__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ _Andrew Alger _| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Elizabeth Alger | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |_______________| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[9407]
[S18]
Great Migration Begins
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--James Allen | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--William Allen | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[9585] Married (1) Alice ______, married (2) Elizabeth ______.
[9586]
[S18]
Great Migration Begins
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Roger Aylesbury | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
__ _David Badcock _|__ _James Badcock _| | | __ | |________________|__ _Job Badcock ___| | | __ | | ________________|__ | |________________| | | __ | |________________|__ | |--Mercy Babcock | | __ | ________________|__ | _John Crandall _| | | | __ | | |________________|__ |_Jane Crandall _| | __ | ________________|__ |_Mary Opp ______| | __ |________________|__
[8557]
[S24]
Babcock Genealogy
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Mary Baker | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[8463]
[S75]
Woodworth Family of America
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Mary Bevins | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
__________________ __________________|__________________ __________________| | | __________________ | |__________________|__________________ _Samuel Camp __| | | __________________ | | __________________|__________________ | |__________________| | | __________________ | |__________________|__________________ | |--Hannah Camp | | _Richard Baldwin _+ | _Timothy Baldwin _|_Isabell Harding _ | _Timothy Baldwin _| | | | __________________ | | |__________________|__________________ |_Mary Baldwin _| | __________________ | __________________|__________________ |_Mary Beard ______| | __________________ |__________________|__________________
[4520] Daughter of Samuel and Mary (Baldwin) Camp.
[4521]
[S98]
RootsWeb WorldConnect Project
___________________ _Richard Church ___|___________________ _Nathaniel Church _| | | _Richard Warren ___ | |_Elizabeth Warren _|_Elizabeth Walker _ _Richard Church _| | | ___________________ | | ___________________|___________________ | |_Sarah Barstow ____| | | ___________________ | |___________________|___________________ | |--Hannah Church | | ___________________ | ___________________|___________________ | ___________________| | | | ___________________ | | |___________________|___________________ |_Hannah Stover __| | ___________________ | ___________________|___________________ |___________________| | ___________________ |___________________|___________________
__ __|__ _John Cowles _____| | | __ | |__|__ _John Cowles ______| | | __ | | __|__ | |_Hannah Bushoup __| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Esther Cowles | | __ | __|__ | _Robert Bartlett _| | | | __ | | |__|__ |_Deborah Bartlett _| | __ | __|__ |__________________| | __ |__|__
____________________ _Joseph Cummings _____|____________________ _Robert Samuel Cummings _| | | _Joseph McElhinney _ | |_Margaret McElhinney _|_Catherine Finley __ _Ralph Harvey Cummings _| | | ____________________ | | ______________________|____________________ | |_Elizabeth Brown ________| | | ____________________ | |______________________|____________________ | |--Cloyce Cummings | | ____________________ | ______________________|____________________ | _________________________| | | | ____________________ | | |______________________|____________________ |_Barbara Ogier _________| | ____________________ | ______________________|____________________ |_________________________| | ____________________ |______________________|____________________
[11385]
[S101]
McElhinney Family
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ _Richard I de Beaumont _| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Raoul VI de Beaumont | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |________________________| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[3660] Hereditary vicomte of Maine, Signeur of Beaumont-le-Vicomte.
[3661]
[S14]
Ancestral Roots of Americans
[3662]
[S19]
Directory of Royal Genealogical Data
__ ___________________|__ _Edward Doty _____| | | __ | |___________________|__ _John Doty _______| | | __ | | _Thurston Clarke __|__ | |_Faith Clarke ____| | | __ | |___________________|__ | |--Elizabeth Doty | | __ | _Francis Cooke ____|__ | _Jacob Cooke _____| | | | __ | | |_Hester Mahieu ____|__ |_Elizabeth Cooke _| | __ | _Stephen Hopkins __|__ |_Damaris Hopkins _| | __ |_Elizabeth Fisher _|__
[5892]
[S26]
Mayflower Increasings
__ __|__ _John Dow ___| | | __ | |__|__ _Thomas Dow _______| | | __ | | __|__ | |_Johan Coop _| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Edmond Dow | | __ | __|__ | _____________| | | | __ | | |__|__ |_Margaret England _| | __ | __|__ |_____________| | __ |__|__
[3500]
Mentioned in his father's will with children Robert and Margaret.
Edmunde Dove, almost surely identical, gentleman of Filby (Filby is a
parish of Great Yarmouth), had a daughter Sarah baptised 16 Mar 1603.
_Joseph Dow ______+ _James Dow ____|_Mary Challis ____ _Joseph Dow _________| | | _John Nichols ____ | |_Mary Nichols _|_Abigail Sargent _ _Joseph Dow _| | | __________________ | | _______________|__________________ | |_Elizabeth Cummings _| | | __________________ | |_______________|__________________ | |--Enos Dow | | __________________ | _______________|__________________ | _____________________| | | | __________________ | | |_______________|__________________ |_Olive Cobb _| | __________________ | _______________|__________________ |_____________________| | __________________ |_______________|__________________
_John Dow ___ _Thomas Dow _________|_Johan Coop _ _Henry Dow _______| | | _____________ | |_Margaret England ___|_____________ _Henry Dow _| | | _____________ | | _Christopher Marche _|_____________ | |_Elizabeth March _| | | _____________ | |_Frances Farrer _____|_____________ | |--Joseph Dow | | _____________ | _____________________|_____________ | __________________| | | | _____________ | | |_____________________|_____________ |____________| | _____________ | _____________________|_____________ |__________________| | _____________ |_____________________|_____________
[3336]
He was the first Dow born in America.
Joseph was an important factor in Hampton life until in 1683 he
voluntarily withdrew, a Quaker, from public life and, with associates,
moved to the southerly part of Hampton, then almost without a
population. The new home extended into what is now fixed as
Salisbury, Massachusetts, and into what is now Hampton Falls. Most of
the new Quaker colony lay within the present boundaries of Seabrook.
The Dow family sprung from Seabrook. is the largest of any. Nearly
one fifth of all Dow in America are of Quaker Stock.
While Joseph was at all times less influential in public affairs than
his older brother, he was a man of much force of character, of natural
leadership, whose influence upon the destinies of the Province can be
distinctly traced. His persecution in 1683 had more to do than any
other single cause with the removal of the notorious Governor
Cranfield and the inauguration of a somewhat more liberal government,
altho he was but one of a dozen who appealed successfully to the
English King. He was sergeant of militia and saw much fighting
against the Indians. He held this position May 31, 1671, when, with
all the officers of Norfolk Co., he petitioned the General Court for
the retention of their former major.
A farmer, as were all, he turned to many lines. There is preserved in
the New Hampshire Historical Society a steel trap, belonging to him,
the first ever imported into America. Muskrat and mink fur was
abundant in Hampton. Ability to survey land was not a common
accomplishment before 1800, and Joseph bought in England the best
compass and other equipment that the time knew. This was inherited by
his son Samuel. His town offices were few. He appears on the grand
jury 1676; Feb 12, 1669, appointed to survey the Exeter-Hampton line,
a source of trouble; in 1671 to make additional survey of that line;
in 1680 to lay out the marshes. This also was highly important, as
the salt hay was the largest single source of individual income.
Appointed Dec 16, 1680, to rebuild the municipal saw mill. In vol 17,
Rev Rolls, p 632, is: "At a Councill held 20th October 1693, Ordered
that the Bounds of this Province from three miles Northward of
Merrimack River be run off on the 14th of November next according to
the order of Council made last March & that notice be given to the
Governor & that Mr Joseph Dow & Capt Joseph Smith be Com'rs for the
same and that they be payd by the Treasurer out of the Public Revenue
& that they make a returne thereof to this board." This was an
important step in the history of the Province, altho it was litigated
for the next half century. New Hampshire boundary was a line three
miles north of the river, but its bed was tortuous and sometimes
shifting. For many years Massachusetts had claimed much more than its
possible maximum and had levied taxes. The survey of 1693 added a
long tier of farms to Hampton and extended about 20 miles. West of
this, subsequent surveys until 1741 were made by many authorities.
Curiously, the surveyor who laid off the straight line west to N Y
State did not allow properly for the variation of his compass, so that
at the west extremity a wedge seven miles thick was put into Mass,
belonging properly to Vermont. This includes the whole township of
Williamstown. The final survey of 1741 made the greatest change. From
Haverhill was taken land constituting two new townships, Salem and
Plaistow. This is important to anyone who traces the Haverhill Dow.
In many cases a man, born in Haverhill, died in Plaistow, although he
never left his house. Eight Dow families were so shifted from one
Province to the other.
Aug 25, 1701, not quite two years before his death, Joseph Dow was
chosen one of the trustees for the land ordered set off for a meeting
house for "those Christian people called 'Quakers."
Half of the men of Hampton had come from England to escape from
persecution on account of their religious beliefs by those who adhered
to the Established Church, many fleeing to Holland to save their own
lives and limbs. Yet, in less than a full generation, these very men
(all the ruling class of them) had become persecutors of those who
differed in faith, much more relentless, much more barbarous than
their own persecutors had been. It must be imagined that there were a
few in Hampton who looked upon this infamous whipping with horror, who
in an uncharitable age held some vague notion of the milk of human
kindness. Nothing makes religious converts like persecution. No one
dared open his mouth in remonstrance, much less express sympathy with
a new, strange faith which carried humility and forgiveness to an
incomprehensible extent. But many thought it over. It was 30 years
before it was legally safe to become a Quaker, and even after that it
was suicidal for any ambitious man. It precluded service in army or
militia, it was a bar to all political life, depending on popular
election or not. It was social ostracism. Town and church were a
unit, the minister the central figure. He above all fought the man or
woman who did not yield blind subservience to him. Against the
Quaker, also, was discrimination in everyday business; the non-Quaker
would not trade if he could find another market. Yet, the very night
of that whipping there were waverers; in a dozen years a dozen
citizens had more or less secretly embraced the faith. The leading
spirits were Joseph Dow, sturdy and ever unafraid, and Abraham
Perkins, son of Abraham, styled the Father of Hampton. Tradition says
that Joseph joined in 1675, when he was 34. His wife was equally an
enthusiast. In 1683 came trouble. Joseph and other jurymen, all
Quakers, were passing the Governor's house (the notorious Cranfield),
were invited in and friendely received, but on asking the question
whether they might not when sworn (as before they had done) hold up
their hands instead of kissing the Book, the Governor fell into a rage
and asked them how they came there, to whom Dow replied "at your
honor's invitation." Mr Cranfield complained of this matter to the
next court as a riot. Dow was forced to give �100 bonds for his
appearance next session. When Dow appeared nothing was alleged against
him, he was discharged and his arms restored; but at another session,
after Dow was called again on the same bond, and the penalty was
enforced against him, he was forced to flee out of the province with
his wife and nine children, leaving his house and goods, with the corn
in the ground, to the Governor.
Some amends for loss of crop were made to Joseph Dow, who returned in
the fall of 1683, but this was not by Cranfield. The Friends met and
quickly evolved a plan to sell out in Hampton village and move
southward. Another small circle had come into existence in Amesbury,
and a move in their direction might be advantageous. The new site had
been carefully surveyed by Joseph Dow. As farm land it was as good as
that in Hampton, barring the salt hay crop. It could be bought for a
small fraction the cost of similar acreage near Hampton village. About
this time Joseph was at the height of his material prosperity, so he
bought as freely as his means afforded. He took 20 acres in Salisbury
once owned by Francis Dow and about nine pieces in all, from 20 to 50
acres each. At a point just over the Seabrook border the first meeting
house was put up, following plans made, no doubt, years previously.
Here the community began as wholly Quaker. It made once and for all an
impassable gulf between Hampton and Seabrook. Capt Henry Dow, astute
political leader, tactful diplomat, could not be expected to show
sympathy with the outcast faith; his son Deacon Samuel Dow was
orthodox of the orthodox. Between Henry and Joseph Dow, however, there
was a lifelong brotherly love. No appeal from one to the other was
ever disregarded. Thereafter, however, the two great genealogical
lines never met. Quaker sought Quaker in marriage and dismissed such
as married outside the Society. On the other hand, church people were
seldom inclined to risk the social consequences of marrying into a
Quaker family.
He, Abraham Green and Joseph Dow were the committee to oversee the
building. The cost was defrayed by subscriptions, Aug 23, 1701, by
Benjamin Brown, Joseph Chase, Thomas Chase, Joseph Dow, Josiah Dow,
Abraham Green, Edmund Johnson, James Stanyan, John Stanyan, Moses
Swett, Christian Williams. For several years trouble was had with the
town authorities over the minister's tax. The Books record seizures
by force of property to pay the salary "of the priest of the hireling
ministry," - John Collins 1703, Henry Dow 1703 and 1705, Joseph Dow Jr
1703, Jacob Morel (Morrill) 1701, James Purington 1705, Richard Smith
1701, Ezeakel Wathen (Worthen) of Amesbury 1702 and 1703. These
seizures were serious matters, the property taken generally much in
excess of the tax. Once the seizure was sold for more than double the
tax. The balance was proffered to the victim, who refused to touch
it. It lay on his mantel and next year was seized for the new tax.
The first marriage in the Society was that of John Peasley of
Haverhill and Mary Martin of Amesbury, 1: 5mo: 1705. It took place in
Thomas Barnard's house after, at the previous monthly meeting, Thomas
Nickolls and Joshua Purington had been appointed a committee to
inquire if they were free to marry. The register was signed by 47
guests as witnesses, including Mary, Hannah, Charety, Josias,
Jeremiah, Joseph, Henery, and John Dow. In 1705 the Society meeting
sent 3 delegates to the Rhode Island Yearly Meeting, Joseph Chase,
Joshua Purington and Moses Swett. In 1705 a second meeting house was
resolved upon, to be in Salisbury, and Henry Dow and Thomas Challis
were appointed to look for the land.
Record books up to 1758 are extant; all now preserved in the Brown
School at Providence; about 1739 Philip Rowell kept them. Births,
marriages and deaths at Berwick, Maine, are often entered but there is
a dearth of such records from home. Occasional dismissals for cause
were made. In 1706 Samuel Cass was declared not to be in the true
faith. Action signed by 14 men, including Henry and Jeremiah Dow. In
1707 John Collins was similarly disciplined, although he was restored
and even sent delegate to the Salem 1715 Quarterly Meeting. This
action was signed by 18, including Henry, Jeremiah, Charety, Mary and
Thomas Dow. This was the first time women voted in such matters.
[3337]
[S93]
Hampton, New Hampshire History
[3339]
[S44]
Maine and New Hampshire Genealogical Dictionary
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Mary Ewer | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[6836]
[S26]
Mayflower Increasings
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ _Robert Fuller __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Samuel Fuller | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |_Sarah Dunkhorn _| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[6172]
[S26]
Mayflower Increasings
__ __________________|__ _Walter Hatch _______| | | __ | |__________________|__ _Samuel Hatch _| | | __ | | __________________|__ | |_Elizabeth Holbrook _| | | __ | |__________________|__ | |--Isaac Hatch | | __ | __________________|__ | _Edward Doty ________| | | | __ | | |__________________|__ |_Mary Doty ____| | __ | _Thurston Clarke _|__ |_Faith Clarke _______| | __ |__________________|__
[6079]
[S26]
Mayflower Increasings
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ _Alexander Henderson _| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Alexander Henderson | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |______________________| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[321]
Married Joan or Jane ???. With his brothers William and John, settled on Owl Creek near Fairfax, Virginia about 1735 - 1740, finally settled in that part of Kentucky which later became Fleming County.
[322]
[S5]
Henderson Family History
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Hannah Hobart | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[7038]
[S26]
Mayflower Increasings
_Alexander McConnell _+ _John McConnell _|______________________ _Alexander McConnell _| | | ______________________ | |_________________|______________________ _James McConnell _________| | | ______________________ | | _James Wilson ___|______________________ | |_Martha Wilson _______| | | ______________________ | |_________________|______________________ | |--Martha McConnell | | ______________________ | _________________|______________________ | ______________________| | | | ______________________ | | |_________________|______________________ |_Jean (Jenny) Cunningham _| | ______________________ | _________________|______________________ |______________________| | ______________________ |_________________|______________________
[13050]
[S118]
McConnell Family Sketch
_Solomon McCulley _ _David M. McCulley _|_Sarah Greenleaf __ _James Davis McCulley ___| | | _James Willson ____+ | |_Ann Willson _______|_Sarah McConnell __ _William Hutchison McCulley _| | | ___________________ | | ____________________|___________________ | |_Martha Jane Hutchinson _| | | ___________________ | |____________________|___________________ | |--Glen Robert McCulley | | ___________________ | ____________________|___________________ | _________________________| | | | ___________________ | | |____________________|___________________ |_Nancy Ann Hamill ___________| | ___________________ | ____________________|___________________ |_________________________| | ___________________ |____________________|___________________
[15069] Grandview cemetery.
[15068]
[S7]
McCulley Family Tree
[15070]
[S107]
Louisa County Cemeteries
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Hugh Price | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[5789]
[S26]
Mayflower Increasings
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Degory Priest | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[6938]
[S26]
Mayflower Increasings
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--William Randall | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[16103] Son of Simon and Jane (Stephens) Randall.
[16104]
[S133]
Patricia Curtis
__ __________________|__ __________________| | | __ | |__________________|__ _John Smith ______| | | __ | | __________________|__ | |__________________| | | __ | |__________________|__ | |--Rebecca Smith | | __ | _William Marston _|__ | _William Marston _| | | | __ | | |__________________|__ |_Rebecca Marston _| | __ | _Robert Page _____|__ |_Rebecca Page ____| | __ |_Lucy Warde ______|__
[7263]
[S93]
Hampton, New Hampshire History
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Rebecca Stanley | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[4993] Daughter of Christopher and Susannah (______) Stanley.
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Mary Stevens | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[4869] Daughter of Joseph and Jerusha (Stow) Stevens.
[4870]
[S62]
Hale, House and Related Families
_____________________ ___________________|_____________________ ________________________| | | _____________________ | |___________________|_____________________ _Andrew Stevenson ___| | | _____________________ | | ___________________|_____________________ | |________________________| | | _____________________ | |___________________|_____________________ | |--Joseph Stevenson | | _James Willson ______+ | _Zaccheus Willson _|_Susannah Alexander _ | _James Renwick Willson _| | | | _Robert McConnell ___+ | | |_Mary McConnell ___|_Nancy Boyd _________ |_Nancy Mary Willson _| | _____________________ | ___________________|_____________________ |_Jane Roberts __________| | _____________________ |___________________|_____________________
[15167]
[S37]
Willson Family Tree
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Phillipa Talbot | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[3185]
[S14]
Ancestral Roots of Americans
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Elizabeth Turner | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[5985]
[S26]
Mayflower Increasings
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ _Richard Tuttle _| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Hannah Tuttle | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |_________________| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[7131]
[S66]
Massachusetts Pioneers
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--Rebecca Van Scoyk | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[20483] Mallory Cemetery.
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ _George Wathen _| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--William Wathen | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |_Joyce White ___| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[4740] Married Rachel ______.
__ __|__ __| | | __ | |__|__ __| | | __ | | __|__ | |__| | | __ | |__|__ | |--George J. Wheeler | | __ | __|__ | __| | | | __ | | |__|__ |__| | __ | __|__ |__| | __ |__|__
[12948]
[S5]
Henderson Family History
________________ _________________|________________ _Walter Woodworth _| | | ________________ | |_________________|________________ _Benjamin Woodworth _| | | ________________ | | _________________|________________ | |___________________| | | ________________ | |_________________|________________ | |--Ezekiel Woodworth | | ________________ | _________________|________________ | _John Damon _______| | | | ________________ | | |_________________|________________ |_Hannah Damon _______| | _Henry Howland _ | _Arthur Howland _|________________ |_Martha Howland ___| | ________________ |_________________|________________
[8223]
[S75]
Woodworth Family of America
_Benjamin Woodworth _+ _Caleb Woodworth ___|_Hannah Damon _______ _Selah Woodworth _| | | _Samuel Munger ______+ | |_Jane Munger _______|_Sarah Hand _________ _Jacob Woodworth _| | | _Daniel Dunham ______+ | | _Jacob Dunham ______|_Rebecca Norton _____ | |_Rebecca Dunham __| | | _Jonathan Pettee ____+ | |_Elizabeth Pettee __|_____________________ | |--John Woodworth | | _Caleb Woodworth ____+ | _Cyrenus Woodworth _|_Jane Munger ________ | _Luke Woodworth __| | | | _Phillip Chatfield __+ | | |_Abigail Chatfield _|_Marcy Baldwin ______ |_Sally Woodworth _| | _____________________ | ____________________|_____________________ |_Jane Hasten _____| | _____________________ |____________________|_____________________
[496]
Moved to Cortland township, Dekalb county, Illinois in 1853. Cleared
and farmed land he purchased from John P. Van Wyck
The name of Johnson Woodworth, as the father of Isaac Johnson
Woodworth, was given on the Death Certificate of Isaac Johnson
Woodworth, information for which was provided by Charles Johnson
Woodworth, son of I. J.
[21176] St. Peters Protestant Episcopal Church
[498]
[S72]
Woodworth, Life and Descendants of Selah
[499]
[S75]
Woodworth Family of America
[500]
[S75]
Woodworth Family of America