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The Life From The Roots blog topics have changed several times since I began this blog in 2009. I initially wrote only about the family history I had been working on for 20 years. Years later, I was into visiting gardens, historical homes, churches, libraries that had genealogical collections, historical societies, war memorials, and travel/tourism places. I also enjoy posting autographs and photos of famous people I've met or have seen.

Along with my New England roots, other areas include New York, New Jersey, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and the Eastern Townships of Quebec, Canada.

Please check out the labels on the right side for topics (please note, they need work). Below the labels and pageviews is a listing of my top nine posts, according to Google. Four of them pertain to Lowell, MA. These posts change often because they are based on what people are reading.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Tombstone Tuesday -- POOLE (2 generations) -- Massachusetts

William Pool  (Poole)
Born:  April 16, 1732, Medford, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts
Died:  March 03, 1776, Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts
He married Elizabeth Ward (no cemetery stone located)

William Poole was my 4th great-grandfather.
William Poole was buried at Old South Cemetery, Peabody, Essex Co., Massachusetts


I have two direct lines from William, the stones are below.

Ward Poole
 Born:  April 17, 1763, Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts
Died:  November 14, 1828, Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts

His wife, Rebecca Seccomb (below)
Rebecca Seccomb
Born:  March 25, 1762, Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts
Died:  November 23, 1832, Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts

Ward and Rebecca were my 3rd great-grandparents.
Both are buried at Harmony Grove Cemetery, Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts

Fitch Poole, brother of Ward, son of William (both above).
Fitch Poole
Born:  February 13, 1772, Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts
Died:  January 22, 1838, Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts

His wife, Elizabeth "Eliza" Cutler
Born:  July 04, 1779, Hamilton, Essex Co., Massachusetts
Died:  April 22, 1854, Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts

Fitch and Elizabeth were my 3rd great-grandparents.
Fitch and Elizabeth were buried at Harmony Grove Cemetery, Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Longest Obituary I've Ever Seen

I've had the obituary for a good 12 years, and it finally got read as I typed it.  With one hand on a magnifying glass and the other in spell check, the below is what was written.  The photo at the left was in the middle of the obituary and it is a etching of my 2nd great-grandfather. Because this is about him, and how I found this brings back sentimental feelings of joy. I have not been able to locate a death certificate.  It took another year before I discovered where he was buried....in my own back yard, so to speak!  Sections in red might be of interest to some readers.

“THE NEW YORK TIMES, FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1894

Dr. William F. Poole Dead

HE MADE LIBRARIANSHIP KNOWN AS A PROFESSION.

A Lover of Books, He spent His Life Among Them—As Librarian and Organizer He Developed His Profession on Lines of Greatest Utility—His indexes Valued on Two Continents—His Recent Great Work in Chicago.

CHICAGO, March 1—William Frederick Poole, LL D., died at 8 o’clock this morning in his home in Evanston.  His serious illness had caused alarm among his friends for several days, and his death was not unexpected.

Few men have done more to elevate and dignify the profession of librarian and to develop it along the lines of practical utility than William Frederick Poole.  Forty years ago librarianship was hardly known as a profession.  Most of the librarians of that day were men who had drifted into the pursuit from some other occupation in life.  Few, if any, chose it as a life work.  Now it has come to be recognized as a profession demanding and compensating first-rate abilities.

Dr. Poole was born in Salem, Mass., Dec. 24, 1821, the son of Ward and Eliza (Wilder) Poole.  He was a descendant of the seventh generation of John Poole, who came from Reading, England, with the first settlers of the Massachusetts Colony, resided in Cambridge in 1632, and in 1635 was the leading proprietor in the settlement of the town of Reading, Mass.  Mr. Poole attended school in Danvers (later South Danvers, and now, Peabody) until he was twelve years old.  Between his twelfth and seventeenth years he was out of school, learning the jeweler’s trade in Keene, N.H.  In 1835 the family moved to Worcester, Mass., where he spent a year in farming, with his father.  He then returned to Danvers, engaged a year in mercantile business, and later, in the employ of an uncle, learned the ancestral trade of tanner.

Finding himself not quite at home either as jeweler, farmer, or tanner, he got back to his books, and his seventeenth birthday found him fitting for college at the Leicester Academy.  In 1842 he entered Yale College, but after one year of study was obliged to stop to earn sufficient money with which to complete his course.  The next three months were devoted to teaching, and then he returned to Yale, entering as a sophomore in 1846, and graduating in 1849 in the same class with President Dwight.  In the last tern of his sophomore year, Mr. Poole was appointed Assistant Librarian of the Society of Brothers in Unity, which has a library of 10,000 volumes.  He had been in the position but a few weeks when he saw that the great need of the students was some mean of ascertaining what the bound sets of periodicals contained.  He went about supplying this want by preparing an index to them, and in a year he had the work so far advanced that the society voted to print it.

While the printing was in progress Mr. George P. Putnam of this city assumed the whole pecuniary responsibility of its publication, and the work appeared in 1848, with his imprint, under the title of “Index to Reviews and Other Periodicals to Which the Indexes Have Been Published.”  The entire edition was soon exhausted, and the author immediately began the preparation of a larger and more comprehensive work on the same general plan.  With all this extra work, young Poole maintained a rank of scholarship which secured him an election among the first to be the Phi Beta Kappa Society of the college.  The first year after his graduation he spent in completing his “Index to Periodical Literature,” which was not, hover published until 1853.  The first “Index” contained 154 pages octavo; the second 521 pages.  The third edition of the “Index” appeared in 1882, and contained 1,489 pages, royal octavo.  This was prepared with the co-operation of the American Library Association and the Library Association of Great Britain.  The “First Supplement” to this index was published in 1887.

In 1851 Mr. Poole became Assistant Librarian of the Boston Athenaeum, and the next year Librarian of the Boston Mercantile Library.  During his four years in that position he prepared and printed a dictionary catalogue of the library on the “title-a-line” principle which has been so widely followed since, and also brought out his second “Index.”  From 1856 until January, 1869 Mr. Poole was librarian of the Boston Athenaeum, which had, at the time he became its director, 100,000 volumes.  During his administration, with the assistance of Mr. Charles Russell Lowell, a brother of James Russell Lowell, the excellent catalogue of the library, since printed in five large volumes, was begun.  It was completed by his successor.

On leaving the Athenaeum, Dr. Poole was occupied during the next year as a library expert for the organization and general management of libraries.  He organized during that year the Bronson Library at Waterbury, Conn., and the Athenaeum Library at St. Johnsbury, Vt.; rearranged and catalogued the Naval Academy Library at Annapolis, Md.; selected and purchased the books and had the general direction of the Newton and Easthampton (Mass.) Public Libraries.  In the Fall of that year he was invited to reorganize and take charge of the Cincinnati Public Library.  This invitation he accepted, and for four years held the office of Librarian.  During these years the Cincinnati Library Building was erected, at that time the finest and largest building of the kind in this country.  In October, 1873, he was appointed Librarian of the Chicago Public Library, and entered upon his new duties Jan. 1, 1874.

The institution had then a reading room and about 700 volumes, which had not yet been catalogued or made accessible to the public.  May 1, 1874, the library was opened with 18,000 volumes.  In less than two years it had increased to 57,000, and now is said to have the largest circulation of any single library in the country.  During his years of connection with this library Dr. Poole was often called upon for advice and assistance in the formation and management of libraries throughout the country, especially in the Northwest, where his influence in favor of the public-library system was great.  In 1887 he was elected Librarian of the Newberry Library in Chicago.  This is a library of reference solely, and was founded by the late Walter L. Newberry of Chicago, who left $3,000,000 for the purpose.

This library is the crowning work of Dr. Poole’s life.  Its collection was begun in 1887, but it was not until last year that the beautiful building erected for it was occupied.  The building faces Washington Square, on the north side of the City of Chicago.  It is Spanish-Romanesque in architecture and built of granite.  Only one wing, the frontage on one of the four sides of the block on which the building stands, has been erected, but this is very imposing.

When completed, the building will hold 4,000,000 volumes.  An auditorium to seat 475 people, is one of the features of this building.  This was provided to carry on university extension work, in which Dr. Poole was particularly interested.  He was the one to inaugurate it in Chicago, and he was actively engaged in it up to the time of his death.

The number of volumes in the library is 117,000, and there are 46,000 pamphlets.  These were carefully selected by Dr. Poole to meet the requirements of the scholars.  The department of biography in large and complete, and a remarkable collection of the sources of American history, including biography, genealogy, State and local town histories and other original documents, is one of the features of the library.  The department of music is said to be the best and largest in the country.  These are only a few of the departments in which the library excels.

Dr. Poole so outlined the work that his successor, whoever he may be, will have no difficulty in carrying on the work of making the Newberry the best reference library in the country, as he planned.

Dr. Poole was among the first to recognize the value of concerted action among librarians to advance the interests of their work.  He was a member of the convention of librarians held in this city in September, 1853, which was the first meeting of the kind in the world.  Upon the organization of the American Library Association, in 1876, he was made one of its Vice Presidents, and continued in that office until his election in 1885 to the Presidency of the association.  He was one of the party from this country which attended the first conference of English librarians in London in 1877, and was a Vice President of that meeting.  Dr. Poole devoted much attention to library architecture and his several papers on this subject attracted much attention, both in this country and in Europe.  He was a leader in the movement for practical utility and convenience in library buildings, as opposed to the old conventional style, in which use was sacrificed to impressiveness of architectural effect.  In other departments of library arrangement he manifested no less activity and fertility of practical ideas.  The “Report on Public Libraries,” issued in 1876 by the United States Bureau of Education, contained several papers by him, prominent among them one on “The organization and Management of Public Libraries,” which gave practical directions on all essential points connected with this work, and is still generally recognized as a standard authority on the subject.

Aside from the works already named, Mr. Poole’s writing were mainly in the direction of American history and historical criticism.  He was especially interested in the early history of New England and that of the West, and for thirty years was a constant writer for the periodical press on subjects connected with these studies.  Controverting the charges brought against the New England clergy of fomenting the witchcraft persecution, he published several articles in 1885-9 which attracted general attention.  Chief among them was the one called, “Cotton Mather and Salem Witchcraft,” in the North American Review for April, 1889.  In the “Memorial History of Boston” he wrote the chapter called “Witchcraft in Boston.”  In the North American also appeared his articles on “The Popham Colony,” October, 1868, and “The Ordinance of 1787,” April, 1878, the former intended to dispose of the Maine claims to priority of settlement over Massachusetts, and the latter for the first time giving the secret history of the famous ordinance.

In 1870 he discovered in the Massachusetts archives a manuscript of Gov. Thomas Hutchinson on the “Witchcraft Delusion of 1692,” which he printed in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register for October, 1870, and also a separate form, with copious notes, illustrating the bibliography of New England witchcraft.  He also wrote two other pamphlets on the subject of witchcraft and three anonymous pamphlets on the dictionary controversy – “The Battle of the Dictionaries,” 1858; “Websterian Orthography: A Reply to Dr. Noah Webster’s Calumniators,: 1858, and “The Orthographical Hobgoblin,” 1859.  In 1887 Mr. Poole reprinted a rare and curious work which appeared in London in 1854, (the first printed history of the Massachusetts Colony) entitled :Wonder-Working Providence of Slon’s Saviour in New England,” to which, he wrote an elaborate introduction of 154 quarto pages, besides preparing an index.  His “Anti-Slavery Opinion Before 1800: was based on a paper he read before the Cincinnati Literary Club and was printed in Cincinnati in 1872.

In 1874-5 Dr. Poole edited in Chicago a literary monthly called The Owl, and was also a constant contributor to The Dial after it was started in 1880.  His work was always to the nature of a plea for judicial fairness and candor in historical writing, and his pen was constantly on the alert to discover and expose the pet fallacies of the vilifies of the fathers  of New England.

Dr. Poole for a number of years was the President of the American Historical Society, a member of the American Antiquarian Society, and of the Essex Institute, and corresponding member of the Historical Societies of Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Wisconsin, and various other States.  He received the honorary degree of LL D. from the Northwestern University in 1882.  Mr. Poole was married Nov. 22, 1854 to Miss Fanny M. Gleason, daughter of the late Dr. Ezra W. Gleason of Boston.  Of seven children born to them, four are living.  Dr. Poole’s personal qualities were such as to contribute in no small degree to the success that he achieved.  Of commanding and yet affable and pleasing address, he combined in a rare degree the force needed for large executive responsibilities with the tact which secured the hearty loyalty and the affection of his subordinates.  He imparted his own enthusiasm and his eminently practical views in library work to a large number of those who are now filling places of importance in the library profession having served an apprenticeship under him.”


Note: I had the obituary scanned and saved in jpeg format.  Thank you Mark for doing this for me.
(But I can't read it!)  But....See this from the New York Times.


Saturday, July 10, 2010

Saturday Surnames -- WILDER (Massachusetts and New Hampshire)

With over 200 Wilders in my "tree" I decided to show my direct line, beginning with the 6th generation.  And, once again, my direct lines are in green.

1. SAMUEL WILDER (DAVID WILDER, EBENEZER WILDER, JOHN WILDER, THOMAS WILDER, THOMAS WILDER) was born 13 JUN 1745 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 22 OCT 1824 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts. He married SARAH \ SALLY BALLARD 1 AUG 1768 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, daughter of JOSIAH BALLARD and SARAH CARTER. She was born 30 NOV 1747 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 28 JAN 1843 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
 

Children of SAMUEL WILDER and SARAH \ SALLY BALLARD are:
+ 2 i. Samuel WILDER was born 25 JUN 1769 in Templeton, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 20 AUG 1849 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
+ 3 ii. ABEL WILDER was born 11 AUG 1770 in Templeton, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 3 APR 1862 in Bridport, Addison Co., Vermont.
+ 4 iii. Sarah WILDER was born 25 FEB 1772 in Templeton, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 1852 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
5 iv. Eunice WILDER was born 6 JUN 1774 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
+ 6 v. David WILDER was born 1 APR 1776 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 23 JUL 1813 in Keene, Cheshire Co., New Hampshire.
+ 7 vi. Mary (Polly) WILDER was born 12 NOV 1779 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 6 NOV 1853 in Westminster, Windham Co., Vermont.
8 vii. John WILDER was born 16 AUG 1781 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 5 MAR 1831. He married Mary KNIGHT.
9 viii. Josiah WILDER was born 22 OCT 1782 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
+ 10 ix. Luke WILDER was born 25 SEP 1785 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 1869.
11 x. Dolly WILDER was born 18 MAY 1788 in Lancaster, Worcester Co., Massachusetts. She married Samuel HOWE.


Descendant Register, Generation No. 2


Children of ABEL WILDER and MARY "Polly" MEAD are:


22 i. Emily WILDER was born 18 DEC 1798 in Keene, Cheshire Co., New Hampshire, and died 25 MAR 1873 in Peabody, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married Osgood HERRICK 29 DEC 1830 in Keene, Cheshire Co., New Hampshire. He was born in Millbury, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 16 MAR 1837 in Millbury, Worcester Co., Massachusetts. She married Elisha ROCKWOOD 21 FEB 1838 in Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts. He was born 9 MAY 1778, and died BEF 1873.
+ 23 ii. ELIZABETH WILDER was born 6 APR 1801 in Keene, Cheshire Co., New Hampshire, and died 24 JAN 1859 in So. Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
+ 24 iii. Mary Meade WILDER was born 16 OCT 1806 in Keene, Cheshire Co., New Hampshire, and died 2 MAR 1886 in Peabody, Essex Co., Massachusetts.


Children of ABEL WILDER and Lydia JEFTS are:
+ 25 i. Augustus Thomas WILDER was born 13 AUG 1818 in Keene, Cheshire Co., New Hampshire, and died 29 NOV 1892 in Keene, Cheshire Co., New Hampshire.
+ 26 ii. Sarah Ballard WILDER was born 11 SEP 1821 in Keene, Cheshire Co., New Hampshire, and died 28 JAN 1905 in Cambridge, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts.


Descendant Register, Generation No. 3



23. ELIZABETH WILDER (ABEL WILDER, SAMUEL WILDER, DAVID WILDER, EBENEZER WILDER, JOHN WILDER, THOMAS WILDER, THOMAS WILDER) was born 6 APR 1801 in Keene, Cheshire Co., New Hampshire, and died 24 JAN 1859 in So. Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She was buried in Harmony Grove Cemetery, Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married WARD POOLE 24 JAN 1819 in Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts, son of WARD POOLE and REBECCA SECCOMB. He was born 30 JAN 1799 in Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 22 MAY 1864 in So. Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts. He was buried in Harmony Grove Cemetery, Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.


Children of ELIZABETH WILDER and WARD POOLE are:


+ 66 i. Joshua Hall POOLE was born 15 OCT 1819 in Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 5 APR 1877 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
+ 67 ii. WILLIAM FREDERICK POOLE was born 21 DEC 1821 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 1 MAR 1894 in Evanston, Cook Co., Illinois.
68 iii. Henry Ward POOLE was born 13 SEP 1825 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 21 OCT 1890 in Mexico City, Mexico.
69 iv. Lucius POOLE was born 3 JAN 1833 in Danvers, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 10 JAN 1905 in Boston, Suffolk Co., Massachusetts.
+ 70 v. Eliza Wilder POOLE was born 1 AUG 1835 in Worcester, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 18 AUG 1893 in Peabody, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
+ 71 vi. George Sanger POOLE was born 28 JUL 1839 in Worcester, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 26 MAY 1907 in Somerville, Middlesex, Massachusetts.
72 vii. Joseph Converse POOLE was born 5 MAY 1844 in Worcester, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died 17 FEB 1845 in Worcester, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.

Friday, July 9, 2010

Stone House Day in Hurley, New York -- Back in Time


Do you want to go back in time?  One of my favorite genealogy experiences was to travel to Hurley, Ulster County, New York, an hour west of Albany, and spend a good part of the day touring old houses in the town that was settled in 1661.  There is another reason I went, my ancestor, Matthys Ten Eyck lived there and he and his wife are buried there. I'm not talking about recent events, but the early 1700s.

Stone House Day is an annual event, and the 60th one will be held tomorrow, July 10th.  They must be doing something right. And what fun for the entire family.  From the website,
You can see the other attractions:

• a 1777 Ulster Militia Encampment,
• guides in colonial attire,
• crafts and demonstrations, and
• a Town Library Fair, with collectibles and book sales.

Also from their website, "The first inhabitants of Hurley were the Esopus Indians, members of the Algonquin Nation’s Delaware tribe. In 1661, a few Dutch farmers moved in, and the next year the settlement was surveyed, lands were officially granted to twelve Dutch and Huguenot families, and the village became Nieuw Dorp, meaning “New Village.” "Peter Stuyvesant later owned about 200 acres of land here." And, "Most settlers returned to rebuild their village, but in 1664 the British had taken over the entire “New Netherlands” colony and in 1669, named the village “Horley,” after the ancestral estate of English Governor Lovelace on the Thames, not far from London. Hurley at one time included portions of what are now the Towns of Marbletown, Rosendale, Woodstock, and New Paltz. But the Dutch language persisted for 150 years more among the stubborn anti-British residents.



Today, 25 of the original stone houses still exist—200 to 300 years later. All are privately owned homes except for the Hurley Museum. Descendants of the first settlers still reside in some of the homes."

A few photos from my past trip.


Front and back of the Matthys Ten Eyck's house.
(We were able to tour inside the house.)
He was my 7th great-grandfather.




Tombstone of Matthys Ten Eyck.

Various photos.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Tombstone Tuesday -- Cemeteries (How could I not take these)


Last month, my husband and I took a little trip to New Hampshire and Quebec, Canada and came upon three lovely cemeteries.  Of course, a quick stop to check out a rainbow proved to be the best thing.  I always wanted a rainbow shot with a cemetery in it.

These two shots were taken in Colebrook, New Hampshire.




East Hereford, Compton County, Quebec
(In my haste to get photos uploaded, I deleted the one with the sign, but you can see it via the link above.)

A few miles up the road, another nice cemetery.

East Hereford, Compton County, Quebec


Within 3 minutes, we went from New Hampshire, to Vermont to Canada.
Vermont on the left and New Hampshire on the right.
The beginning of the Connecticut River.
Connecticut River in Massachusetts (further south of above).

Sunday, July 4, 2010

1976 Bicentennial -- July 4th

The nation was counting down to the Bicentennial for many years and Washington, DC intended to make that July 4, 1976 a memorable day for all.  As a matter of fact, events were planned for four days.  Some of the special events I went to were the American Folklife festival, the NARA and saw the Declaration of Independence, Bill of Rights and the Constitution, enjoyed a huge "American Bicentennial Grand Parade" and of course saw the fabulous fireworks.


Since I was living in Alexandria, Virginia, across the Potomac River from Washington, I had no intention of missing anything.  But, there was a problem.  Too many people, and the Metro hadn't opened yet in my area.  Fortunately, my first cousin, lived two blocks away from the Capitol, invited me to spend two nights with her.  How wonderful for me and we spent the entire time together sharing all the great and free activities together. We saw the long parade, went to a concert or two and had a superb location to watch the fireworks, from the Capitol, I think we had passes, because she worked for a Texas politician, and I don't remember fighting for a spot.  And when it was all over on the 4th, we were back at her place within minutes.


My photos aren't the best, actually among my worst, but I thought I would share them.  Happy 4th to everybody.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Surname Saturday -- FLINT of Massachusetts

The Flint line is another old Essex County, Massachusetts line.  The interesting thing with this family is, I descend through three daughters of William Flint and Alice Williams.  My direct lines are in green.

Descendant Register, Generation No. 1

1. WILLIAM FLINT was born 1603, and died 2 APR 1673. He married Alice BOSWORTH. He married ALICE WILLIAMS 1644 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She died 5 OCT 1700.


Children of WILLIAM FLINT and ALICE WILLIAMS are:
+ 2 i. Edward FLINT was born ABT 1638, and died AFT MAY 1711.
+ 3 ii. ALICE FLINT was born ABT 1640 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died BET 4 MAR 1711/12 AND 13 MAY 1713 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
4 iii. Elizabeth FLINT was born ABT 1641. She married John WOODIS.
+ 5 iv. MARGARET FLINT was born ABT 1642, and died 1705.
6 v. Thomas FLINT was born ABT 1645 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. He married Elizabeth JOHNSON 22 MAY 1666 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
+ 7 vi. HANNAH FLINT was born ABT 1647 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 20 JAN 1723/24 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.


Descendant Register, Generation No. 2


2. Edward FLINT (WILLIAM FLINT) was born ABT 1638, and died AFT MAY 1711. He married Elizabeth HART 20 OCT 1659 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, daughter of Florence NORMAN.


Children of Edward FLINT and Elizabeth HART are:
8 i. Hannah FLINT was born in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married Robert ORANGE 18 SEP 1702. He was born in of Boston, Suffolk, MA.
9 ii. Sarah FLINT was born in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married Jacob WILLARD.
10 iii. Abigail FLINT was born in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married Benjamin GERRISH.  She married Edward HOLLOWAY 9 JUN 1704.
11 iv. John FLINT was born 26 MAR 1660 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
12 v. William FLINT was born 12 AUG 1661 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
13 vi. Thomas FLINT was born FEB 1662/63 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
14 vii. Joseph FLINT was born 1671 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. He married Experience DERBY.
15 viii. Deborah FLINT was born 1672 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married Thomas LEE. He was born in of Boston, Suffolk Co., Massachusetts.
16 ix. Elizabeth FLINT was born ABT 1673 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married Joseph DEANE.
17 x. David FLINT was born ABT 1675 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. He married Ruth FLINT.
18 xi. Benjamin FLINT was born ABT 1679 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 28 DEC 1732.


3. ALICE FLINT (WILLIAM FLINT) was born ABT 1640 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died BET 4 MAR 1711/12 AND 13 MAY 1713 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married Henry BULLOCK BEF 1654, son of Henry BULLOCK and Susan. He was born ABT 1627. She married JOHN PICKERING AFT 22 AUG 1657 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, son of JOHN PICKERING and ELIZABETH w\o JOHN PICKERING.  He was born 1637 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 5 MAY 1694 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. He was buried in Broad St. Burying Ground, Salem.


Children of ALICE FLINT and JOHN PICKERING are:
19 i. John PICKERING was born 10 SEP 1658 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 9 JUN 1722 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. He married Sarah BURRILL 14 JUN 1683 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
20 ii. Jonathan PICKERING was born 27 SEP 1660.
21 iii. Joseph PICKERING was born 9 SEP 1663 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
22 iv. Benjamin PICKERING was born 15 JAN 1665/66 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died BEF 6 NOV 1718. He married Jane HOBBY 27 APR 1695 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
+ 23 v. Sarah PICKERING was born 7 SEP 1668 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 6 JAN 1717/18 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
24 vi. William PICKERING was born 11 JAN 1669/70 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. He married Hannah BROWNE 19 JUN 1695 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
25 vii. Elizabeth PICKERING was born 7 SEP 1674 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married Samuel NICHOLS BEF 1696 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married James BROWN 22 FEB 1697/98 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
+ 26 viii. HANNAH PICKERING was born 2 JUL 1677 in Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died BEF 29 JUL 1714.
27 ix. Edward PICKERING was born 1679.



5. MARGARET FLINT (WILLIAM FLINT) was born ABT 1642, and died 1705. She married RICHARD NORMAN 28 MAR 1660 in Marblehead, Essex, MA, son of RICHARD NORMAN. He was born ABT 1623, and died ABT 11 AUG 1683 in Misery Island (Marblehead area), Massachusetts. She married Robert GOODWIN 15 OCT 1685 in Marblehead, Essex Co., Massachusetts.


Children of MARGARET FLINT and RICHARD NORMAN are:
28 i. Richard NORMAN.
29 ii. Elizabeth NORMAN died 15 OCT 1716 in Marblehead, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married Aboliab DIAMOND 8 JAN 1684/85 in Marblehead, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married William HINE 13 NOV 1688 in Marblehead, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
30 iii. Benjamin NORMAN.
31 iv. Jonathan NORMAN.
+ 32 v. REBECCA NORMAN was born ABT 1650, and died 1732 in Marblehead, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
33 vi. Joseph NORMAN was born 1656, and died BEF 18 NOV 1691. He married Mary COLLINS 24 JAN 1688/89 in Massachusetts Vital Records for Marblehead, Essex Co., Massachusetts..
34 vii. John NORMAN was born ABT 1658, and died 1709. He married Sarah MAVERICK 10 NOV 1683 in Marblehead, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
35 viii. William NORMAN was born 1658, and died 1699. He married Rebecca ABT 1680 in Salem / Marblehead, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She was born 1657, and died 1729.


7. HANNAH FLINT (WILLIAM FLINT) was born ABT 1647 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 20 JAN 1723/24 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married JOSHUA WARD 18 JAN 1668/69 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, son of MILES WARD and MARGARET. He was born ABT 25 APR 1641 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 1680. She married Eleazer KEYZER AFT 1680 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.


Children of HANNAH FLINT and JOSHUA WARD are:
36 i. Mary WARD. She married Adoniram COLLINS 20 NOV 1701 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
37 ii. Margaret WARD. She married John PICKMAN.
38 iii. Joshua WARD was born 16 JAN 1668/69 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 1680.
39 iv. Hannah WARD was born 2 JAN 1670/71 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She married Eleazer MOSES 24 JUN 1687 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
+ 40 v. MILES WARD was born 11 MAR 1673/74 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died 29 AUG 1764 in Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Follow Friday -- Riverdale, Michigan

Why write about Riverdale, Michigan you might ask.  My 6th cousin recently sent me a 75 page Centennial booklet for her town with a "population of 300-400 if everyone is home."  She lives in this town.  We began sharing our family information a good four years ago and we stopped, some time passed and we started up, this has happened several times.  Nice to have relatives like that, somebody you are comfortable with and who will share.


Because I knew nothing about Riverdale in Seville Township, I checked with google and found a site about
Gratiot County, Michigan, it appears to be in the center of the state, and the Pine River runs through it.  From the booklet, I learned that lumbering was abundant, and the finest pines could be found there in the early days. "In 1854, lured here by the forest of pines, white people started to settle in the area.  Large log drives used to take place where millions of feet of logs were floated downstream to the mills which soon started along the banks."


My ancestors on our shared Schrambling / Scramlin line settled in Michigan, but not this town.  However, cousin Linda had several generations who live there, and currently her parents have a life-lease on a farm, and Linda also resides there.


The town celebrated their Centennial in 1974, and then in 1999 this book was published, which contains some of the original material as well as updates from the past 25 years.  Throughout the book are old and new photos of schools, houses, churches, banks, old sawmills and other buildings. And, many old family photos.  Linda kindly went through each page and wrote on stickies additional bits of information.  There is even a photo of her 130+ year old house, one of oldest in the town!


I particularly enjoyed the piece about the Riverdale Library. "It was started in June of 1941 by Mrs. Josephine Scramlin Bradley.  She collected a few books from the townspeople and borrowed a number of books from the State Library in Lansing." This wonderful lady was Linda's great-aunt!


While trying to locate additional information about the town, I found a listing of some burials at Riverdale Cemetery from Google images.


I no longer have the need to keep her book, and Linda has allowed me to donate it to the New England Historic and Genealogical Soceity's Library (NEHGS).  It will have a safe home, and perhaps others will use it.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Tombstone Tuesday -- KILBORN of New Haven, Connecticut


Aaron Kilborn
Born:  September 03, 1798, Killingworth, Middlesex Co., Connecticut
Died:  August 29, 1876, Orange, New Haven Co., Connecticut

His wife, Almira Richardson
Born:  Abt. 1798, Orange, New Haven Co., Connecticut
Died:  April 22, 1861, New Haven, New Haven Co., Connecticut
 
They were my 3rd great-grandparents. 
They are buried at Evergreen Cemetery, New Haven, Connecticut.


Their son was George Franklin Kilborn
George Franklin Kilborn
Born:  October 30, 1832, Hamden, New Haven Co., Connecticut
Died:  December 16, 1910, New Haven, New Haven Co., Connecticut

His wife, Sophia Polly Davis
Born:  January 11, 1831, Guilford, New Haven Co., Connecticut
Died:  May 03, 1928, New Haven, New Haven Co., Connecticut
 They were my 2nd great-grandparents.
They are buried at Grove Street Cemetery, New Haven, Connecticut
Note:  Yale University is in the background.


Saturday, June 26, 2010

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun

Randy Seaver at Genea-Musings has given us his weekly Saturday Night Genealogy Fun challenge for today.  It is: "Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to:
1) Think about the question: Why do I pursue genealogy and family history research? and  2) Tell us about it on your own blog post, in a comment to this blog post, or in a comment on Facebook."


There are too many reasons, so let's begin with the obvious. I want to know who all my ancestors were, and I mean all of them.
Also,
I want to be late for just about every appointment, because I need that last bit of information.
I want to be glued to the computer or have my nose in a library book.
I want to starve myself, because I won't get up to eat.
I want to get fat because I won't exercise because I want to be at the computer.
I want to get a sore back, sore hands and have eye problems because of the computer...need to blame the problems on something.
I want a messy house, because other things take priority.
I want a hobby that makes me appear smart.
I want to talk about genealogy and have others look strangely at me.
I want a hobby that doesn't cost too much.
I want to wear Genea-Blogger beads one of these days.
I want my non-genealogy fb friends to see all my fb friends, and think, "she knows a lot of people all over the United States, Canada, and So. Korea."
I want to meet somebody just like me.
I want people to think, "This doesn't sound like Barbara."