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Matches 51 to 100 of 1,463

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51 (see Family Note, Stephen Howard.) Howard(), Sarah ^ (I711)
 
52 (see Family Note, Stephen Howard.) Cato, Nancy ^ (I712)
 
53 (see Family Note, Stephen Howard.) Greene, Franklin ^ (I713)
 
54 (see Family Note, Stephen Howard.) Howard, Mary ^ (I1180)
 
55 (See family note.) Wilkinson, Victoria J. ^ (I190)
 
56 (See Genealogical Appendix, Note F.)

He was born March 3, 1773, and died May 26, 1862.

She died October 2, 1820.

Children (Ten):
(1.) Anna Byram Condict, born October 27, 1799; married,
June 10, 1825, the Rev. George Bush, Professor of
Hebrew and Oriental Literature in the University of
New York. They had one child:
Lewis Condict Bush, born November 4, 1827. He was
a graduate of New York University, and a Lawyer. He
died about the year 1854.
(2.) Sophia Woodhull Condict, born August 3, 1801; married,
October 2, 1862, James Cook, of Terre Haute, Indiana.
She died March 14, 1881. They had no children.
(3.) Silas S. Condict, born June 23, 1803, and died October
2, 1805.
(4.) Silas Lewis Condict, (M. D.), born August 14, 1805; graduated
from the College of New Jersey (now Princeton
University), in 1824; married, November 17, 1829,
Phoebe Ann, daughter of Judge David Mills, of Morristown,
New Jersey. He died February 4, 1864. She
died in July, 1880. They had no children.
(5.) Martha Maria Condict, born December 8, 1807; married,
May 14, 1834, David A. Hall, of Washington, D. C.
She died August 5, 1836. They had one child:
Martha Maria Condict Hall, born July 1, 1836; married,
July 10, 1872, Lucas Richards, of Unionville, Connecticut.
They had two children:




Page 117

Lewis Condict Richards, born November 3, 1873; married,
April 30, 1901, Emily Marie Clasby. They had
two children:
Lewis Condict Richards, Jr., born September 8, 1902.
Robert Wardick Richards, born March 16, 1904.
Maria Lucy Richards, born May 24, 1875.
(6.) Nathan Woodhull Condict, (M. D.), born November 20,
1809; graduated from the College of New Jersey (now
Princeton University), in 1828; married, August 3,
1833, Julia Elmer, daughter of Aaron Coe, of Morristown,
New Jersey. She died April 11, 1848. He died
in the year 1892. They had six children:
Nathan Woodhull Condict, born July 22, 1834; married,
October 2, 1862, Fanny K., daughter of Peter B. Curry.
They had three children:
Lee Condict, born December 13, 1863; married, October
4, 1888, Jennie Y. Gillelan, of Montreal, Canada. They
had one child:
Woodhull Lee Condict, born December 10, 1891.
Maria Woodhull Condict, born February 5, 1866; married,
April 12, 1893, Henry M. Smaltz, of Philadelphia, Pa.
They had one child:
John Condict Smaltz, born March 24, 1894. She died
April 3, 1894.
Fannie Matilda Condict, born August 15, 1873.
(Other children of Nathan Woodhull Condict, M. D.):
Stewart E. Condict, born March 17, 1836, and died February
4, 1837.
Lewis Condict, born in the year 1838.
Julia Elmer Condict, born February 14, 1840.
Sophia Woodhull Condict, born September 7, 1842.
George Coe Condict, born in the year 1844.
(7.) Ellen Louisa Condict, born November 30, 1811, and died
March 5, 1818.
(8.) Lewis Condict, (M. D.), born December 26, 1813; graduated
from the College of New Jersey (now Princeton
University), in 1831.
(9.) Edward Condict, born June 11, 1817, and died October
19, 1817.
(10.) Sarah Louisa Condict, born October 16, 1818, and died
November 10, 1818. 
Woodhull, Martha (I18101)
 
57 (see Source Note comment on her given name.) Platt, Evelina A. ^ (I1109)
 
58 (She was reported as not living when her brother George R. died. However, the Leming manuscript recorded she died in 1921 which is more consistent with her having two husbands. I also have probably found her in the 1870 census living in New York City aft Smith, Harriet "Rock" ^ (I780)
 
59 (She was reported not living when her brother George R. died. However, Leming recorded that she died in 1904, which is more consistent with her having two husbands.) Smith, Deborah (I779)
 
60 (That he died before 1698 is likely. In the census of 1698 only one Theophilus Corwin appears. Since his son, Theophilus, was known to have been living still, the absence of a second Theophilus on the list is further indication that this Theophilus was Corwin, Theophilus Daniel (Sr.) > (I4392)
 
61 (The 1930 census records a daughter Florence, age 4, suggesting that this Florence recorded as age 1 in the 1910 census has died.) Hard, Florence < (I5558)
 
62 (The English didn't seize the area from the Dutch until 1669. Therefore, prior to then Hempstead was not in New York and Hempstead was semi-independent of New Netherlands, but occupied by permission.) Carman IV, John (I6840)
 
63 (There are several uncertainties concerning Catherine. Visit source for updates.) Sweezey, Catherine E. ^ (I1123)
 
64 ) John Brewster Bennett, born November 11, 1822; married
in January, 1846, Sarah Margaret, daughter of
Elias Storey and Sarah M. Herrick, of Rhinebeck, New
York. He died February 18, 1860. They had two
children:
Albert Henry Bennett, born in April, 1847.
Sarah Rebecca Bennett, born February 12, 1849; married
in January, 1870, William T. Blair, son of William
Blair, of New York City. He died February 14, 1898.
They had one child:




Page 129

Sarah Catharine Blair, born January 22, 1872. 
Storey, Sarah Margaret (I18575)
 
65 . CORNELIA VAN CLEVE WOODHULL, 7th generation, born July 12, 1825, was the sixth daughter and youngest child of the Rev. Selah Strong Woodhull and Cornelia Van Cleve.

She married, August 24, 1847, Josiah Little Pickard, son of Samuel Pickard.

(See Genealogical Appendix, Note Ee.)

She died June 27, 1900.

He was graduated from Bowdoin College in 1844; was State Superintendent of Public Instruction from 1859 to 1864; Superintendent of City Schools of Chicago, Illinois, from 1864 to 1877; President of State University of Iowa, from 1878 to 1887.
He received the degrees of A. B., and A. M., from Bowdoin College; and in 1870, the degree of LL. D., from Chicago University and Beloit College, and in 1894, the degree of LL. B., from Bowdoin College.

Children (Three):
(1.) Alice Electa Pickard, born December 25, 1849; married,
September 28, 1870, the Rev. Thomas J. Valentine.
She died February 18, 1872. They had no children.
|(2.) Frederick William Pickard, born September 21, 1851;
| married, June 10, 1874, Enola J. Howe. They had
| four children:
| Edward Frederick Pickard, born December 13, 1875.
| Samuel Pickard, born March 17, 1877.
| Alice Enola Pickard, born May 6, 1879.
| Nelly Howe Pickard, born August 7, 1881.
Twins.|(3.) Fanny Matilda Pickard, born September 21, 1851; married,
| January 27, 1875, Frederick Jollyman, of Barnstable,
| England. He was born December 18, 1847.
| They had four children:
| Josiah Pickard Jollyman, born October 29, 1879.
| Alice Jollyman, born December 25, 1881.
| William Jollyman, born February 22, 1883.
| Fanny Jollyman, born March 4, 1888. 
Woodhull, Cornelia Van Cleve (I18634)
 
66 . SARAH STRONG WOODHULL, 7th generation, born January 19, 1815, was the third daughter and fourth child of the Rev. Selah Strong Woodhull and Cornelia Van Cleve.

She married, May 7, 1836, her deceased sister's husband, the Rev. Jonathan B. Condict, D. D.

(See Genealogical Appendix, Note F.)

He died January 1, 1876.

She died June 15, 1879.

Children (Four):
(1.) Eliza Maria Condict, born July 28, 1837; married, July
26, 1866, the Rev. Henry Post Higley. He was graduated
from Middlesburg College, Vermont, in 1860.
They had two children:
Sarah Condict Higley, born July 31, 1868, and died August
25, 1868.
Emma Cornelia Higley, born May 16, 1870, and died
March 6, 1872.
(2.) Anna Payson Condict, born March 14, 1839, and died
October 29, 1874.
(3.) Sarah Jane Condict, born July 27, 1841, and died February
2, 1868.
(4.) Alice Mary Condict, born June 1, 1845; married, September
27, 1871, the Rev. Cassius Horatio Dibble. He
was graduated from Hamilton College in 1868. They
had three children:
Charles Condict Dibble, born February 15, 1874, and died
March 2, 1901.
Condict Woodhull Dibble, born October 23, 1876; married,
September 23, 1902, Elizabeth Lestra Humphrey.
Anna Marie Dibble, born May 29, 1880. 
Woodhull, Sarah Strong (I18580)
 
67 20. HANNAH WOODHULL, 4th generation, born February 25, 1718, was the eldest child of Nathaniel Wodhull, of Mastic, Long Island, and Sarah Smith, of Smithtown, Long Island.

She married Selah Strong, Jr., son of Selah Strong and Abigail Terry, of Brookhaven, Long Island.

He was born February 23, 1713.

Children (Fourteen):
(1.) Nathaniel Strong, (Major), born November 18, 1737;
married Amy Brewster. They had six children:
Rachel Strong, married Charles Howell.
Selah Strong, (3rd,), married Ruth, daughter of Captain
Ebenezer Woodhull. (See Genealogy, No. 81.)
Mary Strong, married her cousin, Selah Matthews.
Hannah Strong, married Captain Joshua Brown.
Nathaniel Strong, married Esther Howell, of Blooming
Grove, New York.
Juliana Strong, married in the year 1774, Captain Vincent
Mathews.
(2.) Rachel Strong, born June 11, 1739; married Birdseye
Young.
(3.) Benjamin Strong, born February 26, 1741, and died August
24, 1767.
(4.) Hannah Strong, born October 17, 1742; married James
Mathews.
(5.) Samuel Strong, (Major), born July 14, 1744; married
Abigail, daughter of John Brewster. They had three
children (names unknown).
(6.) Anna Strong, born November 18, 1746; married Daniel
Tuthill.
(7.) Temperance Strong, born February 16, 1748, and died
November 24, 1750.
(8.) Juliana Strong, born January 16, 1750; married Christopher
Van Deusen.
(9.) Nathan Strong, (Captain), born November 1, 1751.
(10.) Sarah Strong, born September 29, 1753; married Selah
Havens.
(11.) Temperance Strong, (2nd,), born September 11, 1755;
married Stephen Halsey.
(12.) Abigail Strong, born August 17, 1757.
(13.) Selah Strong, born October 14, 1759, and died January
24, 1762.
(14.) Catharine Strong, born January 6, 1762; married Joshua
Hubbard. They had no children. 
Woodhull, Hannah (I25534)
 
68 311. MATILDA WIKOFF WOODHULL, 7th generation, born November 3, 1813, was the eldest daughter and second child of John Woodhull, M. D., and Ann Wikoff.

She married, September 21, 1836, Joseph Combs, son of Elijah Combs, of Monmouth County, New Jersey.

He was born September 21, 1836, and was graduated from the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University), in 1833. Was a Counsellor-at-Law, and in 1860 was appointed Judge of the Court of Errors.

She died May 24, 1864.

He died January 5, 1876.

Children (Five):
(1.) Ann Amelia Combs, born June 27, 1837, and died November
9, 1842.
(2.) John Woodhull Combs, born January 16, 1840, and died
December 28, 1842.
(3.) William Sutphen Combs, (M. D.), born February 15, 1842;
was graduated from the College of New Jersey (now
Princeton University), in 1860; married, July 5, 1871,
Virginia, daughter of Dr. John R. Conover and Drusilla
Torrence Simmons. They had four children:
Joseph Combs, born April 11, 1872.
Julia Combs, born April 15, 1878.
Vienna Young Combs, born February 16, 1881.
William Sutphen Combs, Jr., born August 16, 1883.
(4.) Julia Woodhull Combs, born August 26, 1847; married,
December 4, 1873, Charles Ridgway (a New York Lawyer),
son of Richard Lot Ridgway and Elizabeth H.
Conover. They had five children:


Richard Lot Ridgway, born October 19, 1874.
William Combs Ridgway, born April 4, 1877; married,
December 12, 1903, Jean Cameron McBride.
Charles Dallas Ridgway, born November 12, 1882.
Gilbert Combs Ridgway, born December 1, 1884.
Marion Ridgway, born September 1, 1887.
(5.) George Woodhull Combs, born March 23, 1853, and died
December 31, 1854. 
Woodhull, Matilida Wikoff (I18476)
 
69 334. ELIZA KETURAH WOODHULL, 7th generation, born June 30, 1811, was the eldest daughter and second child of the Rev. Selah Strong Woodhull and Cornelia Van Cleve.

She married, July 20, 1831, the Rev. Jonathan B. Condict, D. D., of Newark, New Jersey. He was graduated from the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University), in 1827; and from Princeton Theological Seminary in 1829. Was made Professor of Pastoral Theology in Lane Seminary, Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1851. In 1855, he was appointed Professor of Sacred Rhetoric, and Pastor of Theology, in Auburn Theological Seminary, and in 1861 was Moderator of the General Assembly, N. S. Presbytery.

(See Genealogical Appendix, Note F.)

She died January 7, 1835.

Children (Two):
(1.) Maria Louise Condict, born September 1, 1833, and died
March 22, 1834.
(2.) Selah Strong Woodhull Condict, born December 7, 1834,
and died March 15, 1835. 
Woodhull, Eliza Keturah (I18651)
 
70 355. ANNA WOODHULL, 7th generation, born July 25, 1811, was the eldest child of Nathan Woodhull and Sarah Smith. She married first, Nelson Smith.
They had no children. She married second, Edward N. Douglass. He died March 18, 1850. She died November 25, 1903.

Children (Three):
(1.) Edward N. Douglass, born March 6, 1832; married, November
22, 1853, Margaret Ann Kirkpatrick. He died
December 22, 1900. They had three children:
Ida May Douglass, born May 6, 1855; married, May 3,
1876, Francis Allaire. They had two children:
Alexander Allaire, born August 6, 1877.
Frank Allaire, born April 17, 1879.
Isaac Seward Douglass, born November 1, 1862; married,
October 2, 1894, Jane Wilson. They had one child:
Gilbert Wilson Douglass, born July 27, 1895.
Margaret Jones Douglass, born December 15, 1870, and
died October 22, 1872.
(2.) Isaac S. Douglass, born February 16, 1834; married Sarah
E. Buckingham. They had two children:
Edward W. Douglass, born November 11, 1857; married
Martha B. Hiliker. They had one child:
Frank I. Douglass, born July 5, 1883.
Frank H. Douglass, son of Isaac S. Douglass, born August
26, 1860; married louise Hamlin. They had one
child:
Marjorie Douglass, born October 27, 1894.
(3.) Margaret Douglass, born October 27, 1836; married Edward
Edwards. She died November 12, 1868. They
had one child:
Lawrence Stewart Edwards, M. D., born July 4, 1855;
married Addie J. Saxton. He died July 25, 1903. They
had two children:
Martha Blanche Edwards, born June 30, 1877.
Margaritte D. Edwards, born October 17, 1888. 
Woodhull, Anna (I17462)
 
71 381. SARAH FORBES WOODHULL, 7th generation, born June 14, 1830, was the eldest child of the Rev. Richard Woodhull and Sarah Forbes.

She married first, December 22, 1850, Captain Edmund Robinson Webb.

He died December 10, 1853.

Children (One):
(1.) Edmund Standish Webb, born June 2, 1852; married,
January 12, 1886, Emma A. Kinsman. He died April
20, 1903.


She married second, January 3, 1856, Philip Coombs, of Bangor, Maine.

(See Genealogical Appendix, Note G.)

Children (Six):
(1.) Philip Henry Coombs, born December 24, 1856; married,
January 31, 1883, Minnie May, daughter of Samuel
Benson Field, of Bangor, Maine. They had two
children:
Grace Field Coombs, born September 6, 1886.
Leola Woodhull Coombs, born March 10, 1889.
(2.) Sarah Harrod Coombs, born April 1, 1859, and died
August 24, 1860.
(3.) Eliza Boardman Coombs, born January 30, 1861; married,
September 12, 1883, the Rev. James Dixon Smiley, son
of John Smiley, of St. Lambert, Canada. They had
four children:
Richard Woodhull Smiley, born November 26, 1885.
Helen Hazlett Smiley, born December 11, 1887.
Carolyn Dixon Smiley, born July 31, 1890.
Edward Forbes Smiley, born November 9, 1894.
(4.) Mary Woodhull Coombs, born November 15, 1862; married,
June 21, 1899, Frederick Nathan Brown, (M. D.),
son of George Walker Brown and Nancy Blanchard,


whose maternal grandmother was a sister of General
Nathaniel Greene, a hero of the Revolution.
(5.) Caroline Coombs, born May 28, 1865; married, July 8,
1890, Henry Anthony Kelley, son of Anthony Kelley.
They had two children:
Henry Woodhull Kelley, born June 26, 1894.
Frances Charlotte Kelley, born November 30, 1901.
(6.) Helen Coombs, born March 20, 1868. 
Woodhull, Sarah Almira (I18687)
 
72 387. MARY ELIZABETH WOODHULL, 7th generation, born May 16, 1844, was the sixth daughter and seventh child of the Rev. Richard Woodhull and Sarah Forbes.

She married, August 31, 1863, Gardner Blanchard Perry, a resident of Buenos Ayres, South America, in which city they lived until 1896, when they took up their residence at "Montpellier," Newport, Rhode Island.

He was born July 9, 1829, and died March 11, 1899.

He was the eldest son of the Rev. Gardner B. Perry, a descendant of Anthony Perry.

They had no children. 
Woodhull, Mary Elizabeth (I18826)
 
73 4. DEBORAH WODHULL, 2nd generation, born in the year 1654, was the eldest daughter and third child of Richard and Deborah Wodhull.
She married Captain John Lawrence, son of Thomas Lawrence, Patentee of Newtown, Long Island. He died December 17, 1729.
She died January 6, 1742.
(See Genealogical Appendix, Note U.)

Children (Three):
(1.) Thomas Lawrence, married, January 3, 1730, Deborah,
daughter of Thomas Woolsey, of Newtown, L. I.
They had four children. He died in 1752.

(3.) Nathaniel (third son of John Lawrence and Deborah Wodhull)
married, May 23, 1728, Susanna, daughter of
Thomas Alsop, of Newtown, Long Island. They had
eight children: 
Woodhull, Deborah (I7327)
 
74 491. SARAH CATHERINE WOODHULL, 7th generation, born January 14, 1831, was the eldest child of Josiah Woodhull and Anna Eliza Keyser.

She married, August 29, 1849, Truman Herrington.

He was born April 15, 1823, and died February 15, 1880.

She died September 29, 1900.


(CANADIAN LINE.)
Children (Seven):
(1.) John Herrington, born February 3, 1851; married,
September 12, 1872, Margaret Dell. They had nine
children: Six are living, three dead (names and dates
unobtainable).

(2.) Josiah Woodhull Herrington, born July 31, 1853; married,
October 16, 1872, Mary E. Bidner. He died March 26,
1901. They had twelve children:
James B. Herrington, born May 21, 1873.
Frederick Albert Herrington, born July 20, 1874, and died
in the year 1876.
Amy Catharine Herrington, born September 30, 1876;
married, October 12, 1899, Wilson L. Rason. They had
no children.
Charles Byron Herrington, born March 28, 1878.
Milton Herrington, born November 10, 1880; married,
March 7, 1903, Rose Edna Spellings. They had one
child:
May Edna Herrington, born December 20, 1903.
Benjamin Franklin Herrington, born January 3, 1882.
Clinton Herrington, born April 7, 1884.
Eliza Nora May Herrington, born January 1, 1886.
Clayton Ivan Herrington, born February 2, 1888.
Josiah Lorne Herrington, born August 29, 1890.
John Clifford Herrington, born December 23, 1892.
Roscoe Grant Herrington, born February 9, 1895.
(3.) Charles Aldrich Herrington, born October 16, 1856; married
Alice Essex. They had four children.
(4.) Benjamin Herrington, born September 20, 1859; married,
May 7, 1884, Rosella L. Thorp. They had three children:
Berton Herrington, born November 9, 1885.
Frederick William Herrington, born July 12, 1887.
Sarah Reta Herrington, born March 29, 1889.
(5.) Truman Herrington, Jr., born March 28, 1861, and died
March 30, 1861.
(6.) Wesley Herrington, born September 4, 1866; married,
January 24, 1894, Eliza Smith. They had two children:
Oscar Herrington, born November 22, 1896.
Dorcas Lucial Herrington, born November 18, 1901.
(7.) George Washington Herrington, born June 28, 1872; married,
December 5, 1893, Clara Wilson. He died December
31, 1893. They had one child:
George Herrington, born July 10, 1894. 
Woodhull, Sarah Catherine (I18837)
 
75 494. HANNAH MARIA WOODHULL, 7th generation, born January 4, 1837, was the third daughter and fourth child of Josiah Woodhull and Anna Eliza Keyser.

She married, December 25, 1855, Egerton Ezra Peck.

She died September 26, 1885.


(CANADIAN LINE.)
Children (Seven):
(1.) Josiah Washington Peck, born in September, 1856; married,
June 28, 1883, Anna E. Lynn. She was born
December 11, 1863. They had eight children:
Nellie Grace Peck, born March 30, 1885.
Flora Frank Peck, born April 13, 1887.
Mamie Evelyn Peck, born February 4, 1890.

Egerton Eustace Peck, born May 8, 1892.
Elizabeth Agnes Peck, born March 17, 1894.
Margaret Peck, born July 29, 1896.
Mary Makenzie Peck, born August 9, 1899.
Josiah Wilber Peck, born March 23, 1902.
(2.) Anna Eliza Peck, born October 5, 1858; married, January
29, 1891, John H. Ware. They had five children:
Three of them, names unknown, died in infancy.
Emma A. Ware, born March 9, 1892.
Ora Mary Ware, born November 24, 1893.
(3.) Emma Alberta Peck, born January 4, 1863; married,
January 11, 1888, Oscar Stephen Uttvits. He was
born November 23, 1858. They had two children:
Ethel Uttvits, born April 16, 1889.
Laura Uttvits, born January 29, 1902.
(4.) Francis David Peck, born September 16, 1865; married,
November 24, 1887, Carrie May Bailey. She was born
March 21, 1868. They had eight children:
Guy Peck and Gay Peck, twins, born August 24, 1889,
and died March 31, 1890.
Infant daughter, born July 12, 1890, and died same day.
Renrie Verne Peck, born February 25, 1894.
Infant son, born March 6, 1896, and died same day.
Frank Kyle Peck, born February 8, 1898.
Crete Bailey Peck, born January 25, 1901.
Eldon Egerton Peck, born April 6, 1903.
(5.) Roscoe Harold Peck, born in October, 1874; married in
the year 1895, Ethel Plummer. They had two children,
twins, Harold Peck and Dorothea Peck, born October
30, 1900.
(6.) Carrie Lauretta Peck, born February 10, 1877; married
William Sherman Gordon. He was born October 16,
1873. They had one child:
Wayne William Gordon, born August 28, 1899.
(7.) George Edmund Peck, born October 18, 1879; married,
September 5, 1900, Irene May Hurst. They had one
child:
Doane Byron Peck, born January 14, 1901. 
Woodhull, Hannah Maria (I18840)
 
76 512. LUCENA MARIA WOODHULL, 7th generation, born June 24, 1854, was the third daughter and child of Charles Aldrich Woodhull, Sr., and Mary Ann Morden.

She married, June 27, 1877, William Richard Dobbyn, of Minneapolis, Minnesota, son of William Dobbyn.

She died November 27, 1897.

He was graduated from Cornell University. Publisher of "The Osteopathic World," lecturer on sociological, literary and historical subjects.


(CANADIAN LINE.)
Children (Four):
(1.) Charles William Deronda Dobbyn, born May 3, 1878; married,
June 12, 1901, Bertha S., daughter of William B.
Hathaway, of Hornellsville, New York.
(2.) Laura Bonita Estelle Dobbyn, born November 6, 1882,
and died in the year 1884.

3.) Aurilla Maude Dobbyn, born March 6, 1886.
(4.) Harold Woodhull Dobbyn, born August 20, 1888. 
Woodhull, Lucinda Maria (I17615)
 
77 694. III. Julia Francis Woodhull, 8th gen., born November 17,
1840.
695. IV. Charles Augustus Woodhull, 8th gen., born June 25, 1843,
of whom later.


He married second, May 18, 1848, Caroline Marsh.

He died June 6, 1871.

She died November 10, 1903.

Children (Four):
696. I. Amelia Mansfield Woodhull, 8th gen., born January 17,
1850.
697. II. George Guy Woodhull, 8th gen., born November 1, 1852,
and died August 26, 1874.
698. III. Edward Marsh Woodhull, 8th gen., born October 28, 1854,
and died July 1, 1897.
699. IV. Frances Louise Woodhull, 8th gen., born November 11,
1860, of whom later.


275. MARIAN MARGARET WOODHULL, 7th generation, born April 21, 1811, was the only daughter and eldest child of Richard Miller Woodhull and Marian Margaret Maxwell.

She married, August 12, 1833, Henry Augustus Chesebrough, of New York City.

(See Genealogical Appendix, Note E.)

He was born March 7, 1801, and died April 2, 1886.

She died June 28, 1885.

Children (Four):
(1.) Catharine Van Zandt Chesebrough, born December 16,
1835; married, December 15, 1858, Henry Julius Cammann.
She died May 3, 1885. They had five children:
Oswald De Normandie Cammann, born October 16, 1859;
married first, November 8, 1888, Maude, daughter of
Judge Levi Ruggles Church, of Montreal, Canada. She
died May 8, 1900. They had two children:
Athole Cammann, born July 12, 1890.
Maude De Normandie Cammann, born December 9, 1893.
He married second, September 13, 1902, Alice, daughter
of Calvin Ward Eaton, of Albany, New York. They
had one child: Katherine Chesebrough Cammann.
Marion Cammann, born May 20, 1861; married in June,
1886, William Dresser Baker, of Chicago, Illinois. She
died February 27, 1898. They had one child:
Katherine Baker, born July 5, 1887.
Kate Isabel Cammann, born August 11, 1863, and died
in August, 1870.
Henry Cammann, born April 25, 1865; married, April 25,
1889, Mary Hooper, daughter of Edward Payson Abbe,



M. D., of New Bedford, Massachusetts. They had two
children:
William Alanson Abbe Cammann, born September 6,
1896.
Henry Herries Abbe Cammann, born August 22, 1901.
William C. Cammann, born July 12, 1868.
(2.) Robert Augustus Chesebrough, born January 9, 1837;
married, April 28, 1864, Margaret, daughter of Dennis
A. McCredy. She was born September 30, 1841, and
died April 3, 1887. They had five children:
Robert Maxwell Chesebrough, born February 6, 1865;
married, April 23, 1900, Harriet, daughter of James
Morash. She was born August 3, 1866.
William Henry Chesebrough, born August 11, 1866.
Augustin Chesebrough, born April 1, 1868, and died July
16, 1868.
Frederic Woodhull Chesebrough, born June 9, 1870; married,
June 28, 1903, Sidney, daughter of Edward J.
Mathews.
Marian M. Chesebrough, born June 3, 1873; married,
April 28, 1897, George Howard Davison. They had
two children:
Howard Chesebrough Davison, born May 30, 1899.
Margaret Woodhull Davison, born October 24, 1901.
(3.) William Henry Chesebrough, (Colonel), born October 16,
1838; married, August 8, 1874, Emma, daughter of
John T. Daly.
(4.) Maxwell Woodhull Chesebrough, born February 20, 1842,
and died unmarried, July 6, 1863. 
Woodhull, Marian Margaret (I18400)
 
78 Abraham Woodhull (October 7, 1750 – January 23, 1826) was a leading member of the Culper Spy Ring in New York City and Setauket, New York, ...
‎Austin Roe · ‎Setauket, New York · ‎Setauket Presbyterian Church 
Woodhull, Abraham Culper Spy Ring (I21663)
 
79 Funeral of David Mills Clark, a Descendant of One of the Wallabout Prison Ship Martyrs.Brookhaven, L.I., October 18- The funeral of David Mills Clark, who died on Thursday last, was held yesterday at his home, the Rev. R.P. Christopher officiatin Clark, David Mills ^ (I872)
 
80 It is unlikely that Ruth was a daughter of Henry Victors and Elizabeth Mangold. While enumerated in the 1920 census as a sibling, she was not enumerated with the family in the 1910 census. She was enumerated as being born about 1905; Henry Victors died in 1903. An interview with a descendent relative who knew the family well indicated that she knew of no Ruth child of Henry and Elizabeth. Victors, Ruth ? (I16562)
 
81 Little has been found of "Mr. Adriance, Principal" of the Brookhaven Public (or Common) school in 1887. Two brief mentions of J. B. Adriance as a teacher were found in Suffolk County, NY, historical newspapers. No clear record in historical documents, such as census enumerations, has been found. Various genealogical resources have also been examined, again with no clear references to the present "Mr. Adriance."

It has been here inferred that the "Bert Adriance" and "Harry Adriance" identified in the 1887 Brookhaven school photograph are his sons.

[A James B. Adriance was found in the 1880 census for North Hector Village, Schulyer, NY. He was a school teacher. He had a son Albert, then twelve. If this is the "Bert" in the picture, then at the time of the picture he would have been nineteen; however, the "Bert" of the picture seems younger than this. In 1880, they also had a son Charles, aged five, who does not appear in the picture. Harry of the picture appears to be of approximately the same age as the boy adjacent to him—Sam Bumstead, and therefore may have been born shortly after the 1880 census. Any facts listed here for the family based on the 1880 census are therefore tentative.]

[In 1874, a James B. Adriance was noted as a teacher at the Collegiate Institute in New York City, along with a John Adriance. (New York Daily Tribune).]
 
Adriance, James B (I12233)
 
82

The Mysterious William Booth

Various Revolutionary war era accounts of activities in Suffolk County, NY, particularly that of Maj. Benjamin Tallmadge's successful raid on Fort St. George, have mentioned a William Booth, son of George Booth, and a nephew to John Booth. One historian has labeled him "mysterious."  While only briefly mentioned in early accounts, he seems to have had a pivotal role in the success of the Tallmadge raid.  I believe that this record likely places him in the extensive family of Booths descended from Ensign John Booth, one of the early settlers of Southold, Suffolk, NY, and accounts for his seeming elusiveness.

On 27 August 1776, Long Island came under British control when the Continental Army was driven out of New York City during the Battle of Long Island. Many Long Island patriots were forced to flee their homes. William Smith, then Lord of the Manor of St. George, his son General John Smith, and their families abandoned their estate on Mastic Neck on the south shore of Suffolk County. William Booth is said to have been the caretaker of the Manor for the Smith family during this period.*  William's presence on Long Island during the war years is still mysterious (his wife gave birth to two children during this period, including one in 1779, not long before the Tallmadge raid.)  Why William would have been living in Tory occupied territory while he had family in the relative safety of upstate New York, and have been a caretaker for the huge Smith estate is still unanswered.

Sometime after 1776, the British established a fort at Smith's point on the site of the Smith Manor house, from which they gained control over the eastern Great South Bay and an inlet that then existed to the ocean.  They called it Fort St. George. Thus protected, the Tories began to cut wood and otherwise provisioned the British Army in New York City.  In order to keep an eye on the estate for the Smith's, William Booth seems to have ingratiated himself with the Tory occupiers, and because of this there was scuttlebutt that he himself was a Tory.

In 1780, with the encouragement of General Smith and permission from General George Washington, Major Benjamin Tallmadge undertook a raid from his base in Connecticut to harass the British at the fort.  This was part of a general plan of harassments (guerrilla warfare) of the British on Long Island.  William Booth provided reconnaissance assistance, perhaps under instructions from the Smith family.  He is said to have provided sketches of the Fort's defenses to Tallmadge for the raid's planning, and was a guide for Tallmadge during the actual skirmish.

After the war, Tallmadge (and apparently the Smiths) provided affidavits affirming William Miller's patriotism. William's uncle John (his father's brother) was known to be a Tory, and he was forced to flee to Canada with his family after the war. He was in ill health, and died soon after his exile.

William returned to Orange County, NY, and seems to have become quite prosperous there.

It was William's grandfather Charles and family who first removed to Orange County in 1741.  William does not seem to have had any descendants on Long Island. The 19th century Booths who lived in Fire Place, South Haven and Yaphank were not his descendants, but descendants of the immigrant Ensign John in another line. Statements by Martha Smith "Tangier," one of the last Smiths to live in the Manor house, that his descendants were living in Brookhaven/Fire Place several generations later does not appear to be true.


* That the relationship between William Smith and William Booth was not as friends, but as employer-employee, is evidenced by what appear to be the somewhat churlish comments by William Smith concerning their "trespassing" and the seemingly minor use of his vast meadows and woodlands for their personal benefit during the hardships of the war years (see Osborne).

 
Booth, William ^ (I11705)
 
83 "A short time previous to the war of 1812, he was murdered, and his body concealed under a bridge on the public road. Evidently he was robbed. The perpetrators of the crime were never detected." Corsen, William Howe (I10276)
 
84 Advance, 6 Mar 1880: "We have to chronicle this week the sad news of Mrs. Timothy Ketcham's death. Sunday evening she was apparently as well as ever, but was taken ill about 7 o'clock. No danger was apprehended until about 3 o'clock a.m., Monday Gold?, Emma ^ (I7803)
 
85 At the 1850 census, he was living in the household of Zopher and Hettie [Mehitabel] Tucker [Tooker]. If he was their son, Zopher would have been about 62 at Benjamin's birth, and more important, Mehitable would have been about 47. Most sources place this Benjamin as the son of Carlisle Tooker (Tucker) and Mary Ann Brown, and grandson of Zopher. Mary Ann's father was Benjamin Alfred Brown; it is therefore likely that Benjamin's namesake was his maternal grandfather. He is first of a line of at least three Benjamin Brown Tookers.

Some sources record a Benjamin Brown Tooker with a birth date of 13 July 1833. While these sources indicate that he married Phebe Lillian Thurston, his children by her are not completely consistent with those recorded here. See for example: http://www.longislandsurnames.com/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I05960&tree=Brown. This source references "Memoirs of John Tooker," 1938, of which I am unfamiliar.
 
Tooker, Benjamin Brown (i) ^ (I59)
 
86 L.I. Advance, From the Archives of the Long Island Advance, 100 Years Ago. 8 January 2009: "Sylvester N. Corwin, an old resident of these parts and well known in Patchogue, died at his home in Brookhaven at the age of 87 years." Corwin, Sylvester N. ^ (I497)
 
87 LI Advance, 30 July 1992:Dorothy Canfield Tuthill, 99, died July 20 at Little Flower Nursing Home, East Islip. She was born and brought up in Patchogue. Upon graduating from Patchogue High School, she attended Mary Baldwin Seminary in Vir Canfield, Dorothy ^ (I3763)
 
88 Long Island Advance, 17 January 1985:Helen Morrow Ewing dies; trustee emeritus at Brookhaven LibraryHelen Morrow Ewing, 88, died January 11 at Brookhaven Memorial Hospital after a long illness.Born in Brooklyn, she was educated at St. Ma Morrow, Helen E. ^ (I4987)
 
89 Mid-Island Mail, Obituary:"Howard F. Robinson, 32-year-old owner of a fuel oil business on Montauk highway, South Haven, died of a fractured skull about 8:30 a.m. Monday, shortly after the car he was driving skidded into a telephone pole on Manor b Robinson, Howard F. ^ (I8382)
 
90 No Cedar Fork, UT was found. Perhaps what was meant was Cedar Fort in Cedar Valley, Utah County, UT. "Cedar Fork" is a river and area near Kamas, UT, in the Wasatch mountains; there does not appear to be any modern settlement there. Davis, Ruth Ann (I13524)
 
91 Patchogue Advance, 4 Mar 1945Lt. P. G. Ballard, Plane Bombardier, Reported MissingWar Department Sends Notice To Wife UpstateMother in Brookhaven Informed—Held Air Medal, Clusters—Had Come Through Narrow Escapes.First Lieut. Paul G. Ball Ballard, Paul Gocht ^ (I5510)
 
92 Patchogue Advance, 24 June 1982:JOHN MITCHELL EWING, 91, a longtime prominent resident of Brookhaven, died Saturday at Brookhaven Memorial Hospital after a lengthy illness.Mr. Ewing was born on January 28, 1890, in Uniontown, Pennsylvania Ewing, John Mitchell Sr. ^ (I9294)
 
93 Rosalie was not enumerated in George's household in the 1900 census, even though there was a servant who could have provided child care. Another ambiguity is that in the 1910 census she was recorded as a student in kindergarten which is incongruous with her age. The 1910 census entry indicates that Edith, George's wife, had had no children, therefore, it is unlikely that her age was erroneously recorded. Ashby, Rosalie < (I9733)
 
94 Source: New York Gazette and Weekly Mercury, June 19, 1772:"Justice Nathaniel Brewster , Bellport , Brookhaven (1772). About four o’clock last Monday afternoon [June 15th?] Nathaniel Brewster Esq. being in the woods with one of his negroes, attemp Brewster, Nathaniel Esq. (ii) ^ (I5818)
 
95 The Long Islander, 23 April 1915: Mrs. Elizabeth Badetty died at her home on High street Saturday morning last, suffering from a complication of diseases. She was 66 years of age, and was born in Brookhaven, the daughter of Charles and Mary Sweze Swezey, Elizabeth Rose ^ (I147)
 
96 ["Mrs. Douglas E. Brown" is frequently mentioned in the pages of the Patchogue Advance following the brief mention of their marriage in the 7 September 1934 issue of the paper. She appears to have been very active in community affairs, but her given name was not found. Her birth surname is inferred from reported visits by her father. The paper is currently online and indexed only through 1948. (6 Nov 2010)] Canner, [w.\ Douglas] ^ (I12948)
 
97 [Based on census records, George N. Ashby may have immigrated to Wisconsin following the death of his first wife Laura, and remarried about 1870 to a "Jeanett." George N. and Jeanette were found in the 1870, 1880 and 1900 censuses. The children by his marriage to Laura are not recorded as living with him, however. Further research is required to prove this relationship.] Ashby, George N. (I690)
 
98 [Byrne recorded two Lydia's without further explanation. Only one is entered here.] Homan, Lydia < (I11688)
 
99 [E. T. Corwin's genealogy contains only one entry for a William Corwin who had a wife Philothea. He recorded her as Philothea Homan, with children William and Barnabas. William was recorded with a questionable birth date of 1790; and his lineage was recorded as Richard -> Jedediah -> Daniel -> Daniel -> Theophilus -> Matthias.]

[The children recorded in the 1850 census could, I suppose, be children of Philothea from a prior marriage to a Mr. Raynor. Barney is perhaps Barnabas in E. T. Corwin's compilation.]

[William H. Corwin's middle name was likely "Hallock," but proof has not yet been found.]

 
Corwin, William H (I22)
 
100 [Frederick Kost's parents and family were deduced from the 1870 census. (t is likely that they are the same family. Other sources record that he resided in Staten Island (Richmond Co.), New York City, although no period of this residency was given. In 1870, Frederick Kost was of the correct age; and the 1910 census recorded Frederick's parents as being born in Germany, as in the 1870 census. A photograph in the Post-Morrow collection, probably taken by Frederick Kost, shows an elderly Joseph Kost on the Fire Island Beach at Smiths Point.] Kost, Joseph > (I7607)
 

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