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3701 When Elizabeth Taylor Pierce was born on November 19, 1776, in Hartford, New York, her father, Joseph, was 42, and her mother, Hannah, was 38. She had five sons with Isaac Pierce between 1800 and 1818. She died on September 7, 1826, in Oswegatchie, New York, at the age of 49, and was buried there.

Since she died before photography, there were no photographs of Elizabeth Taylor.
Elizabeth Taylor was born 19 November 1776, Hartford, Washington, New York, United States. Her parents were Jonathan Taylor Jr 1734-1810 and Hannah Wheat 1738-1813. She married Rev. Isaac Washington Pierce 1776-1859. Elizabeth's death was 7 September 1826 Oswegatchie, St. Lawrence, New York, United States.

Children of Rev. Isaac W. Pierce & Elizabeth Taylor: Levi, Polly, Amasa, Daniel, Eliza/Elizabeth, Phebe, Patience Delilah, (Elder) Isaac W. (II), David, Mial R., Ruth L, John T., Almira
Died before photography. Photos on the internet of her (& Rev. Isaac) are actually of daughter-in-law Phebe Baldwin (& 2nd husband Daily Carpenter).

When ELIZABETH Taylor was born on November 19, 1776, in Hartford, New York, her father, Joseph, was 42 and her mother, Hannah, was 38. When Elizabeth was age 17, she married Issac (Revrend) Pierce on February 19, 1794. 1776-1860. Elizabeth was age 33 at Death of Father. Joseph passed away on July 13, 1810, in Canaan, New York, at the age of 76. Joseph Taylor 1734-1810. Elizabeth was age 34 at Birth of Son Isaac Washington. He was born on July 3, 1811, in Oswegatchie, New York. Elizabeth was age 36 at Death of Mother , Hannah Wheat Taylor. She passed away on April 3, 1813, in Hartford, New York, at the age of 74. Elizabeth died on September 7, 1826, at the age of 49.

Name: Hannah Wheat Gender: Female Age: 74 Birth Date: 16 Jul 1738 Birth Place: Windham, Conn First Marriage Date: 1758 Death Date: 3 Apr 1813 Father: Solomon Wheat Mother: Anne Ripley Spouse: Joseph Taylor Child: Anne Taylor-- Nathan Taylor--Samuel Taylor-- Hannah Taylor-- Joseph Taylor-- Sarah Taylor-- Elizabeth Taylor

Descendants of Elizabeth Taylor ineligible to join Mayflower Society (unproven line). Easily verifiable by contacting them.
Nathan Taylor in the Pennsylvania, Society of Mayflower Descendants Applications, 1911-1929
Name: Nathan Taylor Gender: Male Birth Date: 11 Feb 1761 Birth Place: Concord, Massachusetts Marriage Date: 17 Feb 1784 Marriage Place: Richmond, New Hampshire Death Date: 22 Jul 1831 Death Place: Hartford, New York Father: Joseph Taylor Mother: Hannah Wheat Spouse: Lydia Harris Child: Electa Taylor Applicant Name: Edward Northup Hay Pilgrim Name: William Bradford 
Taylor, Elizabeth (I83398)
 
3702 When Erastus Andersen Hansen was born on May 2, 1872, in Spanish Fork, Utah, his father, Jens, was 48 and his mother, Karen, was 35. He married Anna Lucilla Beck on August 15, 1893, in his hometown. They had eleven children during their marriage. He died on April 14, 1949, in Palmyra, Utah, at the age of 76, and was buried in Spanish Fork, Utah.
 
Hansen, Erastus Andersen (I107822)
 
3703 When Erastus Kruse Fillerup was born on February 16, 1875, in Utah, his father, Anders, was 43 and his mother, Caroline, was 32. He married Lucy Ann (Lulu) Johnson on May 18, 1899, in Salt Lake City, Utah. They had six children in 11 years. He died on July 2, 1910, in Pearson, Chihuahua, Mexico, at the age of 35.  Fillerup, Erastus Kruse (I108077)
 
3704 When Gunnell "Nellie" Lavina Jensen was born on March 22, 1883, in Brigham City, Utah, her father, Brigham, was 27, and her mother, Martha, was 24. She married Charles Cheal on June 22, 1927, in Logan, Utah. She died on December 30, 1973, in her hometown at the age of 90, and was buried there.
Family group sheet has child listed as Nellie C birthday 22 March 1882 
Jensen, Gunnell Lavina (I126833)
 
3705 When Jesse Willard Lloyd was born on June 3, 1860, in Farmington, Utah, his father, Thomas, was 26 and his mother, Susana, was 29. He married Sarah Ellen Jones on November 25, 1885, in Logan, Utah. They had 12 children in 20 years. He died on August 24, 1952, in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 92, and was buried there.  Lloyd, Jesse Willard (I140464)
 
3706 When Joseph Foster was born in 1726 in Salem, Massachusetts, his father, Christopher, was 30 and his mother, Deborah, was 26. He married Mary Molly Wheeler on June 27, 1751, in his hometown. They had 11 children in 19 years. He died in 1777 in Northampton, Massachusetts, at the age of 51.  Wheeler, Mary (I128275)
 
3707 When Julia T. Theobald was born on December 10, 1874, in Beaver, Utah, USA, her father, George, was 26, and her mother, Naomi, was 20. She married Thomas E. Herbert on June 30, 1897, in Millard, Utah, USA. They had seven children in 21 years. She died of bronchial pneumonia on May 9, 1959, in Provo, Utah, USA, at the age of 84, and was buried in Benjamin, Utah, USA.

OBITUARY - JULIA THEOBALD HERBERT - 9 May 1959
Oldest Citizen in Benjamin Dies at 84

BENJAMIN, UTAH

Mrs. Julia Theobald Herbert, 84, longtime oldest resident of Benjamin, died Saturday in a Provo hospital of causes incident to age. She was a native of Beaver, Utah.

She was born at Beaver Dec. 10, 1874, the daughter of George and Naomi Ruth Tanner Theobald. Her early years were spent in the southern part of Utah and she was educated in the schools of Hinckley and Deseret.

An active member of the LDS church, she has held offices in both the Relief Society and Primary organizations of the wards in which she lived. During the years she lived at Benjamin, she served many times as a home nurse or mid-wife. Also, she had served two terms as president of the local Farm Bureau auxiliary, and was an active member of the community camp of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers. In this latter group, she was for many years director of the committee which had the duty of placing flags or markers on the graves of all pioneers and Indian war veterans.

She was married to Thomas E. Herbert on June 30, 1897, at Hinckley, and their marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. They moved to Benjamin at this time and made their home in this community for the major part of their lifetime. Mr. Herbert was a local farmer and livestock raiser. He preceded her in death August 8, 1936. One son and one daughter also preceded her.

Surviving are one daughter Mrs. Naomi H. Thomas, Spanish Fork, four sons, George and Walter Herbert, Payson; Ralph and Max Herbert, Benjamin, and 23 grandchildren, 38 great-grandchildren and one great great grandchild. Also surviving is one brother, Faye Theobald, Hinckley.

Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. in the Benjamin Ward chapel, with Bishop Donald Write officiating. Friends may call at the Claudin-Linde Mortuary in Spanish Fork Tuesday between 7 and 9 p.m. or at the home of Ralph Herbert at Benjamin Wednesday prior to services. Burial will be in the Benjamin Cemetery.
 
Theobald, Julia Pheola (I93483)
 
3708 When Lyndon (Slim) Laird was born on April 14, 1910, in Utah County, Utah, his father, Edward, was 37 and his mother, Annie, was 29. He had eight brothers and five sisters. He died on December 22, 1986, in Overton, Nevada, at the age of 76, and was buried in Dubois, Idaho.
When Lyndon (Slim) Laird was born on April 14, 1910, in Utah County, U tah, his father, Edward, was 37 and his mother, Annie, was 29. He ha d eight brothers and five sisters. He died on December 22, 1986, in Ov erton, Nevada, at the age of 76, and was buried in Dubois, Idaho. 
Laird, Lyndon (I68949)
 
3709 When Martha Magdalana Jeppson was born on June 17, 1858, in Lehi, Utah, her father, Jeppa, was 25, and her mother, Gunniel, was 27. She married Brigham Jensen on September 27, 1875, in Salt Lake City, Utah. They had nine children in 17 years. She died on April 27, 1894, in Brigham City, Utah, at the age of 35, and was buried there.  Jeppson, Martha Magdalana (I104500)
 
3710 When Mary Delone Peterson was born on September 14, 1924, in Salt Lake City, Utah, her father, Almer, was 31, and her mother, Vivian, was 30. She married Richard Calvin Peeples on December 18, 1942, in her hometown. They had two children during their marr  Peterson, Mary Delone (I98687)
 
3711 When Mary Hix was born on August 31, 1757, in Rehoboth, Massachusetts, her father, Isaac, was 49, and her mother, Mary, was 57. She married Daniel Pierce on October 31, 1773, in Bristol, Massachusetts. They had 11 children during their marriage. She died on December 7, 1842, in Tioga, Pennsylvania, having lived a long life of 85 years, and was buried in Delevan, Walworth, Wisconsin
 
Hicks, Mary (I88043)
 
3712 When Sarah Loomis was born on February 1, 1667, in Windsor, Connecticut, her father, Thomas, was 42, and her mother, Mary, was 20. She married Wakefield DIBBLE on December 27, 1692, in her hometown. She died in 1693 in Simsbury, Connecticut, at the age of 26.  Loomis, Sarah (I2897)
 
3713 When the angel of death entered the home of Peter C. Jensen and called the father, a home was left desolate and the community was robbed of one of its most stalwart citizens. Mr. Jensen was operated upon Tuesday of last week for appeudlcitis and a complication of troubles from which he had been a sufferer for many years. He progressed nicely for the first few days but his body had become so weakened by the years of suffering which be had passed thru that he had no vitality to back him up In his fight for life and on Saturday a change came which Indicated that the sick man was growing weaker. This continued until Monday afternoon and he was removed from the hospital to his home - in the hope that the change would prove beneficial and the home Influences would act as a stlmulous but he continued to sink until the end came about 8 oclock. Peter C. Jensen was born in Brigham City August 30, 1861 and was the son of the late Bishop Peter Jensen of Mantua. When be was four years of age his parents removed to Mantua where he grew to manhood and spent the greater part of his life. His falth-er was manager of the Co-op store there and when the son grew to young manhood, he was Installed as manager to succeed his father. This was before Mr. Jnsen was married, that event occuring in 1881 when he led Miss Amelia Keller to the altar. A more devoted pair never lived togther than did Peter C. Jensen and his good yife., They had troubles a plenty too, for 11 children were born to them and eight out of the eleven preceded their father and mother to the other side. As climax to this long list of sad experiences the wife and mother was called home In January 1909. Since that time Mr. Jensen has been a changed man and tho surrounded by affectionate children he seemed unable to recover from the great loss which he sustained. These things coupled with bodily ailments made his cup of sorrow full and running over and yet withal he was a man of genial disposition and always greeted his acquain-tences with a pleasant smile and a kind word. Since the death of his wife he lived for his children, two of whom are unmarried and their every want was anticipated and granted. In return his daughters lavished their love and affection upon their father and did all in their power to bring sunshine Into his home, and It was a most happy home despite the troubles that had torn It In the past While a resident of Mantua, Mr Jensen served as assistant superintendent In the Sunday School and then was superintendent for a period of 8 years. He had to give up his labors in that capacity in 1900 and went to California with his family In the hope that his health might be restored. For a year they lived at San Diego and during that time Mr. Jensen gave his services to the branch of the ohurch at that place and labored la connection with the Missionaries to spread the gospel which he had a testimony of. Returning home in 1901, the family resided at Mantua until 1906 when they moved to Brigham City. Mr. Jensen was road supervisor at Mantua for a season and was called from there to perform home missionary work throughout the western part of this county. - Upon his removal to this city, his activities did not cease for he was made a ward teacher in the First ward and upon the death of Bishop McMaster, who was a member of the City Council at the time, Mr. Jensen was appointed to succeed him and fill the unexplred term which he did with honor and integrity. He was also made a member of the Box Elder Stake Religion Class Board and served faithfully In that position until the time of his death. Mr. Jensen was an honest man in all that the word Implies. Frugal, wise in his dealings, yet generous and most kind hearted, he was a man whose influence was' for good whenever it was felt. By his Judicious labors In a commercial way, he succeeded in providing himself and family with sufficient means so that he was not compelled to labor hard during the later years when his health became so poor. In his passing, a good man has gone to rest and the world has been made better by his having lived in it Universal sympathy goes; out to his daughters Eulalia and Verda who were wrapt up in their father and in whose love and tender affection they basked. The sunshine has all bat gone out of their lives and only the Unseen Power can heal the wound that has been made by the taking of their father and protector. Another daughter, Mrs. Maud Hansen, and several grand children survive Mr. Jensen. Funeral services are being held this afternoon at 1 o'clock in the First ward chapel.  Jensen, Peter Christian (I128149)
 
3714 When William Leonard Flint was born on March 24, 1854, in Farmington, Utah, his father, William, was 40 and his mother, Mary, was 28. He married Keturah Grover in 1874. They had four children during their marriage. He died on April 5, 1942, in St Anthony,  Flint, William Leonard Sr (I111328)
 
3715 While Margaret was travelling to France for her wedding, she was captured by Beatrice's father, Thomas. He took her back to Savoy and married her himself. Thomas' excuse was that Philip II was already married, which was true.  De Genève, Countess Beatrix Marguerite (I34858)
 
3716 White, Lorraine Cook, ed, The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Vital Records, Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1994-2002 Kilde (S448)
 
3717 White, Lorraine Cook, ed, The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Vital Records, Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1994-2002 Kilde (S257)
 
3718 White, Lorraine Cook, ed, The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Vital Records, Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1994-2002 Kilde (S413)
 
3719 wife is not correct - his wife Elizabeth Hopton was the daugther of John Hopton and Margaret Savile
There has been a wrong merge-

William was beheaded as a participator in a conspiracy to place Perkin Warbeck on the throne..
 
Stanley, William Sir (I34989)
 
3720 Wife of John Hobson, b. 29 June 1809 in Chatham,NC. He died 25 Jan 1878 in Orange,Indiana,They were married 18 Feb 1832. She was living with Cintha Ann and William H Kearby in Fort Scott,Kansas.

Family Members
Spouse
Photo
John Hobson
1809-1878 (m. 1832)

Children
Photo
Phebe Hobson Drake
1835-1901

Photo
William G. Hobson
1836-1925

Jeremiah Hobson
1838-1893

Bailey Hobson
1841-1866

Jacob Hobson
1842-1869

Hannah Hobson Lane
1847-1867

Samuel Marcus Hobson
1850-1915

Photo
Cintha Hobson Kirby
1853-1936

Photo
Thomas Smith Hobson 
Haga, Nancy (I127287)
 
3721 Wife of Solomon Stoddard. Daughter of John Warham and Jane Dabinott.

"In Memory of Mrs. Esther Stoddard
The virtuous wife and Relict of the Revd. Mr. Solomon Stoddard
formerly Pastor of the Church in this Town who died Febry 10th
AD 1736 in the 92d year of her age." 
Warham, Esther (I140264)
 
3722 Wilburn (Bill) Roberts was a great scouter having earned the rank of Eagle Scout. He learned to love his fellow men and he learned to do a good turn daily, these he did all his life as he served his fellow men every chance he could. Wilburn through scouting and the influence of his father, learned to love the out doors, hunting, camping, and fishing. Wilburn married his high school sweetheart, Eva Lapree Horn on 11 Nov 1938. They were sealed for time and Eternity in the Idaho Falls Temple on 7 January 1947. Wilburn was drafted into the army leaving Eva with 3 daughters, Joann Lapree, Shirley Jean and Linda Diane. He honorably served his country in the South Pacific. After the war they had two more children, Susan Darlene and Joseph Wilburn. Making his family all included 4 girls and 1 boy. They had a still born daughter in 1957. Wilburn loved his family and worked hard to provide for Eva and the girls and Joe. He worked in construction all of his working career and owned and operated his own roofing business for many years, Roberts Roofing, and involving his family and only son as much as he could. Wilburn loved his family, and worked hard for them. He was up every day between 5-6, no matter the weather, he carried the bundles of shingles up and down ladders, working on black tar roofs in hot temperatures and windy days. He had some set backs and hard times including a cerebral hemorage and several back operations but Wilburn did not quit he worked hard and endured through whatever trials he encountered. Wilburn was a great young men leader and a great scout leader. He enjoyed the youth of the church. When the youth were going on trips and activities everyone would fight to ride with Wilburn because he was so much fun to be with. He loved the church, he loved the youth and he was wiling to do anything and give what ever he could to the church. When he was serving in the war, he picked up the habit of smoking, which kept him out of the church for many years, but that did not change his love of the gospel. He was active in the Elks in Burley and worked hard on many projects to help with medical programs for children and raise funds. He was proud of the service he gave and proud of the donations he was able to give as a service to others. Many times he would do carpentry work or roofing work for widows or others that he knew could not pay and he would neglect to send out a bill. My dad was a wonderful man, caring, giving, generous, and loving. He had a sense of humor and was loved by all who knew him and his wonderful smile. Dad is missed dearly by all of us and we look forward to seeing that wonderful smile of his again. We are grateful for the love he showed us and for the warm and loving home that he provided. We are grateful for the fun times we had as a family and for the memories of laughter and song and the heritage given to each of us.  Roberts, Wilburn Carlyle (I50652)
 
3723 Will: Wife, Mary.
Children: Jabez, Deborah, Unice, Sarah, Joanna, John, Ebenezer , son-in-law John Richardson,
Grandchildren, Unice Buck, Unice Carter, Unice Roberts, John Buck, John Carter, John Brooks, David Roberts, Mary Brooks and Elizabeth Brooks (john's children), Unice Brooks (Ebenezer's daughter), Mary Richardson, 
Brooks, John (I107373)
 
3724 Will: Children: John, Timothy, son-in-law John Moufall, daughter Sarah, Isaac,
Grandchildren: (children of Isaac) Henry and Isaac and daughter Miriam, 
Brooks, Henry (I126981)
 
3725 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt.  Romney, Willard Mitt (I110003)
 
3726 William A Pincock served two missions:

Southern States
December 1914-April 1917
Age Called: 24
Southern States
Set Apart: 8 December 1914
End Date: 13 April 1917
Departed From Home: 9 December 1914
Priesthood office: Seventy
Quorum: 76th
Priesthood: 76th Quo Seventy
Called From: Madison, Fremont, Idaho, United States
Set apart by: Heber J Grant

Eastern States
November 1925-May 1926
Age Called: 35
Eastern States
Set Apart: 24 November 1925
End Date: 13 May 1926
Departed From Home: 25 November 1925
Priesthood office: Seventy
Called From: Sugar City, Madison, Idaho, United States
Set apart by: George Albert Smith 
Pincock, William Aaron (I97768)
 
3727 William Allen (died 18 June 1686), settler of Salisbury, Massachusetts, is not the son of William Allen (died 30 January 1678/9), settler of Salem, Massachusetts. They have no known or proven relationship. However, some genealogists have presumed that they are father and son. They lived in different places in the same county in Massachusetts and have a very common name. But, there are no known original documents that tie them together as father and son.
William Allen (died 1678/9) was born about 1602 based on a November 1664 deposition where he stated his age as about 62. He was married to Alice by 1630 and settled in Salem where children Persis (1630/1) and Samuel (1631/2) were born. Alice died 8 March 1631/2 in Salem, after which William remarried to Elizabeth by 1634 and had children Elizabeth (1634), Deborah (1637), Bethiah (1639/40), Onesiphorus (1642), William (1646), and Jonathan (1649).
William Allen (died 1686) was born around 1618 or earlier based on the age of his wife Ann Goodale and based on an estimated of age of at least 21 at the time of his marriage in 1639. That leaves only 16 or fewer years between supposed father and son. William Allen (died 1678/9) subsequently had a son named William with his second wife Elizabeth in 1646. That makes it unlikely that he had an earlier son also named William at a very young age, a full decade before all his other known children.
In addition, William Allen (died 1678/9) left a will that names his surviving sons from his two marriages, Samuel, Onesiphorus, and William. His estate remained open until 1697 when it was divided between Samuel and Onesiphorus because their brother William had died. He is described as owning property in Manchester and "dying without issue".
William Allen (died 1686) was a long time resident of Salisbury and Newbury, not Manchester, and he had married and had at least 14 children. He is clearly not the same William Allen who was the son of William Allen (died 1678/9) and his wife Alice (died 1631/2).
For further details, see Anderson, Robert Charles. The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633 (New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995). Vol. 1, p. 31-35. 
Allen, William (I123717)
 
3728 William Ames (1701-1799) & Elizabeth Jennyings (1701-1764)

William Ames ( William, John, William, John, John, John) was born 1701 in Plymouth. Massachusetts and died 1799 in Connecticut. Married 1)1721 Elizabeth Jennings and to this union was born twelve children; Elizabeth was born 1701 in Shaftsbury, Bennington, Massachusetts and died 1764 same place. Her parents were Richard Jennings and Mary Bassett. He married 2) 1766 Mrs. Mary Stoell.

William Ames, Jr.
Birth September 18, 1701Bridgewater, Plymouth, Massachusetts, USA
Died 1799 in Mansfield City, Tolland, Connecticut, USA
Immediate Family:
Son of William Ames Sr, and Mary D Hayward
Husband of Mary Ames and Elizabeth D. Ames
Father of William Ames; Mary Buck; Peace Parker; Joseph Ames; Amos Ames and 8 others
Brother of Mary Alger; Martha Conant; Bethiah Keith; Hannah Keith and Sarah Ames
William Ames, Jr.'s Timeline
1701September 18, 1701Birth of William Bridgewater, Plymouth, Massachusetts, USA
1721June 29, 1721Age 19 Marriage of William to Elizabeth Ames W Bridgewater, Ms
1722 Age 20 Birth of Mary BuckBridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States
1723 Age 21Birth of William AmesMA
1725 Age 23 Birth of Barnabas Ames Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States
1727Age 25 Birth of Silence AbbeBridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States
1728 Age 26 Birth of Ann ConantBridgewater, MA, USA
1729 April 6, 1729 Age 27Birth of Peace Parker
Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States
1731
1731Age 29 Birth of Abraham AmesBridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States
1735 Age 33 Birth of Charity Ames Bridgewater, Plymo
----- 
Ames, William Jr. (I98684)
 
3729 William and Phoebe went from Orange Co., N.C. to Rowan Co., N.C. then to Iredell Co., N.C. before going to Edgefield, South Carolina. After being pardoned for his activity with the Regulators, he was given a grant of land in Edgefield County, South Carolina where he died in 1790. His widow, and children, eventually moved on to Tennessee & Kentucky. Phebe was buried in the Lowe burial ground in Simpson Co., Kentucky.

Children of WILLIAM BUTLER and PHEBIA CHILDRESS are:

24. i. JOHN L.3 BUTLER, b. 1763, Virginia; d. Bef. 1820, Wayne County, Mississippi.

25. ii. ELIZABETH BUTLER, b. 1766, Cumberland County, Virginia?; d. September 1825, Moury County, Tennessee.

26. iii. WILLIAM BUTLER, b. October 02, 1770, Rowan County, North Carolina; d. Abt. March 15, 1833, Iredell County, North Carolina/Butler farm near Houston-Ville Community Hwy 2..

27. iv. JAMES BUTLER, b. 1772, Maryland?; d. 1835, Simpson County, Kentucky.

28. v. EDMUND BUTLER, b. Abt. 1774, Virginia; d. May 1850, Simpson County, Kentucky.

29. vi. SAMUEL LEWIS BUTLER, b. Abt. 1776, Rowan County, North Carolina; d. January 26, 1828, Lincoln County, Tennessee.

30. vii. THOMAS BUTLER, b. 1778, Orange or Iredell County, North Carolina(?); d. Abt. 1810.

31. viii. AARON BUTLER, b. Abt. 1782, Edgefield County, South Carolina; d. April 26, 1848, Lived at Fountainhead.Died in Sumner Co., Tennessee.

32. ix. FRANCES BUTLER, b. November 11, 1784, North or South Carolina?; d. November 09, 1855, Simpson Co., Kentucky.

1815: According to letter, she left North Carolina about 1815.

Here is a copy of a letter written by Phoebe to her son William in North Carolina:

Simpson County (Ky) May 10th 1825

Dear Son, son and daughter

I am in good health at present Wm Plumers family and all our family conescions (connections?) are well at this time. as far as we know a great many people have died here this season, me and my people are so many living monuments of the divine goodness and we have great reason to thank that god who is willing to be Lord the preserver of man for his goodness. I long to see you both and I desire very much to have a chance to talk with you both. I may never have an opportunity to see you in this time world. If not my earnest prayer is that we may have a happy meeting hereafter. I am now well stricken in years and may say with the ancient patriarch that few and evil have been the days of the life of my pilgrimage. When I left you about 10 years ago you said that you would come and see me but you have not done so, I think hard of it, be sure to come or write as soon as possible, come this fall if you can. There is a grat prospect of fruit this year, wheat looks well. Remember me to all of your family and all inquireing friends.

You feel near to me altho we are distant. at this time I am your Mother (on the second page is a second paragraph: It appears that you have forgot a tender parent. If you love mewith fraternal affection I wish you to prove your faith by your works, for faith without works is dead being alone. I trust you will make paments for being remiss. My dear son I am with great consideration your very affectioante mother. Signed Phebe Butler This letter was sent to William Butler, Iredell county, To Hustonsville Post office near Hunting Creek N Carolina posted on May 1825, Franklin, Ky.

Jean Schneider furnished me additional information. She said that Phoebe died on a Wednesday about 2:30 A.M. at the home of her son, James but she didn't know when she went to Kentucky to live.

1826 April 16: In the papers of L Q C Butler was found a letter from Phoebe Butler (86) who made an oath.....that William Butler (brother of General John Butler) now deceased & who departed this life as well she recollects on the ninth day of Nov. A D 1790 in the State of Carolina, Edgefield County. Leah O'Donal possesses the letter. (Mesa, Arizona).

She also furnished information from " Kentucky Land Grants", by Willard W. Jillson, Part 1, pg 276 (These are Butlers listed as receiving grants south of Green River in Logan County).
 
Childers, Phoebe (I83777)
 
3730 William Averell Harriman (November 15, 1891 - July 26, 1986) was an American Democratic politician, businessman, and diplomat. The son of railroad baron E. H. Harriman, he served as Secretary of Commerce under President Harry S. Truman and later as the 48th Governor of New York. He was a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1952 and 1956, as well as a core member of the group of foreign policy elders known as "The Wise Men".
While attending Groton School and Yale University, where he joined Skull and Bones, he made contacts that let to creation of a banking firm that eventually merged into Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.. He owned parts of various other companies, including Union Pacific Railroad, Merchant Shipping Corporation, and Polaroid Corporation. During the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harriman served in the National Recovery Administration and on the Business Advisory Council before moving into foreign policy roles. After helping to coordinate the Lend-Lease program, Harriman served as the ambassador to the Soviet Union and attended the major World War II conferences. After the war, he became a prominent advocate of George F. Kennan's policy of containment. He also served as Secretary of Commerce, and coordinated the implementation of the Marshall Plan.
In 1954, Harriman defeated Republican Senator Irving Ives to become the Governor of New York. He served a single term before his defeat by Nelson Rockefeller in the 1958 election. Harriman unsuccessfully sought the presidential nomination at the 1952 Democratic National Convention and the 1956 Democratic National Convention. Though Harriman had Truman's backing at the 1956 convention, the Democrats nominated Adlai Stevenson II in both elections.
After his gubernatorial defeat, Harriman became a widely respected foreign policy elder within the Democratic Party. He helped negotiate the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty during President John F. Kennedy's administration and was deeply involved in the Vietnam War during the Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson administrations. After Johnson left office in 1969, Harriman affiliated with various organization, including the Club of Rome and the Council on Foreign Relations.
Better known as Averell Harriman, he was born in New York City, the son of railroad baron Edward Henry Harriman and Mary Williamson Averell. He was the brother of E. Roland Harriman and Mary Harriman Rumsey. Harriman was a close friend of Hall Roosevelt, the brother of Eleanor Roosevelt.
During the summer of 1899, Harriman's father organized the Harriman Alaska Expedition, a philanthropic-scientific survey of coastal Alaska and Russia that attracted 25 of the leading scientific, naturalist, and artist luminaries of the day, including John Muir, John Burroughs, George Bird Grinnell, C. Hart Merriam, Grove Karl Gilbert, and Edward Curtis, along with 100 family members and staff, aboard the steamship George Elder. Young Harriman would have his first introduction to Russia, a nation on which he would spend a significant amount of attention in his later life in public service.
He attended Groton School in Massachusetts before going on to Yale where he joined the Skull and Bones society. He graduated in 1913. After graduating, he inherited the largest fortune in America and became Yale's youngest Crew coach.
Using money from his father he established W.A. Harriman & Co banking business in 1922. In 1927 his brother Roland joined the business and the name was changed to Harriman Brothers & Company. In 1931, it merged with Brown Bros. & Co. to create the highly successful Wall Street firm Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. Notable employees included George Herbert Walker and his son-in-law Prescott Bush.
Harriman's main properties included Brown Brothers & Harriman & Co, Union Pacific Railroad, Merchant Shipping Corporation, and venture capital investments that included the Polaroid Corporation. Harriman's associated properties included the Southern Pacific Railroad (including the Central Pacific Railroad), Illinois Central Railroad, Wells Fargo & Co., the Pacific Mail Steamship Co., American Ship & Commerce, Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Aktiengesellschaft (HAPAG), the American Hawaiian Steamship Co., United American Lines, the Guaranty Trust Company, and the Union Banking Corporation.
He served as Chairman of The Business Council, then known as the Business Advisory Council for the United States Department of Commerce in 1937 and 1939.
Harriman's older sister, Mary Rumsey, encouraged Averell to leave his finance job and work with her and their friends, the Roosevelts, to advance the goals of the New Deal. Averell joined the NRA National Recovery Administration, the first government consumer rights group, marking the beginning of his political career.
Following the death of August Belmont, Jr., in 1924, Harriman, George Walker, and Joseph E. Widener purchased much of Belmont's thoroughbred breeding stock. Harriman raced under the name of Arden Farms. Among his horses, Chance Play won the 1927 Jockey Club Gold Cup. He also raced in partnership with Walker under the name Log Cabin Stable before buying him out. U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee Louis Feustel, trainer of Man o' War, trained the Log Cabin horses until 1926. Of the partnership's successful runners purchased from the August Belmont estate, Ladkin is best remembered for defeating the European star Epinard in the International Special.
Harriman's banking business was the main Wall Street connection for German companies and the varied U.S. financial interests of Fritz Thyssen; who was a financial backer of the Nazi party until 1938. The Trading With the Enemy Act (enacted on October 6, 1917) classified any business transactions for profit with enemy nations as illegal, and any funds or assets involved were subject to seizure by the U.S. government. The declaration of war on the U.S. by Hitler led to the U.S. government order on October 20, 1942 to seize German interests in the U.S. which included Harriman's operations in New York City. The assets were held by the government for the duration of the war, then returned afterward; UBC was dissolved in 1951.
Beginning in the spring of 1941, Harriman served President Franklin D. Roosevelt as a special envoy to Europe and helped coordinate the Lend-Lease program. He was present at the meeting between FDR and Winston Churchill at Placentia Bay, in August 1941, which yielded the Atlantic Charter, a common declaration of principles of the United States and the UK. He was subsequently dispatched to Moscow to negotiate the terms of the Lend-Lease agreement with the Soviet Union. His promise of $1 billion in aid technically exceeded his brief. Determined to win over the doubtful American public, he used his own funds to purchase time on CBS radio to explain the program in terms of enlightened self-interest. This skepticism lifted with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
Harriman received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, with Distinction, in 1969 and West Point's Sylvanus Thayer Award in 1975. Furthermore, in 1983 he received the Freedom Medal. Harriman was appointed senior member of the US Delegation to the United Nations General Assembly's Special Session on Disarmament in 1978. He was also a member of the American Academy of Diplomacy Charter, Club of Rome, Council on Foreign Relations, Knights of Pythias, Skull and Bones Society, Psi Upsilon Fraternity, and the Jupiter Island Club.
Harriman served as ambassador to the Soviet Union until January 1946. When he returned to the United States, he worked hard to get George Kennan's Long Telegram into wide distribution. Kennan's analysis, which generally lined up with Harriman's, became the cornerstone of Truman's Cold War strategy of containment.
From April to October 1946, he was ambassador to Britain, but he was soon appointed to become United States Secretary of Commerce under President Harry S. Truman to replace Henry A. Wallace, a critic of Truman's foreign policies. In 1948, he was put in charge of the Marshall Plan. In Paris, he became friendly with the CIA agent Irving Brown, who organised anti-communist unions and organisations. Harriman was then sent to Tehran in July 1951 to mediate between Iran and Britain in the wake of the Iranian nationalization of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company
His first marriage, two years after graduating from Yale, was to Kitty Lanier Lawrence. Lawrence was the great-granddaughter of James Lanier, a co-founder of Winslow, Lanier & Co., and the granddaughter of Charles D. Lanier (1837-1926), a close friend of Pierpont Morgan Before their divorce in 1928, and her death in 1936, Harriman and Lawrence had two daughters together:
Mary Averell Harriman (1917-1996), who married Dr. Shirley C. Fisk
Kathleen Lanier Harriman (1917-2011), who married Stanley Grafton Mortimer Jr. (1913-1999), who had previously been married to socialite Babe Paley (1915-1978)
About a year after his divorce from Lawrence, he married Marie Norton Whitney (1903-1970), who had left her husband, Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney, to marry him. On their honeymoon in Europe, they purchased oil paintings by Van Gogh, Degas, Cézanne, Picasso, and Renoir. She and her husband later donated many of the works she bought and collected, including those of the artist Walt Kuhn, to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. They remained married until her death on September 26, 1970, at George Washington University Hospital in Washington, D.C.
In 1971, he married for the third and final time to Pamela Beryl Digby Churchill Hayward (1920-1997), the former wife of Winston Churchill's son Randolph, and widow of Broadway producer Leland Hayward. In 1993, she became the 58th United States Ambassador to France.
Harriman died on July 26, 1986 in Yorktown Heights, New York, at the age of 94. Averell and Pamela Harriman are buried at the Arden Farm Graveyard in Arden, New York.William Averell Harriman (November 15, 1891 - July 26, 1986) was an Am erican Democratic politician, businessman, and diplomat. The son of ra ilroad baron E. H. Harriman, he served as Secretary of Commerce unde r President Harry S. Truman and later as the 48th Governor of New York . He was a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 195 2 and 1956, as well as a core member of the group of foreign policy el ders known as "The Wise Men".
While attending Groton School and Yale University, where he joined Sku ll and Bones, he made contacts that let to creation of a banking fir m that eventually merged into Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.. He owne d parts of various other companies, including Union Pacific Railroad , Merchant Shipping Corporation, and Polaroid Corporation. During th e presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harriman served in the Nationa l Recovery Administration and on the Business Advisory Council befor e moving into foreign policy roles. After helping to coordinate the Le nd-Lease program, Harriman served as the ambassador to the Soviet Unio n and attended the major World War II conferences. After the war, he b ecame a prominent advocate of George F. Kennan's policy of containment . He also served as Secretary of Commerce, and coordinated the impleme ntation of the Marshall Plan.
In 1954, Harriman defeated Republican Senator Irving Ives to become th e Governor of New York. He served a single term before his defeat by N elson Rockefeller in the 1958 election. Harriman unsuccessfully sough t the presidential nomination at the 1952 Democratic National Conventi on and the 1956 Democratic National Convention. Though Harriman had Tr uman's backing at the 1956 convention, the Democrats nominated Adlai S tevenson II in both elections.
After his gubernatorial defeat, Harriman became a widely respected for eign policy elder within the Democratic Party. He helped negotiate th e Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty during President John F. Kennedy's a dministration and was deeply involved in the Vietnam War during the Ke nnedy and Lyndon B. Johnson administrations. After Johnson left offic e in 1969, Harriman affiliated with various organization, including th e Club of Rome and the Council on Foreign Relations.
Better known as Averell Harriman, he was born in New York City, the so n of railroad baron Edward Henry Harriman and Mary Williamson Averell . He was the brother of E. Roland Harriman and Mary Harriman Rumsey. H arriman was a close friend of Hall Roosevelt, the brother of Eleanor R oosevelt.
During the summer of 1899, Harriman's father organized the Harriman Al aska Expedition, a philanthropic-scientific survey of coastal Alaska a nd Russia that attracted 25 of the leading scientific, naturalist, an d artist luminaries of the day, including John Muir, John Burroughs, G eorge Bird Grinnell, C. Hart Merriam, Grove Karl Gilbert, and Edward C urtis, along with 100 family members and staff, aboard the steamship G eorge Elder. Young Harriman would have his first introduction to Russi a, a nation on which he would spend a significant amount of attentio n in his later life in public service.
He attended Groton School in Massachusetts before going on to Yale whe re he joined the Skull and Bones society. He graduated in 1913. Afte r graduating, he inherited the largest fortune in America and became Y ale's youngest Crew coach.
Using money from his father he established W.A. Harriman & Co bankin g business in 1922. In 1927 his brother Roland joined the business an d the name was changed to Harriman Brothers & Company. In 1931, it mer ged with Brown Bros. & Co. to create the highly successful Wall Stree t firm Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. Notable employees included Georg e Herbert Walker and his son-in-law Prescott Bush.
Harriman's main properties included Brown Brothers & Harriman & Co, Un ion Pacific Railroad, Merchant Shipping Corporation, and venture capit al investments that included the Polaroid Corporation. Harriman's asso ciated properties included the Southern Pacific Railroad (including th e Central Pacific Railroad), Illinois Central Railroad, Wells Farg o & Co., the Pacific Mail Steamship Co., American Ship & Commerce, Ham burg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Aktiengesellschaft (HAPAG), the America n Hawaiian Steamship Co., United American Lines, the Guaranty Trust Co mpany, and the Union Banking Corporation.
He served as Chairman of The Business Council, then known as the Busin ess Advisory Council for the United States Department of Commerce in 1 937 and 1939.
Harriman's older sister, Mary Rumsey, encouraged Averell to leave hi s finance job and work with her and their friends, the Roosevelts, t o advance the goals of the New Deal. Averell joined the NRA National R ecovery Administration, the first government consumer rights group, ma rking the beginning of his political career.
Following the death of August Belmont, Jr., in 1924, Harriman, Georg e Walker, and Joseph E. Widener purchased much of Belmont's thoroughbr ed breeding stock. Harriman raced under the name of Arden Farms. Amon g his horses, Chance Play won the 1927 Jockey Club Gold Cup. He also r aced in partnership with Walker under the name Log Cabin Stable befor e buying him out. U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee Louis Feustel, tra iner of Man o' War, trained the Log Cabin horses until 1926. Of the pa rtnership's successful runners purchased from the August Belmont estat e, Ladkin is best remembered for defeating the European star Epinard i n the International Special.
Harriman's banking business was the main Wall Street connection for Ge rman companies and the varied U.S. financial interests of Fritz Thysse n; who was a financial backer of the Nazi party until 1938. The Tradin g With the Enemy Act (enacted on October 6, 1917) classified any busin ess transactions for profit with enemy nations as illegal, and any fun ds or assets involved were subject to seizure by the U.S. government . The declaration of war on the U.S. by Hitler led to the U.S. governm ent order on October 20, 1942 to seize German interests in the U.S. wh ich included Harriman's operations in New York City. The assets were h eld by the government for the duration of the war, then returned after ward; UBC was dissolved in 1951.
Beginning in the spring of 1941, Harriman served President Franklin D . Roosevelt as a special envoy to Europe and helped coordinate the Len d-Lease program. He was present at the meeting between FDR and Winsto n Churchill at Placentia Bay, in August 1941, which yielded the Atlant ic Charter, a common declaration of principles of the United States an d the UK. He was subsequently dispatched to Moscow to negotiate the te rms of the Lend-Lease agreement with the Soviet Union. His promise o f $1 billion in aid technically exceeded his brief. Determined to wi n over the doubtful American public, he used his own funds to purchas e time on CBS radio to explain the program in terms of enlightened sel f-interest. This skepticism lifted with the Japanese attack on Pearl H arbor.
Harriman received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, with Distinction , in 1969 and West Point's Sylvanus Thayer Award in 1975. Furthermore , in 1983 he received the Freedom Medal. Harriman was appointed senio r member of the US Delegation to the United Nations General Assembly' s Special Session on Disarmament in 1978. He was also a member of th e American Academy of Diplomacy Charter, Club of Rome, Council on Fore ign Relations, Knights of Pythias, Skull and Bones Society, Psi Upsilo n Fraternity, and the Jupiter Island Club.
Harriman served as ambassador to the Soviet Union until January 1946 . When he returned to the United States, he worked hard to get Georg e Kennan's Long Telegram into wide distribution. Kennan's analysis, wh ich generally lined up with Harriman's, became the cornerstone of Trum an's Cold War strategy of containment.
From April to October 1946, he was ambassador to Britain, but he was s oon appointed to become United States Secretary of Commerce under Pres ident Harry S. Truman to replace Henry A. Wallace, a critic of Truman' s foreign policies. In 1948, he was put in charge of the Marshall Plan . In Paris, he became friendly with the CIA agent Irving Brown, who or ganised anti-communist unions and organisations. Harriman was then sen t to Tehran in July 1951 to mediate between Iran and Britain in the wa ke of the Iranian nationalization of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company
His first marriage, two years after graduating from Yale, was to Kitt y Lanier Lawrence. Lawrence was the great-granddaughter of James Lanie r, a co-founder of Winslow, Lanier & Co., and the granddaughter of Cha rles D. Lanier (1837-1926), a close friend of Pierpont Morgan Before t heir divorce in 1928, and her death in 1936, Harriman and Lawrence ha d two daughters together:
Mary Averell Harriman (1917-1996), who married Dr. Shirley C. Fisk
Kathleen Lanier Harriman (1917-2011), who married Stanley Grafton Mort imer Jr. (1913-1999), who had previously been married to socialite Bab e Paley (1915-1978)
About a year after his divorce from Lawrence, he married Marie Norto n Whitney (1903-1970), who had left her husband, Cornelius Vanderbil t Whitney, to marry him. On their honeymoon in Europe, they purchase d oil paintings by Van Gogh, Degas, Cézanne, Picasso, and Renoir. Sh e and her husband later donated many of the works she bought and colle cted, including those of the artist Walt Kuhn, to the National Galler y of Art in Washington, D.C. They remained married until her death o n September 26, 1970, at George Washington University Hospital in Wash ington, D.C.
In 1971, he married for the third and final time to Pamela Beryl Digb y Churchill Hayward (1920-1997), the former wife of Winston Churchill' s son Randolph, and widow of Broadway producer Leland Hayward. In 1993 , she became the 58th United States Ambassador to France.
Harriman died on July 26, 1986 in Yorktown Heights, New York, at the a ge of 94. Averell and Pamela Harriman are buried at the Arden Farm Gra veyard in Arden, New York. 
Harriman, American Democratic politician, businessman, and diplomat William Averell (I78853)
 
3731 William called "Christie's Will" also called "The Younger of Barngleish, later Younger of Langholm, & Younger of Aughingill".
Source-Brooksboro Parish Records in Fermanagh Co., Ireland.
Source-Armstrong House of Langholm, item 5.
Source-Border Exploits, edit 1812, p.292
It is well known that during the troubles of Charles I, the Earl of Traquair continued unalterably fixed in his attachment to his unfortunate master, in whose service he hazarded his person and improverished his estate. On one occasion his lordship dispatched Christie's Will to London upon business of the highest importance to his Majesty.But the task was a difficult one, as the Parliamentary leaders used their utmost endeavors to prevent any communication between the King and his Scottish friends. William arrived at London and delivered his papers in safety. In the meantime his enbassy had taken air, and orders were dispatched by the enemy to intercept him. He passed skill from London to Carlisle, a distance of 265 miles, stopping at the latter place to refresh his horse, and then proceeded on his journey. Crossing the bridge over the Eden just outside of Carlisle, he suddenly discovered Parliamentary Soldiers springing up like magic at both ends of the bridge. There was nothing left to do but take to the water, which was in high flood. Facing down stream, he patted his horse's neck, and with a touch of the spur gracefully cleared the parapet. Horse and rider were carried by the swift current to a place called the Stanners, or Stanhouse, where he guided the horse up the wet bank, but they slipped back into the river Quickly cutting the loop that held his long wet cloak, he made for the bank again. With the noble effort the animal brought his master to firm ground. The soldiers, for a time struck with wonder, forgot to fire upon him. Two or three ran down the waterside intending to capture him, but William pointed his wet pistol at them, which the weapon, although useless, caused them to halt. From the Eden he was chased to the Esk, which he swam, gaining the further side, he wheeled around and in true Border style called out to his pursuers to come through and drink with him. They declined, knowing he was in the neighborhood of friends. After this taunt, he proceeded on the journey and faithfully accomplished his mission.
Source-Wilsons Tales of the Border, edit London vol.2,p.736, on perilous mission from Scotland to King Charles I, in London.
Source-Armstrong Surname Organization Salt Lake City, Ut.
In 1630 William kidnapped Sir Alexander Gibson, Lord Durie, a judge, and kept him prisoner for 3 months, in a Castle Dungeon until court decided in favor of his friend, then released the judge at night. Judge and friends thought William had been spirited away by witchcraft.
Source-Preface of Forbe's Journal of the Sessions, Edinburgh 1714
William, son of Christopher and grandson of John of Gilknockie, left Scotland in taking nephew Andrew with him and settleing in northern Fermanagh Co., Ireland, where he became the founder of a numerious family whose branches flourished in those parts. This was some years after the death of Queen Elizabeth.
Another source states William settled in Fermanagh Co., Ireland in 1604.
Source-Armstrong Surname Organization S.L.C. Ut.
Armstrong families of Ireland, most all trace back to William and nephew
Andrew in Brooksboro Ireland.
Source-Chronicles of the Armstrongs p.p. 245,309,316,318, & 392.
The Munro Clan had a long minority in the chiefship from 1635-1651 which coincided with the period of Civil War. During these years General Robert Munro commanded the army sent by the Scottish parliament to Ireland in 1642. Colonel William died in battle in King Charles I, British Army, during the period of the First Civil War with Ireland 1642-1646..
Source-1635-1651 Civil War (Abstract of Acts of Settlement & Explanation, reign of King Charles i, in Parliment at Westminister in 1640.
William buried in the Old Churchyard of Agahavea, a short distance from Brooksboro, Ireland.
Source-Sir Bernard Burke
Source-Chart of the Ten Lairds of Mangerton Castlle
Source-Clans & Tartans by Harper/Collins Glasgow, (Mention of the Civil War pp.89 & 248.
http://www.oocities.org/thetropics/1968/colonel_william.htm 
Armstrong, Col William (I126624)
 
3732 William Derby Johnson Sr. had only one wife, Jane Cadwallader Brown. During this time in the history of the church men were often sealed, while living, to women who were dead. Also, men were sometimes sealed to women whose husbands refused to join the church and be sealed to them. In all the histories we have of William Derby Johnson Sr we know he only had one wife. I have deleted 29 "marriages" because they were sealings not marriages.

Life Story of William Derby Johnson Sr.
1824-1896 (71 Years)
William Derby Johnson was born 27 October 1824, in Pomfret township (near Fredonia), Chautauqua County, New York, a son of Ezekiel and Julia Hills Johnson. He was the fourteenth child born into that family of sixteen children. When the Mormon Church was founded in 1830, he was six years of age. Two years later, in the spring of 1832, his mother, Julia Hills Johnson, "left Pomfret with her family of fifteen children to join the Prophet Joseph Smith at Kirtland, Ohio, in defiance of the wishes of her absent husband, Ezekiel." Julia’s oldest son, Joel Hills Johnson, had already joined the Mormon Church and had been instrumental in his mother’s joining. At the time of her baptism, the Prophet laid his hands upon Julia’s head and gave her a blessing for bringing such a large family into the Church. Julia’s family, including her married children’s families, is represented as being one of the largest families ever to join the Church and move West. Ezekiel, her husband, never joined the Church. He remained quite bitter until the time of the martyrdom. The death of the Prophet Joseph and his brother Hyrum Smith impressed Ezekiel as being so unjust that his feelings mellowed greatly toward the Mormons. He died in Nauvoo in 1848, as a result of a beating administered to him in reprisal of his defense of the saints in Nauvoo against mobs.
William Derby Johnson was baptized while the family was living in Kirtland, according to Church records, 9 April 1836, by Samuel Bent. They moved to Springfield, Illinois for several years before moving to Nauvoo.
They started west with the Exodus in 1846, but returned and came later in 1849. Because his father did not join the church at the time his mother did, there was quite a bit of confusion and difficulties in the home, and a large family to support.
On 9 November 1848, William Derby Johnson married Jane Cadwallader Brown, (born 5 June 1832 in Birmingham (southeast of Sandusky), Erie, Ohio the daughter of Abia William Brown and Abby Cadwallader), in Nauvoo, Hancock County, Illinois, where they remained until the exodus in 1849.
The family stopped in Kanesville, Iowa, (Council Bluff area) for several years before coming on to Utah. In 1848, he signed a petition in Pottawattamie County, Iowa, to secure a Post Office in that county. He served as deputy postmaster in Kanesville, as well as in Florence (now Omaha), Nebraska for a period of two years.
William was employed by his older brother, Joseph Ellis. Joseph Ellis Johnson owned and operated a general merchandise and drugstore along with his printing business in Kanesville. While he was away on pioneering explorations, business with the Indians, or other journeys, William was left in charge of sales and medicine making. From that time forward, wherever William Derby Johnson settled, he carried on with merchandising and the making of medicines with herbs; in Florence (now Omaha), Nebraska; Council Bluffs, Iowa; Salt Lake City, Utah; and Johnson, Kane County.
Concerning his use of herbs for medicines, a granddaughter, Jane Cadwallader Johnson Parry, wrote of him many years later.
"My grandfather, William Derby Johnson, Sr., was a pharmacist and he made a medicine we called ‘essence of life.’ It was good for fevers, intestinal inflammation, etc. In fact, he told us it was a cure for cholera. He also made a stomach powder that was just wonderful and a salve we called ‘Johnson salve.’ Of course the recipes were kept very "hush-hush." I have the one for the salve. It is good, but it is hard to get the ingredients to make it with."
After arriving in Kanesville, Iowa, their first child, William Derby Johnson Jr., was born. Years later he wrote in his diary,
"April 1852 we moved to Traders Point, about six miles from Council Bluffs. I had small pox soon after we moved and came near dying. In April 1853 we moved to Council Bluffs. Early in the spring of 1855, my father went into the woods and cut his own timber and build a store one and one-half stories high; finished it in forepart of summer. Father had saved from his wages, (as clerk in Uncle Joseph’s Drug Store), $250.00 in cash; this he took to St. Louis and bought fancy notions, candy, etc., and got credit for $50.00 and commenced merchandising..."
William Derby Johnson Sr. tells of an interesting experience he encountered one day while hauling a load of merchandise for his store in Council Bluffs. As he traveled along at about midday, he came across a man walking along the road. William stopped and the man climbed up beside him. The stranger said to him, "You are planning on camping at this certain spot tonight." He then told William not to camp there as he had planned, but to change his camping plans as there would be Indian trouble that night... He also gave him some other advice. The stranger then got down from the wagon and bid him good day. William turned to the stranger to inquire his name, where he had come from, and where he was going, but to his amazement the man was nowhere to be seen. He had disappeared as suddenly as he had come. However, William followed the stranger’s advice and changed his camping place... He learned later that the immigrants who had camped there that night were all slaughtered by the Indians.
The Johnson’s second son, Elmer Wood Johnson, who was also born in Council Bluffs, 18 May 1854, gives the following account of their next move.
"We moved to Florence, Nebraska, when I was nearly two years of age. At that time our family consisted of Father, Mother, my brother, William Derby Jr., my baby sister, Jennie Ann and myself. My father kept a store there of general merchandise and we lived in a two-story house.
"In 1861 we crossed the plains with ox team with an emigrant train of Mormons. Cousin Sixtus Johnson, son of Uncle Joel Hills Johnson, was captain of the company. Father had a wagon with four head of oxen and another with two; also a wagon with two horses.
"Our group now consisted of Father, Mother, Willie, eleven years old, myself 7, Jennie 5, Julia 3, and Etta Elmera 1 year, Father’s widowed sister, Almera Barton and her three daughters, Della, Alvira, and Julia, and my Mother’s brother, Abia William Brown. The horse team wagon was occupied by my mother and the children. When camping they formed a half circle to the left and one to the right. In the center they would make a big fire and spend the evening holding meetings, singing, dancing and having an enjoyable time...
"My brother Willie drove one of the ox teams. He loved to read and would often ride along reading, paying no attention to the gait of the oxen until they would get far behind and father would send me back to punch them up so Willie could catch up with the company.
"We arrived in Salt Lake in the fall of 1861. Father bought a house on South Temple about the center of the present Union Pacific Depot. He improved the house and built onto the building until we had a six-room house, three rooms on the ground floor and three bedrooms upstairs. His store was in one of the lower rooms facing north. Our lot of one and one-fourth acres was all planted to orchard, berries, and garden. It was good to have fresh fruit and vegetables again.
"In November, 1870, we were advised by President Brigham Young to move to Southern Utah. My father’s family now consisted of myself, Jennie, Julia, Etta, Abia, Byron and Josey. My brother Willie was married and my sister, Nancy, who was born in Salt Lake City, had died in infancy. We lived that winter in the town of Washington, five miles from St. George and in the spring went to Kanab country and settled in what is now known as Johnson (previously called Hay Canyon). We built a four-room house and commenced tilling the soil. There we had numerous Indian troubles and they were so insulting we were advised to spend the following winter, 1872-1873 in Kanab. By spring the Indian trouble had settled down and it was apparently safe, so we moved back to Johnson.
"At Johnson, father built a house, adobe, four rooms above and five below, with a big porch and a store. Father always had a stock of goods on hand to sell. He had a shop where he made trunks, household furniture and harnesses. His motto was, "Always have something to sell and sooner or later someone will buy it."
From William Derby Johnson Jr’s. diary we read of this period.
"The last of April we moved all the folks to Johnson. We all worked hard, plowing, planting, etc., but in July the grasshoppers came and ate up nearly everything. Uncle Benjamin got discouraged and went back to Spring Lake. That left only Father, Nephi, and Sixtus to hold the place. On account of Indian uprisings and difficulties we were counseled to leave and move into the larger settlements. Therefore, we went to Kanab in September and got rooms in the old Fort."
Three other children were born to Jane and William while living in Johnson. They were Carlos Smith, Hannah Zelnora, and Lodemia Viola. Carlos and Lodemia both died in infancy and are buried in the Johnson cemetery.
W.D. and his family made many fine improvements in Johnson. They had a good garden, orchard, flowers, park, fishponds, and they raised chickens, ducks, and other farm animals. He was a very humble man and never wanted his good deeds to be talked about. He never wanted to be called upon to speak in Church. He was very strict about being on time, and was always in the lead when it came to helping with Church buildings. He stood five-feet-six inches tall, and weighed 160 
Johnson, William Derby Sr. (I132606)
 
3733 William Dresser Huntington was born in Burrville, near Watertown, New York. His early life was spent on a farm near Watertown.
The family was musical and maintained an orchestra in which William played the bass fiddle.
In 1833 the family joined the LDS church and moved to Kirkland, Ohio for two years. Zina and William were baptized in Kirkland during the summer of 1836. In May of 1838 they moved to Missouri staying at Adamondi-Ahman through the trying persecutions of the Church members. In 1839 the family moved to Nauvoo .
Soon after the move their mother died 8 July 1839 of malaria. The family lived with Joseph Smith until they recovered from the fever.
William married Caroline Clark in Nauvoo September 24, 1839 and married her sister Harriet Clark on February 5, 1843. The ceremony was performed by Joseph Smith and sanctioned by William's first wife Caroline.
William helped take care of the bodies of Joseph and Hyrum Smith digging graves under the bee house belonging to the Prophet on a lot where his house stood.
William was active in planning for the trek West moving the families in easy stages to winter quarter at Council Bluffs, Iowa. He remained in Council Bluffs until early 1849 looking after the widows and families of the members of the Mormon Battalion who had volunteered to serve in the Mexican War. In the spring of 1849 the families left winter quarters and arrived in Salt Lake City in the late summer. William then moved on to Springville in 1851.
On October 13, 1854, William with eleven men and an Indian guide went to Navajo Indian country which is now known as Southeastern Utah. The trip was successful exploration and trading.
 
Huntington, William Dresser (I74538)
 
3734 William Ellis Pratt, 85, Salt Lake City, died May 7, 1977 in a local hospital.
Born April 16, 1892 at Wilford, Idaho, to William Orson and Sophia Caroline Keller Pratt. Married Blanche Smith May 28, 1919, Deceased. Married Gladys G. Carr April 18, 1955 at Brigham City, Utah. Member LDS Church. Former employee, D&RG Railroad, B & B. Later self-employed. Veteran World War I, Barracks 1479.
Survivors include his wife and one daughter; Mrs. J. C. (Margaret P.) Williams, Twin Falls Idaho; three grandchildren; five great-grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs. Thelma Frank and Mrs. Naomi Rogers, both Buena Park, Calif.
Interment, Salt Lake City Cemetery.

Salt Lake Tribune (UT) May 10, 1977 
Pratt, William Ellis (I107255)
 
3735 William English
Titles and Terms Bachelor
Event Type Marriage
Event Date 25 Jan 1792
Event Place Durham, England, United Kingdom
Gender Male
Spouse's Name Elizabeth Readhead
Spouse's Titles and Terms Spinster
Spouse's Gender Female 
English, William (I50733)
 
3736 William Gardiner, born in 1671, died December 14, 1732. The following record is found in the Parish register of St.Paul's Chruch, Narragansett: December the 14th day 1732 viz:: on Thursday night between 11 and 12 of the clock departed this life Mr. William Gardiner of Boston Neck in the 61st year of his age, and was interred the Sunday following viz:; the 17th in the church yard of St. Paul's Church in Narragansett."

William married, before 1696, Abigail (born 1681; died Feb 6, 1763) daughter of John and Abigail (Richmond) Remington. (Her mother was the second wife of Henry Gardiner, No. 3) William Gardiner was admitted a freeman in 1712. His name appears on the public records frequently. He was a very wealthy and influential man. His will, dated April 12th, 1732, was probated February 12 1733. It disposed of more than 1600 acres of land and above 3000 pounds, a large sum of money for the time. In this will he calls himself "Cordwainer". His wife survived him and married September 3, 1740, Col. Job Almy of Newport.

William was know as "Wicked Will," I would suppose, because his wife was so young when they married. (hcd) 
Gardiner, William (I131723)
 
3737 William Hilton (1796-1854; LZDZ-1NR) is the husband of Sarah Hardman who is a sister of Edward Hardman (1811- ; LCRD-XSJ) who is a direct ancestor of Delsa Hardman (1908-1960; KWJK-9D3).: {dateOnly} {inPlace} {(description)}  Hilton, William (I83410)
 
3738 William James Snow, son of William Snow and Sally Adams Snow, was born in Lehi, Utah, April 16, 1869. When a year and a half old, he was taken with the family to Pine Valley, Utah. Here in this Pioneer Dixie region, he spent about thirty years of his life  Snow, William James (I130575)
 
3739 William Jared Pratt was born 22 June 1844 in Nauvoo, Illinois to William Dickinson Pratt and Wealthy Eddy. His family included an older half brother and half sister, Ammi Warren and Mary, from his mother’s previous marriage and an older sister Martha, who passed away when William was just 3 years old. William also had two younger siblings, Stephen and Mirza, who both died as infants.
The Nauvoo of William’s childhood was primarily a community of members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, of which William and his family were a part. It was a time of intense activity and growth but also increasing opposition and threats from surrounding communities. The tension of the situation increased to the point that, in about 1851, the Pratt family fled the city to Iowa, in preparation for a longer journey to Utah where the majority of church members were relocating.
Somewhere around this period, William’s parents grew estranged and divorced. In the separation, William stayed with his mother Wealthy and his half siblings.
On 15 June 1852, when William was 7 years old, he and his family departed with the Henry Bryant Manning Jolley Company bound for Salt Lake City. They experienced all the hardships of crossing the plains and mountains by ox drawn wagon but arrived safely in Salt Lake City on 9 September 1852. The family settled to the south in Payson, Utah.
In 1854, William’s mother married William Cornwall Patten, a widower with large family of his own. Wealthy and William Patten had one daughter together, Sarah Wealthy Patten, born in 1857.
In 1860, William moved with his family north to the Cache Valley, an area that would later become southern Idaho, settling in Franklin. Here, William met Alice Fleet Smart, the daughter of English immigrants and Mormon converts who had also answered the call of Brigham Young to settle in the area. Alice and William married on 1 December 1863 in Preston, Idaho.
William and Alice lived the rest of their lives in southern Idaho, where they had ten children - William, Ann, Thomas, Parley, Alice, Jared, Wealthy, Lucy Katie, and Leonidas - eight of whom lived to adulthood.
On 10 April 1873, with Alice’s consent, William married Charlotte Parkinson as his second wife. They had three children together; Florence, William and Clarissa.
In 1883, William moved with his families to Wilford, Idaho, where they lived until 1904, when they moved again to Albion, Idaho, where William lived the remainder of his life.
In all his life, William was a frontiersman, helping building communities from the ground up all while supporting his large family. He was active participant in his church throughout his life and served as the bishop of the church congregation in Clifton for seven years.
William passed away 16 June 1909 in Salt Lake City, where he had gone for treatment. He was buried in Albion, Idaho. 
Pratt, William Jared (I126838)
 
3740 William Kemp of early Duxbury, Mass. is of particular interest to the maintainer of this memorial as his only child, dau. Patience, was the first child of the writer's ancestor. Confusion persists regarding Patience's correct paternity, notwithstanding that numerous articles and lengthy essays have appeared in reputable genealogical journals proving Patience's paternity. Recent inquiries to the writer have prompted the following be added to this memorial for genealogical clarity.

William Kemp, called a servant, arrived at Boston June 3, 1635 aboard the ship James. He soon settled at Duxbury in the Plymouth Colony where on Jan. 7, 1638-9 he was granted a portion of land by the Plymouth Court [PCR Court Orders, 1:109]. On Mar. 5, 1638-9 he was nominated to be a freeman of the Plymouth Colony and thereafter elected a freeman on Dec. 3, 1639 [ibid, 1:117, 139]. While he received several additional grants of land during the year 1640, between late 1639 and late 1640 he was involved in numerous direct transactions with fellow residents regarding the purchase, sale or exchange of land [PC Deeds, 1:56, 57]. He was living at Duxbury Nov. 2, 1640 when he, Capt. Miles Standish and Jonathan Brewster arbitrated an agreement settling a dispute between Joseph Greene and Edmond Brough [PC Court Orders, 1:164]. Unfortunately, he died intestate prior to Sept. 23, 1641 when the inventory of his estate was taken [PC Wills, 1:40; MD 55:75]. His extensive inventory indicates he was a tailor by trade, and apparently a very successful one. This was followed on Nov. 2, 1641 with letters of administration granted to his widow Elizabeth, who filed the estate inventory with the Plymouth Court May 5, 1642 [PC Court Orders, 3:27, 37]. Thereafter, on May 7, 1642 the lands of "Mistress" Elizabeth Kemp are mentioned in a deed as adjoining land sold by Robert Hicks to William Brett. Brett sold that land one year later to Elizabeth's father, Rev. Ralph Partridge [PC Deeds, 1:80].

Rev. Ralph Partridge arrived with his family from England Nov. 17, 1636 to be the first pastor of the Duxbury, Mass. church. At an unknown date between Nov. 1636 and Sept. 1641, William Kemp m. Elizabeth Partridge, Rev. Ralph Partridge's youngest daughter. On May 11, 1643 at Duxbury, the widow Elizabeth Kemp m. as her second husband, Rev. Thomas Thacher of Weymouth, Mass., and became the present writer's ancestors.

Due to the lack of substantive vital records prior to 1653 for any town in the Plymouth Colony, coupled with not reading NEHGR 5:387 (detailed abstract of Rev. Ralph Partridge's 1655 will) instead relying on misstatements at NEHGR 13:245 (Patience Thacher m. William Kemp), early genealogists combined Charles H. Pope's less than clear abbreviated will of Rev. Ralph Partridge [Pope, The Pioneers of Massachusetts (1900), p. 347] to give Elizabeth (Partridge)(Kemp) Thacher a daughter named Patience by 2nd husband Thomas Thacher. Savage in his Dictionary of the First Settlers... (1860) fell into the same error giving Rev. Ralph Partridge's deceased son-in-law William Kemp an imaginary son William ("William Kempe, Duxbury, s. of the first William, md. Patience, dau. of Rev. Thomas Thacher"). Then the assumed death of the imaginary son allowed his imaginary widow Patience to m. Dr. Samuel Seabury as her supposed 2nd husband.

Rev. Ralph Partridge's Sept. 29, 1655 will at Duxbury, Mass. includes a legacy to granddau. Patience Kemp and essentially states:

• I give my daughter, Elizabeth Thacher, all my landed estate in New England,...Excepting one parcel of land at Hicks his necke, which I bought of Mr. Hicks of Plymouth, and another lot of 10 acres which I give to her eldest daughter Patience Kemp...

Pope's brief abstract of Partridge's will does not include the above cited portion of the will, saying only that Partridge left a legacy to "Elizabeth Thatcher, and her children Thomas, Ralph, Peter and Patience."

On Nov. 16, 1660 at Weymouth, Mass., Patience, only child and sole heir of William Kemp, m. Dr. Samuel Seabury. They had numerous children at Duxbury before Patience died there in 1676. Two years before Patience's death, on July 7, 1674 at the Plymouth Colony Court, with modern spelling of words or abbreviations:

• Liberty is granted unto Mr. Samuel Saberry, of Duxburrow, to look out for land to accommodate him in reference to several former grants made by the Court unto Mr. William Kemp, deceased, which the said Mr. Kemp never had, nor any for him, and was disappointed of some parcels of land assigned to him; and thereby he [Samuel Seabury] having an interest therein, as appears by the records of this Court, if, therefore, the said Mr. Saberry, William Kemp's son-in-law, can find any lands as yet undisposed of, he is to have a competent accommodation of lands out of the same. [PC Court Orders, 5:150-51.][*1]

In summary, William Kemp and wife Elizabeth Partridge had a dau. Patience, named for her maternal grandmother. Regardless of whether Patience was b. prior to or after her father's death, upon the marriage of her mother to Rev. Thomas Thacher she became Rev. Thacher's step-dau. and oldest child of Rev. Thacher's household.

[*1] At Dr. Samuel Seabury's death in 1681, the good doctor had not perfected his claim to land of the estate of William Kemp, in right of wife Patience. On July 7, 1682 Samuel's brother-in-law, Rodolphus Thacher of Duxbury (the half brother of Patience Kemp), was appointed guardian to Samuel and Patience's two youngest children - dau. Hannah and son John. [Plym. Court Orders, VI:91.] At the same court, Rodolphus Thacher appeared and: "Att this Court, Mr. Ralph [a.k.a. Rodolphus] Thacher came into the Court, and petitioned the Court to take into their consideration a grant of land made vnto Mr. William Kemp, lying within the towne of Duxburrow, about Namassakesett, with meddow convenient to be layed forth vnto the same, which meddow was neuer yet layd out according to Court order, neither what was done about the laying it out to be found vpon record nor in any writing. This Court doth therefore order the three men appointed by the towne of Duxburrow to lay out the said lands and run the ranges, namely, Ensigne John Tracye, John Soule, and William Paybody, to repaire to the said place, and lay out the said meddow according to that proportion the said meddowes were ordered to be layed forth by the towne of Duxburrow att the first, that soe the vpland of the said William Kemp may be accommodated according to Court order." [ibid, VI:92-3] The appointment of Rodolphus Thacher as guardian to the two named children, and his perfection of the requested land, are key links in documenting that shortly before the death of Patience (Kemp) Seabury, she had a second son named John whose birth does not appear in the Duxbury vital records. 
Kemp, William (I115012)
 
3741 William Pabodie Sr

William Pabodie (1620-1707) & Elizabeth Alden (1625-1716)
immigrant , deacon , planter

William came out of England & settled first at Plymouth; afterwards removed & was among the first Settlers of Saconet or Little Compton perhaps about 1680. For many years he kept up the Lords day Worship in his house where most of the settlers attended -- by praying Reading & singing: till about 1700 when they got a preacher. He was a very pious and exemplary Man: became Deacon of the Church. He always sat with the Minister in the pulpit (tho' not as Elder). He was with his son Wm in the Foundation of the Church in Saconet at its Gathering in 1704. Of which Church he himself & afterwards his son William Pabodie - & afterwards his Grandson Wm Pabodie (& I think another Grandson, viz. Joseph Pabodie) were Deacons. They are all dead. But another of his Grandsons, viz. Benjamin Pabodie, born 1717 is now living an exemplary Deacon of the first congregational Churh in Newport Rhode Island: from whom I [Ezra Stiles] have this Account"
William Pabodie was listed at Duxbury as a male "able to bear arms" (between the age of 16 and 60 in August 1643 ). He was an original proprietor of Bridgewater in 1645 and was admitted a Freeman of the colony on 5 June 1651
In 1648 he purchased for £70 the 80-acre homestead in Duxbury which had formerly belonged to Jonathan Brewster from John Holland and Hopestill Foster of Dorchester (Plymouth Col in MD,
In 1669 William was one of the first proprietors of Freetown, purchasing the fourteenth lot (Plymouth Col ) but exchanging it for land elsewhere (Freetown Hist, 6). He was a proprietor of Saconett (Little Compton) in 1675, but he remained in Duxbury where he was a selectman and town clerk for 18 years and where he recorded the births of all of his children . He called himself of Duxbury, "planter," when be sold 30 acres in Duxbury "lying near Namasakisit" in 1672 William Pabody of Duxbury is included on a list of the early land owners in Little Compton on 29 April 1675
On 6 September and 18 November 1686 William bought land in the 3/4 Mile Square [which had been laid out to 32 different purchasers and which was formerly the reservation of Awashonks, Queen of the Sogonates -bounded on the east by the great main road and on the west by the Sakonet River (Little Compton Farns, from Capt. Benjamin Church and Daniel Greenel, and on 3 October 1686 he exchanged land with Daniel Wilcock for another lot in 3/4 Mile Square (Bristol Co . On 13 March 1688/9 William sold Lot 52 in the second division of house lots in Little Compton to Anthony Colomer, and a reproduction of this deed with William's autograph signature is printed in MD, .
William Pabodie served on the grand jury in June 1648 and was receiver of excise in June 1650. In March 1655 he served on a jury that found John Walker guilty of manslaughter "by chance medley." In 1657, 1660, and 1662 he served on committees laying out land and roads. In October 1665 his committee attended to rebuilding the bridge over Jones River. On 27 June 1667 William was granted "the remainder of that land he paid for, being a parcel of poor hilly barren land." To satisfy a debt of £7 from William and Moses Numaker, William Pabodie received lands on 1 July 1672. He was on the coroners jury in June 1673 and was on committees hearing complaints from persons to whom the Colony was indebted in July 1677 and to apportion tax rates in 1681.
In his will of 13 May 1707, William Pabodie of Little Compton, "for the settling & Continuing peace in my family and amongst my Children after my Decease do order my estate in the world as follow: to his wife (not named);son, William,
Grandsons Stephen Southworth, son of daughter Rebecah deceased, and William and John Pabodie, Sons of William,
to sons-in-law Edward Southworth and William Fobes,;to Edward Southworth.;To biological daughter Mary, Mercey, Martha, Priscilla, Ruth, Sarah, Hannah, Lidia,;the heirs of daughter Elizabeth, ;and the heirs of daughter Rebecah.
The widow and son were named executors and the will was witnessed by John Woodman, Peter Taylor, and Samuel Willbore. Witnesses were sworn on 27 February 1707(18] and on that day bond was given by "m" Elizabeth Pabodie and her son William Pabodie." The inventory of William's estate, taken on 30 December 1707, was valued at £407.14.00, Ezra Stiles Diary 1771 "Memories of the \family of Padodie as I received it from Deacon Pabodie of Newport."

The name Peabody, Paybody, Pabodie is said to have originated in the year 61 during the reign of Nero. Queen Boadicea was located at Icena, Britain. She opposed the Romans in their invasion of the country and with her son Boadie, took refuge in the craggy heights of Wales. Boadie among the Cambri or Britons signifies a man or a great man, and Pea signifies a large hill, a mountain from which Boadie came to be called Peabodie or the Mountain Man, which became the name of the tribe. In some branches of the family Boadie became anglicized to Mann and Pea to hill. William, at Little Compton, Rhode Island, where he died in his 80th year in 1744; his descendants spelled their name Pabodie.

(William Peabody William Paybody of Duxborrow 1620 • St Albans Hertfordshire England)
 
Pabodie, William (I114994)
 
3742 William Pond, Sr.
Also Known As: "William Ponder"
Birth 1568 Groton, Suffolk, England, United Kingdom
Died October 1637 in Groton, Suffolk, England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:Son of John Ponder and Johane Ponder Husband of Judith Pond (Gordon) Father of Robert Pond of Boston; John Pond; Joshua Pond; Mary Pond; William Pond and 1 other Occupation:A Miller for the Winthrops 
Pond, William (I139151)
 
3743 William Reeve Crismon was born on December 28, 1911 in Salt Lake City, Utah to Franklin Winford "Frank" Crismon and Sarah Irene Mecham. He married Lucille Papworth (my cousin) on July 25, 1939 in Idaho Falls, Idaho. He attended the University of Utah. Bill was director of ground operations at Frontier Airlines for 12 years and was a dispatcher at United Airlines for nine years. He was owner and operator of Terminal Gift Shop Inc. at the Salt Lake International Airport from 1961 until his death in 1972.

Bill passed away on Sunday, October 1, 1972 at the University of Utah Medical Center from Leukemia at the young age of 60. He resided at 765 East Three Fountains Circle (4950 South) in Murray, Utah at the time of his death.

He was survived by his wife, of 33 years; sons, William Russell and Thomas Frank, both of Salt Lake City; 6 grandchildren; brother, Frank M., of Denver, Colorado; sister, Mrs. H. J. (Elsie) Mosely, of Emporia, Virginia.

Funeral Services were held on Wednesday, October 4, 1972 at 10:00 AM at the Larkin Mortuary located at 260 East South Temple Street in Salt Lake City. A viewing was held on Tuesday evening from 6:00 until 8:00 PM and on Wednesday morning one hour prior to the services.
Bill was laid to rest following the conclusion of the Funeral Services at the Larkin Sunset Gardens Cemetery in Sandy, Utah.
REST IN ETERNAL PEACE BILL.
Bio by: Ryan D. Curtis 
Crismon, William Reeve (I101724)
 
3744 William Sabin, christened 11 Oct 1609 in Titchfield, Hampshire, England, immigrated to America 1639/40 with his wife, Mary Wright (Name questionable! See her notes!) she may have died before in immigrated), who he married about 1639. He settled in Rehoboth, Bristol, Massachusetts. He was a miller and the progenitor of the Sabin family in America and Canada. His Baptism is recorded in St. Peter's Parish, Titchfield, England "Oct 1609 bapt. William Sabin the XI daye,"55
His Parents are not listed in the baptismal record, but it is believed that they are Samuel and Elizabeth Sabin. Others claim different parents - read "Baptism" note under the Collaborate tab!

The following has errors. He was not likely a Huguenot, not is it likely he came from Wales.
From another contributor: "William appeared at the founding of Rehoboth, MA, in 1643. He was a Huguenot who came to the USA from Wales or the south of England after earlier fleeing France. He was a man of considerable culture, and extensive wealth. He was one of the leading spirits of early Rehoboth in schools, church,and civic affairs, and was well known for providing assistance to persons and families who had suffered the ravages of Indian raids."

"William Sabin was one of the founders of Rehoboth along with his father-in-law Richard Wright and his two brothers-in-law, in 1644. He was a Selectman, Grand Juryman, Deputy from Rehoboth to Plymouth Court."
BIOGRAPHY: William Sabin , the first progenitor, appeared in the town of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, at the organization of the town in 1643. When he came to America is not known, but tradition says he came from Wales or the south of England, where he had found refuge in his flight from France. He was Huguenot, and was a man of considerable culture; and possessing wealth, as is shown in the account of his estate and gifts for the relieving of the wants of those who suffered from the ravages of the Indians. He ws one of the leading spirits of Rehoboth in schools, church, and affairs at Plymouth. Who his first wife was we do not know, but she died shortly after 1660. He married (2) Martha Allen who was born 11 Dec 1641, a twin sister of Mary, daughter of James and Anna Allen of Medfield, of 22 Dec 1663. Martha was a sister of Nathanial and Joseph Allen, whomarried daughters by the former wife. He died about 1687. Made his will 4 Jun 1685. The original will is on file in Boston, Massachusetts. In it are mentioned 16 of his 20 children."
By Ref. Anson Titus, Jr., as found in New England Historical & Genealogical Register.

First wife's name unknown
There is no actual record of her given name. Torrey states her surname was Wright - but this if from old genealogies and not an actual record. Many assumptions - no PROOF!

PARENTS ARE ASSUMED, as is the baptism.
No parents were named in the baptismal record, which is assumed to be the same William Sabin. Researchers have ASSUMED two different couples! No record has been found that proves either is correct.
 
Sabin, William (I121177)
 
3745 William settled near the present (1881) Durgin house, on his father's original lot ; but being a master carpenter was much from home, framing, as is claimed, the first meeting house in town, another meeting-house in Portsmouth, and many other
buildings. Held the military title of "Lieut." 
Durgin, William (I114883)
 
3746 William Taillefer (c. 952 - March 1028), numbered William II (as the second with the sobriquet Taillefer) or William IV (as the fourth William in his family), was the Count of Angoulême from 987. He was the son of Count Arnald II Manzer and grandson of Count William Taillefer I. He stood at the head of the family which controlled not only the Angoumois, but also the Agenais and part of Saintonge.[1] By the time of his death he was "the leading magnate in [the west] of Aquitaine[, but his] eminence ... proved temporary and illusory," evaporating on his death in succession squabbles, revolts and the predations of his erstwhile allies.[2] The principal sources for William's career are Ademar of Chabannes and the anonymous Historia pontificum et comitum Engolismensium.[3]

Between 994 and 1000 William married Ermengarde-Gerberga, widow of Conan I of Brittany and sister of Fulk III of Anjou, who held some castles in Saintonge and Poitou from William as fiefs (pro bene fico). William was perhaps countering the growing strength of the Counts of La Marche in northern Aquitaine since their family succeeded to the County of Périgord, previously dominated by Angoulême, in 975.[2] Fulk was also an ally of Duke William V of Aquitaine, nominal suzerain of Angoulême, and William Taillefer entered into their alliance through marriage. It is also probable that Fulk saw William as a potential ally against the duke and his county of Angoulême as providing a bulwark against aggressions aimed at Fulk's recent acquisition of Saintes and its citadel, the Capitolium.[4] William, exercising the secular control of the church typical of this era, gave the abbacy of Saint-Cybard and later the Bishopric of Angoulême to Grimoard, a brother of Islo, who was both allied with Fulk by marriage and serving as bishop in Fulk's city of Saintes.[5]

Count William aided the duke against the Boso II of La Marche and in return the duke supported the count's extension of his authority into the Bordelais.[2] William was regularly present with the duke's court from about 1000 until October 1010, when an important meeting involving the duke, King Robert II of France, King Sancho III of Navarre and Duke Sancho VI of Gascony took place at the church of Saint Jean d'Angély.[6] His absence from this meeting probably indicates the growing enmity between Duke William and Fulk of Anjou.[7]

Although his fiefs (honores) had initially dominated the border between Saintonge and Poitou (where he subinfeudated some to Fulk), by 1024 William was exercising authority over all Saintonge.[8] In Poitou William controlled the viscounty of Melle and its strongly fortified castrum (citadel).[8] On one occasion William granted outright a church he owned to "his faithful [man]" Iterius, which illustrates how the feudal practice of granting lands in benefice had not completely overtaken the south of France.[9] In 1020 William of Angoulême furthered his influence in Gascony by marrying his son to a daughter of Sancho VI.[2]

On 6 March 1025 a major assembly of Aquitanian prelates and barons met to discuss the claim of Duke William's son, William the Fat, for the Kingdom of Italy. William Taillefer and his eldest son were present.[10] On 1 October 1026 William left on a pilgrimage to the Holy Sepulchre.[11] He travelled through Hungary and Slavonia, even though these regions were generally avoided at that time by pilgrims, since they had only recently been converted to Christianity, according to Ademar.[12]

William died in March 1028[13] and was buried in the monastery of Saint-Cybard. An assembly of the principes et nobiles of Angoulême, Périgord and Saintonge met to judge the woman accused of poisoning him.[14] William was succeeded at Angoulême by his eldest son, Alduin II, whose younger brother Geoffrey quarreled with him over the inheritance in Bordelais. Revolts broke out in Saintonge, where within a decade the Angoulêmes' authority had lapsed completely.[2] 
Taillefer, William (I77705)
 
3747 William was a master carpenter and millwright.  Durgin, William (I114888)
 
3748 William Wilson
Birthdate: 1705
Birthplace: Spalding, , Lincolnshire, England
Death: Died 1772 in Pasquotank, , North Carolina, USA
Immediate Family:
Son of William Wilson and Sarah Wilson
Father of William Wilson
Brother of Elizabeth Wilson 
Wilson, William Thomas III (I128225)
 
3749 WILLIAM, 2nd known child of William Hilton by his 1st wife, was baptized at Northwich 22 June 1617.
He married (1) by 1641 Sarah Greenleaf, daughter of Edmund Greenleaf
(eldest child b. Newbury June 1641;
in his will of 22 December 1668 Edmund Greenleaf made a bequest to "my grandchild Elizabeth Hilton."

He married (2) Charlestown 16 September 1659 Mehitable Nowell, daughter of INCREASE NOWELL. (See NEHGR 124:88-108 for his activities as an explorer.)
Source: Anderson's Great Migration Begins.

he came from London to Plymouth, MA in 1621,
removed to Dover Neck, NH before 1627.
He was named freeman at Newbury, MA in 1643,
and later returned to Dover, NH.

SOME SOURCES :
Anderson, Robert Charles, The Great Migration Begins (Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2004) 951-57
https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/2496/42521_b158319-00276/54551

"William Hilton, in Anderson, Robert Charles. The Pilgrim Migration: Immigrants to Plymouth Colony 1620-1633. (Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2004), 254ff.

NEHGR 31:179-87; 36:40-36 (has some errors see above)
http://www.americanancestors.org/databases/new-england-historical-and-genealogical-register/image/?pageName=183&volumeId=11630&filterQuery=page:3~size:100

Pilsbury 333 (some errors see The Great Migration)
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89069618874;view=1up;seq=359

"William Hilton (17)", in Noyes, Sybil; Charles Thornton Libby; and Walter Goodwin Davis. Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire. (Portland, Maine: Southworth Press, 1928-1939), 334ff.

17 *WILLIAM, son of William of Northwich, co. Chester, and bro. of (1) and (13). He was ‘of London’ and indebted to his fa., by the accounts preserved with latter’s will, in 1605, and was legatee of his bro. Arthur Hilton of Northw. in 1612. He arrived at Cape Cod in the Fortune 9 Nov. 1621, his letter, badly misrep. conditions, addressed to his ‘cousin’ and printed in Capt. John Smith’s book, being dated two days later. The ‘cousin’ may have been a blind for Capt. Smith himself, or one of Hilton’s own nephews or one of his w.’s, with directions to send her over. She arriv. at Plymouth, with two ch., ab. 10 July 1623. They were still there in 1624 when Rev. John Lyford bp. a ch. The historian Hubbard cared little about the eastern country, and his paragraph about the founding of N. H. (N. E. Reg. 31.179) is mostly false. Hilton did not come to the Piscataqua with David Thomson in 1623 and Chr. Levett’s book proves that no settlement had been made up the river in the spring of 1624 (N. E. Reg. 76.315). It was later than this last season, therefore, when Hilton left . Plym. and joined Thomson at Little Harbor with the purpose of starting salt works. Incidentally, salt making was the principal industry of Northwich, his fa.’s home. When his bro. Edward came over in 1628 he naturally removed up river and when Capt. Neale arrived he was liv. on Dover Neck, and planting his corn, safe from his hogs, on the other side of the river in Me. (N. E. Reg. 31.181; Me. P. & C. ii. 19). When (1) gave place to Capt. Wiggin, he appar. went with him to Newfields, but was soon back. Freeman, with Wm. Walderne, 19 May 1642, Com. t. e. s. c. 1642-4, Rep. 1644. He is first found at Kittery Point in June, 1648; bef. that, in Apr., Dover had allowed him and Thos. Turner to gather 70 loads of pine knots on Madbury Neck. In 1647 Mendum, the Kit. Pt. innholder, had bot and given up the ho. owned by Capt. Shapleigh, who got the lic. transferred to Hilton, who hired the ho. and liv. there until S. put him out, soon aft. 15 Oct. 1650, because of his w. Frances, who by her own dep. had been liv. there some yrs. bef. Removing to York, he was promptly given the ferry and tavern lic., made alderman of the expiring city, then selectman 1652-4, and referee in ct. Gr.j. 1651, 1653-5; j. 1650 (foreman). Evid. educated and suffic. familiar with the courts to almost invar. win his frequent suits, he was given his title of Mr. wherever he went. For letters, autographs, etc. see N. E. Reg. 31.179-82, 333; 36.40. Lists 376a, 352, 353, 53, 275, 276, 277. Besides the w. who foll. him to Plym., and Frances, poss. a wid. with ch. when he m. her ab. 1651, there may have been others. His fa.’s endorsing for him to Ellen Hewett bef. 1605 is unexpl., and if one of his wives should prove to have been a Winslow it would expl. his letter writing with Edw. Winslow, his assoc. with John Winslow, his removal to Piscataqua with Gilbert Winslow and the mar. of two of John Winslow’s sons to his relations. Aside from this there is the railing of his w. Frances (for which the ct. sentenced her severely) that one John was his bastard. She was beneath his class. His other w., or wives, kept out of ct. and are therefore nameless. Between two cts., June 1655 and June 1656, he d. (ag. perhaps 75), and the wid. m. Richard White. Goody White called herself ± 70 in 1688 (Me. P. & C. i. 267). Ch: John, perhaps his, bur. in Northw. 26 Nov. 1610. Elizabeth, bp. 27 June, bur. 1 Aug. 1616, in Northw. William, bp. 22 June 1617 in Northw. Mary, bp. 11 May 1619 in Northw.; see (11). John, see (3). Magdalene, m. 1st by 1646 James Wiggin; 2d, of Newbury, pub. 14 May 1698 to Henry Kenning of Salem. Mainwaring, b. bef. 1650. Agnes, (Anne), m. by 1667 Arthur Beale (2). By w. Frances: William, b. ab. 1653. See also (16, 5); also Richard Sweat, Y. D. 2.33; also George and Alice Walton, who rem. from Exeter to Dover Neck, thence to mouth of the river 
Hilton, Captain William (I116190)
 
3750 Winter Quarters  Kimball, Solomon Farnham (I107542)
 

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