_Henry ARCHER _______+
| (1719 - ....) m 1750
_John (Sr.) ARCHER __|_Mary WIGLEY ________
| (1752 - 1830) m 1778 (1729 - ....)
_Henry Gates ARCHER _______|
| (1786 - 1867) m 1810 |
| | _William A. TUPPER __+
| | | (1735 - 1802) m 1755
| |_Elizabeth TUPPER ___|_Margaret GATES _____
| (1758 - 1830) m 1778 (1730 - ....)
_John Nye ARCHER ____|
| (1811 - 1860) m 1833|
| | _Robert NEWCOMB _____+
| | | (1722 - 1802) m 1744
| | _John NEWCOMB _______|_Mary YOUNG _________
| | | (1751 - ....) m 1776
| |_Sarah NEWCOMB ____________|
| (1791 - 1860) m 1810 |
| | _Jonathan CHASE _____+
| | | (1723 - 1799) m 1745
| |_Anne CHASE _________|_Joanna MORSE _______
| (1754 - 1814) m 1776 (1726 - 1807)
_Francis Marion ARCHER _|
| (1838 - 1918) |
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| | | (1784 - 1882) m 1808 |
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| |_Abigail HUGHES _____|
| (1812 - 1892) m 1833|
| | _John SMITH _________+
| | | (1722 - 1790)
| | _Hosea SMITH ________|_Mary HANMER ________
| | | (1768 - 1847) m 1791 (1729 - 1779)
| |_Abigail SMITH ____________|
| (1794 - 1875) m 1808 |
| | _Zadock HERSEY ______+
| | | (1753 - 1850) m 1775
| |_Abigail HERSEY _____|_Abigail LEWIS ______
| (1776 - 1851) m 1791 (1754 - ....)
|
|--Bertram Leroy ARCHER
| (1885 - 1966)
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| _John Owen HUGHES _________|
| | (1784 - 1882) m 1808 |
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| _John HUGHES ________|
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| | | _John SMITH _________+
| | | | (1722 - 1790)
| | | _Hosea SMITH ________|_Mary HANMER ________
| | | | (1768 - 1847) m 1791 (1729 - 1779)
| | |_Abigail SMITH ____________|
| | (1794 - 1875) m 1808 |
| | | _Zadock HERSEY ______+
| | | | (1753 - 1850) m 1775
| | |_Abigail HERSEY _____|_Abigail LEWIS ______
| | (1776 - 1851) m 1791 (1754 - ....)
|_Anna C. HUGHES ________|
(1945 - 1907) |
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| _William Owen Denny CLARK _|
| | (1769 - 1845) m 1802 |
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|_Mary CLARK _________|
(.... - 1882) |
| _Isaiah HERSEY ______+
| | (1720 - 1803) m 1743
| _Zadock HERSEY ______|_Margaret SPRAGUE ___
| | (1753 - 1850) m 1775 (1722 - 1809)
|_Hannah ("Annie") HERSEY __|
(1785 - 1828) m 1802 |
| _____________________
| |
|_Abigail LEWIS ______|_____________________
(1754 - ....) m 1775
_______________________
|
_Andrew S. BOWDEN _______|_______________________
| (1798 - 1882)
_Elbridge C. BOWDEN ________|
| (1823 - 1899) |
| | _______________________
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| |_________________________|_______________________
|
_John Everett BOWDEN _____|
| (1856 - 1932) |
| | _Isaac SNOW ___________+
| | | (1768 - 1848) m 1791
| | _John Paine SNOW ________|_Mary ("Polly") PAINE _
| | | (1801 - 1881) m 1823 (1776 - 1850)
| |_Emily SNOW ________________|
| (1828 - 1905) |
| | _Peletiah TAPLEY ______+
| | | (1757 - 1834) m 1783
| |_Mary TAPLEY ____________|_Sally STOVER _________
| (1801 - 1887) m 1823 (1766 - 1823)
_Everett J. BOWDEN __|
| (1878 - 1957) m 1899|
| | _______________________
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| |_Ida Pleaner JUDGE _______|
| |
| | _______________________
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| |____________________________|
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| |_________________________|_______________________
|
|
|--Horace Gerald BOWDEN
| (1909 - 1988)
| _Samuel WESCOTT _______+
| | (1736 - ....) m 1762
| _Andrew WESCOTT _________|_Olive PERKINS ________
| | (1768 - 1833) m 1790 (1738 - ....)
| _Samuel WESCOTT ____________|
| | (1802 - 1866) m 1834 |
| | | _Isaac PERKINS ________+
| | | | (1746 - ....) m 1770
| | |_Mary PERKINS ___________|_Olive WEBBER _________
| | (1772 - 1840) m 1790 (1752 - 1835)
| _Charles Everett WESCOTT _|
| | (1844 - 1906) m 1867 |
| | | _Joshua GRINDLE _______+
| | | | (.... - 1819) m 1789
| | | _Stephen GRINDLE ________|_Anna LOWELL __________
| | | | (1781 - 1855) m 1806 (1746 - 1819)
| | |_Harriet Elizabeth GRINDLE _|
| | (1807 - 1854) m 1834 |
| | | _______________________
| | | |
| | |_Betsy JOHNSON __________|_______________________
| | (.... - 1819) m 1806
|_Ada Mary WESCOTT ___|
(1875 - 1939) m 1899|
| _______________________
| |
| _Tobias ROBERTS _________|_______________________
| | (1789 - 1838)
| _Tobias ROBERTS ____________|
| | (1818 - ....) m 1844 |
| | | _______________________
| | | |
| | |_Sarah ("Sally") CONDON _|_______________________
| | (1793 - 1855)
|_Mary G. ROBERTS _________|
(1843 - ....) m 1867 |
| _Joseph GRAY __________+
| | (1767 - 1844) m 1797
| _Avery GRAY _____________|_Anna GRINDLE _________
| | (1800 - 1890) m 1820 (1779 - 1847)
|_Rachel C. GRAY ____________|
(1824 - 1874) m 1844 |
| _Richard CONDON _______
| | (1774 - 1848)
|_Mary CONDON ____________|_Rachel B. FOSTER _____
(1799 - 1875) m 1820 (1775 - 1865)
[51030] Find A Grave memorial 143741390 states Horace d. in Berwick, York Co., ME.
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| (1593 - ....) m 1618|
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_William COOPER _____|
| (.... - 1649) m 1645|
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| |_Frances DE SOURBYE _|
| m 1618 |
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|--William COOPER
| (1649 - 1739)
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|_Elizabeth QUINEY ___|
m 1645 |
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[40137] An unverified Cooper file in Ancestry.com in 2015 offers: "When William Cooper Cowper Couper Coupare Coper was born on August 16, 1649, in Snape, Yorkshire, his father, William, was 24 and his mother, Elizabeth, was 21. He was married three times and had five sons and four daughters. He died on February 3, 1709, in Buckingham, Pennsylvania, at the age of 59, and was buried in Fallsington, Pennsylvania . . . . When Thomasine/Thomazine Porter was born about 1656, in Low Ellington, Yorkshire, her father, Patrobus, was 25 and her mother, Thomazinae, was 23 . . . . She died about 1698, in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, at the age of 42."
[22645] The LDS Church's unverified Ancestral File (9TKZ-9B) provides descent of John from Ralph Danvers, b. ca. 1061, of Bourton, Oxfordshire.
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_Richard DE GUBION __|
| (1146 - ....) |
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|--Richard DE GUBION
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|_Beatrice LUCELLES __|
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[44961] Richard and Alice are from the unverified file in 2019 at https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gubion-2 which offers further information.
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_Robert HUCKINS _____|
| (1708 - ....) m 1728|
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_Isaac HUCKINS ______|
| (1747 - 1818) m 1773|
| | __
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| |_Meribah JACKSON ____|
| m 1728 |
| | __
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_James HUCKINS ______|
| (1783 - ....) |
| | __
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| |_Lydia CLAY _________|
| (1749 - ....) m 1773|
| | __
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| |__|__
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|--Henry Otis HUCKINS
| (1819 - 1903)
| __
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|_Fanny ROBINSON _____|
(1787 - 1846) |
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[27137] The 18 July 1860 census of Lubec, Washington Co., ME lists the family: Otis (41, farmer, b. in ME), Mary (40, b. in ME) and children (all b. in ME): Leander (10), Henry O. (8), Sanford (6) - also in the household: Charles O. Mahar (17) and Robert Mahar (15). The LDS Church's unverified IGI file reports that Otis is son of James Huckins and Fanny Robinson, and that Fanny Robinson was b. 1788 in Lubec, ME, d. in March 1846, and m. 13 Aug 1806. The unverified Stein FamilyTree in Ancestry.com in 2013 states James Huckins was b. 4 Aug 1789 in Chichester, Hillsborough Co., NH and d. 27 Oct 1868 in Lubec. Ancestry.com offers: "Huckins Name Meaning - English: patronymic from a pet form of Hugh."
[43246] Find A Grave Memorial 62242583 offers: "died at age 71y. birth year is estimate; h/o 1st Sarah Sylvester. 2nd Lurana 1850 children with Sarah: George D age 16, Julia D 14, Charles H 10, John W 20."
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_Sir John SEYMOUR ___|
| (1476 - 1536) |
| | ______________________________
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| | ______________________|______________________________
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| | _______________________|
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| | | |______________________|______________________________
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| |______________________|______________________________
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|
|--Thomas Seymour, Baron of SUDELEY
| (1506 - 1549)
| _John WENTWORTH ______________
| |
| _Sir Roger WENTWORTH _|_Agnes DRONSFIELD ____________
| | (.... - 1452) m 1423 (.... - 1437)
| _Sir Philip WENTWORTH _|
| | (.... - 1464) m 1447 |
| | | _Philip LE DESPENCER _________+
| | | | (1364 - 1424)
| | |_Margery DESPENSER ___|_Elizabeth DE TIBETOT ________
| | (1400 - 1478) m 1423 (1370 - 1424)
| _Henry WENTWORTH ____|
| | |
| | | _Thomas DE CLIFFORD __________+
| | | | (.... - 1391)
| | | _John DE CLIFFORD ____|_Elizabeth DE ROOS ___________
| | | | (1388 - 1422) (.... - 1424)
| | |_Mary CLIFFORD ________|
| | (.... - 1478) m 1447 |
| | | _Sir Henry ("Hotspur") PERCY _+
| | | | (1364 - 1403) m 1379
| | |_Elizabeth PERCY _____|_Elizabeth MORTIMER __________
| | (.... - 1437) (1371 - 1417)
|_Margaret WENTWORTH _|
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| | |______________________|______________________________
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|_Anne SAY ___________|
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Thomas commanded the English army in the Netherlands in 1543 and was Lord High Admiral of England (1547 to 1549). His political intrigues led to his execution for treason and thus contributed to the downfall in 1549 of his elder brother, Edward Seymour, duke of Somerset, who was Lord Protector (regent) for the young king Edward VI.
The Bhsnell Family Genealogy offers: "Thomas spent his childhood in Wulfhall, outside Savernake Forest, in Wiltshire. Historian David Starkey said that Thomas was 'tall, well-built and with a dashing beard and auburn hair, he was irresistible to women'. A prominent Tudor courtier, Sir Nicholas Throckmorton, described Thomas Seymour as 'hardy, wise and liberal...fierce in courage, courtly in fashion, in personage stately, in voice magnificent, but somewhat empty of matter'.
The Seymour family's power grew during Henry VIII's marriage to Anne Boleyn. Sir John had succeeded in gaining a position for his daughter Jane, as a Lady in waiting. Anne Boleyn failed to have a son which gave the Seymour brothers an opportunity to push Jane in the King's way. Henry married Jane eleven days after Anne's execution in May 1536. However, it was Edward who received the most benefits from his sister's marriage to the King. Historians have speculated whether a division between Edward and Thomas began then as unsurprisingly Thomas began to resent his brother and the good relationship between them began to dissolve. Thomas was however made Lord High Admiral. Thomas's jealousy of his brother consumed him more than any other emotion.
In 1543 John Nevill, 3rd Baron Latymer, died leaving a wealthy widow, formerly Catherine Parr. An attachment grew between Catherine and Thomas. Unfortunately for Thomas, Henry VIII also became interested in Catherine, and later married her, having been impressed with her dignity and intelligence. Envious of Seymour's attentions to Catherine, the king subsequently sent Thomas away on a diplomatic mission to the Netherlands.
Henry VIII died in January 1547, leaving Catherine as one of the wealthiest women in England. Thomas had been made Master-General of the Ordnance in 1544 and Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports in 1545. He returned to court a few months before Henry's death and saw his brother Edward become Lord Protector of England, and in effect, ruler of the realm. After all, the Seymour brothers were uncles to Henry VIII's young son and successor, the future (short-lived) Edward VI of England. As part of a 'unfulfilled gifts clause' left unmentioned in Henry's will, Thomas was granted the title Baron Seymour of Sudeley. Thomas' fervent desire was to unseat and replace his brother as Lord Protector.
Though Thomas Seymour's name had been linked to Mary Howard, Duchess of Richmond, he was still unmarried at the time of the king's death. Possibly Thomas schemed to marry either Princess Mary or Princess Elizabeth, but whatever the truth, neither panned out. However, he did marry Catherine in secret in late April of 1547. Many viewed the marriage as occurring too quickly after the King's death. Anne Stanhope, Somerset's proud wife, disliked Catherine and Thomas and began to turn many people in court against them. To further show her hatred, Anne kept the Queen's jewels, which by right were Catherine's. Many viewed Thomas's marriage to Catherine as an example of his ambition.
Princess Elizabeth, later Elizabeth I of England, was Catherine's ward and immediately after her father's death she began to live with her stepmother in Chelsea. Therefore, Thomas had the guardianship of Elizabeth and also Lady Jane Grey. Thomas, who was overly ambitious, started to make advances toward Elizabeth. The loud and boisterous Seymour began to sneak into 'the Lady Elizabeth's chamber before she was ready, and sometimes before she did rise; and if she were up he would bid her good morrow and ask how she did, and strike her upon the back or on the buttocks familiarly....' As gossip began to spread, Kat Ashley, Elizabeth's governess, implored Seymour to quit his bedroom antics with the princess. Indignant, Thomas retorted, 'By God's precious soul, I mean no evil, and I will not leave it!' Strange episodes followed as Catherine began to join her husband in his bizarre escapades with Elizabeth, once joining her husband in tickling the princess in bed and on another occasion holding Elizabeth still as her black dress was cut by Thomas's sword into 'a hundred pieces.' Although the governess of Princess Elizabeth at one time averred that the Queen had found Elizabeth in Seymour's arms, she later withdrew the story. Catherine nevertheless tried to save Elizabeth's reputation by sending her away to the house of Anthony Denny in Hertfordshire. However when Catherine died in childbirth in August 1548, Thomas renewed his attentions toward the Princess.
Thomas started to bribe a man called John Fowler, one of King Edward VI's closest servants. Fowler told Thomas that the King frequently complained about the lack of pocket money he received. So Thomas smuggled money to the King. Thomas also began to voice open disapproval of his brother's administration skills. As Lord High Admiral, he was able to control the English navy and he openly asked people for support in case of a coup. As admiral he encouraged piracy, allowing pirates safe passage in exchange for shares of their booty. He was completely indiscreet.
Thomas also planned to finance the coup by bribing the vice-treasurer of the Bristol Mint, Sir William Sharington. Sharington was responsible for debasing the coinage in Bristol and he had been fiddling the account books and keeping the majority of the profit. Thomas found out and blackmailed him.
Thomas's downfall
Someone informed the council of Thomas's activities and by the end of 1548 everyone knew of his plans. The Bristol Mint was investigated and Sharington revealed all. Somerset attempted to have his brother pardoned and summoned a meeting with the council that Thomas could attend and explain his actions. However Thomas did not attend and developed a plan to kidnap the King.
On the night of the 16th of January, Thomas broke into the King's apartments at Hampton Court Palace. He entered the privy garden and awoke one of the King's pet spaniels. The guards arrested Thomas and he was sent to the Tower of London. On 18th January 1549, the council sent agents to question everyone around Thomas, including Princess Elizabeth.
On 22nd February 1549, the council officially accused him of thirty-three charges of treason. Somerset delayed signing the death warrant so the council, led by Dudley, went to Edward VI for his signature. On 20th March, Seymour was executed at the Tower, dying 'dangerously, irksomely and horribly.' Thomas's daughter by Catherine, Mary Seymour, was placed in the care of the Duchess of Suffolk, Catherine Brandon. Catherine's daughter Mary should have been a wealthy woman, but her mother had left her fortune to her husband. When Thomas was executed, the crown confiscated everything he had, including Catherine's bequest. The child appears to have died around the age of two, when she disappears from historical record. The title 'Baron of Sudeley' passed to Catherine's brother, William Parr.
It is falsely alleged that upon hearing of his death Princess Elizabeth said, 'Today died a man with much wit and not much judgment.' After almost being seduced by Thomas Seymour, Elizabeth learned to be much more careful in her interactions with men."