Thursday, February 25, 2010

Sabins in Connecticut, founders of Pomfret and Woodstock

One of my ancestors is William Sabin. William was one of the founders of Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony. Possibly he later moved to Boston to associate with the French Refugees, the Huguenots. Amongst William's sons were Benjamin b 1646 (who is my ancestor) and youngest son, John. Capt John Sabin, was probably the first settler, and he built a house in Windham County, Pomfret, in 1696. Pomfret was purchased from the Indians in 1686 for was 30 pounds and was known at that time as "The Mashmuket Purchase".

The Sabins had a sawmill in Pomfret. John's home also served as an outpost against the Indians. The Mashamoquet Brook was a source of power for the small mills developed along the brook and its tributaries. The ruins of these mills and their dam foundations still exist along the brook.

I think I would have loved to live in that area. Pomfret is located in the Northeastern corner of Connecticut, about a 60 min drive to Hartford, the state capitol, and only 45 minutes to the shoreline. Its climate has average winter temperature in the mid-teens to mid-20s in January and February. In summer, 80 to 90 degrees. My favorite seasons are spring and fall, and apparently both those seasons are wonderful there.

Benjamin Sabin b 1646, was one of the original founders of Woodstock Connecticut in 1686. His son Ebenezer, b 10  Dec 1671, was an Ensign in 1700, and he married a Mary. Their son Seth Sabin married Joanna Cady. Their daughter Jerusha Sabin married Elisha Stowell. Their daughter Jerusha Stowell married Samuel Porter Grow and  had Lorenzo Grow.
Lorenzo married Harriet Felker Currier. Their daughter, Mary Frances Grow married Arthur W Newell. Their son Samuel Newell was my grandfather Arthur Newell's father. I have found the ties back to this part of New England happens again and again. It is no wonder I am
so drawn to this region. I hope to visit there for an extended period some day.

Spanish Surnames

My husband's father was born in Puerto Rico. I had thought that would make things easier, tracing his genealogy. It has helped, and it has made it more difficult. In the case of my father-in-law (who died long before I married his son), I discovered his mother's name only after I requested his Social Security application. Even then, John only listed his mother's 'first' surname.

His mother as an example: Cesarea Aviles. Actually her full name was Cesarea Aviles y Rodriguez. This means her father's last name was Aviles and her mother's last name was Rodriguez. When I say last name, I mean their father's last name. IF Cesarea's parents didn't marry, it's entirely possible that Cesarea would have gone by the surname Rodriguez ONLY. In Cesarea's case, her parents never married, but her father Ezequiel Aviles y Aviles 'claimed' her as his child. Sometimes you have to look for Cesarea Aviles, sometimes Cesarea Rodriguez.

That's IF the fathers claim the children!

Cesarea's mother was Juana Rodriguez. Hold on! Wait! Her father's name was Hemeterio Reyes y Barrio. Her mother was Florentina Rodriguez y Rodriguez.
Doesn't that mean Juana should list her nae as Juana Reyes y Rodriguez? What if someone 'mis-listened' and recorded her name on a document (census, birth certificate, etc.) as Juana Rodriguez y Reyes. I'd be going on a wild good chase looking for Juana.

Juana's brother Telesforo and his wife Monserrate really did a number on the censuses in 1910 and 1920.

In 1910, Puerto Rico, Yeguada District 130, p 17/27
Reyes y Rodriguez, Telesforo, 50 yrs, "married" 20 yrs
Soriano y Melendez de Reyes, Monserrate, 48 yrs, "married" 20 yrs
Reyes y Soriano, Maria, 19 yrs
Reyes y Soriano, Antonio, 17 yrs
Reyes y Soriano, Jose, 14 yrs

In 1920, Puerto Rico, Yeguada, District 130, p 1/27
Rodriguez, Telesforo, 62 yrs, "married" 30 yrs
Melendez de Rodriguez, Monserrate, 54 yrs "married 30 yrs
Rodriguez y Melendez, Antonio, 32 yrs
Rodriguez y Melendez, Jose, 24 yrs

Admittedly, some of the ages don't match up. Telesforo's age differs by 2 years, Monserrate's by 4 years. Antonio has magically aged 5 years (maybe it was a transcription erro?). Curious that by 1920, *everyone* in the household has taken on their mother's surnames, which takes the level of "finding" these ancestors to a whole new level.

No wonder genealogy is such a puzzle!

Friday, February 19, 2010

Henry Overstreet, debtors prisoner, settler, traitor?, SC Patriot in Rev War

My grandmother Johnnie "Louise" Higdon's line traces on upwards into the Overstreets. Her grandfather James Jackson Higdon was the son of John Higdon, b 1809 (and a Georgia legislator) and Matilda "Tillie" Overstreet b 1811.

Tillie's parents were Daniel Overstreet and Martha Alberson. Daniel's parents were Daniel (b1765) and "Nellie" Overstreet. Daniel(b1765)'s parents were Henry (b1735) and Jane (Braswell) Overstreet. Henry's parents were Henry (b1710, England) and Ann (?) Overstreet.

Henry, born 1710, came to America. What an experience! He was a settler in a fort amongst Indians. He was granted 150 acres of land. He was possibly the same Henry Overstreet accused of being a traitor to the colonies, yet he was a SC Patriot gunner in the Revolutionary War.

Original Settler at a Fort in Augusta!. From a document published in London, in 1743, the township of Augusta—outside of the garrison—seems to have embraced only a small colony of Indian traders. The following purports to be a complete list of settlers at the fort: Kennedy O’Brien, Thomas Smith, Messrs. McKenzie and Frazier, John Miller, Thomas Goodale, Samuel Brown, Sanders Brown, Sanders Ross, A Sadler, A. Taylor, William Clark, Henry Overstreet, Laclan McBean, William Gray and William Calahern.

S C Patriot! Henry Overstreet enlisted in the Fourth Regiment on 1 Dec 1776 as a gunner. N.A. 853. From the “Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution” page 745.

Debtors Prisoner - a Way to Get to America?! 1732 England was undergoing financial pressures, specifically the working clases and a very small middle class (artisans and merchants) Joining the army or militia might help, but not if you didn't get paid! If debts rose, one might be sentenced to debtor's prison, and his family along with him.

James Ogelthorpe thought these factors presented an opportunity to expand the Georgia Colony in the New World: debtors prisoners could become colonists in the struggling Georgia Colony where the French, Spanish and English were virtually competing over land. Ogelthorpe transported these individuals AND their families (at least two boatloads) in 1732-4. By providing farmer-soldiers to defend the Carolinas from the French and Spanish, he simultaneously emptied the debtors prisons (which were definitely a no-win situation).

These new immigrants landed at the mouth of the Savannah River on Tybee Island in what is now South Carolina. Not all were debtors' prisoners. Some came on their own, hoping for something better than home in England. Sort of yesteryear's grand Time Share opportunity?!

Some Georgia settlers were Scottish immigrants who founded the Darien Colony, and Austrian refugees fleeing Salzberg's religious persecutions. Ogelthorpe united the Scots, Austrians and British colonists along with the present Indian tribes.

The original Georgia Colony stretched from the Ogechee Swamp to the Savannah River. There were fewer than 5000 European colonists. My ancestor lived in an Indian trading post enclosed in a primitive fortress located on a high bluff above the Savannah River.

But the promised pardise instead had mosquitoes, heat and humidity.I can only imagine the dismay my ancestors realized as they adjusted to the climate. I was born in Orlando, Florida. Grew up there. I lived in England for three years. I would have been heartbroken living in humid Georgia.

Many settlers died from diseases living in the swamps along the Savannah. Making a living was difficult. The Spanish and hostile Indians were a constant. Farmers carried muskets with them in the fields, always on the ready. Rum was outlawed. Ownership of land was limited to fifty acres and slavery was outlawed. The "tail mail" statute prohibited colonists from passing their property on to anyone except their firstborn sons. Widows, daughters, and younger sons could not inherit any of their father's property. Colonists were reluctant to establish plantations or improve their properties.

South Carolina and Georgia Colonies lines were indistinct in pre-colonial times. Many Georgiams crossed over into South Carolina especially since South Carolina's property ownership inheritance rights were more liberal, and, rum was legal there!!

The British treated the American colonists in Georgia harshly. Whole families who had offered no resistance to the British presence were sometimes executed. Those loyal to the British found their properties confiscated and destroyed and often imprisoned even after claiming allegiance to the Crown. Once again, colonists retreated to the Carolinas.

Little know fact: Two thirds of Georgia's settlements and farms were destroyed during the Revolutionary War. When the Revolution was over, Georgia, in order to rebuild her settlements, offered large tracts of land at cheap prices to any Revolutionary War veterans Who would move to Georgia. Once again a settlement boom brought families from Virginia, North and Spouth Carolina. http://www.geocities.comlHeartland/Hills/2355/ogacolony.htm


The Colonial Records of Georgia, Vol XXII, page 245, quote from a letter of General James Oglethorpe to accountant in which he mentions “a loan in cattle to one Overstreet, an industrious man with a wife and six children in Augusta.” This was in 1739.

In 1743, a document in London set forth that the township of Augusta outside of the garrison embraced only a few white people, traders with Indians. Among the list of sixteen names of setters at the fort was Henry Overstreet.

In 1762 at a meeting of Council in Savannah, on May 4, was read a petition of Henry Overstreet, lately come into the province of Georgia with his wife and six children in order to settle. He was granted 150 acres of land about three miles above the mouth of Briar Creek, famous in history as the stream believed by Georgia’s early historian, Jones, to be that which De Soto and his men swam in their march through Georgia.


Sources:
http://www.geocities.comlHeartland/Hills/2355/ogacolony.htm
History of Tift County, by Ida Belle Williams, pages 433-5
The James W Overstreet, Sr., and Allied Families by J.V. Chapman. (ending p 436)
Georgia’s Landmarks, Memorials and Legends, p 882
History of the United States: British Colonies in North America by George Bancroft
A True and Historical Narrative of Gerogia by Patrick Tailfer, High Anderson, and David Douglas United States 1790, 1800, 1810
http://www.geocities.comlHeartland/Hills/235 5/ogacolony.htm

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Sometimes OsGOOD and sometimes OsBAD.

In 1983, I was living in Abilene, Texas. I was stationed at Dyess AFB. My cousin Gail was married and living in Dallas. I visited with her a couple of times, and during one visit, she and her husband asked if I'd like to adopt their cat Osgood. Gabe had named Osgood, "sometimes I's good and sometimes I's bad." Osgood was one of my favorite cats. He was beautiful. A beautiful sweet natured tabby with emerald green eyes. I'll have to look for a photo to post of him!

In just the last year, I've discovered that Osgood is a name in my family tree. My great grandmother Mary Troublefield married Walter Lee. The name Troublefield was 'originally' Turbeville. That's another story for another time. Mary's ancestor Sampson Turbeville married Tempie Quimby. [His brother Joseph married Tempie's sister Sarah.]

Tempie Quimby's line [Jonas, Eleazar, Eleazar, John, Robert b 1625]
Tempie's 'great grandfather' 3x Robert Quimby b 1625, married Elizabeth Osgood.

Elizabeth Osgood's parents were William Osgood and Elizabeth Clere. William was b 1609, Herrell, Hants, England. He was one of the first settlers in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts. William and his wife were summoned as witnesses to the Salem Witchcraft Trials. William's cousin was John Osgood (b 1632, son of John b 1595, son of Christopher Osgood). Cousin John had married Mary Clements. Mary [Clements] Osgood was accused of witchcraft, but later acquitted. Maybe William Osgood was a good witness?

Elizabeth Osgood Quimby was wounded, but survived the 7 July 1677 Amesbury massacre led by the Indian Symon/Simon. Unfortunately, Elizabeth's husband Robert died from injuries sustained that day.

Here are some links to more Osgood information:
http://www.osgoodancestry.org/emigrants.html
http://www.osgood.org/Osgood/submissions.htm#John%20Adams%20&%20the%20American%20Revolution.%20by%20Catherine%20Drinker%20Bowen%20from

Other sources include:
The New England Historical and Genealogical Register by NEHGS, specifically Vol xiii, pp 200-2, 1866.
http://www.owingsstone.com/getperson.php?personID=I5267&tree=owingsstone

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

BOLLING Ancestors



Robert BOLLING (photograph, left) was the son of John and Mary (Carrie) Bolling. He was born at Tower Street, All Hallows, Barking Parish, in London on December 26, 1646. Robert arrived in the Virginia colony on 2 Oct 1660 at the age of fourteen. His father John, was one of the Bollings of Bolling Hall, near Bradford, England (see photograph and more information below).

Robert's ancestry can be traced to Robert Bolling, Esquire, who died in 1485 and was buried in the family vault in the church of Bradford. According to Bolling family oral tradition, the original deBolling family was Norman French, and came to Barking Parish with William the Conqueror. Below is a photograph of Bolling Hall, near Bradford, England.

When I was a child, my favorite history story about America was Pocohontas. I named a precious kitten Pocohontas. While I don't descend from Pocohontas, my ancestor's first wife was married to a granddaughter of Pocohontas whose descendants are named the Red Bollings. I descend instead from the White Bollings (when he married Anne Stith, below).
First Marriage
In 1674, he married Jane Rolfe, the daughter of Thomas and Jane (Poythress) Rolfe; granddaughter of Pocahontas. Jane died just a year after their marriage.
Their only child was:
1. John Bolling (January 26, 1676-April 20, 1729), married Mary Kennon. According to wikipedia, John Bolling the ancestor to Edith Bolling Wilson, Nancy Reagan, and John McCain.

Second Marriage
In 1681, Col. Bolling married his second wife Anne Stith*, daughter of John Drury and Jane (Gregory) Stith. They had the following nine children together:
i. Jane Bolling (b. 1682), died young.
ii. Robert Bolling Jr. (1682-1749), married Anne Mary Cocke. Ancestors of Presidents George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush; Mary Anna Randolph Custis, wife of Robert E. Lee; and possibly American President Lyndon Baines Johnson.
iii. Stith Bolling (1686-1727), married Elizabeth Hartwell.
iv. Edward Bolling (1687-1720), married Ms. Slaughter.
v. Anne Bolling (1690-1750), married Robert Wynne.
vi. Drury Bolling (1695-1726), married Elizabeth Meriwether.
vii. Thomas Bolling (1697-1734).
viii. Agnes Bolling (1700-1762), married Richard Kennon.
vix. Molly Mary Bolling (b. 1702), died young.

The descendents of Robert Bolling's first marriage are termed "Red Bollings" and the descendents of his second marriage are termed the "White Bollings". His grandson Robert Bolling was one of the most prolific poets in colonial Virginia. As a merchant and planter, Bolling acquired a large estate. He was colonel of the militia and was a member of the House of Burgesses from Charles City County in 1702.

Robert Bolling died on July 17, 1709, and was buried on his plantation Kippax, in Prince George Co., Virginia, where his tomb still stands. However, in 1858, his remains were removed from Kippax to the Bolling mausoleum at Blandford Cemetery in Petersburg, Virginia erected by his great grandson.

Much of this information I excerpted from wikipedia.org, Robert Bolling.

Sources listed at wikipedia:
1. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 7, 1899, pages 352-353.
2. Some prominent Virginia families, Louise Pecquet du Bellet, Edward Jaquelin, Martha Cary Jaquelin, page 305.
3. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 7, 1899, pages 352-353.
4. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 7, 1899, pages 352-353.
5. A Memoir of a Portion of the Bolling Family in England and Virginia, Robert Bolling, John Robertson, Thomas Hicks Wynne, Chesapeake Book Co., 1868, page 19.
6. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 7, 1899, pages 352-353.

Link to a BBC 360 degree view of the interior of Bolling Hall, Bradford, Yorkshire, England:

Relating Links

It's all about relationships. What I find most fascinating about genealogy are the links I discover.

One of my goals is to determine which ancestors were Colonial settlers. Then I'd like to map this out. I might discover that branches (i.e., Newell ancestors lived near Higdon ancestors) lived in the same colony! I'd also like to create a file of Revolutionary War ancestors.

Here's an example of how interwoven history can become: In a deed dated 1718, ancestors from my maternal grandmother Agnes Morgan (Bolling) are listed alongside my paternal grandfather Paul Lee's Tatum ancestors.

"11 Aug 1718. Drury Bolling of Prince George County to Stith Bolling of Surry Co., 80 acres, being part of 500 acres granted to Nathaniel Tatum, Sr., dec'd. lying in Prince George County, on the south side of the Appomatox Rivero, for L10 joining Henry Mitchell, Sr.'s line, and is that tract which Samuel Tatum Sr. and Mary his wife sold Col Robert Bolling, dec'd. signed: Drury Bolling."

Col Robert Bolling married Jane Rolfe (descendant of Pocohontas) and had one child, John b 1676. Jane died and then Robert married Anne Stith. Robert and Anne had nine children including my ancestor Robert b 1682, and his younger brothers Stith b 1686 and Drury b 1695 (which were mentioned in this deed).

Samuel and Mary Tatum's children were Ann, Nathaniel, Rebecca, Mary, and Samuel, Jr.

Ann Tatum married Hugh Lee, my father Robert Lee's colonial ancestor. So my mother's colonial ancestors and my father's colonial ancestors sold property to each other!! Who would have thought?

I've discovered I'm related to the former President Bushes (8th cousin to "W") through TWO lines! My maternal grandmother Agnes Morgan's line goes back through Stith then Hall then Bolling to Anne Cocke.

Former President George "W" Bush and I have two common grandmothers: Anne Cocke (7th for both of us) and Mary Bridge (8th for both of us). My maternal grandmother's line goes from Morgan to Stith, to Hall, Bolling and then Anne Cocke. My maternal grandfather Arthur Newell's line goes through Grow, then Sanger, then Roth and on up to Lyon. Mary Bridge, our common 8th grandmother, had two daughters Eunice (my line) and Mary ("W"s line) Lyon.

I'm also related to Laura Welch Bush, 9th cousins, through my maternal grandmother Agnes Morgan. Our common 9th great grandmother is Elizabeth Warren, 1644-1728, children Joel and Sarah Walker. Joel is my line, down through Elizabeth, then Wm Richard Jones, on down to Morgan.

How many other links might I discover as I 'put it all together?" Certainly other surprises await me!

Monday, February 15, 2010

Moore on Higdons in Decatur, Georgia

I have created this blog to keep a record my genealogical progress. Genea-Trekking isn't always 'logical' though. It's often full of tangents and unusual discoveries.

Today for instance. I decided to try to figure out more about my grandmother Louise Higdon's ancestor, Martha Ann Moore. She lived in Decatur, Georgia her whole life. She was born in 1831 and died in 1893. She married John Robert Butler on 15 February 1849 (one-hundred sixty-one years ago TODAY!).

I can't get any further back on Martha Ann. I thought maybe searching through Decatur records might reveal some clues. It didn't. BUT, I did find the record of confirmation of my grandmother Louise's original name. She always maintained that she was first named "Johnnie" after a beloved relative/brother of her father?/ uncle who had died from a shooting accident just before she was born. She was the first grandchild born after John Higdon had died. I have searched and searched for a record of this. Found it today. While looking for Martha Ann Moore.

1880 Federal Census Mortality Schedule, Decatur, Georgia.

Higdon, Henry died at 13 years, of pneumonia, 242 Decatur
and
Higdon, John, died at 18 years, in November, "Shot Accidentally"

Maybe, just maybe, this clue on John and Henry will help me find out more about Martha...