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    1. tuttle
    2. iam looking for info on a george tuttle who married a rachel wayman they had 14 kids and george passed away in 1906 when my grandmother was 6 monthes old eleanor ellen tuttle rachel later married a redmond my grandmother was born in sherman pa lived most of her life in delaware county new york Becky

    08/19/2000 07:22:03
    1. Re: more Tuthill, Tuttle.. Page 1
    2. Dora Smith
    3. I might have atleast his children at my web site at http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Acres/5127/Readyhough/tuttle.html. I do have a list of my Tuttle sources. I also have my own copy of the stuff on the Devonshire Tuttles, that is from Tuttles in America, and how they aren't atleast immediately related to my Connecticut and Massachusetts Tuttles, on that page. The stuff Charlie posted may include this, may be the same thing, may be something different, could include information that actually links the two families farther back, for all I know. Tuthill was a common word for a small hill or a small river or something, I have that on my page too, but also alot of these families have very similar family crests with lions or something. Since I never got the first two postings that Charlie sent, mine start with number 3, and then proceed to MORE Tuttles, nos 1 through 3, I don't have complete information on what it is he posted. Yours, Dora Smith --- Pat Ratcliff <pratclif@topsurf.com> wrote: > I am looking for other descendants of Richard > Tuttle, brother of William. > > Pat Ratcliff > Baumholder, Germany > pratclif@topsurf.com > http://www.familytreemaker.com/users/r/a/t/Patricia-Louise-Ratcliff/ > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Dora Smith" <tiggernut_48@yahoo.com> > To: <TUTTLE-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Saturday, August 19, 2000 5:33 PM > Subject: Re: more Tuthill, Tuttle.. Page 1 > > > > > > I missed Tuthill, Tuttle, page 1. Mine start > at > > page 3 or something. Where did all that stuff > > come from? It looks like that ancient > Tuttles in > > America book, I think - but it's hard to > tell. > > Is this the family that came to > Massachusetts; > > John, William, and i think Richard, or a > totally > > different family? Because there was > speculation > > in that Tuttles in America book, if I have > the > > right book, that thos e Tuttles were of a > wealthy > > family who may have been in Essex, who were > > involved in the royal court, were lord > mayors, > > all of that. But my Tuttles weren't of that > > family - or I'd appreciate any real evidence > that > > they were of that family from farther back. > > > > Yours, > > Dora > > > > > __________________________________________________ > > Do You Yahoo!? > > Send instant messages & get email alerts with > Yahoo! Messenger. > > http://im.yahoo.com/ > > > > > > ==== TUTTLE Mailing List ==== > > *? Do you want to support the > > *? Rootsweb Genealogical Data Cooperative? > > *? Visit http://www.rootsweb.com > > > > > ==== TUTTLE Mailing List ==== > ** Please include NAMEs, DATEs, and LOCATIONs > in your postings ** > __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Send instant messages & get email alerts with Yahoo! Messenger. http://im.yahoo.com/

    08/19/2000 04:47:22
    1. Re: more Tuthill, Tuttle.. Page 1
    2. Dora Smith
    3. I missed Tuthill, Tuttle, page 1. Mine start at page 3 or something. Where did all that stuff come from? It looks like that ancient Tuttles in America book, I think - but it's hard to tell. Is this the family that came to Massachusetts; John, William, and i think Richard, or a totally different family? Because there was speculation in that Tuttles in America book, if I have the right book, that thos e Tuttles were of a wealthy family who may have been in Essex, who were involved in the royal court, were lord mayors, all of that. But my Tuttles weren't of that family - or I'd appreciate any real evidence that they were of that family from farther back. Yours, Dora __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Send instant messages & get email alerts with Yahoo! Messenger. http://im.yahoo.com/

    08/19/2000 02:33:07
    1. page 3 last page
    2. charlie
    3. Summary of Mrs. Sones' TuttleTuthill line: John Tuthill England Henry Tuthill, born ca 1580, County Norfolk England. died between 20 Mar 1618 and 20 Apr 1619 married before or by 1607 to Alice GOOCH, dau, of John & Margaret Henry Tuthill, the immigrant, born (bapt.) 28 June 1612; died ca 1650, LI. married before 1635 to Bridget who mar. (2) Win. Wells. (Check for Wells genealogies which may or may not produce her maiden name he have married Bridget in England Henry, that is.) John Tuthill, born at ? on 16 July 1635; died 12 Oct 1717 Orient, L.I. married 17 Feb 1657 Deliverance King. Deliverance born (bapt. 31 Aug 1641 Salem died 25 Jan 1689) John Tuthill, born 14 Feb 1658, Southold, LI; died 21 Nov 1754; married Mehitable Wells, born ca 1666 died 26 Aug 1742 James Tuthill, born ca 1692 LI, died ca 1772 Orange Ca, NY; married ca 1714 Rachel Browne John Tuthill, born ca 1730 Brookhaven, LI; died ca 1770 Orange Co., NY (before his father); married 23 Nov 1752 in LI Temperance Smith Keturah . Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

    08/18/2000 08:47:47
    1. page 2
    2. charlie
    3. John Tuthill 16 July 1635, son of Henry. 1612; died 12 Oct 1717 Oysterponds (Orient) L.I.; Married (1) 17 Feb 1657~Southold, LI deLiverance, baptized 31 Aug 1641 at Salem, MaSS who died 25 Jan 1689 at Gysterponds, the daugh-ter of William and Dorothy (Hayne) King; married (2) 28 May 1690 at Southold to Sarah 3 Sep 1635, died 8 Nov 1728 at Southold, the dau of John & Mercy (Paine) Frost & the widow of Thomas YOUNGS. (Same references as given immediately above furnished his this data.) Children: (1) John 14 Feb 1658 (2) Elizabeth 19 Jan 1661 (3) Henry i May 1665 (4) Hannah 7 Nov 1667 (5) Abigail 17 Oct 1670 (67) died young (8) Daniel 23 Jan 1680 (9) Nathaniel 10 Nov 1683 (1) died young Henry Tuthill, baptized 28 June 1612 Tharston, County Norfolk, England, son of Henry 1580 & Alice Gooch; died ca 1650 age 38 at Southold, LI; in 1637 had lot in Hingham, Mass. but not known when came over; sold lot Jun 1644 & to Southold where (his) bra. John had been some years; married Bridget (no last name given); she married (2) at Southold to William WELLS & she died soon; (Data from LTV). Children: (1) John 16 July 1635 (2) Elizabeth ca 1637 (3) Nathaniel ca 1639 (4) Daniel baptized 30 Aug 1640 Hingham, Mass (5) Sarah ca 1642 died unmarried (6) Ann ca 16489 (7) Mary ca 1649 Henry Tuthill ca 1580, county Norfolk,. England, son of John, made a will 20 March 1618, proved 20 April 1619, which mentions his fatherinlaw John GOOd, his brother John TUThILL, his wife Alice and the children listed below. Henry was buried 26 Apr 1618 at Tharston, England. Children all baptized at Tharston: (1) John bp 25 Oct 1607 (2) William bp 29 Oct 1609 (3) Henry bp 28 Jun 1612 (4) Alice bp 24 Sep 1614 and (5) Elizabeth bp 9 March 1616. The Henry Tuthill baptized 28 June 1612 at Tharston may have been in Hingham, Mass. as early as 1634 but he was to Southold, LY, NY in 1644. Here for the first time (I am quoting Dr Tuttle now) is published a very large account of his male line descendants, mostly collected by the 50 years of work of LTV with with many additions from other sources. Henry's descendants tended to retain the spelling TUTHILL much more than did the other early American lines. However a steady tendency to change it to TUTTLE among Henry's descendants began in the first American generation, so that more than half the living descendants now spell it Tuttle. LTV was quite unhappy about this changing. Many times in her years of corresp, with me she remarked "Why did they have to change to TUTTLE? Since very few of the others used this spelling, it would have been much easier to trace them if they hadn't changed it." Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

    08/18/2000 08:45:14
    1. more Tuthill, Tuttle.. Page 1
    2. charlie
    3. Keturah Tuthill, c1755 Orange Co., NY, dau John c1730 & Temperance SMITH; (she was) living 1816 Luzerne Co., Pa; married (in) Orange Co. NY (to) Thomas died 1829 Luzerne Co., Pa.,(the)son of John & Charity (Davenport) Lamoreaux. (Information furnished to Dr. Tuttle by Lotta Tuthill Vail born 7 Sep 1880). (Children): (1) Martha . c1775 m. Samuel Pringle; (2) Elizabeth 30 Sep 1776 married Geo. palmer Ransom; (3) James married Sarah Hunter, 10 children; (4) Daniel mar. Mariah Allen (5) John 21 Nov 1780, unmarried (6) Charity M. Peter Steele (7) Hannah m. Stephen Van Loon (8) Thomas 19 Aug 1787 mar. Mary Boston (9) Amelia mar. Fletcher Case (I) Keturah 18 Feb 1791 mar. Samuel Ackley (11) Jane mar. Absalom Case (12) Temperance married Matrhias Van Loon (13) Joshua 30 Aug 1793 mar. Betty Ives. John4Tuthill, ca 1730 Brookhaven, L(ong) I(sland) son (of) James 1692; died ca 1770 Woodbury Clove, Orange, NY; mar. 23 Nov 1752 Smithtown, LI (to) Temperance died ca 1780, daughter (of) James and Jerusha (Topping) Smith. (data furnished by LTV above); Children: (1-2) twins 1753, James & John; (3-4) twins ca 1754, Ezekiel & William (5) Keturah ca 1755 (6) Samuel ?ca 1750's (7) Daniel ?ca1760 James Tuthill, ca 1692 Oysterponds, LI, son of John 1658; died ca1772 Orange Co., NY (migrated to) same location ca 1748; married ca 1714 Rachel ca 1692; living 1738, the daughter of Jonathan & Elizabeth (Salmon) Browne. (data furnished by LTV above). Children: (1) Rachel ca 1715 (2) James ca 1717 (3) Elizabeth ?c1719 (4) Daniel c1721 (5) Mary c1725 (6) Jonathan 6 October 1727 (7) Mehitable ca17289 (8) John Ca 1730 John Tuthi1l, 14 Feb 1658 Southold, LI, son of John 1635; died 21 Nov 1754 ae 9' served Colonial Assembl.y, several offices,; JP; called "Chalker John"; Married Mehitable (born) ca 1666 same location (Southold LI); (who) died 26 Aug. 1142, the daughter of William & Mary WELLS. (Note no maiden name for Mary Wells). Infor. furnished to Dr. Tuttle same as above, and also a manuscript of data collected on the Tuthills of Suffolk County, L.1. by Milton E. Felt of Wading River, Long Island. (no date indicated). Children: (1) John ca 1685 (2) Mary ca 1687 (3) Joshua ca 1690 (4) ca 1692 5) Dorthy ca 1694 (6) Freegift 8 Aug. 1698 (7) Daniel ca 1700 (8) Jemima (Hannah?) ca. 1703 Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

    08/18/2000 08:43:55
    1. Last Page
    2. charlie
    3. old, b. 15 Jan., 1712, d. 18 Nov., 1768 " He owned half of Plum Island, anti the Gulls, besides valuable estates in New London and elsewhere." (Miss F. M. Caulkins, the historian, supposes him to have been the Daniel Tuthill, Jr., of Southold, who resided in New London, Conn., in 1729. His rather conveyed to him in that year part of the Bradley lot. A Daniel Tuthill, presumably Daniel, Jr., in. in Mch., 1728, Sarah, only child of Joseph Coinstock, of New London. Issue: Ann, b. zi Feb., 1729; Elizabeth b. 1732, and perhaps others.) Daniel in. 29 Oct., 1733, Mehitable, da, of John Budd 4th, b. 22 Nov., 1715, d. 27 Nov., 1788 (Will, Lib. 27, p. 63, N. Y. City Wills.) Issue i. MIHITASLE, b. 5 July, 1734 in. Bailey. ii. HANNAH, b. 29 ApI.. 1736 d. 6 Feb., 1760. iii. Lvn:i., b. 13 Sept., d. Nov., 1738. iv. DANIEL, b. 10 Dec., 1739, d. ae. 3 yrs. and 8 inns. v. JOHN, b. 8 Sept.. I 742, probably in. Phoebe Corwin, 27 Oct., 1763; he went to Guilf'Ord, Conn., thence to Northampton, Mass., and finally settled in Westminster, Vt. Left issue. vi. PETErt,OfPluin lsland,b. 13 OcL, 1744, drowned iS Sept., 1785; m. 4 Feb., 1767, Elizabeth, da. of Benjamin Hutchinson. vii. Rufus, of Plum Island, b. 17 Jan., 1746/7 d. 11 Dec., 1843. Capt. of Militia. He in. 6 Sept., 1769, Mary Dimon. Ancestor of Daniel.Terrv Tuthill, of Orient. viii. Abigail, b. 17 June, 1749. ix. Jonathan, b. 22 Oct.. 1751, m. ab. 1773, Mehitable, da. of Jonathan', and Lrdia~ (Tuthill) Terry. x. Mary, b. 20 June, 1755, d. i Oct., 1756. xi. Daniel 2nd, b. Nov., 1757. xii. Hannah 2nd b. Feb., 17. * One Hannah in. Saml. Hutchinson, in 1753 Record in jonathan Tuthill's Bible. Through the courtesy of Mr. N. Hubbard 'Cleveland. many of the Salmon Rec-ord (lates have been incorporated in the above text. Thanks are also due to many Tuthill descendants for their kindness in furnishing data to the compiler. It is a curious coincidence that, in Norfolkshire, Eng., we find the names of seven prominent families of Southold, I.. I., viz.: Youngs, Wells, Tuthill, King. 4' Browne Reeve. and Corey. The following brief account of these families in England may be of interest as throwing some light on their probable relationship to those of the name in Southold, and it will be observed that, of the seven mentioned, four are buried in the Church of St. Peter Nlancroft. Vot~,;s.The will of Rev. Christopher Yonges (from 16111625 Vicar of Rey-sion and Southwold, Suffolk, Eng.), dated II November, 16----, proved 2 July, 1626 (N. Ii. A'(~'istcr. April, 'q8). gives us reason to believe that he was tise father of his Curate. Rev. John \'onges, afterwards of Soutbold, 1.. I. The will of Col. John Vonges, son of Rev. John, bears an heraldic seal, of which it is difficult to give an accurate blazon. It is apparently, Or, a lion rampant, . C,ys/. i h,imet in pro/lie, surm,'unt,'d /'j' a gr,y/n~rend, or wolf, passant. (L. I. Tray der, 26 February, 1898 N. V. City Wills, Liber v., page 293.) Gideon and David Voungs. descendants of Capt. Joseph Voungs, of Southold, used a or lion seflmnt, crest. Either Capt. Joseph or his wife was the child of Rev. Christopher Vonges. At Ceystwey:, Norfolkshire, is a Bulwer tomb and arms, impaling, for Yonge, 0,. ~'n a lvn,t sai.1, is, a bordu,'e, ingrailed azure, Aeza,:/t' thrce griffin:' heads erased, a /1,~' lirsi. lUo,nefields Nodolk," viit., 220.) XVFiLs.Notwithstanding a slight discrepancy of date, William Wells, Gent. . of Sonthold. is counted, by a tradition of two centuries and the best authorities on Long Island genealogy, the son of the Rev. William Wells, who was from 15981620 Rector of St. Peter's Mancroft Church. Norwich, and also Prebendary of Norwich Cathedral. The arms on his tomb in St. Peter's are : Or, a lion double ~uer4e, sable, Zn bordure ingrailedgules. ("Genealogy of Wells of Southold, L. I.") . TUTHILL.The "Pedigree of Tuthill of Norfolk Co., Eng.," in the College of Heralds, London, places John Tuthill, of Saxlingltam, as founder of the family. His oldest son, William Tuthill, of Newton, Gent., died in 1591. He bought the Manor of Thorpehall. Saxlingham, in 1567 from John Dimock. The arms from the tomb of Lady Dalyson, daughter of William Tuthill, have already been described. William's younger brother, John Tuthill, married Elizabeth Woolmer. The two sons of this latter couple, given by the College of Heralds, are William and John, Their youngest brother is supposed to be Henry Tuthill, of Tharston, born 1580, third son of John, of Saxlingham, and father of Jolin and Henry Tuthill, of Southold. KING.In the Church of St. Peter Mancroft is an armorial brass plate on the tomb of John King, late of Norwich. Gent., who died 31 May, 1658 The arms blazoned, Sable, 0;1 a chrr'ron ingealled ~rr~ent, threc escolops of the /kld (Blome-field, v., 207), are ascribed by heraldic writers to King, of Wiltshire; but they were also borne by King, of Shelly, Suffolk County, in the latter part of the fourteenth century. (" Davy's MSS.," p. zx8, l~ritish Museum.) Robert King, Esq., of Great 'l~hurlow, Suffolk, in 1689 was afterwards I.ord of Tharston, in Norfolk. (Blome6eld, v., 347 An examfination of the " Pedigree of King, of Norwich," in the College of Heralds. London, might repay those interested in the name. BROWNE.More than twenty manors in Norfolk were at different times owned by families bearing this name, and Blornefield describes many coats of arms and sepulchral monuments in the county. Robert Browne, Mayor of ~orwicl1 in 1522 has his arms, .S~l'k, lhre~~ c,~i at: argent, on the font and turret of St. Stephen l'roto-Mar:yr Chttrch, Norwich. (Ibid., IV., 154.) Sir Thomas Browne. M.D., author of" Religio Medici," u'as born ii~ October, 1605, died 19 October. :68z, and was buried in Ilte Church of St. Peter Mancroft. On his tomb are the arms: A /.c,,,17oided sable, b,~trc',c,s trs'opdlets. (lx.. 193.) REEVE.Thomas Reeve and Raif Sherman had the rectory and advowson of Ilse Vicarage of Almoner's Manor in 1562. John Reeve, A.M., was Rector of Diss, Norfolkabire, in t5S9. Thomas Reeve bought Clavers Manor in 1636. Sir Edmund Reeve was lord Chief Justice of Common Pleas, preferred in 1638. His tomb at Stratton bears the arms : Asnic, a c/,,-rron. l'etrc'cen three tabs 0/ wings, conjoined, and eler,ated. or, impaling sable, on a c,4,pron bctr,,ec,, /h,~e heads erased, or, three stars of six points gules. COREY.Mr. Corey, of Bramerton, after r6o3 owned Saxlinghant Manor. It was bought by Sir Robert Reeve. (V., 469.) Thomas Cone, Es~., who died 5 February, z6Sz, ac. tsventy.se~en, was the only son of Francis Cone. Esq.. and Ann, his wife, daughter of Sir John Corbet. of Swrowston, Ban. Arms : Urest, a den,t or, issuont /~'o,u a duc,,l co,oiid, proper, qnorta.ring L'orbet arms. (V., 472.~ who died Cone arms at Cauno, Norfolkshine, on the tomb of Judith Curie, January, r6S~ Quartcrlt. first and fourth sablc', on a clO'VSO,i l,,tit'tt,i three ~'7iJifl5 heads era.'ed, or, as ,,,anl' ,nn/lcts. ~gu/'s, ins polin;~ in tlic second and th,ir,l per pale ors,ent on~l sable, an Unicorn, possani. /,'t7,',cn three cross cross/ct: consitcrchon;e~l, jm. paling arh'cnt, three crosses. IX., 408.)J Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

    08/18/2000 06:54:20
    1. page 11
    2. charlie
    3. MSS. Family Records of J. G. Tuthill and Stuart Tuihill Terry. ii. JAMES (perhaps), Proprietor in New Windsor, N. Y., in 1751/2 His will at Albany mentions "Father James Tuthill of Orange Co." iii. BENJAMIN (possibly), rated in Brookhaven in 1759, and per-haps others. 9. JOSHUA TUTHILL (John,4 John', Henry2, Henry'), of Cutchogue, b. 1690, d. z June, 1782; m. Hannah, da. of Major James Reeve of Matti-tuck; she d. 8 Mch., i 764, ae. 64. Issue: i. JAMES', of Cutchogue, b. 1727, d. 25 Oct., 1795 in his 68th yr.' in . in Nov., 1754, Elizabeth Mac, of Brookhaven. ii. SAMUEL, doubtless twin of James, d. 23 Sept., 1805 in his 78th yr.; in. Phoebe Davis, who d. 10 Jan., 1823, ae. 94 years iii. JOHN, of Speonk, b. 1728, d. 4 Nov., 1805 ae. 77 yrs.; in. 20 Sept., 1750, Sarah Wells, b. 1732, d. 11 Dec., 1820 iv. ISAAC, b. 24 Sept., 1733, d. 25 Aug., 1740. V. DEBORAH, b. 7 Jan., 1736, d. 25 Nov., 1814; m. Elijah Terry, ancestor of the late Stuart Tuthill Terry, of Southold. * vi. HANNAH, 2nd da., d. unmarried. vii. DELIVERANcE, d. 24 June, 1739, ae. 4 inns. viii. DANIEL (possibly).* to. DANIEL' TUTHILL (John', John2, Henri, Henry'), of Southold. He d. in Nov., 1785; in. Nov., 1727, Prudence Goldsmith. She d. 3 Sept.. 1746. Daniel perhaps en. 2nd Widow Jemima Petty, 22 Mch., 1750. His will (Lib. 38, p. 316 NEW York City Wills) names the six children below: i. JAMES, b. 1728. ii. JOHN, b. 1730, (who probably in. Abigail Terry,) the ancestor of the late Judge James H. Tuthill, of Riverhead. iii. DANIEL, b. 1732, in. Sarah Thurston. His descendant, the late Hon. William H., Tuthill, of Tipton, Iowa, was the author of the chart entitled the Tuthill and Kent Genealogy. iv. MEHITABLE, m. , Heinpstead. v. MARY, in. Paine. vi. LYDIA. II. FREEGIFT' TUTHILL (John', John', Henry1, Henry'), of Brook-haven, L. I., and of the Precinct of New Windsor, N Y., b. in Southold Town, 8 Aug.. 1698; d. in Goshen, N. V., Sept., 1765; in. in June, 1727, Abigail Goldsmith. Freegift's will is recorded in Albany, and in Lib. 25, p. 180, New York City Wills. Issue, all of Orange Co., N. Y.: i. ABIGAIL', doubtless a native of L. I., named in her father's will. ii. NATHANIEL, b. in Brookhaven, L. I., 17 Jan., 1730; in. Mar-garet Herod, of L. I., b. 3 Aug., 1739. Nathaniel was a soldier at Fort Montgomery, when it was taken by the Brit-ish, but escaped capture. iii. JOSHUA. All 3 brothers were in the Continental Army; iv. FREEGIFT. the last died in service. I 2. HENRY' TUTHILL (Henri', John', Henry', henry'), of Southold, b. 1690, d. i Sept., 1775. He in. ist Hannah, who Griffin says was a da. of Samuel Beebe, of Plum Island, though Keith in his Ancestry of Be;yamin Harrison surmises that her name was Crouch. Shed. t Dec., 1715, in her 24th yr., and is buried at Orient. Henrv in. 2nd, on Ia Dec., 1717, Phoebe3 Young, doubtless da. of Christopher2, Sr., (Rev. John') and his wife Mary' Budd (Lieul. John', Lient. John'). Phoebe was b. before 1695, and d. 24 Aug., 1775. Issue, by ist wile: i. HENRY', of Acquebogue, b. before Dec., 1715. d. 17 Sept., 1793 ; en. t6 Mch., 1738, Phoebe: Horton (Caleb, Caleb2, Caleb', Barnabas'), d. 3 Nov.. 1793, in her 75th yr. Henry's grand-da., Anna Symines, in. President Win. Henry HarrI-son, and was the grandmother of President Benjamin Harrison. Children of Henry and Phoebe (Young) Tuthill (see third note below), order unknown II. AZARIAH, a Deacon at Orient, d. 20 Dec., 1804 ae. over 8o yrs.; he in. 13 July, 1746, Bethia Horton. In. BARNABAS (probably), Capt. in the French War in 1739, and Major of the 4th N. V. Regiment in the Revolntion.* He d. 9 Oct., 1782. He in. ist, S Mch., 1759, Lydia King, whod. 18 Sept., 1779; in. 2nd, 20 Feb., 178? Ansi' King. (Will, Lib. 35' p. 192, N. V. City WillS.) He had 8 chil-dren. (See son of Henry, No. 5 and note.) Iv. NATHANIEL, drowned. His widow, m, to him on 17 ApI., 1733, doubtless in. Abraham Parsons, of Easthainpton. She was probably Abigail King. v. CHRISTOPHER, b. in 1726, d. 1798: in. 16 Jan., 1733, Phoebe, da. of Jonathan Young. Christopher was the ancestor of the late Jeremiah H. tuthill of Orient. vi. ZIPPORAH, b. in 1732, d. in 1799; in. 13 Feb., 1738. Richard Brown, 6th, of Orient. Their youngest da., Sarah, in., 6 May, 1793, Rurus King, of the same place.t vii. PHOEBE, doubtless en. Stephen Sweezv, in 1742 viii. BETHIA, en. Micah Horton. 13. NATHANIEL' TIJTHILL (Daniel',John', Henry', Henry'), of Southold, b. I July, 1708, drowned I Mch., 1732, en. Hannah, da. of SamueL King. (She in. 2nd, Jonathan Rackett.) Issue: i. NATHANIEL', of Hashamomack, b. 1731, d. 8 ApI.. 1758 in. ist Michal' Young (Gideon', Gideon', Gideon2, Capt. Joseph'), b. 9 Sept., 1734, Old Stile, d. 26 Feh., 1756, en. 7 Aug., 1755, New Style. Nathaniel en. znd, Mary, da. of Constant and Abigail Havens, of Sag Harbor, 1). 1735. d. 1822, ae. 87. (Will, Lib. 25, p. 374, New York City.) 14. DANIEL' TUTHILL, JR., (Daniel', John', Henri, Henry',) of South- * N. V. GEN. AND BIOGRAPHICAL Rec., Jan., 1571, p. 6. Pedigree of King, of Salem. The Salmon Record" gives the marriage of Sleplien Sweezy ~iid Phcebe Tut. hill in 1742, and that of Isaac Reeve and IIznuah Tuthill in June, 1757. The only surviving grandson of Major Isaac Reeve slates that Ille Major is buried at Mattituck, L. I., wilh his two wives. Hannah T., who died 20 June. 1780 ae. forty~one, and Sarah Chesbro. The children of the first wife were Hannah Reeve, Phwbe (Reeve) Goldsmith, Mary (Reeve) Wells, C. Augusla (Reeve) Overton, and Isaac Tuthihl Reeve. All save Hannah (she being dead) are named by Henry Tuthill, born 1715 died 1793.a5 his grandchildren in his will at Ihe Suflolk County Surrogate's (Lihier A. p. 315). Griffin must, therefore, be in error when l~e says P/ide Tuthill married Major Isaac Reeve. Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

    08/18/2000 06:51:49
    1. page 10
    2. charlie
    3. THE TUTHILL FAMILY OF THARSTON, NORFOLK CO.. ENGLAND, AND SOUTHOLD, SUFFOLK CO., NEW YORK. FROM PAPERS OF JUDGE w. H> TUTHILL AND OTHER SOCRCES Contributed by lucy I D. AKERKLY 6. DANIEL4 Tuthill (John', IIenrj, Henry'), of' Southold, b. 23 Jan., 1679, d. 7 Dec. 1762; in. in 1705 Mehitable' Horton (C'ap/. Jonathan~, Barnabas'), b. 17 Feb., 1679, d. ' Sept., 1757 widow of Peter Bradley. Daniel was a Deacon at Southold. Letters of administration on his estate were issued in 763 to his sons, Daniel Tuthill, Jr., and Nathaniel. issue, all of Southold i. MEHITABLE~, b. 9 Sept., 1706, in. Thomas' Terry TAos.'), in 17234, who d. 17 Jan., 1740. His will, dated 7 Nov., 1739, names his ' Brother Jonathan Terry, Wife, Mehitable, children, Thomas'. and RuTh. Terry, not yet 21 yrs. old, and da. Mehilable Terry, not 18 years of age." (Lib. 13, p. 352; N. Y. City Wills.) Thomas Terry, the son mentioned above, was b. 1727. He was a Col. at Southold during the Revolutionary War. 13. NATHANIEL, b. i July, 1708. ABIGAIL, b. ApI., 1710, m. Henry Havens. 14 IV. DANIEL, Jr., b. 15 Jan., 1712. v. NOAH, b. 13 Mch., 1714; m. 2 Nov., 1738, Hannah Tuthill, da. of John, No. 7 or John, No. 4. Noah's will was proved 31 May 1766. (Lib. a~, p. 374, N. Y. City Wills.) Hannah's will was proved 9 Ocr., 1770. (Lib. 27, p. 470, N. Y. City Wills.) Issue: Daniel', who m. Ruth Terry; Mehilable, who in. King; Hannah, and Lydia Tuthill. Vi. PATIENCE, b. is Mcli., 1716, m. John Havens of Moriches, 24 Oct., 1733. vii. LYDIA, b. 6 May, 1718, d. 25 Aug.. 1780, in. 19 Sept., 1737, Jonathan' Terry(Thos.~, Thos.), b. 17~-~, d. 9 June, 1775. Lucy had 12 children: Jonathan'; Thomas; Lydia; Ruth; Desiah,~ Noah; .JJ'ohi.'ahle; Patience; Patience; Thomas; Daniel Tuthill, and Patience, Terry, b. between 17381761. Desiah, the 5th child, m. James Griffin. Their son Augustus Griffin, of Orient, states in his Journal that all the daughters of Daniel Tuthill died between 17701783. viii. MARY, b. 30 June, 1721. in. NATHAN UTHILL (Jo/in', John',John, iJenry~, Henry'), of Acquebogue, b. 1715; he probablvd. zz Mch., 1769.* 7. JoHN' TUTHILI. (John, John', Henry, Henry), of Southold, b. in 1683, d. 29 June, 1743; m. ab. 1706, Elizabeth , b. 1686, d. 21 Oct., 1750. She was perhaps a da. of Jonathan Brown, but could not have been the da. of Jonathan' Horton, as Mr. Moore conjectures, for he was b. ~fl 1683. John's original will is in New York City. (Lib. s~, p. 88.) Issue : i. JONATHAN', b. in 1707 ; ii. JOHN iii. ISAIAH iY. JEREMIAH; v. NATHAN, of Acquebogue; vi. ELIZAHETH; vii. HANNAH; yin. MARY; iX. SAMUEL, b. in 1724. All were natives of the Town of Southold. The znd son, John. b. ifl 1709, d. in Mch. 1695 in. 15 Nov., 1744, Abi. gail Lambert, who d. 8 Sept., 1751. The Tuthill and Kent Genealogy is in error as to this John having in. Keziah Brown in 1746, as his wife Abigail was then living.t (~)JAME5' TtrrtuLL (John', John', Henry', Henry'), doubtless both of ~'Hrookhaven, L. I., and of Orange Co., N. Y. i'he will of John Tut-hi]!, b. 1683 (Lib. 15, p. 88, N. Y. City Wills), leaves ".~ of Dayton's right, in Brookhaven," to his brother James. The Brookhaven Town Records show that James Tuthill acquired land in the Town in 1714, and "the other half' of Dayton's right, in 172!." James is rated in Brookhaven in 1741, but not in 1749. He in. before leaving L. I. Issue i. DANIEL', b. in Suffolk Co., in. Susannah Healnier, b. 1722. Daniel's will is dated Goshen, N. Y., 23 Feb., 1761. (Lib. 23, p. 130, N. V. City Wills.) * MSS. Record of Deacon Daniel Tuthill. f MSS. Record of Mrs. Geo. Wilson Smith. Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

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    3. * Prime's History of Lo,r~~ Is/and arid the Horton Genealoqy. t Pcdi~-ree of Kuh.f, of Salem. MSS. Record of Stuart Tuthill Terry. 6. viii. DANIEL, b. 23 Jan., 1679. ix. NATHANIEL, b. 10 Nov., 1683 ; d. at Antigua, W. I., 18 Dec., 1705. X. MARY (daughter of 2nd wife), d, i i Jan., 1698/9 aged about 8 years. 4. John TUTHILL (John', Henry', Henry',), of Southold, b. 14 Feb., 8; d. 21 Nov., 1754 m. Mehirable' Wells ( Win.'), b. at 1666 m. in, or before 1683; d. 26 Aug., 1742. John was a landowner in South: old Town, Justice of the Peace, Commissioner to lay out the King's Highway (the first public road from Brooklyn to Easthampton), Member of the N. Y. Provincial Assembly from 169398, and Sheriff. Children, all natives of Southold Town, perhaps not in order: 7. i. JOHN', b. in 1683. III. MARY, b. 1687 ; d. in 1780, aged 93 m. 27 Nov., i 1706/7 Joan-than' Horton (Capt. Jonathan', Barnabas'), of Southold, b. 23 Dec., 1683 ; d. 2 April, 1768. They had six children Mary', Elzphaz, Mehi~'able, Azariah, Lasarus, and Ambrose Horton, born between 170820. Of these, Azariab, a graduate of Yale College, was missionary to the I.. I. In-dians, and ancestor of the Rev. Theodore L. Cuyler, of Brooklyn,* while Lazarus Horton, b. 1717, m. Ann Corey (David', Isaac', John'). 9. iv. JOSHUA, b. in 1690. Y. DOROTHY, b. perhaps in 1692 ; m. Joseph Brown, of Southold (possibly son of Walter [see Census of 1698], or of Joseph Brown, Sr., whose death on the II Dec., 1739, is recorded in the Salmon Record), b. probably before 1698 ; d. 14 July, 1751. His will (L. 17, p. 412, New York City Wills) mentions "Wife Dorothy, Brother Daniel Brown, Live sons; married, and unmarried 'daughters," naming but one of the latter, Dorothy. Issue; order unknown : Dorothy', Han-nah, Benjamin, Joseph, Joshua, SeIah, Jeremiah, and Abigail Brown. This last, probably b. 173437 ; d. before 1770. She was the 1st wife of John' King, Jr. (John', Saint.', Saint.', Win.'), of Southold, b. iS Dec., 1727 ; m. '3 March, ; d. 14 July, 1792.t 10. vi. DANIEL. 11. vii. FREEGIFT, b. 8 Aug., 1698. vill. HANNAH (perhaps), either she, or her niece, Hannah, daugh-ter of John Tuthill, No, ~, m. Noah Tuthill, in 1738. ~. HENRY' TUTHILL (John', Henry', Henry'), of Southold. b. i May, z66~ d. Jan., 1750 ; m. before 16904 Bethia' Horton ( Cap:. Jonathan' Barnabas'), b. at 1674 : d. r6 March, 1744. Henry was Justice of the Peace, and owned land in the Towns of Southold and Brookhaven, The subject of the marriage date of Henry and Bethia is discussed in Keith's Ancestry of Benj~amin Harriron, The daughter Rebecca attributed to Henry, in Moore's Indexes of Southold Genealogies, is doubtless only an error of type, as Henry's will (Lib. 17, p. ii8, N. Y. City Wills) cited as authority, does not contain the word Rebecca. Issue, all ol Southold Town: 12. I. HENRY', b. in 1690. 11. JONATHAN, b. in 169*; d. 8 Feb., 1741 ; m. 23 Feb., x723 Susannah L'Hommedieu, who died his widow, 17 May 1743, in her 39th year. She was the daughter of Benjamin and Patience (Sylvester) L'Hommedieu, of Southold, and the granddaughter of Thomas Brinley, Esq., of Stafford-shire, England, auditor of King Charles Ist.* Issue, all of the Town of Southold: i. Jonathan', d. 25 Feb., I72~, aged 2 years. 2. Benlamin (doubtless), who d. i6 Feb., I74~, in his 23rd year ; he is buried near Susannah and Jonathan, at Orient. 3. Beihia, mentioned in the will of her grandfather, Henry Tuthill. III. NATHANIEL, b. about 1694, drowned at sea, 27 April, 1727, probably m. Mary Petty, 4 Oct., 1721. He, or his brother Barnabas, was doubtless the father of John' Tuth ill and De-liverance, wife of Elisha Paine, named by Henry Tuthill, as his grandchildren, in his will, quoted above. Iv. BARNABAS, b. perhaps in 1696, certainly before 1698. It is still an open question whether this man be Major Barnabas Tuthill, or not. The weight of authority being against it, see Barnabas, the probable son of Henry, No. 12.t v. BETHIA, b. 12 Dec., 1703 ; d. 30 Aug., ,761 ; m. 26 May, 1721. She was the ist wife of Samuel' Landon (.Nizthan) of Southold; b. there, 20 May, 1699; d. at Guilford, Conn., 21 Jan.. 1782. Issue, ten children: Henry',daughter, Han-nizh, Samuel, Bethia, Parnel, Nathaniel, fared, David, and jonathan Landon, born in Southold, between 1741743. * Magazine of American lli.rtory. Nov., 1887, p. 361. t A Partial Record o/ the Landons, of Southold, "N. V. Gen. and Biog. Rec.," Jan., 1897. MAJOR BARNABAS TUTHILLMoore's Indexes" stale that Barnabas (ion of Henry Tulbill, b. 166~), d. in 178, that he m. ISI, Lydia King in '759, who d. in 1779 ; and 2nd, Annie King in 1780. The census of 1698 shows that Henry's son Barnabas was then alive, while the Salmon Record" assigns the above wives to Major Barnabas Tuthill, but Griflin'~ "Journal" places Major Barnabas, as son of Henry, b. 1690, and grandson of Henry, b. 1665. How are we to decide the parentage of Ilte said major? Again, Moore's "In-dexes" do not assign any son Baritabas to Henry, . s6qo. One thing is certainthe Barnabas Tuthill, given in the Southold militia, in the Report of the New York State Historian for 1897, as serving in 1715, was tite son of Henry. b. 1665, for if Henry, b. r6qo, had a son named Barnabas. he was b. after 1717. Were there, how-ever, two Barnabas Tuthills, or only one? Which one served ri the French war in 1759 and which as a major in the American Revolution Judge Tuthill, of Iowa, believed Major Barnabas to be son of Henry Tulhill. b. 1690. An old record from Orient gives the following : " Children of Major Barnabas Tuthill: 1st son, Barnabas, m. Desish Conklin, d. Nov., 1805 2nd son, Gamaliel, m. Milliken 3d son, Samuel 4th, Joshita. 1st dau., Lydia m. John Paine 2nd dau., Hannah, m. a Thompkins, oC Orange Co. 3rd dan., Lucrecia, m. a Thomp. kins, of Orange Co. Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

    08/18/2000 06:47:16
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    3. Newton, Gent., and granddaughter of John Tuthill, of Saxlingham. She died 27 Sept., 1585, in her 19th year. John Tuthill, of Saxlingham, father of Henry, b. in 1580, was perhaps brother of William Tuthill, named above. HENRY TUThILL, of Tharston, Norfolk Co., England, b. in 1580, 3rd of John TUTHILL, of Saxlingharn, m. Alice (Gooch ?). His will, dated 20 March, 1618 proved 20 April, 1619, in England, mentions John Gooch, father; Margaret Rau, mother-in-law; Ann Woodyard, kinswoman ; John Tuthill, brother: wife Alice, and the five children below. The Church Register of St. Mary’s, Tharston, contains the entry of Henry’s burial on 26 March, 1618 It also records the baptism of all his children. Issue i. JOHN’, of Tharston, sometime of Southold, in the Colony of New Haven, America. bapt. 25 Oct., 1607, d. in England. “He was a widower in 1637.” Both Trumbull’s History of Connecticut, and Dodd’s Register, mention this elder, or Pilgrim, John Tuthill, as at New Haven in 1640. He was one of the original or earliest settlers of Southold, and her first civil magistrate, being appointed “Constable, by the New Haven Court, in 1642 : 6 2, for Yennicok,” or Southold.* “He had no home lot there, and was probably only a temporary sojourner.” Savage and Griffin err in calling him the father of John, Jr., b. 1635, as this latter himself states that he was the son of John’s brother, Henry “Pilgrim John was probably identical with John Tuthill, named with Capt. Undtrhill in 16389 at Piscatawa, now Dover, N. H.” He returned to England. remarried, and left descendants there. (For other John Tuthills, see Savage’s Genealogical Dichonary, The Burnam Family, the Tuttle Family, and the Descendants of John Porter.) WILLIAM, of Tharston, England, bapt. 29 Oct., 1609. Could he have been the William Tuthill, aged 26, who came to America in the ship Planter, in 1635, and who settled in New Haven, Conn., in 1639/49? Hatfield’s History of Elizabeth N.J. and Long Island tradition, say that he was; but the descendants of William, of New Haven, believe that their ancestor, the said William, was almost certainly of Devonshire. 2. HENRY, bapt. 28 June, 1612. iv. ALIcE, bapt. 24 Sept., 1614. v. ELIZABETH, bapt. 9 March, 1616. 2, HENRY’ TUTHILL (Henry’), of Tharston, England. and Hingham, Mass., bapt. 28 June, 1612, m. in England, Bridget , who came with him to America, survived him, and in., 2nd, William Wells, Gent., of Southold. Lincoln’s History of Ziingham says Henry Tuthill had a planting lot at Broad Cove in 1635, and a house lot in 1637. Cushing’s MSS. states that Henry Tuthill and his wife came from Norfolkshire, and settled in New Hingham in 1637. Henry was Freeman in March. 1638, and Constable in 1640. He sold his lot in Hingham 20 June, 1644, and. doubtless came to Southold. Savage states that both Henry and Bridget died before 1650. Children i. JOHN’, JR., b. 16 July, 1635. * ~Vhitaker’s history of Sauthold. and New Haven colonial Records. t Southold Town Records, I, 50, 217 t Southold Celehration. p. r44 (1890) Tuthill Family Meeting, P. 23. ii ELIZABETH, in. in or befure 1660 William Johnson, of Centre Island, near Oyster Bay. She and her brother John were wards of William Wells, their stepfather.* II’. NATHANIEL (possibly), witness at Southold in 1660 and prob-ably the settler of that name, in Elizabeth, N. J., who took the oath of fidelity in 1665. He was living in 1695, and owned 153 acres of land. 11. DANIEL (probably), bapt. in Hingham, Mass., 30 Aug., 1640. A witness at Southold in 1657; d. there 28 Aug., 1658.1 (3) joHN’ TUTHILL, JR., or 2nd (Henry2, Henry’), of Southold, N. Y., b. 16 July, 1635 (in England?), d. at Southold, 12 Oct., 1717; m. there, 1st, on 17 Feb., 1657, Deliverance, daughter of William’ and Dorothy (Hayne ?) Kinge “bapt. at Salem, Mass., 1641 :31 8.” Dorothy southold, ' 25 Jan 1688/89 aged 49 years” John, in., 2nd, on 28 May, 1690, Sarah, probably widow of Thomas Young, and daughter of John Frost. She d. 8 Nov., 1727. John was a large landowner at Southold. The dates of the birth of his children are recorded in his Bible and in Liber E. MSS. Town Records §. Issue, by 1st wife 4. . JOHN’, b. 14 Feb., 1658 ii. ELIZABETH, b. 19 April, 1661 ; m. i June, 1681 William’ Wells ( Wm. b. May, 1660 ; d. 17 Oct., 1696. Issue I . William’ Wells; 2. John Wells ; 3 Henry Wells 4. Mary Wells, the 2nd wile of Lieut. Thos. Reeve. These four children were b. in Southold, between 1683-1691/2 Elizabeth, according to Pelletrean’s Early L. I. Wills, sur-- vived her husband and m. 2nd, John Goldsmith about 1698. iii. HENRY, b. 1 May, 1665 iv. HANNAH, b. 7 Nov.. 1667 ; d. 25 July, 1752 ; in., 19 Jan., 1686 Joshua2 Wells (Win.’), b. 1664 ; d. 1744. Issue, fourteen children : Mary, Hannah, Joshua. Deliverance, Abigail Anna, Samuel, Daniel. Solomon, Nathaniel Bethia, Mehitable, Deborah, and Freegift Wells, b. between 1687- 1714, in Southold.II v. ABIGAIL, “b. 17 Oct., 1670; d. 6 June, 1705, being the wife of John Parker.” He was probably her 2nd husband, as she had doubtless in. Joseph Conklin, in Nov., 1690. He d. 23 Nov., 1698 Letters of Administration on his estate were issued 16 Dec., 1698. to his widow, Abigail, and her father, John Tuthill, Sr.¶f. Liber E. of mss Southold Town Records, gives the dates of birth of two children of Joseph and Abigail (Tuthill) Conklin I. “Joseph Conklyr~, b. 7 Aug., 1691. 2. John Conk~yng, b. 16 Oct., 1694.” VI. DOROTHY, b. i6 Oct., 1674 ; d. 24 Feb., 1683/4 vii. DEI.IvERANCE, b. 2 Aug., 1677 ; d. 17 Sept., 1683. 4. William Wells, of Southold, and his Descendants. See Haifield’2 History of Eliaaheth, N.J., tI,e Tuthill and Kent Genealogy, and the MSS. Record of J. G. Tuthill. Ped4’ree of Kin~’, of Salem. See Moore’s Indexes, and Southold Town Re:ords, I, 78. Willia,n Wells, of SouMold, and his Descendants. ¶ Pe11etre~n’s Early Long Island Wills,” p. 161. Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

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    3. will is recorded PCC33 Pembroke. His children: iii Iv. V. vi. vii. viii. i. Joyce bap.4 Feb. 1599/1000. ii. Thomas hap. 25 Oct. 1601, m. 28 Ocr. 1630 Joan Gilkes and had: a. Elizabeth (1631-1634). b. RiChard (1632-1634). c. Mary b. 1634. d. Elizabeth b. 1635/6. e. Hannah b. 1638. Jefferey bap. 25 Mar. 1604. William b. & d. 1606. John b. 1807. Joan b. 1610. William b. 1612/ 13. Alexander hap. 9 Feb. 1615/16, in. Mary () and had: a. Richard b. 1634. b. Hannah b. 1645. THoMAs' Tredwell baptized 29 July 1565 at Swalciffe, had nine chil-dren, all baptized at St. Anne's, Epwell, Oxfordshire: i. Alexander hap. 10 Dec. 1597. will proved 16 June 1662; in. 7 Feb. 1630/1 Ann Litley and had 4 children: a. Alice b. 1631, in. a Grafton. b. Rebecca b. 1653 /4. c. Martha b.164l. 4 Thomas b. 1637/8. living 1662. ii. George hap. 19 Sept. 1599. bur. 18 June 1614. iii Anne hap. 10 Dec. 1600. iv. Alice bap. 12 Sept. 1602. + v. Thomas. . vi. Richard hap. 16 Mar. 1604/5, living 1662. vii. John hap. 29 Sept. 1606. + viii. Edward. ix. Joan bap. 27 Dec. 1609. THOMAS1 TREDWELL, son of Thomas-1, was baptized 4 December 1603, married Mary Taylor/Wilson, emigrated to America in 1635, and had two known children: i. Thomas hap. St. Giles Cripplegate IS July 1634: emigrated 1635. ii. Nathaniel b. Ipswich. Mass., 15 Mar. 1640: in. 1661 Abigail Wells. EDWARD' TREDWELL baptized 20 December 1607, died 1660/61. married Sarah (), emigrated to Arnerica about 1635 to 1637. and had six children: i. Samuel in. before 1669; d. 21 Ocr. 1718. ii. John b. before 1644, d. about 1716: in. (1) 1668 Elizabeth Starr who died before 1682; in. (2) before 1682 Hannah Smith who was living in 1706. iii. Rcbecca. iv., v., vi. Three who died without issue. 104:204. In our article on the Tredwells we omitted the three daughters of Thomas' Treciwell. According to William A. Robbins' 'Thomas Tread-well of Ipswich,Mass.. and Some of His Descendants" (Reg. 60:49) the children of Thomas were Thomas, Mary Nathaniel. Esther, and Martha. We must have been so interested in the ancestry of Edwardt Tredwell that we didn~t check the descendants of Thomas carefully enough. Thomas A. Tredwell, 1113 Southdown Rd., Hills borough CA 94010 THE TUTHILL FAMILY OF THARSTON, NORFOLK CO.. ENGLAND, AND SOUTHOLD, SUFFOLK CO., NEW YORK. FROM PAPERS OF JUDGE W. H. TUTHILL, AND OTHER SOURCES. Contributed by Lucy Dubois Akerly. THE meaning and derivation of Totyl, Totehill, Tuthill, or Tuttle, has been treated of so exhaustively in The Tuttle Family by G. F. Tuttle (1883), and The Tuth ill Family Meeting by Hon. W. H. Tuthill (1867), that it is superfluous to discuss it here. Families living near the natural or artificial mounds called tot-hills which abounded in widely separated localities, probably adopted that designation as a surname. A common origin, or even blood relationship between all those who bear this name, is therefore unlikely. Blomefield, the historian of Norfolk, gives an account of ten or eleven tumuli, the largest of which is called tut-hill, near Thetford, Norfolk, Eng-land, doubtless raised by the Danes to cover their slain, in a battle with King Edmund, A.D. 871. I The arms of the Tuthills of Norfolk- I shire, as given in the Vlsi/a/ion c/Essex, of 1634, are: ''Or, on a chevron azure, three crescents argent. Crest, a leopard passant, sable, crowned or, on a mound vert." These arms, without the crest, are found in the church of Trowse-with-Newton, Nortolkshire, England. on the tomb of Elizabeth, wife of Sir Roger Dalyson, daughter of William Tuthill, of Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

    08/18/2000 06:39:37
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    3. 12. William, Prof. of DIvInity and Archdeacon of Canterbury, d. 1647; buried in Christ chh., Canterbury; in. Damaris, dau. of John Abbott of Guildford Surrey; d. 1678; 18 chil. 1. Catharine, b. 1620; d. 1634: m. Thos. Peke. 1, THOMAS, b. 1639; d. 1844. 2, ParER, 1648. 8, CHARLES, 1661. 4, EDWARD of Hills Court, b. 1642; in. Elizabeth, dan. of Geo. Wentworth, bro. and heir to the Earl of Strafford; d. 1691. Her bro. Sir Ruish Wentworth had dan. Mary who in. Thomas, Lord Howard of Effingham 1. Edward b. 1674; d. a. i. 2, Thomas b. 1672; d. 1701, a. 29; m. Elizabeth , dau. of Anthony Ball of Bruiley; (2) Robert Minchard. 1, Sarah, in. Win. Wright Morrice, a. of Admiral Morrice. 5, DAMARTS. in. Henry Dering, b. 1688; s. of Sir Edward and Anne, dan. of Sir John Ashburnham and sis. of Lord Ashburnham. 1, Edward, Eaq., b. 1663. 2, John 8, Unton, dan. 4, CaMarine. 6, SUsAN, m. John Aucher, prebendary of Canterbury, b. 1641. II. George, b. 1615; bu. 1649; in. Ann Springer. She in. (2). Cainpion. 1. William. h. 1611; in. Priscilla, dan. of Thos. Petherby; d. 1683. 1, William b. 1669; in. Alice, dan. Win. Randolph of Maldstons, Kent Co. 1, Alice, in. Stephen Otway. 2, William, Lieut..Gen.; d. Oct. 9, 1709; unin. 8, CarolIne, d. 1756, a. 55. 2, Thos. 1071. 8, Anthony of London, afterwards of Richmond, b. 1674; had 22 chil. of whom: 1, Anthony, M.D., 8ds. 2, Plncke,eld a. 3, Thomas,2d s. 4, Chas., 4ths.; d. 1785; in. (I) Chas. of Lymington; d. 1786; in. Elizabeth, dan, of John Wastney. 1, Chas. 2, Aun. (2) Thomas Pineke. 5, Anne. 4, George, h. 1672; d. 1679. 5, Edward, b. 1680. 6, Frances, b. 1682. 7, Elizabeth, b. 1679; d. 1688. 8, Fetherby, b. 1677; d. 1678. 9, Phebe, b. 1676. 10, Ann., 1670. 11, Elizabeth, b. 1668; d. 1669. Ill. William, b. 1626; in. Margaret Courthope 1, Gitoitna, b. 1654; in. Ann Barlow. 2, DAMARIS, b. 1655. 8, CHARLES. b. 1661. 4, ANN, b. 1662. IV. Ann, in. John Boys. V. Charles, b. 1625; d. 1669. VI. Win., 1622; d. 1624. . VII. Thomas. 1628. VIII. Elizabeth, 1681. IX. Angel, a dan., 1628; d. 1646. X. Sarah, b. and d. 1680. XI. Dorothy. twin with Sarah. XII. Ann, 1681. XIII. Mary, 1682. .12.14. Ann Kingsley will proved Sept. 11, 1712; in. John Boys of Hoad Coast Req..s, of John Boys an(Mary, dan. or Martin Fotherby, Bishof of Salisbury. He d. 1660, a. abt. 46.’ She in. (2) Sir Richard Head. i. by 1st in.: 1, olin and Sir William. 1,. . John Boy., b. 1659; d. Sept., 1711; Col. in the army: in. Jane, dan. of Sir Richard Head Bart. She was wld. of Herbert Price, Esq. She d. Dec. 17,1717, a. 66. 1, John, Col. in the army; d. March 17, 1747; in. Elizabeth, dan. of Thos. Dalison, Esq., by Susan dan. of Sir Thos. Style Bart. 1, John. 2, Thomas. 8, William. 4, Elizabeth, Dec. 25, 1720; in. Chas. Wake, D. D., prebendary of Westininister and Rector of East. Knovie and Fonthill, Wilts. 5, Ann, b. Feb. 1728; d. 1762; in. 1750 Osmund Beauvoir, 1). D., head mas~er of’ the King’s School, Canterbur~’. 1, Elizabeth, d. 1829; in. 1785 Wm. Hammond of St. Albans Court, b 1752. 1, Osmund, b. 1790; in. Mary, dan. of Sir lienryOzenden Bart. 2, Elizabeth, b. 1786. 3. Mary, 1787; in. Chas. Allix. . .12.142. SIr William Boys, Kt., M. D.; d. 1744; bu. Canterb. Cath.; in. Ann dan. of Sir Paul Barrett, Sergt. at Law, who d. 1758. 1, John, b. 1695. 2, Win., 1697. 8, Ann. 4, Elizabeth, b. 1698; d. 1722. 5, Sarah, b. 1699. 6, Mary, b. 1700; in. Thos. Barrett, Esq., of See, Kent. .12.1428. Ann Boys, b. May 22, 1694; in. about 1710, Sir Francis Head Bart, b. 1694. I. Ann, b. about 1712; in. Win. Egerton, IA.,. D., 9th s. of John, 2d Earl of’ Bridge-water. 1, CHARLOTTE, in. Win. Hammond Esq. 1, Charlotte, in. 1771, Thou. Wat-kinson Payler who in. twice again and d. 1816. 1, Thomas, Major in 7th Dragoons. 2, Rev. Win. 3, James, bleut. -Cal. In the army. 4, ,John. 5, Henry. 6, Rev. Anthony. 7, Charlotte, 4th wire of Win. F.gerton of Totten Park. M. P. 2, JEMIMA, b. 1728; in. Edward Brydges, b. 1712: a 2nd cousin to Edward Gibbon 1. of Edward Gibbon the hislorian. 1, Sir .John Wm. head, b. 1764; Kt. and M. P., Lieut..Col. in Portugese army and Lord Beresf’ord; in. Lady Isabella Anne Ileresford, dan. of George Marquis of Wstcrford by Elizabeth dau. and heiress of’ Henry Moock, Esq., by Lady Isabella Bent.-inck dau, of Henry first Duke or Portland, by Elizabeth (lan. and co-heiress of Wrioth- . esley E. of Gainsboro 2, Anne, in. Rev. Geo. Lefroy, Rec. of Ashe. 8, Rev. Edward Tymewell claImed the Barony of Chandos. 4, Sir Egerton b. 1762; rep. Maldatone in Pan. 181218; Bart; in. Elizabeth, dan. of Rev. W. D. and Elizabeth Barrett . Buche sis. of Thos. Barrett of Lee Priory; (1) m Mary dan. of Rev. Win. Robinson. i. by 1st in.: 1, Gray Matthew, und. H. N.; d Mlnorica 1812. 2, Edward ,Wm. Geo., d. 1816, a. 16. 8, . Rev. Egerton Anthony, 1808. 4, Ferdinand, 1804. 5, Mary Jane, 1805; in. Capt. (leo. Todd 3d Dragoon Guards. i. by 2d in.: 10, Thou. Barrett, b. 1789; Capt. Grenadler Guards; took surname of Barrett according to will of great uncle Thou. Barrett. 11, John Win. Egerton, b. 1791; blent. 14th Dragoons. 12, Elizabeth Jeinlina, in. 1817 (leo. Holmes, Esq, . C. B. . blent. .Col. 3d Dragoon Guards. 13, Jemima Ann Deborah, m. 1817 Edward Quillinan, Esq., blent. 3d Dra~oon Guards. 14, Charlotte Catharhie, in. Fred. Dashwood Swaun, Esq., Capt. Grenadier Guards. . We have g one thus largely into details in this account of the Devon Brknch for the ~~.that all. the circumstances point unmistakably to It as the source of the four Ttttle lamlllea who came over in 1635. EMIGRATION TO NEW ENGLAND. The circumstances which led to tiue colonization of New England are matters of history, and require only a brief allusion here. England was on the verge of a great civil war, the end and outcome of ivhich no man could predict, but which would cer-tainly bring widespread calamity, ruin, and death in its train. The establishment of the Plymouth Colony had pointed out to the English reformers a way of escape from the religious persecution they had so long endured, and from the evils of the impending conflict.. . . Between 1629 and 1640. these hard alternatives were pressed upon the harrussed and long suffering people of England. On the one hand, the horrors of civil war, Inten. aifled by religious animosities, OH the other, a savage wilderness on the far aide of 8000 miles of ocean. Those who chose the latter were certainly not lacking in courage. To the known dangers to~be braved and hardships and sufferings to be endured were added - . those which are alwajs the most dreadful in anticipation, the unknown. The mauner In which the exIgency was met by those who stayed and did battle, as well as by those who fled to the w erness, shoivs that they were men fit to become “the sires of Empires yetto be.” In the early part of the period above named occurred “the great emigration,” and the plaxiting of the principal New England Colonies. The more cautious and prudent those havIng the strongest attachments and the largest Interests at home, would natur. ally be the most reluctant and among the latest to leave. And so It happened that the later emigrants, those who caine betwecn 1685 and 1640, were, as a general thing, of a higher class than those who came earlier; or perhaps it would be more proper to say the later emigratlons comprised a larger proportion of the higher classes than the earlier. The company of Eaton and Davenport, who came In 1687, and a little later founded New Haven, is a well.known instance. The Tuttles came In 1685, as appears from Drake’s Researches, from which we copy the following list ot PASSENGERS BY TIlE PLANTER, . April 2d, 1685. These underwritten names are to he transported to New England in the Planter, Nicholas Travice, Master, bound thither, the parties having brought certificates from the minister at St. Albans, In Hertfordshire, and attestation from the justIce of the peace, according to the Lords’ order. [Signed] RICHARD FENN, Alderman. Aoa. John Tuttell, a inercer 89 . Joan Tuttell 42 . John Lawrence 17 · . William Lawrence 12 ‘·Maria Lawrence 9 Abigail Tuttell 6 Symon Tuttell 4 Sara Tuttell 2 Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

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    3. eat, and condItion.” ArmsOr, on a cross engraved sable, and an eagle dlsplayed. I, Nicholas. d. Dec. 22, 1622; m. Ann . In the church at Chudleigh, evon, a monument partly defaced inscribed: “Sacred to the memory of John, son of Nicholas and Ann Tothill, parish, who died the day of July, . “Strangers and friends, if learned or good draw near, For such as you this tomb demands a tear; For Do’ the d oat Inciosed was once indued With every talent to he wise and good . Learned, tho’ untaught in all that schools could teach, That judgment could improve or jenius reach; Yet knew no pride, a soul above disguise, That nothing wished but to be good and wise; He lived a blessing on mankind bes:owed And died at last an offering At for God.” Polwheles Devon 2. Grace, b 1605, d. Dec. 24, 1628; m. William TothIll of the Middle Temple, Esq., and had one child, Henry. b. 1623. About 31/2 miles from Exeter, close to the village of Exminister stands an old church in which a monument lisa this inscrip-tion: “This moumnent is erected to the memory of Grace, wife of William Tothill of the Middle Temple, Esq., who had Issue Henry, and died the 24th of Feb., 1023, in the 18th year of her age, and both buried In this aisle. She being daughter of Henry Tothill of Peamore, then Sheriff of Devon, and Mary lila wife. EI dept et sup creft . If Grace could length of days thee give, Or virtue could have made the live. If goodness coulde thee here have kept, Or team of friends which for thee wept; Then had ‘at thou lived amongst us here, To whom thy virtues made thee dear; flut thou a Sainte did’st Heaven aspire, Whilst here on earth wee thee sdm re; Then rest deere corps In mantle claye Till Christ thee raise the latter dave; Thy years were few, thy glass being run, When death did cede thy life hegunn.” Under the effigy whIch Is reclined as a pedestal: . “Speake Stanie, tell her story, Its grace Inherits glory.” George Tothill, p rob, descended from Jeffery, was Bailiff 1662, again in 1664, Lord Mayor of Exeter 1 668, again In 1677. By mandate of the King made Alderman of Exeter 1687; next year W illiam, Prince of Orange, landed at Torbay and advanced with his small army towards Exeter, The Prince had been Informed that the .people stood ready to redeive hIm with acclamationa of joy and that all the gentry of the west would join hIm at hIs landing. But the cruel disposition of the King James. and the recent atrocities of Kirk and Jeff reys, had filled tlte minds of the nobility and gentry with dread of the awful consequences of failure. One of the officer~ ot . the Prince who preceded with a few liorsenien was put under arrest and confined by the authorities of Exeter, The next day Lord Mordaunt and Dr. Burnet, afterwards Bishop of Salisbury, arrived with four troope of horse and found the gate shut against them. The Lord Mayor assigned as a reason the obligation of his oath to the King. Lord Mordaunt ordered the Porter to open the gate on pain of death, and upon his refusal, says Jenkins in his Hit of EyeLet., “George Tuthill, Esq., one of the Aldermen, opened it and atimitted the troops.” For several days scarcely any person of note came in, Of the magistrates of Exeter only Alderman Tuthill and one other at first declared in his favor. This appeared so unfavorable to the Prince had lie began to doubt the success of his expedition and at one time proposed to reembark for Holland. But the spirit and firmness of Alderman Tuthill seem to have Inspired the gentlemen of Devon and Somerset with courage for they soon began to come forivard In great ntinibers and the revolution became an accom-plished fact. Subsequently being largely engaged in mercantile business he met with very heavy losses at sea and became much reduced in circtimstances, whIch coming to the knowledge of King William he gratefully awarded him a pension of £200 per annum. He is perhaps the Mr. Tothill referred to as the purchaser of Bagtor.* 4. John Tothill, m. and had: 1, Elizabeth, 2, William, f. of William of the Middle Temple, Esq., b. about 1600.: m. Grace, dau. and co-heiressof Henry Tothill, Esq., *Ragtor, was sold to Mr. ToIhill by Sir Henry Ford. b. about 1620 who was twice principal Sec. of State to Chas. II. in Ireland, only a. of John Ford of Bagior. Esq. by Katharine d. and he of George Drake of Sprattibays, Esq., Lieut.-Col. under hIs kinsman Sir 3obn Drake of Ashe. Bagtor was sold by deac. of Tothiil to the tat Lord Ashburton. a. of Geoffrey, b. 1605; d. 1828. 1. Henry, b. 1623. He in. (2) dau, of Sir George Sonthoote. 8, Hales or Hulse, 4, Thomas. 8. Juliana Tothill, in. Richard de Burnbnry, and had: 1, Grace. 2. Mary. 8, Thomas, 4, ElIzabeth. 6, Joan. 9. Rlohard Tothill, descrIbed in the pedtgree as one of the justices of the peac. of Castle (*wys (Wiston in Pembrokahire) and London; was a nrlnter and stationer of’ London, where he resided for forty years at the sign of the find and Sf or In Fleet street, near Temple Bar, during which period he printed 78 book., chiefly on law. HIs first license dated AprIl 12,1549, to print books on common law for seven years; renewed May 8, 1556, for seven years; renewed for life Jan. 12, 1558. HIs first Imprint bears date Oct. 1, 1551. His second, Oct. 1, 1652. “A Atanifeat Detection of the most Vile and Detestible Vice of Dice Playing.” In 1552 he printed an abridgment of the “Chronicles of England,” by Richard Grafton (his father.in.law). This edition contains somewhat In relation to the controversy between Grafton and Stow. Same year he printed “The Tragical history of ROmeO and Juliette a metrical paraphrase from ths Italian of Bandello, translated by Arthur Brook, with Sonnets. (See Warton’r. History of English Poetry. Vol. 111, p. 671.) In 1566, Grafton’. Chroni-des of England, containing 1208 pp., besides a table of the bailiffs, sheriffs and mayors. Grafton’s Rebus on title page and under it, “imprinted by Henry Denhaint for Ric ard Tuttle and Henry Toye. In 1670, Richard Tottle printed an Abridgment of the Chronicles, whIch contained a remarkable prologue against John Stow, who replIed In 1578. In 1571 he printed a’ Treatise containing Tables and Rules, by R. Grafton. In 1579, In conjunction with Benneinan, he printed “Stowe’s Chronicles.” In 1578 he was made Master of the Stationer’s Company, and held the office for six years, and probably re.elected in 1584, for “latterly havIng retired for the benefit of his health, the business of the company was sometime at a stand, as appears by an ordinance of the court of assistants, Sept. 80, 1589 After his retirement the London business was carried on by his son. In 1588 he gave to the company for the relief of the poor, Tullie's offices in Eng-lish and Latin, Moral Philosophy, Romeo and Julietta, QuIntius Curtlus in Englis Mr. Dr. Wilson on Usurle, Two English Lovers, Songs and Sonnets by the Earl of Surrey. A book, “ Diall of Princes,” bearing his imprint, is In the Astor Library. The State library at Hartford also contains one of his Imprints. Hansard’s Typographia containsa drawing of lils device of the “Hand and Star,” and of his monogram and motto, of which the engraving below Is a copy. RIUHARIJ TOlTEL In Lyson’s Environs of London, I find that the Manor of Perry Place (now Perry Oaks), in Middlesex, near London, was demised in 1587 to Sir Christopher Heaton for 21 yrs., at £8 per annum, and in 1592, to Joan, wife of Richard Tottill and her sons William and John for their espective lives in reversion. In 1608 thIs estate was granted to Lord William Paget. Richard Tothill m. Joan, dan. of Richard Grafton; i. 1, Jane, m. Andrew Kowldhnrst. 2, . Ais, In. Thomas Kowldhurst, 8. Mary, in. Jesse Snyder. 4, Susan, in. James Hawley, a. of James, s. of William. 5, William. 6, James. ni. Ellen, dan, of William Goch.J 7, Richard. 8, John. 9, Elizabeth m. William Bradahaw. 10, Judith. 11, Attn. 95. William Tothill, an emiiient lawyer, clerk in Chancery anti compiler of Chancery reports, among tlie earliest ever published, known as Tot/till’s Reports. He ·Thomasde Burnbury, m. Mary, dau, of John Beare of Bearescoinb, and had: m, Richard. a. Thos. 3, Mary. 4, ElIzabeth. ~. Ann. 6, Susan. SHenry Denham was a former apprentice of Richard.Tottle and probably brother of the wife of Rich-ard’s son, William Tothill of Shardeir’es. “Henry Denham was an exceedingly nice printer, and was the first who used thF semi-colon with propriety . He was under-warden of the Stationer’s Co., —A ma. Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

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    3. TOTHILLS OF DEVON, .\ The first of this branch known to us is William Totyl. His name stands at the head of a pedigree taken from Meyrick’s Heraldic Viuitaiiona of Wales, Vol. 1, p. 183, dated Oct. 24, 1591. and received from Rychard Tottyll, whose arms, as described, are the same as in the frontispiece, excepting that the lion is rampant Instead of passant, and Is differenced with a mullet, denoting that he was the third son. His arms are impaled with the arms of Grafton. From the above visitation, from Poiwbeles Devon, and from sundry English Co. Histories and other works we have gleaned the following accounts of this branch, which, though but a fragment, is suffi-cient to show the standing, character and associations of tho family at the time of, and a lissndred years antecedent to the settlement of New England. A copy of the pedigree in Tuckelt’s Devon, has been kindly forwarded to us by Alnsworth Spofford, Esq., Librarian of Congress. William Totyl. called in the pedigree, Esq., of Devonshire, was bailiff in 152$; again In 1548; HIgh Sheriff’ of Devon in 1549, and Lord Mayor of Exeter In 1552. At this period Exeter was the political capital of the West of England, and second only to London In Importance. The great manufacturing and commercial cities of Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, etc., were insignificant hamlets. In the time of Charles the 1st it contained about 10,000 inhabitants. Its venerable Cathedral was begun In the 13th century. It is a city of great antiquity—a Bishopric, and the capital of Devonshire, which Is one of the most beautiful counties In England, and one of the largest, being second only to Yorkshire in size. In regard to sheriffs, Fuller remarks: “The reader will not be disappointed at the many armless (i. e. lacking Coats of Arms) sheriffs of London. They were not so cognizable persons as the sheriffs of counties. The latter were men of known and grown estate, eminent for family.” That he was eminent for family In another sense than that intended by Fuller appears In the fact that he had 30 children, though probably not all by one wife, In the pedigrse his wife is called “Elizabeth Mathew of Vorganwg,” and she was doubtless the mother of Geoffrey. John, Robert and Richard, and perhaps of several more. She was daughter of Geoffry Mathew of Glasnorganshire, which some Welsh genealogists have traced back to Gwaetltwed, Prince of Cardigan and Gwent, while others deduce is from Yorkelyne. Burke, in his Landed Gentry says Site name was of considerable distinction in Cornwall and Devon at an early date. ·Of this line was Sir David Mathew of LiandafT, Great Standard Bearer,” Admiral Thomas Mathew, M. P., Col. John Mathew, who took a leading part, under his relations on the maternal side, Sir Richard and Sir Devil Granville in the civil war in the west of England, George Mathew, High Sheriff of Glamorganshlre. 1592, who married, 1620, Elizabeth, Viscountess Thurbes, mother or James, Duke of Orsoond, and settled in Ireland, Tobias Mathew, Archbishop of York, and Cecil Mathew, married Baron Talbot and is represented by the Earl of Shrewsbury and Talbot. ‘It has been obseryed of the Salons. that when they divided the realm into provinces, called, in Saxon, Shire,. and in Latin, Comitatus (i.e. Counties) framed the government of them from the ancient custom of the Romans, from whom it was descended to them from their German ancestors, in conformity to which they constituted certain of their chief men topreside over their Shires, which they called Earldo men, for, in Latin. Comiice or Ceasa/es). King Alfred, for more ready administration of justice, allowed the Earidomen or Counts to make deputies who were called Vjt~ Comib’s or f’is Caa,ifs, and in their own ton a ue. Sheriffs, I c. the Shyre—reeve from the Saxon word G,r,-/a or Gereva, i. c. ,Srnr’nsl —praefect or Steward to distribute justice to the people, in their provincial or county courts. Finsily the Shertif became the chief executive officer. the Karl being an attendance on the King. They were usuallT men of high rank and great power in the realm, in the reign of King Edwa,d 1, the election of Sheriff was granted to the people. before appointed by the King, though Edward II continued to aupoint Sheriffs for several counties. Elections grew so tumultuous that by atatutes of Edward III. Henry VI sadHenry V Ill. the Chancellor. Treasurer, Pres. of King’s Council, Chief Justices and Chief Baron are to make the elecuon.—Hasie~s II,et. ~,fKeitf Co. Of the 36 children of William Tothill, the names on record of only ‘12 are known to us, and theorder of these nolcertain: I, Joan,, in. John Hulse; (2) Richard Hokeley. I, Grace. 8, Geoffrey, so. Joan Dillon. 4, John. 5, Alice, m. William Parsons. 8, Juliana, in. Richard de Burnbury. 7, Amy, in. Hill, 8, Elizabeth, m. Thomas Stukeley of Pulam. 9, Richard, m. Joan (irafton. 10, Robert. 11, Daughter, in. Thomas Walker; (2) Thomas Cranston. 12, Katharine, m. William KIngsley; (2) ,Nicholas Drake. 1. . Joan Tothill, so. John, a. of Richard and Joan (Whltlegh) Hula.’ 1, Arthur (irenvIlle, d. 1658; Capt.; m. Dorothy. dan. of Richard Boyle, Lord Archbishop of Tuatn. She in, (2) Henry Turner, Sergt. .Major under Lord inohinquin in Ireland. 2, Sir Nicholas. 8, Richard. so. Jane Fortescue, dan. of John and gr. dan. of Sir Louis Fortescue, one of ilse Barons of the Exchequer temp. Hen. VIII. 1, Richard of Kene-den and Efford, Esq.. living in 1620; in. Anne Sutoliffe, only dau. of Dr. Matthew Sntcliffe founder of the College at Chelsea and over forty years dean of Exeter. 1, Matthew, d. 1856; m. Sabina Clifford and had dan. Anne, m. 1655 Rev. John Tyndal. D. D. Margaret Whitleigli, sister of Joan, so. Sir Roger (irenville of Stow, High Sheriff of Cornwall. . 2, Hen. V III., d. 1524: had S as. 6 dana., of whom Sir Richard arenville, Kt. 111112; High Sheriff of Devon 1588; Marshal of Calais; so. Matilda Beavil, and among others: Roger (irenville, lit., Esq. of the body of Hen. VIII.; drowned in life time of his father in the Hose Frigate off Portsmouth; so. Thomasine Cole and had: Sir Hicharti Urenville of Stow, a gallant naval commander; served in army in Hungary with high repute; High Sheriff of Cornwall 1578; fitted out a colony and sailed for Florida 1585 where he left 100 men; made many successful voyages; d. in battle with the Spaniards; so. Mary St. Leger and had: Bernard (jirenville, Ks., Iligh Sheriff of Cornwall l5I~6; II. P. and KS.; d. 1886; in. Elizabeth Beavit and had: Sir Bevil tirenYille, Kt.; called . “the Bayard of En g land,” b. 1595; fell at Lansdown with a patent from Chas. I. in his pocket for the Earldoin of Bath; in. (irace, dan. of Sir George Smith of Exeter and sister of the mother of George Monk, Dttke of Albertnarle; had: 1, Bernard (irenville, g room of the hedchamber to Chas. Ii.; was father of Bernard (irenville and grand-father of Mary (Irenville, b. 1700; d. 1788; so. 1757 Alex. Pendarves of Cornwai 1; (2) 1748 Mr. Delany. Her autobiography, edited by Sarah Chauncey Woolsey (8], published 1879. 2, Sir John (irenville, Earl of Bath, attended Chas, I i . in all his wanderings abroad; d. 1701; so. Jane Wyche and had (irace Grenville, m. Sir George Cartaret. 3. Geoffry Tot~ii11, Alderman of Exeter; Recorder 1568; arms granted 1568: pttr-chased the eat, at Peatnore from tIme Crownf; to whIch It had fallen on the att.ainderof thie Duke-of Suffolk, It is about seven tidies from Exeter, Polwhele describes it as a place of singular beauty. Not far from the villa is a romantic rock encrusted with white tnoaa and shaded with Ivy. Venerable trees adorn the grounds. and “the park beautiful In itself, with its little undulating hills and dales, commands extensive and varied prospects.” On the dec, of his dan, Joan (Northlelghs) in 1639 the eat, passed to her son Henry Northleigh, Esq. (4eoffry Tothill mu. Joan Dillon.± . I. Joan ‘rothill, m. Robert Northleigh of Durham, b. 1588; d. Jan. 18, 1888. i.: 1, Henry, who was 1. of Henry, b. at Dean Prior in Devon March 14, 1642, and d. in London. A Mein. of Parle, J’an. 81, 1698. 2, George. 8, Jeff ry. 4, Hobart. 5, John. 6, Robert, - 7, Thomas. S. James. 9, Mary. 10, Jot~n. 11. Margaret. II, Harris. . obert, k Henry, HI g It Sheriff of Devon 1624; called of Palinoutht (Plymouth). l~ noticed byFullerin Wortkies of England; in. Mary, dan. and heir of Nicholas Spekeof i.owton. “Tlie.Spekee,~’ says Sir Wni. Pole in Deecriptirn of Deeon, p. 285, “were of very great ‘John Hulse had son Judge John Hulse, King’s Sergt. at law s~s~; one of the Justices of thi King’s Bench 5454’ m. a dau of Mewy of Whitechurch and had: i, John Bishop ot Coventry and Litchileld and s, Rlcbaid, whom. a dau. of Ashe and had Richard whom. Margaret one of the daus. sod heirs of Robert Latimer ol Fittlefield, and had Richard who in. Joan, dau. of Richard Whitlegh of Ettord near Plymouth, sad had John whom. Joan Tothill as above. tlrsack’s Antiquities of Exeter. SWalter Dillon of Ireland, Esq.. had. son Nicholas, who had son Robert, father of Nicholas, 4th son, whose arms are given in G,,ill,,u’s Ikraidry. and of Henry Dillon, eldest son and heir, who in. Elizabeth, dau. of Sir Hugh Pollard. and had Robert, Andrew, Henry, Margaret and Anna. He in. (a) Anne, dau, of Win. Kelly of Devon, Esq ,and had Joanna whom. Jeffrey Tothill of Exeter. James Dillon, 3d Earl of Roscommon in Ireland, in. Elizabeth, youngest dan. of Sir William Went-worth and sis, to Thomas Wdntworth. the great Earl of Straftord. and had Wentworth Dillon. b. In I. 1633, 4th Earl of Roscommon; a celebrated poet; d. i684: bu. in Westininiater Abby.CAas,her’s Eiicyc. Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

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    3. with Isabel, 70, perhaps his mo.; w. Ann, 41; ch. Ann, 12; John, 10; and Rebecca, 6; he with his w. join, our ch. 27 Dec. aft. arr. was adm. freem. 3 Mar. foIl, and d. 8 May 1640. Perhaps his d. Ann in. John Pantry of hartford, an(l next, 23 June 1654, Thomas Welles of H. SAMUEL, New Haven, a propr. 1685, was s. of John, and gr.s. of’ Wil-liam, but no more is kn. to me. Simon, Ipsw:ch, s. of’ John of the same, b. in Eng. m. Sarah, d. of John Cogswell, had Joanna, b. 24 Sept. 160.1; Simon, 17 Sept. 1667; Eliz. 24 Nov. 1670; Sarah, 3 Sept. 1672; Abi-gail, 7 Oct. 1673; Susanna, 7 May 1675; William, 7 May 1077; Charles, 31 Mar. 1679; Mary, 12 June 1680; Jonathan, 11 June 1682; and Ruth, 16 Aug. 1685; and lie d. Jan. 1692. Of thc ch. nam. John and eight others were liv. at the d. of f. Two other ch. were b. of wh. one was John, but prob. the other liv. not many hours. His wid. Sarah, after these thirteen ch. liv. to 24 Jan. 1732. The eldest d. in. a Pack-ard; Eliz. m. Samuel Ayres of Haverhill; Abigail in. Philemon War-ner; Mary m. Thomas Burahain; and one in. Samuel Ward. Simon New Haven, had Daniel, b. 11 Nov. 1680; had in 1670 engag. to rem. to Wallingford, certain, did not long contin. there. Simon, Ipswich, s. of Simon of the same, in. 16 Jan. or one acco. says June 1696, Mary, d. of’ Samuel Rogers, had Sarah, b. 11 Oct. 1697; Margaret, 24 Aug. 1699; and Eliz. 26 Sept. 1700. THoMAS, New haven, s. of’ William, not the babe he brat. in 1635, with him, unless we reject (as I am very ready to do) the numeration of yrs. at his d. giv. by Dodd; was freem. bef. 1669, propr. 1685, m. 21 May 1661, hannah, eldest d. of Thomas Powell, had Hannah, b. 24 Feb. 1662; Abigail, 17 Jan. 1664 Mary, 14 Jan. 1666; Thomas, 27 Oct. 1667; John, 5 Dcc. 1669; Esther, 9 Apr. 1672; Caleb, 29 Aug. 1674; Joshua, 19 Dcc. 1676; and Martha, 23 May 1679. Ihis w. d. 15 Oct. 1710; and he d. four days aft. aged 68, says Dodd, prob. foil. the gr.s. inscript. too little by seven yrs. Wil-liam Boston, came in the Planter 1635, aged 26, with w. Ehiz. 23; ch. John 31/2 Ann, 21/4 and Thomas, 3 mos. lIe is, by tradit, said to have come from Co. Northampton. Ilis w. join, our ch. 24 July 1636, and brot. to be bapt. Jonathan, 2 July 1637; David, 7 Apr. 1639 Soon aft. lie rein. to New Haven, there became a man of conscq. had Joseph, bapt. 22 Nov. 16.10; Sarah, Apr. 1642; Eliz. 9 Nov. 1645; Simon, 28 Mar. 1647; Benjamin, 29 Oct. 1648; Mercy, b. 27 Apr. bapt. 19 May 1650; and Nathaniel, 24, bapt. 29 Feb. 1652. ilis est. was giv. to be admin. June 1673, all the ch. liv. and the w. d. 30 Dec. 168.1. Of the ds. Sarah m. 12 Nov. 1663, John Slawson; Mercy in. 2 May 1667, Samuel Brown; Eliz. in. 19 Nov. foIl. Richard Edwards. Farmer num-bers the gr. in 1834, as six at Yale, four at Harv. and two at other N. E. coIl. TWELVES, TUELLS, or TWELLS, ROBERT, Braintree was one of the petitnrs. for gr. of what did not belong to our goverain. honestly to give (the region possess. by Gorton and his fellow inisbelievers) in Oct. 1645, rs. 22 or 23 Nov. 1655, Martha, d, of Peter Brackett, had Mary, b. 8 July 1656; Martha, 17 Dec. 1657, or 19 Dec. 1658, as in Geneal. Reg. XII. 350, d. soon; Richard, 16 May 1660, by the rec. in Boston, but by ano. rec. Martha, again, 16 June 1660; Rachel, 8 May 1662; Peter, 10 Oct. 1666; Sarah, bapt. 29 May 1670; John, 14 July ¶672; but these two ivero at the third ch. in Boston; Hannah, 21 Sept. 1673; Abigail, 27 or 28, bapt. 29 July 1677; was freem. 1663, and caught front his f.-in-law the milit. distinct, ens. 1671, lieut. ia 1684, d. 2 Mar. 1691, aged (tho. gr.st. says eighty yrs.) a. 77 yrs. old. Mary in. Nov. 1676, Ebenezer Tyng; Rachel in. 25 Sept. 1689, William French, and d. soon; and Abigail in. 12 June 1704, Shubael Seaver of Roibury. Ihis will of 18 Mar. 1697, pro. G May foil, shows that Mary had ano. h. one Clarke, and that three then unin. ds. were Hannah, Sarah, and Abigail . Of this name Mr. Seer. Increase Nowell, in the Col. rec. Vol. II. 128, made the ingenious, or ridiculous, perversion Quelves. TWIDE, WILLIAM, is the name giv, to a passeng. in the Arabella, 1671, from London, for N. E. but he was not long liv. here unless he changed it. TwINING, STEPhEN, Easthain, s. of William the sec. in. Jan. 1683, Abigail, d. of John Young of the same, had Stephen, b. 30 Dec. 1684; Eleazer, 26 Nov. 1686; Nathaniel, 27 Mar. 1689; Mercy, 8 Sept. 1690; and John, 5 Mar. 1693. WILLIAM, Yarmouth 1643, rein. early to Easthain, had perhaps, by w. Ann, William, prob. b. in Eng. and Eliz. and Ann, prob. b. here. lie d. 15 Apr. 1659, and Ann, w. of William sen. d. 27 Feb. 1681, but possib. this may not have been the w. wh. bore the sec. William, but his sec. w. Ehiz. in. 19 Aug. 1669, John Rogers; and Ann in. 3 Oct. 1672, Thomas Bills. WILLIAM, Eastham, s. of the preced. prob. b. in Eng. in. Eliz. d. of Stephea Deane, had usanna, b. 25 Jan. 1655; Joanna, 30 May 1657; Stephen, 6 Feb. 1660; and Wil-liam. lie was liv. in 1695. WILLIAM, Easthain, s, of the preced. m. 26 Mar. 1689, Ruth, d. of John Cole of the same, had Eliz. b. 25 Aug. 1690; Thankful, 11 Jan. 1697; Ruth, 27 Aug. 1699; Hannah 2 Apr. 1702; William, 2 Sept. 1704; Barnabas, 29 Sept. 1705; and Mercy, 20 Feb. 1708. TWISDEN, TWISDALE, or TWISDALL, JOHN, York 1648, had been of Seituate in 1639, and came from Co. Kent, was of gr. jury 1649, prob. had John, for in Nov. 1652, John sen. and jr. submit. to Mass. and SAM-UEL is found in 1656. His d. Alice or Eliz. in. 20 Nov. 1649, Joseph Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

    08/18/2000 06:24:53
    1. page 2
    2. charlie
    3. TUTTLE, TUTTEL, or TUTHILL DAVID, New HAVEN s. of William, a propr. 16 , in 1687 put under the care of his br. Thomas, and d. 1693, without ch. EDWARD, Boston, freem. 1690. ELISHA, Boston, freem. 1690. HENRY HINGHAM 1637, came with w. from some place in Co. Norfolk, freem. Mar. 1638, was made constable 1640. John Ipswich, came in the Planter front London 1635, aged 39, with w. Joan, 42; and cli. Abigail, 6; Simon, 4; Sarah, 2; and John, I; besides *JOAN Gid-dings, 20, and her It. George, 25, wIt. are kit. to be call. ch. of T. They had prob. liv. at St. Albans, ia Hertfordsh. and had emb. 2 Apr. to be join. four days aft. by sev. others of the same names in two fams. He was freem. 13 Mar. 1639, rep. 1644; and prob. had more cIt. on our side of the ocean, as Simon (perhaps in place of him wh. d.) and Mary. After few yrs. he went home, was estab. to advantage in Ireland, whither in 1054 his w. foil, lie He 30 Dec. 1656 at Carrickfergus, whence his wid. in 1689 writes to George Giddings as Iter s. and so call, also John and Simon, and John Lawrence. His d. Sarah in. 1 Feb. 1654, Richard Martin. JoHN, New Haven 1640, appoint. constable 1642, had, says the careful town rec. Samuel, b. 9 Jan. 1660; Sarah, 22 Jan. 1662; Daniel and Mary, tw. 13 Apr. 1664; and Eliz. 21 Nov. 1666, wh. all were bapt. the yr. foil. but the blunder ch. rec. has all with false dates, 23 inst. of 24 Mar. for the four first, wh. is a slight affair; but abomina-bIe for the youngest, said to be bapt. two days bef. she was b. *JOHN, Southold, L. I. went prob. front New haven with Rev. John Youngs, a. 1641. He was liv. 1681, had John, b. 16- .July 1635; Joshua; and James. It is suppos. he was front Saxlingham Co. Norfk. JoHN, Dover 1642 or earlier, d. late ut 1662, leav. wid. Dorotlty, one d. m. s. John, ano. d. and s. Thomas, all perhaps minors. The last was k. 1664 by the fall of' a tree. The younger d. was perhaps Dorothy, wh. m. i Sept. 1686, Samuel Tibbets of D. JOHN, Boston, s. prob. of Richard, m. 10 Feb. 1647, Mary, d. of' Edward Holyoke, had Mary, b. 18 Apr. 1653; Rebecca, 17 June 1 660 and Sarah; liv. at Rumney Marsh, perhaps rem. to Lynn, aitd may be the freem, there of 1671, possib. that lieut. of the corps of cavalry, wh. was disch. 1673. Mary m. 4 Dcc. 1678, Caleb Carter; and Sarah in. Joseph Newell, both of Charlestown. JoHN, New Haven, perhaps eldest s. of' William, brat. by his f. under 4 yrs. of age in the Planter, m. 8 Nov. 1653, Catharine Lane, had Hannah, b.2 Nov. 1655; John, 15 Sept. 1657; Samuel, 9 Jan. 1660; Sarah, 22 Jan. 1662; Daniel and Mary, tw. 13 Apr. 1664; all bapt. Mar. 1666, but tlte day in Geiteal. Reg. IX. 363, is wrong; and 'Eliz. b. 21 bapt. 25 Nov. foll. and all ill right of their mo. besides ano. later, David, 15 Nov. 1668 His inv. is of' 12 Nov. 1683. John, Southold, L. I.s. ot John of the same, m. 17 Feb. 1658, Deliverance King, had John, b. 14 Feb. 1659; Eliz.; Henry, 1 May 1665; Hannah; Abigail; Dorothy; Deliverance; Daniel, 23 Jan. 1680; and Nathaniel, 10 Nov. 1683. He had sec.w. m. 28 May 1690, Sarah Young; and d. 12 Oct. 1717. John Dover, s. of John first of' the same, fill. many offices, town elk. 30 yrs. selectman, rep. and judge of C. C. P. had John, b. a. 1671; Thomas, 4 Apr. 1674; James, 7 Apr. 1683; and Ehenezer; beside two ds. and leav. large est. d. 1720. In his will calls w. Mary, cIt. Ebenezer, and Mary; gr.ch. Thomas and John, s. prob. of Joltn, wh. had been k. by the md. 17 May 1712; John, and Nicholas, s. perhaps of Thomas, wIt. had d. 26 Apr. 1699, in the Bay of Campeachy, and Elijah and Phebe, ch. of James, wb. d. 1709; beside John and Peter Hayes, wh. must, I think, have been eb. of John. Mary was w. of John Wallingford, m. 6 Dec. 1687; and I find rea-son to differ from Mr. Quint, wh. supposes that she was the same wh. m. Hayes. JOHN, Ispwich, s. perhaps of the first Simon, m. 8 Dec. 1689, Martlta Ward, perltaps sis. of Samuel, ltnd Martha, b. 1690; and Mary, 7 July 1696; and he d. 26 Feb. 1716. JOHN, Boston, freem. 1690. JONATHAN, New haven, s. of William, was in the freemen's list 1669, by w. Rebecca, d. of Francis Bell of Stamford, had Rehecea, b. 10 Sept. 1664; Mary, 7 Feb. 1666; David, 14 Nov. 1668; tho. this is manifest. wrong, for next comes, in less than five mos. Jonathan, 6 Apr. 1669; and David on the same 14 Nov. 1668, is, by the same author, giv. to John; Simon, 11 Mar. 1671; William, 25 May 1673; and Nathaniel, 25 Feb. 1676. His w. d. 2 May 1676. LIe was propr. 1685. JONA-THAN, Boston, freem. 1690. JosEph, New Ilaven, s. of William, pro-pound. for freem. 1669, in. 2 May 1667, Hannah d. of Thomas Munson, had Joseph, b. 18 Mnr. 1608; Samuel, 15 July 1670; Stephen, 20 May 1673; Joanna, 13 Dec. 1675; Timothy, 30 Sept. 1678, d. soon; Su-sanna, 20 Feb. 1680, d. young; Eliz. 12 July 1683; and Hannah, May 1685, wh. may itave d. soon; and ano. Hannalt came in her place. He d. 1690, aged, says Dodd, 62, wlten lie could he only 50, if tlte a. of Wil-ham. His wid. in. 1694, Nathan Bradley, and d. next yr. He was propr. 1685. JosHuA, Southold, L. I. s, of the first John of the same, had Joshua. NATHANIEL, New haven, s. of William, propr. 1685, may then have been some yrs. at Woodbury there had Mary, bapt. May 1683; Ephraim ; Hezekiah ; Isaac, b. 3 Feb. 1698; Temperance and Ann; d. 20 Aug. 1721, leav. w. Sarah, and nam. in Itis will all those ch. cxc. tlte first, wIt. was perhaps d. At Ncw Haven the rec. names Ephiraim, b. 20 July 1683; and Temperance, 24 Nov. 1684; and first ree. tlte m. 10 Apr. as one reads or ano. Aug. 1682, with Sarah Howe, eldest d. of Ephraim. So flint the order of childr. tnken above from Cothrett must be incorrect, and possib. one of tlte names. RICHARD, Boston, came in tlte Planter, from London 1635, aged 42, call. husbandman; Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

    08/18/2000 06:19:32
    1. Pioneers of Massachusetts, page 1
    2. charlie
    3. Some of the words were hard to see and read so please make the best of it. Also some of them you can take a guess at. I tried to fix all that i could. PIONEERS OF MASSACHUSETTS, A DESCRIPTIVE LIST, Drawn from Records of the Colonies, Towns and Churches, and other Contemporaneous Documents. . BY CHARLES HENRY POPE, PASTOR FIRST CHURCH, CHARLESTOWN, BOSTON, COMPILER OF THE DORCHESTER POPE FAMILY THE CHENEY GENEALOGY, ETC. Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Co. 1965 Originally Published Boston, 1900 TUCSON PUBLIC LIBRARY Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 65-22478 Charlie Griffith cgriff@ccomm.com

    08/18/2000 06:16:45
    1. Books & Libraries!
    2. Hi, I notice that people ask for lookups & no one has the book! You can try inter library loan to get this book--for the past 20 years are more, I have gotten many genealogy books this way! :) You can also try the following: If the book(s) are out of print & the LDS library has a copy--your librarian can have the LDS make a copy of the book for your library (at your cost). LDS will make copies at minimal cost for a library but will not make copies for personal use. Hence, you make a copy of the copy when it gets to your library! Very few people know that this service exist! Happy hunting, Helen (DCGS)

    08/11/2000 04:48:53
    1. Tuttles of Hanover, NJ 1700's
    2. S.& A.Gore
    3. Hi List, Since we were on the subject here are our North East TUTTLES: This information was sent to me from Gwen,who edited the books by Alva and re-released them through Solo Press. I do not know what vol. this came from and I do not know what these ref. # mean. But I have put little coments in where I know or do not know anything. If anyone out there knows more on this little line or can connect James Tuttle to any line I would appreciate it. Thanks, Abbe Gore 105017.400@compuserve.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- >James TUTTLE b. 1819 N.Y. (I am guessing this means ref. # OT103?) I think this comes from "Tuttles Toothills in America" by Alva Tuttle) We don't know where he dies maybe Ca. >m. Albrya CASTLEMAN b. Nov 23,1824 CAN. d. Jul 14,1910 Sacramento >dau of Marlomus & Esther(MYERS) CASTLEMAN b. CAN. > >(Source:117) >James Tuttle Registered 29 May 1867 Placer Co. Ca. age 48 saloonkeeper > children >1.Ellis TUTTLE b. 1840 d. by 1910 he died young I think. >_________________________________________ > >2. Charles TUTTLE b. 1842 d. by 1910 Do not know anything on him. >______________________________________________________________________ > >3.Filetta TUTTLE b.1844 d. by 1910 I think it is a female but I do not know anything. >_______________________________________________________________________ >4. Martin Henry TUTTLE b. 1849 CAN >m. Ellen REDDICK b. 1855 CAN. >Resided 1896 Rocklin Ca. RR Engineer >On 1880 Sacramento Census: age 31 laborer, Ellen 25, Lillie 3, Ella 8 mo. I believe they both died in Ca. I have a photo of Reddick tombe stone I think she died 1931 Nov 13 Martin died March 14 ,1927 > >(1) Lillie TUTTLE b. 1877 Ca. d. Sept. 14 1959 Oakland Ca. She would have died as Lillie SMALL. > m. (1) May 1896 Sacramento Ca. "of Rocklin Ca." to William GORE b. 1867 Sacramento Ca. > m.(2) Lewis DeWitt SMALL b.Oct 16,1869 Ill. d. Apr. 20, 1951 Oakland Ca. son of James & Mary (VEDDER) SMALL We have nothing on him. > >(2)Ella G. TUTTLE b. 1880 Sacramento Ca . > m. July 3,1903 Sacramento,Ca. to Charles S. HARRIS b. 1876 of Reno NV. > __________________________________________________________ > >5. William Eugene TUTTLE b. 1851 CAN >m. Antoinette HENDERSON b. 1862 CAN. d. 1950 age 88 > (1) William Martin TUTTLE b. Jan 5,1886 Ca. d.Dec. 30,1911 Sacramento buried Rocklin Ca. Committed murder/suiside in Sacramento. Lots of newspaper articles about this insodent. (their infant daughter was playing on the floor while the whole thing took place. There was also alot of controversy over who would adopt the child since there was a large estate to deal with. > m. (1) July 3 1906 Dutch Flat Ca. to Geneva DUFFEY b. 1888 Ca. dau of Edward & Cathrine (MORAN) DUFFEY > m. (2) Aug. 1, 1910 Sacramento,Ca. to Hazel Winnifred WOODSON b.Mar. 23 1893;d. Dec. 30 1911 Sacramento, Ca. dau of Van & Alice >(CASSELMAN) WOODSON > > (2) Harriet Antoinette TUTTLE b. 1889 Rocklin Ca. > m. Oct. 30 1910 Sacramento Ca. to William Henry GORE b. 1889 >Rocklin Ca. > We have William's obit. Not Harriets she died Oct. 31,1970 > (3) Lester Eugene TUTTLE b. Oct. 30 1890 Rocklin Ca. > m. (1) Amy Divorced > m. (2) Sept. 10 1919 Sacramento Ca. to Mable Alice GRIFFIN b. 1894 IA dau of Abe & Mary (BENSON) GRIFFIN- Divorced > m.(3) Sept. 1 1934 Sacramento Ca. to Mary Frances GILLAN b. 1898 Ca. dau of Frank & Charlotte(GRAPLE) GILLAN > Ditto on this family. We do not have anything on this family > (4) Henrietta Theresa TUTTLE b. 1903 Ca. > m. Nov.25 1932 Sacramento Ca. to Byron Moore DENNEY b. 1894 OH. son of Charles & Dell (MOORE) DENNEY > She died in 1990ish and this was the first of many husbands > (5) Aurlein Ruth TUTTLE b. 1907 Ca. d.1999 Ca. > m. 1925 San Francisco Ca. to Bert E. TODD b. 1902 son of Robert B. & Mary (PHILBRICK) TODD > > (6) Mrs N.H. CRANE Do not know her first name or anything > > (7) Mrs. R.L. STAFFORD Do not know her first name either > > (8) Mrs. Hattie BIDDLE We are uncertain of all three of these last entries > >Hazel Winnifred WOODSON's mother was a CASSELMAN related to Albrya >CASTLEMAN ?????? > Steve & Abbe Gore 105017.400@compuserve.com gore@frazmtn.com www.frazmtn.com/~gore/ourweb.htm www.familytreemaker.com/users/g/o/r/Abbe.M.Gore/

    08/07/2000 04:22:54