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 ...
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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
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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
Where Ancestry meets Heritage... Have My Genealogy Services will Travel by [phone or email, train or arrangement] Free initial consultation... Reasonable retainer...and rates... per diem projects. Picture is of Lake McDonald West Glacier National Park Montana... and Yes this is Real! happy scrolling... Email me at seedsgenealogy@live.com
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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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