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3001 Ruth Naomi was born in Snowflake, Arizona on July 10, 1891. At the tender age of three months she moved with her family to the nearby town of Woodruff where her father was called to be the first Bishop.

Ruth had a happy childhood in the town of Woodruff despite the very humble circumstances of the two dozen families that made up that small community. Seventeen times they dammed up the Little Colorado to obtain irrigation water and seventeen times the dam was destroyed. But they were all there on a mission and did not know the meaning of the words "give up”. Today a beautiful, permanent concrete dam controls the Little Colorado River.

In 1906 Ruth completed the district school and then went off to the Snowflake Academy where she was an outstanding high school student during the years of 1907- 1909. She then went to Thatcher, Arizona where she lived awhile with her older sister, Alivinia. Her studies there included the subject of public speaking. This course brought out her great native talent and she has thrilled innumerable audiences throughout her life with her unusual skills of elocution.

In 1912 she went to Los Angeles with her "dearest friend" Mettie Peterson. She worked as a clerk in a department store and continued her studies at the Manual Arts High School. She had a straight "A" record and obtained her high school diploma. Most of the next two years were spent in teaching school, especially at Taylor, Arizona. During this time she managed to save five hundred dollars which proved to be adequate for her mission in the Eastern States.

Prior to her mission she received her temple endowments on May 29, 1914 in the Salt Lake Temple. She then reported to the mission home in Brooklyn, New York. After just one month she was assigned to the East Pennsylvania Conference with headquarters in Philadelphia. Ruth loved her mission; she wrote following in her journal.

This call to be a missionary, representing my Church was the beginning of one of the most outstanding experiences of my life. I loved the peoples my companions our President, the elders, the towns and cities of eastern part of our great land. In fact, all of it gave me a zest for living which cannot be told in words. I found that daily tracting could be a most glorious experience. I am still reaping an abundant return from the faith, study and personal work which I put into my mission.

Eugene and Ruth were both outstanding missionaries and were married in the St. George temple, as both of their parents had been, on September 28, 1916.

Their love of education made their first step quite clear - obviously they must go back to Provo and complete his academic work. These were happy days that included playing the trombone in the dance band, serving as class president and participating on the debating team.

These years were busy ones. Despite Ruth’s varied activities it was always clear that she regarded her calling as wife and mother as her top priority. She helped each child along the way and shared in their joy as each of them fulfilled a full time mission for the Church.

Ruth worked hard as a wife and a mother and always cheerfully did household jobs. She once wrote, “No matter what the task may be, if it's the thing which needs doing, I enjoy it. People who say. ‘Oh! I detest dishes’, or ‘I just can't do that’, or, ‘I wouldn’t think of doing that kind of work’, try my patience. If I need to scrub floors - then scrubbing goes and it can be just as dignified as anything else I might do. It seems to me that one loses dignity or social importance (whatever that may be) only by failing in one's obligations.”

Another role Ruth often found herself filling was that of a hostess. She wrote, “To [be a good hostess] is extremely satisfying. Not just greeting people with a smile or being a good conversationalist, but being able to sense the likes and dislikes of people. Make them feel easy. To be thoroughly unselfish in the how and wherefores of what goes on. To be able to plan and execute entertaining at home within the scope of her particular budget…To do this is one of the challenging, charming tasks of women.”

Ruth was an able seamstress and wrote that, “I began on the 4th of July that I was 13 years old to make my own dress and I made everything from then until I bore my 8th baby, except two suits and my coats.”

Most of Ruth’s accomplishments went unheralded but she did receive two significant recognitions. In 1961 she and her husband were invited to the Brigham Young University where they were given the "Joseph F. Smith Living Award." In 1966 her name was submitted by some friends to the "California Mother of the Year" contest. A lovely blind lady was chosen as Mother of the Year and Ruth Naomi was selected as Runner Up.

Ruth also loved the church and never refused a call to serve. A partial list of her Church callings includes seven ward or stake relief society presidencies, stake literary leader and three years of service as an Ordinance Worker in the Los Angeles and Oakland Temples.

Throughout their life Eugene and Ruth loved sharing the word of the Restoration. Their first mission together was right after Eugene’s retirement in l96l when they served a proselyting mission in Scotland. This was later followed by two academic missions at the Church Colleges in Hawaii and New Zealand. Eugene drew on his experiences at Gila colleges to perform the same task in Laie, Hawaii, getting the academic accreditation for the Church College.

After their third mission, they purchased a beautiful home a half block from the Oakland Temple and settled in for what they thought would be the golden years of Temple work. They were both ordained as ordinance workers in the Oakland Temple where Dad also worked as Sealer. That dream was interrupted by the passing of Ruth. 
Savage, Ruth Naomi (I133286)
 
3002 Ruth Zink was married to William Daniel Adamson. They were later divorced but I'm not sure when.
 
Zink, Ruth Eleanor (I140849)
 
3003 Ræer Kirkegaard  Lynge, Thomas Christian Jensen (I111785)
 
3004 s/o Micajah & Rebecca Rawlston Poole  Poole, Ewalt (I140440)
 
3005 Said to be the daughter of a John Byrd who was "from Spotsylvania Co VA." I have not found a great deal support for this. John's son Henry testified that he was born 1764 in Prince Edward Co. I found the name John Byrd in Fincastle Co as early as 1772 - he was the first court clerk in that new county.

I may have found Elizabeth Harmon in the 1830 census. There is an enumeration for the household of a William Harmon listed next to John B., Richard, James, and Chesley "Ray" and John Adams who were married to Harmon girls. However, this William is marked as age to 10-15 - I suspect he may have been a grandson helping out. The other members of this household were two young girls, 1 age 5-10 and the other 10-15. Then there was an older lady, age 50-60 - Elizabeth Harmon would have been about 59 in 1830. However, on the next page was Elizabeth Harmon with 2 males age 15-20 [Hiram & Charles], 1f age 10-15 [Elizabeth, the only unmarried daughter], 1f age 50-60 - John L. is not present and likely already deceased.

Although many databases give her death as 1837; I believe I found Elizabeth Byrd Harmon living with her son Richard in Carroll Co IL in 1850. She was 79 years old, b. VA, and blind. The 1837 date seems to have come from a deed of the heirs of John L. Harmon, dec'd, which included Elizabeth Harmon, widow, very much alive.

Her mother is said to have been a Sarah, who married William Burch after the death of John Byrd. Sisters of Elizabeth included Milard who married Edward Smith. Edward Smith was a witness to the marriage of Elizabeth Byrd to John Harmon according to an online database. Jane Byrd who married Jacob Waggoner is another sister to Elizabeth.

Found online:
Byrd Family Association, The Early Byrds of Grayson County, Virginia and Many of their Descendants (Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, 1992), pp. 1, 2, 63, 64. "(1787) Dec. 6, JESSE VAUGHN and ELIZABETH BYRD, sur. William Vaughn; consent of parents William and Mary Vaughn, and William and Sarah Burch." This recorded marriage apparently never took place as Elizabeth Byrd married another man, John Lincoln Harmon, three weeks later. Hereinafter cited as Byrds of Grayson, VA.
The Register of Marriages in Montgomery Co, VA, does indeed show both marriages - Jesse Vaughn to Elizabeth Byrd, on the 6th of Dec, 1787 and then John Harman to Elizabeth Byrd, on the 16th of Dec . William & Sarah Burch are listed as parents of both - I wonder if perhaps this was a different daughter that married Jesse Vaughn [there is evidence of close association between the Byrd & Vaughn families] and perhaps either a minister's return was wrong or was copied into register wrong. Online genealogies for Jesse Vaughan say that he married Francis Jones, dau of Thomas & Elizabeth Jones in Montgomery Co. The page of the register copied for me, p.21, all seems to be in the same clear hand - I would not think this is the original but has been recopied, another chance for error.

Volunteer Lookup: A BRIEF OF WILLS & MARRIAGES IN MONTGOMERY & FINCASTLE COUNTIES, VIRGINIA 1733-1831, Anne Lowry Worrell, originally printed in 1932.
John Harman m. Elizabeth Bird dau of William and Sarah Burch (step daughter of William)

Deed Book H; pp 353-354 Marion Co., Indiana
Indenture made March 13, 1837--Elizabeth Harmon, widow of John L. Harmon and William W. Harmon, John B. Harmon, Alexis Jackson, Charles Harman, Hiram Harmon, Chistly Ray, James Harmon, Hiram H. Lewis, Nathaniel P. Walters, Richard Harmon, all legal heirs of John L. Harmon, deeded to Cyrus Cotton--$20--6 Acres of land commencing on section line at middle stake Sections 15 & 10 in west bank of Eagle Crek; south 12 rods; east to high bank on north side of Wray's Branch to line of Charles Harmon's 40 acres of land which he bought from Alexis Jackson, etc; except a small piece of land fenced in as grave yard where John L. Harmon is buried.

In 1850 Richard's mother Elizabeth Harmon appears to be living with the family in Carroll Co IL. She is 79, born in Virginia, and blind.
Richard Harmon, age 57, b. VA. Mary, age 56, b. VA. David, 17, b. IN. Richard M. age 26, b. IN. Elizabeth, 79, b. VA.

Found online:
"Elizabeth died in the home of her daughter, Jene (Harmon) Wray in Illinois at the age of 99 years." By 1870 when Elizabeth would have been age 99, daughter Jane was widowed and living with her son Mark in Knox Co, IL - so I'm not sure Elizabeth lived quite this long. I did not find Elizabeth Harmon after the 1850 census.
An Everton FGS posted on MyHertitage also states she died at 99 years and is buried in the Christian Church Cemetery, Harmon, Knox Co, Illinois. (I found an unincorporated village in Knox Co, named Hermon, and there is a Hermon Christian Church Cemetery. However, 231 interments are listed on FindAGrave - none for a Harmon or Hermon. Chesley "Ray" is buried there - b. 1817, d. 1888 - he would not have been the Chesley Wray, husband of Elizabeth's daughter Nancy Jane as he's the wrong generation, but he could be a son of Chesley Wray by his first wife.

PostIt Note:
Prince Edward,Virginia is the location of her birth
Mt. Carmel, Carroll, ILL. in 1869 is the location and year of her [Elizabeth's] death
Posted by "Andrea" to my WorldConnect database
amelzer2000@yahoo.com

"Elizabeth died in the home of her daughter, Jene (Jane Harmon) Wray in Illinois at the age of 99 years." By 1870 when Elizabeth would have been age 99, daughter Jane was widowed and living with her son Mark in Knox Co, IL - so I'm not sure Elizabeth lived quite this long. I did not find Elizabeth Harmon after the 1850 census. The statement was made in an article written many years after the fact and was at least third hand information. 
Byrd, Elizabeth (I139545)
 
3006 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt.  Kristensen, Christine Grønkjær (I111403)
 
3007 Sally Olivia Williams Journeycake was an interpreter for the Methodist missionaries among the Wyandotte indian tribes. In 1827, while on a hunting trip in the forest with her husband and other Delawares, she fell ill and fell into a trance for several hours. The Indians feared she was dead or dying. After many hours in that state, she awoke, praising God, who she said had appeared to her and saved her soul. It was said that she treated all with great kindness and manifested a beautiful Christian spirit and won for her the respect of the tribe. The influence of her life made a deep impression on her children and also upon the Indians. It was her Christian influence that made possible the resumption of Christian missions in 1829 among the Delawares in Kansas. Harry M. Roark states in his book "Charles Journeycake, Indian Statesman and Christian Leader" in Chapter 3, he states about Sally Journeycake, that "The highest possible tribute is due this pious Indian mother, for her faith in and love for God far exceeded that of the average Christian, in her day or any day. Her faithful and loyal Christian life, which had to be lived alone, no doubt played a large part in molding the stalwart character of Charles Journeycake".  Williams, Sally Olivia (I112474)
 
3008 Salt Lake City Cemetery  Kimball, Joseph Smith (I125311)
 
3009 Salt Lake City Cemetery  Godbe, Elizabeth (I116608)
 
3010 Salt Lake City Cemetery  Larsen, Carl Johan (I116525)
 
3011 Salt Lake City Cemetery  Gillespie, John W (I115006)
 
3012 Salt Lake City Cemetery  Barton, Elizabeth (I114131)
 
3013 Salt Lake City Cemetery  Kimball, Florence (I78578)
 
3014 Salt Lake City Cemetery  Kimball, Louie Prescindia (I78569)
 
3015 Salt Lake City Cemetery  Kimball, Charles Spaulding (I16558)
 
3016 Salt Lake City, Utah  Clayton, David Hyrum Sr. (I86440)
 
3017 Salt Lake Telegram, 16 Oct 1931, p. 13, Deaths:
JACOB B. VISSING Jacob B. Vissing, 68, former employee of the Z. C. M. I. carpet department and traveling salesman in California for the the last 25 years, died in Los Angeles at 1 p. p. m. Thursday of cancer, according to word received here. Mr. Vissing was born in Denmark, April 1, 1863, and came to Salt Lake in 1885. He left Salt Lake for California in the year before the San Francisco Earthquake and fire. [1905]

See account of his emigration from Denmark to Utah in his father's entry. 
Wissing, Jacob Busk (I132631)
 
3018 Salt Lake Tribune, The (UT) | 4 February 2010

Salt Lake City UT United States

Brent Reed Gardner 1927 ~ 2010 Brent Reed Gardner, 82, passed away o n January 29, 2010 at his home in Salt Lake City, Utah of an apparen t heart attack.He was born in Salem, Utah to Anna Marie Abildskov an d Frank Lynn Gardner on November 1, 1927. He spent his youth in Salem , Utah farming with his father and was educated in Salem, graduating f rom Spanish Fork High School. Married Heidi Eckardt on June 10, 1955 , later solemnized in the Los Angeles Temple. Brent was an accountan t by profession. He served as a High Priest in the LDS Church and ha d many callings. He loved digitizing for the Genealogy Department of t he LDS Church. Brent is survived by wife, Heidi and their three childr en: Brenda Hutchinson, Atlanta, Georgia; Robyn Mendenhall (Michael) Sa lt Lake City, Utah; Nelson Gardner (Chrissy), Peoria, Arizona; eight g randchildren and his sister and brother-in-law, Frances and Richard Wa tkins. Preceded in death by his infant son, Brent R. Gardner, Jr., hi s parents and brother, Russell F. Gardner. A service will be held in h is honor on Saturday, Feb. 6, 2010 at Larkin Mortuary, 2350 East 130 0 South, Salt Lake City, Utah at 11:00 a.m. In lieu of flowers, pleas e donate to the Perpetual Education Fund of the LDS Church.

(c) 2010 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. Reproduced with t he permission of Media NewsGroup, Inc. by NewsBank, Inc. 
Gardner, Brent Reed (I127501)
 
3019 SAMUEL ALLEN III was born 4 December 1660, East Bridgewater, Plymouth, Massachusetts, to Samuel Allen II (1632-1703) and Sarah Partridge (1639-1717). He married (1) *Rebecca Cary, 1 December 1685, in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. Rebecca was granddaughter of Miles Standish, and daughter of John Cary, who come from England and settled in Duxbury, Massachusetts. He married (2) Mary Pratt (not Alden.) He married (3) Jane Vining, widow of Jacob Turner. [After Rebecca's death, Samuel married Mary Pratt, in Bridgewater. This second wife has sometimes been identified as Mary Alden, but that identification has been rejected. In New England Marriages Prior to 1700, Clarence Almon Torrey identified the second wife as "Mary [Alden?] Pratt? (?1667- ), dau Matthew."[2] The transcribed Records of Brunswick Separate Church of Scotland, Connecticut, where Samuel's son Joseph was active, provide additional evidence that her last name was Pratt in the form of an entry (which could be based on a family bible record) indicating that Samuel Allen married a woman named Pratt as his 2nd wife, and that "by her he had Joseph, Matthew, and Seth." [3] Additionally, the same church records show that Samuel's grandson Asahel Allen named one of his sons "Pratt."[3] Samuel's second wife is likely to have been Mary Pratt, born in Weymouth, Massachusetts in 1667, the daughter of Matthew Pratt and Sarah (Hunt) Pratt of Weymouth. The will of Matthew Pratt, dated 30 June 1711, included a bequest to daughter "Mary Allin,"[4] indicating that his daughter Mary had married a man named Allen. This identification also is consistent with Torrey's indication that Allen's second wife Mary was the daughter of Matthew.]

• Samuel was married on the same day that his sister Mehitable Allen married Isaac Alden.
• Was engaged in many Indian Battles and while on a March to join Captain Church (with his father) with twenty of his neighbors took seventeen prisoners without a single casualty.
• From the Note of Bill Erickson: In 1721 a meeting-house had been begun on land given by Samuel Allen, Jr., apparently in anticipation of the legal organization of the precinct in 1723. (Benjamin W. Harris, The Bridgewater Book (Published by George H. Ellis, Boston, Ma., 1899)
• Deed: Old Burying Ground, East Bridgewater, Ma. (Source: William Latham, Epitaphs in Old Bridgewater, Massachusetts, (1882 (Reprinted by Heritage Books, Inc. 1986)), Page 185, When he gave this land is uncertain; but was probably the first land used for a public burying-ground in East Bridgewater. The one hundred rods is supposed to be the high ground in the southwest part of this grave yard, and is considered the oldest part of the yard.)
• Residence: Abt. 1750, East Bridgewater, MA (Source: William Latham, Epitaphs in Old Bridgewater, Massachusetts, (1882 (Reprinted by Heritage Books, Inc. 1986), Page 184. .Lived in front of Thomas Rogers' house... The whole of which homestead was bounded northeasterly by the road, there, being about seventy rods wide; and southwesterly by Matfield river, or meadow on that river.)
• Will: September 01, 1736, Recorded August 6, 1750 (Source: Plymouth County Probate Records, Docket 325, Book 12, Page 97, Timothy Allen and Seth Allen Executors.)

Samuel Allen III died 28 June 1750, Bridgewater, Plymouth, Massachusetts, at age 90.

Samuel Allen, III
Birth: Dec. 4, 1660
Bridgewater
Plymouth County
Massachusetts, USA
Death: Jun. 28, 1750
Bridgewater
Plymouth County
Massachusetts, USA

Samuel Allen was the son of Samuel Allen and Sarah Partridge. He married 1)Rebecca Cary in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts on 2 December 1685 2)Mary Pratt in 1700 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts.

Family links:
Parents:
Samuel Allen (1632 - 1705)
Sarah Partridge Allen (1639 - 1722)

Spouses:
Rebecca Cary Allen (1665 - 1697)
Mary Alden Allen (1668 - 1727)*

Children:
Ephraim Allen (1689 - 1780)*
Timothy Allen (1691 - 1755)*
Mehetable Allen Bushnell (1694 - 1750)*
Joseph Allen (1701 - 1777)*
Mary Allen Kingman (1704 - 1740)*
Matthew Allen (1708 - 1787)*
Seth Allen (1710 - 1766)*
Abigail Allen Waldo (1712 - 1799)*

Siblings:
Samuel Allen (1660 - 1750)
Mehitable Allen Alden (1664 - 1725)*
Sarah Allen Snow (1667 - ____)*
Bethiah Allen Pryer (1669 - 1744)*
Josiah Allen (1677 - 1736)*
Nehemiah Allen (1681 - 1728)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Old Graveyard
East Bridgewater
Plymouth County
Massachusetts, USA
Plot: There Is No Stone

Created by: Jack W. Davis
Record added: Nov 13, 2007
Find A Grave Memorial# 22889701

PLYMOUTH COLONY SEAL

Samuel (3), eldest child of Samuel (2) and Sarah (Patridge) Allen, was born December 4, 1660, in Bridgewater, where he afterward lived, and executed his will in 1736. He married (first) in 1685, Rebecca, granddaughter of Miles Standish, and daughter of John Cary, who came from England and settled in Duxbury, Massachusetts, and his wife, Elizabeth Godfrey. He married (second) 1700, Mary, daughter of Joseph and Mary (Simmons) Alden, of Bridgewater, and granddaughter of John Alden and Priscilla Mullins. Joseph Alden was born in 1627, was an early resident of Bridgewater, and a farmer. Children of the first marriage: Samuel, born October 18, 1686, died 1750. married, 1728, Jane Turner, of Weymouth; Ephraim, born 1689, settled in Royalton, Vermont; Timothy, mentioned below; Joseph, born 1693, died young;Posted 12 Dec 2009 by Patti K Oates
Was engaged in many Indian Battles and while on a March to join Captain Church (with his father) with twenty of his neighbors took seventeen prisoners without a single casualty.

From the Note of Bill Erickson:

In 1721 a meeting-house had been begun on land given by Samuel Allen, Jr., apparently in anticipation of the legal organization of the precinct in 1723. (Benjamin W. Harris, The Bridgewater Book (Published by George H. Ellis, Boston, Ma., 1899))

More About SAMUEL ALLEN, JR.:
Deed: Old Burying Ground, East Bridgewater, Ma. (Source: William Latham, Epitaphs in Old Bridgewater, Massachusetts, (1882 (Reprinted by Heritage Books, Inc. 1986)), Page 185, When he gave this land is uncertain; but was probably the first land used for a public burying-ground in East Bridgewater. The one hundred rods is supposed to be the high ground in the southwest part of this grave yard, and is considered the oldest part of the yard.)
Residence: Abt. 1750, East Bridgewater, MA (Source: William Latham, Epitaphs in Old Bridgewater, Massachusetts, (1882 (Reprinted by Heritage Books, Inc. 1986)), Page 184, ..Lived in front of Thomas Rogers' house... The whole of which homestead was bounded northeasterly by the road, there, being about seventy rods wide; and southwesterly by Matfield river, or meadow on that river.)
Will: September 01, 1736, Recorded August 6, 1750 (Source: Plymouth County Probate Records, Docket 325, Book 12, Page 97, Timothy Allen and Seth Allen Exectors.)

Samuel Allen was the son of Samuel Allen and Sarah Partridge. He married 1)Rebecca Cary in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts on 2 December 1685 2)Mary Alden in 1700 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts.

Bridgewater Burying Ground

REBECKAH CARY (Carey) was born 30 March 1665, Bridgewater, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts, to John Cary (1610-1681) and Elizabeth Godfrey (1620-1680.) She married Samuel Allen III, in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, on 1 December 1685.

Rebeckah Cary Allen died 29 October 1697, Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, at 32 years of age, at the birth of her daughter Rebeckah who also died.

The Old Grave Yard, Bridgeport, Plymouth, Massachusetts, USA

Rebecca Cary Allen
Birth: Mar. 30, 1665
Bridgewater
Plymouth County
Massachusetts, USA
Death: Oct. 29, 1697
Bridgewater
Plymouth County
Massachusetts, USA

Rebecca (Cary) Allen was the daughter of John Cary and Elizabeth Godfrey. She married Samuel Allen in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts on 1 December 1685.

Family links:
Parents:
John Cary (1610 - 1681)
Elizabeth Godfrey Cary (____ - 1680)

Spouse:
Samuel Allen (1660 - 1750)*

Children:
Ephraim Allen (1689 - 1780)*
Timothy Allen (1691 - 1755)*
Mehetable Allen Bushnell (1694 - 1750)*

Siblings:
John Cary (1645 - 1721)*
Francis Cary (1647 - 1718)**
Jonathan M Cary (1656 - 1695)*
Joseph Cary (1663 - 1721)*
Rebecca Cary Allen (1665 - 1697)

*Calculated relationship
**Half-sibling

Burial:
Old Graveyard
East Bridgewater
Plymouth County
Massachusetts, USA
Plot: There Is No Stone

Created by: Jack W. Davis
Record added: Nov 13, 2007
Find A Grave Memorial# 22889781

Cemetery Photo
Added by: Chip5610

Photos may be scaled.
Click on image for full size.

My 8th great grandmother. She was the wife of Samuel Allen born 1660. She was the mother of Samuel Allen born 1686 who was likely the father of Abigail Allen Waldo born 1712.
- Joan McGrath Richards
Added: Jun. 15, 2014

- Mike Appleby
Added: May. 30, 2014

- CD
Added: Apr. 9, 2014

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Cary_Monument
Bridgewater, MA
Excerpted from the book "John Cary, the Plymouth Pilgrim" by Seth C Cary, 1911

The Old Graveyard

Old Graveyard, East Bridgewater, Plymouth, Massachusetts, USA

Children of Samuel Allen and Rebecca Cary:

1. Samuel Allen IV, b. 18 Oct 1686, Bridgewater, Massachusetts, “his first born”; d. bef. 1736.
2. *EPHRAIM ALLEN was born 11 April 1689, Bridgewater, Massachusetts, (“the second”) to Samuel Allen (1660-1750) and Rebecca Cary (1665-1697.) He married Zipporah Crane about 1710, of Plymouth or Bridgewater, Massachusetts. Ephraim died 15 February 1776, Northborough, Worcester, Massachusetts Bay.
3. Timothy Alle 
Allen, Samuel III (I121447)
 
3020 Samuel Chase Kimball
Memorial
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Birth: Feb. 13, 1848
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake County
Utah, USA
Death: Jul. 26, 1848
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake County
Utah, USA

Son of Heber Chase Kimball and Ellen Sanders

Family links:
Parents:
Heber Chase Kimball (1801 - 1868)
Ellen Sanders Kimball (1823 - 1871)

Siblings:
William Henry Kimball (1826 - 1907)**
Helen Mar Kimball Whitney (1828 - 1896)**
Heber Parley Kimball (1835 - 1885)**
David Patten Kimball (1839 - 1883)**
Charles Spaulding Kimball (1843 - 1925)**
Sarah Helen Kimball (1845 - 1860)**
Isaac Alphonso Kimball (1846 - 1912)**
Abraham Alonzo Kimball (1846 - 1889)**
Solomon Farnham Kimball (1847 - 1920)**
Samuel Chase Kimball (1848 - 1848)
David Orson Kimball (1848 - 1849)**
Heber Kimball (1849 - 1850)**
Prescindia Celestia Kimball (1849 - 1850)**
Joseph Smith Kimball (1850 - 1864)*
David Heber Kimball (1850 - 1927)**
Cornelia Christeen Kimball (1850 - 1853)**
Murray Gould Kimball (1850 - 1852)**
Augusta Kimball (1850 - 1861)*
William Gheen Kimball (1851 - 1924)**
Joseph Smith Kimball (1851 - 1936)**
Susannah R. Kimball (1851 - 1851)**
Samuel Heber Kimball (1851 - 1943)**
Newel Whitney Kimball (1852 - 1931)**
Harriet Kimball (1852 - 1852)**
Willard Heber Kimball (1853 - 1854)**
Jonathan Golden Kimball (1853 - 1938)**
Jacob Reese Kimball (1853 - 1875)**
Rosalia Kimball Edwards (1853 - 1950)*
Albert Heber Kimball (1854 - 1944)**
Enoch Heber Kimball (1855 - 1877)**
Hyrum Heber Kimball (1855 - 1943)**
Lydia Holmes Kimball Loughery (1855 - 1928)**
Daniel Heber Kimball (1856 - 1936)**
Jeremiah Heber Kimball (1857 - 1887)**
Sarah Maria Kimball Jenkins (1857 - 1901)**
Elias Smith Kimball (1857 - 1934)**
Anna Spaulding Kimball Knox (1857 - 1932)**
Mary Melvina Kimball Driggs (1858 - 1933)**
Andrew Kimball (1858 - 1924)**
Peter Kimball (1858 - 1860)**
Alice Ann Kimball Smith (1858 - 1946)**
Eliza Kimball Woolley (1859 - 1906)**
James Heber Kimball (1860 - 1865)**
Joshua Heber Kimball (1861 - 1925)**
Sarah Gheen Kimball Seckels (1861 - 1913)**
Mary Margaret Kimball Moffat (1861 - 1937)**
Moroni Heber Kimball (1861 - 1923)**
Joshua Heber Kimball (1862 - 1863)**
Eugene Kimball (1863 - 1932)**
Wilford Alphonso Kimball (1863 - 1928)**
Franklin Heber Kimball (1864 - 1865)**
Lorenzo Heber Kimball (1866 - 1929)**
Abbie Sarah Kimball Burrows (1868 - 1943)**

*Calculated relationship
**Half-sibling

Burial:
Kimball-Whitney Cemetery
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake County
Utah, USA

Maintained by: SMSmith
Originally Created by: Utah State Historical So...
Record added: Feb 02, 2000
Find A Grave Memorial# 65769
Samuel Chase Kimball
Added by: SMSmith

Samuel Chase Kimball
Added by: SMSmith

Samuel Chase Kimball
Cemetery Photo
Added by: David M. Habben

Photos may be scaled.
Click on image for full size.

- Angel of Flowers
Added: Jan. 16, 2015

- Camille Phelps
Added: Mar. 3, 2014
with respect
- Goddess
Added: Sep. 12, 2013

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Kimball, Samuel Chase (I97521)
 
3021 Samuel Dennis White’s family moved to the Ohio Valley about 1830 having been caught up in the great westward movement. While in Ohio the White Family was converted to the L.D.S. Church. They moved to Walnut Grove, a few miles east of Nauvoo. It was there that he met and married Mary Hannah Burton.
When the Prophet Joseph Smith was killed, he was on a mission in New York and was called home. He moved his family to Nauvoo for protection from angry mobs.
He helped to build the Kirkland and Nauvoo Temples. Samuel Dennis and Mary Hannah Burton were among some of the first to enter the Nauvoo Temple and receive their endowments on January 12, 1846 along with both of their parents.
He died at Amos Milton Mussers home, his son in law, while attending conference. 
White, Samuel Dennis (I132480)
 
3022 Samuel Eaton son of Barnabas Eaton & Mehetable Alden, was born 16 May 1732 at Middleborough, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay British Colonial America. Massachusetts. He was married 18 November 1753 to Patience Tinkham in Middleborough, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay British Colonial America. He died 18 January 1820 in Middleborough, Plymouth County, Massachusetts.
Burial January 1820 in Plymouth, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. 
Eaton, Samuel Sr. (I121457)
 
3023 Samuel Headley (1690-1755)

Birth:1690 Of Headleytown, New Jersey
Christening:Of Borough Of, Elizabeth, Essex, NJ
Death:1755 Elizabethtown, Essex, New Jersey
Burial:Conneticutt
Spouse- Mary H Foster (1719)
DeniseEdwards1 (20 August 2009)
Birth:1719 , Union, NJ
children
Robert Headley (1742-)
Joshua M Headlee (1746-1840)
- Denise Edwards 30 aug 2009 
Headley, Samuel Sr. (I1923)
 
3024 Samuel Hinckley, I
Also Known As:"Hinkley"
Birthdate:May 25, 1589
Birthplace:Harrietsham, Kent, England
Traveled to New England, arriving in 1635 on the Hercules with his family
Death:Died October 31, 1662 in Barnstable, Barnstable County, Massachusetts, Colonial America
Place of Burial:Barnstable, Barnstable County, Massachusetts, United States
Immediate Family:
Son of Robert Hinckley and Katherine Hinckley
Husband of Sarah Soole and Bridget Hinckley
Father of Thomas Hinckley, Governor of Plymouth Colony; Susannah Smith; Mary Hinckley; Sarah Cobb; Elizabeth Parker and 6 others
Brother of Thomas Hinckley; Stephen Hinckley; Margaret Hinckley; Elizabeth Hinckley; Katherine Hinckley and 2 others
Half brother of Clemen Hinckley and Isaac Hinckley
Managed by:Private User
Last Updated:yesterday
View Complete Profile 
Hinckley, Samuel (I59494)
 
3025 Samuel Howell, Jr. (ca 1748-1802) born in Philadelphia; died 31 October 1802. He married Margaret Emlen (1750-1822), 23 May 1771.[36] Like his father and kinsmen, he became a member of the State in Schuylkill, March 10, 1784.[37] In 1772 Samuel Howell, Jr. was a signer of Pennsylvania colonial currency. Notes totaling ₤25,000 were authorized March 21, 1772, 72,825 notes, to be signed by any one of twenty-four signers, one of who was Samuel Howell, Jr.[38] Wikipedia.com  Howell, Samuel (I139171)
 
3026 Samuel Kimball, Captain
Birth circa August 19, 1677Wenham, Essex, Massachusetts Died January 20, 1745 in Wenham, Essex, Massachusetts Immediate Family:Son of Samuel Kimball and Mary Kimball Husband of Elizabeth Fowler Father of Nathaniel Kimball Brother of Sarah Kimball; Martha Kimball; Mary Huckaby; Richard Kimball; Jonathan Kimball and 7 others
 
Kimball, Samuel II (I90615)
 
3027 Samuel Monroe Crosier 1819 -
birth 15 April 1819 Euclid, Cuyahoga, Ohio, United States 
Crosier, Samuel Monroe (I88084)
 
3028 Samuel Murdock (1698-1769) & Submit Troop (1706-1784)

Samuel Murdock (Robert, Jackson) was born 1698 in Roxbury, Suffolk, Massachusetts and died 1769 in Windham, Windham, Connecticut. He married 1725 Submit Troop and to this union was born nine children. (Note: There were 10 children from this union.) Submit was born 1706 in Bristol, Rhode Island and died 1769 in Windham, Windham, Connecticut. To this union was born ten children. She was the daughter of Dan Troop and Deborah Macey. following tombstone inscription in Westmoreland co.,, Pennsylvania
He joined many of his relatives in the migration from Newton to Connecticut, bought land in Lebanon, and was admitted to the church there with his wife in 1726. He bought one hundred and twenty-two acres of land in Windham, Connecticut, in 1735, and ninety more adjoining, in 1736, and moved to Windham the next year. He was a prominent citizen of Windham, and was admitted to the church there in 1738 . Connecticut Colonial Records give his commission as "Captain of the Troop of Horse of the Fifth regiment" in 1741. He was Deputy for Windham to the General Assembly in 1756, 1757, 1759 , 1760, 1761, 1764 and 1766. He died in Windham, January 17, 1769, and is buried with his Wife and daughter Eunice in the old cemetery at Windham. His will, dated December 23, 1767, divides ides his property, the homestead being left to his youngest son Eliphalet. His wife's brother , Dan Throop, was made executor. The following provision made for his wife is a model of conjugal care to my dearly beloved Wife Submit
Father: Robert MURDOCK b: 6 SEP 1663 in Stirling, Central, Scotland
Mother: Hannah STEDMAN b: 2 MAR 1665 in Watertown, Middlesex, Massachusetts
Marriage 1 Submit THROOP b: 25 DEC 1706 in Bristol, Bristol, Rhode Island
Married: 24 JUN 1725 in Lebanon, New London, CT

Children
1 Hannah MURDOCK b: 25 AUG 1726 in Windham, Windham, CT
2 William MURDOCK b: 26 JUL 1728 in Lebanon, New London, CT
3 Eliphalet MURDOCK b: abt 1729 d:1745
4 Samuel MURDOCK b: 27 AUG 1729 in Lebanon, New London, CT
5 Jonathan MURDOCK b: 19 FEB 1733 in Lebanon, New London, CT
6 Submit MURDOCK b: 13 NOV 1736 in Lebanon, New London, CT
7 William MURDOCK b: 2 JAN 1738 in Windham, Windham, CT
8 Dan MURDOCK b: 24 FEB 1742 in Windham, Windham, CT
9 Lydia MURDOCK b: 29 JUN 1745 in Windham, Windham, CT
10 Eliphalet MURDOCK b: 5 OCT 1748 in Windham, Windham, CT
11 Eunice MURDOCK b: 29 JAN 1750 in Windham, Windham, CT

Sources:

Tombstone inscriptions
Submit (Throop) Murdock
1) Here lies the body of Mrs. Submit Murdock consort to Capt. Samuel Murdock who departed this life Oct. 17, 1784 in the 78 year of age
Samuel Murdock
2) Here lies buried the body of Captain Samuel Murdock who died ...17 Jan 1769 in ye 71 year of his age Samuel Murdock Birth: 24 Mar 1698 - Roxbury, Suffolk, Massachusetts, USA Death: 17 Jan 1769 , Windham, Connecticut, USA Parents Father: Robert MURDOCK Mother: Hannah STEDMAN Spouses Submit Throop Marriage: 3 Jun 1725 - Lebanon, New London Co., CT 2 8
www.google .com(history of Westmoreland co.,Pennsylvania
 
Murdock, Samuel (I100429)
 
3029 Samuel Page (1670-1743) & Mindwell Pond (1667-1722)
PAGE Samuel, born 01 Mar 1670/71 at Branford, New Haven, CT; died 1743 at Branford, New Haven, CT. Samuel married Pond Mindwell (the daughter of Pond Samuel and Blatchley Miriam) Abt 1699 at Branford, New Haven, CT; born Abt 1675 
Pond, Samuel II (I139128)
 
3030 Samuel Pond, I
Birth circa 1609 Groton, Suffolk, England, United Kingdom
Death: Died March 14, 1653 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut, USA
Immediate Family:Son of Robert Pond of Boston and Mary Shepard Husband of Sarah Page Linsley Father of Isaac Pond; Samuel Pond, II; Nathaniel Pond; Sarah Hoyt and Abigail Day Brother of Mary Blackman; Jonathan Pond; Robert Pond, Jr.; Ephraim Pond; William Pond, of Dorchester and 1 other Occupation:Came with Gov. Winthrop in 1630 to Boston 
Pond, Samuel I (I139150)
 
3031 Samuel Washburn, third son of John Washburn, was born probably in Duxbury, Plymouth Colony, about 1651, and married Deborah Packard, daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth Packard, about 1677 in Bridgewater.
They settled in Bridgewater, Massachusetts. In 1690 Samuel Washburn and his brother-in-law, John Ames Jr. were named as Constables in Bridgwater, and Samuel Washburn was a Selectman from Bridgwater in 1701.

Samuel Washburn died testate on 24 Mar 1720 in Bridgewater, aged 68 years, and was buried in the Old Graveyard in Bridgewater.
His will was dated 13 Mar 1720, and probated on 4 Apr 1720, and named his sons Samuel and Nehemiah Washburn as executors.
He mentioned his wife, Deborah, son Samuel Washburn, heirs of son Noah Washburn, deceased, heirs of son Israel Washburn, deceased, sons Nehemiah and Benjamin Washburn, daughter Hannah, wife of John Keith, grandson Israel Washburn, son of son Israel, and cousin Deliverance Jennings, wife of Ephraim Jennings. Deborah (Packard) Washburn died after 1725. 
Washburn, Samuel (I41339)
 
3032 San Francisco Bulletin, Tuesday, Dec 15, 1891, San Francisco, CA
KELLY - In Olympia, Wash - Dec 12. , Minerva B. wife of D. B. Kelly 
Beardsley, Minerva (I115346)
 
3033 Sanden  Thomsen, Niels (I100869)
 
3034 Sandra Kirkham is decendant http://brooklyncentre.com/trees/getperson.php?personID=I51752&tree=BrainardMehitable (a) TROWBRIDGE, b. 26 Jan 1725/1726, Framingham Village (Middlesex) Massachusetts Colony Married: 5 May 1745 Cambridge Village (Middlesex  Trowbridge, Mehitable (I98690)
 
3035 Santa Ana Cemetery  Snow, Sarah Lucina (I127800)
 
3036 Sarah "Sally" Bigelow, daughter of Simeon Bigelow and Sarah Foster, was born on March 9, 1787 in Brandon, Rutland, Vermont.

On July 20, 1806 Sally married Aaron Goodrich, son of Captain Stephen and Dorothy Goodrich. They had two sons: Aaron and George, from 1811-1823.

Sally and Aaron divorced in 1833, after which Sally married as her second husband Ansel Melvin on June 20, 1843 in Henry County, Illinois and they settled in Duncan, Mercer, Illinois where Sarah died before Ansel married his third wife on April 24, 1854. 
Bigelow, Sarah (I142446)
 
3037 Sarah Alden

BIRTH 1627
Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, USA
DEATH 13 Jun 1688 (aged 60-61)
Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, USA
BURIAL
Myles Standish Burying Ground
Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, USA
MEMORIAL ID 14421267 · View Source

Daughter of Priscilla (MULLINS) and John ALDEN. Sis of John, Joseph, Eliz, Jonathan, Ruth, Mary,David, Rebecca, Priscilla and unknown. Wife of Alexander Standish. 
Alden, Sarah (I119123)
 
3038 Sarah Allen was married to John Cary up until his death in 1695.
Their children:
Recompence - about 1688
John - about 1690
Jonathan - about 1692

Sarah settled the estate in 1695. She married Benjamin Snow in 1705. The children chose their uncle, Samuel Allen, as their guardian in 1706.

Sarah's Family History:

DEACON SAMUEL ALLEN (1632-1718)
SARAH TRACY PARTRIDGE (1639-1717)
and other Family Members

Samuel Allen and his wife Ann were among the first settlers of Braintree, Massachusetts. They had Samuel, 1632, and subsequently Joseph, James, Sarah, Mary and Abigail. His wife Ann died 1641, and he had a second wife, Margaret.

SARAH PARTRIDGE was born 2 September 1639, Duxbury, Massachusetts, to Governor George Partridge (1605-1695) and Sarah Tracy (1621-1708.) She was their oldest child. She married Deacon Samuel Allen II, 16 December 1658, in Bridgewater. Her family was one of the earliest settlers in Bridgewater. She was a member of the Congregational Church. She died 30 October 1717, Duxbury, Plymouth, Massachusetts, at age 78.

Samuel Allen was born 10 Nov 1632 in Braintree, Norfolk, County, Massachusetts. He died 18 Oct 1718 in Bridgewater, Plymouth, Massachusetts. Samuel was born to Samuel Allen Sr. and Ann Witmore. He was married on 16 Dec 1658 in Bridgewater, Plymouth, Massachusetts, to Sarah Partridge, daughter of George Partridge and Sarah Tracey. They are the parents of eleven children, all born in Bridgewater.

Samuel, the eldest son of Samuel, settled in the parish of East Bridgewater as early as 1660. He was one of the original landed proprietors of the town and held many offices of trust an honor from the people. He was town clerk from 1683 to 1702, was a member of the Legislature in 1698, was in many of the battles with the Indians in those times, and once, while on a march to join Capt. Church with twenty of his neighbors, took seventeen prisoners after a desperate conflict. The records of the town still bear witness of his character for accuracy and research.

He was a deacon of the church and bore a good character to his death. He married Sarah, daughter of George Partridge of Duxbury; she was born in 1639.

Children of Samuel Allen and Sarah Partridge:

1.Samuel Allen, 4 Dec 1660-28 June 1750.
2.Essiel/Asahe Allen, 1 Mar 1662-
3.Eleazer Allen, 1663-
4.Mehitable Allen Alden, 20 Jan 1664-2 Dec 1685.
5.Sarah Allen Snow, 14 Apr 1667-1743.
6.Bethiah Allen Pryor, 12 May 1669-11 Mar 1744
7.Nathaniel Allen, 10 Feb 1672-1742
8.Ebenezer Allen, 14 Oct 674-1730
9.Josiah Allen, 21 Apr 1677-1736
10.Elisha Allen, 8 Feb 1678-1731
11.Nehemiah Allen, 5 Jan 1681-1703

Samuel son of Samuel married Rebeckah, daughter of John Cary, 1685. She was the granddaughter of Miles Standish. She died in 1697. Their children: Samuel, 1886; Ephraim, 1689; Timothy, 1691; Joseph 1693; Mehitable 1635. The mother died 1697, and he married Mary, supposed to be the daughter of Joseph Alden in 1700, and had seven children. His will 1736.

Ephraim went to Berkley and was a blacksmith.

Ephraim Allen, Sr. born 1691, Roxbury, Mass. Died 15 Feb 1776, Northborough, Mass. Spouse: Zipporah Crane born 1689 in Taunton, Mass. Died 1769 in Attleboro, Mass. Buried in Newell Burying Ground, South Attleboro, Mass. Married Ephraim Allen about 1710 in Plymouth or Bridgewater, Mass.

Children of Ephraim Allen and Zipporah Crane:
1. Hannah Allen b 1712 in Dighton, Mass.
2. Ephraim Allen b 1713 in Dighton, Mass.
3. Rebecca Allen b. 1715 in Dighton, Mass.
4. Zipporah Allen b 1718 in Dighton, Mass.
5. Benjamin Allen b. 1721 in Dighton (Berkley), Mass.
6. Tabitha Allen b 1724 in Berkley, Mass.
7. Samuel Allen b 1727 in Dighton, Mass.

Inscription:
In memory of
Mr. Ephraim Allen
Who died February 15th
1776 in the 85th Year of
his age.
 
Allen, Sarah (I118524)
 
3039 Sarah Angeline Osborne Woods
BIRTH 31 Aug 1860
Missouri, USA
DEATH 16 Apr 1928 (aged 67)
Nemaha, Nemaha County, Nebraska, USA
BURIAL
Nemaha Cemetery
Nemaha, Nemaha County, Nebraska, USA
MEMORIAL ID 114275192 · View Source 
Osborn, Sarah Angeline (I124178)
 
3040 Sarah Bush Lincoln

Birth: Dec. 13, 1788
Hardin County
Kentucky, USA
Death: Apr. 12, 1869
Coles County
Illinois, USA

She became Abraham Lincoln's stepmother when he was nine - Sarah became a widow in 1816 left with three children while Thomas Lincoln became a widower in 1818 left with two children. He simply knocked on her door one day in Hardin County, Kentucky and proposed marriage. Quickly married, the second for both, Sarah age 31 and Thomas age 41, loaded up a wagon with Sara's things and headed for the Thomas' farm in Indiana. Abraham and his sister found out they had a new mother as well as three new playmates. While Thomas viewed his son's studious ways as a waste of time, his new stepmother although illiterate herself, encouraged him. This influence probably led to his lofty place in American history. They became close, while the distance between father and son widened. The Lincoln's moved to Illinois in 1830 at which point, Abraham parted and went his own way. Upon the death of his father in 1851, he did not attend the funeral but continued to visit his stepmother periodically. The president-elect made one last visit to Sarah before he left for Washington and then visited the grave of his father. It was the last time they would ever meet. Sarah continued to live at the Coles County farm until her death at age 80 leaving over twenty grandchildren to mourn her. She was interred beside her second husband, Thomas Lincoln.

Family links:
Spouses:
Thomas Lincoln (1778 - 1851)
Daniel Johnston (1782 - 1816)*

Children:
Elizabeth Johnston Hanks (1807 - 1864)*
Matilda Johnston Hall (1811 - 1878)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Thomas Lincoln Cemetery
Pleasant Grove Township
Coles County
Illinois, USA
GPS (lat/lon): 39.38771, -88.2369

Maintained by: Find A Grave
Record added: Jan 22, 2000
Find A Grave Memorial# 8256
Sarah Bush Lincoln

Birth: Dec. 13, 1788
Hardin County
Kentucky, USA
Death: Apr. 12, 1869
Coles County
Illinois, USA

She became Abraham Lincoln's stepmother when he was nine - Sarah became a widow in 1816 left with three children while Thomas Lincoln became a widower in 1818 left with two children. He simply knocked on her door one day in Hardin County, Kentucky and proposed marriage. Quickly married, the second for both, Sarah age 31 and Thomas age 41, loaded up a wagon with Sara's things and headed for the Thomas' farm in Indiana. Abraham and his sister found out they had a new mother as well as three new playmates. While Thomas viewed his son's studious ways as a waste of time, his new stepmother although illiterate herself, encouraged him. This influence probably led to his lofty place in American history. They became close, while the distance between father and son widened. The Lincoln's moved to Illinois in 1830 at which point, Abraham parted and went his own way. Upon the death of his father in 1851, he did not attend the funeral but continued to visit his stepmother periodically. The president-elect made one last visit to Sarah before he left for Washington and then visited the grave of his father. It was the last time they would ever meet. Sarah continued to live at the Coles County farm until her death at age 80 leaving over twenty grandchildren to mourn her. She was interred beside her second husband, Thomas Lincoln.

Family links:
Spouses:
Thomas Lincoln (1778 - 1851)
Daniel Johnston (1782 - 1816)*

Children:
Elizabeth Johnston Hanks (1807 - 1864)*
Matilda Johnston Hall (1811 - 1878)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Thomas Lincoln Cemetery
Pleasant Grove Township
Coles County
Illinois, USA
GPS (lat/lon): 39.38771, -88.2369

Maintained by: Find A Grave
Record added: Jan 22, 2000
Find A Grave Memorial# 8256
 
Bush, Sarah (I112221)
 
3041 Sarah Edith Gardner August 1878 - 21 October 1904 • L28G-974, She went by Edith.
Sarah Edith Gardner, daughter of William Gardner 1834-1922 • 2MJQ-PHX and Emma Rice 1840-1934 • 2MJ7-9WT, was born August 1878, at Wheeler, Steuben, New York, United States.
She married Thomas D Stickney 1868-1936 • 9CJ2-N2S, 3 December 1898, at Wheeler, Steuben, New York.
They had a daughter Bernice Gardner Stickney 1900-1965 • 2MJQ-G1S.
Sarah Edith Gardner Stickney died 21 October 1904, at Wheeler, Steuben, New York, and is buried at Wheeler Cemetery, Wheeler, Steuben, New York.
Sarah Edith Gardner August 1878 - 21 October 1904 • L28G-974, She wen t by Edith.
Sarah Edith Gardner, daughter of William Gardner 1834-1922 • 2MJQ-PH X and Emma Rice 1840-1934 • 2MJ7-9WT, was born August 1878, at Wheeler , Steuben, New York, United States.
She married Thomas D Stickney 1868-1936 • 9CJ2-N2S, 3 December 1898 , at Wheeler, Steuben, New York.
They had a daughter Bernice Gardner Stickney 1900-1965 • 2MJQ-G1S.
Sarah Edith Gardner Stickney died 21 October 1904, at Wheeler, Steuben , New York, and is buried at Wheeler Cemetery, Wheeler, Steuben, New Y ork. 
Gardner, Sarah Edith (I126235)
 
3042 Sarah Ellen Jones was born on December 2, 1864, in Wellsville, Utah, the child of Joseph Price and Jane Hughes. She married Jesse Willard Lloyd on November 25, 1885, in Logan, Utah. They had 12 children in 20 years. She died on February 19, 1946, in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 81, and was buried there  Jones, Sarah Ellen (I140465)
 
3043 Sarah Hooker christened 21 February 1629/30 at Bromfield, Essex, England,

REVEREND JOHN WILSON Jr. was born September 1621, of London, England, to Rev. John Wilson Sr. (1588-1667) and Elizabeth Mansfield (1592-1658.) Rev. Wilson married Sarah Hooker, daughter of Rev. Thomas and Susannah Hooker, about 1648 of Medfield, Norfolk, Massachusetts.

John Wilson Jr. was brought to New England by his father, John Wilson Sr., on the latter’s second voyage, 1632. He was graduated in the first class at Harvard College, in 1642, was admitted to his father’s church in Boston in 1644, and was freeman in 1647. After preaching several years he became assistant to Rev. Richard Mather, at Dorchester in 1649, and after two years’ service here removed to Medfield, soon after the settlement of that place, and in December, 1651, he was installed as the first minister of the town, where he was ordained Pastor, October 12, 1652, in which service he continued for forty years, until his death, besides performing the duties of physician and school master.

By a contemporary he is referred to as “gracious and godly, a faithful and useful man, well esteemed.”

In his will, made three days before his decease, he mentions his wife Sarah; son John (to whom he bequeathed his share of the Braintree farm); daughter *Sarah, wife of Josiah Torrey, formerly wife of Paul Batt; daughter Susanna, wife of Grindall Rawson; and grandchild Thomas Weld son of his daughter Elizabeth, deceased, formerly wife of Thomas weld. (Suffolk Co. Probate, Vol. 8, fol. 58.)

Reverend John Wilson died 23 August 1691, in Medfield, Massachusetts, age 70, having on the previous Sunday “preached both forenoon and afternoon, fervently and powerfully.”
SARAH HOOKER was christened 21 February 1630, in Chelmsford, England.

Sarah’s parents were Thomas Hooker (1586-1647, immigrant) and Susanna Garbrand (1593-1676.) Thomas Hooker came from Rotterdam in 1633 in the Griffin. He resided in Cambridge and then Hartford in 1636. He was Pastor there. He was a Freeman 14 May 1634. In his will he left “my daughter, Sarah Hooker £100 at marriage or at age twenty-one, the disposal and further education of her and the rest I leave to my wife.” The inventory of his estate was £1136, including £450 in real estate.

Sarah married John Wilson in about 1647, of Medfield, Massachusetts.

Sarah Hooker passed away 20 August 1725, Braintree, Massachusetts, age 95.

Children of Rev. John Wilson and Sarah Hooker:

1. John Wilson, b. 6 July 1649; d. young. Child.
2. Sarah Wilson was born about 1650 of Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, to Rev. John Wilson (1621-1691) and Sarah Hooker (1629-1725.) She married (1) Paul Batt, bef. 1674, of Boston. He died in 1678; (2) *Josiah Torrey, 5 May 1680, in Medfield, Norfolk, Massachusetts. We do not know when or where Sarah Wilson passed away.
3. Thomas Wilson, b. 1652; d. 1652. Child.
4. Elizabeth Wilson, b. 1653 d. 1653. Child
5. Elizabeth Wilson, b. 1656; d. 1687.
6. Dr. John Wilson, b. 1660; d. 1728.
7. Thomas Wilson, b. 1662; d. 1662. Child.
8. Susanna Wilson, b. 1664; d. 1748. 
Hooker, Sarah (I143764)
 
3044 Sarah is mentioned in the Will of her brother John:
John Bowne's Will dated 9/24/1714, proved 2/15/1715-16 left to wife 400 lbs, to sister, SARAH SALTER, all plate, etc. to Gershom Mott for his children 200 lbs, to Joseph Dennis, Jeremiah white, Thomas and John Salter, Hannah LINCOLN and William Hartshorn's 3 children each 250 lbs. Brothers Obadiah Bowne and Richard Salter (actually brother-in-law), Executors and Residuary Legatees. Monmouth Will Books Book A, pp 10-27.

Sarah Bowne, the daughter of John and Lydiah Holmes Bowne, married Richard Salter, a lawyer, judge, and colonial legislator. Hannah, the daughter of Richard and Sarah Bowne Salter, was born about 1692 (possibly in Freehold, Monmouth Co., NJ). Sometime before Sept. 14, 1714 (in Monmouth Co., NJ?), Hannah Salter married Mordecai Lincoln (an iron founder) and moved to Chester Co., PA. Hannah Salter Lincoln was the mother of "Virginia" John Lincoln. "Virginia" John Lincoln was the father of the Abraham Lincoln who settled in Kentucky and was killed by Indians there in the 1780s. This Abraham Lincoln was the grandfather of Abraham Lincoln, the President of the United States. Therefore, the Rev. Obadiah and Katherine Hyde Holmes were the fifth great grandparents of Abraham Lincoln. In addition, Hannah Bowne Salter's son, Edwin Salter, lived in New Jersey. Edwin Salter wrote the Early Dutch Settlers and wrote an article on Rev.
Obadiah Holmes which was printed in the Monmouth Democrat newspaper of September 6, 1888. The American ancestry of Abraham Lincoln, including his line to Obadiah and Katherine (Hyde) Holmes is documented in Ancestors of American Presidents, Gary Boyd Roberts, published in cooperation with the New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Mass., 1995, pp. 33-36, 149-150. This book provides the lineage of each president, including their royal and Mayflower lines and other notable connections and is still in print.
 
Bowne, Sarah (I139173)
 
3045 Sarah Peake Kimball
Original name: Sarah Peake Kimball
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Birth: May 3, 1811
Staffordshire, England
Death: Dec. 3, 1873
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake County
Utah, USA

Daughter of Isaac Peake and Annes Ledward

Married William Spencer Noon, 12 Feb 1829, Caverswall, Stafford England

Children - Harriet Frances Noon, Elizabeth Ann Noon, Adelmone Noon

Married Heber Chase Kimball, abt 1842

Children - Adelbert Henry Kimball, Sarah Helen Kimball

History - Sarah was sometimes referred to as Sarah Peak Noon. She was Kimball's first plural wife. Her first husband, William S. Noon, deserted her in Nauvoo, and she married Kimball sometime in 1842.

Mormon Pioneer Overland Travel

Family links:
Spouse:
Heber Chase Kimball (1801 - 1868)

Children:
Sarah Helen Kimball (1845 - 1860)*
Heber Kimball (1849 - 1850)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Kimball-Whitney Cemetery
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake County
Utah, USA

Maintained by: SMSmith
Originally Created by: Utah State Historical So...
Record added: Feb 02, 2000
Find A Grave Memorial# 65833 
Peake, Sarah Perry (I126855)
 
3046 Sarah Rachel Taylor Bondurant

1748 Marriage Record
Name:John Peter Bondurant
[John Bondurant]
Gender:Male
Birth Place:VA
Birth Year:1709
Spouse Name:SarahRachel Taylor
Spouse
Birth Place:VA
Spouse Birth Year:1711
Marriage
Year:1748
Marriage State:VA
Number Pages:1 
Taylor, Sarah Rachael (I93154)
 
3047 Sarah Rebecca Tew, Daughter of William Thomas Tew and Clara Elizabeth Snow, was born January 7, 1888 in Mapleton, Utah, where she grew up and spent a happy childhood surrounded by loving family and friends. After completing her schooling, she attended and graduated from the BYU Academy. While there, she met Buell Allred and then waited for him while he spent four and one-half years on his mission in Samoa. During this time, she taught school one year in Heber and three years in Mapleton. Upon his return, they were married in the Salt Lake Temple, binding this marriage for time and all eternity. They spent the first few years of marriage in Canada. Returning to Lehi, they purchased a home and land, and here six children were born to them. Because of Buell’s lingering illness, which he had contacted in Samoa, much of the responsibility of raising their children and supporting them, fell on her shoulders. After his passing in 1934, she took upon herself the tremendous task of rearing their family; always leading by example. She supported them by raising cucumbers, and selling products for different companies, walking many miles, and then returning another day to deliver them. She never knew idleness, and as a result, spare moments were spent in quilting and making rugs. Life was serious, but she possessed a wonderful sense of humor to take her over the hard spots. She inspired in each of her children a need for higher education and an abiding faith and love of the gospel. It was her firm belief that anything could be accomplished in righteousness. She helped support the children in college and sent two sons and one daughter on missions. After seeing her children through school and missions, she herself accepted a call to labor in the North Western States Mission, working mostly in Oregon. After thoroughly enjoying this experience, she came home to another important undertaking-that of genealogy and temple work. Three days before her stroke, she went through two sessions in the temple. And on the day of her stroke, she was on her way to the temple. For sixteen years she was very happy and satisfied with this life of service. She lived a long life filled with devotion to church, family, and friends. No matter what job she was given in the church, she served willingly and well. She always thought of others and wanted to do something special for them. She has spent many hours piecing quilts. One Christmas she gave 40 quilt tops to her children and grandchildren. She loved nature and its beauties. In later years she found satisfaction in painting on canvas what she remembered.

Written by Sherilyn Smith. Taken from “Biographical Sketch, Presented at the Funeral for Sarah Rebecca Tew Allred, July 3, 1970, Wing Mortuary, Lehi, Utah,” written by Clara Allred Smith, her daughter. In the possession of Darrell and Sherilyn Smith.
 
Tew, Sarah Rebecca (I43400)
 
3048 SARAH SCOTT
1816-1878
JAMES MULHOLLAND
1804-1839
ALEXANDER MULLINER1
1807-1874
Sarah Scott was born the sixth child and youngest daughter of Jacob and Sarah Warnock Scott on October
25, 1816 at Armagh, Ireland. Sarah was always a favorite of her mother and was the last of the family to
join the Mormon Church. Ann Scott later recorded:
My sister Sarah was the last one of my sisters to obey the gospel. The rest of our family had all come into the
church amid were rejoicing in the blessings of the Lord, and were intensely interested in Sarah’s conversion.
The latter was mother’s favorite girl, not that she was loved more than the other children, but she always
seemed to especially seek mother’s companionship and she clung to her as do the tendrils of the vine to the
tree. But now, even after mother had yielded obedience to the word of the divine Master, her faithful
daughter companion still stood out of the fold, and so remained until God, in his own good way, let the light
into her soul. In Sarah’s final acceptance of the truth can be seen the workings of that Providence of whom
Cowper wrote:
“God moves in a mysterious way
His wonders to perform.”
This dear sister had witnessed something of divine power, besides having been surrounded by those
influences at the last favorable to her conversion, as well as learning that the gospel preached by the Saints
was identical with the message Jesus taught in ages past. Under those circumstances her responsibility to
God was very great. One evening before bed-time I went into my father’s buggy-house for secret prayers,
and while resting upon my knees before the Lord, the spirit came upon me in the gift of tongues. The
interpretation was, if my sister Sarah was not baptized that very night she should not live to see the light of
another day. Astonished at this remarkable revelation I immediately hurried to my sister, whom I found as if
in waiting for me, and I delivered to her the terrible message. Instead of being shocked at a message fraught
with such fearful significance, she replied, “I believe the statement to be true from a manifestation I had last
night.” Some time the night before after retiring to bed, my sister said her bedroom was suddenly filled with
such an intense light that it seemed as if her powers of endurance were too frail to withstand the shock which
was produced upon her entire system. She felt that if the influence of the power to which she was subjected
were not soon removed, she would die. She lifted up her mind in prayer to the Lord, that the power which
had so overcome her might be removed, and it was immediately withdrawn. She said she was fully satisfied
that the hand of the Lord was in all that had been shown us, and that she was ready for baptism. And the
same hour of the night we went with her to the water, where she was baptized into the Church of Christ by
Elder Green. And so far as our family was concerned, our cup of joy was full; because father and mother,
with my brothers and sisters were all in the church, and God had in a wonderful manner confirmed to us the
message which he had sent, and had established, seemingly beyond the possibility of a doubt, our certainty of
the truth which we had accepted.
At Far West, Sarah fell in love with the accomplished 35 year-old James Mulholland, secretary to Joseph
Smith. Mulholland had converted to the church in Toronto not long before Sarah, and was probably already
acquainted with the Scotts in Canada. After her marriage to James at the age of 22, Sarah became a close
participant in the inner workings of the church during that dark period. Tragedy soon struck when James,
who had caught cold by sleeping on damp ground after his departure from Far West, developed “brain
fever” only months after his marriage to Sarah. In desperation, Sarah took her young husband to Emma

1
Alexander’s surname is variously spelled Mulliner, Mullinder, or Mullender. Early records most often spelled it Mulliner, while
in his later life family spelled it Mullinder.
74
Smith, who cared for him for five weeks until he died on November 3, 1839. Emma later wrote that “His
spirit left its suffering tenement for a better mansion than he had here.”1
James’ death must have been a
terrible blow to Sarah, who as a widow gave birth in April 1839 to their daughter Helena at Nauvoo.
Sarah continued to live in her late husband’s home in Nauvoo until 1843. At that time, a conflict
developed when her older brother John refused to share some property outside of the town with Sarah. On
October 25, 1843, Sarah Scott Mulholland was married to Alexander Mulliner (Mullinder) by John Taylor.
Alexander was born September 15, 1807 at Haddington, East Lothian, Scotland, the son of Samuel
Mulliner, Sen., and Jane Sutherland. His older brother Samuel, Jun. was one of the first Mormon
missionaries to preach in his native Scotland. Alexander welcomed Sarah and her little daughter Helena
into the new marriage. Sarah’s father Jacob wrote: “Alex Mulliner, you know is a good tradesman he gets
plenty of work, & they live quite comfortable, little Helena, is a fine strong child.” In 1844 at Nauvoo
Sarah bore their first child together, Jennett “Nitty” Mulliner.
Alexander and Sarah followed the older Scott siblings in rejecting polygamy and association with
John Scott during the crises of 1844. In 1846, they accompanied Isaac, Ann, and their families to
Wisconsin, where the Mulliners settled at Lyons. Little of their later life is known. In addition to Jennett,
Sarah gave birth to Samuel Alexander (1846), Anna (1848), Revena (1850), Robert (1854), and Sarah
(1858). In the 1860s, Sarah joined her siblings in supporting the Reorganization, but Alexander does not
seem to have participated in the church. Alexander died in 1874 at Lyons. Sarah died on Christmas Day,
1878 at Waupun, Fond du Lac Co. (now Dodge Co.), Wisconsin of lung congestion. Her remains were
brought to Lyons to be placed beside her daughter’s grave.
http://scottcorner.org/JACOB%20&%20SARAH%20SCOTT.pdf 
Scott, Sarah (I126687)
 
3049 Sarah Shuler, daughter of William Shuler and Sarah Croll, was born May 15, 1801 in Vincent Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania. She married John Buckwalter on February 21, 1828, and eight children were born of their union: Margaret, William Shuler, Henry Shuler, Sarah, John Edwin, Elizabeth Lucretia, and twin sons Joseph and Bitner who died in infancy. The Buckwalters lived in West Nantmeal, Chester County, Pennsylvania, near Phoenixville. In the year 1839, Sarah's husband John Buckwalter was converted to "Mormonism" (the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints). John died unexpectedly in March 1841. Sometime during this same year Sarah became convinced of the truth of "Mormonism" and was baptized. In April of 1842 she with her six children moved to Nauvoo, Illinois, traveling by steamboat from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. At this time her eldest child was thirteen and her youngest only two.
They lived in Nauvoo for about four years, until the Mormons were driven out of their homes. Being without means, Sarah and her children were forced to remain in Nauvoo after the main body of Saints had left. In September of 1846 the mob attacked the few remaining Saints who were unable to start with those who left earlier. On the 10th of September, Sarah and children were driven from Nauvoo. They fled across the Mississippi River into the Territory of Iowa and camped upon its banks.
As winter with its chilly blasts came nearer, Sarah decided with her sons to try to seek shelter from the cold, as well as to obtain work which would supply them with food and clothing, so they determined to go to St. Louis, which was 200 miles away. Upon arriving in Keokuk they learned that a steamboat bound for St. Louis was tied up at the dock. Sarah visited the captain and tried to engage passage for her family, telling him she had no money but would pay him with any household articles he cared to accept. For pay he took a feather bed and an old Kentucky rifle which had belonged to her husband.
The boys obtained work in St. Louis and were able to provide an adequate living for the family. Early in the spring of 1849 Sarah returned to her home in Pennsylvania to visit her relatives. One of her brothers said he thought the gospel work might be true but he did not have time to bother with it. Another brother tried to persuade her to forsake the "deluded Mormons" and return to her family. However, Sarah was determined to go west, to rejoin her fellow Saints who were now in the valleys of the Rocky Mountains.
In April 1852 the Buckwalter family traveled by steamboat to Council Bluffs, Iowa. Wagons, supplies, yokes of steers and everything needed for the journey was purchased. The family was in camp at Winter Quarters for about four weeks preparing for the trip across the plains. On May 31, 1852, the line of march commenced. After traveling two months and twelve days, enduring many hardships and dangers, they reached Salt Lake City on August 11, 1852.
The Buckwalter family pitched their tents and wagons on the banks of the Jordan River near the old racetrack. On August 31st Sarah and her son Henry drove all but one yoke of oxen to graze for the fall out on Church Island. By the 15th of September they rented a house in the Ninth Ward, and the family moved from their encampment.
A prominent Church leader, Heber C. Kimball, had taken an interest in Sarah's and her children's welfare. On 7 Feb 1846, Sarah had been sealed to Heber C. Kimball as one of his wives. In 1888 the Kimball family published a book entitled THE LIFE OF HEBER C. KIMBALL, written and compiled by President Kimball's grandson, Orson F. Whitney. The book lists 45 wives of President Kimball, including Sarah (Shuler) Buckwalter; however, Sarah was one of the 14 who were said to be wives "in name only". Apparently Heber C. Kimball helped to support several widows and orphans; many of these widows were sealed to him but they never lived together as husband and wife.
On April 2, 1853, Sarah's daughter Sarah, age 15, died. In 1855 they moved to American Fork, where they endured many hardships incident to those early days. Sarah moved with the family of her son Henry to Salt Lake City in 1877, where she died on January 25, 1879, from a paralytic stroke. She is buried in the Salt Lake City cemetery. 
Shuler, Sarah (I107469)
 
3050 SARAH SOOLE was baptized 8 June 1600 at Hawkhurst, Kent, England. Her parents were Thomas Soole (1569-1614) and Mary Iddenden (1573-1656.) She married Samuel Hinckley 7 May 1617, at Hawkhurst, Kent, England.

St. Laurence Church, Hawkhurst
She and her family came from England to America in 1635 on the Hercules to Scituate, MA. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index:
Name: Saml Hinckley, year 1634. Family members listed: Wife Sara; Child Susan; Child Mary; Relative Elizabeth and child Sara.

The Good Ship Hercules
In 1634, people embarked at Sandwich for New England on the'Good ship Hercules of Sandwich'. The following is a passenger list, taken from 'History of Sandwich, by W. BOYS, 1792, pp. 750-1'.

"Sarah joined Mr. Lothrop's church on 30 Aug 1635, her name recorded as 'Goody Hinckley'. Sarah must have been pregnant on the voyage, as daughter Eliazbeth, said to have been born in Scituate, was baptized 6 Sept 1635. ... (she) had eleven children, but several died in infancy." (Bonnie Hubbard)
Sarah Soole died on 18 Aug 1656 in Barnstable, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, age 56. She was buried 19 August 1656 at Mattache Village, Barnstable, Massachusetts.

Biography
Name
Name: Sarah Soole [1]
Name: Sarah Hinckley [2]
Name: Sarah Soule
Birth
Birth: 1600 [3]
Baptism
Baptized: 8 JUN 1600, Hawkhurst, County Kent, England[2]
Note: 1600 "June Baptized the viij th day Sarah the daughter of Thomas Soole."[1]
Family
Samuel first married Sarah Soole on May 7th, 1617 in Hawkhurst, County Kent, England [2]. Sarah was baptized at Hawkhurst 8 June 1600, daughter of Thomas and Mary (Iddenden) Soole of Hawkhurst.
Together they had 16 children:
1. Thomas, bp. Hawkhurst, Kent, 19 March 1619/20 [NEHGR 68:186]; m. (1) Barnstable 4 December 1641 Mary Richards [PCR 8:44]; m. (2) Barnstable 16 March 1659/60 Mary (Smith) Glover [MD 6:98].
2. John, bp. Tenterden, Kent, 28 April 1622 [NEHGR 65:315]; bur. there 25 February 1627/8 [NEHGR 65:315].
3. Susannah, bp. Tenterden, Kent, 6 November 1625 [NEHGR 65:315]; m. by 1644 John Smith (on an unknown date, "John Smith & Susannah Hinckley contracted at our sister Hinckleye's house [in Barnstable]" [NEHGR 10:39]; eldest known child b. Barnstable [blank] April 1644 [MD 12:154]).
4. Mary, bp. Tenterden, Kent, 23 March 1627/8 [NEHGR 65:315]; no further record.
5. Sarah, bp. Tenterden, Kent, 22 November 1629 [NEHGR 65:315]; m. Barnstable 12 December 1649 Henry Cobb [GMB 1:392-95; PCR 8:42; NEHGR 9:287].
6. Mary, bp. Tenterden, Kent, 18 September 1631 [NEHGR 65:315]; living 8 October 1662, possibly married, when named in the will of her father. (The claim has been made that Mary married James Houghton of Barnstable, and was the "Mary Haughton,widow," who made her will on 19 January 1685/6, in which she made individual bequests to each of the children of Thomas Hinckley [MD 18:134-36, citing BarnPR 1:77-78]. However, no relationship was stated with the Hinckley children, and, on the other hand, she also made a bequest to "the two eldest children of Joseph Potts my brother Edward Potts his eldest son." Since there is no known connection between the Hinckley family and any Potts family, we do not believe that the wife of James Haughton was Mary Hinckley.)
7. Elizabeth, bp. Tenterden, Kent, 10 March 1632/3 [NEHGR 65:315]; bur. there 18 June 1633 [NEHGR 65:315].
8. John, bp. Tenterden, Kent, 1 June 1634 [NEHGR 65:315]; d. young.
9. Elizabeth, bp. Scituate 6 September 1635 [NEHGR 9:281]; m. Barnstable 15 July 1657 Elisha Parker [PCR 8:47].
10. Samuel, bp. Scituate 4 February 1637/8 [NEHGR 9:281]; d. young.
11. Samuel, bp. Scituate 10 February 1638/9 [NEHGR 9:281]; bur. Barnstable 22 March 1640/1 [NEHGR 9:285].
12. Daughter; bur. Barnstable 8 July 1640 ("a daughter upon their coming hither buried unbaptized") [NEHGR 9:285].
13. Child (twin), b. late 1640 or early 1641; bur. Barnstable 6 February 1640/1 [NEHGR 9:285].
14. Child (twin), b. late 1640 or early 1641; bur. Barnstable 19 March 1640/1 [NEHGR 9:285].
15. Samuel, b. Barnstable 4 July 1642 [PCR 8:44], bp. Barnstable 24 July 1642 [NEHGR 9:282]; m. (1) Barnstable 14 December 1664 Mary Goodspeed [MD 6:99]; m. (2) Barnstable 15 January 1668[/9?] Mary FitzRandolph [MD 6:99].
16. Ensign John, b. Barnstable 24 May 1644 [PCR 8:44], bp. Barnstable 26 May 1644 [NEHGR 9:282]; m. (1) Barnstable [blank] July 1668 Bethia Lothrop [MD 6:135]; m. (2) Barnstable 24 November 1697 Mary Goodspeed [MD 14:87].
Note: 1617 "May Marryed the vij th day Samuell Hinckley and Sarah Soole."
(Among the entries given above is the record of the marriage of Samuel Hinckley of Tenterden, co. Kent, and of Scituate and Barnstable in New England, which has hitherto escaped notice, although before the Hinckley records and pedigree were communicated to the Register in 1911 (vol. 65 ), careful search was made for the place and date of this marriage and for the maiden name of Samuel Hinckley's wife. The baptismal record of Thomas Hinckley, Governor of the Plymouth Colony, which had remained unknown, is also printed here. Hawkhurst, co. Kent, the parish in which these records were found, lies ten miles west from Tenterden and fifteen miles southwest from Harrietsham, and adjoins the border of Sussex. The John Hinckley whose children were baptized at Hawkhurst was probably the John who was born about 1591, a brother of Samuel, the settler in the Plymouth Colony. (Vide Register, vol. 65, p. 187). For the Soole family and related families vide infra. [1]

Following Sarah's death 18 August 1656, Samuel married (2nd) Bridget Botfish, December 15th, 1657 in Barnstable, Massachusetts.[4] [PCR 8:44; MD 6:98; NEHGR 65:318] They had no children together.
Parents' Marriage
Husband: Thomas Soole
Wife: Mary Iddenden
Child: Sarah Soole
Marriage: 16 OCT 1598, Hawkhurst, co. Kent, England
Note: (at NEHGS) '...Sarah Sool... daughter of Thomas Sool and 1st wife Mary Iddenden.'
From NEHGR: Marriages in the Parish Registers of Hawkhurst, co. Kent:
"1598 "October Marryed the xvj th day Thomas Soole and Marye Iddenden."[5][6]
Emigrated March 1634
Sailed: Passenger in the Hercules of Sandwich (200 tons) with her husband Samuel Hinckley, and their children Susan, Sarah, and Mary, and Elizabeth a kinswoman. [2]
Death
Died: 18 AUG 1656, Barnstable, Massachusetts

Sarah Soole Hinckley
Birth: Jun., 1600
Fordwich
City of Canterbury
Kent, England
Death: Aug. 18, 1656
Barnstable
Barnstable County
Massachusetts, USA

Samuel Hinckley married (1) in Hawkhurst, Kent, 7 May 1617, Sarah Soole, baptized there on 8 June 1600, daughter of Thomas Soole. She died at Barnstable on 18 August 1656 and was buried there on 19 August 1656.
They had 16 children: Thomas, John, Susanna Smith, Mary, Sarah COBB, Mary (not wife of James Haughton), Elizabeth, John, Elizabeth Parker, Samuel, Samuel again, "a daughter upon their coming hither buried unbaptized," twins who died young, Samuel, & John.
Thomas Hinckley, the eldest son of this immigrant, attained great prominence, serving as the last governor of Plymouth Colony, from 1681 to 1692.

Family links:
Spouse:
Samuel Hinckley (1589 - 1662)*

Children:
Thomas Hinckley (1618 - 1706)*
Susanna Hinckley Smith (1625 - 1675)*
Sarah Hinckley Cobb (1629 - ____)*
Samuel Hinckley (1642 - 1727)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Unknown

Children of Samuel Hinckley and Sarah Soole.
1. Governor Thomas Hinckley (1619-1706)
2. John Hinckley (1622-1627)
3. *SUSANNA HINCKLEY (1625-1675)
4. Marie Hinckley (1628-1628)
5. Sarah Hinckley (1629-1679)
6. Mary Hinckley (1631-1662)
7. Elizabeth Hinckley (1632-1633)
8 John Hinckley (1634-1634)
9. Elizabeth Hinckley (1635-1691)
10. Samuel Hinckley (1637-1641)
11. John Hinckley (1644-1709)
 
Soole, Sarah (I59435)
 

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