I looked up MOHLER FAMILY in my set of "Brethren Encyclopedia," a lovely reference work. (Is there a similar publication for the Quakers?) Here's what B E has to say on p 868-9: MOHLER FAMILY. Ludwig Mohler (1696-1754) from Switzerland arrived in Pennsylvania on Aug. 29, 1730, on the Thistle with his wife and three sons. He settled in Lancaster Co., PA, near Ephrata. Some of the family became Brethren in the White Oak and Cocalico congregations. Fourth generation John jr migrated to Weyer's Cave VA ca 1800. Three sons of Ludwig's son Jacob --- John, Rudolph, and Samuel --- migrated to Ohio ca. 1842, settling around the Covington and Sugar Grove congregations. In the division of 1881 some went with the Old German Baptist Brethren. Several of the next generation moved on to Johnson County, MO, and to Kansas. The Mohler family provided numerous ministers in Lancaster Co., PA, southern Ohio, Missouri, and Kansas. Christian Mohler and his nephew Daniel (relationship to the above uncertain) were early Brethren settlers in Cumberland Co. PA. Annual Meeting was held on Daniel's farm in 1824. This family has contributed much to the Cumberland County congregations. IWG Citations listed include C C Moler's "Descendants of Ludwig Mohler" (1956); L M Mohler's "Mohler Family of Ohio" (1958) C G Dunning's "Genealogy of the Ludwig Mohler Family in America" (1921) and others. B E also has separate articles about John Saylor Mohler, Robert Ellsworth Mohler (I knew him!), Samuel Mohler, Samuel Sayler Mohler, and Mohler Church of the Brethren, PA (near Ephrata). J **************Feeling the pinch at the grocery store? Make dinner for $10 or less. (http://food.aol.com/frugal-feasts?ncid=emlcntusfood00000001)
My husband's Quaker ancestors: Pike Overman Hinshaw Rogers Gardner Mendenhall Sell Crew(s) Weisner/Weesner/Wiesner My source is 'Weisner-Weesner and allied families' by John Turner Weisner. Some families came into PA>VA>NC. Most were settled in the Piedmont area of NC (Orange, Guilford, Stokes, Surry, and Forsyth Counties). From NC there was a lot of migration by family members to Indiana and points west, but his direct ancestors remained in NC. Ginny Durham, NC
Actually I did find some of my files: Catharine married Joseph Rehr, b. 15 June 1825, d. 7 Sept 1900. Her father Michael, died in Nicktown, 1 Mar 1869. Catharine and Joseph's daughter, Caroline Rehr, was my grandmother's grandmother. Katie Again, sorry I sent this twice! > From: [email protected] > Date: Sun, 5 Apr 2009 18:01:36 -0400 > To: [email protected]; [email protected] > Subject: Re: [Q-R] Mohler/Moulder > > Hi, Jan, > > We've corresponded before on the Mohler/Moulder line. > > The John Mohler/Moulder family is not related to the Robert Moulder family of > Marcus Hooks (Robert was a sailmaker and his heritage was English). I descend > from the "German" emigrant, John Mohler who died near Maynardsville, TN in > 1810 and was probably born in Hassloch, Prussia (now part of Germany). I have > not proven his absolute birth date -- what is your source? I use "about 1734" in > my files still. > > I paid for my Moulder uncle's Y-DNA test last year and discovered that our > DNA is very close to the Ludwig and Henry Mohlers of Ephrata, Lancaster Co, PA. > We now believe the Mohlers were from Basel (or just east of it), Switzerland, > with John's grandfather having moved into what is now southwestern Germany > near Speyer on the Rhine River where they were shepherds. John Mohler, some or > all of his siblings and probably his father came to PA where Ludwig's family had > settled. This DNA discovery was a big breakthrough on our family research! We > are now leaning towards John Mohler's father being Heinrich Johann (or Johann > Heinrich) Mohler (a.ka. "Henry Mohler") born and christened 1711 in Hassloch, > Germany, and possibly a brother or cousin of Ludwig's. Henry's wife was Maria > Catharina Drucktenhengst, b. 1708 in Hofheim, Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany. > > I agree that Susannah Swingle, John's wife, was probably of the Zwingli line, > but haven't proven anything on her except for a death date and location. Much > more there to research! > > I believe my gggg-grandfather, Jacob Moulder b. 1775, was probably the first > of the Mohlers to use "Moulder" as his surname, probably in an attempt to > become more American. He is using it by 1802 in Orange Co, NC, where he purchased > land and married (Elizabeth Borland). There is surviving correspondence > between Jacob and other members of the family back east which use "Mohler" for those > in NC and VA, so we know it's the same family. > > Jacob was not a Quaker, but some of his children, grandchildren and > great-grandchildren married Quaker spouses (Braxton, Carter, Ellis, Farlow, Hadley, > Lindley, Millis, Nixon, Pickett, etc.). Jacob's son, John Moulder, married > Eleanor Maris; she was disowned by the Society but later regained her membership in > Parke Co, IN. John did become a member (I think in Parke Co at the > Bloomingdale MM), and was a member in several meetings in Howard Co, IN. > > Still lots to research on the Mohler/Moulder line ... > > Eleanor Rayl > > > > Message: 11 > > Date: Sun, 5 Apr 2009 14:29:17 EDT > > From: [email protected] > > Subject: [Q-R] Moulder/Mohler > > To: [email protected] > > Message-ID: <[email protected]> > > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" > > > > I have not actually proven the information I collected about the > > Moulder/Mohler family. My records show that the emigrant John > > Mohler/Moulder was born > > May 27 1733 in Basel, Switzerland, and died May 27 1810 in Union County, > > Maynardsville, TN His parents are believed to be Heinrich/Henry Mohler > > (1708->1748) and Catharina XX. John Moulder is said to have migrated from > > PA to NC > > before the American Revolution (about 1770) and was a cobbler and > > saddler. > > (The name MOHLER is a fairly common Swiss Anabaptist name even now. I went > > to school with a lot of Mohlers. The information I found on line > > suggested > > that MOHLER somehow became MOULDER over the years.) > > > > The putative wife found for John Mohler/Moulder is Emigrant Susannah > > Swingle > > (1737-1833). She was born in Switzerland or Prussia, died at > > Maynardsville, Grainger County, TN. (I presume Grainger and Union County > > are perhaps the > > same place, just having undergone some boundary changes.) The marriage > > date > > I have for these folks is c1763 in PA. Children I have for John & > > Susannah > > are: > > > > Henry Moulder (1765->1850). > > Susa (1767-1839) > > Mary (1769- ) > > Elizabeth (1770 - ) > > Catherine (1772 - >1838) > > John (1773-1801) > > Jacob (1775-1846) > > Valentine "Felty" (1776-1833) > > > > There is an tradition within the family that Susannah Swingle and her > > sister > > were unwilling immigrants, that the young Swiss girls were visiting the > > docks, were lured aboard a ship, then locked in. When they arrived in > > Philadelphia, the girls were sold for their passage money. They wound up > > being > > purchased and "properly reared" by the senior Moulder family. Louis > > Moulder/Mohler later married the sister (whose name I don't yet have), and > > John > > Moulder/Mohler married Susannah. (Incidentally, the Swingle name sounds a > > lot like > > Zwingli, an important name among German and Swiss Anabaptists (Mennonites > > and > > Dunkards). > > > > Children credited to Henry/Heinrich Mohler and wife Catharina XX are: > > > > Lewis (1730- ) > > John (1733-1810) > > Anna Maria (1734 - ) > > Valentine (1735-<1804) > > Johan Jacob (1736 - ) > > Margaret (1743- ) > > Anna Catharina (1747- ) > > > > There is also another line of information that puts Henry/Heinrich as son > > of > > Robert Moulder/Moler b 1650 and wife Jane XX. If this family was Swiss > > German, this last batch of stuff just doesn't sound plausible to me. > > Robert > > is not a German name, nor is Jane. So if these are truly the parents of > > these fine folks, then the MOHLER stuff is unlikely. > > > > Happy hunting. > > > > Jan > > > > > > > ************** > Feeling the pinch at the grocery store? Make dinner for $10 or > less. (http://food.aol.com/frugal-feasts?ncid=emlcntusfood00000001) > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message _________________________________________________________________ Quick access to your favorite MSN content and Windows Live with Internet Explorer 8. http://ie8.msn.com/microsoft/internet-explorer-8/en-us/ie8.aspx?ocid=B037MSN55C0701A
Hello, I am interested in your Mohler's. I'm wondering if my Mohler's possibly were from the same family, but immigrated later. I don't have my documents in front of me at the moment, but my most recent ancestor is Catharine Mohler, married to _____ Rehr (can't remember his first name at the moment. Her father's name was Michael. She would have been born c. 1830?, in France if I remember right, in the Alsace-Lorraine region, on the Rhine River. They were Catholic, and immigrated when Catharine was a girl, if I remember right. Maybe circa 1840-1850? They settled in Nicktown, Cambria County, PA. I don't believe I have anyone to DNA test, but I'll try to see. For a while I was in contact with a relative I believe still living in France. Katie Rennie Sorry I sent this twice to you, I didn't have replyall on, so it didn't go to the list! > From: [email protected] > Date: Sun, 5 Apr 2009 18:01:36 -0400 > To: [email protected]; [email protected] > Subject: Re: [Q-R] Mohler/Moulder > > Hi, Jan, > > We've corresponded before on the Mohler/Moulder line. > > The John Mohler/Moulder family is not related to the Robert Moulder family of > Marcus Hooks (Robert was a sailmaker and his heritage was English). I descend > from the "German" emigrant, John Mohler who died near Maynardsville, TN in > 1810 and was probably born in Hassloch, Prussia (now part of Germany). I have > not proven his absolute birth date -- what is your source? I use "about 1734" in > my files still. > > I paid for my Moulder uncle's Y-DNA test last year and discovered that our > DNA is very close to the Ludwig and Henry Mohlers of Ephrata, Lancaster Co, PA. > We now believe the Mohlers were from Basel (or just east of it), Switzerland, > with John's grandfather having moved into what is now southwestern Germany > near Speyer on the Rhine River where they were shepherds. John Mohler, some or > all of his siblings and probably his father came to PA where Ludwig's family had > settled. This DNA discovery was a big breakthrough on our family research! We > are now leaning towards John Mohler's father being Heinrich Johann (or Johann > Heinrich) Mohler (a.ka. "Henry Mohler") born and christened 1711 in Hassloch, > Germany, and possibly a brother or cousin of Ludwig's. Henry's wife was Maria > Catharina Drucktenhengst, b. 1708 in Hofheim, Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany. > > I agree that Susannah Swingle, John's wife, was probably of the Zwingli line, > but haven't proven anything on her except for a death date and location. Much > more there to research! > > I believe my gggg-grandfather, Jacob Moulder b. 1775, was probably the first > of the Mohlers to use "Moulder" as his surname, probably in an attempt to > become more American. He is using it by 1802 in Orange Co, NC, where he purchased > land and married (Elizabeth Borland). There is surviving correspondence > between Jacob and other members of the family back east which use "Mohler" for those > in NC and VA, so we know it's the same family. > > Jacob was not a Quaker, but some of his children, grandchildren and > great-grandchildren married Quaker spouses (Braxton, Carter, Ellis, Farlow, Hadley, > Lindley, Millis, Nixon, Pickett, etc.). Jacob's son, John Moulder, married > Eleanor Maris; she was disowned by the Society but later regained her membership in > Parke Co, IN. John did become a member (I think in Parke Co at the > Bloomingdale MM), and was a member in several meetings in Howard Co, IN. > > Still lots to research on the Mohler/Moulder line ... > > Eleanor Rayl > > > > Message: 11 > > Date: Sun, 5 Apr 2009 14:29:17 EDT > > From: [email protected] > > Subject: [Q-R] Moulder/Mohler > > To: [email protected] > > Message-ID: <[email protected]> > > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" > > > > I have not actually proven the information I collected about the > > Moulder/Mohler family. My records show that the emigrant John > > Mohler/Moulder was born > > May 27 1733 in Basel, Switzerland, and died May 27 1810 in Union County, > > Maynardsville, TN His parents are believed to be Heinrich/Henry Mohler > > (1708->1748) and Catharina XX. John Moulder is said to have migrated from > > PA to NC > > before the American Revolution (about 1770) and was a cobbler and > > saddler. > > (The name MOHLER is a fairly common Swiss Anabaptist name even now. I went > > to school with a lot of Mohlers. The information I found on line > > suggested > > that MOHLER somehow became MOULDER over the years.) > > > > The putative wife found for John Mohler/Moulder is Emigrant Susannah > > Swingle > > (1737-1833). She was born in Switzerland or Prussia, died at > > Maynardsville, Grainger County, TN. (I presume Grainger and Union County > > are perhaps the > > same place, just having undergone some boundary changes.) The marriage > > date > > I have for these folks is c1763 in PA. Children I have for John & > > Susannah > > are: > > > > Henry Moulder (1765->1850). > > Susa (1767-1839) > > Mary (1769- ) > > Elizabeth (1770 - ) > > Catherine (1772 - >1838) > > John (1773-1801) > > Jacob (1775-1846) > > Valentine "Felty" (1776-1833) > > > > There is an tradition within the family that Susannah Swingle and her > > sister > > were unwilling immigrants, that the young Swiss girls were visiting the > > docks, were lured aboard a ship, then locked in. When they arrived in > > Philadelphia, the girls were sold for their passage money. They wound up > > being > > purchased and "properly reared" by the senior Moulder family. Louis > > Moulder/Mohler later married the sister (whose name I don't yet have), and > > John > > Moulder/Mohler married Susannah. (Incidentally, the Swingle name sounds a > > lot like > > Zwingli, an important name among German and Swiss Anabaptists (Mennonites > > and > > Dunkards). > > > > Children credited to Henry/Heinrich Mohler and wife Catharina XX are: > > > > Lewis (1730- ) > > John (1733-1810) > > Anna Maria (1734 - ) > > Valentine (1735-<1804) > > Johan Jacob (1736 - ) > > Margaret (1743- ) > > Anna Catharina (1747- ) > > > > There is also another line of information that puts Henry/Heinrich as son > > of > > Robert Moulder/Moler b 1650 and wife Jane XX. If this family was Swiss > > German, this last batch of stuff just doesn't sound plausible to me. > > Robert > > is not a German name, nor is Jane. So if these are truly the parents of > > these fine folks, then the MOHLER stuff is unlikely. > > > > Happy hunting. > > > > Jan > > > > > > > ************** > Feeling the pinch at the grocery store? Make dinner for $10 or > less. (http://food.aol.com/frugal-feasts?ncid=emlcntusfood00000001) > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message _________________________________________________________________ Rediscover Hotmail®: Now available on your iPhone or BlackBerry http://windowslive.com/RediscoverHotmail?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_HM_Rediscover_Mobile1_042009
That should read Amos b 1801. Janet -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Bonnie Woodman Sent: Monday, April 06, 2009 8:25 AM To: Judy Baker; [email protected] Subject: Re: [Q-R] Friends' Lineage Hi Judy, I see you have the "Davis" line listed. Can you tell me which line it is? My are the Samuel Davis line that donated the land for the church in Salem, Ohio. take care, Bonnie >>> "Judy Baker" <[email protected]> 4/4/2009 5:56 PM >>> If you're all not tired of this thread, here are some additional ancestral surnames. Nearly all colonial Mass., with some later generations in New York and Ohio and documented in Society of Friends records. Bowerman Davis Gifford Killea/Killey/Kelley Jenney Perry Sherman Tucker Wady Williams Wing Winslow Judy ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hi Judy, I see you have the "Davis" line listed. Can you tell me which line it is? My are the Samuel Davis line that donated the land for the church in Salem, Ohio. take care, Bonnie >>> "Judy Baker" <[email protected]> 4/4/2009 5:56 PM >>> If you're all not tired of this thread, here are some additional ancestral surnames. Nearly all colonial Mass., with some later generations in New York and Ohio and documented in Society of Friends records. Bowerman Davis Gifford Killea/Killey/Kelley Jenney Perry Sherman Tucker Wady Williams Wing Winslow Judy ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
I am descended from Zephaniah Mason CARR and Angeline GOLDEN of Steuben and LaGrange cntys, IN
I too am interested in the Davis line in OH. My husband's ancestor was Amos Davis, b 1891, whose father Joseph was living with him 1850 in Center Township, Grant Co. IN. Joseph is listed as 80 yrs old, b in NJ. Amos & Joseph were both in Concord, Fayette Co. OH in 1830. I have no further information on Joseph and would like some. Janet -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Bonnie Woodman Sent: Monday, April 06, 2009 8:25 AM To: Judy Baker; [email protected] Subject: Re: [Q-R] Friends' Lineage Hi Judy, I see you have the "Davis" line listed. Can you tell me which line it is? My are the Samuel Davis line that donated the land for the church in Salem, Ohio. take care, Bonnie >>> "Judy Baker" <[email protected]> 4/4/2009 5:56 PM >>> If you're all not tired of this thread, here are some additional ancestral surnames. Nearly all colonial Mass., with some later generations in New York and Ohio and documented in Society of Friends records. Bowerman Davis Gifford Killea/Killey/Kelley Jenney Perry Sherman Tucker Wady Williams Wing Winslow Judy ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
I have a Phebe PIERCE b: 1758, dtr of Caleb PIERCE and Ann MENDENHALL. I also have a Phebe PIERCE b: 1804, dtr of Thomas PIERCE and Margaret TRIMBLE. There were at least two separate PIERCE families in early Chester/Delaware cntys, PA. The lesser known line of Henry PIERCE and Sarah SMITH of Concord and the better known line of George PEIRCE and Ann GAYNER. Henry PIERCE, IV d: 1801 and wife, Margaret, had a son, Henry PIERCE V b: c 1888. My line branched off before this last Henry and I quit tracing the line at that point.
Hey, I'm supposed to be getting ONE E-mail per day from this list but am now getting many. Please fix. >. . .
Cousin to Daniel. His father, Squire, was the brother of my George Boone IV. -- Doy Louise Groenenberg Yakima, WA
I feel the same way. Just trying to get some information on my Atkinson line. Thomas b. 1741 don't know where, joined Cane Creek, m. at Cane Creek, went to Wrightsboro, Ga, not sure whether back to Cane Creek, but finally wound up in I believe it was Short Creek, OH. Married Hadley, and Crowe. jerrym ----- Original Message ----- From: Paulette To: Friends Sent: Sunday, April 05, 2009 10:57 PM Subject: [Q-R] families Very interesting discussion. The only Quaker families that I know for sure I descend from were Anthony Moore and Zilphia Haines of Frederick, Virginia. Paulette ________________________________________ PeoplePC Online A better way to Internet http://www.peoplepc.com ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.0.238 / Virus Database: 270.11.42/2042 - Release Date: 04/05/09 10:54:00 -- I am using the free version of SPAMfighter. We are a community of 6 million users fighting spam. SPAMfighter has removed 9175 of my spam emails to date. Get the free SPAMfighter here: http://www.spamfighter.com/len The Professional version does not have this message
Cool Spring Preparative Meeting in Sussex County, Delaware existed until about 1817 and was part of Duck Creek Monthly Meeting and later Motherkiln (became Camden) Monthly Meeting centered in Kent County. See http://www.quakermeetings.com/meeting_view?anID=TST615L for Duck Creek MM and http://www.quakermeetings.com/meeting_view?anID=TST373L for Camden MM. The Friends Historical Library at Swarthmore has most of the original vital records of the monthly meetings, but I did not see any reference to separate Cool Spring PM records on the Records website. http://trilogy.brynmawr.edu/speccoll/mm/camdemm.xml Tom Thomas C. Hill 425 Walnut Street, #1800 Cincinnati, OH 45202 U.S.A. and Charlottesville, VA Note new e-mail address: [email protected] www.QuakerMeetings.com -----Original Message----- Sent: 04 April 2009 10:51 PM I was interested to see the locations of your Quaker ancestors and notice that you mention a Meeting at Coolspring, near Lewes DE . Are there any records for that Meeting? Do you know what dates it was in existence? I am looking for information on a Thomas Newport, b England known to have been in Philadelphia and Lewes (d abt 1758 perhaps in Sussex DE) who may or may not have been a Quaker. His son Jesse Newport m abt 1758 Elizabeth (Long) of Worcester Co MD; they joined the Duck Cr Meeting, Kent Co DE in 1777. On Sat, Apr 4, 2009 at 6:24 PM, Leslie Bagwell <[email protected]> wrote: > Descendants of Fretwell Wright > ------------------------------ > 1-Fretwell Wright b. Unknown, , , England, d. Unknown > |-2-Esq Peter Fretwell Wright b. 1743, d. 7 Mar 1791, (Cold Springs Meeting, Sussex, Delaware, USA) > +Elizabeth Fisher b. After 1744, m. 8 Jul 1768, Cool Springs Meeting House, Sussex, Delaware, USA, d. After 1800, par. John Fisher and Grace Lloyd
If you run across the names of BENINGTON or PEIRCE in Chester County, you are looking at my late wife's forebears. John BENINGTON married Phebe PEIRCE in the Concord MM of Delaware County, but their children were all born in Chester County. One of John's children married an ELFRETH. So my wife had cousins in that line, also. Think about Elfreth's Alley in Philadelphia. My late wife's great grandmother was a BENINGTON. On her mother's father's side she was related to the RECKITTs. One of her RECKITT forebears was William RECKITT, a Quaker missionary who established quite a few MMs along the east coast of the US around the time of the Revolutionary War. He made a couple of voyages from England, once even being captured by the French and imprisoned for a while. I get a real kick out of reading about some of the many people whose names I have run across in my research on the BENINGTON and RECKITT lines. Keep it up, people! You never know when something will click and you add in another three or four generations. Eugene M. Wiese 838 Linlawn Drive Wabash, IN 46992-3903 [email protected] (260) 846-0516 ----- Original Message ----- From: "K" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: 04 April, 2009 5:54 PM Subject: [Q-R] My PA Quaker Lines & Question on Irish Quakers' History > Both my mother and father's families are from Chester County, PA > Quaker lines > My mother's family, the STERN line from Downingtown in Chester County, > PA shares most of the surnames Judy lists from her husband's HEALD > line, as well as CURRIER and related lines from Cecil Co. Maryland. > My father's Chester County lines are SPEAKMAN, MERCER, PYLE, and > related lines.
My ancestor, Nathaniel Donham died by 1812 in Clermont Co OH. A witness to the Clermont County will is Jesse Swein/Swain. He may be descended from Nathaniel Donham who died ca 1727 in Bucks Co. PA and whose daughter Elizabeth married Jonathan Fitzrandolph. This Nathaniel owned land in Newtown as did the Twinings from Eastham MA. Is it possible Jesse Swein is related to the Nantucket Swains? Thanks. Pat On Apr 5, 2009, at 7:27 PM, Sue Maxwell wrote: > Do any of you with Nantucket Quakers or ancestors have photos, > Bibles, or > anything that could be shared with other fellow Nantucket descendants? > > > > I am co-authoring a book about my Swain grandmother, and the family > research > I am doing is for a background to the book. I am new to knowing that > the > Swains came from Nantucket, but do have a photo of a portrait of my > ggg > grandfather, Shubael Swain, who was born there and moved to NYC as > a ship > captain. His parents were Ebenezer Swain and Lydia Ellis, and his > parents > were Ebenezer Swain and Lydia Gyles. I am always looking for living > relatives who might have stories, photos, information, Bible records, > anything that would add to the story of her ancestors and cousins > and even > living relatives. > > > > Thanks, Sue > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] > with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and > the body of the message
I completely overlooked my Quaker Bowne, Thorne and Feake Quaker families. Some sources here are: Rubincam, Milton., “ “A Winthrop-Bernadotte Pedigree.” ,” NEHGR. Volume 103. October 1949. Whole Number 412. Frost, Josephine C., compiler., Ancestors of Henry Rogers Winthrop and his Wife Alice Woodward Babcock., Compiled for their daughter Alice Winthrop. 1927, Reprinted by Quintin Publications, Orange Park, FL 32065., 592 pages., Found WorldVitalrecords.com and genealogy.com. Cocks, George William, compiler., History and Genealogy of the Cock- Cocks-Cox Family, Assisted by John Cox, Jr., Privately Printed by Unionist-Gazette Assn, Somerville, NJ, 1914., 2nd Edition, Enlarged., Descended from James and Sarah Cock of Killingworth Upon Matinecock in the Township of Oysterbay, Long Island, New York., Found Google Books online. Rahway & Plainfield New Jersey Quaker Meeting Records. Cox. Indexed by Selby Publishing & Printing. Published 1992 by Selby Publishing and Printing. 3405 Zartman Rd., Kokomo, IN 46902. A transcription of notational abstracts made of monthly meeting records by John Cox, Jr. These cards were left with the Haviland Record Room of New York Yearly Meeting who has allowed them to be copied. Some of the script was nearly indecipherable and was copied as it appeared. Linda Smith
Per Dr. Hubert English (first cousin of my grandmother) author of a privately published book titled: A GENEALOGY OF THE ILLINOIS BRANCH OF THE ENGLISH FAMILY(1970) 1. Joseph ENGLISH, Sr. born 1610-1615 lived at Nailsworth, Gloucestershire, England came to America in 1683+ and died in 1686. His first wife, mother of his four children, died in England. In 1685 he married Joan, widow of Henry COMLEY, at Quaker meeting house. 2. Joseph ENGLISH, Jr. born abt. 1645-50, married abt. 1670 to Hannah CLIFT came to America in 1677, with Hannah's parents on the ship Kent; +Footnote: Thanks to Alan Batchelor, our Joseph ENGLISH was aboard the ship "The Society" and arrived in America, August 1682. among the founders of the colony at Burlington, New Jersey and died 1725. He operated a ferry between Bristol, Penn. and Burlington, NJ. 3. John ENGLISH born abt. 1690 in Bucks Co., Pennsylvania, married Sarah _______. In 1714, Joseph Jr. gave John 550 acres of land in Eastern New Jersey with a mill on it. A village grew up there known as English Creek. John acquired other lands and was Justice of the County Court for 34 years. 4. Joseph ENGLISH born abt. 1725 at English Creek, inherited the land on the west side of English Creek, married abt. 1750 to Prudence _________. Had three sons, Joseph, Migeal and Thomas, in the Revolutionary Army. Was overseer of the poor during the Revolution. Died 1807. 5. Isaac ENGLISH born abt. 1765-67, married Jemima LAKE. He died Nov. 2, 1846. 6. Abel ENGLISH born July 7, 1797 at English Creek, married Margaret BABCOCK. Deane Craig in Las Vegas, Nevada ____________________________________________________________ Stuck in a dead end job?? Click to start living your dreams by earning an online degree. http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL2141/fc/BLSrjpTKL6hDKeBCxlewc6jJL4IY2GWMgau1V87vxcZEtVG7HGCUPHo928o/
Here is a list of Quaker ancestors for my husband and me. I am especially interested in sharing any information on the families who settled in NE Ohio (Stark, Mahoning, and Columbiana Counties) and in eastern Indiana in the early 1800s. Especially: Carr, Painter, Stratton, Holloway, Griffith, Fogg, Marshall, Hamlin, Wileman(Wildman) in Ohio, and Hill & Pickett in Indiana. Thanks. Nancy Brantingham Robert Brantingham Abbott Allen Antrim Austin Bacon Bassett Belman Bishop Blount Borton Bowne Braddock Bradway Branin Brantingham Browne Buck Buffum Burson Butcher Carr Chambless Copeland Cowgill Davis Denn Elkinton Elkinton Feake Fell Fogg Foulger French Griffith Hancock Handy Holloway Hopper Howland Humphries Hunt Kinsey Knowles Lippincott Maddocks Marshall Marston Moss Muncy Norcross Oakford Overman Page Painter Pancoast Parsons Pharo Phillips Pike Powell Price Prickett Ridgway Scattergood Schofield Scriven Sharp Shaw Sherman Silver Skidmore Smith Southwick Stratton Thomas Thompson Townsend Tyler Waddington Washbourne Wickersham Willetts Willetts Willson Wilson Wood Woolf Woolman Nancy Lloyd Brantingham Albertson Atkinson Bagley Bailey Batte Beeson Belman Biles Brown Burgess Charles Cleare Craven Croshaw Davis Elam Epes Fell Glover Grubb Hadley Hamlin Hargrave Heath Hendricks Henley Hill Isham Janney Lindley Littleberry Maris Marshall Matson Mendenhall Mercer Miller Moon Moore Newby Newlin Nicholson Nixon Nutt Overman Packingham Paxson Pickett Pierson Pike Poythress Pritchard Pyle Rookings Smith Symonds Symonds Underwood Vane Vestal Ward Warrilow Watson White Wileman/Wildman Wilson Wray Yardley Yeargain
I am not the same Sue Maxwell, but your name is fun for me; my ggg grandfather, Shubael Swain, from Nantucket, originally, looked exactly like Robert Burns- I have a photo of a portrait of him- very handsome indeed. Sue
-----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected] Sent: Sunday, April 05, 2009 8:54 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [Q-R] Quaker Forefathers That's correct Lenard (Leonard), is the one. I don't know where I'd access the book but I write down the title an see if I can look it up. Thanks <Snip> Jered Jared: "History of St/ Mary's County,Maryland 1634-1990" is available From: David Hammett P.O. Box 11 St. Inigoes, Maryland 20684 301-872-5422. This is in St. Mary's County, Maryland! I purchased mine at a local book store, Route 234 & Wildewood Parkway, California, Maryland, 20619. I descend from the Darnell Line, a man named Edward Darnell; however, he was not of Henry Darnell's Line but distantly related in England. The Darnell brothers did help him, and he settled at Port Tabacco in present day Charles County, MD. No, we are not of the St. Mary's GUYs, but rather the Minnesota Guys, so probably related over the Pond! Violet Moore Guy