Daughter : Rebecca
Date of Birth : 25 September 1687
Place of Birth : Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Married :
Died : March 1688
Notes : from Braintree Town Records, “Rebeckar Webb, daughter of Samuel Webb by Mary Webbe his wife was buried 25 March 1687/8.”
Samuel Webb
Full name : Samuel Webb
Alternate spellings, aliases : Mister Samuel Webb, (gentleman’s title); Samuel Webb, Sr.
Parents :
Father : Christopher Webb, Sr.
Mother : Hannah Scott
note :
Date of Birth : 28 July or 6 August 1660
Place of Birth : Billerica or Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Notes : His birth is taken from Billerica Town records, “Web, Samuell, s. Cristopher and Hanna, July 28, 1660” and also from Braintree Town Records, “Samuel Webb, son of Christopher & Hanna born 6. 6. 1660”
Spouse :
Name : Mary Adams
Date of Marriage : 16 December 1686
Place of Marriage : either in Braintree or in Chelmsford, Massachusetts Colony
Died : 21 December 1744
Notes : from Braintree Town Records, “Samuel Webb & Marah Adams were Maried by Mr. Clarke December 16th. 1686.” His wife was the daughter of Captain Samuel Adams and his wife Rebecca Graves, who also had two daughters named Rebecca and Susannah; Rebecca married John Waldo and Susannah married John’s brother Daniel Waldo. They moved to the vicinity of Windham Centre, Connecticut and it is this family connection that drew Samuel and his wife from Braintree to Windham.
Date of Death : 20 February 1738-39
Place of Death : Windham, Windham County, Connecticut
Burial Information : Buried on old Windham Cemetery, his gravestone was still standing as of 24 November 2001; the inscription reads : “In memory Mr Samuel Webb the late and well beloved consort to Mrs Mary Webb departed this life Feb 20th AD 17?? In the 79th year of his age.”
[Click here for an image of his gravestone]
Probate : His will was proved 6 March 1738/9, having been drafted 7 January 1730/1; and gives to his wife Mary, “all my moveable estate both within doars and without doars to be wholly at hur dispose, and that end of my dwelling hows next to ye town Street, to be hurs deuring hur Natural life.” His inventory was valued at ?172 9s 3d.
Military Service : unknown, may have been in local militia
Occupation(s) : On 14 March 1709, he was formally admitted an inhabitant of the town of Windham, Connecticut and the same year also chosen to be town Lister or Assessor and also on the School Committee. In 1710 he was appointed a distributor for the estate of the late Robert Hibbard, Sr. In 1713 he was appointed ‘Innkeeper’. In the summer of 1714 he acted as Attorney on behalf of Elizabeth Smith to distribute the estate of her late husband, Elisha Smith. Many noted him as a Gentleman, apparently a ‘man of substance’.
Religion : Member of the First Church of Windham prior to 1726, listed as a Communicant of ‘Windham First Church’ in 1726, Reverend Thomas Clap (he became pastor 3 August 1726 when the record begins).
Property : What land, home and goods may have been owned while residing in Braintree, no evidence has yet surfaced. His property in Windham can best be outlined by paraphrasing J. A. Vinton : He moved with his wife and children to Windham Centre, Windham County, Connecticut in 1707. On 29 January 1706-7, Samuel Webb of Braintree purchased of Thomas Huntington of Windham, for ?233, the fifth ‘home-lot’ at Windham Centre, with the one-thousand acre right belonging to it (…in the end the land only totaled about 300-400 acres). There was, at the time, a house on his home-lot, and an apple orchard on his farm. The house was situated on the west side of the ‘town street’. It was the second lot north from that of Cates, the first settler, and the second lot south from the centre lot in the village; the lots being twenty yards wide on the street.
This property and any others acquired since were distributed prior to his death to his sons and son-in-law. He also transacted business back in his home-town of Braintree, prior to and after leaving for Windham : “On consideration of the petition of Mary Pennyman of Braintree, plaintiff, v. Samuel Webb of Windham, defendant, praying a judgment of the superior court holden at Hartford, March 12th, 1722/3, in an action of covenant, wherein the said Webb demurred to a certain part of the declaration, and said it was insufficient to maintain the action, and the petitioner, the plaintiff, said it was sufficient and prayed judgment : on which the court were of opinion it was insufficient, and give costs for the defendant : It appeared that in the said part of [396] the declaration an action || of covenant was sufficiently declared, viz. that the defendant had covenanted that he had at such a time lawful power and good right, to sell a certain parcel of land, which the plaintiff says he had not, to the damage of the said plaintiff a certain sum, and thereof brings her suit; which therefore this Assembly is of opinion is a sufficient declaration of such an action, and the aforesaid judgment is erroneous; and the said judgment is hereby reversed and the petitioner is allowed one more tryal of her said action at the superior court to be held at Hartford in March next; and the whole of the cost of the process to follow the final tryal.”
(Public Records of Connecticut, October 1723 [page 415])
Family :
Daughter : Rebecca
Date of Birth : 25 September 1687
Place of Birth : Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Married :
Died : March 1688
Notes : from Braintree Town Records, “Rebeckar Webb, daughter of Samuel Webb by Mary Webbe his wife was buried 25 March 1687/8.”
Son : Samuel, Jr.
Date of Birth : 14 May 1690
Place of Birth : Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Married1 : Hannah Ripley, 8 October 1711
Married2 : Elizabeth Fisk, 14 May 1752
Died : 6 March 1779, Rockingham, Vermont
Notes : from Braintree Town records, “Samuel Webb, son of Samuel Webb and Mara his wife was borne May 14, 1690.”
Daughter : Mary
Date of Birth : 25 November 1694
Place of Birth : Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Married : Amos Dodge
Died :
Notes :
Son : Nathaniel
Date of Birth : 10 February 1696
Place of Birth : Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Married : Elizabeth Fitch, 24 April 1718, Windham, Connecticut
Died : 19 September 1750, Windham, Connecticut
Notes : His youngest son – Captain Nathaniel Webb, commanded a company in the Revolution. Admitted to the First Church of Windham, by Rev. Thomas Clap, on 8 May 1727.
Son : Zebulon
Date of Birth : c. 1698
Place of Birth : Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Married : Judith Howard, 19 December 1722, Windham, Connecticut
Died : Canterbury, Connecticut
Notes : Received a farm in 1720 on Little River in East Windham, now called Scotland, Connecticut. He was possibly a soldier in the French & Indian War. Along with his wife he is listed as a Communicant of ‘Windham First Church’ in 1726.
Comments, sources, various additional :
Bates, Samuel A. (Editor; Town Clerk of Braintree). Records of the Town of Braintree Massachusetts, 1640 to 1873. Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony 17 June 1886. Facsimile Reprint by Heritage Books. Bowie, Maryland, 1991. ISBN1556133979
Vinton, John Adams. The Giles Memorial – Genealogical Memoirs of the Families Bearing the Names Giles, Gould, Holmes, Jennison, Leonard, Lindall, Curwen, Marshall, Robinson, 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, 556
Savage, James. A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, showing three generations of those who came before May, 1692 on the basis of Farmer’s Register. Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Company, originally published Boston, 1860-1862. Reprinted with "Genealogical Notes and Errata," excerpted from The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. XXVII, No. 2, April, 1873, pp. 135-139; and a Genealogical Cross Index of the Four Volumes of the Genealogical Dictionary of James Savage, by O. P. Dexter, 1884. Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. Baltimore, 1965,1969,1977,1981,1986, 1990. Electronic version has been adapted under the direction of Robert Kraft (assisted by Benjamin Dunning) from materials supplied by Automated Archives, 1160 South State, Suite 250, Orem UT 84058 (http://genweb.net/~books/savage/savage.htm)
Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut, 1636-1776, Volume 6. October 1723 [page 415]; available online http://www.colonialct.uconn.edu/
Records of the Congregational Church in Windham, Conn. 1700-1851. Connecticut Historical Society. Hartford, 1943.
Lincoln, Waldo. Genealogy of the Waldo Family. A record of the descendants of Cornelius Waldo of Ipswich, Massachusetts from 1647 to 1900. Volume 1. Press of Charles Hamilton. Worchester, Massachusetts, 1902.
Copyright Jonathan Webb Deiss
http://www.webbdeiss.com/
Samuel Webb
Full name : Samuel Webb
Alternate spellings, aliases : Mister Samuel Webb, (gentleman’s title); Samuel Webb, Sr.
Parents :
Father : Christopher Webb, Sr.
Mother : Hannah Scott
note :
Date of Birth : 28 July or 6 August 1660
Place of Birth : Billerica or Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Notes : His birth is taken from Billerica Town records, “Web, Samuell, s. Cristopher and Hanna, July 28, 1660” and also from Braintree Town Records, “Samuel Webb, son of Christopher & Hanna born 6. 6. 1660”
Spouse :
Name : Mary Adams
Date of Marriage : 16 December 1686
Place of Marriage : either in Braintree or in Chelmsford, Massachusetts Colony
Died : 21 December 1744
Notes : from Braintree Town Records, “Samuel Webb & Marah Adams were Maried by Mr. Clarke December 16th. 1686.” His wife was the daughter of Captain Samuel Adams and his wife Rebecca Graves, who also had two daughters named Rebecca and Susannah; Rebecca married John Waldo and Susannah married John’s brother Daniel Waldo. They moved to the vicinity of Windham Centre, Connecticut and it is this family connection that drew Samuel and his wife from Braintree to Windham.
Date of Death : 20 February 1738-39
Place of Death : Windham, Windham County, Connecticut
Burial Information : Buried on old Windham Cemetery, his gravestone was still standing as of 24 November 2001; the inscription reads : “In memory Mr Samuel Webb the late and well beloved consort to Mrs Mary Webb departed this life Feb 20th AD 17?? In the 79th year of his age.”
[Click here for an image of his gravestone]
Probate : His will was proved 6 March 1738/9, having been drafted 7 January 1730/1; and gives to his wife Mary, “all my moveable estate both within doars and without doars to be wholly at hur dispose, and that end of my dwelling hows next to ye town Street, to be hurs deuring hur Natural life.” His inventory was valued at ?172 9s 3d.
Military Service : unknown, may have been in local militia
Occupation(s) : On 14 March 1709, he was formally admitted an inhabitant of the town of Windham, Connecticut and the same year also chosen to be town Lister or Assessor and also on the School Committee. In 1710 he was appointed a distributor for the estate of the late Robert Hibbard, Sr. In 1713 he was appointed ‘Innkeeper’. In the summer of 1714 he acted as Attorney on behalf of Elizabeth Smith to distribute the estate of her late husband, Elisha Smith. Many noted him as a Gentleman, apparently a ‘man of substance’.
Religion : Member of the First Church of Windham prior to 1726, listed as a Communicant of ‘Windham First Church’ in 1726, Reverend Thomas Clap (he became pastor 3 August 1726 when the record begins).
Property : What land, home and goods may have been owned while residing in Braintree, no evidence has yet surfaced. His property in Windham can best be outlined by paraphrasing J. A. Vinton : He moved with his wife and children to Windham Centre, Windham County, Connecticut in 1707. On 29 January 1706-7, Samuel Webb of Braintree purchased of Thomas Huntington of Windham, for ?233, the fifth ‘home-lot’ at Windham Centre, with the one-thousand acre right belonging to it (…in the end the land only totaled about 300-400 acres). There was, at the time, a house on his home-lot, and an apple orchard on his farm. The house was situated on the west side of the ‘town street’. It was the second lot north from that of Cates, the first settler, and the second lot south from the centre lot in the village; the lots being twenty yards wide on the street.
This property and any others acquired since were distributed prior to his death to his sons and son-in-law. He also transacted business back in his home-town of Braintree, prior to and after leaving for Windham : “On consideration of the petition of Mary Pennyman of Braintree, plaintiff, v. Samuel Webb of Windham, defendant, praying a judgment of the superior court holden at Hartford, March 12th, 1722/3, in an action of covenant, wherein the said Webb demurred to a certain part of the declaration, and said it was insufficient to maintain the action, and the petitioner, the plaintiff, said it was sufficient and prayed judgment : on which the court were of opinion it was insufficient, and give costs for the defendant : It appeared that in the said part of [396] the declaration an action || of covenant was sufficiently declared, viz. that the defendant had covenanted that he had at such a time lawful power and good right, to sell a certain parcel of land, which the plaintiff says he had not, to the damage of the said plaintiff a certain sum, and thereof brings her suit; which therefore this Assembly is of opinion is a sufficient declaration of such an action, and the aforesaid judgment is erroneous; and the said judgment is hereby reversed and the petitioner is allowed one more tryal of her said action at the superior court to be held at Hartford in March next; and the whole of the cost of the process to follow the final tryal.”
(Public Records of Connecticut, October 1723 [page 415])
Family :
Daughter : Rebecca
Date of Birth : 25 September 1687
Place of Birth : Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Married :
Died : March 1688
Notes : from Braintree Town Records, “Rebeckar Webb, daughter of Samuel Webb by Mary Webbe his wife was buried 25 March 1687/8.”
Son : Samuel, Jr.
Date of Birth : 14 May 1690
Place of Birth : Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Married1 : Hannah Ripley, 8 October 1711
Married2 : Elizabeth Fisk, 14 May 1752
Died : 6 March 1779, Rockingham, Vermont
Notes : from Braintree Town records, “Samuel Webb, son of Samuel Webb and Mara his wife was borne May 14, 1690.”
Daughter : Mary
Date of Birth : 25 November 1694
Place of Birth : Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Married : Amos Dodge
Died :
Notes :
Son : Nathaniel
Date of Birth : 10 February 1696
Place of Birth : Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Married : Elizabeth Fitch, 24 April 1718, Windham, Connecticut
Died : 19 September 1750, Windham, Connecticut
Notes : His youngest son – Captain Nathaniel Webb, commanded a company in the Revolution. Admitted to the First Church of Windham, by Rev. Thomas Clap, on 8 May 1727.
Son : Zebulon
Date of Birth : c. 1698
Place of Birth : Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony
Married : Judith Howard, 19 December 1722, Windham, Connecticut
Died : Canterbury, Connecticut
Notes : Received a farm in 1720 on Little River in East Windham, now called Scotland, Connecticut. He was possibly a soldier in the French & Indian War. Along with his wife he is listed as a Communicant of ‘Windham First Church’ in 1726.
Comments, sources, various additional :
Bates, Samuel A. (Editor; Town Clerk of Braintree). Records of the Town of Braintree Massachusetts, 1640 to 1873. Braintree, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Colony 17 June 1886. Facsimile Reprint by Heritage Books. Bowie, Maryland, 1991. ISBN1556133979
Vinton, John Adams. The Giles Memorial – Genealogical Memoirs of the Families Bearing the Names Giles, Gould, Holmes, Jennison, Leonard, Lindall, Curwen, Marshall, Robinson, 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, 556
Savage, James. A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, showing three generations of those who came before May, 1692 on the basis of Farmer’s Register. Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Company, originally published Boston, 1860-1862. Reprinted with "Genealogical Notes and Errata," excerpted from The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. XXVII, No. 2, April, 1873, pp. 135-139; and a Genealogical Cross Index of the Four Volumes of the Genealogical Dictionary of James Savage, by O. P. Dexter, 1884. Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. Baltimore, 1965,1969,1977,1981,1986, 1990. Electronic version has been adapted under the direction of Robert Kraft (assisted by Benjamin Dunning) from materials supplied by Automated Archives, 1160 South State, Suite 250, Orem UT 84058 (http://genweb.net/~books/savage/savage.htm)
Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut, 1636-1776, Volume 6. October 1723 [page 415]; available online http://www.colonialct.uconn.edu/
Records of the Congregational Church in Windham, Conn. 1700-1851. Connecticut Historical Society. Hartford, 1943.
Lincoln, Waldo. Genealogy of the Waldo Family. A record of the descendants of Cornelius Waldo of Ipswich, Massachusetts from 1647 to 1900. Volume 1. Press of Charles Hamilton. Worchester, Massachusetts, 1902.
Copyright Jonathan Webb Deiss
http://www.webbdeiss.com/
Google search this year in english history 1660
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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
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’.
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