Acclaimer - Disclaimer

Acclaimer - Disclaimer - Short and Sweet: For a very long time I proposed to set out and find my; roots, MyHeritage, relatives and blood line. This blog is dedicated to that proposition. I hope the reader will find it; entertaining, interesting, enjoyable and more believable then most all programs on TV in the United States at this moment. Just think, no fake audience laughs, swears, sex, junk or stupidity and no; noise, commercials and mindless nonsense. Who knows it might even be helpful to anyone so inclined to find it interesting enough to discover more about their own; relatives, history, lives, attitudes and MyHeritage. Enjoy! This blog is not meant to be anything you might expect nor anything anyone else might expect, if you don't want to be here you certainly have the power to leave. After three years in the worst economy I’ve ever in my life seen I have turned to my life long interest of Genealogy in an attempt to do something I truly enjoy doing. So if anyone is so inclined as to consider my services, please do so by becoming a follower with rights to leave comments. I have an email and I like to answer it on a personal level. So remember I do not profess to possess any, magical powers, the Force or the Farce, clairvoyance, money, or hold any truths that are more self evident than anyone else. Therefore, whew, I am not responsible for anything harmful to anyone or anything else one may read in this Bloggish site. This is an original Blog, Pictures and Written content is Copyrighted. When possible credit for contributions to content will be noted and given. I believe in giving credit where credit is due however some sources on the internet do not believe in that virtue and it is unclear as to what the accredited site might be.


My Family

MY FAMILY circa 1959

In the beginning….
Hey Pop, how much longer is it to Cincinnati?
A couple more hours!
MOM! I need the jar!
ME too mom!

And that was what it was like in a 1955 Ford Customline Fordor from the back, clear vinyl covered bench seat with a hump on the floor in abt. 1959. The jar was for the purpose of us three boys back there to use when we had to go number one while on long drives.

Dan, that’s me, was nine years old, Tom, the younger brother was six and Dave was all of twelve. Hattie, my mom was thirty nine and Don, my dad was thirty four which, I didn’t know the age difference between mom and dad until about thirty years later. They didn’t want us to know there was a difference back then and I still do not know why not, they just didn’t.

Well, we were on our way to Cincinnati on what we called our summer vacation which was two days to pack, a day on the road, two days to stay there, a day to drive home, a day to unpack and a day to rest before resuming our normal lifestyles.

This vacation was well planned. It included snacks, canteens, comic books, pillows and blankets though mom eventuall said, “Don, go back, I forgot my girdle!” and that’s when I learned what a girdle was. We were on our way to see some old friends that moved away some two years ago, they had a horse and a place for us all to stay.

Dad drove into Cincinnati earlier than he expected so rather than go directly to our friend’s house we pulled up in front of a tall downtown building and we just sat there in the car. “No Don! – Yes Hattie!” the conversation went and we sat there.

Us boys, had no clue as to what the yes’s and no’s were but, dad explained, “Back during World War II when I was in The Paratroops the sergeant yelled, Role Call and I said, Don Nippert, bet you never heard that name before, he said, under his breath?”

And to dad’s surprise he surprised to learn that someone else had. Apparently a fellow Paratrooper told my dad that where he came from there were lots of Nippert’s and that place, was Cincinnati.

Dad pulled up in front of a building where the phone book had told him was a Nippert and that began Hattie’s, No Don’s and his Yes Hattie’s. Hattie ended the conversation with “DayMonYoDayKahSoWhen!” which is what she usually said when she was losing the yes, no, battle. She, Tom and Dave sat in the car as me and Pop marched on in to that tall building cause Pop said he was going to talk to a Nippert. And so was I!

After a few wrong turns we arrived in front of a door that proudly displayed, Nippert & Nippert, how neat was that I thought. We opened the door and walked right in. Dad said hello and asked if we could see, Mr. Nippert. The nice lady said she was sorry and that the Nippert’s were not in. Sadly dad and I stood there though proud of having made the effort to attempt to see the other Nippert’s. The Cincinnati Nippert’s.

Dad explained our journey and told her who we were. To which she told us that she knew the Nippert’s would be disappointed to learn they had missed us. We started to leave and she said for us to wait a minute while she went and got a book. She told us how the Nippert’s were interested in Genealogy and wondered if we might look at the book and see if we were in it. We were! And as dad pointed us out she handed him a pencil and asked him to fill in the blanks. The book seemed old; it was typed on tissue like crinkly paper.

Michael Nippert, it said and a son Earl. Earl was Pop’s father and Michael was a grandfather he never knew. Dad filled in Earl’s birth and death dates, his wife Harriet, my grandmother, and her dates, then his own, mom’s, Dave’s, mine and Tom’s. We left our name and number, thanked her and left. That was that and we drove on to our friend’s house. The year, circa 1959.

As of this writing the Cincinnati trip was fifty two years ago, the day is Sunday, February 13, 2011, I am about to be sixty one, Don will be eighty six this year and Hattie ninety one. Tom will be fifty eight and Dave would have been sixty five this year but, tragedy struck in February, 1982 and Dave died at age thirty five.

Thinking back to 1976 Dave had told me about a novel, I read the book and it told a story going back to 1767 about the life of a man named Kunta Kinte. The book “Roots” by Alex Haley. The novel became a best seller, published in thirty seven languages and in 1977 it became a popular television miniseries that reached a record breaking 130 million viewers. I guess I fell into the public interest and in my Genealogy roots and once again I wanted to learn more about my Heritage and Ancestry.

After reading the book I called Louis Nippert, one of the Cincinnati Nippert’s dad and I missed back in ’59 and he answered. I told him of; our visit, near some twenty years earlier, the book “Roots”, and my interest in Genealogy and that any help he could give me would greatly be appreciated.

Yes! It was and is greatly appreciated and later my wife and I stopped by Louis and Louise Cincinnati’s house and thanked them in person. Alfred, Louis's father had passed away.

Louise and Louis were gracious hosts and deeply appreciated our unexpected visit, I showed Louise Louis’s letter and showed her some of my research and then began asking questions. She told me of her visit to our ancestry’s homeland in France and the hospitality and Key to the City she was given. We took several pictures and she invited us back.

We exchanged Christmas cards for a while and Louise wrote me a few times. We were very sad when Louis passed away and we are very glad to know that as of this writing Louise is doing great and well into her nineties. God Bless Louise and Louis. Thank you so much for your friendship to me and my wife and your wonderful support to the people of Cincinnati and to the Nippert Genealogy.

Please start with the April Archieve.. and 'Food for Thought'
See my letter from Louis… in the older posts below
Oh, and contrary to C. Wilson's comment, that was, "Where Nippert got most of his information." this was all I got...Which was given too and used by her. Along with the Napoleon story... I researched. Your welcome cousin Christina! Please credit my folks for giving you my information along with crediting the Cincinnati Nipperts. You just might be interested in the Webb\Bradford and other lines you don't have. Oh lol as they say get in touch I would be happy to colaborate with you. Oh and the same for Godfried (Godfrey) California Nippert decendants' next time please get your information correct before publishing it, and glad I could help! lolol

That Night

It was the time when the horrific, historic, disparaging voyage of their passage was concluding it was December. The number of survivors calling themselves passengers had diminished, and it was cold, wet and miserable. The souls in their numbers were vanquished, lost and unforgiving; they felt exhausted, unsanitary, abandoned, depressed and afraid. The crew was tired, sick and hungry they were desperate, lonely and insanely savage for their own lust. Everyone was in close quarters, most were sick, many dying and hope was fading.A small congregation of their membership was again out scouting and foraging for food and a place to find a safe haven in which to succumb to a second attempt at a life in adversity, deprivation, weather and inhuman conditions, anguish and doubt. The Separatists had indeed separated and it had become apparent that perhaps even their own existence was in peril. Everyone had a useless dependency upon everyone else and only they and their own existence mattered.Upon his return to the ship his faith was beside him and his thoughts of the hideous crime of murder occupied his disbelief. How and why did this happen? Who was to blame? Her disappearance could not have been possible unless others had turned their heads, how is it no one saw? Where is her body, why was she forsaken? Why did no one see her depression? Why did no one help her, why was she alone! She was murdered and I can do nothing or say nothing. She is lost and gone into the cold watery depths of darkness and loneliness. The crime has been committed and no one was witness too it. Everyone is dependent upon their own silence for their very existence and no one dare let the truth ever be known as to what had happened ‘That Night’.

Popular Posts

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Great Site to Visit

This site is well worth the visit is it know wonder it gets 600,000 hits a month!


Tell Marlyn... Dan Nippert sent you...lol

Happy Holidays to one and all!!

Thursday, November 3, 2011

New Surname List

Adams, Albro, Ames, Arden, Backus, Baker, Baldwin, Barcus, Bartlett, Baxter, Bingham, Bradford, Branch, Brewster, Briggs, Brooks, Bryant, Carpenter, Chauncey, Claus, Cloward, Coburn, Cogswell, Collins, Cook, Cooper, Crane, Creyke, Cushman, Daily, Dawson, DeLap, Dell, Dodge, Douglas, Duetsche, Duntz, Edgerton, Eichenlaub, Ellis, Evered, Felde, Fitch, Fox, Freeman, Gifford, Griswold, Haley, Hall, Hanson, Harold, Hebard, Hewyns, Hill, Hirschinger, Holmes, Hunt, Hurley, Hyde, Jacob, Janes, Jefts, Jennings, Jewett, Kingsbury, Knopf, Lambert, Lebarron, Lemcke, Lewis, Lorentz, Manning, Matthews, May, McMaster, Metcalf, Mitchell, Molson, Moog, Morton, Mueller, Murphy, Newcomb, Nippert, O’Dell, Perigo, Pierce, Potter, Preston, Price, Priest, Radke, Richards, Richardson, Ripley, Rude (Rood), Sauve, Schaeffer, Schroeder, Scott, Seabury, Seall, Shakespeare, Sheffield, Shepard, Skeets, Smith, Southworth, Steele, Stephan, Stevens, Stinger, Stone, Tracy, Uhalt, Van Dooger, Vermayes/Fearmayes, Waldo, Warner, Webb, Wentworth, Wilborne, Wilson, Wood, Wright, Young

BE SURE TO SEE THE 04/20/11 POST "What's in a surname, especially if it's your's?"

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Title of the book... this month... I hope

Along with Chapter One. Any takers? Last call for followers... you can be in the book and perhaps your relatives will find their way as well. Looking for connections? Holland, England, America and the melting pot of Heritage. Nippert Genealogy dba Seeds Genealogy is the place to look drop by and leave your name.

Relatives since Jamestown, Plymouth and all ships, colonies, and states after, from then until now this is a chance for you to explore a new chapter of relativity. This chapter began with this bloggish display of new Mayflower Descendants and how they just might be connected to you, no matter where the place, what time period or last name.

Drop me a line at dannippert@gmail.com we just may have someone in common. Happy Halloween if you believe in Ghosts and that sort of thing. Dan

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Let's Communicate

Well, I seem to be doing all the talking! How bout YOU! Please join in ... In This Lifetime...

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Time to remember...

Ok anyone it's time to remember to join this site or advertise here. It's easy to do, simply click the join button on the lower right column and follow a step or two. Or contact me, Nip, at seedsgenealogy@live.com .

I will continue to work on this; site, database and the book and hope I can recruit; you, your input, and ideas. Donations, Advertisors, and help are always welcomed. I might be changing the format of this; confusing, hard to follow, Hodge Podge style blog and begin devoting a page to each generation.

Thanks for around 1700 views from around the world and for your support!

Nip

PS If you haven't already, please go to the July post: 1) A Long Time Ago...

Generation 19 - Hanson Sawyer Nippert

Hanson Sawyer Nippert was born in 2006 and any additional information will be kept private, other then the fact Hanson, is a direct desendant and a 14 great - great -great - great - great - great - great - great -great - great - great - great - great grandson of Governor William Bradford.

Generation 18 - Ashley Danielle Nippert

Ashley Danielle Nippert was born in 1983. With regard to her Privacy any additional information will be kept private.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Two more Generations

These Seeds are all for Hanson... as will be the next to posts...

Generation 17 Daniel Edward Nippert and Jill Ann Murphy

waiting for your interest before I post anymore...

To much me... time for you to find a connection to the Mayflower and more

Generation 16 Donald Earl Nippert and Hattie Dora Deutsch

I can not say enough about my mom and dad, only that I love them both very much and if it weren't for them I would not be posting this! I am very PROUD to be your son!

This is for you mom and you dad. When you read this let me know.
Mom recently turned 91, dad will be 86 in October and they have been married 65 years this past July!!

Monday, September 12, 2011

Generation 15 Harriet Augusta McMaster and Earl George Nippert

Earl was born in Baraboo, Wisconsin November 21, 1891 and died February 12, 1953. He married Harriet Augusta McMaster who was born September 10, 1907 and died in 1986. Together Earl and Harriet had two children; Donald Earl and Barbara Fay (1931 - 1933).

Much more is archived and much much will follow... Donald is my Pop and he turns 86 this October.

Note:
Dad is a direct Ancestor and 11th generation grandson of Governor William Bradford of the Mayflower and Plymouth Colony  history.

Generation 14 Mabel Webb and Arthur McMaster

Boohbie as she was called was the third of seven children born to John Tyler and Augusta Persis and she was born Mabel Webb on June 24, 1879. I knew Boohbie and she was a fun loving wonderful women.

Boohbie married A.E. McMaster (Arthur Emmitt McMaster) and together they had three children; Marjorie J., Arthur Webb (known as Webb) and Harriet Augusta born September 10, 1907 in Batavia, Illinois.

Generation 13 John Tyler Webb 1842 and Augustta Persis Richardson 1845

John Tyler Webb [(John had ten siblings) If you think we have a connection here let me know I have all ten.]
Birth:  Jul. 26, 1842
Bellmont Center
Franklin County
New York, USA
Death:  Oct. 16, 1920
Saint Charles
Kane County
Illinois, USA

Children of John and Augusta (Born November 20, 1845 and died April 20, 1901)
i Francis Harrison Webb; b. abt, 1878; d. October 1961, Reedly, California (Married
ii Mabel Webb, June 24, 1879. St. Charles, Kane County, Illinois
iii Jennie Webb, b. abt.,1880 d., 1915 St. Charles, Illinois
iv Caroline Webb, b. Abt. 1882; d., 1938, Chicago, Cook County
v Andrew Webb; B., Abt 1883; d., Abt., 1899
vi Ruben Webb, B., Abt, 1884, D., 1941, Elgin, Illinois
vii Alfred Webb; b., Unknown (Missing after Spanish American War)
Notes for Alfred Webb:Alfred Webb was missing after the Spanish American War, Mabel (Dan Nippert's Great Grand Mother) indicated he was last seen at the battle of San Juan Hill. A body was returned to the family but when it was opened it was not Alfred his tombstone is at South Cemetary.
Birth:  Nov. 20, 1845
Death:  Apr. 23, 1901
wife of John T. Webb
 My dad Donald Earl Nippert has letters

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Join In!!

It's easy to become a follower and even easier to get an update just scroll down and look at the right side. And follow by e-mail. This blog was designed to be interactive, fun, frustrating, confusing, intellectual, fantastic helpful, brave clean, and waiting for your input. Come on in the water is fine.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Generation 12 Rueben Webb 1810 - 1877 and Harriet Roberts

Rueben Webb was born May 1, 1810 in Malone, Franklin County, New York and died January 10, 1877. He married Harriet Roberts who was born in 1818, New York. Together they had 11 children one of which was a son John Tyler Webb born in 1842.

Generation 11 Oliver Webb and Sally Nichols

Oliver Webb was born April 30, 1872 in Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts and died November 11, 1948 in Malone County New York.  He married Sally Nichols who was born March 28, 1783 in Benson, Rutland Vermont. She died on July 19, 1868. Of their eight children a son Reuben was born in 1810.

Generation 10 Pvt.Ebenezer Webb 1718 - 1803

Ebenezer Webb was the son of Samuel Webb and Hannah Ripley, daughter of Joshua Ripley, town clerk of Windham, and great-granddaughter of Gov. William Bradford of the Plymouth Colony.
he was born January 1718/9 in Windham, Windham County, Connecticut and died February 11,  1803 in Scotland Society, (East) Windham County, Connecticut. He married Ruth Crane and they had a son Ebenezer Webb (Jr) who was born May 29, 1757 and died August 14, 1846. He married Abigail (Rude - Rood) who was born February 4, 1759 and died May 5, 1830 in Malone, Franklin County, New York. Of their eleven children a son Oliver was born April 30, 1782.

Generation 9 Hannah (Bradford - Ripley) Webb 1684 - 1750

Joshua Ripley and Hannah Bradford had a daughter Hannah on Mach 2, 1684 she married Samuel Webb, born May 14, 1690 whose father was Samuel born 1660, he married Mary Graves born 1667.

I need mention this is a critical point in my family tree. I'm hoping many of you will find connections and relatives from this point on...

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Generation 8 Hannah Bradford 1662 - 1738

Hannah Bradford; b. May 9, 1662, Plymouth; d. May 28, 1738, Windham, CT
m. Joshua Ripley (1658-1739), on Nov. 28, 1682. He was born in Hingham MA, the son of John Ripley and Elizabeth Hobart. Hannah and Joshua had 12 children, including 2 sets of twins.

General George McClellan, inventor George Eastman, and actor Christopher Reeve are all descended from Hannah Bradford and Joshua Ripley: See below.

Her tomb stone reads "Here lies interred the body of that most worthy, and virtuous, and most ingenuous gentlewoman, Mrs Hannah B Riley, the well beloved consort o f Joshua Ripley, Esq, who after she had led a most lovely and eventful life, fell asleep in Jesus, May 28, 1738, in the 76th year of her age."

Much much more is credited and attributed to this remarkable women!

Generation 7 - William Bradford (Major) - 1624 - 1704

Remember from here on I am taking a direct path to my Grandson I am purposely leaving out a ton of information but, I would be happy to take any inquires at seedsgenealogy@live.com Additionally all other information is in my family tree.

A son of 1590 - 1657 Governor William  Bradford and Alice Carpenter is:

Child of 1624 (Major)William Bradford and the first of his first of three wives, Alice Richards is:
HANNAH BRADFORD, b. May 9, 1662, Plymouth, Plymouth, MA; d. May 28, 1738, Windham, Windham, CT. Hannah was the sixth child of William and Alice's ten children.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Coming up next

...will be the continuation of the line through the present. I will not include much more in the way of details unless I am contacted via seedsgenealogy@live.com. Or if I get any comments such as to continue any detail. I have all the information in my family's tree and believe me it is a constant on-going, exciting, fun thing to keep up. I am anxious to share this direct line and please note that I have extended the branches to help others with their endeavor.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Generation 6 - Governor William Bradford - 1590

Source Public Domain - Internet
also: http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4SKPT_enUS401US401&q=Govenor+William+Bradford

Born on 19 March 1589/90 in Austerfield, Yorkshire, England. Baptized on 19 March 1589/90 in St. Helen’s Church, Austerfield when newborn. Died on 9 May 1657 in Plymouth, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, 67 years old. Buried in Burial Hill, Plymouth.
William Bradford (1589/90-1657) was the well-known separatist who was an organizer of the Source Governor Carver died during the first winter, William Bradford (1587-1657) was elected Governor of the Plymouth Colony and was re-elected annually for 31 years (except for 5 years in which declined to serve).
A Biography of Gov. William Bradford may be found on the link: Virtual American Biographies/William Bradford-Governor. This biography provides an excellent biography of Gov. William Bradford, a drawing of his home in the Plymouth Colony, and an account and history of Gov. Bradford's written works.
Governor William Bradford was the author of Of Plimoth Plantation, a major work of early American History, and other writings. He knew many languages, including English, Dutch, French, Latin and Hebrew as well as local Indian speech. Born in Austerfield, Yorkshire, he was baptised there on Mar. 19, 1589. He became an orphan after his father died in 1591 and his mother died in 1597. He was brought up by an uncle, Robert Bradford (1591-1637) and a great uncle, Thomas Bradford (d. 1605).
No relationship has yet been found linking his family to the famous Protestant Martyr, John Bradford (c1510-1555), who was burned at the stake in 1555. Although, from certain religious leanings, it would seem as if Gov. Bradford had been influenced somehow by the Martyr's cause. It is known that the young William had somehow managed to obtain (or obtain access to) a copy of The Book of Martyrs by John Foxe (1517-1587), which contained a history of John Bradford (c1510-1555). This may have been an important book providing early influence upon, and shaping the young mind of, the man who was later to become Governor Bradford of Plymouth.
Until he was about 18 years old, William lived among his community of sheep herders and woolen workers in and around Austerfield, often helping out with farm chores and listening carefully to his uncles, who were somewhat wise to the ways of the world and saw that young William and his older sister, Alice Bradford (1587-1607), might have a sense of family and might so require some special attention since they had become orphaned. William was provided the education offered by a local "Dame School", which was a kind of local school run by women teachers, mainly concerned with domestic skills, such as cooking and weaving. William had little idea at the time how much these skills would later be needed in the New World, or indeed to make a living in Holland during his sojourn there.
William was not so poor as he may have felt, for his father was one of the richest Yeomen in Austerfield and left him and his sister a reasonable estate, including a small farm in Bentley handed down through generations by his great-great grandfather, Peter Bradforth (1460-1542) (as the surname was spelled then). The estate was managed for him by his uncle Robert Bradford (1561-1609) which could afford such niceties as a Dame School for William. Later, this estate helped William secure an investment in the Mayflower.
He was also quite attached to his elderly great-uncle Thomas Bradford (d. 1605) who was interested in expanding his intellectual horizons and filled him with adventure stories and created an air of wonderlust. Thomas told him of the wisdom of the "Gray Friars" at their local Church of All Hallows in Austerfield. They must have been a little spooky because they held on to some very old pagan traditions that may have pre-dated Christianity. They, and his great-uncle Thomas, were somewhat suspicious of Church authority, and told little William about Foxe's book, The Book of Martyrs, and helped him find the Friars that could teach him a little Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, so he could read the word of GOD as it was first handed down, and not as it was interpreted by local Ecclesiastical Law.
Thomas also had a circle of elderly friends, probably meeting regularly at the local pub, who were gossiping about the adventures of one of their friends and neighbor, Sir Martin Frobisher (c1539-1594), a beknighted World-class seafaring explorer and adventurer, whose every story was a life-risking, hair-raising tale of desperation and exploitation. Certain members of Frobisher's family appear as witnesses to Bradford wills and official documents of the time. Young William must have had his head filled with adventure and wonder about distant places, especially the New World.
In his teenage years, William must have met Alice Carpenter in Yorkshire but he did not marry her until 1623 (in Plymouth MA) after his first wife died in 1620, and after Alice's first husband, Edward Southworth, died in 1621. According to a recent finding, Williams's second cousin, George Morton, who married Alice Carpenter's sister, Julianna Carpenter, so that William and George were also to become brothers-in-law.
In about 1606, William became involved with a group of religious dissidents who were experimenting with alternative religious beliefs, some of which were considered heretical by the Church of England. A Minister of the established Church, Richard Clyfton, was preaching puritan ideology in nearby Gainsborough, and John Smyth, a Pastor at the Scrooby Church, within walking distance of Austerfield, went a step farther and "separated" his congregation from the established Church. William Brewster, a Cambridge educated postmaster became a mentor to young William's philosophical thinking toward Church reforms and became one of the separatists. Richard Clyfton soon joined the separatists, and the momentum grew. The attraction to this group, calling themselves "separatists", for young William was wide-ranging and included everything from philosophy to adventure to romance. The latter, since it is avoided in most biographies, merits a sentence or two of elaboration. Some of the Separatists and similar organizations believed that young girls should be exposed to sexual stimulation, as soon as they are physically and emotionally capable of being seduced, because it is GOD's way. On this and other matters, the separatists brushed against the law, and also became disenfranchised by their own families. They put themselves into a situation where they chose to emigrate to Holland where they could pursue their beliefs without the harrassment of the established Church of England. It is quite possible that William was first attracted to Dorothy May in England when she was at the tender age of 11 in about 1607, shortly before he arrived in Holland in 1609, but was not married to her until Nov. 9, 1613, in Holland, when she was 16. She was born in 1596 in Wisbeach, Cambridgeshire, England. William Bradford, along with some of the other separatists, were jailed for a short time in Boston, Lincolnshire, England, in 1608 upon the failure of their first attempt to sail to Holland
Dorothy May's family has been recently found by Charles. H. Townshend of New Haven CT in Dorothy May and her Relations on page 754 in a Gary Boyd Roberts publication. Her parents were John May of Shouldham Abbey, Norfolk, England; and Cordelia Bowes. Dorothy had siblings, Francis May, Farnneru (Jacomye?) May, Henry May, John May, and Stephen May. John May of Shouldham Abbey was the son of John May, Bishop of Carlisle, Doctor of Divinity and Master of Catherine's Hall, Cambridge, who died in Apr. 1598. Cordelia Bowes was the daughter of Martyn Bowes, who was the son of Sir Martyn Bowes, knight, goldsmith and Lord Mayor of London in 1545. Sir Martyn Bowes was married to Frances Clopton, daughter of William Clopton of Groton, who was the son of Richard Clopton of Melford and Groton, Suffolk, England.
Dorothy was described in a Heresiography by Ephraim Paget, minister of St. Edmund's, Lombard Street, London as follows: "Mistress May, who used to in her house sing psalms being more fit for a common brawl ... by reason of such uncouth and strange translations and the meeter [meter] used in them the Congregation was made a laughing stock unto strangers". Dorothy's brother, Henry May had become a member of the sect known as the "Ancient Brethren", a sexually promiscuous group of dissidents that broke away from the Jews.
William Bradford, along with his separatist companions, successfully emigrated to Amsterdam in 1609, and subsequently moved their community to Leyden (now Leiden), where they established a Church under the pastorate of John Robinson, and shared ideas with other religious reformers who had been proscribed from practicing in England or elsewhere in Europe. There were Dutch Mennonites, Brownists, Ancient Brethren, and philosophers at Leyden University, such as Polyander and Grotius, who influenced the separatists to modify their views from the more puritan notions that they held in England. The liberalization of their views contributed to John Smyth's even more extreme belief that the Bible was not the word of God, but was written by ancient people who took certain liberties in the interpretation of God's intentions.
The separatists made a decision to form a company, sell all their belongings in England and Holland, and hire two ships, the Mayflower and the Speedwell, to take them to America to found a new colony. The venture was also funded in part by private merchant bankers in London and Holland, and indentured servants were invited to join the party. The Speedwell proved not to be seaworthy and had to turn back, but the Mayflower arrived on Cape Cod in August, 1620, delivering 101 settlers to found the Plymouth Colony.
The religious philosophy that the separatists brought to America included the notion that people should be able to choose their own beliefs in spiritual matters, and meet to discuss them and to decide their own moral principles and create laws in a more-or-less democratic fashion. The separatists later became known as "pilgrims" of a humanist and naturalistic philosophy based on broadly Christian ideas. They should not be confused with the "puritans" who settled somewhat later, in much greater numbers, in Boston and other New England towns, and ultimately absorbed the separatists among them.

and so on and so forth

http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4SKPT_enUS401US401&q=Govenor+William+Bradford

http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&aq=hts&oq=&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4SKPT_enUS401US401&q=m2.+Alice+%28Carpenter%29+Southworth*+%281590%2f1-1670%29%2c+daughter+of+Alexander+Carpenter*+and+Priscilla

Use above search link for original Source and credit below:
m2. Alice (Carpenter) Southworth* (1590/1-1670), daughter of Alexander Carpenter* and Priscilla Dillen*, and widow of Edward Southworth.
William and Alice had 3 children:
Notes for GOV WILLIAM BRADFORD:
William was baptized in St Helens of Austerfield, Yorkshire , Eng on 3 19 1589
He was self taught. He was imprisoned at 18 in Boston, Linc olnshire, Eng for attempting to escape to Holland. Was succ essful in reaching Holland in 1609 with 125 Puritans that m et illegally in Scooby, Eng. Was apprenticed to a French Pr otestant for silk dying. Later his profession was listed a s Frustian (weaver of course cloth of cotton and flax-cordu roy, mole skin & velveteen). He was a citizen of Leyton, Ho lland on 3/30/1612.
Tradition says he courted Alice Carpenter, but was oppose d by her parents because of his inferior social position. S he married Edward Southworth and had 2 children before bein g widowed. William married Dorothea May. She drowned by jum ping or falling from the Mayflower as it was berthed in th e Cape Cod Harbor in America. After his first wife's deat h he wrote to Alice Carpenter Southworth: "I am not that Bi ll Bradford I once was. I am now Governor of the Colony , a widower, and if you will come to America, I am at you r service. Apparently the letter did the trick, as she arri ved in Plymouth on the ship "Anne" in July, 1623. They wer e married in the 4th wedding held in the colony.
He was elected as 2nd Gov.. of Plymouth after the death o f John Carver in April 1621. Was re-elected 30 times and se rved until 1656 all but 5 of the years. It was said that h e provided strong leadership that keep the tiny community a live during the early years.
When he died he was the richest man in the colony-his prop erty valued at 400 Pounds with a home in Plymouth and a far m in Kingston. He left a library of 275 volumes. He was pro ficient in Dutch, French, Latin, Greek and Hebrew. He learn ed Hebrew so he could read the Old Testament in the origina l language.
Listed as some of his possessions at his death include: Whi te blankets, green rug, snaphance and matchlock muskets, Ho lland sheets, hemp sheets, Holland tablecloths, 1 great bee r bowl, wine cup, suit with silver buttons, black britches , red waistcoat, lead colored suit with silver buttons, bla ck coat, green gown, violet cloak, 1 black hat, 1 colored h at, light colored cloak, and 6 pairs of shoes.
Books included: French Academy, History of the Netherlands , Peter Martire on the Romans, Mayers works on the New Test ament, Luther on the Galations, Calvin on Genesis and Comme ntary on the Acts, Mr Ainsworth on Genesis and Exodus, Giff ord Refuted, Speed's General Description of the World, a Ph ysics book, and 2 Bibles.
     
Child of GOV BRADFORD and DOROTHY MAY is:
  i.   JOHN7 BRADFORD, b. Bet. 1615 - 1618, Holland; d. Bef. Sep 21, 1676, Norwich, New London, CT; m. MARTHA BOURNE, Bet. 1640 - 1651, Norwich, New London, CT; b. 1614; d. 1689.
     
Children of GOV BRADFORD and ALICE CARPENTER are:
10. ii.   IV WILLIAM7 BRADFORD, b. Jun 17, 1624, Plymouth, Plymouth, MA; d. Feb 20, 1702/03, Plymouth, Plymouth, MA.
  iii.   ALICE BRADFORD, b. Abt. 1627, Plymouth, Plymouth, MA.
  iv.   MERCY BRADFORD, b. Bef. May 22, 1627, Plymouth, Plymouth, MA; d. Bef. May 9, 1657; m. BENJAMIN VERMAYES, Dec 21, 1648, Plymouth, Plymouth, MA; b. 1624; d. Bef. Nov 28, 1665.
  More About MERCY BRADFORD:
Nickname: Twin

11. v.   JOSEPH BRADFORD, b. 1630, Plymouth, Plymouth, MA; d. Jul 10, 1715, Plymouth, Plymouth, MA.


Generation 5 - William Bradford - 1557

William Bradford born 1557

William Bradford*; b. 1557, Austerfield, Yorkshire, England; bur. July 15, 1597, Austerfield, Yorkshire, England

or died 1591?

William Bradford* (1557-1591) was born, married, and died at Austerfield, Yorkshire, England. He was a Yeoman, within a class of farmers and animal husbandrymen below that of a Gentleman, but able to own property. He was suffiently prosperous that he was one of two Yeomen in Austerfield to be taxed. He married Alice Hanson on June 21, 1584, in Austerfield. William died at the relatively young age of 34, in 1591, when his son, William Bradford (1589/90-1657), who was to become Governor of the Plymouth Colony, was not yet two years old. William Bradford (1557-1591) is thought to have died of a pestilent contagious disease.

daughter of John Hanson and Margaret Gressam.
Alice Hanson was baptised on Dec. 8, 1562, in Austerfield. Alice was the daughter of John Hanson and Margaret Gressam. Alice became the wife of William Bradford (1557-1591). After William Bradford (1557-1591) died, Alice married a second time, on Sept. 23, 1593 to Robert Briggs (bur. Aug. 16, 1629), with whom she had two children, both born in Austerfield.

Agnes Briggs, bap. Sept. 22, 1594.
Robert Briggs, bap. May 8, 1597.
Alice died in 1597, buried at Austerfield on May 23, 1597, probably in the consequences of the birth of her second child, Robert Briggs.

Children of WILLIAM BRADFORD and ALICE HANSON are:
i. MARGARET BRADFORD, b. Mar 8, 1583/84, Austerfield, York, England; d. Mar 8, 1583/84, Austerfield, York, England.
Burial: Mar 9, 1584/85, Or 1586

  ii. ALICE BRADFORD, b. Oct 30, 1587, Austerfield, York, England; d. Jan 30, 1605/06, Austerfield, York, England.
Burial: Jan 30, 1606/07, Or 1608

iii. GOV WILLIAM BRADFORD, b. Mar 19, 1588/89, Austerfield, York, England; d. May 9, 1657, Plymouth, Plymouth, MA.

Generation 4 - William Bradford - 1529

Or Born 1513

William Bradford (1515-1595) a prosperous Yeoman farmer,

References:
English Origins of New England Families, 2nd Ser. Vol. 1. p. 243 Ancestry of the Bradfords of Austerfield, Co. York by William Bradford Browne. Ed. by Gary Boyd Roberts, pub. by Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, 1985.
The Mayflower Web Pages
Bradford of Plymouth by Bradford Smith, Pub. by J. B. Lippencott, 1951.
See Also Source: Connie Trier Genelogy Chrisman Pedigree
Other:
Descendants of Governor William Bradford, by Ruth Gardiner Hall, under auspices of the Bradford Family Compact.
Bradford Genealogy by Faith Bradford
A Line of Bradfords 1460-1988 by Bradford Stone

Bradford Registry, Vol 4, 83 & 84

below is somewhat confusing and original citations even more confusing however...
http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&aq=hts&oq=&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4SKPT_enUS401US401&q=William+Bradford%27s+first+wife+was+very+probably+Alice+Morton

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Go to the Index of ancestral surnames
Go to the Index of Names: which includes names of in-laws, half-relations, aliases, and adopters.
Go to the How to use this genealogy page.
Contact the author: e-mail link: Phillips Verner Bradford
Note: Ancestors of Phillips Verner Bradford are denoted in the text lists with an asterisk (*) following the names

William Bradford's first wife was very probably Alice Morton, a sister of the Anthony Morton from whom he bought land and houses. According to the Browne Reference (see below), William Bradford (c1515-1595) won these properties in a "fine" where Bradford was a "plaintiff" and Anthony Morton and his wife, Mary are "deforciants". The same article asserts that William Bradford's 1 st. wife was Alice Morton, sister of Anthony Morton, and that Anthony Morton was the grandfather of George Morton, the Plymouth Colonist. One of Anthony Morton's two sons was George Morton (the elder) who married Catherine Boun and had a son, the George Morton of Leyden and Plymouth, a member of the Seperatists, many of whom sailed to Plymouth on the Mayflower.

George Morton was therefore, a second cousin to Gov. William Bradford. George sailed originally on the Speedwell which developed leaks and had to return to England, so he came later on the Anne in 1623. He married Juliane Carpenter, a sister of Alice Carpenter, the 2nd wife of Governor Bradford. Thus he was also a brother-in-law to Gov. William Bradford of Plymouth.

William Bradford (c1515-1595) married his second wife, Margaret Fox, in Nottingham on Oct. 19, 1567. Margaret was the daughter of William Fox of Harworth , Nottingham County, by whom William Bradford (c1515-1595) had one child (a daughter), Elizabeth Bradford (bap. July 16, 1571). Elizabeth married James Hall at Austerfield on June 25, 1595 and had four children surnamed Hall, three of whom were living in 1609.

WILLIAM BRADFORD, b. 1513, Austerfield, Yorkshire, England; d. January 10, 1594/95, Austerfield, Yorkshire, England.

Between About 1515 and 1529


Descendants of ROBERT Bradforth
Generation No. 4

5. WILLIAM BRADFORD-BRADFORTH (ROBERT3, PETER2 BRADFORTH, ROBERT1) was born Abt. 1529 in Austerfield, York, England, and died Jan 10, 1595/96 in Austerfield, York, England. He married (1) UNKOWN BRADFORD-BRADFORTH Bef. 1552. She died in Y. He married (2) MARGARET FOX Oct 19, 1567 in Austerfield, York, England, daughter of WILLIAM FOX. She was born Abt. 1538 in Austerfield, York, England.

Notes for WILLIAM BRADFORD-BRADFORTH:
Margaret is wife #2. Was buried as "William Bradfourth th e Eldest". about 1575 he and John Hanson were apparently ta xed as the 2 richest men in Austerfield.


Burial: Abt. Jan 10, 1594/95, Or 1596
Children of William Bradford and Alice Morton
http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&aq=hts&oq=&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4SKPT_enUS401US401&q=Children+of+William+Bradford+and+Alice+Morton


i. ALICE BRADFORD, b. Abt. 1557, Austerfield, York, England.

ii. WILLIAM BRADFORD, b. 1558, Austerfield, York, England; d. Jul 15, 1591, Austerfield, York, England.

iii. ROBERT BRADFORD, b. Jun 25, 1561, Austerfield, York, England; d. Apr 23, 1609, Austerfield, York, England; m. ALICE WAINGATE, Jan 31, 1583/84.



Children of WILLIAM BRADFORD-BRADFORTH and MARGARET FOX are:

iv. ELIZABETH BRADFORD, b. Jul 16, 1570, Austerfield, York, England.

v. THOMAS BRADFORD, b. Mar 9, 1577/78, Austerfield, York, England; d. Oct 1, 1631, England.

Generation 3 - Robert Bradford - 1487

Robert Bradford
Born: 1487
Died: November 28, 1552
Died at: Willingley, Tickhill, Yorkshire Co., England

Married:
He married Elizabeth (unknown) in 1530 at Willingley, Tickhill, Yorkshire Co., England.
Elizabeth was born in 1503 and died January 21, 1554/55 at Willingley, Tickhill, Yorkshire Co., England.

Children of Robert and Elizabeth
  i.   William Bradford, born 1532 in Austerfield, Yorkshire Co., England; died 10 Jan 1594/95 in Austerfield, Yorkshire Co., England; married Margaret Fox 19 Oct 1557 in Austerfield, Yorkshire Co., England.
   ii.   Katherine Bradford, born Abt. 1533; died Unknown.
   iii.   Elizabeth Bradford, born Abt. 1534; died Unknown.
   iv.   Robert Bradford, born Abt. 1536; died Unknown.
   v.   Richard Bradford, born Abt. 1537; died Unknown.
   vi.   John Bradford, born Abt. 1538; died Unknown.
   vii.   Peter Bradford, born Abt. 1540; died Unknown.
   viii.   Thomas Bradford, born Abt. 1542; died Unknown.
   ix.   Hugh Bradford, born Abt. 1544; died Unknown.
   x.   Alice Bradford, born Abt. 1546; died Unknown.

http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&aq=hts&oq=&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4SKPT_enUS401US401&q=Robert+Bradford+Born%3a+1487



     

Generation Two - Peter (Bradeforth, Bradforth) Bradford - 1483

Robert Bradforth (as it was spelled) Bradford
Paid Taxes in 1522

Robert had a son Peter
Peter Bradford
Born: Abt. 1483, Willingley, England
Died Feb 12, 1556/57,
Will Proved 4/6/1558.

Married Mrs. Bradford in 1481
Second wife after 1491

Nickname: The Younger

Children of Peter and 1st wife
1.Robert (Bradfourth) Bradford, b. 1487, Willingley, Tickhill, Yorkshire Co., England, d. 28 Nov 1552, Willingley, Tickhill, Yorkshire Co., England.
2.Peter Bradford, b. 1483, Bentley, Arksey Co., England, d. 06 Apr 1558.
3.John Bradford, b. 1485, Willingley, Tickhill, Yorkshire Co., England, d. 06 Jul 1541, Almholme, England.
4.Katherine Bradford, b. 1489, Willingley, Tickhill, Yorkshire Co., England, d. Bef. 1557.
 5.Agnes Bardford 1491, Willingley, Tickhill, Yorkshire Co., England, d. Bef. 1557

http://www.google.com/#hl=en&cp=45&gs_id=1x&xhr=t&q=Abt.+1483%2C+Willingley%2C+England+Peter+Bradford&qe=QWJ0LiAxNDgzLCBXaWxsaW5nbGV5LCBFbmdsYW5kIFBldGVyIEJyYWRmb3Jk&qesig=EMSEIoEF6zPPtwo_Vy6QLg&pkc=AFgZ2tlEQr6Pl58cr-ZwMsGG8zLN6I8QnmqDH5rqcYURF8hPSnk4Q_XyQ8pgSWvqpw1JRlv5uH0ggLw-ZASPFyWZjGjdoWzuVA&pf=p&sclient=psy&rlz=1W1SKPT_en&source=hp&pbx=1&oq=Abt.+1483,+Willingley,+England+Peter+Bradford&aq=f&aqi=&aql=&gs_sm=&gs_upl=&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.&fp=f281eab034165f74&biw=1366&bih=641


The Bradford Line Generation One abt 1435 Robert Bradford

Robert (Bradfourth) Bradford
Born: June 1435
Bently, Arksey Co., England
Died: June, 1525

Married: Edith Mirfyn, Born 1439 in Bently, Arksey Yorkshire, England and died in 1460

Children:
Peter (Bradeforth or Bradfourth) Bradford

See also:
http://www.octhouse.com/bradfordreport.html
http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~kenzie/GenBRADFORTH.htm

Friday, August 12, 2011

Thanks Val

Thanks for your comments Val. I hope to present generation one soon! In the meantime I hope you will give my last email some thought.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Do you have any interest what so ever in... Genealogy?

If so why don't we share our interest/connection, oh, err sorry, not on those "Social Networks" why not right here, right now? Have you known the Feeling of been here before, all related, all from the same imagination?

This Blog? Well I am descended from William Bradford of the Mayflower fame and I am deeply concerned about what actually happened to his second love and first wife. I believe she was... murdered... so... what's the interest, if any, in this theory? Is there any?

Anyone care to help me rewrite American History?

The Generations, the time, the place, the whom...

Is the creator of Harry Potter a genius? Did I exist yesterday or was it my relative? Is the Mayan Calendar something we should look at adopting? You know? If my ancestor's created me and I not them then how can you believe you aren't part of them that made you? oh oh, ...belief, religion.... What would happen if one combined all the world's religions and all the world's non religious believers? Would you have EVOLIGION?

Rain Man or...

OK I definitely know someone visits here, I definitely know! So where is everybody?

Dustman Hoffman as the Rain Man

no... it's just me

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Sorry... I have been... taking some personal time away from it all....

I am trying to realize that in order for a blog to work it must have some followers... and that would be you... ever think about life after you?

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Nevermind Don't Worry

Nevermind Don't Worry, nothing ventured nothing gained, Chicken!, think nothing of it, no one else has so... the first one to become a follower will win a prize. Of some kind but not of any worth or monetary value, in fact, it really won't be a prize of any kind, I was only kidding However, should you be so bold I might be inclined to tell you about...  Dorothy May Bradford!

Monday, July 11, 2011

Want to join in...

Help me write this book... I've only just begun and though most of it has already been written over the last 300 years only you may find that this time it just may be about one of our ancestry's... and not quite the same old story. Comments are always welcome. Join the fun, make the history...

Friday, July 8, 2011

1) A time long ago...

That Night

It was the time when the horrific, historic, disparaging voyage of their passage was concluding it was December. The number of survivors calling themselves passengers had diminished, and it was cold, wet and miserable. The souls in their numbers were vanquished, lost and unforgiving; they felt exhausted, unsanitary, abandoned, depressed and afraid. The crew was tired, sick and hungry they were desperate, lonely and insanely savage for their own lust. Everyone was in close quarters, most were sick, many dying and hope was fading.

A small congregation of their membership was again out scouting and foraging for food and a place to find a safe haven in which to succumb to a second attempt at a life in adversity, deprivation, weather and inhuman conditions, anguish and doubt. The Separatists had indeed separated and it had become apparent that perhaps even their own existence was in peril. Everyone had a useless dependency upon everyone else and only they and their own existence mattered.

Upon his return to the ship his faith was beside him and his thoughts of the hideous crime of murder occupied his disbelief. How and why did this happen? Who was to blame? Her disappearance could not have been possible unless others had turned their heads, how is it no one saw? Where is her body, why was she forsaken? Why did no one see her depression? Why did no one help her, why was she alone! She was murdered and I can do nothing or say nothing. She is lost and gone into the cold watery depths of darkness and loneliness. The crime has been committed and no one was witness too it. Everyone is dependent upon their own silence for their very existence and no one dare let the truth ever be known as to what had happened ‘That Night’.


Your thoughts and comments are welcomed... how would you write this?

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

OK Ok

I read my two latest posts and I fear no one else did! OK so what, big deal, what you don't know won't hurt. Just look at what you're missing...

Revamp

I have been in the process of further review, revamp, and laziness for awhile but, I am glad of it! I made some gains and things are progressing. I have actually been amazed at the number of folks, people, kids, mistakes have stumbled upon this blog. Thanks even if you didn't stay,that's ok. You know if you find any like this one please let me me as I would surely ck it out. I think of it as my own little mine's eye, my own little alter ego, my own little get away...

Secret! Hang around long enough you may find several interesting links, connections, blogs and no nonsense conversation.

Come One Come All...seedsgenealogy@live.com

Genealogy Questions? Need a Lead? Can't Find What You Need? Try Seeds Genealogy! And/or add to the fun, this blog is a LIVE  on-going site... with hopefully room for all... join me as a follower and if you wish, I will add your name to this blog... I welcome your questions, cherish your support and hope we find a common thread... or at least help you find yours.
I often come here when the; news, weather, TV, social networking, same old emails, promises and plain old boredom hits how bout you? Why are you here?

This is an On Going Project besides life as usual, are you working on one? I'd like to know! They say Wisdom sets in at 60,,, that's what they say! A friend of mine, 61 is reaching out for his PHD, another closing his 100 year old family business, what say you?

Come on we want to hear from you... leave your comment... and get on with it...

Help us all write this story; this blog, this history, this legacy and this is the place you can be a part of.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Heritage

British, English, American, Irish, Scottish, German, French, Alsacian, Swiss, New English, The Old West, Illinois and most other states... and... much, much, much... more

Monday, May 16, 2011

Time to go back...

Hanson Nippert - Ashley Nippert- Daniel Nippert - Donald Nippert - Earl Nippert - Harriet McMaster - Mable Webb - John Tyler Webb - Rueben Webb - Mayflower Letter - Oliver Webb and Sally Nichols - Ebenezer Webb Jr. - Pvt. Ebenezer Webb - {[1690 - Samuel Webb and 1684 - Hannah Ripley get married in Windham, Windham, County, Connecticut October 08, 1711 Samuel was the son of Samuel Webb and Mary Adams]} Hanna's mother who married Joshua Ripley was 1662 - Hannah Bradford the daughter of Maj. William Bradford and the son of Gov. William Bradford. THUS the Mayflower Society Letter and the SEVEN GENERATIONS. You would think they might be happy to add an additional 9 generations?

2006 - Hanson Sawyer Nippert

My first grandson.

1983 - Ashley Danielle Nippert

First born of my three daughters. And mother fo my first grandson.

1950 - Daniel Edward Nippert

ME

1925 - Donald Earl Nippert

My Dad who, turns 86 this October.

1907 - Harriet Augusta McMaster - Nippert

Harriet married my grandpa Earl George Nippert and they had my dad Donald Earl Nippert.

1879 - Mabel Webb McMaster

My dad's grandmother, my great grandmother and a very fun loving lady. 'Boohbie' as she was called.

She married a McMaster and had my grandma, Harriet.

Additional information is private...

1842 - John Tyler Webb

http://www.geni.com/people/John-WEBB/6000000002209253470
WEBB          JOHN       T             M/W  UNK  0035892 1920-10-16 KANE        ST CHARLES          20-10-27
Birth:  Jul. 26, 1842
Bellmont Center
Franklin County
New York, USA
Death:  Oct. 16, 1920
Saint Charles
Kane County
Illinois, USA

Family links:
 Children:
  Alfred Smith Webb (1870 - 1898)*
  Jennie Webb (1876 - 1915)*

 Spouse:
  Augusta Persis Richardson Webb (1845 - 1901)

*Point here for explanation

 
Burial:
South Cemetery
Saint Charles
Kane County
Illinois, USA

Created by: Peter G. Parkhurst
Record added: Mar 16, 2009
Find A Grave Memorial# 34878477
ID: I123756260
Name: John WEBB
Given Name: John
Surname: WEBB
Sex: M
Birth: 20 Jul 1842 in Bellmont,Franklin,NY
Death: 14 Oct 1921
Change Date: 7 Jun 2002

Ancestry Hints for John WEBB
    2 possible matches found on Ancestry.com 

Father: Reuben WEBB b: 1 May 1810 in Malone,Franklin,NY
Mother: Harriet ROBERTS b: Abt 1820 in of Chateaugay,Franklin,NY
Marriage 1 Augusta RICHARDSON
Married: Apr 1868
Note: CHAN7 Jun 2002
Children
 Alfred WEBB b: 5 Sep 1870
 Carrie WEBB b: 18 Sep 1871
 Jennie WEBB b: 8 Feb 1876
 Mabel WEBB
 Reuben WEBB b: 1882
 Andrew WEBB b: 1885
 Francis WEBB b: 1886
Google John Tyler Webb 1842
John Tyler Webb (1842 - 1920) - Find A Grave MemorialMar 16, 2009 ... 26, 1842. Bellmont Center Franklin County New York, USA. Death: Oct. 16, 1920 ... John Tyler Webb Cemetery Photo Added by: Kidd Gunn ...
www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=34878477 - Cached?I24472: James BROADDUS (ABT 1730 - ____)May 29, 2005 ... Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography, Volume II VIII--Prominent Persons, "John Webb Tyler: was descended from Charles Tyler, who was living in ...
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/.../myff/.../g0000098.html - Cached
John WEBB (1842 - 1921) - GenealogyJan 26, 2010 ... Genealogy for John WEBB (1842 - 1921) on Geni, a free resource with over 100 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.
www.geni.com/people/John-WEBB/6000000002209253470
google english american history 1842
Immigration 1800-1900schoolnet.co.ukBy 1842 this had reached 200000, which accounted for more than a half of all ... a large number of the English people who went to America stayed in agriculture. ... The failed German revolution in 1848 stimulated emigration to America. ...
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USA1800.htm - Cached - Similar?File:Non-Native American Nations Control over N America 1842.png ...File:Non-Native American Nations Control over N America 1842.png ... The following pages on the English Wikipedia link to this file (pages on other projects ...
en.wikipedia.org/.../File:Non-Native_American_Nations_Control_over_N_ America_1842.png - Cached
Timeline of United States history (1820–1859) - Wikipedia, the ...The old land and the new : the journals of two Swiss families in America in ...
en.wikipedia.org/.../Timeline_of_United_States_history_(1820–1859) - Cached - Similar
Show more results from wikipedia.orgTrivia on United States and American History: 1842 | Trivia LibraryTrivia about the history of the United States in 1842, worker's rights are helped, child labor laws enacted, Rhode Island's new constitution attempts to ...
www.trivia-library.com/.../united-states-and-american-history-1842.htm - Cached - Similar
A critical dictionary of English literature and British and ... - Google Books ResultSamuel Austin Allibone, John Foster Kirk - 1891 - Biography & Autobiography - 3140 pages
Civil and Financial Legislation of Europe and America, 1842, Svo. 5. Civil Statistics of All Nations, 1844-50, 5 vols. Svo, £7 9«. ...
books.google.com/books?id=3d8NAQAAIAAJ...
Abraham Lincoln marries Mary Todd — History.com This Day in ...On this day in 1842, struggling lawyer Abraham Lincoln marries Mary Anne Todd, ... The Crumbling of America DVD. Is the U.S. infrastructure past its ...
www.history.com/...history/abraham-lincoln-marries-mary-todd - Cached - Similar
Audubon Bird Prints from Birds of America 1842His marriage in 1808 to Lucy Blackwell, an English woman and neighbor, added stability ... Audubon worked on the monumental Birds of America from 1827-1838, ...
www.panteek.com/AudubonBirdsFlowers/pages/aus106-123.htm - Cached
Holdings: Writers in America, 1842-1967;Writers in America, 1842-1967;. an informal glance at some of the authors who have ... Language: English. Published: Jersey City, N.J., Davey Co. [1968] ...
yufind.library.yale.edu/yufind/Record/1164851 - Cached
A critical dictionary of English literature and British and ... - Google Books ResultSamuel Austin Allibone - 1872 - Literary Criticism - 3140 pages
Arch. Alison, History of Europe. TLos. Arnold, 1795-1842, History of Home. Thos. ... For a knowledge of the History of America, the reader should consult ...
books.google.com/books?id=2p8MAAAAYAAJ...
Amazon.com: Lieutenant Zagoskin's travels in Russian America, 1842 ...Amazon.com: Lieutenant Zagoskin's travels in Russian America, 1842-1844: The first ethnographic ... Interested in teaching English overseas? 26, 9 hours ago ...
www.amazon.com › Books › Travel › Asia › Russia - Cached
Timeline results for English American History 18421842 Hamilton, Tromas, an English writer, authir of " Men and Maimers in America," He died in 1842. The Scenery of the Lower Mississippi, 213. Han ...
books.google.com
1842 In the summer of 1842, Charles Dickens, the well known English novelist, made a journey in America, and pub. lished his observations in a book ...
books.google.com

Whoa, hold on... The Mayflower Society Letter

Excerpt from letter I received from the Society

11/11/09  We have received your Preliminary Review Form and have checked our files to identify the best previously approved lineage paper that follows your stated lineage. GS#12017 matches your proposed lineage from Mayflower passenger William Bradford through the 7th Generation: Oliver Webb m. Sally Nichols.  This is an older and only somewhat well documented paper which then follows this couple's son Nichols Webb; but we have no previously approved lineage papers that follow a son Ruben.  This does not mean your proposed line is invalid, only that no one has ever applied to The Mayflower Society on this line beyond the point of generation 7.  


As this is an older paper, the line will require updating beyond the point of the Generation 6 birth.  Some of the sources referenced in the paper will need to be reevaluated.  For most Mayflower lines, documentation through the generation 6 birth is provided in our Mayflower Families Through Five Generations series of books.  No additional documentation is necessary for relationships and events included in these books. Please consult the William Bradford volume of this series for information on the early generations of your line.  In this book, your line is followed through the birth, in generation 6, of Ebenezer Webb.    end excerpt.
This, dear readers is, where I come in, beyond generation seven and I have the documentation which extends the "no one ever has ever applied" through today, 2011 and beyond. Well I fear the Society was to keen to ask me for membership fees and FAILED TO BE CONCERNED, about this new lineage.

1810 - Rueben Webb

http://www.geni.com/people/Reuben-WEBB/6000000002209244721

ID: I123755278
Name: Sallie NICHOLS
Given Name: Sallie
Surname: NICHOLS
Sex: F
Birth: 28 Mar 1783 in Massachusetts
Death: 9 Jul 1868 in Malone,Franklin,NY
Change Date: 5 Jun 2002


Marriage 1 Oliver WEBB b: 30 Apr 1782 in Norwich,Hampshire,MA
Married: Abt 1805 in Benson,Rutland,VT ?
Note: CHAN5 Jun 2002
Children
 Aaron WEBB b: 9 Aug 1806 in ,of Rutland,VT
 Fanny WEBB b: 4 Mar 1808 in ,of Rutland,VT
 Reuben WEBB b: 1 May 1810 in Malone,Franklin,NY
 Jewett J. WEBB b: 24 Mar 1812 in Malone,Franklin,NY
 Angeline WEBB b: 15 May 1814 in Malone,Franklin,NY
 NICHOLS WEBB b: 17 Apr 1816 in Malone,Franklin,NY
 Sarah Ann WEBB b: 12 Jan 1818 in of Malone,Franklin,NY
 (Infant) WEBB b: 18 Feb 1822 in Malone,Franklin,NY



ID: I123755422
Name: Reuben WEBB
Given Name: Reuben
Surname: WEBB
Sex: M
Birth: 1 May 1810 in Malone,Franklin,NY
Death: 10 Jan 1877 in Canton,Fulton,IL
Change Date: 6 Jun 2002

Ancestry Hints for Reuben WEBB
    2 possible matches found on Ancestry.com 

Father: Oliver WEBB b: 30 Apr 1782 in Norwich,Hampshire,MA
Mother: Sallie NICHOLS b: 28 Mar 1783 in Massachusetts
Marriage 1 Harriet ROBERTS b: Abt 1820 in of Chateaugay,Franklin,NY
Note: CHAN7 Jun 2002
Children
 Josephine WEBB b: 1836 in New York
 Luther Bradish WEBB b: 1 Jan 1838 in New York
 HARRISON WEBB b: 1840
 John WEBB b: 20 Jul 1842 in Bellmont,Franklin,NY
 Oscar B. WEBB b: 1845 in New York
 Harriet WEBB b: 9 Sep 1848 in New York
 Charles WEBB b: 11 Dec 1851
 Fernando WEBB b: 1853
 Millard WEBB b: 29 Feb 1856 in Malone,Franklin,NY
 Lillian WEBB b: 11 May 1854
 (Infant) WEBB b: Abt 1856

Ancestry Hints for Reuben WEBB
    2 possible matches found on Ancestry.com 

Father: Oliver WEBB b: 30 Apr 1782 in Norwich,Hampshire,MA
Mother: Sallie NICHOLS b: 28 Mar 1783 in Massachusetts
Marriage 1 Harriet ROBERTS b: Abt 1820 in of Chateaugay,Franklin,NY
Note: CHAN7 Jun 2002

Reuben WEBB (AFN: 19PW-GT4) Pedigree
 Sex:  M 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Submitter(s):
 RICH & SUE MCCLELLAN Microfilm:  NONE
 2051 E DESMOINES
MESA AZ Submission:  AF95-101746
 USA 85213 



Son : Reuben
Date of Birth : Tuesday, 1 May 1810
Place of Birth : Franklin County, New York
Married :
Died : 10 January 1877
Notes : from family bible of Oliver Webb

https://www.familysearch.org/s/recordDetails/show?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fpilot.familysearch.org%2Frecords%2Ftrk%3A%2Ffsrs%2Frr_203759973%2Fp_320989885&hash=HloWXpZgU9zB10k5M56iYku8TUc%253D

Generation 9
Children:
i Josephine Webb; b. 1836, Malone, NY; d. May 30, 1855; married Henry J. Smith
ii Luther Bradish Webb, b. January 01, 1838, Belmont, NY d, February 10, 1921, Elgin, Illinois (married Nancy Orkine 1861)
iii Harrison Webb b.1840, Belmont, NY d. September 12, 1845, Belmont, NY
(10) iv John Tyler Webb, b. June 20, 1842, Belmont, NY d. October 12, 1921, St, Charles, Kane County, Illinois
v Oscar Webb; b.September 09, 1848, Belmont, NY d. 1029 (married Jennie Tucker, 1869)
vi Harriet Webb, b. September 09, 1845, Belmont, NY d. Unknown, Elgin, Illinois
vii Charles Webb; b. December 11, 1851, Belmont, NY; June 24, 1933 (Married (1) Edith Coats; married (2) Marion Webb)
viii Lillian Webb; b. May 11, 1854, Belmont, NY d. December 31, 1909, Narka, Kansas; (Married Henry Hall, unknown)
ix Fernado Webb, b. 1856, Belmont, NY
x Millard Webb; b. February 29, 1856, Belmont, NY (Married, Augusta Mink)
xi Baby Boy Webb, B. Unknown D, Unknown (Probably died at birth)

?  Lots of Webb's
Record from Franklin County. IL Marriage Records
WEBB, REUBIN A                       DAVIS, CORNELIA A                    05/21/1875 00C/0046          FRANKLIN            Google search
Today in History for Year 1810Results 1 - 32 of 32 ... Today in history for year 1810. Browse historical events ... Feb 1st - 1st insurance co managed by blacks (American Insurance Co of Phila) ... Mar 27th - William Hepworth Thompson, English classical scholar (d. 1886) ...
www.historyorb.com › Dates by Year - Cached - Similar
Brief Timeline of American Literature and Events:1810-1819(Image courtesy of the Images of American Political History site. ... This is the "year of no summer" in New England; 10 inches of snow fall in ...
www.wsu.edu/~campbelld/amlit/1810.htm - Cached - Similar
Trivia on United States and American History: 1810 | Trivia LibraryTrivia about the history of the United States in 1810, the population, the people move west, the Hartford Convention and Federalists meet.
www.trivia-library.com/.../united-states-and-american-history-1810.htm - Cached - Similar
19th Century American Culture - 1800-1810 - LSC-Kingwood LibraryThe 1800-1810s. It's difficult to imagine that in 1800 American independence was only 25 years old | The capital moved from Philadelphia to Washington ...
kclibrary.lonestar.edu/19thcentury1800.htm - Cached - Similar
America's Best History - U.S. History Timeline: The 1810's - The ...United States History Timeline, 1810-1819, from americasbesthistory.com. ... naturalized American sailors had been seized by British forces by this year, .... Ontario allows American forces to break the Indian allies of the English and ...
americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1810.html - Cached - Similar
Timeline of United States history (1790–1819) - Wikipedia, the ..."Agriculture in America in the 1790s: An Englishman's View." Agricultural History, Vol. 49, No. .... 2008. Irwin, Douglas A. and Richard Eugene Sylla, eds . ... Wikimedia Commons has media related to: United States in the 1810s ...
en.wikipedia.org/.../Timeline_of_United_States_history_(1790–1819) - Cached - Similar
American/ World History 1800- 1810 AD1805 Battle of Trafalgar The Battle of Trafalgar established British naval superiority for over a hundred years. Napoleon was intent on crossing the English ...
www.historycentral.com/dates/1800ad.html - Cached - Similar
The Bones' HistoryApr 15, 2008 ... to the Unites States in the year 1810. ... The history of Ireland is a history of conquest and oppression by the English. ...... He was the founder of his family in America; an honest and preserving man, ...
theboneshistory.blogspot.com/ - Cached
The geographical and historical dictionary of America and the West ... - Google Books ResultAntonio de Alcedo, George Alexander Thompson - 1812 - History
Animated by this example, the English endeavoured to abolish this infamous ... Negroes were carried over to America by the above nations in the year 1810. ...
books.google.com/books?id=FuI-AAAAYAAJ...
1810: Information from Answers.comHe will spend the next few years studying the English wool market. .... The birds account for roughly one-third of America's avian population (see 1800; ...
www.answers.com › Library › History, Politics & Society -
Google search Rueben Webb 1810
Reuben WEBB (1810 - 1877) - GenealogyJan 26, 2010 ... Genealogy for Reuben WEBB (1810 - 1877) on Geni, a free resource with over 100 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.
www.geni.com/people/Reuben-WEBB/6000000002209244721
Reuben Webb (1810 - 1890) - Find A Grave PhotosAug 14, 2010 ... Reuben Webb. Memorial · Photos · Flowers · Edit · Learn about removing the ads from this memorial... [Add A Photo]. Image is scaled. ...
www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=pv&GRid=19818855 - Cached
Rhoda Bowker Webb (1810 - 1890) - Find A Grave MemorialJun 10, 2007 ... Reuben Webb (1810 - 1890) *Point here for explanation. Note ...
www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=19818856 - Cached
Show more results from findagrave.comNancy Saunders / Reuben Webb of Va.1 post - Last post: Nov 4, 2001
married to Reuben Webb about 1810 Virginia Reuben was born 1786 New London, Bedford Co, Va. and died aft 1850 probably in franklin Co., Va. ...
genforum.genealogy.com/saunders/messages/2450.htmlRe: Webb record in 1797 Franklin Co., NC? - Apr 4, 2009
Re: JOHN BUNNER WV WILL 1810? - May 23, 2006
John H.Lett,1810,Rutherford,Tn,1820,Warren Co,Tn census? - Jul 8, 2005
More results from genforum.genealogy.com »
Get more discussion results
Genealogy - pafg694 - Generated by Personal Ancestral FileM, iii, Reuben Webb was born on 1 May 1810 in Malone, Franklin, Ny. He died on 10 Jan 1877 in Canton, Fulton, Il. M, iv, Jewett J. Webb was born on 24 Mar ...
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~elessar5/pafg694.htm - Cached

1782 - Oliver Webb

http://www.geni.com/people/Oliver-WEBB/6000000002209242326
http://www.webbdeiss.org/webb/webb_oliver_02.html
Webb-Deiss Research
is now soldiersource.com >>
Oliver Webb
Full name : Oliver Webb
Alternate spellings, aliases :
Parents :
Father : Ebenezer Webb
Mother : Abigail Rude
note : married in Windham County, Connecticut
Date of Birth : 30 April 1782
Place of Birth : Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts
Notes : From Norwich Town Records, ?Oliver Webb son of Ebenezer Webb and Abigail Webb was born 30th day of April AD 1782 ? Reg Samuel Knight?.
Spouse : 
Name : Sally Webb
Date of Marriage :
Place of Marriage : New York
Died : 9 July 1868
Notes : ?Aged 85 years & four months?
Date of Death : 11 November 1849
Place of Death : Belmont, Franklin County, New York
Burial Information :
Notes : ?Age years 67 ? 6 months?
Military Service :
Occupation(s) : Farmer
Location of Residences, record of movement, migration, etc.
Property : A statement in his father?s pension file in a letter abstracting his father?s service : ?He resided at Windham until February 1782, then moved to Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts and lived there eight years. He then moved to Benson, Rutland County, Vermont where he lived the remainder of his life.? This is not exactly correct, as Ebenezer was living in Malone, Franklin County, New York, at age 75 years, when he gave a deposition in his brother Christopher?s pension case.

Family :
Son : Aaron
Date of Birth : Saturday, 9 August 1806
Place of Birth : Franklin County, New York
Married : not married
Died : Saturday, 29 March 1807
Notes : from family bible of Oliver Webb
Daughter : Fanny
Date of Birth : Friday, 4 March 1808
Place of Birth : Franklin County, New York
Married :
Died :
Notes : from family bible of Oliver Webb
Son : Reuben
Date of Birth : Tuesday, 1 May 1810
Place of Birth : Franklin County, New York
Married :
Died : 10 January 1877
Notes : from family bible of Oliver Webb

Son : Jewett J.
Date of Birth : Tuesday, 24 March 1812
Place of Birth : Franklin County, New York
Married : Lucy A. Roberts, 18 October 1837 (she was born 31 October 1818)
Died : Wednesday, 31 March 1897 ?aged 55 years & 7 days, 6-15 A.M.?
Notes : from family bible of Oliver Webb; children - Edna Ann born 22 November 1838, William Benjamin born 12 August 1841, Albert Nichols born 25 August 1845

Daughter : Angeline
Date of Birth : Wednesday, 15 May 1814
Place of Birth : Franklin County, New York
Married :
Died : 28 March 1815
Notes : from family bible of Oliver Webb

Son : Nichols
Date of Birth : Wednesday, 17 April 1816
Place of Birth : Franklin County, New York
Married :
Died :
Notes : from family bible of Oliver Webb

Daughter : Sarah Ann
Date of Birth : Tuesday, 12 January 1819
Place of Birth : Franklin County, New York
Married :
Died :
Notes : from family bible of Samuel Webb

Son : not named
Date of Birth : Monday, 18 February 1822
Place of Birth : Franklin County, New York
Married :
Died : Tuesday, 19 March 1822
Notes :
Comments, sources, various additional :
Vinton, John Adams. ?The Giles Memorial ? Genealogical Memoirs of the Families Bearing the Names Giles, Gould, Holmes, Jennison, Leonard, Lindall, Curwen, Marshall, Ribinson, Sampson, and Webb; also Genealogical Sketches of the Pool, Very, Carr and other Families with a history of Pemaquid, ancient and modern; some account of early settlements in Maine; and some details of Indian warfare. Printed for the author, by Henry W. Dutton & Son, Washington Street, Boston. 1864. pp 496 ? 532.
Pension File of (brothers) Christopher Webb and Ebenezer Webb (abstracts) : M804 Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Files 1800 ? 1900 Webb, Abner ? Webb, Isacc. Roll2514. National Archives and Records Administration. Washington, DC. Viewed 14 July 2001. (both pension files are on the same roll)
Massachusetts Vital Records : Huntington; Vital Records : 1764-1805, Town Records 1790-1795 (microfilm)

Family Record of Ebenezer Webb... in family bile of (his son) Samuel Webb and in family bible of (his son) Oliver Webb.
New York Adjutant General's Office Index of Awards on Claims of the Soldiers of the War of 1812. Albany: - , 1860. Found on Ancestry.com ? www.ancestry.com
War of 1812 Military service data found here - http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/ny/franklin/military/militarytoc.htm - compiled by W. David Samuelson
Marriage data found here - http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/ny/franklin/churches/congregational/parmelee.txt - compiled by John Austin (uncajohns@yahoo.com).

| Genealogy | Webb?s Removed West | Webb Gallery | Updates | Links |
 google search Oliver Webb 1782
Oliver Webb, son of Ebenezer Webb, JrDate of Birth : 30 April 1782. Place of Birth : Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts Notes : From Norwich Town Records, “Oliver Webb son of Ebenezer ...
www.webbdeiss.org/webb/webb_oliver_02.html - Cached?Ebenezer Webb JrNotes : From Norwich Town Records, “Oliver Webb son of Ebenezer Webb and ...
www.webbdeiss.org/webb/eben2_webb.html - Cached
Show more results from webbdeiss.orgGenealogy - pafg694 - Generated by Personal Ancestral FileOliver Webb [Parents] was born on 30 Apr 1782 in Norwich, Hampshire, Ma. He died on 11 Nov 1849 in Malone, Franklin, Ny. He married Sallie Nichols about ...
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~elessar5/pafg694.htm - Cached
Oliver WebbNotes : From Norwich Town Records, "Oliver Webb son of Ebenezer Webb and Abigail Webb was born 30th day of April AD 1782 – Reg Samuel Knight". Spouse : . ...
en.domotica.net/Oliver_Webb - Cached
HSESWOct 22, 2008 ... [Mod]; 1876 George Oliver Webb, Webbsborough, Castlecomer, 1089 a. ... 1.5.1782 Sale at Wellbrook, stock & furniture of late Rev Dr Hewetson ...
homepage.eircom.net/~lawekk/HSESW.HTM - Ireland - Cached - Similar
Heads of families at the first census of the United States taken ... - Google Books ResultUnited States. Bureau of the Census, United States. Census Office - 1908 - Reference - 189 pages
Smee, Robert Knight, Hannah Webb, Aaron Aspray, John Faldo. ... Tignor, Phillip Taylor, Moses Tignor, James Thomas, John Webb, JohnS Webb, Isaac Webb, ...
books.google.com/books?isbn=0806303441...
Ebenezer WEBB b. 29 MAY 1757 Windham, Windham, CT d. 14 AUG 1846 ...Oliver WEBB, b. 30 Apr 1782, Norwich, Hampshire, MA Find all individuals with events at this location , d. 11 Nov 1849, Malone, Franklin, ...
www.olddeadrelatives.com/getperson.php?personID=I18911... - Cached
Google search this year 1782 in english american history
Today in History for Year 1782Results 1 - 30 of 30 ... Today in history for year 1782. Browse historical events ... Jan 7th - 1st US commercial bank, Bank of North America, opens in Philadelphia ... Feb 5th - Spanish take Minorca (western Mediterranean) from English ...
www.historyorb.com › Dates by Year - Cached - Similar?Historical Events for Year 1782Results 1 - 22 of 22 ... Jan 7th - 1st US commercial bank, Bank of North ...
www.historyorb.com › Events by Year - Cached - Similar
Show more results from historyorb.com1782 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaYear 1782 (MDCCLXXXII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display ... The bald eagle is chosen as the emblem of the United States of America. ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1782 - Cached - Similar
Historical Events Happened In The Year 1782May 3, 2011 ... Important, popular and memorable events of 1782. ... Bank of North America, opens in Philadelphia on this day in history. ... Feb 05 Spanish take Minorca ( western Mediterranean) from the English on this day in history. Feb 21 On this day in history uS congress resolves the establishment of a US mint ...
www.hisdates.com/years/1782-historical-events.html - Cached
The First Icehouse in America?Marquis de Chastellux; Travels in North America in the Years 1780, 1781 and 1782 , English translation by George Greive, revised translation and notes by ...
www.ushistory.org/presidentshouse/history/icehouse.htm - Cached - Similar
Bibles of Colonial AmericaIt was quite late in Colonial American history when the first English language Bible was printed in America, 1782 to be exact. ... that “did not exceed seven or eight hundred copies”, around the year 1752, with a second edition in 1761. ...
www.greatsite.com › English Bible History - Cached - Similar
Treaty of Paris: Primary Documents of American History (Virtual ...Earlier that year, a broadside published in Baltimore outlined the principal ... Adams's entry for November 30, 1782, discussed the signing of the preliminary ... A Great Improvisation: Franklin, France, and the Birth of America. ...
www.loc.gov › Researchers - Cached - Similar
Trivia on United States History and American Revolution: 1782 ...About the United States in 1782, American Revolution concludes, history and the ... May A 22-year-old woman named Deborah Sampson, disguised as a man, ...
www.trivia-library.com/.../united-states-history-and-american-revolution- 1782.htm - Cached - Similar
The History Place - American Revolution: An Unlikely Victory 1777-1783The following year, Britain will declare war on the Dutch who have been engaging in .... In the English Parliament, there will soon be calls to bring this long ... January 1, 1782 - Loyalists begin leaving America, heading north to Nova ...
www.historyplace.com/unitedstates/revolution/revwar-77.htm - Cached - Similar
Gouverneur MorrisThe Congress sought little more than reconciliation for English led ... The year 1782 brought great success and great tragedy, beginning with Morris' drafting ... However, Morris was passionate about America's future, as he writes in a ...
pabook.libraries.psu.edu/palitmap/.../Morris__Gouverneur.html - Cached - Similar
Timeline results for This year 1782 in English American History1782 In the year 1782, Robert Aitken, a printer of Philadelphia, issued / the first Bible in the English language printed in America, and which possibly ...
books.google.com
1782 It was this misfortune which induced the English to acknowledge the independence of America in the year 1782. Washington learned the military art ...
books.google.com

1757 - Ebenezer Webb Jr.

See Children under Abigail
Ebenezer Webb, Jr.
of Windham County, Connecticut
Full name : Ebenezer Webb
Alternate spellings, aliases : Ebnz’r; Ebenezer Webb, Jr.
Parents :
Father : Ebenezer Webb
Mother : Ruth Crane
note :
Vital Statistics :
Date of Birth : 28 May 1757
Place of Birth : Windham, Windham County, Connecticut
Date of Death : 14 August 1846
Place of Death : Malone, Franklin County, New York
Burial Information :
Notes : From family bible of his son, Samuel Webb, “Ebenezer Webb deperted this life August 14th 1846. Aged 89= 2= 15 year month days”
Education : literate
Spouse1 : 
Name : Abigail Rood, or Rude
Date of Marriage : 28 August 1777
Place of Marriage : Windham County, Connecticut
Died : 10 May 1830
Notes : Abigail was born 4 February 1759; she is a descendant of Thomas Rood, through his incestuous relationship with his daughter Sarah Rood, who bore a son named George Rood in July 1672.  Thomas was executed for his crime, Sarah was whipped, and George was taken to live with the Leffingwells, who raised him.  Their marriage date is from a copy of the Samuel Webb family bible as is Abigail’s date of death, “Departed this life Abigail Webb the wife of Ebenezer Webb in the year May tenth 1830 in the seventy second year of her age.”  It seems that Ebenezer and Abigail were sexually active before they were married, as the Windham Town Records show that their first child was born in February 1778, only five months after their marriage.  Further tying the family together, Abigail Rude’s brother Nathan Rude married Ebenezer Webb’s sister Ruth Webb.
Spouse2 :
Name : ?
Date of Marriage :
Place of Marriage :
Died :
Military Service : Patriot of the Revolution. He volunteered in May 1775 to Major Obadiah Johnson’s Company, Colonel Israel Putnam’s Regiment Connecticut Troops.  He was stationed for some time at Cambridge, Massachusetts during the Battle of Bunker Hill and was discharged December 1775. 
Re-enlisted July 1776 to Captain Elijah Sharp’s Company, Colonel Samuel Mott’s Regiment Connecticut Troops.  He was on the expedition to Ticonderoga and camped on the west bank of Lake Champlain for about four months; discharged 28 November 1776 at Mount Independence opposite to Ticonderoga. 
In September 1780, enlisted for two months in Captain Rust’s Company, Colonel McLellan’s Regiment.  He marched to New London and served about two months.
Afterwards he resided at Windham until February 1782, then moved to Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts and lived there eight years.  He did not render any military service after November 1780.
Ebenezer Webb appears with the rank of … on a Pay Roll of Major Obadiah Johnson’s Company in the 3d Reg’t of Foot, raised by the Colony of Connecticut, 1775 (Revolutionary War), dated …not dated…  Time of enlistment May 19, 1775.  Discharged Dec 16, 1775.  Months and days in the service 6 mos 28 days.  Premium for enlisting ?2 s12.  Whole of pay ?16 s8.
He applied for a pension in October 1832, which he received (s20822).  He was pensioned on 5 October 1833 and received $43.33 per year.  His affidavit of service is below :
State of New York, County of Franklin } On this twelfth day of October 1832 personally appeared in open court before the Judges of the Court of Common Pleas now sitting at the Court House in the Town of Malone in and for the County of Franklin, Ebenezer Webb a resident of the said town of Malone in the County of Franklin of the State of New York aged seventy five years who being first duly sworn according to law doth on his oath make the following declaration in order to obtain the benefit of the act of congress passed June 7, 1832.
That he was born at Windham in the state of Connecticut on the 29th day of May 1757 according to the best of his information & belief that he believes there is a record of his birth ----- at the office of the Town Clerk of Windham and that he has a transcript from it in his possession that he resided at Windham aforesaid in the County of Windham & State of Connecticut till February 1782.  That he entered the service of the United States under the following named officers and served as herein states That he first enlisted as a volunteer in a company commanded by Capt. or Major Obadiah Johnson of Connecticut Troops the first Lieutenant was Ephraim Lyon 2d Lieutenant Willis Cleft – Ensign Abner Robinson in the Regiment then Commanded by Genl Israel Putnam, this enlistment was entered into at Windham aforesaid in the Month of May 1775 for the term of seven months that he immediately marched with the said Regiment to Cambridge near Boston and served out the term of seven months. ----- Regiment at Cambridge and was regularly discharged at Cambridge in the Month of December in the year 1775 and at the same time received a regular written discharge, signed by Genl Israel Putnam as he believes – which discharge he has since lost and has not seen it within forty years that he was at Cambridge with his Company during the Battle of Bunkers Hill in June 1775.
That in the month of July in the year 1776 he voluntarily enlisted at Windham aforesaid for the term of four months as a Private Soldier in a Company commanded by Capt. Elijah Sharp 1st Lieut Abner Robinson 2d Sanford Kinsbury Ensign Simon House in a Regiment Commanded by Col. Samuel Mott all of Connecticut but whether State of Continental Troops does not know. That he marched with the said Company & Regiment under the said officers from Windham to Ticonderoga in the State of New York on the West Bank of Lake Champlain where he served out the said term of four months and was regularly discharged at Mount Independence opposite to Ticonderoga on the 28th day of November in the year 1776 but did not at that time obtain any written discharge.
That about the first of September 1780 he was drafted for two months service to be performed at and near New London and entered the service as a Private at Windham in a company commanded by Captain Rust, Jude Buck Lieutenant in Col McLellan’s Regiment and marched to New London and served out the said two months and was discharged at Groton – about the first of November 1780 but obtained no written discharge that he has no documentary evidence except what is herewith submitted and that he knows of no person whose testimony he can procure except such as he has obtained & now herewith –(illegible)- who can testify to his service.
He hereby relinquishes any claim to a pension of annuity except the present and declares that his name is not on the pension Roll of this Agency or any State.
That he resided at Windham till February 1782 when he moved to Norwich in the County of Hampshire in the State of Massachusetts where he resided about 8 years then removed to Benton in the county of Rutland of the State of Vermont and resided there till March 1811 when he removed to Malone in the County of Franklin & State of New York where he has continued to reside till this time & now resides there. – (signed) Ebenezer Webb
Sworn to and subscribed to this day --- aforesaid
(signed) John H. Russell Depu. Clerk
He offered as evidence of his service an affidavit supplied by Adam Stevens of Rutland County, Vermont, his former Sergeant in Capt. Obadiah Johnson’s Company, and an affidavit from his brother, Christopher Webb of Cazenovia, Madison County, New York :
…(first part if affadivit is missing)… of the deponent eighty years old do testify and say that Ebenezer Webb formerly of Windham, Windham County, Ct. listed into Capt. Obadiah Johnson of Canterbury, Windham County, Ct. Company in the year AD 1775 for seven months.  Col. Israel Putnam’s Regiment Ct. line of Volunteers (Who was afterwards made a Brigade Gen’l.) Lyon was the first Lieut and Howard the second and Robertson the ensign of said Company.  And the said Webb served one month over the time he enlisted for faithfully which made eight months and then took a regular discharge signed by Israel Putnam.  And this I know because I was a Serg’t in the aforesaid company and did their writings.  Dated at Sudbury, Rutland County, Vt. Sept, 3rd 1832 (signed) Adam Stevens
State of Vermont, Rutland County } Sudbury Sept 3rd, 1832 there personally appeared Adam Stevens and was sworn to the above deposition by me (signed) Peter Reynolds, Justice of the Peace.
New York, Madison County } On the 30th day of July 1832 Christopher Webb of the Town of Cazenovia in said county being duly sworn deposeth and saith that he is well acquainted with Ebenezer Webb of the Town of Malone in the County of Franklin & State aforesaid and that he is a brother of this deponent, and according to the best recollection the said Ebenezer was 75 years of age in the month of May last.  And this deponent further deposeth & saith that the said Ebenezer was born in the town & County of Windham in the State of Connecticut.  And he further deposeth & saith that in the year 1775 the said Ebenezer enlisted for the term of 7 months to go to Cambridge under Major Jedediah Johnson & in Col. Putnam’s Regt. but whether it was into the Continental or State service he cannot state but the deponent was knowing at the time of the said Ebenezer’s going with the army to Cambridge & that he served out the term of his enlistment and this deponent further deposeth & saith that he himself was in the service at Roxbury a private in Col. Jedediah Huntington’s Reg’t 5 of the last months in which the said Ebenezer served at Cambridge and saw him frequently during that time & further that the term of service of the said Ebenezer & that of the deponent expire on or about the same date viz: the 10th day of December 1775 & that they were both then honorably discharged and returned home to Connecticut.  And this deponent further deposeth & saith that the said Ebenezer again enlisted in the year 1776, into Capt. Elijah Sharp’s Company & Col. Mott’s Reg’t. for four months and went to Ticonderoga.  This deponent did not see him enlist as he was living about two miles from his fathers at that time but was frequently at his fathers and heard the family frequently speak of his having enlisted and of his being gone to Ticonderoga and was at home at his father’s when the said Ebenezer returned from Ticonderoga at the end of the 4 months service.  And this deponent further deposeth & saith that in the year 1780, he was knowing of the Ebenezer being drafted for the term of two months to go to New London or Groton … and that he went and served the said two months as he was informed at the time & further that he was knowing to the fact of the said Ebenezer returning home to Windham at the expiration of the said term.  And he further deposeth and saith that he had not at that time any doubts in mind but that the said Ebenezer Webb did actually serve the whole of the aforesaid three different terms as above stated, and that he still believes it.  (signed) Christopher Webb
He likewise testified on behalf of his brother, Christopher (below from Christopher Webb’s pension file) :
State of New York, Franklin County } …Ebenezer Webb of the Town of Malone in the County of Franklin in the State of New York, aged seventy-five years, being duly sworn in deposes and says that he knows Christopher Webb of the Town of Cazenovia, in the County of Madison & State of New York – that the said Christopher is a brother of that deponents – that as this deponent has been told and verily believes, the said Christopher was born in Windham in the State of Connecticut in the year 1755 and that the said Christopher shortly after Lexington Battle, in the year 1775 joined as a volunteer soldier, a company of Militia raised in a place then called Hanover in the State of Connecticut to go to Boston, Massachusetts to serve against the common enemy, and verily believes that he went there, as he was absent from home a number of weeks, before he returned, but how long he served at that time, the deponent does not know – that in the summer of the same year 1775 – the said Christopher enlisted into a company of Connecticut troops in a Regiment commanded by Col. Jebediah Huntington, and came to Roxbury, Massachusetts, where this deponent saw him frequently, as the deponent was then a soldier stationed at Cambridge, Massachusetts, and knows that the said Christopher, served against the common enemy at that time, five months, and after being honorably discharged returned home to Connecticut in company with the deponent. – And that, in the following year 1776, as the deponent then understood, and now verily believes (while this deponent was in the service of his country at Ticonderoga in the State of New York) the said Christopher enlisted or volunteered into a Regiment of Connecticut troops, but what regiment this deponent does not now recollect, and was marched to White Plains in the State of New York to serve against the common enemy but how long he served at that time this deponent cannot say -.  And further that in the winter of 1776 & 1777 this deponent well remembers, that said Christopher entered as volunteer into a Regiment of Connecticut Troops to go to Providence in the State of Rhode Island to serve against the common enemy when the British lay at Newport, and verily believes that he went there as the deponent learned at the time and never heard it contradicted, but how long he served at that time the deponent does not know.  And this deponent further states that in the summer of 1777, this deponent was knowing to the said Christopher enlisting or entering into a Regiment of Militia raised in New London County Commanded by Colo. Lattimer as a substitute for Daniel Cutler, a Sergeant in said Regiment for the term of two months to go to Saratoga to serve against the common enemy, and verily believes, as he understood at the time that the said Christopher went to Saratoga, and was present and assisted at the capture of General Burgoyne and his army.
Subscribed and sworn to before me August 22nd 1832 – Benjamin Clark, Justice of the Peace }  Ebenezer Webb
Occupation(s) : Farmer
Notes : Norwich Town Records shows how he marked his cattle in the 1780’s, “Ebenezer Webb ear mark is a swallow tale in the end of the right ear and one half a penny the upper side of the same.”  He also served the town as Fine Server and Hogreaver during a part of the last year of the Revolution.
“Norwich, Hampshire… (extracts)
March 8, 1783 at a legal town meeting…
…made choice of Samuel Knight Town Clark, Samuel Knight, Darius Webb and Lt. William Fobes Selectmen & Assessors.
…Ebenezer Webb Fine Server and hogreaver.
…Darius Webb Pound Keeper.”
Religion : probably Congregational when a resident of Windham – could be almost anything after that
Location of Residences, record of movement, migration, etc.
Property :  A statement in his pension file in a letter abstracting his service : “He resided at Windham until February 1782, then moved to Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts and lived there eight years.  He then moved to Benson, Rutland County, Vermont where he lived the remainder of his life.”  This is not exactly correct, as Ebenezer was living in Malone, Franklin County, New York, at age 75 years, when he gave a deposition in his brother Christopher’s pension case.  He may have lived in Vermont at the time of his death.
He states in his pension application that has in his possession a transcript of his birth record which he obtained from the Town Clerk of Windham, which certificate is dated February 1782, providing proof that he resided there at that time.  His son, Oliver is recorded as being born in Norwich, Massachusetts only two months later in April, so he must have moved in that period from Windham to Norwich.  He lived there, near to his brother Darius, until at least 1790, because he was enumerated in the census at that place, and he states that he lived there from February 1782 for eight years.  He lived in Benson, Vermont until 1811, when he moved to Malone, New York, where he resided until he died.
1790 Federal Census.  Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts
Page #, Head of Family, Free White Males >16, <16, Free White Females, All Other Persons, Slaves
Ebenezer Webb, 1, 2, 3, 0, 0
1810 Federal Census.  Benson, Rutland County, Vermont
Head, Free Males <10, 10-16, 16-26, 26-45, >45, Free Females <10, 10-16, 16-26, 26-45, >45, Others, Slaves
Ebenzr Webb, 2, 0, 2, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, (24, 20, 51, 1, 2, 3, 17, 4, 4, 0)
1820 Federal Census.  Malone Township, Franklin County, New York
Page#, Head, Free Males <10, 10-16, 16-26, 26-45, >45, Free Females <10, 10-16, 16-26, 26-45, >45, Foreign, Agriculture, Free, Slaves
Ebenezer Webb, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0
Oliver Webb, 2, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 3, 0
Samuel Webb, 2, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 2, 0
1840 Census of Pensioners.  Franklin County, New York
Given Name & Surname, Age, Head of Household, City, Town, County
Ebenezer Webb, 82, Samuel Webb, Bellmont, Franklin County
Family :

Daughter : Sally Webb (Sarah)
Date of Birth : 12 or 19 February 1778
Place of Birth : Windham, Windham County, Connecticut
Married : …Brooks
Died : 15 June 1838
Notes : According to her birth date from Windham Town Records, there is no way that she was conceived after the date of her parent’s marriage (August 1777), so she was conceived out of wedlock.

Son : Reuben Webb
Date of Birth : 12 February 1780
Place of Birth : Windham, Windham County, Connecticut
Married :
Died : 19 November 1866 “age 87”
Notes : birth date from Windham Town Records

Son : Oliver Webb (Olever)
Date of Birth : 30 April 1782
Place of Birth : Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts
Married : Sally Nichols, 6 October 1805, Sudbury, Vermont by Joseph Warner
Died : 11 November 1849, “…aged 67 years, 6 months”, Malone, Franklin County, Vermont
Notes : From Norwich Town Records, “Oliver Webb son of Ebenezer Webb and Abigail Webb was born 30th day of April AD 1782 – Reg Samuel Knight”.  His wife Sally died 19 July 1868, aged 85 years and 4 months.  He served in the War of 1812 in Captain Asaph Perry’s Company of New York Militia, 27 September 1813 until 23 October 1813.  His wife applied for a Bounty Land Warrant, cert#21697, 160 acres, Act of 1855.

Daughter : Abigail Webb
Date of Birth : 18 July 1784
Place of Birth : Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts
Married :
Died : 12 June 1786, Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts

Daughter : Abigail Webb 2nd
Date of Birth : 21 August 1786
Place of Birth : Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts
Married : …Skeels (?)
Died : 1 September 1868 “aged 82 years”
Notes : From Norwich Town Records, “Abigail Webb Jnr daughter of Ebenz Webb and Abigail Webb was born 21 day of August AD 1786 – Reg Samuel Knight”.  Her birth is in the bible records of Jewett J. Webb but not in the NEGHR transcript.

Son : Samuel Webb
Date of Birth : 9 May 1789
Place of Birth : Norwich, Hampshire County, Massachusetts
Married : Polly Crawford, 3 October 1811
Died : 20 September 1858, Bellmont, Franklin County, New York (interred same place)
Notes : From Norwich Town Records, “Samuel Webb son of Ebzr Webb and Abigail Webb was born 9 day of May AD 1789 – Reg Samuel Knight, Tw Clk”  Polly Crawford was born 1 February 1792, died 4 October 1858; her father Eleazer Crawford owned a farmstead in Black River Township, Lorain County, Ohio when he died in 1844 leaving a widow Polly Crawford.

Daughter : Lovicy Webb
Date of Birth : 10 October 1791
Place of Birth : Benson, Rutland County, Vermont
Married : Charles Young
Died : 19 August 1843 “aged 52” or 19 September 1846 at Franklin County, New York
Notes :

Son : James J. Webb
Date of Birth : 22 November 1793
Place of Birth : Benson, Rutland County, Vermont
Married : Phidelia
Died : 21 August 1868 or 1867 “aged 74”
Notes : From family bible of Samuel Webb, “Phidelia Webb wife of James J. Webb died March 24 1852 aged 56 years 6 months 19 days.”

Daughter : Nancy Webb
Date of Birth : 28 May 1797
Place of Birth : Benson, Rutland County, Vermont
Married : Alvin Wilder
Died : 4 August 1879
Notes :

Son : Thomas J. Webb
Date of Birth : 20 April 1801
Place of Birth : Benson, Rutland County, Vermont
Married1 : Orrissa Bessett, b. circa 1800
Married2 : Harriet Wood, b. circa 1816
Died : 7 November 1882
Notes : children – Luke S., Jane Crandall

Son : Wyllys Rude Webb (Willis)
Date of Birth : 17 January 1804
Place of Birth : Benson, Rutland County, Vermont
Married : Rebecca (?)
Died : 19 June 1867 “aged 63 years 6 months” at Norfolk, St. Lawrence County, New York
Notes :

Comments, sources, various additional :

Vinton, John Adams.  The Giles Memorial – Genealogical Memoirs of the Families Bearing the Names Giles, Gould, Holmes, Jennison, Leonard, Lindall, Curwen, Marshall, Ribinson, Sampson, and Webb; also Genealogical Sketches of the Pool, Very, Carr and other Families with a history of Pemaquid, ancient and modern; some account of early settlements in Maine; and some details of Indian warfare.  Printed for the author, by Henry W. Dutton & Son, Washington Street, Boston. 1864. pp 496 – 532.
Harvey Hayes Webb family bible transcript, typed transcript, drafted in the 1950's; courtesy Hazel Skelly Webb
Webb, Loren. Diary of Captain Loren Webb, 1861 - 1863, Firelands Historical Society, 1995. Transcribed by Matthew L. Burr. 
Written communication with Vinton Phillips and David L. Hester, Huron County, Ohio, January 2001- ongoing. 
Pension File of (brothers) Christopher Webb and Ebenezer Webb (abstracts) : M804 Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Files 1800 – 1900 Webb, Abner – Webb, Isacc.  Roll2514.  National Archives and Records Administration. Washington, DC. Viewed 14 July 2001. (both pension files are on the same roll)

Massachusetts Vital Records : Huntington; Vital Records : 1764-1805, Town Records 1790-1795 (microfilm)

A Family Record of Ebenezer Webb was found in a copies of the family bible’s of (his son) Samuel Webb & (his son) Oliver Webb in facsimile images of the Bible Record of Jewett J. Webb which were viewed by the author and compared against… (McAusland, Gloria Natalie of Providence, Rhode Island.  Webb Bible Records. …from the New England Historical and Genealogical Register, (April) 1942, Volume XCVI (96).  NEHGR, Boston.  1942.  pp. 203-205.) …and they are nearly identical in content.
M1005.  Department of the Treasury Records of Bureau of Public Debt.  Records of Connecticut Continental Loan Office 1777-1779.  Rg53 (two reels)

Copyright Jonathan Webb Deiss
http://www.webbdeiss.com/
Son : Ebenezer Webb, Jr.
Date of Birth : 28 May 1757 (Windham Vitals v1, p210)
Place of Birth : Windham, Connecticut
Married : Abigail Rood (Rude), 28 August 1777, Windham County, Connecticut (Windham Vitals v2, p246)
Died :
Notes : He was a soldier and a Patriot of the Revolutionary War.  They had two children in Windham (Sarah b.1778, Reuben b.1780) and more children in Norwich, Massachusetts.
google english history 1757
1757 in History1757 in history - brainyhistory. ... October 16, Austrian troops occupy Berlin. November 5, Battle at Rossbach (7 year war/French and Indian War) ...
www.brainyhistory.com/years/1757.html - Cached - Similar?Today in History for Year 1757Results 1 - 21 of 21 ... Today in history for year 1757. Browse historical events, famous ... Apr 6th - English king George II fires minister William Pitt Sr ...
www.historyorb.com › Dates by Year - Cached - Similar
Fort William Henry “Massacre” - US HistoryThe role of Fort William Henry “Massacre” in the history of the United States of America. ... 1757 was another bad year for the British cause in North America. ... and the ensuing "massacre" of the surrendered English on August 8, 1757 ...
www.u-s-history.com/pages/h1175.html - Cached - Similar
Louis XV of France Survives Assassination Attempt (1757) - This ...3 posts - 3 authors - Last post: Jan 5
In 1757, the unpopular king was stabbed in the side by Robert Damiens. ... so you end up as a four-year old child with the future peace of ...
forum.thefreedictionary.com › ... › This Day in History - Cached
Get more discussion results
Battle of Plassey - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaIn April 1756, Alivardi Khan died and was succeeded by his nineteen year old ... Clive and Watson then moved against Calcutta on 2 January 1757 and the ..... History of England from the Peace of Utrecht to the Peace of Versailles ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Plassey - Cached - Similar
David Hume - Britain Unlimited: British History OnlineThis was the year that one of his most important works "Philosophical Essays Concerning Human ... 1754: "History of England". 1757: "Four Dissertations". ...
www.britainunlimited.com/Biogs/Hume.htm - Cached
Answers.com - Who was prime minister of england in 1757English History question: Who was prime minister of england in 1757? William Cavendish, The Duke of Devonshire was prime minister of the United Kingdom from ...
wiki.answers.com › ... › History › European History › English History - Cached
BBC - History - Historic Figures: William Blake (1757 - 1827)bbc.co.ukAfter his seven-year term was complete, Blake studied at the Royal Academy, ... In 1784, he set up a print shop, but within a few years the business ...
www.bbc.co.uk/history/.../blake_william.shtml - Cached - Similar - Add to iGoogle
Unifying Themes in the History of British India, 1757-1857: An ...by WA Green - 1985 - Cited by 4 - Related articles
Following the Battle of Plassey, 1757, which gave the East India Com- ..... ing scholars of British Indian history. Eric Stokes' The English Utilitarians ...
www.jstor.org/stable/4049335 - Similar
Item of the Day: Hume's History of England (1757) | Eighteenth ...Sep 14, 2007 ... Item of the Day: Hume's History of England (1757) ... this year is remarkable for being the epoch of the well-known epithets of WHIG and ...
18thcenturyreadingroom.wordpress.com/.../item-of-the-day-humes-history- of-england-1757/ - Cached - Similar
Timeline results for This year in english history 17571757 Eight sheets of it were printed by Dodsley in 4to, in 1757, which with the author's corrections are now in the British Museum. A few respected ...
books.google.com
1757 The French took Os- we'-go and sixteen hundred English troops in 1757, and the next year the English took the fortress of Lou'-is-burg and nearly six ...
books.google.com
More timeline results »
Books for This year in english history 1757
The History of England - Tobias George Smollett, David Hume - 1827 - 488 pages
The Cambridge Economic History of India: C ... - Dharma Kumar, Tapan Raychaudhuri, Meghnad Desai, ... - 1983 - 1096 pages
books.google.com
Google Ebenzer Webb 1757
Ebenezer WEBB (1757 - 1846) - GenealogyJan 26, 2010 ... Genealogy for Ebenezer WEBB (1757 - 1846) on Geni, a free resource with over 100 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.
www.geni.com/people/Ebenezer-WEBB/6000000002209240381
My Family Tree:Information about Ebenezer WebbObadiah Johnsons; enlisted May 19, 1775 and of Ebenezer Webb, Jr. born May 29, 1757, whose service was about the same as his father.” ...
familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/d/a/h/.../UHP-0191.html - Cached
SharedTree: Ebenezer Webb Jr. (1757)Feb 10, 2011 ... Birth: 28 May 1757. Windham, CT. Source image: ... Father: Ebenezer Webb Sr. ( 1718 - 1803) Mother: Ruth Waldo Crane (1718 - 1796) ...
www.sharedtree.com/person/1564531 - Cached
Ebenezer WEBB b. 29 MAY 1757 Windham, Windham, CT d. 14 AUG 1846 ...Ebenezer WEBB b. 29 MAY 1757 Windham, Windham, CT d. 14 AUG 1846 Malone, Franklin, NY.
www.olddeadrelatives.com/getperson.php?personID=I18911... - Cached
Possible and Plausible Patriots - Webb-Deiss ResearchObadiah Johnson's; enlisted May 19, 1775 and of Ebenezer Webb, Jr. born May 29, 1757, whose service was about the same as his father.” ...
www.webbdeiss.org/webb/revolution.html - Cached - Similar
Genealogy - pafg694 - Generated by Personal Ancestral FileEbenezer Webb [Parents] was born on 29 May 1757 in Windham, Windham, Cn. He died on 14 Aug 1846 in Malone, Franklin, Ny. He married Abigail Rude on 28 Aug ...
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~elessar5/pafg694.htm - Cached