Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Alice

Female


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Alice

    Notes:

    Probably the Alice Perkins recorded as buried in Hillmorton on 20 Aug 1613.

    Family/Spouse: Thomas Perkins. Thomas (son of Henry Perkins) was born about 1525 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died before 23 Mar 1592; was buried on 23 Mar 1592 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Henry Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1555 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died before 11 Mar 1609; was buried on 11 Mar 1609 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Henry Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (1.Alice1) was born about 1555 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died before 11 Mar 1609; was buried on 11 Mar 1609 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England.

    Henry married Elizabeth Sawbridge on 29 Nov 1579 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England. Elizabeth died on 20 Aug 1613. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 3. John Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 23 Dec 1583; was christened on 23 Dec 1583 in St. John the Baptist, Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died between 28 Mar 1654 and 26 Sep 1654 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.


Generation: 3

  1. 3.  John Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born before 23 Dec 1583; was christened on 23 Dec 1583 in St. John the Baptist, Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died between 28 Mar 1654 and 26 Sep 1654 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

    Notes:

    They arrived with five of their children on 5 Feb 1631, on the Lyon. Ancestors of FDR, among many others.

    John married Judith Gater on 8 Oct 1608 in St. John the Baptist, Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England. Judith (daughter of Michael Gater and Isabel Baylie) was born before 19 Mar 1589; was christened on 19 Mar 1589 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died after 26 Sep 1654. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 4. John Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 14 Sep 1609; was christened on 14 Sep 1609 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died on 14 Dec 1686 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.
    2. 5. Elizabeth Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 25 Mar 1611; was christened on 25 Mar 1611 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died before 18 Sep 1670.
    3. 6. Mary Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 3 Sep 1615; was christened on 3 Sep 1615 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died on 20 Dec 1700 in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts.
    4. 7. Jacob Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 12 Jul 1624; was christened on 12 Jul 1624 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died on 27 Jan 1700 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.


Generation: 4

  1. 4.  John Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born before 14 Sep 1609; was christened on 14 Sep 1609 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died on 14 Dec 1686 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

    John married Elizabeth before 1636. Elizabeth died on 27 Sep 1684 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 8. Jacob Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1646 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 26 Nov 1719 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

  2. 5.  Elizabeth Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born before 25 Mar 1611; was christened on 25 Mar 1611 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died before 18 Sep 1670.

    Family/Spouse: William Sargent. William was born about 1611; died between 24 Feb 1674 and 8 Apr 1675 in Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 9. Elizabeth Sargent  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Nov 1648 in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 5 Feb 1737 in Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts.

  3. 6.  Mary Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born before 3 Sep 1615; was christened on 3 Sep 1615 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died on 20 Dec 1700 in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts.

    Notes:

    She was accused of witchcraft in 1692, put on trial, and despite much testimony to her good character, convicted. For reasons lost to history, however, she was never executed, and she lived another eight years.

    From Historic Homes and Places and Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Middlesex County, Volume 2 (citation details below):

    Mrs. Bradbury in her old age was tried for witchcraft and convicted July 28, 1692. The evidence in her defense is a fine testimonial to a worthy life. Her husband's testimony was: "We have been married fifty-five years, and she has been a loving and faithful wife unto me unto this day. She hath been wonderful laborious, diligent and industrious in her place and employment about the bringing up of our family which have been eleven children and four grandchildren. She was both prudent and provident, of a cheerful spirit, liberal and charitable. She being now very aged and weak, and grieved under afiflictions, may not be able to speak much for herself, not being so free of speech as some others might be. I hope her life and conversation among her neighbors has been such as gives a better or more real testimony than can be expressed by words." One hundred and eighteen of her friends signed a statement commending her good character: "she was a lover of the ministry in all appearance, and a diligent attender upon God's holy ordinances, being of a courteous and peaceable disposition and carriage, neither did any of us (some of whom have lived in the town with her above fifty years) ever hear or know that she had any difference or falling out with any of her neighbors, man woman or child, but was always ready to do for them what lay in her power, night and day, though with hazard of her health and other danger."

    Rev. James Allen, her pastor, said: "I having lived nine years at Salisbury, in the work of the ministry and now four years in the office of pastor, to my best notice and observation of Mrs. Bradbury, she hath lived according to the rules of the Gospel amongst us; was a constant attender upon the ministry of the word, and all the ordinances of the gospel full of works of charity and mercy to the sick and poor; neither have I seen or heard anything of her unbecoming the profession of the gospel." The evidence against her was as scant as it was nonsensical. Mrs. Bradbury was defended by Major Robert Pike. She was convicted with four others who were hanged in September, 1692. Mrs. Bradbury's execution was postponed, why we know not, but the delusion passed and her life was spared.

    Mary married Capt. Thomas Bradbury about 1636. Thomas (son of Wymond Bradbury and Elizabeth Whitgift) was born before 28 Feb 1611; was christened on 28 Feb 1611 in Wicken Bonhunt, Essex, England; died on 16 Mar 1695 in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 10. Mary Bradbury  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 Mar 1643 in Salisbury, Merrimack, New Hampshire; died on 29 May 1724.

  4. 7.  Jacob Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born before 12 Jul 1624; was christened on 12 Jul 1624 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died on 27 Jan 1700 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptised: 12 Sep 1624, Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England

    Jacob married Elizabeth Whipple about 1648. Elizabeth (daughter of Matthew Whipple and Anne Hawkins) was born about 1629; died on 12 Feb 1686 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 11. Elizabeth Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Apr 1650; died on 4 Dec 1718.
    2. 12. Deacon Joseph Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 Jun 1674 in of Norwich, New London, Connecticut; died on 6 Sep 1726.


Generation: 5

  1. 8.  Jacob Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (4.John4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born about 1646 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 26 Nov 1719 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

    Jacob married Sarah Wainwright on 25 Dec 1667 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. Sarah (daughter of Francis Wainwright and Philippa Sewell) died on 3 Feb 1688 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 13. Phillipa Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 28 Nov 1670 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 26 Apr 1738 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

  2. 9.  Elizabeth Sargent Descendancy chart to this point (5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 22 Nov 1648 in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 5 Feb 1737 in Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts.

    Elizabeth married Samuel Colby before 1668. Samuel (son of Anthony Colby and Susanna) was born about 1638; died between 6 Mar 1716 and 2 Jul 1716 in Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 14. Samuel Colby  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 9 Mar 1671; died before 29 Sep 1746.

  3. 10.  Mary Bradbury Descendancy chart to this point (6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 17 Mar 1643 in Salisbury, Merrimack, New Hampshire; died on 29 May 1724.

    Mary married John Stanyan on 15 Dec 1663 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire. John (son of Anthony Stanyan and Mary) was born on 16 Jul 1642 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; was christened on 24 Jul 1642 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 27 Sep 1718. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 15. Ann Stanyan  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 Feb 1678; died before 1718.

  4. 11.  Elizabeth Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 1 Apr 1650; died on 4 Dec 1718.

    Elizabeth married Thomas Boardman on 1 Jan 1668 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. Thomas (son of Thomas Boreman and Margaret Offing) was born about 1644; died on 3 Oct 1719 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 16. Thomas Boardman  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 8 Aug 1669 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died after 1736.

  5. 12.  Deacon Joseph Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 21 Jun 1674 in of Norwich, New London, Connecticut; died on 6 Sep 1726.

    Deacon married Martha Morgan on 22 May 1700 in Norwich, New London, Connecticut. Martha (daughter of Lt. Joseph Morgan and Dorothy Parke) was born on 20 Mar 1681 in Preston, New London, Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 17. Matthew Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Lisbon, Connecticut; died on 3 May 1773 in Norwich, New London, Connecticut.


Generation: 6

  1. 13.  Phillipa Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (8.Jacob5, 4.John4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 28 Nov 1670 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 26 Apr 1738 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

    Phillipa married Thomas Emerson on 20 Nov 1685 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. Thomas (son of Nathaniel Emerson and Sarah) was born about 1671 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 14 Apr 1738 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 18. Mary Emerson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Apr 1704 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 13 Jul 1777 in Bennington, Bennington, Vermont.

  2. 14.  Samuel Colby Descendancy chart to this point (9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 9 Mar 1671; died before 29 Sep 1746.

    Family/Spouse: Dorothy. Dorothy died after 1748. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 19. Keziah Colby  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 11 May 1696 in Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 3 Nov 1754; was buried in Union Cemetery, Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts.

  3. 15.  Ann Stanyan Descendancy chart to this point (10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 17 Feb 1678; died before 1718.

    Notes:

    Or Mary Stanyan.

    Ann married Capt. Thomas Seally on 2 Jul 1697. Thomas (son of Thomas Sealey and Martha Blaisdell) was born between 1670 and 1675 in Hampton Falls, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 20. Capt. Joseph Ceilley  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 6 Oct 1701 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died in 1786 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

  4. 16.  Thomas Boardman Descendancy chart to this point (11.Elizabeth5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 8 Aug 1669 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died after 1736.

    Notes:

    He was a carpenter.

    Thomas married Sarah Langley about 1697. Sarah (daughter of Abell Langley and Sarah Quilter) was born on 7 Nov 1675 in Rowley, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 27 Dec 1725. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 21. Elizabeth Boardman  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1708; died on 30 Jan 1779.

  5. 17.  Matthew Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (12.Deacon5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born in of Lisbon, Connecticut; died on 3 May 1773 in Norwich, New London, Connecticut.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 1 Aug 1713, Norwich, New London, Connecticut

    Matthew married Hannah Bishop on 19 Apr 1739 in Norwich, New London, Connecticut. Hannah (daughter of Samuel Bishop and Sarah Fobes) was born on 2 Aug 1722 in Norwich, New London, Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 22. Susanna Perkins  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 29 Jan 1753; died on 10 Sep 1810.


Generation: 7

  1. 18.  Mary Emerson Descendancy chart to this point (13.Phillipa6, 8.Jacob5, 4.John4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 20 Apr 1704 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 13 Jul 1777 in Bennington, Bennington, Vermont.

    Mary married Steven Story on 23 Sep 1721 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. Steven (son of Samuel Story and Elizabeth) was born on 7 Oct 1697 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 13 Dec 1766 in Bennington, Bennington, Vermont. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 23. Philippa Story  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 May 1726 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died after 1796; was buried in Old Bennington Cemetery, Bennington, Bennington, Vermont.

  2. 19.  Keziah Colby Descendancy chart to this point (14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 11 May 1696 in Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 3 Nov 1754; was buried in Union Cemetery, Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts.

    Keziah married David Currier on 11 Dec 1718 in Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts. David (son of Richard Currier and Dorothy Barnard) was born on 17 Feb 1696 in Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts; died before 20 Jul 1737. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 24. Edmund Currier  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 27 May 1733; was christened on 27 May 1733 in Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts; died after 1776 in Wells, York, Maine.

  3. 20.  Capt. Joseph Ceilley Descendancy chart to this point (15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 6 Oct 1701 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died in 1786 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 4 Oct 1691

    Notes:

    He was one of the early settlers of Nottingham, and a captain of militia.

    Joseph married Alice "Else" Rawlins between 1724 and 1725 in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts. Alice (daughter of Benjamin Rawlins and Sarah Palmer) was born in 1701 in of Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died in 1801. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 25. Gen. Joseph Cilley  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1734 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 25 Aug 1799 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; was buried in Gen. Joseph Cilley Cemetery, Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    2. 26. Capt. Cutting Cilley  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1738 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 4 Feb 1825 in Northfield, Merrimack, New Hampshire; was buried in Bean Hill Cemetery, Northfield, Merrimack, New Hampshire.

  4. 21.  Elizabeth Boardman Descendancy chart to this point (16.Thomas6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born about 1708; died on 30 Jan 1779.

    Elizabeth married Dr. Joseph Manning on 14 Nov 1732. Joseph (son of Thomas Manning and Mary Giddings) was born on 16 Mar 1703 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 8 May 1784. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 27. Dr. John Manning  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 12 Nov 1738; was christened on 12 Nov 1738 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 25 Oct 1824 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

  5. 22.  Susanna Perkins Descendancy chart to this point (17.Matthew6, 12.Deacon5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 29 Jan 1753; died on 10 Sep 1810.

    Notes:

    "Sufanna ye Daughter of Matthew Perkins & his wife Hannah was born January 29: 1752." [Norwich Vital Records, citation details below.]

    Family/Spouse: Rev. John Staples. John (son of Deacon Seth Staples and Hannah Standish) was born on 23 Apr 1742; died on 15 Feb 1804. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 28. Seth Perkins Staples  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Sep 1776 in Canterbury, Windham, Connecticut; died on 6 Nov 1861 in New York, New York.
    2. 29. Susanna Staples  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Aug 1778 in Canterbury, Windham, Connecticut; died on 22 Nov 1855 in New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut.


Generation: 8

  1. 23.  Philippa Story Descendancy chart to this point (18.Mary7, 13.Phillipa6, 8.Jacob5, 4.John4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 21 May 1726 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died after 1796; was buried in Old Bennington Cemetery, Bennington, Bennington, Vermont.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1814, Vermont

    Philippa married Ebenezer Wood on 10 Dec 1745 in Norwich, New London, Connecticut. Ebenezer (son of Ebenezer Wood and Mary Rudd) was born on 15 Nov 1726 in Norwich, New London, Connecticut; died in Sep 1796 in Bennington, Bennington, Vermont; was buried in Old Bennington Cemetery, Bennington, Bennington, Vermont. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 30. Ebenezer Wood  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Aug 1754 in Norwich, New London, Connecticut; died on 23 Oct 1831 in Delaware County, Ohio; was buried in Oak Grove Cemetery, Delaware, Delaware, Ohio.

  2. 24.  Edmund Currier Descendancy chart to this point (19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born before 27 May 1733; was christened on 27 May 1733 in Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts; died after 1776 in Wells, York, Maine.

    Notes:

    He fought in the Revolution as a first lieutenant in Capt. Samuel Waterhouse's 2nd (Wells) company, 3rd York County regiment.

    Before the Revolution, the Wells town school was kept in Edmund Currier's shop.

    Edmund married Susanna Kimball on 23 Jan 1756. Susanna (daughter of Nathaniel Kimball and Abigail Couzens) was born before 13 Jun 1735; was christened on 13 Jun 1735. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 31. Abraham Currier  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 25 Mar 1759 in Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 24 Mar 1846 in Kennebunkport, York, Maine; was buried in Hope Cemetery, Kennebunk, York, Maine.

  3. 25.  Gen. Joseph Cilley Descendancy chart to this point (20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born in 1734 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 25 Aug 1799 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; was buried in Gen. Joseph Cilley Cemetery, Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

    Notes:

    From Wikipedia (accessed 19 May 2021):

    Joseph Cilley (1734 – August 25, 1799) was a New Hampshire state senator and general.

    Cilley was born in 1734 at Nottingham, Province of New Hampshire, to Captain J. Cilley of the Isles of Shoals and his wife Alice Rawlings. In 1758 he joined Rogers' Rangers and served in northern New York and Canada. On December 15, 1774 he was with John Langdon and John Sullivan in the raid on Fort William and Mary at New Castle, New Hampshire.

    At the start of the American Revolutionary War, Cilley was appointed major of the 2nd New Hampshire Regiment. After the Siege of Boston, he was promoted to Lt. Col. in the 1st New Hampshire Regiment, and he and the regiment were sent to reinforce the Continental Army in Canada fighting at the Battle of Trois-Rivières. With the defeat of the Continental Army in Canada the 1st New Hampshire was sent to New Jersey and Gen. George Washington's main army. Cilley took part in the Battle of Trenton and the Battle of Princeton. With the resignation of John Stark, Cilley took command of the 1st New Hampshire and led them during the Saratoga Campaign of 1777, and the Battle of Monmouth and the Battle of Stony Point in 1778. Henry Dearborn was among the officers under his command. In 1779, Cilley and the 1st New Hampshire were with Gen. Sullivan in his campaign against the Iroquois and Loyalists in western New York.

    On March 19, 1779, the New Hampshire Assembly voted unanimously, "that the worthy Col. Jos. Cilley be presented with a pair of pistols as a token of this State's good intention to reward merit in a brave officer." These pistols are now housed at the Museum of New Hampshire History in Concord, New Hampshire. Cilley retired from the Continental Army on January 1, 1781.

    After the war, he was appointed major general of the 1st Division of New Hampshire Militia, June 22, 1786. Later that year, he commanded troops who put down the Paper Money Riot. Cilley was elected to the New Hampshire Senate and Treasurer, Vice President and President of the Society of the Cincinnati in New Hampshire. Cilley died on August 25, 1799, at his home in Nottingham.

    Cilley married Sarah Longfellow on November 4, 1756. They had ten children, including Greenleaf Cilley, whose sons Joseph Cilley and Jonathan Cilley would become a U. S. Senator and a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, respectively.

    Mount Cilley in the White Mountains is named for him.

    Joseph married Sarah Longfellow on 4 Nov 1756 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire. Sarah (daughter of Jonathan Longfellow and Mercy Clark) was born on 17 Nov 1739 in Hampton Falls, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 23 May 1811 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; was buried in Gen. Joseph Cilley Cemetery, Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 32. Maj. Greenleaf Cilley  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Mar 1767 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 24 Feb 1808 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; was buried in Nottingham Square Cemetery, Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

  4. 26.  Capt. Cutting Cilley Descendancy chart to this point (20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born in 1738 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 4 Feb 1825 in Northfield, Merrimack, New Hampshire; was buried in Bean Hill Cemetery, Northfield, Merrimack, New Hampshire.

    Notes:

    According to Cilley Family (citation details below), he was a captain in the Revolution. The Cillay Pages (citation details below) says he served at Pierce's Island in 1775 and in 1777 raised a company for the defense of Piscataqua Harbor.

    Cutting married Martha Morrill about 1761. Martha died on 4 Jun 1787 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 33. Eliphalet Cilley  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 30 Aug 1762 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

  5. 27.  Dr. John Manning Descendancy chart to this point (21.Elizabeth7, 16.Thomas6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born before 12 Nov 1738; was christened on 12 Nov 1738 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 25 Oct 1824 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

    Notes:

    From The Genealogical and Biographical History of the Manning Families of New England (citation details below):

    He studied medicine under his father’s direction and then commenced practice, at the age of twenty, at Newmarket, N.H. After one year he returned to Ipswich, where he resided and practiced the remainder of his life. As there were no medical colleges or hospitals in America at that day, Dr. Manning, at the age of thirty-three, and after some twelve years of active practice, crossed the ocean to perfect his medical education in England. Returning to this country, 1772 May 8, after a course of six months training in the hospitals and lecture rooms of London, his practice soon became extensive. On the 19th of April, 1775, the day of the battle of Lexington, he drove to Boston to bring his sister, Mrs. McKean, to Ipswich. When near Boston he overtook a British officer, severely wounded, to whom he freely gave the medical attention which he greatly needed. For this humane act the officer gave Dr. Manning a pass which enabled him to enter Boston and depart with his sister. He arrived at Ipswich at night, aroused his family, and when he had collected such articles as he knew would be needed, hastened to the relief of those wounded in the battle, giving to his suffering countrymen such aid as his skill and medicine could accomplish. His grandson, Joseph Bolles Manning Esq., is authority for the further statement that, when this was done, he assisted the British surgeons in caring for their wounded, "and by his direction, both parties [of wounded] were removed to Cambridge, where he attended six weeks until they were discharged." This was, on his part, an early application of the doctrine, since common to all civilized nations, that in the presence of those suffering after battle, all partisan feeling should be forgotten. Later in the war he served as surgeon at Newport, R.I. In 1777 he strongly advocated inoculation for the prevention of small pox, which caused so much opposition and hostility that, for a time, it is said, his life seemed in danger. He was active in business enterprises. He bought and sold real estate outside of his own county, having transactions of this kind in Worcester Co., Mass., Hillsborough Co., N.H., and Cumberland Co., Me. In 1788 he, with others, made proposals to the Legislature for taking the poor of the Commonwealth which were in the almshouse at Boston, and removing them to Ipswich, where, with the selectman of that town to act as overseers, the projectors of the plan would supply them with lodging, good, wholesome food, medical attendance, etc., for three-fourths of the then present expense. A paper was drawn up by the House to accept the proposal, but shows no sign of having been acted upon [House Document 2640]. Ten years later, however, the doctor petitioned for the payment of expenses which he had incurred because, by direction of the selectmen of Ipswich, he had during the past year "supported several of the poor of the Commonwealth", proving that his plan had in some degree been carried into effect. The Acts and Resolves of Massachusetts for 1790 show that he petitioned for payment of certain dues from the Commonwealth to enable and encourage him to carry on a woolen manufactory at Ipswich. The State agreed to pay from its treasury the interest due him on the State notes he held in his own name, and so much of the principal as should amount, with the interest, to £1,000, he first giving bond that the £1,000 should be within one year employed in a woolen manfactory in Ipswich. Whether this official action was satisfactory, and was accepted, has not been learned, but the enterprise was consummated. In 1792 the town of Ipswich granted Dr. Manning land for the erection of the factory. This was, perhaps, the first woolen mill in the country. It stood upon the bank of the river, and was run by a windmill. It was a two-storied building, about 60 x 30 feet, and was at the foot of the hill at the northwest corner of Choate Bridge. The structure now on the site is called Caldwell’s Block. On the end of the building, away from the bridge, was a signboard, about 5 x 23 feet, with "Massachusetts Woolen Manufactory" painted upon it, this being the name by which it was known. Blankets and flannels were made at the factory, which went into operation in 1794, but the enterprise was not a success, and it was closed in 1800. The doctor’s son, Capt. Richard Manning, was superintendent of the mill, and his pattern book is now in the possession of Mr. Francis H. Manning. Dr Manning’s hospitality was widely known. The house he built on High Street, Ipswich, still standing, was constructed with a view to indulging this characteristic. The partitions of the lower story were hung upon hinges at the ceiling, so that they could be raised, thus making one room of the hall and the rooms on each side. As an illustration of this hospitable proclivity, his grandson Richard H. Manning related this incident: "Dr. Manning was riding one summer afternoon, about 1818, toward Hamilton, when he met a Company of Horse, known as the Salem Troop. Drawing up before the captain, whom he saluted as only he could do it, for he was an exceedingly courteous gentleman, stately and venerable withal, he invited the Company to ride on to his house in Ipswich and take supper with him. The invitation being accepted, the doctor turned his horse and rode back to Ipswich at the head of the Troop, which soon drew up in front of the mansion on "Pudding street", now High street. This was the first intimation the family had of the intended feast, and I, a shaver of eight or nine years, was dispatched to all the neighbors for spoons and cooked food to eke out the entertainment.” Dr. Manning was elected representative from Ipswich 1781, '82, '84, '87, '89, '92 and '94 or a total of nine years. His skill and experience rendered him for a long time eminent in the medical profession; all publications dealing with his county mention this fact. He had his own opinions upon politics and religion, and was fond of power and resolute in carrying out his purposes. His character was marked by unvarying courtesy, a broad charity and great kindness of heart.

    John married Lucy Bolles on 27 Nov 1760 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. Lucy (daughter of Charles Bolles and Lucy Kimball) was born on 5 Apr 1742; was christened on 25 Apr 1742 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 23 Aug 1817. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 34. Lucretia Manning  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 23 Mar 1765 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 9 Jul 1852 in Hamilton, Essex, Massachusetts; was buried in Old South Cemetery, Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

  6. 28.  Seth Perkins Staples Descendancy chart to this point (22.Susanna7, 17.Matthew6, 12.Deacon5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 1 Sep 1776 in Canterbury, Windham, Connecticut; died on 6 Nov 1861 in New York, New York.

    Notes:

    Lawyer and politician. He was a representative of the town of New Haven in the State Legislature for seven or eight sessions, most of them during the war of 1812. The institution that eventually became Yale Law School began with him training legal apprentices in his law office in New Haven in the first decade of the 19th century.

    "After completing his studies at Yale [Seth Perkins Staples] began the study of the law in the office of the Hon. David Daggett in New Haven, Connecticut for two years. During this time Seth hand-copied a set of Tapping Reeve's law notes for his own use, but never attended the Litchfield Law School as a student (a common misconception). Once his understanding of the law was adequate. Seth passed the bar in Litchfield in 1799, and then immediately opened a law office of his own in New Haven and commenced practice. In that same year he married Catharine Wales Staples. During their marriage the couple had six children; three sons and three daughters, one daughter of which later attended the Litchfield Female Academy. The future Yale Law School formed in the New Haven law office of Seth P. Staples. Staples owned an exceptional library (an attraction for students at a time when law books were scarce), and he began training apprentices in the early 1800s. By the 1810s his law office had a full-fledged law school. Samuel Hitchcock, one of Staples’ former students, became a partner at the office and later, the proprietor of the New Haven Law School." [Litchfield Historical Society]

    "The [New Haven Law] School began in the New Haven law office of Seth P. Staples in the 1800s, who began training lawyers. By 1810 he was operating a law school. He took on a former student, Samuel J. Hitchcock, as a law partner, and Hitchcock became the proprietor of the New Haven Law School, joined by David Daggett in 1824. (The Yale Law School shield, shown at the upper right of this page, shows staples and a rampant dog, representing Seth Staples and David Daggett.) The school's affiliation with Yale began in the mid-1820s and in 1843, the school's students began receiving Yale degrees." [Wikipedia article on Yale Law School]


  7. 29.  Susanna Staples Descendancy chart to this point (22.Susanna7, 17.Matthew6, 12.Deacon5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 20 Aug 1778 in Canterbury, Windham, Connecticut; died on 22 Nov 1855 in New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut.

    Susanna married Roger Sherman on 7 Jan 1801 in Canterbury, Windham, Connecticut. Roger (son of Roger Sherman and Rebecca Prescott) was born on 16 Jul 1768 in New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut; died on 5 Mar 1856 in New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 35. Elizabeth Baldwin Sherman  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 Oct 1823 in New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut; died on 10 Mar 1917 in Nordhoff, California.


Generation: 9

  1. 30.  Ebenezer Wood Descendancy chart to this point (23.Philippa8, 18.Mary7, 13.Phillipa6, 8.Jacob5, 4.John4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 20 Aug 1754 in Norwich, New London, Connecticut; died on 23 Oct 1831 in Delaware County, Ohio; was buried in Oak Grove Cemetery, Delaware, Delaware, Ohio.

    Notes:

    He was a private in the Revolution.

    Ebenezer married Mary "Molly" Hutchins in 1776 in Bennington, Bennington, Vermont. Mary (daughter of Capt. Nathan Hutchins and Mary Whittier) was born on 20 May 1757 in Norwich, New London, Connecticut; died on 4 Apr 1825 in Delaware, Delaware, Ohio; was buried in Oak Grove Cemetery, Delaware, Delaware, Ohio. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 36. Anson S. Wood  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 3 May 1779 in Bennington, Bennington, Vermont; died on 14 Aug 1849 in Morrow County, Ohio; was buried in Baptist Cemetery, Morrow County, Ohio.

  2. 31.  Abraham Currier Descendancy chart to this point (24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 25 Mar 1759 in Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 24 Mar 1846 in Kennebunkport, York, Maine; was buried in Hope Cemetery, Kennebunk, York, Maine.

    Notes:

    He was placed on the pension roll of York County, Maine, in 1831, for his service in the Revolution as a private on the Massachusetts Continental Army line.

    Abraham married Lydia Kimball on 5 Jun 1784 in Wells, York, Maine. Lydia (daughter of Nathaniel Kimball and Joanna Mitchell) was born in 1763; died on 7 Oct 1832 in Kennebunk, York, Maine; was buried in Hope Cemetery, Kennebunk, York, Maine. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 37. Edmund A. Currier  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1789 in Kennbunkport, Maine; died on 4 Aug 1872; was buried in Hope Cemetery, Kennebunk, York, Maine.

  3. 32.  Maj. Greenleaf Cilley Descendancy chart to this point (25.Joseph8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 1 Mar 1767 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 24 Feb 1808 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; was buried in Nottingham Square Cemetery, Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

    Notes:

    He was a farmer, a major in the New Hampshire militia, and a holder of various Nottingham town offices at one time or another.

    Greenleaf married Jennie Nealley on 22 May 1788 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire. Jennie (daughter of Joseph Nealley and Susanna Bowdoin) was born on 22 Sep 1772 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 26 Mar 1866 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; was buried in Nottingham Square Cemetery, Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 38. Col. Jonathan Cilley, Senator from New Hampshire  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 4 Jan 1791 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 16 Sep 1887 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; was buried in Nottingham Square Cemetery, Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    2. 39. Jonathan Longfellow Cilley, U.S. Representative from Maine  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 2 Jul 1802 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 24 Feb 1838 in Bladensburg, Prince George's, Maryland; was buried in Elm Grove Cemetery, Thomaston, Knox, Maine.

  4. 33.  Eliphalet Cilley Descendancy chart to this point (26.Cutting8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 30 Aug 1762 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

    Eliphalet married Dolly Shaw in 1787 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire. Dolly was born on 30 Aug 1762 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 40. Joseph Cilley  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 Sep 1793 in Epping, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died in Apr 1867.

  5. 34.  Lucretia Manning Descendancy chart to this point (27.John8, 21.Elizabeth7, 16.Thomas6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 23 Mar 1765 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 9 Jul 1852 in Hamilton, Essex, Massachusetts; was buried in Old South Cemetery, Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 9 Jul 1852, Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts

    Lucretia married Asa Smith on 27 Nov 1788 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. Asa (son of Adam Smith and Elizabeth) was born on 17 Jul 1759 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; was christened on 5 Aug 1759 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 30 Jul 1852 in Hamilton, Essex, Massachusetts; was buried in Old South Cemetery, Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 41. Ammi Smith  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 26 May 1790 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died in 1860.

  6. 35.  Elizabeth Baldwin Sherman Descendancy chart to this point (29.Susanna8, 22.Susanna7, 17.Matthew6, 12.Deacon5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 27 Oct 1823 in New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut; died on 10 Mar 1917 in Nordhoff, California.

    Notes:

    Nordhoff, California was renamed Ojai during World War I.

    Elizabeth married Thomas Anthony Thacher on 1 Aug 1860 in New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut. Thomas (son of Peter Thacher and Ann Parks) was born on 11 Jan 1815 in Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut; died on 7 Apr 1886 in New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 42. Elizabeth Thacher  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Sep 1868 in New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut; died on 14 Aug 1952 in Marin, California.


Generation: 10

  1. 36.  Anson S. Wood Descendancy chart to this point (30.Ebenezer9, 23.Philippa8, 18.Mary7, 13.Phillipa6, 8.Jacob5, 4.John4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 3 May 1779 in Bennington, Bennington, Vermont; died on 14 Aug 1849 in Morrow County, Ohio; was buried in Baptist Cemetery, Morrow County, Ohio.

    Anson married Keziah Monroe on 11 Jun 1834 in Westfield, Delaware, Ohio. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 43. Rose Althea Adelia Wood  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 May 1844 in Ohio; died on 17 Jan 1915 in Butler, Bates, Missouri; was buried in Green Lawn Cemetery, Rich Hill, Bates, Missouri.

  2. 37.  Edmund A. Currier Descendancy chart to this point (31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born about 1789 in Kennbunkport, Maine; died on 4 Aug 1872; was buried in Hope Cemetery, Kennebunk, York, Maine.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 1790

    Edmund married Esther Kimball on 20 Dec 1815 in Wells, York, Maine. Esther (daughter of Israel Kimball and Elizabeth "Betsey" Evans) died on 6 Jul 1843; was buried in Hope Cemetery, Kennebunk, York, Maine. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 44. Cyrus M. Currier  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1833 in Kennebunk, York, Maine; died on 21 Aug 1900 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts.

  3. 38.  Col. Jonathan Cilley, Senator from New Hampshire Descendancy chart to this point (32.Greenleaf9, 25.Joseph8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 4 Jan 1791 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 16 Sep 1887 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; was buried in Nottingham Square Cemetery, Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

    Notes:

    From Wikipedia (accessed 19 May 2021):

    Joseph Cilley [...] was a United States Senator from New Hampshire.

    Cilley was born in Nottingham, New Hampshire, the son of Greenleaf Cilley and his wife Jane Nealy. He was also the grandson of Revolutionary War officer Joseph Cilley, after whom he was named. He was the nephew of Bradbury Cilley and brother of Jonathan Cilley.

    Cilley was educated at Atkinson Academy and joined the Army to fight in the War of 1812 as an officer in the 21st Infantry Regiment, seeing action at the Battle of Sackett's Harbor and Battle of Chrysler's Farm. Joseph Cilley was severely wounded at the Battle of Lundy's Lane; he was shot through the leg by a musket ball causing a compound fracture. He attained the brevetted rank of captain, was the quartermaster of the New Hampshire Militia in 1817, and was the division inspector in 1821. After his military service Joseph Cilley became an aide-de-camp to Governor Benjamin Pierce in 1827.

    In 1846, a Whig–Liberty Party–Independent Democrat coalition assumed power in New Hampshire state government. Whig Anthony Colby was elected Governor, Independent Democrat John P. Hale was elected Speaker of the State House of Representatives, and Cilley was elected to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Levi Woodbury. Cilley served from June 13, 1846 to March 3, 1847. He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1846, after which he retired to his farm in Nottingham.


  4. 39.  Jonathan Longfellow Cilley, U.S. Representative from Maine Descendancy chart to this point (32.Greenleaf9, 25.Joseph8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 2 Jul 1802 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 24 Feb 1838 in Bladensburg, Prince George's, Maryland; was buried in Elm Grove Cemetery, Thomaston, Knox, Maine.

    Notes:

    From Wikipedia (accessed 19 May 2021):

    Jonathan Cilley [...] was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Maine. He served part of one term in the 25th Congress, and died as the result of a wound sustained in a duel with another Congressman, William J. Graves of Kentucky.

    Cilley was a native of Nottingham, New Hampshire, and was educated at Atkinson Academy and Bowdoin College. He settled in Thomaston, Maine, where he studied law and attained admission to the bar in addition to editing the Thomaston Register newspaper. A Democrat, Cilley served in the Maine House of Representatives from 1831 to 1836, and was Speaker in 1835 and 1836.

    In 1836, Cilley was elected to the United States House of Representatives. He served part of one term, and died as the result of a gunshot wound caused when he engaged in a duel with Representative William J. Graves. They fired at each other with rifles three times, and on the third shot, Graves hit Cilley's femoral artery, causing blood loss which resulted in Cilley's death. He was temporarily interred at Congressional Cemetery, and later reinterred at Elm Grove Cemetery in Thomaston.

    Jonathan Cilley was born in Nottingham, New Hampshire, and was the son of Jane (Nealley) Cilley and Greenleaf Cilley. He was the brother of Joseph Cilley, grandson of Major General Joseph Cilley, and nephew of Bradbury Cilley.

    Cilley attended Atkinson Academy and Bowdoin College. He was a member of Bowdoin's famed class of 1825, which included Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. While at Bowdoin, Cilley also became close friends with future U.S. President Franklin Pierce, a member of the class of 1824. Deciding to stay in Maine after graduating from Bowdoin, Cilley studied law with John Ruggles, was admitted to the bar in 1828, and practiced in Thomaston.

    In 1829, Jonathan Cilley married Deborah Prince, the daughter of local businessman Hezekiah Prince. Jonathan and Deborah had five children, two of whom died very young. Their surviving children were Greenleaf (b. 1829), Jonathan Prince (b. 1835), and Julia (b. 1837). Jonathan Prince Cilley became a Brigadier General by Brevet in the Union Army during the Civil War. Greenleaf was a career officer in the United States Navy. He married Malvina Vernet, the daughter of Luis Vernet, a former Argentinian governor of the Falkland Islands in Montevideo, Uruguay in 1861 and died in San Isidro, Buenos Aires in 1899. Julia was the wife of Ellis Draper Lazell (1832-1875). [...]

    Cilley died in office after sustaining a fatal wound in a duel with Congressman William J. Graves of Kentucky. The climate surrounding the Twenty-fifth U.S. Congress was one of increasing political partisanship. Majority Democrats fought with minority Whigs over the response to the Panic of 1837, which was generally blamed on the policies of Democratic President Martin Van Buren. Underlying this conflict was lingering bitterness over the decision of Van Buren's predecessor, Democrat Andrew Jackson, not to re-charter the Second Bank of the United States. One of the pillars of the Whig press was the New York Courier and Enquirer, a newspaper edited by James Watson Webb.

    Democrats, including Jonathan Cilley, considered Webb's coverage of Congress to be biased and unfair; Cilley vented some of his party's bitterness in remarks made on the House floor, and suggested that Webb's change from opposing to supporting the re-chartering of the bank came about because Webb received loans from the bank totaling $52,000. Webb, who considered himself insulted by Cilley's suggestion of quid pro quo corruption, persuaded a Whig friend, Congressman William J. Graves, to deliver Webb's challenge to a duel. Cilley refused to accept the letter, in terms which Graves decided were an insult to his honor; Graves then challenged Cilley, and Cilley felt honor bound to accept. Dueling was prohibited within the boundaries of the District of Columbia, so the participants and their seconds – George Wallace Jones for Cilley and Henry A. Wise for Graves – arranged to meet on February 24, 1838, at the Bladensburg Dueling Grounds, just outside the city limits and inside the Maryland border.

    As the challenged party, Cilley had the choice of weapons. Because of Graves' reputation as an expert pistol shot, Cilley selected rifles, with the distance between the duelists to be 80 yards, a distance far enough apart to negate Graves' supposed shooting skill; in actuality, the marked off distance was 94 yards. After their first fire missed, the participants shortened the distance and fired again, but again both shots missed. On the third exchange of shots, Graves fatally wounded Cilley by shooting him through the femoral artery. Cilley bled to death on the dueling ground within a matter of minutes. He was buried at Congressional Cemetery, and re-interred at Elm Grove Cemetery in Thomaston, Maine.

    There is a cenotaph to Cilley's memory located at Congressional Cemetery.

    After Cilley's death, longtime friend Nathaniel Hawthorne published two biographical sketches of him. His colleagues paid tribute to him by passing a Federal law on February 20, 1839, which strengthened the strict prohibition against dueling in Washington, D.C. by making it a crime to issue or accept a challenge within district limits, even if the actual duel was to take place outside the district.

    Jonathan Cilley, by Nathaniel Hawthorne (1838):

    The subject of this brief memorial had barely begun to be an actor in the great scenes where his part could not have failed to be a prominent one. The nation did not have time to recognize him. His death, aside from the shock with which the manner of it has thrilled every bosom, is looked upon merely as causing a vacancy in the delegation of his State, which a new member may fill as creditably as the departed. It will, perhaps, be deemed praise enough to say of Cilley, that he would have proved himself an active and efficient partisan. But those who knew him longest and most intimately, conscious of his high talents and rare qualities, his energy of mind and force of character, must claim much more than much a need for their lost friend. They feel that not merely a party nor a section, but our collective country, has lost a man who had the heart and the ability to serve her well. It would be doing injustice to the hopes which lie withered upon his untimely grave, if, in paying a farewell tribute to his memory, we were to ask a narrower sympathy than that of the people at large. May no bitterness of party prejudices influence him who writes, nor those, of whatever political opinions, who may read!

    Jonathan Cilley was born at Nottingham, N.H., on the 2d of July, 1802. His grandfather, Col. Joseph Cilley, commanded a New Hampshire regiment during the Revolutionary war, and established a character for energy and intrepidity, of which more than one of his descendants have proved themselves the inheritors. Greenleaf Cilley, son of the preceding, died in 1808, leaving a family of four sons and three daughters. The aged mother of this family and the three daughters are still living. Of the sons, the only survivor is Joseph Cilley, who was an officer in the late war, and served with great distinction on the Canadian frontier. Jonathan, being desirous of a liberal education, commenced his studies at Atkinson Academy, at about the age of seventeen, and became a member of the freshman class of Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Me., in 1821. Inheriting but little property from his father, he adopted the usual expedient of a young New-Englander in similar circumstances, and gained a small income by teaching a country school during the winter months both before and after his entrance at college.

    Cilley's character and standing at college afforded high promise of usefulness and distinction in afterlife. Though not the foremost scholar of his class, he stood in the front rank, and probably derived all the real benefit from the prescribed course of study that it could bestow on so practical a mind. His true education consisted in the exercise of those faculties which fitted him to be a popular leader. His influence among his fellow-students was probably greater than that of any other individual; and he had already made himself powerful in that limited sphere, by a free and natural eloquence, a flow of pertinent ideas in language of unstudied appropriateness, which seemed always to accomplish precisely the result on which he had calculated. This gift was sometimes displayed in class meetings, when measures important to those concerned were under discussion; sometimes in mock trials at law, when judge, jury, lawyers, prisoner, and witnesses were personated by the students, and Cilley played the part of a fervid and successful advocate; and, besides these exhibitions of power, he regularly trained himself in the forensic debates of a literary society, of which he afterwards became president. Nothing could be less artificial than his style of oratory. After filling his mind with the necessary information, he trusted every thing else to his mental warmth and the inspiration of the moment, and poured himself out with an earnest and irresistible simplicity. There was a singular contrast between the flow of thought from his lips, and the coldness and restraint with which he wrote; and though, in maturer life, he acquired a considerable facility in exercising the pen, he always felt the tongue to be his peculiar instrument.

    In private intercourse, Cilley possessed a remarkable fascination. It was impossible not to regard him with the kindliest feelings, because his companions were intuitively certain of a like kindliness on his part. He had a power of sympathy which enabled him to understand every character, and hold communion with human nature in all its varieties. He never shrank from the intercourse of man with man; and it was to his freedom in this particular that he owed much of his subsequent popularity among a people who are accustomed to take a personal interest in the men whom they elevate to office. In few words, let us characterize him at the outset of life as a young man of quick and powerful intellect, endowed with sagacity and tact, yet frank and free in his mode of action, ambitious of good influence, earnest, active, and persevering, with an elasticity and cheerful strength of mind which made difficulties easy, and the struggle with them a pleasure. Mingled with the amiable qualities that were like sunshine to his friends, there were harsher and sterner traits, which fitted him to make head against an adverse world; but it was only at the moment of need that the iron framework of his character became perceptible.

    Immediately on quitting college, Mr. Cilley took up his residence in Thomaston, and began the study of law in the office of John Ruggles, Esq., now a senator in Congress. Mr. Ruggles being then a prominent member of the Democratic party, it was natural that the pupil should lend his aid to promote the political views of his instructor, especially as he would thus uphold the principles which he had cherished from boyhood. From year to year, the election of Mr. Ruggles to the State legislature was strongly opposed. Cilley's services in overcoming this opposition were too valuable to be dispensed with; and thus, at a period when most young men still stand aloof from the world, he had already taken his post as a leading politician. He afterwards found cause to regret that so much time had been abstracted from his professional studies; nor did the absorbing and exciting nature of his political career afford him any subsequent opportunity to supply the defects of his legal education. He was admitted an attorney-at-law in 1829, and in April of the same year was married to Miss Deborah Prince, daughter of Hon. Hezekiah Prince of Thomaston, where Mr. Cilley continued to reside, and entered upon the practice of his profession.

    In 1831, Mr. Ruggles having been appointed a judge of the court of common pleas, it became necessary to send a new representative from Thomaston to the legislature of the State. Mr. Cilley was brought forward as the Democratic candidate, obtained his election, and took his seat in January, 1832. But in the course of this year the friendly relations between Judge Ruggles and Mr. Cilley were broken off. The former gentleman, it appears had imbibed the idea that his political aspirations (which were then directed towards a seat in the senate of the United States) did not receive all the aid which he was disposed to claim from the influence of his late pupil. When, therefore, Mr. Cilley was held up as a candidate for re-election to the legislature, the whole strength of Judge Ruggles and his adherents was exerted against him. This was the first act and declaration of a political hostility, which was too warm and earnest not to become, in some degree, personal, and which rendered Mr. Cilley's subsequent career a continual struggle with those to whom he might naturally have looked for friendship and support. It sets his abilities and force of character in the strongest light, to view him, at the very outset of public life, without the aid of powerful connections, an isolated young man, forced into a position of hostility, not merely with the enemies of his party, but likewise with a large body of its adherents, even accused of treachery to its principles, yet gaining triumph after triumph and making his way steadily onward. Surely his was a mental and moral energy which death alone could have laid prostrate.

    We have the testimony of those who knew Mr. Cilley well, that his own feelings were never so imbittered by those conflicts as to prevent him from interchanging the courtesies of society with his most violent opponents. While their resentments rendered his very presence intolerable to them, he could address them with as much ease and composure as if their mutual relations had been those of perfect harmony. There was no affectation in this: it was good-natured consciousness of his own strength that enabled him to keep his temper: it was the same chivalrous sentiment which impels hostile warriors to shake hands in the intervals of battle. Mr. Cilley was slow to withdraw his confidence from any man who he deemed a friend; and it has been mentioned as almost his only weak point, that he was too apt to suffer himself to be betrayed before he would condescend to suspect. His prejudices, however, when once adopted, partook of the depth and strength of his character, and could not be readily overcome. He loved to subdue his foes; but no man could use a triumph more generously than he.

    Let us resume our narrative. In spite of the opposition of Judge Ruggles and his friends, combined with that of the Whigs, Mr. Cilley was re-elected to the legislature of 1833, and was equally successful in each of the succeeding years, until his election to Congress. He was given successive years as the representative of Thomaston. In 1834, when Mr. Dunlap was nominated as the Democratic candidate for governor, Mr. Cilley gave his support to Gov. Smith, in the belief that the substitution of a new candidate had been unfairly effected. He considered it a stratagem intended to promote the election of Judge Ruggles to the senate of the United States. Early in the legislative session of the same year, the Ruggles party obtained a temporary triumph over Mr. Cilley, effected his expulsion from the Democratic caucuses, and attempted to stigmatize him as a traitor to his political friends. But Mr. Cilley's high and honorable course was ere long understood and appreciated by his party and the people. He told them, openly and boldly, that they might undertake to expel him from their caucuses; but they could not expel him from the Democratic party: they might stigmatize him with any appellation they might choose; but they could not reach the height on which he stood, nor shake his position with the people. But a few weeks had elapsed, and Mr. Cilley was the acknowledged head and leader of that party in the legislature. During the same session, Mr. Speaker Clifford (one of the friends of Judge Ruggles) being appointed attorney-general, the Ruggles party were desirous of securing the election of another of their adherents to the chair; but, as it was obvious that Mr. Cilley's popularity would gain him the place, the incumbent was induced to delay his resignation till the end of the term. At the session of 1835, Messrs. Cilley, Davee, and McCrote being candidates for the chair, Mr. Cilley withdrew in favor of Mr. Davee. That gentleman was accordingly elected; but, being soon afterwards appointed sheriff of Somerset County, Mr. Cilley succeeded him as speaker, and filled the same office during the session of 1836. All parties awarded him the praise of being the best presiding officer that the house ever had.

    In 1836, he was nominated by a large portion of the Democratic electors of the Lincoln Congressional District as their candidate for Congress. That district has recently shown itself to possess a decided Whig majority; and this would have been equally the case in 1836, had any other man than Mr. Cilley appeared on the Democratic side. He had likewise to contend, as in all the former scenes of his political life, with that portion of his own party which adhered to Mr. Ruggles. There was still another formidable obstacle, in the high character of Judge Bailey, who then represented the district, and was a candidate for re-election. All these difficulties, however, served only to protract the contest, but could not snatch the victory from Mr. Cilley, who obtained a majority of votes at the third trial. It was a fatal triumph.

    In the summer of 1837, a few months after his election to Congress, I met Mr. Cilley for the first time since early youth, when he had been to me almost as an elder brother. The two or three days which I spent in his neighborhood enabled us to renew our former intimacy. In his person there was very little change, and that little was for the better. He had an impending brow, deep-set eyes, and a thin and thoughtful countenance, which; in his abstracted moments, seemed almost stern; but, in the intercourse of society, it was brightened with a kindly smile, that will live in the recollection of all who knew him. His manners had not a fastidious polish, but were characterized by the simplicity of one who had dwelt remote from cities, holding free companionship with the yeomen of the land. I thought him as true a representative of the people as ever theory could portray. His earlier and later habits of life, his feelings, partialities, and prejudices, were those of the people; the strong and shrewd sense which constituted so marked a feature of his mind was but a higher degree of the popular intellect. He loved the people, and respected them, and was prouder of nothing than of his brotherhood with those who had intrusted their public interests to his care. His continual struggles in the political arena had strengthened his bones and sinews: opposition had kept him ardent; while success had cherished the generous warmth of his nature, and assisted the growth both of his powers and sympathies. Disappointment might have soured and contracted him; but it appeared to me that his triumphant warfare had been no less beneficial to his heart than to his mind. I was aware, indeed, that his harsher traits had grown apace with his milder ones; that he possessed iron resolution, indomitable perseverance and an almost terrible energy; but these features had imparted no hardness to his character in private intercourse. In the hour of public need, these strong qualities would have shown themselves the most prominent ones, and would have encouraged his countrymen to rally round him as one of their natural leaders.

    In his private and domestic relations, Mr. Cilley was most exemplary; and he enjoyed no less happiness than he conferred. He had been the father of four children, two of whom were in the grave, leaving, I thought, a more abiding impression of tenderness and regret than the death of infants usually makes on the masculine mind. Two boys -- the elder, seven or eight years or age; and the younger, two -- still remained to him; and the fondness of these children for their father, their evident enjoyment of his society, was proof enough of his gentle and amiable character within the precincts of his family. In that bereaved household, there is now another child, whom the father never saw. Mr. Cilley's domestic habits were simple and primitive to a degree unusual, in most parts of our country among men of so eminent a station as he had attained. It made me smile, though with any thing but scorn, in contrast to the aristocratic stateliness which I have witnessed elsewhere, to see him driving home his own cow after a long search for her through the village. That trait alone would have marked him as a man whose greatness lay within himself. He appeared to take much interest in the cultivation of his garden, and was very fond of flowers. He kept bees, and told me that he loved to sit for whole hours by the hives, watching the labors of the insects, and soothed by the hum with which they filled the air. I glance at these minute particulars of his daily life, because they form so strange a contrast with the circumstances of his death. Who could have believed, that with his thoroughly New-England character, in so short a time after I had seen him in that peaceful and happy home, among those simple occupations and pure enjoyments, he would be stretched in his own blood, -- slain for an almost impalpable punctilio!

    It is not my purpose to dwell upon Mr. Cilley's brief career in Congress. Brief as it was, his character and talents had more than begun to be felt, and would soon have linked his name with the history of every important measure, and have borne it onward with the progress of the principles which be supported. He was not eager to seize opportunities of thrusting himself into notice; but, when time and the occasion summoned him, he came forward, and poured forth his ready and natural eloquence with as much effect in the councils of the nation as he had done in those of his own State. With every effort that he made, the hopes of his party rested more decidedly upon him, as one who would hereafter be found in the vanguard of many a Democratic victory. Let me spare myself the details of the awful catastrophe by which all those proud hopes perished; for I write with a blunted pen and a head benumbed, and am the less able to express my feelings as they lie deep at heart, and inexhaustible.

    On the 23d of February last, Mr. Cilley received a challenge from Mr. Graves of Kentucky, through the hands of Mr. Wise of Virginia. This measure, as is declared in the challenge itself, was grounded on Mr. Cilley's refusal to receive a message, of which Mr. Graves and been the bearer, from a person of disputed respectability; although no exception to that person's character had been expressed by Mr. Cilley; nor need such inference have been drawn, unless Mr. Graves were conscious that public opinion held his friend in a doubtful light. The challenge was accepted, and the parties met on the following day. They exchanged two shots with rifles. After each shot, a conference was held between the friends of both parties, and the most generous avowals of respect and kindly feeling were made on the part of Cilley towards his antagonist, but without avail. A third shot was exchanged; and Mr. Cilley fell dead into the arms of one of his friends. While I write, a Committee of Investigation is sitting upon this affair: but the public has not waited for its award; and the writer, in accordance with the public, has formed his opinion on the official statement of Messrs. Wise and Jones. A challenge was never given on a more shadowy pretext; a duel was never pressed to a fatal close in the face of such open kindness as was expressed by Mr. Cilley: and the conclusion is inevitable, that Mr. Graves and his principal second, Mr. Wise, have gone farther than their own dreadful code will warrant them, and overstepped the imaginary distinction, which, on their own principles, separates manslaughter from murder.

    Alas that over the grave of a dear friend, my sorrow for the bereavement must be mingled with another grief, -- that he threw away such a life in so miserable a cause! Why, as he was true to the Northern character in all things else, did he swerve from his Northern principles in this final scene? But his error was a generous one, since he fought for what he deemed the honor of New England; and, now that death has paid the forfeit, the most rigid may forgive him. If that dark pitfall -- that bloody grave -- had not lain the in midst of his path, whither, whither, night it not have led him! It has ended there: yet so strong was my conception of his energies, so like destiny did it appear that he should achieve every thing at which he aimed, that even now my fancy will not dwell upon his grave, but pictures him still amid the struggles and triumphs of the present and the future. 

    Jonathan married Deborah Prince on 4 Apr 1829. Deborah (daughter of Hezekiah Prince and Isabella Coombs) was born on 6 Jul 1808; died on 14 Aug 1844; was buried in Elm Grove Cemetery, Thomaston, Knox, Maine. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 45. Commander Greenleaf Cilley  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 Oct 1829 in Thomaston, Knox, Maine; died on 5 Feb 1899 in San Isidro, Buenos Aires, Argentina; was buried in Elm Grove Cemetery, Thomaston, Knox, Maine.

  5. 40.  Joseph Cilley Descendancy chart to this point (33.Eliphalet9, 26.Cutting8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 27 Sep 1793 in Epping, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died in Apr 1867.

    Notes:

    Also called Joe Jackson Cilley.

    Joseph married Nancy Maloon on 23 Apr 1822 in New Hampshire. Nancy (daughter of Jeremiah Maloon and Nabby Thomas) was born in 1804 in Deerfield, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died between 1850 and 1860. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 46. Louisa M. Cilley  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 12 Oct 1822 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 13 Jul 1900 in Barrington, Strafford, New Hampshire; was buried in Samuel Thompson Cemetery, Barrington, Strafford, New Hampshire.

  6. 41.  Ammi Smith Descendancy chart to this point (34.Lucretia9, 27.John8, 21.Elizabeth7, 16.Thomas6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 26 May 1790 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died in 1860.

    Notes:

    Ammi Smith and his wife Lucy Lakeman were third cousins, both being great-great-grandchildren of Thomas Manning and his wife Mary Giddings. Ammi was a great-grandson of Dr. Joseph Manning (1703-1784), and Lucy was a great-granddaughter of Joseph's identical twin John Manning (1703-1775).

    Ammi married Lucy Lakeman on 26 Nov 1815. Lucy (daughter of William Lakeman and Sarah Wells) was born on 9 Apr 1799 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died in 1859. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 47. Ammi Smith  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 4 Dec 1826 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 9 Aug 1876 in Newton Centre, Middlesex, Massachusetts; was buried in Newton Cemetery, Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts.

  7. 42.  Elizabeth Thacher Descendancy chart to this point (35.Elizabeth9, 29.Susanna8, 22.Susanna7, 17.Matthew6, 12.Deacon5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 22 Sep 1868 in New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut; died on 14 Aug 1952 in Marin, California.

    Notes:

    From www.ywcasf-marin.org/marin-womens-hall-fame/honorees/elizabeth-thacher-kent:

    Elizabeth Thacher Kent, a matriarch in the founding family of Kentfield, is one of the few Marin County women to be elected posthumously to the Marin Women's Hall of Fame. Kent was a distinguished proponent of women's rights and international peace and was instrumental in securing women's right to vote.

    Kent took up permanent residence in Marin in 1907 and immediately became a vocal activist in support of women's' suffrage. When her husband, William, was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, Kent leveraged her position as a Congressman's wife to support the national suffrage movement. She was a featured speaker at the 1913 and 1914 conventions of the National American Women's Suffrage Association (NAWSA) and shortly thereafter assumed leadership of their Congressional Committee. By 1915, she helped form the Congressional Union (later re-named the Women's Party), which picketed the White House in support of suffrage. Kent was arrested twice for her suffrage demonstrating. However, her cause prevailed and in August 1920 the Susan B. Anthony Amendment to the United States Constitution was passed guaranteeing American women the right to vote.

    In addition to supporting suffrage, Elizabeth Kent was committed to the cause of world peace. In the 1930's, she provided leadership to the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. She and her husband were also early supporters of the fledging conservation movement. They donated a large tract of land to the U.S. Government to preserve old-growth redwoods. Their gift, the Muir Woods National Monument, provides a lasting testimony to the Kents' exemplary lives of public service.

    Elizabeth married Rep. William Kent on 26 Feb 1890 in Nordhoff, California. Rep. (son of Albert Emmet Kent and Adaline Elizabeth Dutton) was born on 29 Mar 1864 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois; died on 13 Mar 1928 in Kentfield, Marin, California. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 48. Elizabeth Sherman Thatcher Kent  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 8 Jan 1894 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois; died on 12 Jan 1952 in Marin, California.


Generation: 11

  1. 43.  Rose Althea Adelia Wood Descendancy chart to this point (36.Anson10, 30.Ebenezer9, 23.Philippa8, 18.Mary7, 13.Phillipa6, 8.Jacob5, 4.John4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 14 May 1844 in Ohio; died on 17 Jan 1915 in Butler, Bates, Missouri; was buried in Green Lawn Cemetery, Rich Hill, Bates, Missouri.

    Notes:

    Also called Rosaltha Adelia Wood.

    Rose married Alva Evans Lyle in 1874 in Metz, Vernon, Missouri. Alva (son of Robert Lyle and Anna Evans) was born on 8 Mar 1848 in Perry County, Ohio; died on 9 Aug 1914 in Butler, Bates, Missouri; was buried in Green Lawn Cemetery, Rich Hill, Bates, Missouri. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 49. Bam Lyle  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Jul 1879 in Grinnell, Poweshiek, Iowa; died on 18 Sep 1976; was buried in Forest Hill Cemetery, Kansas City, Jackson, Missouri.

  2. 44.  Cyrus M. Currier Descendancy chart to this point (37.Edmund10, 31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born about 1833 in Kennebunk, York, Maine; died on 21 Aug 1900 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1832, Kennebunk, York, Maine
    • Alternate birth: Abt 1834, Maine

    Family/Spouse: Louisia Ardelia. Louisia (daughter of Michael and Catharine) was born about 1839 in France; died on 27 Nov 1866 in Dorchester, Suffolk, Massachusetts; was buried in Codman Burying Ground, Dorchester, Suffolk, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 50. Norris Wiggin Currier  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 16 Mar 1859 in Kennebunkport, York, Maine; died on 25 Jan 1941 in Charlestown, Suffolk, Massachussets.

    Cyrus married Thankful P. Millett on 25 Mar 1869 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts. Thankful was born about 1831. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 45.  Commander Greenleaf Cilley Descendancy chart to this point (39.Jonathan10, 32.Greenleaf9, 25.Joseph8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 27 Oct 1829 in Thomaston, Knox, Maine; died on 5 Feb 1899 in San Isidro, Buenos Aires, Argentina; was buried in Elm Grove Cemetery, Thomaston, Knox, Maine.

    Notes:

    He joined the US Navy as a midshipman shortly after his father was killed in a duel. He made a career of it and retired in 1865 with the rank of Commander. On a naval visit to South America he met and fell in love with Malvina Vernet, daughter of Luis Vernet, who was once governor of the Malvina Islands. They married in 1861 and lived in the United States for some years, where their first two children were born. They were present in Ford's Theater in Washington, D.C. on 15 Apr 1865 when President Lincoln was assasinated. Not long after that, they moved back to Argentina, where they spent the rest of their lives.

    They had six children. Their oldest, a daughter, died before her second birthday. The second, Jonathan Vernet Cilley (1863-1947) was born in Brooklyn, New York, trained as a civil engineer, married an Italian woman, and spent the rest of his life in South America. The remaining four children, Luis Prince Cilley (1867-1941), Joseph Saez Cilley (b. 1868), Déborah Malvinas Cilley (b. 1870), and Malvina Justa Cilley (1872-1941), were all born in South America, married South American spouses, and died there, resulting in innumerable descendants of the New England Cilley family on that continent, mostly in Argentina and Chile.

    Greenleaf married Malvina Vernet on 13 May 1861 in Montevideo, Uruguay. Malvina (daughter of Luis Vernet, Governor of the Malvina Islands and Maria Saez) was born on 5 Feb 1830 in Malvina Islands, Argentina, now Falkland Islands, British Overseas Territory; died on 24 Sep 1924 in Argentina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 46.  Louisa M. Cilley Descendancy chart to this point (40.Joseph10, 33.Eliphalet9, 26.Cutting8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 12 Oct 1822 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 13 Jul 1900 in Barrington, Strafford, New Hampshire; was buried in Samuel Thompson Cemetery, Barrington, Strafford, New Hampshire.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1823, Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire
    • Alternate birth: Oct 1823, New Hampshire
    • Alternate birth: 12 Nov 1823, Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire
    • Alternate birth: Abt 1824, New Hampshire
    • Alternate birth: Abt 1824

    Louisa married Samuel Thompson on 7 Jul 1844 in Dover, Strafford, New Hampshire. Samuel (son of Job Thompson and Abigail Burnham) was born on 30 Mar 1815 in Durham, Strafford, New Hampshire; died on 27 Dec 1892 in Barrington, Strafford, New Hampshire; was buried in Samuel Thompson Cemetery, Barrington, Strafford, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 51. Mary Parthenia Thompson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Mar 1856 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 21 Nov 1942 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois; was buried on 23 Nov 1942 in Acacia Park Cemetery, Norwood Park, Cook, Illinois.

  5. 47.  Ammi Smith Descendancy chart to this point (41.Ammi10, 34.Lucretia9, 27.John8, 21.Elizabeth7, 16.Thomas6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 4 Dec 1826 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 9 Aug 1876 in Newton Centre, Middlesex, Massachusetts; was buried in Newton Cemetery, Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts.

    Family/Spouse: Hannah B. Shaw. Hannah (daughter of William Benson Shaw and Cynthia Witherell) was born on 6 Mar 1828; died on 23 May 1899; was buried in Newton Cemetery, Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 52. Ella S. Smith  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Apr 1854 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 12 Jan 1927 in Woodstock, Windsor, Vermont; was buried in Newton Cemetery, Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts.

  6. 48.  Elizabeth Sherman Thatcher Kent Descendancy chart to this point (42.Elizabeth10, 35.Elizabeth9, 29.Susanna8, 22.Susanna7, 17.Matthew6, 12.Deacon5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 8 Jan 1894 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois; died on 12 Jan 1952 in Marin, California.

    Elizabeth married George Stanleigh Arnold on 26 Feb 1915 in Washington, D.C.. George (son of George Sumner Arnold and Evelyn Greenwood Thompson) was born on 3 Apr 1881 in New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut; died on 18 Jan 1942 in Marin, California. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 53. Elizabeth Sherman "Bibba" Arnold  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 2 Dec 1915 in San Francisco, San Francisco, California; died on 18 Sep 1992 in Los Altos, Santa Clara, California.


Generation: 12

  1. 49.  Bam Lyle Descendancy chart to this point (43.Rose11, 36.Anson10, 30.Ebenezer9, 23.Philippa8, 18.Mary7, 13.Phillipa6, 8.Jacob5, 4.John4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 14 Jul 1879 in Grinnell, Poweshiek, Iowa; died on 18 Sep 1976; was buried in Forest Hill Cemetery, Kansas City, Jackson, Missouri.

    Bam married Rex Ivar Heinlein on 20 Nov 1899 in Butler, Bates, Missouri. Rex (son of Samuel Edward Heinlein and Elizabeth Kitchin) was born on 8 Aug 1878 in Christian County, Illinois; died on 7 Nov 1959 in Los Angeles County, California; was buried in Forest Hill Cemetery, Kansas City, Jackson, Missouri. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 54. Robert Anson Heinlein  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 7 Jul 1907 in Butler, Bates, Missouri; died on 8 May 1988 in Carmel-By-The-Sea, Monterey, California.

  2. 50.  Norris Wiggin Currier Descendancy chart to this point (44.Cyrus11, 37.Edmund10, 31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 16 Mar 1859 in Kennebunkport, York, Maine; died on 25 Jan 1941 in Charlestown, Suffolk, Massachussets.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1941, Somerville, Middlesex, Massachusetts

    Notes:

    He was a chauffeur, and a member of the Henry Price lodge of the Masons.

    Norris married Margaret A. Carmichael on 6 Jan 1885 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts. Margaret (daughter of Alexander Carmichael and Catharine) was born in Mar 1858 in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia; died on 29 Sep 1929 in Somerville, Middlesex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 55. Laura Adele Currier  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Aug 1889 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 24 Aug 1959.

  3. 51.  Mary Parthenia Thompson Descendancy chart to this point (46.Louisa11, 40.Joseph10, 33.Eliphalet9, 26.Cutting8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 1 Mar 1856 in Nottingham, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 21 Nov 1942 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois; was buried on 23 Nov 1942 in Acacia Park Cemetery, Norwood Park, Cook, Illinois.

    Mary married Dr. Douglas Amos Payne on 12 May 1888 in Cook County, Illinois. Douglas (son of James Withers Payne and Elizabeth Holtzclaw) was born on 30 May 1857 in Orlean, Fauquier, Virginia; died on 23 Nov 1943 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois; was buried on 26 Nov 1943. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 56. Veda Louise Payne  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 8 Feb 1890 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois; died on 6 Dec 1975 in Eagle River, Vilas, Wisconsin; was buried in Eagle River Cemetery, Eagle River, Vilas, Wisconsin.

  4. 52.  Ella S. Smith Descendancy chart to this point (47.Ammi11, 41.Ammi10, 34.Lucretia9, 27.John8, 21.Elizabeth7, 16.Thomas6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 15 Apr 1854 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 12 Jan 1927 in Woodstock, Windsor, Vermont; was buried in Newton Cemetery, Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts.

    Ella married Frederick Augustus Gardiner on 28 Apr 1875 in Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts. Frederick (son of David L. Gardiner and Abigail A. Winslow) was born on 7 Jan 1848 in Farmington, Franklin, Maine; died on 29 Jul 1923 in Barnard, Windsor, Vermont; was buried in Newton Cemetery, Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 57. Elizabeth Manning Gardiner  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1879 in Massachusetts; died in 1958 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; was buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts.

  5. 53.  Elizabeth Sherman "Bibba" Arnold Descendancy chart to this point (48.Elizabeth11, 42.Elizabeth10, 35.Elizabeth9, 29.Susanna8, 22.Susanna7, 17.Matthew6, 12.Deacon5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 2 Dec 1915 in San Francisco, San Francisco, California; died on 18 Sep 1992 in Los Altos, Santa Clara, California.

    Notes:

    http://www.sfgenealogy.com/boards/mcobits/archive4/5426.html:

    Elizabeth 'Bibbs' [sic] Arnold of Los Altos, a mathematician, environmentalist and wildlife advocate who helped crack the Japanese code during World War II, died Friday, Sept. 18, 1992, at her Los Altos Hills home of lung cancer. She was 76.

    A native of San Francisco, Dr. Arnold was reared in Marin County and was the oldest grandchild of Rep. William Kent, for whom the city of Kentfield was named.

    The daughter of a prominent San Francisco attorney, Eugene Arnold, she attended the Katherine Branson School in Ross and graduated first in her class in 1932. The school later named a day in her honor after she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa at Vassar College in her junior year.

    After graduating from Vassar in 1937, Dr. Arnold earned her Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of California at Berkeley in 1941.

    During World War II, Dr. Arnold was recruited by the Navy and worked on a team of cryptographers cracking Japanese codes, for which she received a Meritorious Civilian Service Award.

    In the 1960s, Dr. Arnold worked on machine language translation at Lockheed Missiles and Space Co. Inc.

    After her retirement in 1969, Dr. Arnold helped establish a recycling center in Los Altos and worked with Wildlife Rescue, helping injured animals.

    Dr. Arnold is survived by her husband of 46 years, Dr. William Francis Whitmore of Los Altos; four sons, Charles Whitmore of Washington, D.C., Edward Whitmore of San Francisco, Thomas Whitmore of Oakland and Peter Whitmore of Victoria, B.C. Also surviving are her brothers, George Stanleigh Arnold of Kentfield, Peter Arnold of Grass Valley and Anthony Arnold of Novato.

    -----

    Note that the above obituary is in error in two respects. Her father was George Stanleigh Arnold, not Eugene Arnold; and her family nickname was "Bibba", not "Bibbs."

    Her page at the Mathematics Genealogy Project is here, showing her to be a generation of advisors closer to Felix Klein than her husband was.

    -----

    Elizabeth Sherman Arnold and William Francis Whitmore were 7th cousins, both being 6XG-grandchildren of Col. John Lane (1661-1715) and Susanna Whipple (1661-1713).

    Elizabeth married William Francis Whitmore on 1 Nov 1946. William (son of Charles Edward Whitmore and Elizabeth Manning Gardiner) was born on 6 Jan 1916 in Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts; died on 6 Jan 1996. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 58. Thomas Sherman Whitmore  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Feb 1953 in Washington, D.C..


Generation: 13

  1. 54.  Robert Anson Heinlein Descendancy chart to this point (49.Bam12, 43.Rose11, 36.Anson10, 30.Ebenezer9, 23.Philippa8, 18.Mary7, 13.Phillipa6, 8.Jacob5, 4.John4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 7 Jul 1907 in Butler, Bates, Missouri; died on 8 May 1988 in Carmel-By-The-Sea, Monterey, California.

  2. 55.  Laura Adele Currier Descendancy chart to this point (50.Norris12, 44.Cyrus11, 37.Edmund10, 31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 22 Aug 1889 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 24 Aug 1959.

    Laura married Benjamin Edwin Drew on 6 Jan 1910 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts. Benjamin (son of Edwin Drew and Sarah Adelaide George) was born on 31 Jan 1876 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died in 1917 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 59. Edith Estelle Drew  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Mar 1911 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 12 Sep 2008 in Washington, Washington, Iowa.

    Laura married Hartwell Roderick McIsaac after 1930. Hartwell was born about 1894 in Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 56.  Veda Louise Payne Descendancy chart to this point (51.Mary12, 46.Louisa11, 40.Joseph10, 33.Eliphalet9, 26.Cutting8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 8 Feb 1890 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois; died on 6 Dec 1975 in Eagle River, Vilas, Wisconsin; was buried in Eagle River Cemetery, Eagle River, Vilas, Wisconsin.

    Notes:

    Called on her birth certificate Veda Lou Dorthenia Payne.

    In 1918 and 1920 she and her husband lived at 148 St Paul's Place in Brooklyn, New York.

    Veda married Joseph Jardine Macdonald on 12 May 1916 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois. Joseph (son of Rev. Donald Barclay Macdonald and Marienne Jardine) was born on 22 Sep 1888 in Bendale, now part of Scarborough, Ontario; died in Jan 1963. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 60. William Douglas Macdonald  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 11 Jun 1917 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois; died on 28 Mar 1989 in Bedford, Westchester, New York; was buried in Calverton National Cemetery, Calverton, Suffolk, New York.

  4. 57.  Elizabeth Manning Gardiner Descendancy chart to this point (52.Ella12, 47.Ammi11, 41.Ammi10, 34.Lucretia9, 27.John8, 21.Elizabeth7, 16.Thomas6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born in 1879 in Massachusetts; died in 1958 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; was buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts.

    Elizabeth married Charles Edward Whitmore on 31 May 1913 in Church of St. John the Evangelist, Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts. Charles (son of William Henry Whitmore and Frances Theres Walling "Fanny" Maynard) was born on 26 Sep 1887 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 7 Dec 1970 in Santa Clara, Santa Clara, California; was buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 61. William Francis Whitmore  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 6 Jan 1916 in Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts; died on 6 Jan 1996.

  5. 58.  Thomas Sherman Whitmore Descendancy chart to this point (53.Elizabeth12, 48.Elizabeth11, 42.Elizabeth10, 35.Elizabeth9, 29.Susanna8, 22.Susanna7, 17.Matthew6, 12.Deacon5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 10 Feb 1953 in Washington, D.C..


Generation: 14

  1. 59.  Edith Estelle Drew Descendancy chart to this point (55.Laura13, 50.Norris12, 44.Cyrus11, 37.Edmund10, 31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 22 Mar 1911 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 12 Sep 2008 in Washington, Washington, Iowa.

    Edith married Bernard Everett Nickerson in 1937 in Somerville, Middlesex, Massachusetts. Bernard (son of Alfred Smith Nickerson and Ella Seretha McComiskey) was born on 14 Jun 1908 in Clark's Harbour, Cape Sable Island, Shelburne, Nova Scotia; died on 17 May 1993 in Clark's Harbour, Cape Sable Island, Shelburne, Nova Scotia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 62. Bruce Nickerson  Descendancy chart to this point died on 10 Apr 2023.
    2. 63. Lorna Mae Nickerson  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Mar 1942.

  2. 60.  William Douglas Macdonald Descendancy chart to this point (56.Veda13, 51.Mary12, 46.Louisa11, 40.Joseph10, 33.Eliphalet9, 26.Cutting8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 11 Jun 1917 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois; died on 28 Mar 1989 in Bedford, Westchester, New York; was buried in Calverton National Cemetery, Calverton, Suffolk, New York.

    Family/Spouse: Margaret Elanore Esterl. Margaret (daughter of John Esterl and Anna Karoline Simmet) was born on 6 Dec 1916 in Park Falls, Price, Wisconsin; died on 22 Sep 2004 in Calvary Hospital, Bronx, Bronx, New York; was buried in Nola Cemetery, Park Falls, Price, Wisconsin. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 64. (Private)  Descendancy chart to this point

  3. 61.  William Francis Whitmore Descendancy chart to this point (57.Elizabeth13, 52.Ella12, 47.Ammi11, 41.Ammi10, 34.Lucretia9, 27.John8, 21.Elizabeth7, 16.Thomas6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 6 Jan 1916 in Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts; died on 6 Jan 1996.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 6 Jan 1917, Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts

    Notes:

    His papers, described as "Journal, reports, and printed articles, relating to the development of the Polaris missile and other American naval weapons systems", are at the Hoover Institution. In connection with those papers, the Online Archive of California describes him as "American physicist; chief scientist, Special Projects Office, United States Navy, 1957-1959; chief scientist (ocean systems), Lockheed Missiles and Space Company, 1969-1983."

    His page at the Mathematics Genealogy Project is here, where it can be seen that his great-grand-advisor was Felix Klein, of the bottle; one of Klein's two advisors was Rudolf Lipschitz, and one of Lipschitz's grand-advisors was Joseph Fourier.

    -----

    William Francis Whitmore and Elizabeth Sherman Arnold were 7th cousins, both being 6XG-grandchildren of Col. John Lane (1661-1715) and Susanna Whipple (1661-1713).

    William married Elizabeth Sherman "Bibba" Arnold on 1 Nov 1946. Elizabeth (daughter of George Stanleigh Arnold and Elizabeth Sherman Thatcher Kent) was born on 2 Dec 1915 in San Francisco, San Francisco, California; died on 18 Sep 1992 in Los Altos, Santa Clara, California. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 65. Thomas Sherman Whitmore  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Feb 1953 in Washington, D.C..


Generation: 15

  1. 62.  Bruce Nickerson Descendancy chart to this point (59.Edith14, 55.Laura13, 50.Norris12, 44.Cyrus11, 37.Edmund10, 31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) died on 10 Apr 2023.

    Family/Spouse: Barbara. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 66. Robert Nickerson  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 67. Timothy Nickerson  Descendancy chart to this point died between 1985 and 1995.
    3. 68. Rebecca Nickerson  Descendancy chart to this point
    4. 69. Jonathan Nickerson  Descendancy chart to this point

    Family/Spouse: Jo. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 63.  Lorna Mae Nickerson Descendancy chart to this point (59.Edith14, 55.Laura13, 50.Norris12, 44.Cyrus11, 37.Edmund10, 31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born in Mar 1942.

    Notes:

    Lorna Mae Nickerson and Ronald Whitman Nickerson were fourth cousins, both of them great-great-great-grandchildren of John Nickerson of Nova Scotia (1772-1880) and Dorothy James "Dolly" Burke of Ireland and Nova Scotia (1770-1867).

    Lorna married Ronald Whitman Nickerson about 1960 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, and was divorced about 1982. Ronald (son of Whitman Blades Nickerson and Nellie May Acker) was born on 24 Feb 1937 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 8 May 2010 in Cedar Rapids, Linn, Iowa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 70. Lydia Drew Nickerson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 May 1962 in New Castle, Lawrence, Pennsylvania.

  3. 64.  (Private) Descendancy chart to this point (60.William14, 56.Veda13, 51.Mary12, 46.Louisa11, 40.Joseph10, 33.Eliphalet9, 26.Cutting8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1)

    Family/Spouse: Debra Doyle. Debra (daughter of Lauren Leonard "Larry" Doyle and Mildred Louise Morgan) was born on 30 Nov 1952 in Gainesville, Alachua, Florida; died on 31 Oct 2020 in Colebrook, Coos, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 71. (Private)  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 72. (Private)  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 73. (Private)  Descendancy chart to this point
    4. 74. (Private)  Descendancy chart to this point

  4. 65.  Thomas Sherman Whitmore Descendancy chart to this point (61.William14, 57.Elizabeth13, 52.Ella12, 47.Ammi11, 41.Ammi10, 34.Lucretia9, 27.John8, 21.Elizabeth7, 16.Thomas6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Jacob4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 10 Feb 1953 in Washington, D.C..


Generation: 16

  1. 66.  Robert Nickerson Descendancy chart to this point (62.Bruce15, 59.Edith14, 55.Laura13, 50.Norris12, 44.Cyrus11, 37.Edmund10, 31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1)

  2. 67.  Timothy Nickerson Descendancy chart to this point (62.Bruce15, 59.Edith14, 55.Laura13, 50.Norris12, 44.Cyrus11, 37.Edmund10, 31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) died between 1985 and 1995.

  3. 68.  Rebecca Nickerson Descendancy chart to this point (62.Bruce15, 59.Edith14, 55.Laura13, 50.Norris12, 44.Cyrus11, 37.Edmund10, 31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1)

  4. 69.  Jonathan Nickerson Descendancy chart to this point (62.Bruce15, 59.Edith14, 55.Laura13, 50.Norris12, 44.Cyrus11, 37.Edmund10, 31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1)

  5. 70.  Lydia Drew Nickerson Descendancy chart to this point (63.Lorna15, 59.Edith14, 55.Laura13, 50.Norris12, 44.Cyrus11, 37.Edmund10, 31.Abraham9, 24.Edmund8, 19.Keziah7, 14.Samuel6, 9.Elizabeth5, 5.Elizabeth4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1) was born on 24 May 1962 in New Castle, Lawrence, Pennsylvania.

    Family/Spouse: David Dyer-Bennet. David (son of John Dyer-Bennet and Mary Abby Randall) was born in 1954. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Lydia married Nigel Kent Ray about May 1984 in Iowa City, Johnson, Iowa, and was divorced on 16 Apr 1987 in Hennepin County, Minnesota. Nigel was born about 1962. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 71.  (Private) Descendancy chart to this point (64.(Private)15, 60.William14, 56.Veda13, 51.Mary12, 46.Louisa11, 40.Joseph10, 33.Eliphalet9, 26.Cutting8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1)

  7. 72.  (Private) Descendancy chart to this point (64.(Private)15, 60.William14, 56.Veda13, 51.Mary12, 46.Louisa11, 40.Joseph10, 33.Eliphalet9, 26.Cutting8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1)

  8. 73.  (Private) Descendancy chart to this point (64.(Private)15, 60.William14, 56.Veda13, 51.Mary12, 46.Louisa11, 40.Joseph10, 33.Eliphalet9, 26.Cutting8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1)

  9. 74.  (Private) Descendancy chart to this point (64.(Private)15, 60.William14, 56.Veda13, 51.Mary12, 46.Louisa11, 40.Joseph10, 33.Eliphalet9, 26.Cutting8, 20.Joseph7, 15.Ann6, 10.Mary5, 6.Mary4, 3.John3, 2.Henry2, 1.Alice1)