents. Iiams, Capt. John (I4323)
 
6154 He inherited "Doden" from his parents. Iiams, Plummer (I4324)
 
6155 He inherited "Marietta" from his grandfather; he and his wife lived there. This is a museum in Glenn Dale, Maryland. du Val, Edmund Brice Jr. (I6235)
 
6156 He inherited and lived at the Garossen Estate. von Rosenberg, Johan Sigismund Otto (I5478)
 
6157 He inherited Essex Farm as a minor from his uncle Benjamin Franklin in 1822 after his death. He died in 1831; he drowned in College Creek while attending St. John's College. He died intestate, and Essex was passed on to his four sisters.

From then until 1851, when Dr. Franklin Waters moved from Anne Arundel Count,y it was owned partly by the sisters; Samuel gradually bought out the other heirs until he and Rachel Waters owned the entire farm.

Dr. Waters records services to his estate in Ledger B, fol. 209v and 210r. He is called Samuel Franklin, orphan, and the bills are to the estate of Dr. Samuel Franklin, deceased. Franklin Waters names himself "guardian" here. 
Franklin, Samuel (I4101)
 
6158 He inherited Essex from his Aunt Elizabeth Battee; his picture was in the Parlor at Essex. He died later the same year that he inherited it, in 1822. He left Essex to his minor nephew, Samuel Franklin Jr, the son of Dr. Samuel Franklin.

From the Maryland Gazette: "Frankling, Capt. Benjamin, died at his residence in A.A. Co., much regretted" (Jan. 2, 1823). Is this the same one? A Captain? (S208, p. 63).

According to Marine, "Benjamin Franklin" was a "Private in Capt. Stile's Co., Marine Artillery."

Maryland Gazette, 2 Jan. 1823:

Franklin, Capt. Benjamin, died at his residence in A.A. Co., much regretted. 
Franklin, Benjamin (I3329)
 
6159 He inherited from his father "Billingsley," near Upper Marlboro, Prince Georg County, MD. Weems, William Loch (I7052)
 
6160 He inherited from his father "part of a tract of land called ‘Enfield Chase,' to be laid off to my said son John on the upper part of said land, so as to include what land I hold on the West side of Collington Branch." The rest went to his brothers Richard and Isaac.

His will is dated April 16th, 1786, and probated July 12th, 1786. He mentions his sisters Elizabeth and Henrietta, brothers Jeremiah and William and Isaac--names which also appear in his father's will--and nephew William (Moylan Lansdale). William and Jeremiah were joint executors. 
Lansdale, John (I3916)
 
6161 He inherited the famous "Hammond-Harwood House" in Annapolis from his mother's family. Professor of English at the Naval Academy. The family were "intense southern sympathizers" (Newman 3.87).

The family had one son, who died fighting for the Confederacy at Winchester, and three daughters. 
Harwood, William (I8183)
 
6162 He inherited the firm of William Skinner & Sons from his father. He was a shipbuilder, who established a yard in 1832 to build small schooners for the bay and coastal trades. The company expanded into building steamboats on the Chesapeake.

The 1840 census shows that he had a pretty big household, but gives no names of other family members, which didn't come until 1850. He is apparently buried in a "Skinner family cemetery" in "Town Point, Dorchester County, MD."

He also kept a Skinner family bible; this is written about in an article in the Calvert County Genealogical Society newsletter. The Thomas Skinner genealogy in vol. 16 of Colonial Families of the Eastern Shore uses this as a source. 
Skinner, Zachariah (I6845)
 
6163 He inherited the management of his father's pile-driving company; his sons Warren and Edward were working for it in 1920 as well.

Note, Times-Picayune, 13 July 1946, p4;

Civil District Court, Inventories Filed

Succession of John Edward Hemenway, $122, 737.73. 
Hemenway, John Edward (I14608)
 
6164 He inherited Tulip Hill from his father, and came to live there in 1790. His portrait was painted about 1753 by John Wollaston of Annapolis.

This couple were double first cousins. As Reaney explains about their parents, "Mary [Galloway] Chew was a sister of John's father. Sarah's father [Justice Benjamin Chew] and John's mother were brother and sister" ("Tulip Hill," 383).

See the collection at the NYPL for his father. There is also this collection at the Library of Congress: "Galloway-Maxcy-Markoe family papers, 1654-1888 (bulk 1750-1860)." Here is the collection description:
"Correspondence, business papers, financial records, legal documents, speeches, reports, essays, memoranda, and other papers relating to economic conditions in Maryland (1750-1818) and foreign affairs and political events in the 1840's and 1850's. Includes the manuscript of Virgil Maxcy's biography of John C. Calhoun and numerous letters from Calhoun. Other correspondents include members of the Cheston, Chew, Howard, and Tilghman families, Lewis Cass, Daniel Dulany, Peter Force, Alexander Hamilton, Jr., David Hoffman, Francis Scott Key, George McDuffie, John F. Mercer, James Monroe, Joel R. Poinsett, Richard Rush, Joseph Story, Benjamin Tasker, Jr., George Washington, and Daniel Webster. Microfilm edition of the Higginson & Bird letterbook available, no. 16,289. Members of the Galloway, Maxcy (Maxey), and Markoe families represented include Samuel Galloway (1720-1785) and his son, John (d. 1810), merchants; John's son-in-law, Virgil Maxcy (1785-1844), lawyer, politician, and diplomat; and Virgil's son-in-law, Francis Markoe, public official."

There are also the "Cheston-Galloway Papers, 1684-1961" at the Maryland Historical Society. 
Galloway, John (I7904)
 
6165 He is "Edward" on the 1900 census, but this must be Edwin, since his obit. says he's a twin, and he and Eugene are the only twins in his family. Weixel, Edwin William (I14782)
 
6166 He is "Eugene" on the 1900 census, but this must be him, since he (and his brother Edwin) are both identified as twins, sons of Adele Roth and Charles Weixel, in their obituaries. Weixel, Edward Jules (I15247)
 
6167 He is "F. Maurice" on the 1860 census, but "Morris" on the 1870 census. Members of this family seem to have all changed their names to Morris.

None of the three children that appear on the 1860 census appear on the 1870 census. 
Morris, Felix (I4691)
 
6168 He is "late" in his wife's obituary Portas-Martinez, Enrique (I15942)
 
6169 He is a direct ancestor, apparently, of Vice-President Dick Cheney. See http://www.wargs.com/political/cheney.html. Tyler, Robert (I6489)
 
6170 He is a Franklin from the Swamp, near West River.

Death dates accord with the difference between his son William and his wife's next son Wilson, by her second marriage. 
Franklin, Benjamin J. (I13462)
 
6171 He is an important originator of Dye family lines because he had about 19 or 20 children.. Dye, Ezekial (I9450)
 
6172 He is apparently descended from Capt. John Bissell, who immigrated to New England in about 1628 (first to Massachusetts and then Connecticut). Bissell, Charles Forman (I1701)
 
6173 He is buried in the Mutti tomb in Greenwood; this is likely to be his wife's last name, then. Liuzza, Joseph Philip Sr. (I14992)
 
6174 He is buried in what the KHS identifies as "Hamilton Cemetery No. 1," which is located in Bracken County "1 1/2 miles southwest of Brooksville, hwy. #10 on Hamilton Ridge." The Bracken County Historical Society's volume identifies this as "Hamilton #3," and I go by their designations. Hamilton, Samuel "Towhead" (I2089)
 
6175 He is called "Col. Edward Murray C.S.A." on his daughter's tombstone. A Col. Edward Murray served in the VA 49th Infantry Regiment. Murray, Col. Edward (I12277)
 
6176 He is called a "Justice" in the 1850 census; his father in law Asahel Walker was also as Justice of the Peace. Pownall, Moses (I9945)
 
6177 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I1073)
 
6178 He is denoted as Ephraim (1) in Hamilton. He had 2 or 3 wives and 28 children; Rebecca Cutter was his first wife.

A genealogy of the Frazee family also appears in the back of Mertz's Morris Migration. According to Mertz's notes this is derived from the information in Hamilton's Ancestral Lines of the Doniphan, Frazee, and Hamilton Families, along with information from Burt's Cushman Genealogy
Frazee, Ephraim Sr. (I13525)
 
6179 He is descended from a long line of Quakers who settled near Philadelphia and, later, in the Sandy Spring area. He is included on the Quaker Ancestors page.

There is a picture of him at Essex, taken in 1917. 
Hartshorne, Charles Robertson (I2051)
 
6180 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I13663)
 
6181 He is described as a Major in the Revolution, and as his family were Loyalists, this was for the British. He seems to have served in New York. Dulany, Walter (I4436)
 
6182 He is described as “deffunt” on the marriage record of his son Pierre. Pitard, Pierre (I15318)
 
6183 He is described as “veuf,” a widower, of “Julienne Galleran” [?] on his marriage record to Renée Pitard. Boué, Julien (I13973)
 
6184 He is George W. on the 1900 census, living with his father and step-mother--or, I assume that this is him. Dunbar, George W. (I15260)
 
6185 He is identified as a servant of "Newgent" in 1649; he came to American as an indentured servant. He lived in Port Tobacco, Maryland, and later in Charles Co. Moore, Henry Sr. (I13432)
 
6186 He is identified as the progenitor of the line in the Froelich book; no ancestors of his could be securely identified.

A Christoph Froelich b. abt. 1700 in Insterburg (now Chernyakhovsk, Kaliningrad Oblast) is named as a cousin. Christoph b. 1700 had a son Johann Jacob Froelich bpt. 7 June 1738 in Insterberg, and Johann in turn had a son Johann Ernst Froelich bpt. 8 July 1767 in Insterburg. 
Froelich, Christoph (I12970)
 
6187 He is immigrant ancestor of the famous American Bowie family. He emigrated in about 1705 from Scotland to settle by the Pautexet River in Prince George's Co., MD. He appears in Burke's Peerage. Bowie, John (I3973)
 
6188 He is in his own household, not his father's, for the 1776 census for Harford Co. Here is his full household:

Donovan, Wm, 23
Rachel, 19
Anos, 6 mos. 
Donawin, William (I11173)
 
6189 He is included on the Quaker Ancestors page because the Franklins were Quakers. He and his wife are first cousins.

In the 1830s, Essex came to the four Franklin girls who were the daughters of this Franklin.

His medical diploma was at Essex, dated 1804, from the University of Maryland. He died fairly young. He had an attack of "bilious fever" and was bled, and died from it. He practiced medicine in Prince George's County, MD, and there married Mary Waters. 
Franklin, Dr. Samuel (I3760)
 
6190 He is included on the Quaker Ancestors page.

This seems not to be the same Griffith family described in Newman (1933); that family descends from William Griffith m. Sarah Maccubin. 
Griffith, Samuel "Of Wales" (I3530)
 
6191 He is included on the Quaker Ancestors page. Waters, John (I3449)
 
6192 He is included on the Quaker Ancestors page. Arnold, Richard (I3819)
 
6193 He is included on the Quaker Ancestors page. Cooper, George Jr. (I4361)
 
6194 He is included on the Quaker Ancestors page. Bolton, Samuel (I10012)
 
6195 He is Joseph Hacker on his birth record, and Louis on his death record.

Curiously, the death record also changes his father's name in the same way:

Le vingt douze novembre mil sept cent quatre vingt neuf a été inhumé dans le cimetiere de cette paroisse le corps de Louis Hacker, age de trois ans, fils legitime de Louis Hacker, marchand tailleur, resident en le bourg, et de mademoiselle anne denis son epouse, decede hier au soir en ce bourg. en foi de quoi, nous avons signé le jour et an que des fus . . .

The twelfth of November the year 1789 was buried in the cemetery of this parish the body of Louis Hacker, aged three years, legitimate son of Louis Hacker, merchant tailor, resident in the village, and his wife Anne Denis wife, who died last night in town. In witness whereof, we have signed the day and year that was . . .

This must be Joseph Sr., given his wife. And therefore, I assume that the death refers to the son Joseph who was born a bit less than years earlier as well. 
Hacker, Joseph (I15217)
 
6196 He is just named "Iglehart Williams" in MacKenzie. I don't see this first name on the 1870 census for his parents. I assume, however, that he is the same as the "John I." on the 1870 census, because of the "I," though the age differs from the 1850 census by about 2 years. Note that all of the ages on the 1870 census for this family are about 2 years younger than the ages given on the 1850 census. Williams, John Iglehart (I701)
 
6197 He is listed as a Churchwarden in Bromborough in 1678.

Note this, quoted from the Cheshire parish registers, that more Spann records would be available at Bromborough: "At end of the first register volume (parchment, 44 pages), notes by Richard Spanne (a) states he procured/presented 'this booke' 1678, (b) on opposite page 'Whom hath occasions to [illegible] this book may looke for burialls at this end and births and baptizms at the other end of this booke'; (c) following (a) details of the marriages and children of four generations of Spannes 1580–1685, exact dates not given, and details of the baptisms and sometimes burials of R.S. himself, ten children. and two grandchildren 1624–1694; (d) 1682 statement re an annual donation to the church by R.S.; (e) note on burials of previous generations of Spanne 'in the church' and on the family pew rights."

It would seem that Christenson relies on this register for his information about the Spann family back further, but this is not clear.

An Edward Spann, "Edward Spann, Yeoman of Bromborough, Cheshire," had a will dated 27 September 1654; it is available from the National Archives. Is Edward Richard's father? Christenson says so, but the link is not clear to me as yet.

As Christenson says, Richard seems to be a man of some means in Cheshire, able to send his sons off to University. The only earlier will in Cheshire for a Spann is Thomas in 1673. Why his sons went to Dublin, however, is a good question: they were perhaps, in an academic fashion, part of the mid-17th century movement encouraged by Jacobean officials to colonize Ireland, especially by religion, and the Spann family would have been Anglican if they attended Trinity College and became priests. If this is so the family would have been anti-Catholic, and as priests served especially the English colonists there. 
Spann, Richard (I12860)
 
6198 He is listed as a militia officer in Warren, Maine: "Ensign, March 29, 1834, Lieut. Apr. 28, 1836, Rifle co."

The 1842 New Orleans City Directory has this.

M'Clellan, A. . . . wharf builder . . . Clio b. Bacchus & Apollo Sts.

WHP moved from Maine to New Orleans. His brothers James Brackett, George Merrill, and Edward Cutter also apparently travelled to New Orleans with him, and were married there. There is also a death record for Thomas McLellan, his brother (who died 1882 of "general paralysis of the insane"?!--see the image of his death certificate). They were ship chandlers, and some of their business papers are preserved at the Special Collections department at Tulane University ("McLellan Papers 1839-1884, 92 items," kept in their Manuscripts Collection on Resources for Waterways Transportation).

His death certificate implies he moved to New Orleans ca. 1845.

According to the shipping news from around 1840, he may have owned ships named the “Henrietta” and the “Ludwig.” These travel regularly from Maine to New Orleans, with “McLellan” as the owner. Maybe also the “Ligonia.”

He is apparently the "William H. McLellan" who is the holder of two Louisiana Patents for a "fare box," to hold money securely (no. 5,491, patented 1867, and no. 63, 804, patented 1867). See the the website on "Index to Early Louisiana Patents, 1810-1890."

He is buried in the McLellan tomb in Lafayette Cemetery; here is the inscription:

WM. H. McLELLAN
BORN SEPT. 30, 1811
DIED APRIL 24, 1895
[OBVERSE]
WM. H. McLELLAN 
McLellan, William Henry Paine (I55)
 
6199 He is listed as a son on the 1850 census, but he must be from an earlier marriage? Murray, William (I8188)
 
6200 He is listed as a student of medicine on the 1850 census. Waters, Thomas (I6499)
 
6201 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I11113)
 
6202 He is listed in John and Deborah Powers, Texas Painters, Sculptors & Graphic Artists: A Biographical Dictionary of Artists in Texas before 1942, with this entry: "McLellan, James Lucretius. San Antonio. Painter. Exhibitions: San Antonio Local Artists Annual Exhibition (1930-31, 1934, 1936-38, 1940, 1944)." His brother Ralph was an artist as well. McLellan, James Lucretius (I6204)
 
6203 He is listed in the 1880 census, when he was 72, as a "Commission Merchant." See the 1866 note to Thomas Hall.

In 1842 he and his brother Samuel bought land from Thomas B. Offutt in Montgomery Co.

In 1842 Robert received a power of attorney from his brother Samuel.

In 1844, he and his brother Samuel, and his wife Priscilla, bought land called "Part of Ebenezer" which had been deeded from Mary Gaither to Samuel Hambleton, in Montgomery Co., in 1818. See the deed for that as well.

In 1855 he bought a house on 233 Lombard St. in Baltimore from his brother Thomas H. Freeland.

J. Harris Franklin's notebook says that he died "1-18-186_." He died before 1887, because that is the first dated receipt from Maria where she is called his "executrix."

Death date from the Baltimore Orphan's Court Document dated 13 May 1887.

He and his wife's portraits were in the parlor at Essex, where they were married. The portrait is signed "H. Bebie"; this is Hans Heinrich (or Henry) Bebie (d. 1888). The couple were great friends of the Franklins who used to visit frequently from Baltimore. John Lansdale Sr. says that "[Great] Uncle Robert Freeland said that he had the portrait painted to ‘preserve her beautiful face.'"

His direct ancestor William Hambleton (b. 1663) who married Margaret Sherwood is a common ancestor between him and Bucey Skinner, who worked at Essex Farm from 1938 until his death. 
Freeland, Robert (I3759)
 
6204 He is living alone on the 1880 census. Levensaler, Cyrus (I3192)
 
6205 He is living at Essex with his brother Dr. Franklin Waters, Sr. Waters, Richard H. (I12253)
 
6206 He is living at Essex with the family of his deceased brother Dr. Waters Sr. Waters, Richard H. (I12253)
 
6207 He is living with his daughter Pauline's household in the 1930 census. von Rosenberg, Paul (I334)
 
6208 He is named "James" in the Tillman history. Clapham, Jonas (I2027)
 
6209 He is named "Richard Jr." in the Queen Anne Parish, Prince George's Co. church records. Duckett, Richard Jacob (I8661)
 
6210 He is named (though his spouse is not) on his daughter Guiseppa’s death record. Lombardo, Ignazio (I17260)
 
6211 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I2611)
 
6212 He is named after John Higgins Strain, the uncle of his mother Eliza Wimberly Strain. He wrote an informally structured family history entitled "Miscellaneous Personal and Family Notes," Houston, TX; he started it on March 22, 1929, and then he returned to it various times over the years. It is kept on the Maryland Histories page.

He was married in California. His family moved to 714 Rosalie Ave. in Houston, TX in 1920. He apparently became a Freemason in 1922. Later, the family moved to 814 Kipling Ave Houston in spring of 1925, where they lived until 1947. At this time he inherited Essex, after the death of Aunt Jig, to which he moved in 1947. ("Aunt" Jig, whose given name was Rachel Alice Waters, was actually his 1st cousin once removed, but she had been born 30 years before he was, and this was what everyone called her.) He retired from the Southern Pacific Railroad on May 31, 1948. He retired to "Essex," in Anne Arundel County, which he had inherited from his cousin Aunt Jig. He was a member of the South River Club in Anne Arundel County after the early 1950s. He suffered a stroke which disabled him during the 1950s. He died at Essex Farm in Anne Arundel Co., Maryland. 
Lansdale, John Sr. (I12)
 
6213 He is named as "natural de Havana" on his son's marriage record. Fernandez, Joseph (I15928)
 
6214 He is named as "natural de la trinidad en la isla de Cuba" on his marriage record. Fernandez, Joseph Joaquin (I13941)
 
6215 He is named as "natural de Tour [Tours] en Tourena [Touraine]" on his son's marriage record. Touraine was broken apart in 1794. Juerre, Louis (I15931)
 
6216 He is named as his father’s eldest son in his father’s will. Stockett, John (I9269)
 
6217 He is named in his wife's second marriage license, where she is described as "widow of Francis Pinner, grocer." Pinner, Francis (I12529)
 
6218 He is named simply "Currens" on the 1880 census. Not to be confused with Elijah Currens Savage who was born in 1839. Savage, Rev. Elijah Currens (I10312)
 
6219 He is named “Alfred Saulny” on his son Alfred’s marriage record, and his wife is named “Alice Simon” on the marriage record. He is aged 21 on his own marriage record—so, born about 1879 or 1880. This also names his father as Joseph and his mother as Mary.

There are three Alfred Saulnys at the time in NOLA; the third seems to be the correct one, given the records:

—One was Alfred Saulny born on 18 Oct. 1872, the son of Louis Saulny and Marie Carmouche (vol. 60, p. 858).

—A second who names himself “Alfred Joseph Saulny Sr.” was born on 21 Jul 1877. He registered for the WW2 draft in 1942. He was living at 1711 N. Robertson, in New Orleans, with his wife. He was 64, and employed by St. Louis Cemetery #3. Unfortunately the draft reg. does not name his wife, and he seems to have no birth or death record. There is an 8 Oct. 1894 marriage record between Alfred Joseph Saulny (son of Louis and Anita ?Gammond) and Nellie Soublet (son of Louis and Alida Simon) that may be him. No ages are given on the record, however.

There also, then, seems to be more than one Louis Saulny at the time as well.

—A third Alfred Saulny was born on 31 July 1881, the son of Joseph Saulny and Marie Curre (vol. 98, p. 114) 
Saulny, Alfred Joseph Sr. (I14137)
 
6220 He is named “beau-frère,” brother-in-law, on Adrien Gamard’s marriage record. Gosset, Antoine (I8358)
 
6221 He is named “veuf de Marguerite Mangere” on his death record, which also gives his parents’ names. Pitard, Julien (I8241)
 
6222 He is no. 32 in S298. S298 adds a great deal to the family history here, on top of what is contained in the Simpson family history. His estate near Leesburg, VA suffered great losses during the Civil War.

The name is also spelled "Skilman."

The dates of his children are from S298. They are all so regular that they seem to be estimates. 
Skillman, Capt. Abraham (I7222)
 
6223 He is not apparently related to the Harwood family of Anne Arundel Co., Maryland, but was, according to Maria Horner Lansdale, a descendant of Benjamin Franklin. Ben was his great-grandfather, via his daughter Sarah.

According to the history.naval.mil:
"Andrew Allen Harwood was born on 9 October 1802 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. He was appointed a Midshipman in the Navy at the beginning of 1818, subsequently serving in the West Indies, the Mediterranean, and at the Philadelphia Navy Yard before receiving promotion to Lieutenant in 1827. Two decades of further duty afloat and ashore, including a long assignment with the Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography, were recognized with Commander's rank in 1848. During 1852-1855 he made a Mediterranean deployment in the frigate Cumberland.
After 1855 Captain Harwood served in shore posts, among them a tour as Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography in 1858-1862. Promoted to Commodore in mid-1862, he was in charge of the Washington Navy Yard and the Potomac Flotilla until December 1863. Commodore Harwood subsequently was a member of the Board of Examiners and Secretary of the Light House Board, remaining on the job in retired status from October 1864 onward. Beginning in 1869, when he was promoted to Rear Admiral on the Retired List, he held legal positions, concluding with a year as the Navy's Judge Advocate in 1870-1871. Rear Admiral Andrew A. Harwood died in Marion, Massachusetts, on 28 August 1884."

Documents relating to his career can be found in the Harwood Family MSS in the Library of Congress' Civil War MSS Collection; see MS 416. 
Harwood, Adm. Andrew A. (I1683)
 
6224 He is not included as one of the children in the biographies given under his parents because he had died before those biographies were written. He died only a year after his wedding. According to his gravestone, he was "a student at Christian Seminary, Drexel Institute, and Pearce's College, an Electrician with Walker S. Kepler, Phila., Married to Carrie s. Coffell Aug. 30, 1898." Walker, Isaac Hampton (I12215)
 
6225 He is not living with his wife in 1920; possibly they were unmarried, though Harris records them as being married in 1918.

Harris Franklin's notebook records a Fred MacDonald (not living with this family in the 1920 census) as the wife of the oldest daughter Katherine Franklin, and the father of Geraldine, Katherine's daughter. The census, however, does not give Katherine's last name as McDonald, but instead names "Francis," her sister, as "Francis MacDonald." Because this family lived in Texas, and Harris probably did not know them personally, I'm making this Francis's family, not Katherine's. 
McDonald, Fred (I3586)
 
6226 He is not named as “veuf” on his wife’s 1786 burial record. Fouque, Lazare (I16274)
 
6227 He is not recorded in Loeser's article, so his placement here must be regarded for the moment as an assumption. The child died young. Maccubbin, Zachariah (I1079)
 
6228 He is not related to the Hollidays of Anne Arundel County. Holliday, Alexander Rieman (I9071)
 
6229 He is not the same family as the Waters family from Anne Arundel County, at least on this side of the Atlantic.

He was shipwrecked on Bermuda in 1610, rescued a few years later, and ended up in Elizabeth City, Virginia. 
Waters, Lt. Edward (I11776)
 
6230 He is often recorded as "John, Jr." because his father Vincent apparently had a brother named John who was "John, Sr."

From the Dye listserv: "The cemetery is behind the Methodist Church on the brow of the hill south of Manassas, Prince William County. 284,757 - 4290,172 on my GPS Unit. See: One Hundred Old Cemeteries of Prince William County, VA, E. R. Conner, pages 107-111. " 
Dye, John "Hickory" (I9300)
 
6231 He is on the Louisiana Mysteries page. HIs ancestry is a complete mystery: please let me know if you can help!

He was buried in Girod St. Cemetery as "native of N.Y. Vault of family." Which family, exactly? There are a number of other McMillens and McMillans in Girod St. Founded in 1822, the Girod St. Cemetery was largely for Protestants. It was de-consecrated and abandoned in 1957. The remains were re-located to the Hope Mausoleum, 4841 Canal St., and the Saints’ stadium was build on the site.

Several bits of data:

—Note that his son John, given his birth day, may have been a son by a first marriage.
—There are John McMillens who immigrated or were naturalized into Baltimore and Ohio in the mid-1820s, born at about the right time.
—A John McMillen enlisted in the Army for 5 years in Dec. 1819 who was aged 16; he was from New York City. According to the record, he "deserted June 2/20. Dec. 31/20 confined"; he was confined over the next year. "June 30/21 present sick"--so he was back in. Maybe him; maybe not.
—A Margaret Ann McMillen died in New Orleans on 10 May 1842, aged 33; she was born abt. 1809. Could this be a relative?
—[There is also a John McMillan in Caddo Parish, Louisiana on the 1840 census; his household has 2 males under 5, one between 5 and 10, one aged 20 to 30, and one aged 30 to 40; and one woman aged 30 to 40. This would fit if Ellen weren't born yet at the census (she technically would have been), and the man from aged 20 to 30 is an unknown relative of some sort. There are other McMillans living in Caddo Parish as well.]
—The 1842 City Directory, for the year he died, has three McMillens, none of which is "J."
—There is a John “McMullen” who appears in records about this time. A succession was filed, for instance, under this name in the Parish of Orleans First District Court (#5770) between 1846 and 1853. I think he was a ship's captain who died in an accident. 
McMillen, John (I3427)
 
6232 He is one of the Franklins from the "Swamp" near West River.

He and his wife were married in 1874, and he was dead by 1880, so he's hard to track. The most appropriate find on the Census for him is a "John J. Franklin" in 1870: aged 21, in the 6th Ward of Baltimore Co., Battery City, in the "Maryland Insane Hospital." 
Franklin, John J. (I13455)
 
6233 He is only probably Edward Jarman's father; see the note under Edward. The name is also Jerman, German, Gurman, German. Jarman, John (I9986)
 
6234 He is recorded in Welsh, but no parentage is given. How does he connect to any of the Lansdales on this site? I have seen no evidence of this William Lansdale anywhere else! He is on the Maryland Mysteries page.

Note that there is also a John H. Lansdale who got a license to marry Nancy Warfield on June 6, 1797 in Anne Arundel Co. They too are unknown. 
Lansdale, William (I11541)
 
6235 He is registered as a bookeeper in Baltimore in the 1890 census. Brehme, Franklin Waters Hall (I5541)
 
6236 He is said to be a "Hüttenverwalter," the manager of a steel mill. "Hüttenindustrie" is the steel industry; he was the manager of a mill called the "Lönhberger Hütte" in Hesse next to Löhnberg.

The Groos history gives two different death dates for him: 24 March 1796 (p 407), at the Lönhberger Hütte; and 11 Feb. 1810, in Feudingen (p497). 
Groos, Wilhelm Heinrich (I17067)
 
6237 He is said to have been the founder of Hyattsville, Maryland (S280, 138). Hyatt, Christopher (I3956)
 
6238 He is said to have lived and died in Montgomery Co. Welsh, Richard (I11479)
 
6239 He is Sr., though clearly named after his G-Grandfather. Morris, Israel Wistar Sr. (I3991)
 
6240 He is the "John" after whom John Lansdale Sr. was named. His two oldest children, Sally and Cornelia, were apparently born in D.C., according to the 1880 census, which is where they lived during the War; after that the children were born in Maryland.

There is a window dedicated to he and his wife in St. John's Church, Olney. I assume that they were dedicated by his neice Eliza Wimberly and her husband Thomas F. Lansdale (b. 1844). 
Strain, Capt. John Higgins (I3864)
 
6241 He is the author of the Duckett/Sellman pedigree chart (1927). Member of the South River Club as a contemporary with John Lansdale, Jr. King, Thomson Jr. (I6635)
 
6242 He is the author of the family history which describes the Simpson family. Simpson, James Hendley Sr. (I4166)
 
6243 He is the biographical subject of S287, "One Hundred Years Ago." He was sent to be educated in England in 1784, returning in 1789. He was ordained May 26, 1793 by the Rt. Rev. Thomas J. Claggett. He was a minister at Broad Creek Parish and later at St. John's in Georgetown.

See the image of him from the collection of the Maryland Historical Society. 
Addison, Rev. Walter Dulany (I4255)
 
6244 He is the first of the "Kurland Family"; the Arms were granted in 1631 to his great-grandson Otto Hahnebohm. "Rosenberg" is one of the Kurland families. These are the families whose genealogies appear in the Kurland Ritterschafts Archiv. See the Wikipedia article about the "Baltic Knighthoods." von Rosenberg, Johann (I16594)
 
6245 He is the first of the Gould line traced by Mclellan in his history of Gorham. Elizabeth McLellan was his second wife. Gould, Nathaniel (I6469)
 
6246 He is the grandfather of Dr. Franklin Waters of Essex (via his son Henry). Waters, Samuel Jr. (I3528)
 
6247 He is the holder of two Louisiana patents related to the railroad, one for a Rail Chair (no. 416,580, patented 1889) and one for an axle box (318,879, patented 1885). See the website on "Index to Early Louisiana Patents, 1810-1890."

Buried in the DeGrange tomb in Metairie Cemetery. 
Degrange, George Edward (I202)
 
6248 He is the immigrant ancestor of the Sharples/Sharpless family as traced by Cope. He arrived on the "Friendship" in 1682 with wife and children. This couple had 8 children.

Here is part of a biography from Cope:

"SHARPLESS,(48*) JOHN, of Ratherton, in Cheshire, England, m. Jane Moore, of the same place, in the year 1662. In the year 1682 the family removed to Pennsylvania, landing at Chester on the 14th of 6th mo., 1682, more than two months prior to the arrival of William Penn. John Sharpless had purchased 1000 acres from Penn, by lease and release of April 4 and 5, 1682, part of which they took up on Ridley Creek, about two miles northwest from Chester, "where they fell a large tree, and took shelter among the boughs thereof about six weeks, in which time they built a cabin against a rock, which answered for their chimney-back, and now contains the date of the year when the cabin was built, viz., 1682, in which they dwelt about twenty years, and where they all died except the mother and three sons; in which time Joseph learnt the trade of house-carpenter, and when of age built the first dwelling-house, which is now standing (1816) and occupied by one of their descendants. Part of the original floors are still in use, being fastened down with wooden pins of about an inch in diameter, instead of nails. It is a sizeable two-story dwelling, the walls of stone." It is now occupied by Beulah E., widow of Daniel Sharpless." 
Sharples, John (I11003)
 
6249 He is the immigrant ancestor of the so-called "Quaker Greggs." He apparently converted to Quakerism after William Penn visited Waterford, Ireland in 1678.

According to S252, "William Gregg settled on a tract of land of 400 acres in Christiana Hundred, New Castle County, Delaware, surveyed to him 3.11.1685. He d. "ye 1st of the 7th month" ans was buried on his plantation, 1687" (8).

As quoted by Hinshaw, "GREGG FAMILY (from Albert Cook Myers' Immigration of Irish Quakers pp 122/339, etc.) Since so many Gregg families settled within the verge of Fairfax monthly meeting, Loudon Co., Va. it seems needful to give their background, as far as known. According to A. C. Myers, ‘Wm. & Ann Gregg came to America with the Dixon, Hollingsworth, Sharpley, etc. families, who came from the North of Ireland, probably County Armagh; William Gregg settled on a tract of 400 acres of land in Christiana Hundred, New Castle Co., Delaware, surveyed to him 11-3-1685. He died ye 1st of ye 7th mo and was buried on his own plantation 1687.'"

FYI: There are many genealogies for this Gregg family, and other related Gregg families, on the internet and in print. This is not a branch of the tree on which I have done original documentary research; I have, instead, attempted to choose among what seem to be (by their citation of source information themselves) the most authoritative studies possible. I have also noted conflicting data in the notes, where authoritative sources seem to differ. Caveat litterator.

Here is his will, taken from McIndoe:

The Last Will and Testament of John Gregg
of New Castle County, Delaware

In the name of God and on this twenty-second day of April in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and thirty-eight, I John Gregg of the County of New Castle on Delaware and Christiana Hundred, a yeoman being of perfect mind and memory thanks to God and calling to mind the mortality of my body and knowing that it is appointed once for all men, today Do make and ordain this my Last will and testament that is to say principally and first of all I Give and Recommend my Soul unto God that loves it and for my body I recommend it to the earth to be buried in a Christian manner at the discretion of my executor, not doubting but at the General Resurrection I shall receive the same again by the mighty power of God and as touching such worldly estate which it hath pleased God to bless me with. In this life I give and devise and dispose of the same in the following manner and form:

In promise I give and bequeath to Elizabeth, my Dearly Beloved wife, the sum of ten pounds of Good and Lawful money to be Raised and Levied out of my Estate; besides the third part of the produce of the plantation I now Dwell on; with the privilege of the new Rooms at the East end of the house and the third part of the cellar under the same During her widowhood; together with the third part of my moveable Estate as the law directs.

Item: I have made over unto William my Eldest Son's home I make one of my estates a tract of Land containing two hundred acres Laying and being on Red Clay Creek, it being in the County of New Castle, which is his part.

Item: I give and have made over unto my son Thomas two hundred acres of Land laying and being on Red Clay Creek in the County of Chester, which is his part.

Item: I give and bequeath unto my son Joseph two hundred acres of Land also lying and being on Red Clay Creek in the County of Chester to be possessed and enjoyed by him, his heirs and assigns forever, it being his part.

Item: I give and bequeath unto my son Samuel, who I make the other of my executors, all the tract of Land I now live on being and containing seven hundred acres or there abouts with the improvements thereunto belonging by him to be possessed and enjoyed by him, his heirs and assigns forever, it being his part.

Item: I give and bequeath to my two Daughters Hannah and Rebecah, in the first place, twenty-nine pounds of Good and Lawful money to each of them to be raised and levied out of my moveable estate; besides sundry goods that have been already Promised to be theirs which I compute will make them Equal with what I have already given to my Daughter Emey; And the remainder part of my moveable estate shall be equally Divided between my three Daughters: Emey, Hannah and Rebecah.

And I do hereby totally Disallow, Revoke and Disavow all and every other former testaments, wills, Legacies and [ ? ] by me in any way before this time [ ? ], willed and bequeathed. Ratifying and confirming this and no other to be my last will and testament, In witness whereof I have here unto set my hand and seal the day and year above written. Signed, sealed, published, pronounced and Declared by the said John Gregg as his last will and testament. 
Gregg, William (I2114)
 
6250 He is the nephew of John Henry (b. 1796); his wife Martha Cornelia is the niece of Polly HIggins, who was John Henry's wife. Alternatively, his uncle was the wife of his wife's aunt. :).

He was living in 1860 with his wife and children in Polk Co., Arkansas. Naomi, aged 6, was born in Tennessee, but the youngest, William, aged 2, was born in Arkansas, giving a window of between abt.1854 and 1858 for the time when they moved from Tennessee. 
Logan, Samuel Henry (I5038)
 

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