Monday, December 4, 2017

Rachel and the Elusive Baxter Family






I have decided, I think, to write about Rachel Baxter who married Andrew McKenrick  This might prove too difficult and I may change my mind, but here goes...

We really know next to nothing about Rachel Baxter-we do not know who her parents were, where she was from, when she was born nor where; nor do we know when she died nor where....That's it.  End of story-

Actually what I kind of plan to do, is to write about what we do know from the records; then what we think we might know, what has been conjectured and try to discover the truth or fallacies in those conjectures.  I want to try to figure out why  one theory or another might work and might not.

One thing that we do know, because we have the Record of it... is that Rachel married Andrew McKenrick in the Conewago Chapel in Hanover, Conewago Township, Adams County, PA.  They married on 27 May 1817.

"May 21 1817 Andrew McKenrick married together with Rachel Baxter Witnesses John Dillon and Nelly Timmons"


We next see her in the Church Records when they had their 1st child Charles baptized at the same Chapel where they married.  There apparently was a group Ceremony that day as there were several babies baptized.  Andrew and Rachel were Godparents to the child of George Starner and Magdalene Noel.  John Dillon and his wife were Godparents to the McKenrick's son.  (Do you remember my proposed connections between Andrew and the Starners, Noels and Dillons?  If not read my Blogpost "A Mother and Child Reunion"  https://wrightmckenrick.blogspot.com/search?q=mother+and+child )


"(Birthdate) July 12 1818 (Bapt. date) Nov 15 1818   (Child) Rachel (Parents) George Starner and Magdalene Noel Sponsers Andrew and Rachel McKenrick
(Birthdate) May 1 1818 (Bapt. date) Nov 15 1818 (Child) Charles (Parents) Andrew McKenrick and Rachel Baxter  Sponsers  John and Polly Dillon"

Their next child Margaret was also baptized at Conawago-in October 1820.  The surname here is spelled McKarnick and Andrew and Elizabeth Noel were Godparents.



Son John, also Baptized at Conawago...name on this one is McHenry (which is what McKenrick means)  but they got Baxter right this time.  John's Godparents were John Unknown (maybe Walter?) and Anna Noel.




Son, Andrew, who was the 1st McKenrick to come West and settle in Camanche, Clinton Co, Iowa, was Baptized at Conawago in Feb 1829.  The surname now is spelled McHenricks; Godparents were Andrew Noels and Maria Dillon.



So, we have the 1st, 2nd, 5th and 6th children baptized at the Conewago Chapel.  the other 4 we have no Baptism Records for.  Most likely they received this Sacrament at St Ignatius Church in Ortanna.  Most of their records have been lost due to fire.




We do show Rachel listed on some Death records as the Mother of her children.  We have Death certificates for Andrew, Theresa, Mary and Samuel Baxter-each listing Rachel Baxter or just Baxter.


Now we will look into some of the theories about Rachel.  Many of our cousins have Rachel listed as the daughter of Samuel Baxter and Sarah Chenoweth of Maryland.  That her father's name was probably Samuel (because her son was named Samuel Baxter) is a good place to start.  There is no Samuel Baxter living in Adams County listed on the 1800 (supposedly when Rachel was born)  Census for Adams and surrounding Pennsylvanian Counties.  The only Baxters listed for Adams County in 1800, are a Phillip and a David.  Phillip is 26-44 with a female 16-25,  David is a male 16-25 with a female of the same age and a female 10-15.
Could this be our Rachel??  She is a bit older than what we have listed for Rachel-she would have had to be born in 1790 at the latest.  But this family lived in Menallen!!  This is where Andrew and his family lived for a good part of his life. Just based on proximity alone-this last, David would be our most likely candidate to be Rachel's father!

There are several Baxter families living in York County (this is the County that was further divided in 1800, to form Adams County.  We have a George Baxter-single male over 16. a Jonathon with 3 males under 16, one over and 4 females.  There is a Joseph, 1 male over 16 and 2 females.  Then there are 2 Williams, also in York-one with 2 males over 16 and 3 females and the other with 2 males over 16 and 2 females.  Our Baxter family could be any or none of these!!

 There is a Samuel Baxter however, on the 1790 Census.  He does not live in Adams County, but in Washington County, which is in the far Southwest of Pennsylvania.  There are 3 Free White males 16 and older living in this household and 6 free, White females, (no ages given for the females-not even an age range, just Females). This could be the right family, but there is no way to know without more information.
On the 1810, however,  when Rachel would have been about 10 years old, there is still a Samuel living in Washington County.  He is over 45 as is his wife, there are 2 females age 16-25 and 1 male under 10 years of age.  If Rachel were born by 1794-she would be 16.  The usual birth date given for her is 1800.  I do not know if this is documented somewhere that I have not located or if it a rough guesstimate-given Andrew, her husband was born in 1794 and she may have been a bit younger than he.  This could possibly be her family but how did she meet Andrew way over in Adams County?  People were not as mobile back then, most never left their township let alone travel several counties over.  And, if we guess that the family moved to Adams-this would be a west-east migration which would be against the normal migratory patterns.  Most families leaving Washington County would travel east to west and end up somewhere is Ohio or Indiana.  That is not to say that it was never done but it is not the Norm.  Samuel and his wife, both now over 45 are both still living in Fallowfield, Washington County, PA.  There are also a couple of other families of Baxters  living in Washington County so we can now guess that the family did not migrate to Adams.  This means Rachel would have traveled to Adams without her family.  This would have been highly unlikely.                                                   
Samuel Baxter and his wife Sarah Chenoweth of Maryland, did have a daughter named Rachel...I do not believe that she is the same Rachel as our Grandmother. This family is pretty well documented...one of the Daughters of the 3rd Lord Baltimore (from whence the name of the City) married into the Chenoweth family.
Samuel and Sarah with their daughter Rachel and son Samuel and other children moved west sometime before Samuel Jr's wedding in 1823 in Muskigum, Ohio.  Perhaps they left, according to one respected McKenrick Genealogist, as early as 1803.  Rachel would have been about 3 years old.  I cannot find them on a census earlier than 1840.  Both parents Samuel and Sarah had died and so Samuel is the Head of the Household.  he is listed as being age 40-49.  There are 2 females listed at 30-39.  One of these would  be his wife-the other, most likely his sister Rachel.   On the 1850 (Yay!!  Finally women and children have names and ages!) Samuel is again Head of Household-his wife Actus is listed as is his sister Rachel-their ages are a bit screwy but it is they.  She is missing from the 1860 Census but in 1870, her brother Samuel has died-she and Samuel's wife Actus are living with Actus' and Samuel's son, Charles, now in Henderson, Knox Co, IL.

This Rachel died in 1880 of Pneumonia and was buried in Galesburg, Knox County, Illinois.  I believe our Rachel died before 1840 (her last child James was born in 1833 and she does not appear on the 1840 Census.)  I do not believe she left Andrew and her 8 children and resumed her Maiden name(!!!???) and traveled west.

This is the most recent information that I have come across regarding Rachel and the Baxters...this was in the October 6, 1945 Gettysburg Compiler...






This may account for the family rumor that Rachel was connected somehow to the Dillons and Noels.  These families were intermarried  for several generations and we see above in the Baptismal records that many Dillons and Noels and Starners served as godparents to the children of Andrew and Rachel.


Wednesday, September 20, 2017

Isaac Allerton-the Original Yankee Trader

Isaac Allerton's signature on The Mayflower Compact 1620

I have decided to look at each of the Mayflower families that were our ancestors.  All told we had 8 Grandparents who arrived on the Mayflower, in 1620. (If we count Aunts and Uncles  there were a total of 14 relatives of my family, 2 of those being by marriage only)
 The list of Grandparents include Isaac Allerton, his wife Mary Norris, his Daughter Mary Allerton Cushman (her husband arrived on the 2nd ship The Fortune, in 1621), John Howland, his wife Elizabeth Tilley Howland, her parents John and Joan Hurst Rogers Tilley, and George Soule (his wife arrived on the 3nd ship The Anne in 1623).  Isaac's brother, John was also a passenger (our 11th Great Uncle) and Isaac's 2 other children, Bartholomew and Remember would be our 10th Great Uncle and Aunt.  Isaac's sister Sarah (our 11th Great Aunt) was married to passenger Degory Priest; she came on a later ship.  John Tilley also had a brother Edward and his wife aboard ship; they would be our 11th Great Uncle and Aunt.




I have chosen Isaac Allerton and his family to start this discussion.  He is the ancestor that I used to join The Society of Mayflower Descendants.  The reason I chose him is because he was our most direct male Mayflower ancestor.  (At that time one could not join under the women passengers!)  His daughter and her husband Thomas Cushman gave rise to a family line that was direct male ancestors from the Mayflower to the birth of our Great Great Grandmother Josephine Cushman Pattison in 1832.

Isaac was the son of Edward Allerton and Rose Davis or possibly of Bartholomew Allerton and his unknown wife.  (The fact that Isaac's oldest son was named Bartholomew leads me to believe this was probably his Father's name)  There is an early record of an Isaac Allerton, son of Bartholomew,  being taken on as an apprentice to a Blacksmith in 1609.  .    He was possibly born in Ipswich, Suffolk, England in 1586.  Isaac's oldest son Bartholomew who was a Mayflower passenger returned to England and settled in Suffolk, so perhaps his family had lived there previously and he had relatives in that area.

 Isaac left England with a group of English Calvinist Separatists who separated from the Church of England and moved to the Netherlands.  Here in 1611, he appears in the records when he marries Mary Norris in Leiden, South Holland.  According to the Marriage record, Mary was born in "Newbury", most like in Berkshire.  Her birth year is usually given as 1590.
The Allertons had 3 children while in Leiden, Bartholomew, Remember and Mary.  A fourth child who died without a name was buried in that Dutch city.   You can read more about the Pilgrims in Leiden at this website:    http://www.leidenamericanpilgrimmuseum.org/Page31X.htm
 Isaac worked as a tailor, in the textile business, not as a Blacksmith.   However,  interestingly Bartholomew, Isaac's Perhaps Father, was a Tailor.   Many of the English Separatists were involved in the textile Industry,  as weavers, fullers and carders

In 1620, Isaac and Mary and their three children along with many of their friends and relatives in Leiden felt they needed to leave Holland. They were afraid that their children were loosing their English cultural ties and were becoming more Dutch than English.  They also feared that they would begin to drift away from their strict Calvinist faith.  To this end they decided to journey to the New World.
Isaac was in his mid-30's when the Separatists travelled across the Atlantic, landing at what they called Plymouth in  Dec 1620.   He became a widower during the dreadful First Winter of 1620-21, when approximately half of the Mayflower passengers died.  His wife Mary had given birth to a still-born child aboard the Mayflower while it was anchored in Plymouth harbor.  Dwellings were being built ashore for the settlers and for five weeks, they had to continue to live in the cramped ship.  The men made several trip to reconnoiter and to hunt, but the women and children for the ,most part, remained aboard the anchored ship.  Mary died on 24 Feb 1621 and was buried in an unmarked grave on Burial Hill.   Isaac was left with three children ages approximately 8, 5 and 4.

Signing of the Mayflower Compact, aboard the ship, on 11 Nov 1621


Somewhere between 1623 and 1626, Isaac married again; this time to Fear Brewster, the daughter of William Brewster, an Elder and leader in the Colony.  Together they had 2 children, Sarah and Isaac.  Fear had died by 1634, reportedly of a fever.
William Brewster


Isaac served as Assistant to John Carver, the 1st governor of the Colony. He served as such from 1621-1625.  In 1626, he became involved in the financial affairs of the Colony and things begin to get a little murky.


John Carver





Apparently Isaac and other Colonist assumed some of the Colony's debt to the men back in England who had footed the bill of their New World adventure.  Eventually, the Colony's  monies and his became somewhat intertwined...he also was setting up fur trading posts and going into competition with Plymouth Colony whose money he was managing.  Perhaps, Isaac was consumed with making money or maybe he miscalculated his ability to pay the Colonists back the monies he had "borrowed".  His fellow Plymouth settlers,  at least in the beginning, thought he meant well and his heart was good.  However, he tried their patience once too often.  Several of them had to go into personal debt to assume the Colony's debt caused by Isaac's wheeling and dealing.
Add caption
Eventually, in the 1630's,  he was asked to leave the Colony and he moved to the New Haven Colony and also maintained a home in New Amsterdam, a Dutch colony-today Manhattan in New York City.  He was influential in New Amsterdam, serving on the council of Eight Men, elected officials who governed the Dutch Colony.  He owned property that was not far from the late World Trade Center buildings of our time.  It today is known as Peck's Slip and was the site of a ferry that operated before the Brooklyn Bridge was built over the East River.  http://untappedcities.com/2012/11/14/history-of-streets-the-secrets-of-the-slips-on-the-lower-east-side/
Peck Slip, right in Center, future site of the Brooklyn Bridge, once owned by Isaac Allerton  (1850 Map)







Isaac Allerton became a wealthy man because of his dealings...he traded up and down the New England coast and had invested money in a Caribbean sugar plantation.  He truly was the original Yankee Trader!!

Isaac's 2nd wife Fear Brewster had died in 1634.  About 10m years later he married for the 3rd time in New Haven This wife was named Joanna Swinnerton.  She and Isaac had no children together.  She outlived him by many years.

Isaac died in February 1658 and is buried in New Haven, CT.  His wife Joanna and son by his 2nd wife,  Isaac Jr,  were appointed Executors and Beneficiaries of his estate.  His eldest son Bartholomew had returned to England long ago and raised his family there.  His Daughter Remember married Moses Maverick, Founder of the beautiful seaside town of Marblehead, MA.




Isaac's younger daughter by his 1st wife Mary Norris, married Thomas Cushman and became our 9th Great Grandparents.  


Thursday, August 24, 2017

Neglected Families in the McKenrick Line

Susan Elizabeth Bart McKenrick
I tend to neglect these families-I am not sure why.  I think because I am so obsessed with Andrew McKenrick's parentage, I forget that Susan's family are our Grandparents as much as Andrew and Rachael Baxter are.   And, the female line always tends to be neglected a bit.  So, we are going to correct this!  I am going to revisit my Maternal line and explore the "Neglected Families"-the Barts, Bradys and Driscolls.  (Maybe next time, we will try to discover more about Rachael Baxter!!)

Susan Bart (1837-1894) was our Great Great Grandmother, wife of Samuel Baxter McKenrick.  She was also the Daughter of the Anna Brady Bart, (The Widow Bart), 2nd wife of Samuel's father, Andrew McKenrick and her 1st husband, Jeremiah Bart.  This makes Anna and Jeremiah Bart our Great Great Great Grandparents.

On the Left, you see our Great Great Grandparents, I haven't counted them, but there should be 16.  Jeremiah and Anna are the couple directly tied to Susan (her parents).   Jeremiah's and Anna's parents expand out from there and so on.  Each column represents a generation and you add a "Great" for each generation moving Left t Right.  Thomas Brady, hanging out there all alone would be our 6th Great Grandfather.   
(Just an FYI-there are Leaves {hints} on almost every person on the chart.  I am not ignoring them but they are for Public user's Trees.  I usually look at these but do NOT use them as sources as they usually have unproven information)

Susan's father Jeremiah died at about age 41-in 1841.  The 1st Census he appears on by name and actually the 1st record we have of him is 1830.  He is living with a female of his age so I must assume this is Anna Driscoll Brady, his wife.  I cannot find a Marriage Record for this couple.
 Prior to that time (1830),  he must have been living in his father's household-remember, women and children were not listed by name until the 1850 Census.   In 1831, he is quoted in the Gettysburg newspaper The Star, on the occasion of a Fourth of July Festival.  He made a Volunteer Toast.

The article describes a party held by residents of Hanover which is in York County-the next County to the East of Adams.  This is of interest because the family I believe Jeremiah belonged to was from Hanover. 
Front page of The Star Tuesday July 19, 1831


The above article and quote appeared on Page 2 which was labeled THE STAR ANTI-MASONIC AND REPUBLICAN BANNER


W next find Jeremiah mentioned in the Baptismal Records of his children.  Interestingly, the 2 girls,  Adele Susanna and Susan Elizabeth Bart were baptized Catholic in 1833 and 1837.   The only son Jeremiah Jr.  to survive was baptized  in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Hanover.  Apparently Jeremiah was raised Lutheran and Anna Catholic and this was how they reconciled the difference.  Whatever works.  

The above is the entry for our GG Grandmother Susan Bart McKenrick's Baptism at St. Ignatius Catholic Church.  It roughly translates:  2 April 14th May 1837 Baptism was  accomplished for Susan Elizabeth, legitimate daughter of Jeremiah Barrh (sic) and Anna Brady.  Margaret Somebody was Godmother (the 1st date given was her Birth date, the 2nd, the date of the Sacrement)

The Baptism record for Jeremiah Jr.  is much easier to read!

I believe there were 5 children born to this couple, there was a son John but I think he died as an child as I can find no records-these are the 4 that were living when Anna Brady Bart married Andrew McKenrick and who survived to adulthood.  Adel married John Hall and died in her 70's, Susan, of course married Samuel Baxter McKenrick and Jeremiah Jr. married Agnes Young and died in 1911 in the County Poor House.  

Jeremiah died in 1841 so there are really only about 10 years of his life of which we have records. 
We do not know for certain who Jeremiah's parents were but I have a really good candidate.  John Bardt  ?? (1778-1855).  John ?? may have been an immigrant, we do not know-his last name is spelled  in the German  manner and he is buried in St Matthews Evangelical (German) Lutheran Churchyard but I find no record of his Immigration so I assume he was born here.  There are several  Bardts in Hanover where this John ?? lived and where Jeremiah and Anna lived on the 1830 Census.  There also are several other John Bardts (Barth, Bartz) etc.  in Adams and York and Franklin Counties.  I have John on the 1790 Census and then not on another until 1850.  He may have been one of the other Johns that I do find on other Censii, but I have no proof and he and his wife were buried in Hanover, York County...so I can't assume they  moved around.  John ?? was married to a woman named Susannah ??.  The 1st record we have of Susannah ?? is the 1850 Census with her Husband, John ??.  They are 68 years old and have a woman, age 39, Mary Bart living with them.  She is probably a daughter.  Jeremiah and Anna named their oldest son John and both their daughters were named Susan -after his Mother?- Adele Susannah and Susan Elizabeth.  John and Susannah Bardt ?? are buried in the St Mathew Evangelical Lutheran Church in Hanover, York, PA.  

Susan's mother was Anna Driscoll Brady.  She married Jeremiah Bart in 1831 in the Conewago Chapel.  His death was in about 1841 and on 3 Sept  1849, she married Andrew McKenrick also in the Conewago Chapel.  I have a copy of the Marriage Record for Andrew and Anna but cannot find Anna and Jeremiah Bart listed at all.  Not sure what that is about. I have the Marriage records for Conawago for 1831 but they are not listed.   I don't think they would have married in the Lutheran Church and have been able to Baptize the girls Catholic.


Roughly translated: "September 3 Andrew McKenrick and Anna Brady formerly Bart were joined in Matrimony"  I cannot figure out who the Witness were.  The last name Dietz must have been the Priest as the initials S.J. follow.  This is Society of Jesus

Anna was the daughter of Samuel Brady and Marie Driscoll Brady.  She was born in Berwick Township, Adams County, which is just across the County line from Hanover, York County where Jeremiah was from.  The 1st time we see her in the Public Records is on the 1850 Federal Census shortly after her marriage to Andrew.  The original copy is so light it is impossible to read so we look at the Ancestry.com record.  We see Andrew and Anna, then the McKenrick children still living at home followed by the Bart children.  We see Samuel McKenrick age 19 and his future wife Susan Bart  age 14.  This is also the Census with Margaret Sterner (Andrew's Mother Presumptive) living with the family.  

Anna Driscoll Brady Bart McKenrick died on 22 May 1858.  She is buried in St Ignatius Church yard in Ortanna, PA-no one knows where her husband Andrew is buried.  


Anna's parents were Samuel Brady and Marie Driscoll Brady.  Samuel was born in the city of York in York County, Pennsylvania.  (Did you  know that York was the 1st Capitol City of The United States of America??  I didn't either!  Nice little article here    http://www.yorkcity.org/about/history/)

Samuel and Marie Driscoll (Driskle, Driskell etc) were married 24 Oct 1802 also at the Chapel at the Sacred Heart Basilica in Conawago.  
24 October 1802 Samuel Brady  married Marie Driskle witnesses Charles Driskle, Marie Brady



Samuel appears on the 1810, 1820, 1830 and 1840 Censii-he died in 1847.  He was a land owner-owning 95 Acres in York County in 1798. 
Samuel Brady is buried in the St Ignatius Churchyard


  Samuel's  father was Thomas Brady who appears on the 1800, 1820 and 1830 Censii for Adams County.  We do not know the name of his wife.  The records get pretty murky about here-Thomas' father may have also been named Thomas ?? and it appears he was an Immigrant from Ireland-as they were Catholic, probably not from the Protestant North.  There are many records for Thomas Brady from Pennsylvania-one of them served in the American Revolution, one in the War of 1812.  I cannot tell which is which, if either,  as there are no identifiers other than Name and Pennsylvania.  These Thomas Bradys could be one of these 2 men or neither of them; there is no real way of knowing.  I do have a listing of the soldiers of the 10th Pennsylvania regiment which contains both a Thomas Brady Sr and Jr.  (Jr would have been about 25 and Sr. about 45 so this is possible)  It does not say what Counties the men were recruited out of.  None of the familiar Adams County names are on the list.  

It does appear that one of these Thomas Bradys is buried in the Conewago Cemetery.  
A page from the Register of the Sacred Heart Basilica Graveyard in Conewago, PA; Thomas Brady Lot #39. (No dates are given)

There are Immigration Record for  Thomas Bradys, who arrived in 1746,  both on the ship Delaware.   One of these may be our Thomas Brady-or not.  One was assigned an Apprenticeship in Chester County, the other on Philadelphia.  I lean towards the 1st one, but that may just be because he was a Weaver!   


















Anna Driscoll Brady's Mother was Marie Driscoll (Driskell, Driscall, Driskle, etc).  She was the daughter of James Driscoll and possibly Jane Pierson  ??. A James and Jane were married in Cumberland County on 29 Oct 1768 in a Reformed German-Swiss Church.  (Protestant and Calvinist).  This obviously is not a Catholic family, and we have no way to know for sure that this James is the James found later in York, then Adams County.  The age is right, but James Driscoll is a fairly common name.  (Things get much easier after 1850 when wives and children are listed on the Census by name!!) 



I thought I would include a County Map of Pennsylvania.  County lines may be a bit different now, but this gives you an idea of where these people lived.  These counties are all in South Eastern and central PA.  







Sometime before 1800, James and Jane ?? moved to Adams County and here Marie was born

 and married Samuel Brady.  

I hope you all now know more about Susan Bart's side of the family...I certainly do!! 
 That is one great thing about doing the Blog...it gets me to research and organize information
 on families I haven't visited for a while!  Next time, we will return to Dad's side.
  I am thinking of doing an in-depth look into each of our Mayflower ancestors and their families.





















Thursday, July 6, 2017

Rowley, Massachusetts; Home of a Few of our Puritan Ancestors, The Boyntons, The Jewetts, The Spoffords, The Willards and Elijah Grout

Town Hall, Rowley Massachusetts
Something a little bit different today,,,I am going to start by featuring a place rather than  person or an ancestor.  The locations our ancestors lived in played an important role in their lives and it is important to know where they lived if you are trying to do your own Genealogical research. In the US, Vital Records are kept at the County level, although this can vary from State to State.  In Illinois, for example-there are some records in the County Court House files but they are also stored regionally and can be found online.
There are many locations that have played an important role in our family's History.

 Right here in Illinois, in Rock Island-I am a 4th generation Born and Bred Rock Islander-my Daughter was #5-all on the maternal line-My Great Grandmother Lena Gross Schieberl, her Daughter Mildred Schieberl McKenrick, My Mother, Barbara McKenrick Wright, me, my Daughter.  On Dad's side-three Generations, Dad, Robert Wayne Wright, me and my Daughter (My son was born in the next town over!)


Mercer County is also important to our family as our Wrights and Pattisons lived there for several generations.  James Monroe Wright settled there with a toddler Traverse Rock Wright, the father of our grandfather-who true to the old song...after WWI moved from rural farm country to the bustling town of Rock Island after he'd seen "Paree"





Camanche, Iowa was where the McKenrick brothers from Adams County, PA,  settled and raised their families.  When I was young, there were a lot of McKenricks in Camanche.  Today, there are still a few and many with allied names like Mensinger and Anson.

Adams County, of course is important as the home of the McKenricks-it was from here that this family spread throughout the US and indeed, the world.  Wherever you go, if you meet a McKenrick without a "d"...it is a good bet that they are my Cousin!

Plymouth Massachusetts is vital to our family History as it was the place our Pilgrim Ancestors first settled on New World soil.  From Plymouth, they moved on to other small communities in the Bay Colony and from there into Vermont, Maine and New Hampshire.  After several generations, our Cushmans moved to the Georgia, Alabama, Panhandle of Florida area.

European places include Bohemia, home of the Schieberls for probably hundreds of years.  Alsace was where the Gross family traveled from, to land in LeClaire, IA, and our branch then came to Rock Island.  Many English villages and towns-mostly in the West and North of England were an original home of many of our Ancestors.  Scotland of the McKenricks and Duncans (and perhaps Northern Ireland at one time) and the McCorkles: the Hortons and Powells were undoubtedly from Wales originally There were Walloons, the Soules and the Rue family and French Huguenots, the Delano and Bessonette families from the Low Countries and France and Hanoverians, the Dickmeiers from Niedersaxon in Germany.

One small town in Massachusetts played a very large part in our Family's history and I'm willing to bet none of us have even heard of it.  Rowley, Essex County, Massachusetts, population about 6,000.  I lived out there for a year, in Portsmouth, NH just 30 miles away and never heard of it.  Some of the bigger towns, Lawrence, Haverhill, Salem, Essex County, Masachusetts-those I heard of when I was out there, but never Rowley.  I even visited Salem.

Rowley was settled by a group of Puritans who arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in Spring of 1638; they sailed from Hull, England in the ship John of London.  There were about 20 families who accompanied Reverend Ezekiel Rogers.  They also shared their limited quarters aboard ship with the first Printing Press to land in the New World.  (It was later sold to Harvard University est. 1636).  This group joined a Church in Boston and wintered over there.  In the Spring of 1639, they decided to move on to form their own community and Church.

Before I go much further, I feel the need to make the distinction between our Puritan and our Pilgrim Ancestors.  Both Religious factions were predominately from England, they were Calvinists (more closely in tune with Presbyterianism, the Church of Scotland, than they were with Anglicanism, the Church of England)-they both wanted to reform the Anglican Church founded by Henry VIII.  Henry broke with the Roman Catholic Church headed by the Pope in the 1530's because he wanted a divorce from his first wife Catherine so that he could marry his second wife, Anne Boleyn.  He established the English Church with himself as its Head thus assuring he could have anything he desired.  This new Church was very similar in Theology and Ritual to Catholicism.

The 2 major Reformists groups of the time were the Separatists-those who wished to separate from the Anglican Church-the Religious Pilgrims of the Mayflower belonged to this Sect.  The other-the Puritans-wished to reform and purify the Church of its popery...in other words, its similarity to Catholicism.  While both of these groups came to the Colonies seeking religious freedom-neither of them were tolerant of religious ideology different from their own.  We have already seen a little of the difficulties of the Quakers when trying to live among the Puritans.  Eventually most of the Reformists became either Presbyterian or Congregationalists.  This is a very complex subject which I have tried to simplify in a few sentences.  To learn more:  http://www.plymouth-church.net/congregationalway.html

So, back to Rowley: to Ezekiel Rogers and his band of Puritan settlers.  3 of our Grandfathers,  John Boynton, Joseph Jewett and John Spofford were aboard the John.  Another, Richard Swan left Boston and joined the group traveling to  Rowley.  Elinor ( or Ellen) Pell also in Boston, married John Boynton and traveled with her new husband to found a Settlement and Church at Rowley.  Rowley was named for the town in England, in Yorkshire where Ezekiel Rogers had been Pastor and was dismissed for refusing to comply in reading a certain text that he disagreed with.

The line of descent for these 4 families is:
 William  Boynton (born 1590-died Unknown )our 10th Great Grandfather (1) who remained in England; his son The Immigrant John Boynton, and Rowley Founder(1614-1670) (2) married Elinor Pell, our 9th Great Grandparents; their son Captain Joseph Boynton (1644-1700) (3) our 8th Great Grandfather, married Sarah Swan, daughter of Richard Swan, The Immigrant and Rowley Founder (1607-1678);  their son Hilkiah Boynton  (1687-1745)  (4) our 7th Great Grandfather married Priscilla Jewett (4) Granddaughter of Joseph Jewett The Immigrant  (2) and Rowley Founder; their Daughter, our 6th Great Grandmother Joanna Boynton (1712-1779) (5) our 6th Great Grandmother married John Grout (1704-1770) (5) (whose family arrived in 1640 to Massachusetts Bay Colony, also probably Puritans but not from Rowley): their son Elijah Grout,  (1702-1837) (6), our 5th Great Grandfather  married Mary Willard (6) (whose family also arrived in the early 1630's) and he was a Commisary in the American Revolution and their daughter was Katy Grout (7) who married Clark Cushman (7) descendant of eight  Mayflower Passengers;  their Daughter Josephine Cushman (8) married Henry Pattison (whose mother's family the Gardners descended from George and Herodias Long  and the Whaleys descended from Theophilus-both included in previous Posts)  (8) , their daughter Kate Pattison  (9) married T.R.Wright  (9), their son was Robert Burns Wright (10), their son Robert Wayne Wright (11)  and his daughter ME  (12)!!  YAY!

The Boyton line is our oldest documented line: The name is first mentioned in 1067.  Many of the Boyntons were Knights (Sir Thomas, Sir Ingram etc).  This accounts for the fact that they are so well documented-there was land to be inherited so it was important to know the line of descent.




Above 3 pages show the Boynton Lineage from the Earliest mention in 1067 to the Father of the Immigrant John


Title Page of The Boynton Family Genealogy-this list differs from others I have seen, in which the 1st Boynton listed was named Torchill    http://www.quine.org/boynton.html

Again-thankfully, I inherited all of this Genealogy from my Grandfather.  I don't think I would have had the patience to do this family on my own!!

By the time Joanna Boynton married John Grout  the Boynton family lived in Lunenburg, Massachusetts Bay Colony.  Their son Elijah who married Mary Willard lived in Charlestown, Sullivan County, New Hampshire.  The Cushmans, Clarke and Katy Grout Cushman lived on the Vermont side of the border in Barnet Vermont.


Elijah Grout, our 5th Great Grandfather was a Revolutionary Patriot.  He served as Commissary for the Vermont Revolutionary Forces.  Prior to this time, he had served as a Delegate to various Delegations at the Local and Colonial level.  He was appointed to the Committee of Safety.  Charlestown, NH-where the Grouts lived was originally called "Plantation No. 4".  Eventually during the King George's War and the French and Indian Wars a Fort was built at the site.  It was not in use during the Revolution although it was still referred to as such.  Our 4th Great Grandparents Clark and Katy Grout (daughter of Elijah) Cushman are listed in some Registers as marrying at "The Fort at No. 4" (In others it is listed as Charlestown).

There is, today, a Replica of the Fort that is a Living History Museum.  There is a great Video on Youtube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzUjSkoytMA


There is also a Facebook page:https://www.facebook.com/The-Fort-at-No-4-125938420768003/




"Letters from Commissary Elijah Grout from:

               











Elijah Grout and Mary Willard had 11 children although the youngest died as a toddler.  Mary died in 1786 and Elijah remarried a Widow with 10 children.  He died in 1807






Tuesday, June 6, 2017

An Uncommon Colonial Woman-Herodias Long and our 9th Great Grandfather George Gardner, and their Gardner Descendants.

The Biblical Herodias with the Head of John the Baptist...would you name your daughter after this woman??

I am afraid I have come to the point in this Blog, which I knew was inevitable...I have run out of Maternal ancestors to write about.  So, unless I uncover something new on my Mother's family...I will probably be featuring Paternal ancestor's from here on out.

The last Post was about an 8th Great Grandfather-this one will be about a couple who were my 9th Great Grandparents:  George Gardner and Herodias Long.   And once again, our connection to this couple is thru the Mother of Henry Pattison, Emma Gardner and her father George Gardner.

This line begins with me (1), my Dad Robert Wayne Wright (2), his father, my Grandfather, Robert Burns Wright (3)his Mother, my Great Grandmother, Kate Pattison Wright (4), her Father, my 2 Great Grandfather, Henry Pattison (5), his Mother Emma Gardner Pattison (6), her Father, my 3 Great Grandfather, George Gardner (7), his father, my 4 Great Grandfather,Othniel Gardner, my 5th Great Grandfather (who married Lydia Reynolds, a descendant of Theophilus Whaley of the last Post) (8), his father, my 6th Great Grandfather, Benoni Gardner, (9), his father, my 7th Great Grandfather Isaac Gardner (10), his father, my 8th Great Grandfather, also Benoni Gardner (11), his Parents, my 9th Great Grandparents George Gardner and  Herodias Long Hicks Gardner (12).

George was born in England; he is the Immigrant of the Gardner line.  For many years, he has been considered to be the son of Reverend Michael Gardner (Gardiner, Gardener) of Greenford Magna, Middlesex, England 1522-1630.  Apparently, this man had a son named George, baptized in 1599 or 1600, who married Sarah Slaughter and who immigrated to the American Colonies with an infant child named Benoni.  It was surmised that Sarah died in childbirth or aboard ship and was buried at sea.  Our George was thought to be this George.  A well-known Genealogist G. Andrews Moriarty has pretty much debunked that theory-basing his new theory on the age of  George, son of Reverend Michael with the ages of the children of the George of  Newport, Rhode Island Colony, who was our Grandfather.  He is now considered to not be the son of the Reverend-as our George Gardner  fathered five children between 1667 and 1674.    If our George was born in 1599-1600 as was the son of Reverend Michael, he would have been 67-74 when those five children were born.  Possible but improbable.  We know that our George had reached the age of majority by 1638-therefor he had to have been born before 1618.  1608-1615 is the generally accepted Birth year for our George.

In "The Gardiners of Narragansett" by Caroline E. Robinson, written in 1819, a man named Thomas Gardiner, born in England and died in 1636 in Roxbury, Massachusetts is presented as the probable father of George.  This can be neither proven nor disproven; there is no credible connection between the men except the name.

So...we do not know who the parents of our 9th Great Grandfather was, nor do we know where in England he was from.    It is believed that he settled in the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations in 1637.  In 1638, he is admitted as an inhabitant of Portsmouth, on Aquidneck Island; this is the first time we see him in the public record.  He then removed from Portsmouth, RI to Newport RI where he became a land owner and was an active member of the Newport community.  It was here and at about this time that he met our 9th Great grandmother Herodias Long Hicks.

Herodias, born in about 1622-23 probably in Somersetshire,  had come to the New World with her husband John Hicks-to whom she was still married when she began a relationship with George.  She had married Hicks in London when she was 13-14 years old

Almost impossible to read, but this is the Marriage Record of John Hicks and  'Miss"Harwood" Long, daughter of William Long in London.  Herodias' name is variably spelled Hored, Herod, Odias, Harwood etc.  This is dated 14 March 1636
She had been sent to London, by her Mother, possibly to live with relatives after her Father's death.  Here she met and married John Hicks who was most likely in his 20's.  Shortly after the Marriage, the couple left England and settled in Massachusetts Bay Colony.  In 1640, following Anne Hutchison's lead,they removed to Aquidneck Island and settled in Newport, in the Rhode Island Colony. http://www.history.com/topics/anne-hutchinson     Their first Daughter Hannah was probably born in Massachusetts; a second, Elizabeth in Rhode Island;  there was possibly a son born to them also.    Problems arose in the marriage- In December 1643, Herod filed a complaint that John was beating her.  Hicks was in March 1644 "bound to the Peace by the Governer [sic], Mr. Easton, in a bond, for beating his wife, Harwood Hicks..."   

Hicks eventually left Herodias..going to live among the Dutch colonists in New Netherland
(today parts of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Delaware, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island ).
 (New Netherland is  part of early American history that is alluded to but never delved into in  the History 
books.)
 Learn more of this fascinating part of our history and the Dutch influence on our Culture here:
https://www.newnetherlandinstitute.org/history-and-heritage/digital-exhibitions/a-tour-of-new-netherland/
 Hicks took what little personal goods Herodias brought to the Marriage with him and apparently the children. 
She then began living  with George  Gardner, for protection and for support; they stayed together as
Common-law husband  and wife for some 20 years and 7 children.  Hicks did eventually file for and obtain a divorce from her on the grounds of Adultery.

During the 20 years, Herodias became acquainted with several people who were fervent Quakers.  The Quakers were regarded as Heretics by the Puritans who controlled Massachusetts.  Quakers were banned from living within Massachusetts Bay Colony.A short history of the conflicts between the two Religious groups may be read here:   http://digging-history.com/2014/02/09/early-american-faith-puritans-vs-quakers/
 One of the women that Herodias met and admired was a neighbor Mary Dyer who was hanged for her religious fervor and Quaker proselytizing in Puritan Massachusetts.  Mary was one of the 3 Martyrs to Quaker Faith known as "The Boston Martyrs"...she was the only woman executed as a Quaker by the Puritans.






Mary Dyer 1611-1660
Herodias, in support of her friend Mary,  in 1658, went to Weymouth, 60 miles on foot with a twelve year old Village girl to help her and her youngest child, Rebecca Gardner at breast.  We don't know if Herodias had actually converted to Quakerism but she was in The Bay Colony in support of Mary.  The women were captured, imprisoned for 2 weeks and received a lashing-while Herodias tried to shield the infant child with her arms, to protect her from the whip.

 In 1665, Herodias Hicks Long Gardner appeared before the Court, demanding a Separation from George Gardner-stating they were never married (although a neighbor stated that they had recited vows before him and his wife) and she essentially requested a Restraining Order against him, wanting him to bother her no more.

Apparently she had caught the eye of a very wealthy and landed man, John Porter.  She was not a young woman any longer, having given birth to 9 children; she was in her 40's.  She evidently had a fair amount of charm however, because John Porter abandoned his wife for her.  This poor lady, the first Mrs. Porter,  was forced to plead to the Court for a settlement from her Husband so that she could live and buy food.  Apparently Porter complied to the Court's and the lady's satisfaction and Herodias and John Porter began cohabitating.  Eventually they were called out by the Court because of the irregularity of their living conditions (Herod pretended to be his Servant) and it is thought they married in 1673.

John gave large tracts of land to all of Herodias' children including the eldest, Benoni, our Grandfather (who used to be thought to be the son of Sarah Slaughter not Herodias Long).
Map showing the lands Herodias' and George's children inherited from her 3rd Husband
On the above map we can see the Gardner boys. Nicholas, William, Henry, Benoni, George, then John Watson who was the Husband of Daughter Dorcas and after her death, he married  Daughter Rebecca.


The name Benoni is from the Hebrew and means "Son of sorrow".  It frequently was given to boys whose Mother died at their birth.  This actually makes a good case for Ben to be the son of Sarah, but it is now believed that Herodias named his this because of her sorrow with her unhappy marriage with her first husband when she initially went to live with George.

George Gardner moved on to marry Lydia Ballou and father 5 more children.

If you are interested in reading more about George Gardner and Herodias, there are 2 wonderful Historical novels by Joanne Butler, available on amazon.com "The Rebel Puritan" and "The Reputed Wife".  (There apparently was a 3rd scheduled but it has not yet come out).  Very readable and informative.  https://www.amazon.com/Jo-Ann-Butler/e/B008I5N05G/ref=dp_byline_cont_ebooks_1

She also has a great Blog http://www.rebelpuritan.com/More.html 

It is believed that Herodias died in 1722 which would make her about 100 years old at the time of her death.  No grave site for her or George Gardner has been identified.

Benoni-the eldest child of George Gardner and Herodias Long Hicks Gardner (his Common-law wife)  was born about 1647.  He married a woman named Mary.  The maiden name of this woman is not known-Grandpa Wright gave it as Eldred.  This has been in question recently and a couple other names have been given as possibilities-Mary Sherman and Mary Dyer (not the Mary Dyer who was executed by the Puritans but a descendant of hers).  Benoni and Mary had many children-one of which was Isaac Gardner, our 7th Great Grandfather.
Hannah Gardner, Daughter of Benoni, a Granddaughter of George and Herodias.


Isaac Gardner was born in January 6 or 7th , 1687/8.  On March 24, 1709, Isaac married Elizabeth Davis, daughter of Thomas Davis and in 1713, Isaac received land from his parents-part of the land deeded to his father from his mother Herodias' 3rd husband John Porter.  Isaac and Elizabeth Gardner raised 10 children in Exeter, Rhode Island-one of these, another Benoni, was born Mar 13, 1720 and became our 6th Great Grandfather.
Benoni Gardner (II) 1720-1765 married Elizabeth Hall, a daughter of Zuriel and Susannah Sheffield Hall.  Their son was Othniel Gardner...Othniel supposedly fought in the Revolutionary War-he was a Lieutenant and may have died in Service in December 1777.  I also have reports that he died at home in Petersburgh, Rensselaer County, NY


Othniel was married to Lydia Reynolds (

Snips of SAR Application for a Descendant of Othniel  Gardner


Othniel, son of Benony and Elizabeth ( ) Gardner, was born 

1742 in Rhode Island; died 1783. He married Lydia Reynolds, a famous 
beauty; after his death, she married a Babcock. Othniel Gardner, with 
wife Lydia, removed from Block Island, R. I., to Stephentown, N. Y., 
about 1769. In 1775 he signed a compact to organize a new colonial 
government of New York State. He was an officer in the Revolutionary 
army. He died at Petersburg, N. Y., leaving a family of six children, 
and was buried in the Reynolds cemetery at Petersburg. His two old- 
est sons were born in Exeter, R. I. He was sheriff of the county during 
the Revolution. 

George, born 1766; died 1840; married Louisa Dawley. 
Excerpt from "The Gardiners of Narragansett" pertaining to Othniel and Lydia Reynolds Gardner and George.  

Reynolds Cemetery, Petersburgh, Rensselaer County, NY.  Othniel and Lydia Gardner are reported buried here.
The family record of John Carroll Watts : containing his Lewis\u002C Gardner\u002C Barber\u002C Kennedy\u002C Teter\u002C and Watts lines
I can add to the above as I too have checked the National Archives and the DAR with no results for Military Service in the Revolutionary War for Othniel Gardner


Anywho...Othniel's son George was the Grandfather of our Henry Pattison (our Great Great Grandfather).  George's claim to fame was the fact that he owned the first Newspaper "The Recorder" published in his home town of Troy, New York.
Note misspelling of Pattison

"The Recorder," the first newspaper published in Troy, made its 
first appearance in 1791. It was a small folio, four columns to the 
page, and was printed by George Gardner. It was in Troy that the 
first paper mill in Northern New York was constructed in 1792. This mill 
was built by Mahlon Taylor on the west side of the Poesten kill, near 
which he also erected a grist mill and a saw mill. Power for all the 
mills was supplied from a dam which he built some three hundred feet 
up the stream from the grist mill. The proprietor soon found a purchaser for the paper
mill, which he sold, December 29, 1792, to Charles 
R. Webster and (icorge Webster of Albany and Ashbel Seymour and 
Perely Ensign of Hartford, Conn., for 400 pounds. 
History of Troy, New York (As a Village)FROM LANDMARKS OF RENSSELAER COUNTY
BY: GEORGE BAKER ANDERSON
PUBLISHED BY D. MASON & CO. PUBLISHERS, SYRACUSE, NY 1897





George married Lois or Louisa Dawley.  I tend to believe her name was actually Louisa as that name is used often in subsequent generations.  The Dawley family originally came to the Colonies from Lisburn, County Down in what is today Northern Ireland (that part that is still part of Great Britain).  They came in the late 1600's.  All of the families that married into the Gardners seem to have been Colonial families that arrived in the states in the 1600's-they are well documented and thankfully I inherited this part of the Family Tree, from my Grandfather, intact.  It seems they used the same names over and over...for example-the Stafford family had 3 Amos Staffords in a row; Grandfather, father and son.  Both the father and Son died in 1760.  Grandpa Stafford was a Lieutenant in the French and Indian Wars-Sonny was a Captain in the Militia and his son Stukely (not Amos) was a Private in the Revolutionary War.  (Lois or Louisa Stafford was the Mother of   Lois or Louisa Dawley who married George Gardner)

Okay-got that little rant out of the way...
You may remember-if you are really paying attention...that Henry Pattison's mother, Emma Gardner, in her will, left a Parcel of land to her daughter-in-law Josephine.  This land was in Illinois and was the land in Mercer Co. that Henry, Josephine and their family were living on.  I had always thought that Emma inherited the land from her father, George Gardner and that George must have served in the War of 1812.  However, I have found George's Will and there is no mention of 80 acres of land in Illinois.  I do not know how Emma came to own this land and will have to dig deeper.Perhaps it came from her Mother's side of the family.  I also cannot find Military Records for George.  Of course, I cannot find Othniel Gardner's records from the Revolutionary War either.  Maybe next time I go to Gettysburg, I will take the train to DC and visit the National Archives in person!  Or perhaps a Land Title search at the Mercer Co Court House...

George and Lois Dawley had several children-the 1st two were daughters Emma (26 December 1794-9 July 1863) and Olivia (12 May 1796-4 June 1871).  The Sisters married Brothers John (15 October 1778-6 February 1867) and Elias (5 August 1789-19 March 1863) Pattison.  I cannot find the description of the Double Wedding but I remember reading that they wore identical outfits-one in Apple green and the other in Rose pink.
Found it!!

http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=12201  
The Patterson and Pattison Association:a contribution of genealogical records



The above regarding the Countess of Stafford and Edward IV is BS. For one thing, the Countess of Stafford died in 1474, Emma Gardner was born in 1794.  The Countess of Stafford could hardly have been her Great Grandmother!!  To put in perspective-I had 3 Great Grandparents living when I was born.
 My Grandfather Wright had correspondence from the lady that wrote this (no reason to put her name here but I do remember it)  This where I read the part about the wedding.  May be true, may not....but creates a pretty mental image of the wedding.

John and Emma Gardner Pattison had twelve children.  The first five were Sons;  Henry, our Great Great Grandfather was Number 3.

John Pattison died in 1867; his wife Emma Gardner had died in 1863.  They are buried in Union Cemetery, Fort Edward, Washington County, New York.