_David HAYNES _______+ | (1738 - 1775) m 1757 _Perley HAYNES __________________|_Lydia AYERS ________ | (1756 - 1833) m 1792 (1737 - 1799) _Isaiah Putnam HAYNES _| | (1808 - 1881) m 1837 | | | _William HOPKINS ____+ | | | (1744 - 1813) m 1765 | |_Jenne HOPKINS __________________|_Elizabeth ANDERSON _ | (1771 - 1816) m 1792 (1742 - 1813) _Albert HAYNES _________| | (1864 - 1927) m 1895 | | | _John (Sr.) ARCHER __+ | | | (1752 - 1830) m 1778 | | _Anselm Thomas ("Ansel") ARCHER _|_Elizabeth TUPPER ___ | | | (1789 - 1866) m 1815 (1758 - 1830) | |_Lucy Brackett ARCHER _| | (1821 - 1881) m 1837 | | | _Asael FOSTER _______+ | | | (1774 - 1851) | |_Sally Fabyan FOSTER ____________|_Lucy BRACKETT ______ | (1797 - 1865) m 1815 (1774 - 1819) _Jasper Hutchings HAYNES _| | (1897 - 1960) m 1928 | | | _Joshua WILLIAMS ____+ | | | (1747 - 1833) m 1771 | | _Simeon WILLIAMS ________________|_Bethiah CLARK ______ | | | (.... - 1858) (1751 - ....) | | _Asa K. WILLIAMS ______| | | | (1828 - 1894) m 1858 | | | | | _Nathaniel KENNEY ___+ | | | | | (1773 - ....) m 1794 | | | |_Harriet KENNEY _________________|_Elizabeth MILLS ____ | | | (.... - 1877) (1781 - 1853) | |_Nellie Grant WILLIAMS _| | (1872 - 1959) m 1895 | | | _Samuel DUNN ________+ | | | (1778 - 1848) | | _Samuel (Jr.) DUNN ______________|_Dorcas COBB ________ | | | (1804 - 1883) m 1830 (1783 - 1847) | |_Direxa Esther DUNN ___| | (1831 - 1912) m 1858 | | | _John (Jr.) ARCHER __+ | | | (1783 - 1861) m 1805 | |_Julia Ann ARCHER _______________|_Lucy Willey COLSON _ | (1808 - 1882) m 1830 (1785 - 1884) | |--Mary Direxa HAYNES | | _____________________ | | | _________________________________|_____________________ | | | _______________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_________________________________|_____________________ | | | ________________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | _________________________________|_____________________ | | | | | | |_______________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_________________________________|_____________________ | | |_Ruth MCKAY ______________| (1895 - 1977) m 1928 | | _____________________ | | | _________________________________|_____________________ | | | _______________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_________________________________|_____________________ | | |________________________| | | _____________________ | | | _________________________________|_____________________ | | |_______________________| | | _____________________ | | |_________________________________|_____________________
[6829] living - details excluded
[21894] See http://www.personal.psu.edu/staff/t/a/tar2/mark/pafg13.htm
[21892]
[S2]
LDS Church's Ancestral File - not verified.
[21893]
[S2]
LDS Church's Ancestral File - not verified.
[56564]
[S2]
LDS Church's Ancestral File - not verified.
[33924] Martha's obituary: "Martha Zepp Salzman, a longtime Ridgefielder and a harpsichordist who was one of the early members of the Ridgefield Symphony, died Jan. 9 in Tucson, Ariz. She was 67 and wife of Joseph Salzman. Mrs. Salzman was born in Chicago, Ill., on April 26, 1934, daughter of Louise and Rudolph Zepp. She grew up in the Chicago area and graduated from Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N.Y., where she was a George Eastman Honorary Scholar. She received a masters degree in music at the University of Illinois, where she taught oboe for two years. She married Joseph Salzman in 1958 and a year later the couple moved to Ridgefield where she began raising a family. Mrs. Salzman was one of the first members of the Ridgefield Symphonette, now the Ridgefield Symphony Orchestra, and was an early board member. When she began her performing career here, she played the oboe with the orchestra and was also an accomplished pianist. In the late 1970s, however, Mrs. Salzman discovered her fondness for the harpsichord. 'I had only tinkered with it a couple of times, when a friend invited me to play his,' she told a reporter in 1979. 'Id never had any forethought about it, but when I started playing it, I just fell tremendously in love with it. After five months, I gave up the piano completely and switched to the harpsichord.' Mrs. Salzman studied under Albert Fuller in New York and with Igor Kipnis, the noted harpsichordist, who lived in Redding and who once commented that Mrs. Salzman played 'extremely musically.' By 1979 she had begun performing throughout the area, both in solo concerts and with orchestras, on a harpsichord that had been custom made for her in Boston. She frequently performed as the harpsichord accompanist for Thomas Stacy, English horn soloist for the New York Philharmonic. One of the high points of her career was performing in 1985 at the Church of St. Martin-in-the-Fields in London, a center for early music, where Handel had performed more than 200 years earlier. She herself specialized in music of the Baroque period. 'I get a real joy out of making a piece live,' she once said. 'For me, music is sort of a haven, and its made me so very happy. Music heightens the ordinary existence of everyday living - it takes us away from the turmoil of the world and brings a bit of peace and beauty into our lives.' For many years Mrs. Salzman taught piano here, and had hundreds of students. In 1992, the Salzmans retired to Tucson, where she became active in and president of the Arizona Early Music Society. She performed widely on the harpsichord in Arizona. Besides her husband, Mrs. Salzman is survived by three children, Mark Salzman of Glendale, Calif., Erich Salzman of Tucson; and Rachel Salzman of Bethel, owner of the Ridgefield Tile Shop on Main Street; and by two grandchildren, Ava Salzman of Glendale and Isabela Opera of Bethel."