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Matches 2551 to 2600 of 3058

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2551 Raymond Roots lists birthdate of 18 Aug 1865 Jessie Clide RAYMOND
 
2552 She is buried in Upper Sackville Cemetery. Allison READ
 
2553 He was the son of William and Jemima FINNEY READ. Eliphalet READ
 
2554 1880 census for son William lists an age with a birth year of 1815. Elizabeth READ
 
2555 age 55 Elizabeth READ
 
2556 age 65, father b. Mass, mother b. New Brunswick Elizabeth READ
 
2557 Here name has also been spelled REID, but her tombstone says READ. Elizabeth READ
 
2558 He is buried in East Ferry Cemetery. Isabelle REDDING
 
2559 He is buried in Evergreen Cemetery. Omar Murrell Clinton REESE
 
2560 He was the son of Marion and Martha CONANT REESE. (Reese) Omar Murrell Clinton REESE
 
2561 She was the daughter of William and Marion ROULEY RICHARDS. [Dave Johnson] Mabel RICHARDS
 
2562 She was the daughter of Fred and Fern ABBOT RICHARDSON. Huldur RICHARDSON
 
2563 She was the daughter of Chipman and Emma SNOWDON RICHARDSON. Minnie May RICHARDSON
 
2564 She was the daughter of George and Sarah GOFF RIDLEY. Mary Mahala RIDLEY
 
2565 She is buried in Pleasant Hill Cemetery. Ada M. ROBBINS
 
2566 Widower, living with dau, Ermina. Charles ROBBINS
 
2567 He is buried in Pleasant Hill Cemetery. George Atwell ROBBINS
 
2568 She is buried in Pleasant Hill Cemetery. Mabel Evelyn ROBBINS
 
2569 He is buried in Pleasant Hill Cemetery. Norman Atwell ROBBINS
 
2570 age 32 Julia ROBINSON
 
2571 Age 40, father b. VT, mother b. NY Julia ROBINSON
 
2572 Upon her death in April 1899, Julia Robinson Henika bequeathed two thousand dollars to the Wayland Ladies Library Association for construction of a library building. Her husband George H. Henika, and mother, Mary Forbes, later donated additional funds toward its construction. Grand Rapids architect Fred H. Eely designed the building, which the Wayland Globe newspaper predicted would be "A Very Pretty and Modern Affair." The picturesque library opened in the spring of 1900. Although domestic in scale, the building gleans an impressive Richardsonian quality from the random ashlar fieldstone and Eely's design. The stone used in construction was gathered from a local farm. Julia ROBINSON
 
2573 She left everything to her son Abraham and made him her sole executor. Dirkje ROELOFSE
 
2574 She was on the tax list of Flatlands, Sept 1676 (Doc. Hist. N.Y., Vol I., 489; Vol IV., 156), also on Sept 25, 1683 (vol II, 496). (Gen of Westervelt) Dirkje ROELOFSE
 
2575 He is buried at Pine Bank Cemetery. Chauncey ROGERS
 
2576 Killed as a pilot in WWI. Newton Chauncey ROGERS
 
2577 He was a trucker and killed in a traffic accident. Glenn Davis ROLFE
 
2578 He was first married to Agnes Ellison and had two children by her: Homer Graves and Clara Cornelia. Robert ROLFE
 
2579 She is buried in the Jordan cemetery. Jessie Mae ROUSE
 
2580 He is buried in Pleasant Hill Cemetery. Francis Goodwin RUGGLES
 
2581 St. Clair was the son of Benjamin Henry and Sophia RICE RUGGLES. St. Clair RUGGLES
 
2582 She was the daughter of Thomas and Rachel PHLLIPS RUNYAN. Maude Mary RUNYAN
 
2583 He is not listed as part of the family in the 1880 census. It's possible that he could be living elsewhere as a farm hand or laborer. Eugene L. RUSSELL
 
2584 She was the daughter of John J. and Elizabeth McNEIL RUSSELL. Hannah RUSSELL
 
2585 Duane changed his last name to RYAN in Aug 1966 Duane Darrell RYAN
 
2586 He was the son of Charles and Annie BROOKS SABEAN. George SABEAN
 
2587 SACKET, AUGUSTUS, founder of Sackets Harbor, N. Y.; b. in N. Y. City, Nov. 10, 1769; became a lawyer; purchased a tract in Houndsfield, N. Y., and settled on Lake Ontario in 1801; was first collector of the dist. of S. H., but was removed for cause; was first judge of Jeff. co. from 1805 to 1810, and in 1812 removed to Jamaica, N. Y., and thence to Meadville, Pa.; in 1820 went to Rutherford co., N. C.; returned to the St. Lawrence where he claimed some islands, and in 1827 removed to Newburg, N. Y.; d. at Albany, April 29, 1827. (Hough's Hist. Jeff. Co., N. Y., p. 451.) [Tinley] Augustus SACKETT
 
2588 Chestnut lists death date of 26 Jul 1762. Hannah SACKETT
 
2589 Early in life he became an ardent abolitionist and his house in Sullivan County was at one time a station on the so called Under Ground Railway, leading from the South to Canada. His removal from Sullivan County, N. Y., to Carbon County, was in 1835, and while residing there he built a number of mills for his brother in law, Isaac Gould. After remaining in Carbon County a few years he returned to his home in Sullivan County, and for some years held the offices of school director and assessor of his town. His removal to Allegan County,Mich., was in the year 1854. He there built several large mills and served his town as Justice of the Peace and Postmaster. A short time before his death he returned to Pennsylvania. James W. SACKETT
 
2590 She was the daughter of James and Margaret MUSTARD SACKETT. Jean Frances SACKETT
 
2591 Lawyer. Lived in New Windsor, Orange (NY) and New Cornwall John SACKETT
 
2592 Judge Joseph Sackett, second son of Captain Joseph and his wife Elizabeth Betts, was born at English Kills, Newtown, Long Island, N.Y. in the month of September 1680. Judge Sackett resided during the greater part of his life at English Kills. [Tinley]

Colonial land papers show that on Jan. 11, 1727, a patent was duly issued to Nathaniel Hazzard and Joseph Sackett for 4,000 acres in adjoining town of Blooming Grove; that on July 7, 1736, a patent for additional plots containing 2,000 acres, located near that last mentioned, was issued to Joseph Sackett, Jr., and that on Sept. 1, 1737, a third patent for another 2,000 acres in same vicinity was issued to Joseph Sackett. Judge Joseph Sackett never moved to New Windsor, N.Y. [Tinley] 
Joseph SACKETT
 
2593 In 1724 he and his brother-in-law, John Alsop, purchased the central portion of the "Chambers Southerland Patent," in the Town of New Windsor [ed- N.Y.], on the west shore of the Hudson River. There they built a wharf,storehouse and established a sloop freight and passenger line, which ran at stated intervals to and from New York City. They also started and maintained for a number of years a flat-boat ferry at that place, which carried horses and cattle, as well as human beings to and from a point near what afterwards became Fishkill Landing, on the opposite shore. This ferry, which was the first of its kind established on the central Hudson, was extensively patronized previous to the Revolution. Joseph SACKETT
 
2594 Lived in New Windsor and Orange, New York; and in New York City. Previous to or immediately after the date of his marriage he became engaged in mercantile business in New York City, to which for several years he gave considerable attention -- dividing his time between that and the practice of his profession. Meantime his father, Judge Joseph Sackett, and his father-in-law, Samuel Clowes, acquired title to several extensive tracts of fertile land in the vacated Capt. John Evans patent, on the west bank of the Hudson River and in the County of Orange, N. Y. This land they had surveyed and plotted into small farms and village lots, which they disposed of to incoming settlers. Evidently this lucrative land business on the Hudson possessed for the young lawyer and merchant a controlling attraction, for about the year 1741, he relinquished all interest in his promising mercantile venture to his younger brothers and removed with his family to Orange County. There, in addition to looking after his father's real estate interests, he soon became engaged in extensive transactions on his own appointed, by Governor George Clinton, High Sheriff of Orange County, which office he retained by consecutive reappointments through the administrations of Governors Danvers, Osborn, De Lancy, and Sir Charles Hardy, to the year 1757, when he resigned said office, removed his family to Long Island and took up anew the practice of his profession in New York City.

In 1749 a land company, composed of Joseph Sackett, Jr., his brother John Sackett, and eight other men of local prominence, was organized under the title of "The Proprietors of New Windsor." To this company the Sacketts transferred all of their New Windsor real estate except the wharf and storehouse property. The "Proprietors" laid out the entire unimproved portion of their purchase in village lots and township plots, and a considerable number of new dwellings were added to the settlement. [Tinley] 
Joseph SACKETT
 
2595 Will: In the name of God, Amen, "March 31, in the year of our Beloved Lord Christ 1755." I, JOSEPH SACKETT, of Newtown, in Queens County, being in perfect health. My executors are to pay all debts "and to clear my lands that is mortgaged in the Loan Office at Jamaica, in Queens County." My executors are to sell all my lands lying in the Patent of Goshen, in Orange County, except the land that is to be laid out at Wawayanda or other lands belonging to the Patent, "And a Round Hill, so called, and what land belongs to me joining to the same, It lyeth between the land of Hezekiah Howell and Thomas Coleman, And what land I have lying between a brook called Perrys and a hill called Cor. Matthews, on said hill," Reserving in all the lands they sell 3/4 of all mines and minerals, with privilege to dig and carry off the same and to erect buildings for that use. They are also to sell all my lands in New Jersey, reserving the same privileges, and they are also to sell all my lands and meadows in Newtown, except what I shall give to my wife and my son William. I leave to my wife Hannah 1/2 of the lands and buildings hereafter named during her widowhood, and the other half to my son William, viz., my mansion house and all the buildings, and the lot of ground they stand on, and all my lands on the east and south sides of the road that leadeth from Newtown to New York ferry, except a lot I bought of Johanes Colver, And all my lands and meadows lying on the west side of said road as far as the lower end of Smith's Island, And all my land and swamp at a place called Juniper Swamp, And a piece of upland and fresh meadow bounded east by Thomas Morel, north by the middle ditch, west by a ditch that runs through my meadow, and so straight to the upland, and south by a road or piece of meadow joining to John Ketcham and Rapalye and the creek above Coe's mill. And after my wife's death my son William is to have the whole, and he is to pay to his brother Thomas and his sister, Elizabeth Fish, each œ100. I leave to my sons Thomas and William all my wearing clothing. To my son Joseph a silver-headed cane. To my daughter, Elizabeth Fish, her choice of my negro girls. To my son William a negro boy. I leave to my wife Hannah 1/2 of the rest of movable estate, and the remainder to be sold to pay debts. "I leave to my 6 sons, Joseph, John, James, Samuel, Thomas, and William, a Hill of land called the Round Hill, lying between the land of Hezekiah Howell and Thomas Coleman (in Orange County), Also a piece of land lying between the brook called Perrys brook, on a hill called Cor. Matthews, but on condition that if there be any mines or minerals on said lands, or on the lands I have sold in New York or West Jersey, they shall pay to my daughter, Hannah Whitehead, 1/13 of the clear profit, and also pay to Elizabeth Fish and to the children of my daughter, Frances Blackwell, and to the children of my deceased daughter, Deborah Stringham, and to my wife, 2/13. I leave to my sons James, Thomas, and William all my right in Wawayanda Patent, except what has been laid out. After paying all debts, all the rest of the money is to be paid my children, Thomas, Samuel, Hannah Whitehead, and Elizabeth Fish. If my son William dies without issue, then his lands to go to the rest of my children. "My executors are to sell so much cleared land joining the lot I bought of Johanes Colver as will make it 40 acres with that lot, and they are also to sell all my upland and fresh meadows joining to Thomas Morell at the main ditch and the road." I make my wife Hannah and my sons executors. Witnesses, Thomas Way, Richard Hallett, Jr., James Way, Jr. Proved in New York, October 22, 1755. Note: Page 317 - 52 Joseph SACKETT
 
2596 In Weygant's book on page 138-141, #463 Nathaniel Sackett 1768-1854, of Dutchess County, N. Y., and Butler County, Ohio, son of (148) Hon. Nathaniel and Mary Rogers Sackett, was married in 1792, to Elisabeth Terboss, daughter of Jacob Terboss, Jr. and his wife Sarah Dubois.

There is an account of him moving from NY. to Cincinnati and then joining with Mr Piatt in the purchase of an extensive tract at what was then called Baker's hill in Butler Co.

In a transcription of a letter written by him to his brother Samuel dated Ohio, March 12, 1820 he extoles the virtues of the fertile land and then he says: "I have laid out a town on my farm and sold a number of lots. There are already 20 houses upand two stores and two taverns, and there is a Presbyterian Meeting-house in sight. I have called it Monroe..." -- From Sackett Rootsweb list. [Ed Page] 
Nathaniel SACKETT
 
2597 Chestnut and Tinley list a death date of 1726. Richard SACKETT
 
2598 He served in the 4th NY Regiment. Samuel SACKETT
 
2599 He was the son of Joseph and Mercy WHITEHEAD SACKETT.

In 1735 Mr. and Mrs. Sackett took up their residence in Orange County, NY. The young couple resided during the greater part of the first eight years of their wedded life at the foot of Storm King Mountain, near the village of Cornwall. Samuel served as minister and missionary in Orange & Westchester Counties of New York and Hartford, CT.
At the outbreak of the Revolution his congregation and family was divided. Hannah's husband and family were staunch Tories while her brothers fought with the colonists. Crompond, where Samuel lived & preached, was about midway of the distance between the outposts of the opposing armies. He preached whenever occasion offered, not concealing the fact that his sympathies were with those of his countrymen who had determined to throw off the galling yoke of oppression. In July, 1779, the meeting house at Crompond, in which his flock assembled for worship, was destroyed by fire kindled by a body of British cavalry sent out for that especial purpose. [Tinsley] 
Samuel SACKETT
 
2600 Will: In the name of God, Amen. I, SAMUEL SACKET, of Jamaica, in Queens County, Gentleman, being sick. I leave to my wife Mary the use of all household furniture, lands, negroes, horse and chair, two best cows, with pasturing and firewood for two fires, if she lives in the country. If she chooses to live in the city, I leave her the use of the back part of my house in New York, in Queen street, with the back room, two chambers and loft and kitchen. If she choose to live in the country, I leave her œ50 a year and one fifth of the income of estate. I leave to my oldest son, Samuel, œ700. To my son Richard œ500. To my son Augustus œ500, when of age. My executors are to allow to my wife œ50 for each of my children, yearly, so long as they live with her, as compensation for their meat, drink, washing, clothing and education. And when they are of suitable age, they are to be put to callings, as my executors may think most suitable. My executors are to sell all stock and farming utensils. After the death of my wife, I leave all to my children, Samuel, Richard, Augustus, and Sophia. I make my relation, Captain Thomas Laurence, of Newtown, and my friends, James Desbrosses, of New York, and Christopher Smith and Cary Ludlow, of Jamaica, executors. Dated September 26, 1780. Witnesses, Jacob Sharpe, Charles Welling, Samuel Welling. Proved, October 25, 1780. Note: Page 22.--52 Samuel SACKETT
 

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