__ | __|__ | __| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | __| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _John BROWNSON ______| | (1548 - 1623) | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | | __| | | | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | | |__|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | | |--Roger BROWNSON | (1576 - 1635) | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | __|__ | | | | | | |__| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |__| | | __ | | | __|__ | | |__| | | __ | | |__|__
A John Conner is listed as head of household in both Penobscot and Castine, Hancock Co., ME in the 1830 federal census. A John D. Conner is in the 1830 census in Brooksville, Hancock Co., ME. A John Connar [sic] is head of household in the 1800 census in Penobscot.
John's parents are not known. In the 18th century there was a large family of Conners at Connerville, Co. Cork, Ireland. There is a family legend that John's Conner ancestor was king of Ireland for a day. [A William Con(n)er arrived at Plymouth, Mass. in 1621 on the "Fortune" & received a share in the 1623 land division, but is not in the 1627 cattle division nor elsewhere in colony records. We have no reason to suppose that John descends from him, but the name is curious.] Our John D. Conner was one of the first of 23 settlers in Majabigwaduce [area of Penobscot and Castine; Castine and Brooksville were later taken from the town(ship) of Penobscot]; John resided on the Joseph Benney property in 1761 and in 1766 is listed as having homesteaded 140 acres in present-day Penobscot with 60 rods fronting the Bagaduce River (lot 67 on Peters' 1787 survey). The farm is 1.1 miles from the Castine town line on Dunbar Road (the road to Penobscot).
The surnames Conner, Conners, Connor, Connors as well as O'Conner and O'Connor are descendants of six Irish O'Connor septs dating from the second century: O'Conor of Coromroe, Co. Clare; O'Connor, Kerry, Chief of the Munster; O'Connor Foley of Co. Offaly; O'Connor Kennogh of Ulster; O'Conor Don and O'Conor Ros in Connacht. The final two kings of Ireland were of the Connacht O'Conors, Turlough O'Connor (1088-1156) and Roderick O'Connor (1116-1198). Exiled persons of this surname have established their families in France, Spain, Austria and America. In Ireland the surname is the 9th most prevalent. The name (in Irish, Ó Conchobhair) means Hero or Champion.
"Saxons, Viking, and Celts: The Genetic Roots of Britain and Ireland,"" Bryan Sykes (NY: W. W. Norton & Co., 2006), investigates genetic roots and deduces that a high proportion of men with surnames such as O'Connor [Conner ?] strongly indicates direct descent from Niall of the Nine Hostages (Niall Noigialach), and states (p. 215) "In the parts of Ireland most strongly associated with the Ui Neill, mainly in the north-west, the proportion of these Y-chromosomes reaches almost one quarter of the male population." The patrilineal inheritance of the High Kingship is through the Ui Neill clan. Was our Conner line part of this inheritance? Sykes also proposes a genetic inheritance from what he calls the clan of Oisin (prehistoric figure in Irish legends) - (p. 160) "...in Connacht, occupying the north-west quadrant, the proportion of Y-chomosomes in the clan of Oisin reaches and astonishing 98 per cent." We have suspected that our Conner line is from this area of Ireland.
Notes for further research: John came from York (Co.), ME and might relate to Conners in Berwick and/or in NH. [Note: York Co. included all of Maine until 1760, when Cumberland and Lincoln Counties were set off from it.] There are Conners/Connors in "Pioneer Irish in New England," Michael J. O'Brien (Clearfield Co., Baltimore: 1998 reprint) - Chapter 14 deals with Irish imigrants to York Co., ME and pp. 90-94 list Conners in southern New Hampshire in the 17th century - but our John does not appear in this book. Sylvia Conner Wardwell believes John may have been at Bow, NH in the forestry business. Ann Torbett posted in the Ancestry.com message board in 2001 that a "Sarah Turbett [sic] married John Conner Nov. 5, 1722 Berwick, York Co, ME". A Sarah Conner, wife of John Conner, is listed as attending a lecture 29 Dec 1741 in First Church, Berwick, ME - NEHGR 82:211. This John Conner of Berwick and wife Sarah conveyed 28 Dec 1735 to James Pike land in York Co., ME (York Deeds, Vol. 18, p. 2). [See also http://develop.nmdg.com/virtualhosts/communities/chadbourne/4thgen.html which states this John is "probably son of Jeremy of Exeter." Alis may be a second wife, and he may have children by an unknown first wife - note that a granddaughter Hannah was b. 24 March 1776 per Penobscot V.R. In 1784 there were 9 persons living on John's lot - "Bangor Historical Magazine" (1893) 8:55-57. See article by Marian Conner and Forrest D. Myers in newsletter of Penobscot Historical Society, Nov., 1984. Sylvia Conner Wardwell believes John m. Alis ca. 1777 at Penobscot, ME. "History of the Town of Exeter, N.H.," Charles H. Bell (Exeter: 1888) lists these Conner families:
Jeremiah Connor, Anne Gove (she d. 12 Feb 1723); md. 3 July 1696 - had: Jeremiah, b. 18 Apr
1697, d. Apr 1722), Jonathan (5 Dec 1699), Philip (3 March 1702), Samuel (3 May 1704),
Hannah (20 Sept 1706), Anne (30 March 1709) and Benjamin (7 Sept 1711).
Cornelius Connor - his child, Moses (6 Dec. 1707). [Cornelius was a member of Capt. Harmon's Company, 1721-1722]
Jonathan Connor, son of Jeremiah and Ann Connor, b. 5 Dec 1699, md. 23 Jan 1724 Mehitabel, da. of John and Mehitabel Thing, b. 19 July 1706 - had: Anne (15 Sept 1724), Mehitabel (5 Dec 1726, d. 30 Aug 1736), Jeremiah (8 Feb 1731), Jonathan (14 Oct 1737), Anne (10 Dec
1739), Mehitabel (27 July 1742) and John Thing (16 July 1745).
Philip Connor, Maria Dudley; md. 14 May 1729 - had Maria (22 Sept 1731), Philip (25 Sept 1733), Joseph (16 Feb 1735) and Joshua (18 Aug 1743).
Samuel Connor, b. 3 May 1704, m. 26 May 1726 Sarah Gilman (b. 18 Dec 1708) - had: Maria (12 May 1728), Anna (1730-1742), Samuel (2 April 1733), Jeremiah (18 Nov 1736), Joshua (1738-1742), Sarah (1741-1742), Eliphalet (14 Aug 1743), Joseph (7 Aug 1746) and Mary (3 Oct 1750).
Benjamin Connor, Abigail Bartlett; md. 25 June 1734 - had: Abigail (4 Feb 1736), Jeremiah (26 Mar 1739), Nathaniel (8 April 1742), Abigail (31 May 1744), Anne ( 18 March 1746), Benjamin (28 March 1748), Mary (25 Jan 1750) and Joseph Bartlett (15 Oct 1752). Benjamin md. (2) Mary , widow of Jeremiah Leavitt, and had Ephrain (4 Dec 1760) and Nathaniel.
Benjamin d. 18 Oct 1811 and wife Mary d. 20 March 1820.
Jeremiah Connor, son of Jonathan and Mehitabel, md. 1 Sept 1754 Hannah Sanborn (dau. of Jabal and Abiah) and had Mary (30 May 1755) and Dudley (29 Nov 1756).
There are also later Connor/Conner families given in this history. Jeremiah Connor is in the list of inhabitants 10 Oct 1664 and in 1731 a Jeremiah Conner [sic] was appointed to the committee to replace the old meeting-house with a court house. Jeremiah Conner and Philip Conner purchased pews in the new meeting-house in 1731. The history also lists baptisms in the First Society including these Connors: John and Moses 21 Aug 1748, sons of David; Hannah 6 April 1760, dau. of Jeremiah; Joseph 14 Aug 1758, son of Joseph; Tristram Sanborn 21 Nov 1762, son of Jeremiah Connor. Marriage intentions begin in 1783 and give only one John Conner (p. 79): "John Conner, Jr., Elizabeth Shepard of Brentwood; 16 April 1791."
Torrey's "New England Marriages Pior to 1700" lists only these four Conners: Cornelius Conner (1637-1687) & Sarah Brown (1634-1709), by 1659, Salisbury; James Conmairs (?) [sic] & Naomi Harmon, int. 15 Aug 1696, Boston; Jeremiah Connor (1672- ) & Ann Gove (1677- ), 3 July 1696, Salisbury/Exeter, NH: John Conner & Elizabeth Podington/Purington, 15 May 1691, Salisbury.
Near Concord, NH, Conners appear in the 18th century. "History of Pembroke" (Concord, 1895), I:279: "Samuel Conner was probably the first physician to locate in Pembroke, coming from Exeter, and settling at Buckstreet about 1755...in 1759 he moved to Pembroke Street...practised in town several years, was married, had several children, among whom was Col. Samuel, who was killed in the Battle of Bennington in 1777; and Eliphalet, who also served in the Revolution... October 1, 1781, he leased to his son Joseph the farm inherited from his son Col. Samuel, and the same day deeded to his five children all his real and personal estate so inherited. He died about 1787."; I:70 - David Connor and Samuel Connor, Jr. are among petitioners in 1759; II:111- these Conner [sic] names are on a 1764 petition from Pembroke: David, David, David Jr., Moses; I:85 - Samuel Connor was deeded lot 2 in Buckstreet; I:105 - in 1767 Samuel, David and Eliphalet Connor are among petitioners for a justice of the peace to be provided for Pembroke; I:108 - Samuel Connor is among petitioners for a ferry to be established; II:120-21 - Lt. Samuel Connor, David Connor and John Connor are on list of members of the Presbyterian congregation in 1773; I:109 - Samuel and John Connor are among many petitioners for right of representation of Pembroke in the General Assembly; I:118 - one of two companies raised to serve in the War for Independence was headed by Capt. Samuel Connor; I:120 - signers of the 1776 "Association Test" (supporting the national Declaration of Independence) included John and David Connor; I:126 - David Connor is on the Pembroke Committee of Safety and Inspection; I:375 - David Connor is Selectman 1762-68; I:128 - Samuel was Lt. Col. when he died of wounds 9 Oct 1777; I:136 - also serving in the war were John and Eliphalet Connor, and they are the only Connors on the tax rolls in 1805 (I:162-3), and no Connor is on the tax roll in 1820 (II:184-86); II:148 - in 1782 Joseph Conner is a highway surveyor and John Conner is a hog-reeve by town meeting appointment.
"Bicentennital History of Pembroke" (1976), p. 50, gives the families of two children of a David Conner:
1) John Conner, b. 8 Feb 1746; m. Mary ______ (b. 19 Dec 1747) - their children listed (including Hannah, b. 30 May 1777 - note a Hannah living with John D. Conner in 1790).
2) Dr. Samuel Conner; m. Sarah Gilman of Exeter - their six children are listed (Jeremiah, Eliphalet, Col. Samuel, Maria, Joseph and Mary).
"Collections of the Dover, NH Historical Society", Vol. 1, lists: 29 April 1776 the death of "Joseph Conner, old age"; John Conner among three men drowning in October, 1780; 25 Nov 1783 the death of John Conner, aged 48; 4 Aug 1785 the death of a son of Widow Conner; 31 Aug 1729 (by the Rev. Jonathan Cushing) the baptism of Joseph Connor and Sarah his wife. Probate records of Strafford Co., NH include the estate of John Conner of Dover, cordwainer, administered 16 Nov 1785 by widow Mary Conner and included sale of a lot of land in Middleton, NH; also the estate of Joseph Conner, cordwainer, administered 9 April 1777 by John Conner of Dover, a cordwainer; also the estate of Jeremiah Connor [sic] of Gilmanton, husbandman, administered 9 Oct 1795 by his widow Hannah.
There are no Conners in the index of "Early Record of Londonderry, NH - 1719-1762", in the index of "VR of Hamtpon, NH" (Boston, MA: NEHGS, 1992) or in the index of "V.R. of Kittery, ME" (Camden: Picton Press, 1991). "VR of Berwick...Maine" (Camden: Picton Press, 1993) includes record of marriage of John Conner and Sarah Turbet 5 Nov 1722; marriage of John O. Conner and Sophia Rolf of Berwick 16 June 1825; marriage of James Conner, resident in South Berwick, and Caroline Nelson of Exeter, NH, int. 28 Oct 1815; marriages at First Church, Berwick of James McCarrel and Abigail Conner 8 Aug 1746 and of Samuel Roe and Olive Conner 25 April 1751.
Several unverified family trees in Ancestry.com post in error that John is son of a John D. Conner (b. by 1725 in Ireland) and an Abigail Moulton (b. in Hampton, Rockingham Co., NH, d. 24 April 1777 in York, York Co., ME, m. 6 April 1749 in her home town).
"Guide to the Early Settlers of America," Henry Wittemore (Baltimore: Genealogical Pub. Co., 1967), p. 102 lists Cornelius Conner "of Exeter, quite early removed to Salisbury, there, by wife Sarah, had Sarah, botn Aug. 23, 1659; John, Dec. 8, 1660; Samuel, Feb.12, 1662; Mary, Dec. 27, 1663; Elizabeth, Feb. 26, 1665; Rebecca, April 10, 1668; RUth, May 16, 1670; Jeremiah, Nov. 6, 1672; a daughter probably Ursula, in record Husly, Aug. 10, 1673; Cornelius, Aug. 12, 1675 and Dorothy, Nov. 1, 1676. Ruth married 1687, Thomas Clough, of Salisbury, as his second wife." Cf. "History of York, Maine," Charles Edward Banks (Baltimore: Regional Pub. Co., 1967), p. 160.
The Town of Penobscot: "Maine Place Names and the Peopling of Its Towns," Ava Harriet Chadbourne (Freeport, ME: Bond Wheelwright Co., 1957), p. 49: "Penobscot, 1787. The name of this town, the only one in Hancock County which has Indian origin, is taken from that of the river and bay upon which it is located. ...the word is best translated as 'the rocky part' or 'the descending ledge place.'" For a detailed history of the area, see "Penobscot, Maine 1761-2011," Mark E. Honey (Bangor, ME: Snowman Printing, 2011) [distrubted by the Penobscot Historical Society]
Conner: The surname may be derived from the Irish name O'Connor (meaning descendant of Connor). After the death of Brian Boru at the Battle of Clontarf, the O'Connors ruled Connacht (a region of western Ireland) from their capital at Rathcrogan. The O'Connor kings emerged as the dominant force in Ireland early in the twelfth century - Tulough O'Conner became King of Connacht in 1106 at age 18, and quickly proved himself an intelligent and able ruler. He was succeeded by Rory O'Connor in 1156 - Rory became High King, the first ruler apparently universally accepted by the Irish. But the Normans defeated the O'Connors in the thirteenth century and Connaught was given to the de Burgo family."Surnames of the United Kingdom," Henry Harrison (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1969), I:90 - Conner = Connor = Celtic "counsel-help") - conn = wisdom + an asp. form of cobhair, "aid, help"). A description of the Conner surname and more genealogy is on-line at http://personal.cfw.com/~connercj/conname.htm in June, 2002. "Directory of the Ancestral Heads of New England Families, 1620-1700", Frank R. Holmes, compiler (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2008),p. 50 offers: "The Celtic and Gealic word 'conal' signified love, friendship. Cornelius [Conner} settled at Salisbury, Mass., in 1637; removed to Exeter, N.H., returned to Salisbury, 1659."
The LDS Church's IGI file contains a John Conner, b. 31 Mar 1741 in Haresfield, Gloucester, England (son of John Conner). Curious, but no known relationship to ours. A Conner line in New Hampshire from the 17th century is on-line at http://www.landmarknet.net/loisam/#hh in April, 2000.
A family history search in the LDS on-line files, 3 Sept 2000, found:
1. John CONNER - International Genealogical Index/BI, Gender: M Birth: Abt. 1638 Of Market Place, Leeds., Yorkshire, England
2. John CONNOR - International Genealogical Index/BI, Gender: M Birth: Abt. 1639 Wymondon, Leicester, England
3. Johan CONNER - International Genealogical Index/BI, Gender: M Christening: 19 Mar 1640 St. Sampson Or Golant, Cornwall, England
4. Johan COUNER - International Genealogical Index/BI, Gender: M Christening: Mar 1641 Saint Sampson Or Golant, Cornwall, England
5. John CONER - International Genealogical Index/BI, Gender: M Marriage: 1642 Annesley, Nottingham, England
6. John CONER - International Genealogical Index/BI, Gender: M Marriage: 1642 Of Annesley, Nottingham, England
7. John CONER - International Genealogical Index/BI, Gender: M Marriage: 1642 Of Annesley, Nottingham, England
8. John KONNER - International Genealogical Index/BI, Gender: M Birth: Abt. 1643 Of Hamilton, Lanark, Scotland
9. John CONNER - International Genealogical Index/BI, Gender: M Christening: 31 Jan 1646 Saint Mary, Marlborough, Wiltshire, England
"Random Notes of Early Settlers about Brunswick and Topsham" in "Maine Historical and Genealogical Register" Vol. 9 (1898), No. 5, p. 135 records John Conner and wife Elizabeth, daughter of John Purington, has son Gideon of Dover, NH and son John." For pioneer Connor/Conner families in New England, see "Pionerr Irish in New England," Michael J. O'Brien (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1998). A John Conner drowned in Oct. 1782 according to the town of Dover, NH, and another John Conner, age 48, died 25 Nov 1783 in that town. A John Conner was in Capt. Moses Butler's Co. at Louisburg, Nova Scotia in 1745 - see "Maine at Louisburg in 1745," Henry S. Burrage (Augusta, ME: Burleigh & Flynt, 1910), p. 60.
"History of Penobscot County, Maine, with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches" (Cleveland: Williams, Chase and Co., 1882), p. 268. states that his son, John, was born in Portsmouth, NH and relocated to Penobscot, ME when he was about 24 years old. Does this provide a clue as to father John's early location, remembering that Portsmouth could have included nearby towns in the mind of the book's authors?
A John Connor [sic] is listed in "The Artificers and Inhabitants Who Built Fort George, Penobscot, 1779-1780" in "The Maine Genealogist" magazine (Vol. 26, p. 60; 2004) as providing two oxen in 1779.
For a easily read description of the time and situation, read Chapters Three and Four in "The Lobster Coast...," Colin Woodward (New York: Viking Penguin, 2004).
Perhaps our ancestral home town is Connor - https://2irelands2gether.com/2014/08/31/is-this-the-least-known-historic-village-in-ireland offers: "Kells and Connor have a proud place in the history of Ulster and Ireland. As its Heritage Trail booklet (beautifully produced by the Kells and Connor Community Improvement Association) outlines in fascinating detail, St MacNissi, a disciple of St Patrick (who is believed to have tended sheep on nearby Slemish mountain during his first period of slavery in Ireland), built a monastery here. By the 11th century Connor boasted a Romanesque cathedral richly decorated with Celtic carving and standing at the centre of a populous settlement led by the Ó Floinn family, part of the Uí Thuirtre confederation, who had successfully resisted the Norman invaders for many years. Connor continued to thrive under the Normans. An Augustinian abbey was built and in 1178 a Norman, Reginaldus, became Bishop of Connor. Its 'golden age' ended when a Scottish army led by Edward Bruce, who had recently declared himself High King of Ireland, defeated an Anglo-Norman army before sacking this then strategically important town in 1315. It was never to recover its previous significance. In the early 17th century Kells and Connor were part of the Ulster Plantation, and were settled mainly by Scottish Presbyterians. They were to become two of the North's most predominantly Presbyterian villages (they still have no fewer than four Presbyterian churches of various denominations). The religious revival which was to sweep Protestant Ulster in the late 1850s began in a school hall near Kells."
Perhaps our ancestor is the semi-historical Conor MacNessa - see https://www.libraryireland.com/biography/ConorMacNessa.php
[40250] The unverified Day Family Tree in Ancestry.com in 2015 offers: "Robert Day was born in 1518 in Yorkshire, the child of Richard and Elizabeth. He married Ursulowe Chaloner in 1537 in Yorkshire. They had [at least] one child during their marriage . . . . Ursulowe Chaloner was born in 1512."
[3456] Probably son of Fulk de Limoges. Limoges, a town of west-central France, flourished as Augustoritum in the Roman era and in the 4th century became Lemovices (whose capital it was). Featuring palaces, baths, its own senate and the right to mint coins, it suffered in the wars of succeeding centuries. Its goldsmiths and mints were famed in the Merovingian era. The chateau was built in the 9th century around the tomb of St. Martial (who introduced Christianity to this province). The province of Limousin was divided in the 10th century - the northern part became La Marche and much of the balance became the separate viscountcies of Limoges, Comborn, Turenne and Ventadour. From 866 these areas were subject to the dukes of Aquitaine, who were crowned in the Limoges cathedral. Eleanor of Aquitaine brought Limousin to the Angevin empire of the Plantagenets in her marriage with Henry. {-see Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1956 Edition, Vol. 14, pp.134-5.} Adalbert's wife was Adaltrude. Cf. http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_vicomtes_de_Limoges.
_Robert GRAY ________+ | (1680 - 1748) m 1706 _Joshua GRAY ________|_Elizabeth FREETHY __ | (1714 - ....) m 1736 (1686 - ....) _Samuel GRAY _____________| | (1750 - 1843) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_Jennat ELLIOT ______|_____________________ | m 1736 _Joseph GRAY ________| | (1767 - 1844) m 1797| | | _John WATSON ________+ | | | (1671 - ....) m 1692 | | _Shadrack WATSON ____|_Ruth HARTSHORN _____ | | | (1713 - 1765) m 1733 (1675 - ....) | |_Mercy WATSON ____________| | (.... - 1828) | | | _Caleb KIMBALL ______+ | | | (1686 - 1734) m 1704 | |_Susanna KIMBALL ____|_Susanna CLOYES _____ | (1711 - 1790) m 1733 _Avery GRAY _________| | (1800 - 1890) m 1820| | | _John GRINDLE _______+ | | | | | _John GRINDLE _______|_Sarah LEAVITT ______ | | | (.... - 1794) | | _Reuben GRINDLE __________| | | | (1757 - 1835) | | | | | _Philip DORR ________ | | | | | (1680 - ....) m 1708 | | | |_Elizabeth DORR _____|_Sarah CHILD ________ | | | (1680 - ....) | |_Anna GRINDLE _______| | (1779 - 1847) m 1797| | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_Hannah LOWELL ___________| | (.... - 1802) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |--Sarah R. GRAY | (1837 - 1915) | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | __________________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | _Richard CONDON _____| | | (1774 - 1848) | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | | |__________________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_Mary CONDON ________| (1799 - 1875) m 1820| | _Eleazer FOSTER _____+ | | (1684 - 1771) m 1703 | _Francis FOSTER _____|_Elizabeth FISKE ____ | | (1711 - 1759) m 1736 (1684 - 1758) | _Jonathan Merrill FOSTER _| | | (1749 - 1834) m 1772 | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_Jemima MERRILL _____|_____________________ | | (1717 - ....) m 1736 |_Rachel B. FOSTER ___| (1775 - 1865) | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | |_Rachel BURNHAM __________| (1749 - ....) m 1772 | | _____________________ | | |_____________________|_____________________
_Arthur HARRIS ______ | _John HARRIS ________|_Johanna PERCY ______ | (1513 - 1554) (.... - 1547) _William HARRIS _____| | (1536 - 1599) m 1579| | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | _Thomas HARRIS _______| | (1580 - ....) m 1600 | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_Agnes MASON ________| | (1559 - 1586) m 1579| | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | _Daniel HARRIS ______| | (1615 - 1701) m 1648| | | _____________________ | | | | | _Joseph HILLS _______|_____________________ | | | (1548 - ....) | | _George HILLS _______| | | | (1578 - 1649) m 1596| | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | | |_Sarah SMITH ________|_____________________ | | | | |_Elizabeth HILLS _____| | (1577 - 1670) m 1600 | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_Mary SYMONDS _______| | (.... - 1649) m 1596| | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |--William HARRIS | (1665 - 1751) | _____________________ | | | _Thomas WELD ________|_____________________ | | (1533 - 1597) | _Edmund WELD ________| | | (1559 - 1608) m 1584| | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | _Joseph WELD _________| | | (1599 - 1646) m 1620 | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | | |_Amy Brewster CLARK _| | | (1566 - 1598) m 1584| | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_Mary WELD __________| (1627 - 1711) m 1648| | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_Elizabeth SHATSWELL _| (1600 - 1638) m 1620 | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | |_____________________| | | _____________________ | | |_____________________|_____________________
[18779] See "Massachusets Bay Connections," Judy Jacobson (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1992), p. 41.
[9661] Elsie is daughter of Soren Christensen.
[55673] Minta is daughter of Charles E. Stratton (1855-1920) & Fannie Belle Foss (1864-1904; m. in 1882 in Hancock, Hancock Co., ME).
__ | __|__ | __| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _Fulgaud, Count of ROUERGUE _| | (.... - 0836) | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _Raymond I, Count of TOULOUSE _| | (.... - 0864) | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | | __| | | | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | | |__|__ | | | | |_____________________________| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | | |--Eudes, Count of TOULOUSE | (.... - 0918) | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | | _____________________________| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | __|__ | | | | | | |__| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_______________________________| | | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_____________________________| | | __ | | | __|__ | | |__| | | __ | | |__|__
_Nathaniel WHITCOMB _+ | (1697 - 1771) m 1738 _Lot WHITCOMB _______|_Phoebe BLACKMAN ____ | (1739 - 1797) m 1762 (1704 - ....) _Paul WHITCOMB ______| | (1770 - 1813) m 1797| | | _Samuel NYE _________+ | | | (1714 - ....) | |_Lydia NYE __________|_____________________ | (1744 - 1831) m 1762 _Paul WHITCOMB ______| | (1800 - 1877) m 1821| | | _James LAMBERTON ____ | | | | | _James LAMBERTON ____|_____________________ | | | (1725 - 1777) m 1755 | |_Eunice LAMBERTON ___| | (1773 - 1843) m 1797| | | _____________________ | | | | |_Mary SHAW __________|_____________________ | (1734 - 1826) m 1755 _James Monroe WHITCOMB _| | (1828 - 1905) m 1850 | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | _____________________| | | | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_Fannie FAY _________| | (1799 - 1886) m 1821| | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |--Carrie Isabella WHITCOMB | (1857 - 1859) | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_Irene Marsh GUSHING ___| (1831 - 1905) m 1850 | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_____________________| | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | |_____________________| | | _____________________ | | |_____________________|_____________________