I do not know about Russell D. Tuttle, but I also am a descendant of Richard Tuttle. Richard came over on the Planter with his family, landed at Boston, not Rumney Marsh, and then shortly thereafter received a large grant of land at Rumney Marsh. Rumney Marsh later became Chelsea. Richard's land was in North Chelsea, which later became Revere, Massachusetts. By my research, the line only goes back solidly for two generations prior to Richard in England. My Tuttle line goes like this: Richard, John, Jonathan, James, Burrell, Archelaus, Thaddeaus, John, Aura (who married George Waddington), Laurel Waddington (who married George Gilman), George Gilman Jr. --Greg Gilman, Medford, Mass In a message dated 11/25/99 10:07:54 PM Eastern Standard Time, AnEadaigh@aol.com writes: << I am looking for Russell D. Tuttle. He wrote the following "Origin of the Tuttle Name" which appears on the Tuttle surname site: "The name Tuttle is of English origan. The original spelling was toothill which means ( A Lookout point ) It croped up through Englang around the 1400's. My ancesters came over from Englang on a ship called the Planter in 1635. There sailing date from Englang was July 2, 1635. I do not know the exact date they landed in Rumney Marsh, now Chelsee Mass. a suberb of Bosten. I have geneology records going back to 1506 in Northampton, Englang Russell D. Tuttle" I am somewhat acquainted with the origin of my family, and it is the same as Russell Tuttle's. My ancestor, Richard Tuttle, his two brothers, and their family's and their mother Isabel also arrived on the Planter. Therefore, I am understandably interested in contacting him to find out how we are related, and what other information he may have. I hope to hear from him, or someone who may be able to provide me with this information. Thanks to all, Bob Tuttle AnEadaigh@aol.com >>
Hi - How does one post material to the archives? I have transcribed the revolutionary war pension record of (1) Isaiah Tuttle b. abt. 1746 in NJ, d in Greene Co., PA and (2) the will of Amelia Strope Tuttle, widow of Amos, grandson of Isaiah, Amelia was born abt. 1801 & d. 1890 in Greene Co., PA. (3) war of 1812 pension application of Amelia Strope Tuttle and (4) the will of Amos Tuttle, son of Isaiah b. abt. 1765, d. 1845, Greene Co., PA. These folks are of the William line through John>John>Ephraim>Ephraim>Isaiah>Amos>Amos. I would be pleased to make these transcriptions available. Marjorie Smallwood
I am looking for Russell D. Tuttle. He wrote the following "Origin of the Tuttle Name" which appears on the Tuttle surname site: "The name Tuttle is of English origan. The original spelling was toothill which means ( A Lookout point ) It croped up through Englang around the 1400's. My ancesters came over from Englang on a ship called the Planter in 1635. There sailing date from Englang was July 2, 1635. I do not know the exact date they landed in Rumney Marsh, now Chelsee Mass. a suberb of Bosten. I have geneology records going back to 1506 in Northampton, Englang Russell D. Tuttle" I am somewhat acquainted with the origin of my family, and it is the same as Russell Tuttle's. My ancestor, Richard Tuttle, his two brothers, and their family's and their mother Isabel also arrived on the Planter. Therefore, I am understandably interested in contacting him to find out how we are related, and what other information he may have. I hope to hear from him, or someone who may be able to provide me with this information. Thanks to all, Bob Tuttle AnEadaigh@aol.com
Hi Gang, I found this saved from last year. It was Bob Norris who sent it and for the people of Norcal who remember Bob let's hope he is enjoying a "Big Ole Leg" somewhere up in heaven! Read and enjoy! Abbe Gore 105017.400@compuserve.com HAPPY THANKSGIVING Howdy Folks, A little Turkey Day stuff...:-) Hope my seasonal, off-topic post doesn't ruffle any feathers - just fun-learning:-)) As with most truly historic/historical events, this Thanksgiving rendition, taken from "Extraordinary Origins of Everyday Things" by Charles PANATI(NY: Harper & Row 1987) may evoke either a passing comment or violent disagreement. If the latter, please forgive - just thought it interesting & wanted to share.:-)) According to author Panati, our present Thanksgiving day celebration is probably due in most part to the tireless editorial efforts, which began in 1827, of Sarah Josepha HALE, when she was editor of Boston's LADIES magazine(later"Godey's Lady's Book'). But I am getting ahead of myself:-) Let's first return to 1620: Evidently, the 102 Pilgrims aboard the MAYFLOWER were well acquainted with annual thanksgiving day celebrations - an ancient and universal custom: Greeks, Romans, and Hebrews. After the long four month journey ended with their landing at Plymouth on December 11,1620, the Pilgrims, as every schoolperson may remember, suffered from severe weather and a plague that by 1621 had killed hundreds of local Indians and 46 of their own members - mainly to scurvy and pneumonia. But the survivors had plenty for which to be thankful: a bountiful harvest, abundant food, and they were ALIVE. Their existence was in no small part due to the efforts of English-speaking Pawtuxet Indian named SQUANTO who continued to help them in so many ways until his death two years later. According to Governor BRADFORD's own history "Of Plimoth Plantation," the 1621 celebration lasted three days. Let me quote a little from author PANATI's book: "He[Bradford] sent 'four men fowling' and the ducks and geese they brought back were added to lobsters, clams, bass, corn, green vegetables, and dried fruit. "The Pilgrims invited the chief of the Wampanoag tribe, MASSASOIT, and 90 of his braves, and the work of preparing the feast - for 91 Indians and 56 settlers - fell to only four Pilgrim women and two teenage girls[and you Ladees complain:-))] Thirteen women had died the previous winter." As we were school taught, the first Thanksgiving Day had all the elements of a modern celebration: parade of soldiers, blasting muskets and blaring bugles. Even the 90 Indian guest competed against the settlers in foot races and jumping matches. Also, the Indians showed their bow and arrow prowess; the male settlers their accuracy with the gun. THANKSGIVING MENU I suspect maybe a little disagreement here. But according to Panati, the 6 ladees preparing their meal with the resources at hand, produced a varied menu - some of which have since become traditional fare. For the details, let's listen to author Pinati: "Though Governor Bradford sent 'four men fowling,' and they returned with 'a great store of wild turkies,' there is no proof that the catch included the bird we call a turkey. Wild turkeys did roam the woods of the Northeast, but in the language of the 17th-century Pilgrims, 'turkey' simply meant any guinea fowl, that is, any bird with a featherless head, rounded body, and dark feathers speckled white. "It is certain, however, that the menu included venison, since another Pilgrim recorded that Chief Massasoit sent braves into the woods, who 'killed five Deere which they brought to our Governour.' Watercress and leeks were on the table, along with bitter wild plums and dried berries, but there was no apple cider, and no milk, butter, or cheese, since cows had not been aboard the MAYFLOWER. "And there was probably no pumpkin pie[:-(]. Or bread as we'd recognize it. Stores of flour from the ship had long since been exhausted and years would pass before significant quantities of wheat were successfully cultivated in New England. Without flour for a pie crust, there could be no pie. But the Pilgrims did enjoy pumpkin at the meal - BOILED. "The cooks concocted an ersztz bread. Boiling corn, which was plentiful, kneaded it into round cakes and fried it in venison fat. There were 15 young boys in the company, and during the three-day celebration they gathered wild cranberries, which the women boiled and mashed into a sauce for the meal's meats." FOLKS, apparently the next year brought a poor harvest and. with new folks coming in to feed, the Pilgrims never again regularly celebrated a Thanksgiving day. In 1777, the 13 colonies had a common thanksgiving celebration - the victory at the Battle of Saratoga. Also President George WASHINGTON's first National Thanksgiving proclamation in 1789 caused such discord that it was never carried out. It was left to the one woman, Sarah Josepha HALE, who crusaded with magazine editorials for decades, and the Civil War to reinstate Thanksgiving. The bitter Battle of Gettysburg in September, 1863, brought forth an emotional, widely circulated editorial by Mrs. Hale, which supposedly prompted President Abraham LINCOLN to issue a proclamation on October 3, 1863 setting aside the last Thursday in November as national THANKSGIVING DAY." I omit Thanksgiving since.:-)) Refresh your recollection? Now, save me a big ole leg tomorrow:-)), Bob Norris in Dallas
TUTTLE, Phineas, NY>CT, 1779-_____. Phineas TUTTLE married Elizabeth Barnes in about 1798. Who were Elizabeth Barnes' parents? Thank you.
I found this b & d data recently. I know of no links to my lines, but it may help someone else. tootie@netnitco.net Let me know if they belong to you and maybe I can help further. Lake Co. IN-Index to birth records 1899-1920 (found at Lake Co. Library 1-15-1999) Page Name birth date Location father mother bk/pg P 34 Tuthill, Henry P Feb 8 1920 Hobart Walter Edna Brown; ch3/19 P 34 Toothill, Phyllis A Mar 2 1910 Hobart Claude Foneta ?ewcomb ch1/22 Also listed data not copied: Tot, Male 1920 Whiting to Geo. & Mary Julose Toth, Male 1905 Whiting to Geo. & Mary Plaosni Toth, Female 1907 Whiting to Dan & Mary Toth Tootte, Male 1905 Whiting to Dan & Mary Tootte Lake Co. IN-Index to death records 1899-1920 (found at Lake Co. Library 1-15-1999) Page Name Date of Death Location Age bk/pg P 178 Tuttle, McClure May 27 1914 Hammond 27 ch4/25
Hello all, I found a site that has a searchable database for The SF Call Newspaper for the years, 1869,1875-84 1885-1890 These include births, deaths, and marriages. http://feefhs.org/fdb2/sfcalli.html Enjoy, Abbe Gore 105017.400@compuserve.com http://www.frazmtn.com/~gore/ourweb.htm
Lynda- Very interesting, thank you! Phineas' son Hyrum (Hiram) was my great-great-grandfather. He died 6/8/1870 in Grand Mound, Iowa. I thank you and Muriel for the correction on the name of Phineas' wife; Elizabeth Barnes makes a lot more sense than what I had. My sources showed her name as Thankful, but that was probably a confusion with his mother (Thankful Royce), and Barnes has stayed in our family as a frequently-used middle name. Hiram's children were Mary (b 7/26/1840 Mixtown PA), Harriet (b 9/26/1841 Corning NY), Hiram B 2nd (my greatgrandfather, b 11/5/1842, Corning NY), Elizabeth (b 6/1/1844 Corning NY), William T (b 5/9/1846 Corning NY), Theresa (b 4/22/1848 Corning NY), Henry S (5/1/1850 Corning NY), Phineas C (b 3/9/1852, Corning NY), Hannah E (b 9/24/1854 Scio? NY), Charles N (b 4/20/1858 Williamsport PA). Elizabeth & Theresa died very young. This information comes from a Civil War-era family Bible from which a crucial page (the previous generation) is missing. Hiram B 2nd married Susie Sunderlin 3/7/1866 in Grand Mound IA; she d.12/31/1882. He then married Mary Workman 8/1885 in Little Falls MN and had four children; Ethel, Nellie (Asplund), Azura (Hildebrand), and Herman J (my grandfather). Thanks for your help!! -jt- On Sunday, November 07, 1999 2:49 PM, Lynda Ozinga [SMTP:Ozlyn@egl.net] wrote: > > Muriel - this is exciting to run into another descendant of Noah Tuttle - > sister to your Andrew Tuttle & my Chloe Tuttle. Here is what I have on the > Phineas Tuttle line - did you know their descendant also went to Munson, > Illinois - George Wood? Lynda > > > 1. PHINEAS9 TUTTLE (NOAH8, SARGEANT EPHRAIM7, TIMOTHY6, SIMON5, WILLIAM4, > SYMON3 TUTHILL, RICHARD2 TOOTILL, THOMAS1 TOTEHYLL) was born September 08, > 1779 in Cheshire, Berkshire, CT, and died Unknown. He married ELIZABETH > BARNES Abt. 1798. > > Children of PHINEAS TUTTLE and ELIZABETH BARNES are: > i. MERINTHA10 TUTTLE, b. August 27, 1800, Camden, New York; d. Unknown; m. > DAVID S. WRIGHT, March 01, 1825, Camden, New York. > 2. ii. SOPHIA TUTTLE, b. November 12, 1801, Camden, New York; d. Unknown. > iii. HYRUM B. TUTTLE, b. June 04, 1807, Camden, Oneida, New York; d. > Unknown; m. AMANDA M. SKINNER, Unknown. > > > Generation No. 2 > > 2. SOPHIA10 TUTTLE (PHINEAS9, NOAH8, SARGEANT EPHRAIM7, TIMOTHY6, SIMON5, > WILLIAM4, SYMON3 TUTHILL, RICHARD2 TOOTILL, THOMAS1 TOTEHYLL) was born > November 12, 1801 in Camden, New York, and died Unknown. She married PETER > DEMILT WOOD September 25, 1820, son of TIMOTHY WOOD and SUSANNA DEMILT. > > Child of SOPHIA TUTTLE and PETER WOOD is: > 3. i. GEORGE W.11 WOOD, b. Unknown, Camden, New York; d. Unknown, Munson, > Illinois. > > > Generation No. 3 > > 3. GEORGE W.11 WOOD (SOPHIA10 TUTTLE, PHINEAS9, NOAH8, SARGEANT EPHRAIM7, > TIMOTHY6, SIMON5, WILLIAM4, SYMON3 TUTHILL, RICHARD2 TOOTILL, THOMAS1 > TOTEHYLL) was born Unknown in Camden, New York, and died Unknown in Munson, > Illinois. He married MARY A. HOFFSTATTER Unknown. > > Child of GEORGE WOOD and MARY HOFFSTATTER is: > i. CLARA MAY12 WOOD, b. Unknown, Munson, Illinois; d. Unknown, Munson, > Illinois; m. FRANK S. HAYNES, Unknown. > > Notes for CLARA MAY WOOD: > DAR ID Number: 36164 > Mrs. Clara May Wood Haynes. > Born in Munson, Illinois. > Wife of Frank S. Haynes. > Descendant of Timothy (Wylde) Wood. > Daughter of George W. Wood and Mary A. Hoffstetter, his wife. > Granddaughter of Peter De Milt Wood and Sophia Tuttle, his wife. > Gr.-granddaughter of Timothy (Wylde) Wood and Mrs. Susanna (Warner) De > Milt, his wife. > Timothy (Wylde) Wood, (1757-1835), served as a private in Capt. Ozias > Bissell's company, Col. Increase Moseley's > Connecticut regiment. > He died in Camden, N. Y., where his name is found on a monument erected in > honor of soldiers of the Revolution. > Also Nos. 31658, 32436. >
Hi folks- this has been a fascinating place to be lurking, but now I'd like to ask a question: I'm looking for any information on the children of Noah Tuttle (b.Wallingford CT 12/18/1744, d. Camden/Oneida NY 1821 or 1827). Descendant of William (William-Simon-TImothy-Ephraim-Noah). He was the second son of Ephraim to be named Noah; the first died at 1. I am a descendant of Noah's son Phineas, and I would like to find more info on Phineas and his siblings... thanks, -jt-
This site was created by the U.S. Army Military History Institute and it is a searchable database of their Special Collections. Using this database you can see if a photograph exists of your Civil War ancestor. Just enter the surname you're searching and the results page will give any photos of any soldier with that surname, along with (if known) his regiment. Next, you can send an e-mail with the photo ID's that you're interested in. The Army will then send you (for free) a photocopy of the picture, along with instructions on ordering a duplicate photo. An 8x10 photo costs $10.00. No more then ten photos will be produced for any one customer per year. http://carlisle-www.army.mil/usamhi/PhotoDB.html Abbe Gore 105017.400@compuserve.com http://www.frazmtn.com/~gore/ourweb.htm
Looking for descendants of Frances Tuttle Barnes (b. 1847) and Trescott C. Barnes (b. 1845) of Connecticut (Barkhamsted/Riverton/Hartland/Winsted area) through their children, Grace Barnes Turner, Musette Barnes Henry, Josie Barnes Whitman, Jessie Barnes King, Elsie Barnes Pease (1884-1946), Ernest Barnes or Edward Barnes.
I assume yu have already checked the MOSES TUTTLE liste in Alva M Tuttle's TUTTLE/TUTHILL LINES IN AMERICA ( pg 439) . It lists his marriage to Ellen Graves and lists entries fro USC 1850, 1860, 1870 1880. Good luck in your search. Check the above if you have not already done so.-----Lou Tuttle
An ISAAC TUTTLE is listed in Alvan M Tuttle's TUTTLE/TUTHILL LINES IN AMERICA on pg 273 as born Wantage, NJ on 13 March 1820 and states he served in Civil War in 139 Infantry from PA. Lists his wife as Elizabeth HOUGH and lists three children.. Perhaps this is your Isaac -- If the reference is not available in your library it is availabe on microfilm from the LDS Library in Salt Lake City though your local LDS Stake. Good luck in your search -- Hope this is your ISAAC Lou Tuttle
Hello Jackie, >From "Tuttle Family in America..." Vol. II, by Gwen Campbell, page 153 (1) Stephen Tuttle b. 14 Oct 1735 Farmington CT; d. 1809 Wilkes-Barre PA (probably); m. Lydia Lyman b. 17 Jun 1738; d. Elmira NY daughter of Ebenezer Lyman. Stephen served French-Indian War. On 1790 Luzern Co PA; 1800 White Horse (Wilkes-Barre) PA census (a) Sarah Tuttle b. 23 May 1759 Goshen CT; m. 26 Jun 1777 Norfolk CT to Elijah Bennett (b) Aurelia Tuttle b. 29 Jun 1764 Goshen CT; d. 29 Jun 1845 Elmira NY; m. Dr. Matthias Covell b. Glastonbury CT; d. 1813 [children listed] (c) Stephen Tuttle b. 04 Aug 1772 Goshen CT; d. 12 Jan 1851 Elmira NY; innkeeper, merchant, director of Bank of Ithaca, 1st flour mill Elmira NY; m. Mary Ann McKeracha b. 1773 Kent CT; d. 1860 Elmira NY daughter of William McKerachan & step-daughter of Judge Matthias Hellenbach. [children listed] Stephen Tuttle, b. 1735 was son of Stephen Tuttle, b. 5 Sep 1703 New Haven, CT, d. 25 Jun 1735 and Sarah Stanley, d. 20 Jul 1736 Farmington CT. Stephen and Sarah were married 23 Jan 1735 Farmington CT. Stephen was killed by lightning five months after their marriage. Their son Stephen was raised by Sarah's father, Nathaniel Stanley. Stephen, b. 1703 was s/o Samuel Tuttle, b. 15 Jul 1670 Samuel was s/o Joseph Tuttle bap. 22 Nov 1640 Joseph was s/o immigrant William Tuttle, bap. 26 Dec 1607, England Dave -- "Eugenia J. Soncrant" wrote: > > Seeking info. on the family of Stephen Tuttle b Farmington, Ct., 19 Oct 1735, d 1809 Palmyra, N.Y. He ma 23 Apr 1758, Lydia Lyman. > Any bit will help. > Thanks, Jackie > > ==== TUTTLE Mailing List ==== > *? Do you want to support the > *? Rootsweb Genealogical Data Cooperative? > *? Visit http://www.rootsweb.com -- David L. Hanna Georgetown, Texas dlhanna@texas.net
Seeking info. on the family of Stephen Tuttle b Farmington, Ct., 19 Oct 1735, d 1809 Palmyra, N.Y. He ma 23 Apr 1758, Lydia Lyman. Any bit will help. Thanks, Jackie
Isaac Tuttle Served Pennsylvania Co S 176th Inf Reg. PA 09 December 1862 Chaplain Does anyone have addition info on this Isaac Tuttle (no age given in db) from ancestry's site. tootie@netnitco.net
May Elizabeth (Tuttle) Futhey 9/25/1899 died 10/20/1999 100 years old Born in Mahoning County, OH her birth name was Eliza May. About the age of 9 she changed it to May Elizabeth. Parents were Frank H. Tuttle and May Elizabeth Bentley. Siblings were: Vesta, Arthur, Gertrude, Adah, and Ruth. Her mother died when she was young and she was raised by a loving family in Cleveland, OHio. She married Jim Futhey in 10/31/1931 and had two children, Nancy Ann Duggan and John Andrew Futhey. They lived in Brecksville Ohio many years. May died in Shadyside Ohio. My great aunt, a lovely lady. A pleasure to have found thru genealogy research and had the opportunity to know for the last 20 years of her life.
Looking for anyone who may a coonection to Moses Tuttle who married Ellen Graves in 1849 Illinois. Ken
This has come from a pretty reliable source, his job is computers. If he passes it on, I feel comfortable passing it on to others. Gerald Melissa: I'm baaaack From: Newsbytes News Network <http://www.newsbytes.com/> By Sherman Fridman AVERT (Anti-Virus Emergency Response Team), a division of Network Associates, Inc.'s NAI Labs advised customers Thursday that it had placed two new variants of the Melissa virus on its "watch list" with an initial risk assessment of "medium." In an interview with Newsbytes, Jimmy Kuo, director of Anti-Virus Research at NAI Labs, said that the he believes that the virus broke out last Friday or Saturday as that's when the first reports began to arrive. To date there have been 10 distinct reports of the virus and while he has not read them all, Kuo said that so far the virus has appeared in the Netherlands, France, Canada and Australia. Kuo was not aware of any reports of the virus in the United States. Although these new variants of the Melissa virus can be caught by anti-virus software employing heuristic scanning methods, they do spread rapidly via e-mail, causing the deletion of data; that's the reason for the medium risk assessment rating. These Melissa variants activate when an infected document, which usually arrives via e-mail, is opened. According to information released by Network Associates, the subject line will be "pictures" in the case of the variant known as Melissa.U, and "My Pictures" in the case of Melissa.V. In both cases, the sender's registered Word97 or Word2000 username, if available, will follow in the subject line. The body of the e-mail will be "what's up?" in the case of Melissa.U, and will be blank in the case of Melissa.V. Also, in both cases, the virus arrives in the form of an infected Word Attachment, which is a duplicate of the infected Word document opened by the sender to trigger the virus' spread. When the Word document is opened on an uninfected PC, the virus will infect Word's global template, NORMAL.DOT, infecting all future Word documents. On occasion, in the case of Melissa.U, infected documents will have the message "Please Check Outlook Inbox Mail" inserted into them. In the case of Melissa.V, a pop-up message box containing the text "Please Check Your Outlook Inbox Email!" will appear. After the victim presses "OK," text is then inserted into the open document. The viruses behave differently after the NORMAL.DOC template has been infected. Melissa.U will invoke a MAPI e-mail client and send itself to the first four e-mail addresses in the Address Book, which can include distribution lists. It will then attempt to delete these system files in order to make the user's system inoperable: c:/command.com, c:/io.sys, c:/Ntdetect.com, c:/Suhdlog.dat, and d:/Suhdlog.dat. Melissa.V similarly invokes a MAPI client -- such as Outlook or Outlook Express -- and sends itself to the first 40 addresses in the Address Book. It then attempts to delete files and directories in the root of mapped drives with the following letters sequentially in this order: M,N,O,P,Q,S,F,I,X,Z,H,L. As with ExploreZip.Worm, one infection within a large organization can cause loss of many of the organization's files through the virus' actions on mapped drives. Networks Associates, <http://www.nai.com>, claims that its McAfee Total Virus Defense product can detect and clean the Melissa.U and Melissa.V variants. Kuo said that AVERT, the anti-virus research division of NAI Labs, currently employs more than 85 virus researchers and maintains labs on five continents. In addition to studying new and existing security threats, AVERT serves as a global resource for virus information and provides "follow-the-sun" support for virus emergencies worldwide. Copyright © 1999, Newsbytes News Network LLC. All rights reserved.
Hi Tuttles, Someone else forwarded this to me and it does not seem to be our TUTTLE Maybe someone else on the list can claim this TUTTLE. Abbe Gore 105017.400@compuserve.com P.S. Check out my web site lots of Tuttle Pictures! www.frazmtn.com/~gore/ourweb.htm -------------Forwarded Message----------------- Going through the latest Rootsweb Review, and looking for somebi\ody else, I found this. Thought maybe you might be interested. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/SomebodysLinks TUTTLE MARRIAGE LICENSE Posted by MARK WARNER <firern@home.com> on Wed, 15 Sep 1999 Surname: TUTTLE, GILLESPIE FOUND A MARRIAGE LICENSE FOR L.E. TUTTLE AND JOSIE GILLESPIE OF CAMBRIA CA. FROM 1888. WOULD LIKE TO RETURN IT TO THEIR RELATIVES.