Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Joseph Parker

Male 1795 - 1870  (75 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Joseph Parker was born on 18 Feb 1795 in Johnstown, Leeds, Ontario (son of Robert James Parker and Providence Miller); died on 5 Jul 1870 in Cedar Fort, Utah, Utah.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Robert James Parker was born on 7 Jan 1762 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey (son of Thomas Parker and Amy James); died on 17 Oct 1829 in Sorel, Le Bas-Richelieu, Québec.

    Notes:

    Arrived in Canada, 1796, where he took the Loyalist oath of allegiance. [Ontario People: 1796-1803 by E. Keith Fitzgerald. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1993.]

    Robert married Providence Miller. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Providence Miller
    Children:
    1. John Parker was born on 10 Oct 1785 in Elizabethtown, Leeds, Ontario; died in 1875 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah.
    2. William Parker was born in 1787 in Dundas, Ontario; died on 3 Feb 1864 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois.
    3. James Parker was born on 14 Feb 1792 in Edwardsburgh, Greenville, Ontario; died on 12 Apr 1852 in Ontario.
    4. Charles Parker was born in 1793 in Southampton, New Brunswick.
    5. 1. Joseph Parker was born on 18 Feb 1795 in Johnstown, Leeds, Ontario; died on 5 Jul 1870 in Cedar Fort, Utah, Utah.
    6. Joshua Parker was born on 23 Mar 1798 in Dundas, Ontario.
    7. Catherine Parker was born on 23 Mar 1798 in Johnstown, Leeds, Ontario.
    8. Hannah Parker was born on 20 Aug 1801 in Dundas, Ontario.
    9. Robert Parker was born on 8 May 1803 in Williamsburgh, Dumas, Ontario.
    10. Solomon Parker was born on 25 Aug 1804 in Edwardsburgh, Grenville, Ontario; died on 8 May 1884 in Anaconda, Deer Lodge, Montana.
    11. Lydia Ann Parker was born in 1805 in Dundas, Ontario; died on 16 Jul 1887 in Dundas, Ontario.
    12. Thomas Parker was born on 24 Aug 1806 in Mountain, Dundas, Ontario; died in 1880.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Thomas Parker was born on 21 Sep 1737 in of Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey (son of David Parker and Mary Rhea); died on 31 Jul 1822 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey; was buried in Old Tennant Churchyard, Tennent, Monmouth, New Jersey.

    Notes:

    Some sources, including his Find a Grave page, claim him as a veteran of the American Revolution. In the graveyard in which he is buried, a modern stone lists inhabitants of Tennant who fought in that war, and that list includes a "Thos. Parker." But our Thomas Parker would have been 39 when the Declaration was signed. Parker in America (citation details below), citing Salter's 1890 history of Monmouth County, says that the third son of this Thomas Parker and Amy James was another Thomas, and it seems to us likelier that he's the "Thos. Parker" referred to on the stone.

    DNA testing by the Parker Family DNA Project suggests that this Thomas Parker was a descendant of Elisha Parker, born in England about 1630, who married Elizabeth Hinckley and died either in Barnstable, MA or Perth Amboy, NJ. Several unsourced family trees say that Thomas's father David was son of Thomas, son of another Thomas (wife, Mary Mott; he is said to have left the Plymouth colony and settled in or near Staten Island), son of Elisha Parker and Elizabeth Hinckley. Elizabeth Hinckley was a sister of Thomas Hinckley (1618-1706), the last governor of the Plymouth colony.

    The DNA results also suggest that this Elisha Parker was closely related to Robert Parker, also born around 1630, who emigrated to the Plymouth colony and lived in Barnstable.

    Thomas married Amy James on 31 Oct 1761. Amy (daughter of Robert James) was born on 14 Jun 1749 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey; died in Mar 1778 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Amy James was born on 14 Jun 1749 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey (daughter of Robert James); died in Mar 1778 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey.
    Children:
    1. 2. Robert James Parker was born on 7 Jan 1762 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey; died on 17 Oct 1829 in Sorel, Le Bas-Richelieu, Québec.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  David Parker was born in 1704 in Monmouth, New Jersey.

    David married Mary Rhea. Mary (daughter of Robert Rhea and Janet Hampton) was born about 1708 in Monmouth, New Jersey. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary Rhea was born about 1708 in Monmouth, New Jersey (daughter of Robert Rhea and Janet Hampton).
    Children:
    1. 4. Thomas Parker was born on 21 Sep 1737 in of Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey; died on 31 Jul 1822 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey; was buried in Old Tennant Churchyard, Tennent, Monmouth, New Jersey.

  3. 10.  Robert James died between 9 Jun 1777 and 12 Mar 1778 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey.

    Notes:

    His will mentions his daughter Amy Parker and her husband Thomas Parker.

    Children:
    1. 5. Amy James was born on 14 Jun 1749 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey; died in Mar 1778 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey.


Generation: 5

  1. 18.  Robert RheaRobert Rhea was born in 1664 in East Lothian, Scotland; died on 18 Jan 1719 in Monmouth, New Jersey; was buried in Old Tennent Churchyard, Tennent, Monmouth, New Jersey.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 18 Jan 1721, Monmouth, New Jersey

    Notes:

    He was a carpenter. Said to have been a son of Robert Rhea and Christian Hog.

    Robert married Janet Hampton on 9 Jan 1690 in Shrewsbury, Monmouth, New Jersey. Janet (daughter of John Hampton and (Unknown first wife of John Hampton) was born in 1668 in East Lothian, Scotland; died on 15 Jan 1761 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey; was buried in Old Tennent Churchyard, Tennent, Monmouth, New Jersey. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 19.  Janet Hampton was born in 1668 in East Lothian, Scotland (daughter of John Hampton and (Unknown first wife of John Hampton); died on 15 Jan 1761 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey; was buried in Old Tennent Churchyard, Tennent, Monmouth, New Jersey.

    Notes:

    After her husband died, she became a Presbyterian, and was part of the community that founded the Old Tennant Church in Monmouth County.

    Going Up to the House of the Lord, at the site of the Old Tennent Presbyterian Church:

    By 1731, the hardy group of Scottish Covenanters who worshipped on Free Hill in present-day Marlboro had outgrown their small log cabin church. Because the congregation's growth was fed by new settlements in the Freehold-Manalapan area, an acre of land was purchased five miles to the south to build a new house of worship here on White Hill (said to be named for its white oak trees).

    There is a tradition that the builders planned to locate the new church on a lower part of the property and had gathered there to begin work. Whereupon a woman from the congregation named Janet Rhea seized the small cornerstone in her apron and, toiling to the top of the hill, set it down there, saying to the astonished onlookers: "Wha ever heard o' ganging doon to the Hoose o' the Lord, an no o' ganging oop to the Hoose o' the Lord?" Janet's point was made and that church, as well as the present larger sanctuary which replaced it 20 years later, was built on top of the hill.

    In Rev. Symmes' history of the church, he described Janet Rhea as a woman of strong mind and scriptural application and a devout worker in the Presbyterian community that built Old Tennent. The wife of Robert Rhea, a carpenter by profession, who came from Scotland in 1688, Janet was also newly arrived from Scotland when they were married in 1689 at Shrewsbury in the Quaker Meeting House.

    The old Rhea farm, which Robert had purchased, is now the site of the Visitors Center at Monmouth Battleground State Park. Janet Rhea Road, named in Janet's honor, is just west of the intersection of Routes 9 and 33. There is reportedly a family burial ground on the farm's property and that is where Janet and members of her family were buried. She died in 1761 at the age of 93.

    A wonderful piece of furniture from the Rhea family home is on display in Freehold. A chair crafted by Robert Rhea was donated to the Monmouth County Historical Society and is on display at the main museum. The massive chair with very detailed carving was fashioned after chairs Robert remembered in Scotland. It dates from 1695 and is thought to be one of the oldest documented chairs crafted in America.

    Children:
    1. 9. Mary Rhea was born about 1708 in Monmouth, New Jersey.


Generation: 6

  1. 38.  John Hampton was born in 1643 in East Lothian, Scotland; died between 23 Jan 1702 and 26 Feb 1702 in Monmouth, New Jersey; was buried in Old Scots Cemetery, Wickatunk, Monmouth County, New Jersey.

    Notes:

    He and his family were Quakers. He emigrated from Leith to Staten Island on the Exchange with his children, his second wife, and his brother Andrew; they removed shortly thereafter to Freehold, Monmouth county, New Jersey.

    John married (Unknown first wife of John Hampton. (Unknown died before 1675. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 39.  (Unknown first wife of John Hampton died before 1675.
    Children:
    1. 19. Janet Hampton was born in 1668 in East Lothian, Scotland; died on 15 Jan 1761 in Freehold, Monmouth, New Jersey; was buried in Old Tennent Churchyard, Tennent, Monmouth, New Jersey.