Three of my direct ancestral couples married during the first week of December: 6X great grandparents Jonathan Palmer and Mercy Manwaring were united in Stonington, Connecticut, on December 1, 1706; 8X great grandparents John West and Renew Carpenter married in Rehoboth, Massachusetts on December 4, 1703; and 7X great grandparents Jonathan Aldrich and Mary Wilson wed on December 4, 1740 in Smithfield, Rhode Island.
The first paragraph of Old-Time Marriage Customs in New England by Alice Morse Earle published in The Journal of American Folklore in 1893 sets the stage for a wedding:
This excerpt from Pamela McArthur Cole's article on New England Marriages,* gives us an idea of the traditional setting for weddings.*
Also my 7X great grandmother Sarah Nutting, left widowed by my ancestor Jonathan Farnsworth five years earlier, married John Stone on December 7, 1698, in Concord, Massachusetts.
*These two articles were originally published one after the other in the same issue of The Journal of American Folklore. Both are worth reading although I don't think either would meet modern standards of scholarship.
© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.
Showing posts with label Carpenter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carpenter. Show all posts
Friday, December 21, 2018
New England Weddings in my Ancestral Line: December 1st through 7th
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Friday, April 7, 2017
From the Probate Files: Isaac Leonard - Jefferson County, New York - 1862
For a long time our family tree listed an Isaac Leonard as Hannah Worden's father but we weren't certain that it was true. The following notice in the Albany Evening Journal (found via GenealogyBank.com several years ago) provided the proof needed.
Isaac Leonard died in 1862, sometime between March 3rd when he signed his will and December 22nd when that will was presented in court in Jefferson County, New York.
Po Worden of Beech-Wood, Sheboygan County, Wisconsin; Hannah Worden, wife of Porter Worden, of Cedarville, Iowa; Sarah Ann Jackson, wife of John Jackson, of Brownville, aforesaid; George W. Leonard of Pitcairn, St. Lawrence Co., N.Y.; Anna Carpenter, wife of Joseph Carpenter, of Brownville, aforesaid; Rosetta Belcher wife of Andrew Belcher, of Danby, Ionia County, Michigan: | of full age | and Emily Jane Leonard and James F. Leonard of Brownville aforesaid, minors, having no general guardians; all children of said Isaac Leonard, deceased; and Albert H. Leonard, Anna A. Leonard, George Byron Leonard and Jane Leonard, children of Isaac N. Leonard, deceased, son of said Isaac Leonard, deceased, minors having no general guardian. Said Surrogate did therefore appoint Samuel D. Barr of Watertown, Jeff. Co. N.Y. the Special Guardian for all minors to appear for them and take care of their interests in the matter of proving said will, he having previously filed with said Surrogate in writing to be thus appointed and to serve, the said Surrogate did theretofore issue a citation in due form of law directed to the widow, heirs at law and next of kin of said Isaac Leonard, deceased, by their respective names, stating their respective places of residences requiring them to appear before said Surrogate at his office in the said village of Watertown in said County of Jefferson, on the 9th day of February A.D. 1863. to attend the probate of said Will: And afterward, to wit: on the 9th day of February A.D. 1863, satisfactory evidence by affidavit was produced and presented to said Surrogate of the d???vice of said citation in the mode prescribed by law, and on that day, no one appearing to oppose such Will, such proceedings were therefore had said court afterward, that the said Surrogate took the proofs of said Will hereinafter set forth on this 9th day of February A.D. 1863, and therefore adjudge the said Will to be a valid Will of real and personal estate, and that the proofs thereto be sufficient, said Last Will and Testament, and proofs are hereinafter recorded in this Book.
Witness M. H. Merwin Surrogate
Will
The foregoing instrument was at the date thereof Signed by Isaac Leonard, the testator therein named, in our presence, and he at the same time declared the said instrument so subscribed, to us, to be his last will and testament; and we at the same time, at his request and in his presence, and in the presence of each other, have subscribed our names thereto as attesting witnesses ----
W.H. Beach, Watertown, Jeff. Co. N.Y.
F. Milton, Watertown, Jeff. Co. N.Y.
© 2017 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.
[Advertisement. Date: Friday, December 26, 1862 Paper: Albany Evening Journal (Albany, New York) Page: 3
This entire product and/or portions thereof are copyrighted by NewsBank and/or the American Antiquarian Society. 2004
Source: GenealogyBank.com]
Isaac Leonard died in 1862, sometime between March 3rd when he signed his will and December 22nd when that will was presented in court in Jefferson County, New York.
["New York Probate Records, 1629-1971," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYMB-JD1?cc=1920234&wc=9V9R-RMQ%3A213304001%2C221610801 : 28 May 2014), Jefferson > image 86 of 328; county courthouses, New York.]
Isaac Leonard's Estate
Be it remembered, that heretofore to wit: on the 22nd day of December AD, 1862, Jacob G. Hooper of Brownville, Jefferson County, New York, the executor name in the last Will and Testament of Isaac Leonard, late of Brownville aforesaid, deceased, appeared in Court before the Surrogate of the County of Jefferson, and made application to have said Last Will and Testament which relates to both real and personal estate, proved; and on such application the said Surrogate did ascertain by satisfactory evidence who were the widow, heirs at law and next of kin of the said testator and their respective residences, and that they are as follows, to wit: Mary Leonard of Brownville aforesaid, the widow of said deceased; Cynthia Belcher wife of Justus Belcher, of Lyme, Jeff. Co. N.Y.; Jemima Worden wife ofWitness M. H. Merwin Surrogate
Will
I, Isaac Leonard, of Brownville, Jefferson County and State of New York, of the age of Eighty-two years and upward, being mindful of the uncertainty of this life, I do h ereby make, publish and declare this my last will and testament: First, I will, order and direct that my executor hereinafter nominated and appointed to execute this will, pay all my just and lawful debts and funeral expenses -- Second, After the payment of my debts, funeral expenses and expenses of administration I give, bequeath and devise unto my wife Mary Isabel Leonard the use occupation and control of all my property both real and personal during her natural life, provided she remains my widow and unremarried until her decease, and, on her decease, I give & bequeath all my real and personal property then remaining as follows, to wit: One third thereof to my daughter Emily Jane Leonard and the other two-thirds thereof to my son James Foster Leonard & heirs -- But in case my said wife shall marry after my decease, then, in that case, she shall not hold my estate or the use thereof under the above bequest, but from such marriage, she shall have the use of one-third of my real estate during her natural life, in lieu of dower, and she shall also have, and I hereby give, bequeath and devise unto my said wife one-third of my personal property remaining after the payment of my debts, funeral expenses and expenses of administration, to be hers absolutely, and all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, both real and personal remaining at the marriage of my sid wife after my decease, and after the legacies to her made in case of her marriage, I give, bequeath and devise as follows to wit: One-third to my said daughter Emily Jane and the other two-thirds to my said son James Foster Leonard.
Lastly, I hereby nominate and appoint my friend Jacob Hooper of Brownville aforesaid, to be the executor of this my last Will and testament thereby revoking all former wills by me made & in case my said wife shall marry after my decease, then, I hereby appoint the said Jacob Hooper the guardian of my said daughter Emily Jane and my said son James Foster, to be such guardian and act as such from the time of such marriage.
In witness thereof I hereunto set my hand and seal and published and declared this to be my last Will and Testament in the presence of the witnesses who have signed below, this third day of March A.D. 1862.
Isaac Leonard {L.S.}The foregoing instrument was at the date thereof Signed by Isaac Leonard, the testator therein named, in our presence, and he at the same time declared the said instrument so subscribed, to us, to be his last will and testament; and we at the same time, at his request and in his presence, and in the presence of each other, have subscribed our names thereto as attesting witnesses ----
W.H. Beach, Watertown, Jeff. Co. N.Y.
F. Milton, Watertown, Jeff. Co. N.Y.
© 2017 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.
Monday, August 24, 2015
Monday Is for Mothers : Freedom Woodward (1642 - 1681)
This paternal eighth great grandmother died in her late thirties on May 10, 1681, just a week after the birth of her 14th child.*
Freedom was born in Dorchester in about 1642, the daughter of Henry and Elizabeth (Mather) Woodward. The family moved to Northampton in the Connecticut River Valley of eastern Massachusetts and that's where she married Jedediah Strong (1639-1733), who was originally from Hingham, in 1662.
Jedediah** outlived two more wives, finally dying in his 96th year in Coventry, in Tolland County, Connecticut.
Northampton has had a rich history since it was first settled by the English in 1654.*** The view of it painted by American landscape artist Thomas Cole (1801-1848) shows the how the area looked 179 years ago.
*Her children were Elizabeth, Abigail, Jedediah, Ford, Hannah, Thankful, John, Sarah, Lydia, Mary, Experience, Preserved, John (again) and a baby who was unnamed. Of the children, four were known to have died as infants and another died at age 17. Hannah is my direct ancestor through her granddaughter Esther Carpenter who married Benjamin Porter and are thereby my fifth great grandparents. My source for this information is here.
**You can learn more about Jedediah Strong here.
***Historic Northampton has a short video here.
© 2015 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.
Freedom was born in Dorchester in about 1642, the daughter of Henry and Elizabeth (Mather) Woodward. The family moved to Northampton in the Connecticut River Valley of eastern Massachusetts and that's where she married Jedediah Strong (1639-1733), who was originally from Hingham, in 1662.
[1677 Map of New England by William Hubbard.
Source:http://www.histarch.illinois.edu/plymouth/images/1677map.jpg]
[Ancestry.com. U.S., New England Marriages Prior to 1700 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2012. Original data: Torry, Clarence A. New England Marriages Prior to 1700. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2004.]
Jedediah** outlived two more wives, finally dying in his 96th year in Coventry, in Tolland County, Connecticut.
Northampton has had a rich history since it was first settled by the English in 1654.*** The view of it painted by American landscape artist Thomas Cole (1801-1848) shows the how the area looked 179 years ago.
[View from Mount Holyoke, Northampton, Massachusetts, after a Thunderstorm—The Oxbow. Artist: Thomas Cole; Date: 1836.
Medium: Oil on canvas. Metropolitan Museum of Art: Gift of Mrs. Russell Sage, 1908]
*Her children were Elizabeth, Abigail, Jedediah, Ford, Hannah, Thankful, John, Sarah, Lydia, Mary, Experience, Preserved, John (again) and a baby who was unnamed. Of the children, four were known to have died as infants and another died at age 17. Hannah is my direct ancestor through her granddaughter Esther Carpenter who married Benjamin Porter and are thereby my fifth great grandparents. My source for this information is here.
**You can learn more about Jedediah Strong here.
***Historic Northampton has a short video here.
© 2015 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
Working on Wednesday: Henry Woodward (1607 - 1683), Tavern Keeper, Miller and Selectman
I'm in the habit of saying that my mother's people were all Northerners and my father's ancestors all Southern-born, but that's not strictly true because in each lineage there's one branch that's an exception. My father's maternal grandfather Tracy Darrow Porter's male ancestors can be traced to New England as early as 1630.
In 1659 Henry, Elizabeth and their four children, three daughters** and a son, moved to Northampton (possibly at the suggestion of Reverend Mather) where he repeated his involvement in church and local affairs, again taking on the role of Selectman and acting as Surveyor of Highways among other civic duties.
In 1665 he was granted a license to open a tavern which remained in business until 1681. As was typical of the time, he also farmed some land and owned a "corn mill." In this transcribed list of deaths in Northampton, we see what happened to him there in 1683.***
If you want to read more about flour milling in the 17th century, look here; and learn more about colonial taverns here. This blog has more information about Henry.
*It's possible that this Elizabeth was the daughter of the influential Puritan minister Richard Mather who founded a religious dynasty that included his son Increase and grandson Cotton Mather, but it's not certain.
**I am descended from their second daughter Freedom who was born in about 1642. She married Jedediah Strong in 1662 and it's through their granddaughter Esther Carpenter who married Benjamin Porter in 1756 that they find their place in my family tree.
***Note that his daughter (and my ancestor) Freedom Strong is the first name on the list above, having died almost two years earlier.
© 2015 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.
[1677 Map of New England by William Hubbard.
Source:http://www.histarch.illinois.edu/plymouth/images/1677map.jpg]
Henry Woodward, this paternal ninth great grandfather, was born in what is now part of Liverpool, England and is believed to have come to New England on the ship "James" in the fall of 1635. (I haven't found any reference to him so far in The Great Migration Study Project. Perhaps the new Directory will include his name.)
[View of Savin Hill in Dorchester about 1830 from the Dorchester Historical Society]
He settled first in Dorchester, married a young woman named Elizabeth* and became a member of the church, a freeman of the town, and served as Selectman, Constable and on several committees over the years.In 1659 Henry, Elizabeth and their four children, three daughters** and a son, moved to Northampton (possibly at the suggestion of Reverend Mather) where he repeated his involvement in church and local affairs, again taking on the role of Selectman and acting as Surveyor of Highways among other civic duties.
[Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011. Original data: Town and City Clerks of Massachusetts. Massachusetts Vital and Town Records. Provo, UT: Holbrook Research Institute (Jay and Delene Holbrook).]
If you want to read more about flour milling in the 17th century, look here; and learn more about colonial taverns here. This blog has more information about Henry.
*It's possible that this Elizabeth was the daughter of the influential Puritan minister Richard Mather who founded a religious dynasty that included his son Increase and grandson Cotton Mather, but it's not certain.
**I am descended from their second daughter Freedom who was born in about 1642. She married Jedediah Strong in 1662 and it's through their granddaughter Esther Carpenter who married Benjamin Porter in 1756 that they find their place in my family tree.
***Note that his daughter (and my ancestor) Freedom Strong is the first name on the list above, having died almost two years earlier.
© 2015 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.
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