_Friedrich Wilhelm III, King of PRUSSIA ___+
| (1770 - 1840) m 1793
_William I, Emperor of GERMANY ____________|_Luise Auguste of MECKLENBURG _____________
| (1797 - 1888) m 1829 (1776 - 1810)
_Frederick III, Emperor of GERMANY _|
| (1831 - 1888) m 1858 |
| | ___________________________________________
| | |
| |_Augusta of SAXE-WEIMAR ___________________|___________________________________________
| (1811 - 1890) m 1829
_Henry of PRUSSIA _________|
| (1862 - 1929) m 1888 |
| | _Ernst I Saafeld, Duke of SAXE-COBURG _____+
| | | (1784 - 1844) m 1817
| | _Albert Augustus, Prince of SAXE-COBURG ___|_Dorothea Luise Pauline of SAXE-GOTHA _____
| | | (1819 - 1861) m 1840 (1800 - 1831)
| |_Victoria Adelaide Mary WETTIN _____|
| (1840 - 1901) m 1858 |
| | _Edward Augustus, K.G., Duke of KENT ______+
| | | (1767 - 1820) m 1818
| |_Victoria Hanover, Queen of Great BRITAIN _|_Victoria Maria Louisa of SAXE-COBURG _____
| (1819 - 1901) m 1840 (1786 - 1861)
|
|--Waldemar
| (1889 - 1945)
| _Ludwig II, Grand Duke of HESSE-DARMSTADT _+
| | (1777 - 1848) m 1804
| _Karl, General of INFANTRY ________________|_Wilhelmina Luise Of BADEN ________________
| | (1809 - 1877) m 1836 (1788 - 1836)
| _Ludwig IV, Grand Duke of HESSE ____|
| | (1837 - 1892) m 1862 |
| | | _Friedrich Wilhelm Karl, PRINCE ___________+
| | | | (1783 - 1851) m 1804
| | |_Elizabeth of PRUSSIA _____________________|_Maria Anna of HESSE ______________________
| | (1815 - 1885) m 1836 (1785 - 1846)
|_Irene of HESSE-DARMSTADT _|
(1866 - 1953) m 1888 |
| _Ernst I Saafeld, Duke of SAXE-COBURG _____+
| | (1784 - 1844) m 1817
| _Albert Augustus, Prince of SAXE-COBURG ___|_Dorothea Luise Pauline of SAXE-GOTHA _____
| | (1819 - 1861) m 1840 (1800 - 1831)
|_Alice Maud Mary WETTIN ____________|
(1843 - 1878) m 1862 |
| _Edward Augustus, K.G., Duke of KENT ______+
| | (1767 - 1820) m 1818
|_Victoria Hanover, Queen of Great BRITAIN _|_Victoria Maria Louisa of SAXE-COBURG _____
(1819 - 1901) m 1840 (1786 - 1861)
_John BRYANT ________
| (.... - 1684) m 1643
_John BRYANT ________|_Mary LEWIS _________
| (1644 - 1708) m 1676 (.... - 1655)
_David BRYANT _______|
| (1684 - 1731) m 1705|
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_Mary BATTELLE ______|_____________________
| (1650 - 1732) m 1676
_Jacob BRYANT _______|
| (1714 - ....) m 1744|
| | _____________________
| | |
| | _Sylvester STOVER ___|_____________________
| | | m 1652
| |_Hannah STOVER ______|
| (.... - 1736) m 1705|
| | _Henry NORTON _______+
| | | (1618 - ....)
| |_Elizabeth NORTON ___|_____________________
| m 1652
|
|--Jonathan BRYANT
| (1765 - 1802)
| _____________________
| |
| _____________________|_____________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|_____________________
| |
|_Abigail NEWTON _____|
(1726 - 1818) m 1744|
| _____________________
| |
| _____________________|_____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
| _____________________
| |
|_____________________|_____________________
________________________________
|
_____________________|________________________________
|
_William FREATHY ___________|
| (1612 - 1685) m 1639 |
| | ________________________________
| | |
| |_____________________|________________________________
|
_James FREETHY ______|
| (1651 - ....) m 1675|
| | ________________________________
| | |
| | _____________________|________________________________
| | |
| |_Elizabeth BARKER __________|
| (1618 - ....) m 1639 |
| | ________________________________
| | |
| |_____________________|________________________________
|
|
|--Mary FREETHY
| (1680 - ....)
| ________________________________
| |
| _____________________|________________________________
| |
| _Henry MILLBURY ____________|
| | (1625 - ....) |
| | | ________________________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|________________________________
| |
|_Mary MILLBURY ______|
(1651 - 1735) m 1675|
| _Jeremiah DIXON ________________
| |
| _William DIXON ______|_Alice, wife of Jeremiah DIXON _
| | (.... - 1660)
|_daughter of William DIXON _|
|
| ________________________________
| |
|_Joane PIERSON ______|________________________________
[19925] "History of York, Maine," Charles Edward Banks (Baltimore: Regional Publishing Co., 1967), Vol. II, p. 55: Andrew Grover "was the son of THomas and Sarah (Chadwick) Grover of Malden, born in October 1673, and he received a grant of twenty acrfes in 1699, ' wherever he can find it.' ...He married Mary, daughter of James and Mary (Milberry) Freethy, in 1697."
[19923]
[S1]
LDS Church's Ancestral File - not verified.
[19924]
[S1]
LDS Church's Ancestral File - not verified.
_Francis Marion HEICHEL ____+
| (1847 - 1912) m 1894
_William Orley HEICHEL __|_Rachel (Lucettie) COLEMAN _
| (1900 - 1988) m 1921 (1866 - 1942)
_Robert Glenn HEICHEL _|
| (1923 - 2003) m 1944 |
| | ____________________________
| | |
| |_Pauline Elizabeth KING _|____________________________
| (1903 - 1950) m 1921
_David Virgil HEICHEL _|
| |
| | ____________________________
| | |
| | _________________________|____________________________
| | |
| |_Dorothy May FARST ____|
| (1927 - 2003) m 1944 |
| | ____________________________
| | |
| |_________________________|____________________________
|
|
|--Todd David HEICHEL
|
| ____________________________
| |
| _________________________|____________________________
| |
| _______________________|
| | |
| | | ____________________________
| | | |
| | |_________________________|____________________________
| |
|_Patricia Kay MCGUIRE _|
|
| ____________________________
| |
| _________________________|____________________________
| |
|_______________________|
|
| ____________________________
| |
|_________________________|____________________________
[14566] living - details excluded
__
|
__|__
|
_____________________|
| |
| | __
| | |
| |__|__
|
_Lodowick (Hoxsie) HOXIE _|
| (1644 - ....) m 1664 |
| | __
| | |
| | __|__
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| | __
| | |
| |__|__
|
|
|--Hezekiah Hoxie\ HOXSIE
| (1675 - ....)
| __
| |
| __|__
| |
| _John PRESBURY ______|
| | |
| | | __
| | | |
| | |__|__
| |
|_Mary PRESBURY ___________|
(1644 - ....) m 1664 |
| __
| |
| __|__
| |
|_____________________|
|
| __
| |
|__|__
____________________________
|
_____________________|____________________________
|
_____________________|
| |
| | ____________________________
| | |
| |_____________________|____________________________
|
_Richard HUBLER _____|
| |
| | ____________________________
| | |
| | _____________________|____________________________
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| | ____________________________
| | |
| |_____________________|____________________________
|
|
|--Jennie HUBLER
|
| ____________________________
| |
| _____________________|____________________________
| |
| _John D. HEPLER _____|
| | (1828 - ....) |
| | | ____________________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|____________________________
| |
|_Pricilla HEPLER ____|
|
| _Johann Nicholas SCHNEIDER _+
| | (1749 - 1821) m 1773
| _George SCHNEIDER ___|_Anna Maria BORDNER ________
| | (1794 - 1875) m 1818 (1756 - 1827)
|_Lydia DUNKELBERGER _|
(.... - 1900) |
| ____________________________
| |
|_Catharine WAGNER ___|____________________________
(1797 - 1885) m 1818
______________________
|
______________________|______________________
|
_____________________________|
| |
| | ______________________
| | |
| |______________________|______________________
|
_Myron MAY ___________________|
| |
| | ______________________
| | |
| | ______________________|______________________
| | |
| |_____________________________|
| |
| | ______________________
| | |
| |______________________|______________________
|
|
|--Harold MAY
| (1906 - 1931)
| _Christian BRILLHART _+
| | (1805 - 1885)
| _Andrew J. BRILLHART _|_Mary Ann UTZ ________
| | (1830 - 1897) m 1885 (1804 - 1881)
| _James McClelland BRILLHART _|
| | (1875 - 1948) |
| | | ______________________
| | | |
| | |_Almyra JOHNS ________|______________________
| | m 1885
|_Dorothy McCelland BRILLHART _|
(1903 - 1945) |
| ______________________
| |
| ______________________|______________________
| |
|_Lily PREBLE ________________|
|
| ______________________
| |
|______________________|______________________
[15269]
[S227]
Biography in the Oceana County History, Oceana County Historical S=
_________________________
|
_______________________|_________________________
|
_Thomas NEWMAN ______|
| |
| | _________________________
| | |
| |_______________________|_________________________
|
_John NEWMAN ________|
| (1812 - 1893) m 1841|
| | _________________________
| | |
| | _______________________|_________________________
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| | _________________________
| | |
| |_______________________|_________________________
|
|
|--Julia Ann NEWMAN
| (1857 - 1935)
| _George Adam HELLEBART __
| | (.... - 1785) m 1771
| _Jorg Michael HELBERT _|_________________________
| | (1748 - ....) m 1771
| _Jacob HELBERT ______|
| | (1794 - 1884) m 1817|
| | | _Jacob FRACK ____________
| | | | (1690 - 1775)
| | |_Anna Maria FRACK _____|_Susannah Barbara GRUBB _
| | (1752 - ....) m 1771 (.... - 1806)
|_Maria HELBERT ______|
(1821 - 1894) m 1841|
| _________________________
| |
| _______________________|_________________________
| |
|_Elizabeth MOCK _____|
(1792 - 1872) m 1817|
| _________________________
| |
|_______________________|_________________________
____________________________
|
_James ROOSEVELT ____|____________________________
| (1760 - 1847) m 1786
_Isaac ROOSEVELT _________|
| (1790 - 1863) m 1827 |
| | ____________________________
| | |
| |_Maria Eliza WALTON _|____________________________
| (1769 - 1810) m 1786
_James ROOSEVELT ____|
| (1828 - 1900) m 1880|
| | _John ASPINWALL ____________
| | | (.... - 1774) m 1766
| | _John ASPINWALL _____|_Rebecca SMITH _____________
| | | (1774 - 1847) m 1803 (.... - 1809)
| |_Mary Rebecca ASPINWALL __|
| (1809 - 1886) m 1827 |
| | _Joseph HOWLAND ____________+
| | | (1749 - 1836) m 1772
| |_Susan HOWLAND ______|_Lydia BILL ________________
| (1779 - 1852) m 1803 (1753 - 1838)
|
|--Franklin Delano ROOSEVELT
| (1882 - 1945)
| ____________________________
| |
| _____________________|____________________________
| |
| _Warren DELANO ___________|
| | (1809 - 1898) m 1843 |
| | | ____________________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|____________________________
| |
|_Sara DELANO ________|
(1855 - 1941) m 1880|
| ____________________________
| |
| _Joseph (III) LYMAN _|____________________________
| | (1767 - 1874) m 1811
|_Catherine Robbins LYMAN _|
(1825 - 1896) m 1843 |
| _Edward Hutchinson ROBBINS _+
| | (1758 - 1829) m 1785
|_Anne Jean ROBBINS __|_Elizabeth MURRAY __________
(1789 - 1867) m 1811 (1756 - 1837)
Roosevelt was elected for an unprecedented four terms, he was one of the
20th century's most skillful political leaders. His New Deal program, a
response to the Great Depression, utilized the federal government as an
instrument of social and economic change in contrast to its traditionally
passive role. Then, in World War II, he led the Allies in their defeat of
the Axis powers.
His father, a semiretired railway executive, was a cousin of Theodore
Roosevelt, the 26th president of the U.S. Although they were not wealthy
by late 19th-century standards, the Roosevelts of Hyde Park led a
comfortable, gracious existence, and young Franklin's life was sheltered;
he was educated by governesses and indulged by his father. A handsome
youth, he was an excellent athlete, expert at boating and swimming, and he
also collected stamps, birds, and ship models -- hobbies that he pursued
all his life.
His formal education began at the Groton School in Massachusetts, where
the headmaster, Endicott Peabody (1857-1944), stressed to his wealthy
young students their obligation toward those who were less fortunate in
society. After graduation from Harvard University in 1904, Roosevelt
attended Columbia University Law School without taking a degree and was
admitted to the New York State bar in 1907. Despite his widowed mother's
objections, he married a distant cousin, in a gala society wedding at
which President Theodore Roosevelt gave the bride away.
Franklin Roosevelt's political career began with his election to the New
York State Senate as a Democrat in 1910. He quickly gained the national
limelight as the leader of an upstate coalition that fought the influence
of New York City's Democratic machine. His support of Woodrow Wilson's
candidacy as the Democratic presidential nominee in 1912 resulted in his
appointment to the post of assistant secretary of the navy, which he held
during World War I. James M. Cox of Ohio, the party's 1920 nominee for the
presidency, chose Roosevelt as his running mate because of his family
name, but the Cox-Roosevelt ticket proved to be no match for the
Republicans under Warren G. Harding.
Roosevelt faced the greatest personal crisis of his life when he was
stricken by poliomyelitis at his Canadian summer home on Campobello
Island, New Brunswick, in 1921. He veiled his deep physical agony with a
cheerful demeanor and rejected his mother's advice that he abandon
politics and become a country squire at Hyde Park. Encouraged by Eleanor
and his dedicated political mentor, Louis McHenry Howe (1871-1936), he
resumed his career by nominating Alfred E. Smith for the presidency at the
Democratic convention in 1924 and again in 1928, when Smith won the
party's nomination. The Democratic party of the 1920s was deeply divided
between Protestant, rural voters, who favored Prohibition, and urban Roman
Catholics, who opposed it. Anxious to win the New York State electoral
vote, Smith persuaded Roosevelt to campaign for the governorship, given
the latter's strong upstate appeal. Roosevelt, deeply in debt and disabled
by polio, won a narrow victory, while Smith was defeated by Herbert
Hoover.
During two terms as governor of New York (1928-32), Roosevelt established
a reputation as a reforming progressive in the Theodore Roosevelt
tradition and as a champion of relief for impoverished upstate farmers.
His greatest struggle -- for control of the Saint Lawrence River
waterpower resource by the state rather than private utilities -- aimed at
providing cheaper electricity for the rural consumer. With the outbreak of
the Great Depression, he identified himself with the urban relief cause by
appointing Harry Hopkins to head the Temporary Emergency Relief
Administration. As the depression deepened, he assembled the "Brains
Trust," a group of faculty members from Columbia University, to formulate
with him a comprehensive program for resolving the economic collapse that
had begun in 1929. With the aid of a progressive-southern Democratic
coalition in 1932, Roosevelt won the party's presidential nomination, then
easily defeated Hoover in the national election.
Roosevelt's promise of "a new deal for the American people" foreshadowed a
revolutionary extension of federal power into the nation's everyday life.
His first three months in office, known as the Hundred Days, were marked
by innovative legislation originating in the executive branch. In a period
of massive unemployment (25 percent of the work force), a collapsed stock
market, thousands of bank closings for lack of liquidity, and agricultural
prices that had fallen below the cost of production, Congress, at
Roosevelt's request, passed a series of emergency measures calculated to
provide liquidity for banking institutions and relief for the individual
and to prevent business bankruptcy. Further, abandonment of the gold
standard in 1933 had the effect of devaluating the dollar in international
markets.
In addition to relief measures, such as creation of the Works Progress
Administration under the direction of Harry Hopkins, the New Deal aimed at
long-range economic solutions to problems stemming from World War I. The
farm depression, a result of overproduction, had begun in 1921 and sent
millions to the cities during the 1920s; Roosevelt regarded it as the root
cause of the economic collapse of the late 1920s. He responded with a
broad agricultural program framed by the Agricultural Adjustment Acts of
1933 and 1938. This legislation introduced production controls for certain
basic commodities, including corn, cotton, wheat, tobacco, and hogs, in
order to create a balance between supply and demand; it promoted
reforestation and conservation and provided subsidy payments for curtailed
planting; and it utilized the concept of an ever-normal granary, balancing
crop surplus against lean years. Creation of the Tennessee Valley
Authority in 1933 benefited one of the nation's most impoverished areas.
This multipurpose development included federal construction of dams to
harness cheap hydroelectric power, water management, improvement of
farming techniques and river navigation, and the construction of hospitals
and schools. New industries attracted by cheap electricity and labor
diversified the southern economy.
Although Roosevelt's ties to the city and organized labor were never
strong, many New Deal measures alienated the business community at the
same time they attracted the urban minorities and the labor movement into
the orbit of the Democratic party. The National Industrial Recovery Act
(NIRA, 1933) began as an industrial stabilization scheme designed to
eliminate cutthroat practices and maintain prices. Section 7a of the law,
which promoted labor unionization, alienated conservative businesspeople,
however. Strict securities-issuance and stock exchange regulation,
enforced by a newly created Securities and Exchange Commission,
intensified business opposition. Benefits provided by the Social Security
Act, by unemployment insurance legislation, and by the Fair Labor
Standards Act of 1938 attracted workers' support. In 1935 and 1936 the
traditional-minded U.S. Supreme Court struck at key New Deal measures by
declaring provisions of both the NIRA and the Agricultural Adjustment Act
unconstitutional.
After winning a resounding victory over Alfred M. Landon in the 1936
presidential election, Roosevelt tried to neutralize the Court by
proposing the appointment of new justices, but Congress rejected this
"court-packing" plan in 1937. In the ensuing years a congressional
coalition of conservative Republicans and Democrats, fearful of growing
federal spending in the 1937-38 depression and anxious to curtail
expansion of federal power into areas traditionally reserved to the
states, checked the New Deal's momentum. The imminence of war in Europe,
followed by U.S. involvement, drew attention away from the president's
domestic defeats and made possible his victories over Republican
candidates Wendell L. Willkie in 1940 and Thomas E. Dewey in 1944.
Roosevelt was a pragmatist in his diplomatic views in the interwar period.
Although he had been a supporter of Woodrow Wilson, he abandoned Wilson's
internationalist ideas when the country turned to isolationism in the
1920s. Then, in the late 1930s, spurred by Adolf Hitler's aggression in
Europe and Japanese expansionism in the Pacific, Roosevelt moved the
United States back toward engagement in world affairs. He was restrained,
however, by the persistence of strong isolationist sentiment among the
voters and by congressional passage of a series of neutrality laws
intended to prevent American involvement in a second world war. Roosevelt
won the contest when, alarmed by Germany's defeat of France in 1940,
Congress passed his lend-lease legislation to help Great Britain's
continued resistance to the Germans. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor
on December 7, 1941, brought the United States into the worldwide contest
on the side of Britain and the Soviet Union.
Roosevelt framed his diplomatic objectives as wartime leader in a series
of wartime conferences. In collaboration with Winston Churchill he
explained Anglo-American war aims in August 1941 in the form of the
Atlantic Charter. It denied territorial ambitions, favored self-government
and liberal international trade arrangements, and pledged freedom from
want and permanent security against aggression. At Casablanca, Morocco, in
January 1943, Roosevelt and Churchill insisted on Germany's unconditional
surrender as a means of preventing the enemy's future military resurgence.
The Québec Conference (August 1943) planned the Normandy invasion. At
Moscow (October 1943) the Allied foreign ministers approved in principle a
postwar organization for world security. Military strategy and the problem
of postwar Germany came under discussion at Cairo (November-December 1943)
and Québec (September 1944). Finally, at Yalta in the USSR (February
1945), Roosevelt, Churchill, and Joseph Stalin broached their plans for a
postwar world. In the process, Roosevelt pressed for admission of China to
the Allied councils as a major power, liberalization of international
trade as a means of preventing future wars, and creation of a United
Nations organization as a mechanism for preserving peace. He did not,
however, see the end of the war. He died of a cerebral hemorrhage.
Roosevelt's vision of a peaceful and stable postwar world foundered on
national ambition. Although he bypassed Churchill and a weakened Great
Britain to deal with Stalin at Yalta, it became apparent on the eve of his
death that Soviet ambitions included the occupation of eastern and central
Europe. His faith in the ability of the UN to keep the peace through the
collaboration of the former wartime Allies proved unworkable in the era of
the cold war.
An Ahnentafel for him is found on the Web in April, 2000 at
http://www.rootsweb.com/~rwguide/presidents/prez32.htm
[22877] http://www.rootsweb.com/~orgenweb/bios/jameshodgen.html offers: "James Hodgen, written by Nancy Prevost - James Hodgen, eleventh child of Robert Hodgen and his second wife Sarah LaRue, was born 18 Jan. 1795 in Hardin County, Kentucky. Both Robert and the extensive LaRue family had moved to Frederick County, Virginia, from Pennsylvania before the Revolutionary War. They knew the Boone family well, and it is said that Daniel Boone's brother Squire explored and secured their first land grants in the wilderness of Kentucky. On 3 Feb. 1783, Robert Hodgen claimed 10,000 acres under Treasury Warrant #14790 on the north side of Green River. In 1784 he moved his family there by flatboat down the Ohio River, and settled on Nolin Creek, in what was at first Nelson County. He was granted permission to build a mill on the Nolin River in 1788, as well as to operate a store and tavern. Many notable guests were entertained at Hodgen's ordinary, including the famous Frenchman Michaux in Jan. 1796, and the exiled Prince Louis Phillippe in Apr. 1797. After Hardin County was formed, Robert was appointed one of the first justices of the county court. He was elected to the state legislature in 1795, and became sheriff of Hardin County in 1800. He was also a deacon of the Severns Valley Baptist Church for many years. Among the neighbors of the Hodgens were Thomas and Nancy Lincoln, who had a home three miles south of the mill, where their son Abe was born on 12 Feb. 1809. One of the LaRue wives served as midwife, and in his younger years Abe spent many hours playing with the Hodgen children. Robert Hodgen died on 5 Feb. 1810. On 7 Feb. 1818 his widow and son John petitioned the Hardin County Court at Elizabethtown to have the town of Hodgenville established on his plantation. The town became the county seat when LaRue County was later created. Sarah (LaRue) Hodgen died 27 June 1825. James Hodgen was just 15 when his father died. He inherited 200 acres of land in Bullitt County, Kentucky, from his father's estate, but it is doubtful he ever lived there. On 1 Dec. 1825 he married a distant cousin, Deidamia McDonald, the daughter of John and Mary (LaRue) McDonald. They had two children born in Hardin County, and about 1828 moved to Warren County, Illinois. Five more children were born there, and in March 1850, Deidamia died of consumption. James married again on 12 Dec. 1852 to Mrs. Malinda (Shirley) Boydston, a widow with four young children. Malinda was born 27 Nov. 1806 Kentucky, the daughter of Daniel E. and June (Allen) Shirley, and had married first as his second wife, John Gardner Boydston. Her step-daughter married James Hodgen's oldest son the following spring, and shortly afterward the families set off for Oregon. Partway across the plains, the company they were travelling with merged with the Washburn train for mutual protection. Although they had no serious trouble themselves, they heard that a party just two days ahead of them had been surrounded by a band of six hundred Indians. A young man in that company had shot an Indian woman while out hunting, and the company was compelled to turn him over to the Indians, who reportedly "skinned him alive" before their very eyes. The Hodgens arrived at the Umatilla Agency on 20 Sep. 1853. On 12 June 1854, James and Malinda settled on a donation claim (Oregon City #2588) in Linn County, several of their children settling nearby. They resided near Springfield, Lane County, at the time of the 1860 and 1870 censuses, James listed as a ferryman on the former and a farmer on the latter. He died there in June 1871. Malinda survived him until 9 Nov. 1891, when she died at Colfax, Whitman County, Washington."
[27547]
[S422]
GEDCOM File : BOYDSTON.ged
_Daniel WARDWELL _______+
| (1734 - 1803) m 1755
_Samuel WARDWELL ______|_Sarah STAPLES _________
| (1774 - 1858)
_Eliakim WARDWELL ___|
| (1802 - 1867) m 1825|
| | _Aaron BANKS ___________+
| | | (1738 - 1823) m 1764
| |_Mary ("Polly") BANKS _|_Mary PERKINS __________
| (1772 - 1862) (1743 - 1833)
_Jeremiah WARDWELL __|
| (1827 - 1908) m 1849|
| | ________________________
| | |
| | _______________________|________________________
| | |
| |_Juliet DUNBAR ______|
| (1810 - 1827) m 1825|
| | ________________________
| | |
| |_______________________|________________________
|
|
|--Abby WARDWELL
| (.... - 1892)
| _James (Sr.) LEACH _____
| | (1738 - 1822) m 1761
| _Obed LEACH ___________|_Alice FREEMAN _________
| | m 1801 (1739 - 1824)
| _Hiram LEACH ________|
| | (1803 - 1891) m 1829|
| | | _Israel BARTLETT _______+
| | | | (1737 - ....)
| | |_Mary BARTLETT ________|________________________
| | (1783 - 1866) m 1801
|_Julia LEACH ________|
(1830 - 1907) m 1849|
| _Peletiah LEACH ________
| | (1757 - 1838)
| _John LEACH ___________|_Mary GRINDLE __________
| | (1783 - 1856) m 1806 (1765 - 1839)
|_Abigail LEACH ______|
(.... - 1832) m 1829|
| _Daniel (Jr.) WARDWELL _+
| | (1760 - 1844) m 1778
|_Abigail WARDWELL _____|_Mary HUTCHINS _________
(1789 - 1855) m 1806 (1770 - 1835)