__________________________ | _George Michael BREINER __________________|__________________________ | (.... - 1782) _Johann Jacob BREINER _| | (1767 - 1842) m 1806 | | | _Mathias (Lei, Ley?) LOY _ | | | (1706 - 1783) | |_Catharina Magdalena (Ley or) LOY ________|_Anna Maria DAY __________ | (1742 - 1806) (1711 - 1786) _John George BREINER _| | (1807 - 1892) m 1829 | | | _Georg (Hammer) HAMER ____ | | | | | _Johann Georg (Hamer or) HAMMER __________|__________________________ | | | (1755 - 1812) | |_Magdalena HAMMER _____| | (1788 - 1827) m 1806 | | | __________________________ | | | | |_Anna Maria, wife of Johann Georg HAMMER _|__________________________ | (1743 - 1830) _George Seager BRINER _| | (1840 - 1926) m 1876 | | | __________________________ | | | | | __________________________________________|__________________________ | | | | | _John SIEGER __________| | | | (1775 - 1854) | | | | | __________________________ | | | | | | | | |__________________________________________|__________________________ | | | | |_Magdalena SEAGER ____| | (1804 - 1889) m 1829 | | | __________________________ | | | | | __________________________________________|__________________________ | | | | |_Catherine KUNTZ ______| | | | | __________________________ | | | | |__________________________________________|__________________________ | | |--Jacob Frank BRINER | (1887 - 1977) | __________________________ | | | __________________________________________|__________________________ | | | _______________________| | | | | | | __________________________ | | | | | | |__________________________________________|__________________________ | | | ______________________| | | | | | | __________________________ | | | | | | | __________________________________________|__________________________ | | | | | | |_______________________| | | | | | | __________________________ | | | | | | |__________________________________________|__________________________ | | |_Susan Barbara MOOSE __| (1846 - 1901) m 1876 | | __________________________ | | | __________________________________________|__________________________ | | | _______________________| | | | | | | __________________________ | | | | | | |__________________________________________|__________________________ | | |______________________| | | __________________________ | | | __________________________________________|__________________________ | | |_______________________| | | __________________________ | | |__________________________________________|__________________________
[7430] Frank was President of Farmers Trust Co. in Carlisle, PA, 1943-57, and served in many civic capacities. He was a Presbyterian. They r. on North College Street, Carlisle for more than 50 years. "The Sentinel [Carlisle, Pennsylvania], 12 July 1977," p. 13: "J. Frank Briner Sr., 89, died Monday in Lexington, Mass. He had lived on N. College St., Carlisle, for more than 50 years before moving to North Carolina in 1971. Born Oct. 30, 1887 in Newport, Perry County, he was a 1906 graduate of Carlisle High School. After attending Dickinson College for a short time, he became a messenger boy in the Farmers Trust Co. He held many positions there over the years and in 1943 was elected president of the bank. He retired from that position in 1957 and at the time of his death was a director emeritus. He had been president of the Carlisle Chamber of Commerce, Treasurer of the Cumberland County March of Dimes, a member of the Citizens-Army Advisory Committee, a director of the Lutheran Theological Seminary in Gettysburg, a member of the Union Fire Company, a past commander of the Sons of Union Veterans, and active in the Pennsylvania Bankers Association for many years. He played in the Carlisle Band, served as chairman of the County Ration Board during World War II, was borough auditor for 18 years, was the first secretary of the Carlisle Water Authority. A 50-year member of Cumberland Star Lodge No. 197 F&AM, he was the oldest living past master, having been master in 1915. He was a member of St. Johns Council, a 50-year member of St. Johns Chapter, Knights Templar, the IOOF, and the First Presbyterian Church, Carlisle. Surviving are a son, J. Frank Briner Jr., Kinston, N.C., a daughter, Mrs. Donald W. (Kathleen) Meals, Lexington, Mass; four grandchildren; two greatgrandchildren. Services will be held Friday at 2 p.m. from the G. Book Roth Funeral Home, Walnut Bottom Road at Belvedere Street. The Rev. Dr. Russell M. Weer will officiate. Burial will be in Westminister Cemetery."
__ | __|__ | __| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | __| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _John PICKERING _____| | (.... - 1668) | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | | __| | | | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | | |__|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | | |--John PICKERING | (.... - 1721) | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | __|__ | | | | | | |__| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |__| | | __ | | | __|__ | | |__| | | __ | | |__|__
See "History of York, Maine," Charles Edward Banks (Baltimore: Regional Publishing Co., 1967), Vol. II, pp. 251-252, 254.
"The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633" reports that John "m. 10 January 1665/6 Mary Stanyan, daughter of Anthony Stanyan. (This date is given in many secondary sources, but has not been found in any original document. On 30 June 1668 John Pickering Senior sued 'Ano. Stanniell ... in an action of the case for that the said Staniell hath not made good an engagement of £110 upon condition of a marriage of said Staniel's daughter with said Pickering's son: withdrawn'.)"
Sarah Lord (see notes for his father) shared 11/98: Captain John Pickering, born 1644-45, died April 10, 1721. Married Mary Stanyon Jan. 10, 1665. His children named in his will of June 21, 1720 are daughter Mary, son John (born Dec. 1, 1666) and children. Mary, born July 18, 1668, married John Plaisted, Esq. Other children were Thomas, born April 6, 1670, died July 3, 1671 (Thomas had a son James who had 5 children, one of who was Abigail - Abigail married a Benjamin Adams who was a nephew of President John Adams, a son of John's older brother Joseph), Sarah, born Feb 15, 1672 (probably died young), Sarah, born Jan. 3, 1674 (died by 1691). Captain John as a carpenter and miller. He was Captain of the militia in Portsmouth, NH for a number of years and Belknap describes him as a man of 'a rough and adventurours spirit, and a lawyer.' He was Lieut., Capt., Representative from 1692 to 1695 and 1697 to 1700, and Speaker of the NH Assembly, 1693-97 as well as Attorney General in 1695. He was the largest subscriber for Mr. Emerson in 1713. He resided at Portsmouth, and was resident in York in Sept., 1700 - he deeded to son son a York saw and corn mill with land adjacent, and also a neck of land. He was apparently back and forth between Portsmouth and York until his death. The last mention of his wife, Mary, is in 1710.
Sarah Lord shared re: his son, John: John Pickering, born Dec. 1, 1666, died April 10, 1715. He married Elizabeth Munden July 17, 1688. He was a miller or Portsmouth and York. Elizabeth died in 1720. His children were Mary (m. Ambrose Sloper), John (died in 1720 with no children), Thomas (m. Dorothy Stover), Deborah (m. 1st John Smithson May 3, 1719, and 2nd Joshua Pickering), Sarah (m. William Hooker), Samuel (m. Sarah Cotton or Walden) and Daniel (baptised in August, 1711).
Sarah Lord shared re: his grandson, Thomas: Thomas Pickering (son of John, grandson of John) went to sea on March 18, 1745 and was killed by Indians in 1746 at Casco Bay. His will is dated March, 1745. He married Dorothy Stover. His oldest son is John . . . this son John was born ca. 1735 and married Elizabeth Boland (or Boulter) (she was born in 1756 in Salem, MA, d. in Portsmouth, NH). Elizabeth may have been his second wife. John (b. ca. 1735) was among those who signed the service roster for the Continental Army as a resident of Newington, NH in 1776; this John's son, Daniel (b. July 4, 1789), was a ship carpenter and served in the War of 1812, was wounded and recovered and moved to the Little Kanawha River valley near present-day Elizabeth, WV in 1817 where he farmed until his death in 1860. ...