Showing posts with label Early New England. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Early New England. Show all posts

Monday, September 16, 2019

General Miller In Hawthorne's Custom-House



The apartment opposite to Hawthorne's was, in his day, occupied by the brave warrior General James Miller... . (Source)

Gen. Miller was...collector of the port of Salem which post he resigned in 1840. He is the "old soldier collector" referred to in the introduction to Hawthorne's Scarlet Letter. (Source)

General James Miller's desk and chair have come to us [the Essex Institute]... .
The old chair had not failed to attract the attention of [Nathaniel] Hawthorne while he served with General Miller at the Salem Custom House. In the preface of the "Scarlet Letter," he tells how the gallant old general would slowly and painfully ascend the Custom House steps and with a toilsome progress across the floor--for the step was palsied now that had been foremost in the charge--attain his customary chair beside the fireplace. (Source)

Saturday, June 22, 2019

General Rufus Putnam's Work In The South


Florida Panhandle

From the Journal of Gen. Rufus Putnam, a brief history of his work after the French-Indian War:





Friday, April 5, 2019

Charlotte Temple


Mrs. Robinson (Perdita) Painting By Gainsborough (Of The Fictional Charlotte Temple's Era)

Charlotte Temple.....

“I have been mistaken,” said Montraville. “I imagined I loved Charlotte: but alas! I am now too late convinced my attachment to her was merely the impulse of the moment. I fear I have not only entailed lasting misery on that poor girl, but also thrown a barrier in the way of my own happiness, which it will be impossible to surmount. I feel I love Julia Franklin with ardour and sincerity; yet, when in her presence, I am sensible of my own inability to offer a heart worthy her acceptance, and remain silent.” Full of these painful thoughts, Montraville walked out to see Charlotte: she saw him approach, and ran out to meet him: she banished from her countenance the air of discontent which ever appeared when he was absent, and met him with a smile of joy."


.....by Susanna Haswell Rowson:

Source
.....Summarized at Wikipedia:

"The book relates the tale of Charlotte Temple, who is enticed by a dashing soldier, John Montraville, to run away with him, but after they cross to America, he abandons her. It belongs to the seduction novel genre popular in early American literature."


Friday, August 24, 2018

Colver-Culver Genealogy



Source
"John Winthrop the younger, in whose company Edward Culver came to America, recruited his band of colonists from the counties Middlesex, Kent and Essex; as the Colver, or Culver, is found in the Middlesex records, especially in some parishes of London, it is more than probable Edward Colver was a native of those parts."

Edward Culver married Sarah Backus, daughter of William Backus and Elizabeth Pratt.


Saturday, August 6, 2016

O.M. Spencer's Ancestry


From The Indian Captivity Of O.M. Spencer:

"My father [Oliver Marlborough Spencer, Sr.] had descended from one of the first families who left England on account of the persecutions for religious opinions, in the reign of the second Charles, to seek in the unbroken wilds of New England an asylum from oppression...". 

My mutual ancestor (Gerrard Spencer) with Oliver Marlborough Spencer (via Wikitree):

Cathy and Oliver are fourth cousins 6 times removed
Cathy (Powers) Palm and Oliver Spencer are both descendants of Gerard Spencer.

1. Cathy is the daughter of Richard Newman Powers [confident]
2. Richard is the son of Ralph Newman Powers [confident]
3. Ralph is the son of Addie (More) Powers [confident]
4. Addie is the daughter of Cynthia (Richmond) More [confident]
5. Cynthia is the daughter of Laura (Backus) Richmond [confident]
6. Laura is the daughter of John Backus [confident]
7. John is the son of John Backus [confident]
8. John is the son of John Backus [unknown confidence]
9. John is the son of Timothy Backus I [unknown confidence]
10. Timothy is the son of Sarah (Spencer) Backus [unknown confidence]
11. Sarah is the daughter of Gerard Spencer [unknown confidence]
This makes Gerard the ninth great grandfather of Cathy.

1. Oliver is the son of Oliver Marlborough Spencer [unknown confidence]
2. Oliver is the son of Samuel Spencer [unknown confidence]
3. Samuel is the son of Isaac Spencer [unknown confidence]
4. Isaac is the son of Samuel Gerrard Spencer [unknown confidence]
5. Samuel is the son of Gerard Spencer [unknown confidence]
This makes Gerard the third great grandfather of Oliver.



Sunday, January 24, 2016

The Webster Genealogy According To Noah


Source [Not Governor John Webster's Property]



Family of John Webster:

Source

Cousin Dana's family.  Noah Webster would be Dana's father's 4th cousin 5x removed.



Wednesday, October 2, 2013

John Lees' Journal



Journal of J. L., of Quebec, merchant By John Lees, Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Michigan



An excerpt from the Journal:

"The passengers came all ashore at the long Wharff and were conducted by Captain Hall to one Collonel Ingarsols a good Tavern in Kings Street which leads down to the Kings Wharf."


Monday, May 25, 2009

John Cleaveland - A New Light In New England

"The World of John Cleaveland" by Christopher M. Jedrey, profiled the life and times of John Cleaveland, who was, as am I, a direct descendant of Moses & Ann (Winn) Cleveland. John Cleaveland was the 3rd son and 7th of 11 children of Josiah Cleveland and grandson of Josiah Cleveland. [President Grover Cleveland was also a descendant of Moses Cleveland]. John Cleaveland was also a descendant of Elisha & Rebecca (Doane) Paine; I am a descendant of the Paines as well.

The scope of Mr. Jedrey's book went beyond the genealogy of Reverend John Cleaveland (1722-1799), although that was included. Reverend Cleaveland's triumphs and struggles within the religious community that itself was going through changes was another theme, although his elders were not immune from religious tensions.

"Some...opposed the Half-Way Covenant (created 1662), and hence were inclined toward toleration for these Baptists* who had sprung up in their midst." *"North Woburn, where the (Moses) Cleavelands lived, contained the Wymans, the Pierces, the Wilsons and the Pollys--four of Woburn's Baptist families."

The author also described the world in which Rev. Cleaveland lived, the impact of New England life and how that life and the dynamics of it reinforced the world of John Cleaveland. The plight of younger sons when land in New England was inherited by the oldest affected John. Younger sons might learn a trade or turn to fishing; John thought he'd try higher education instead.

"... Woburn readily gave land to new settlers from its seemingly inexhaustible holdings of undistributed lands. However, as the amount of available land shrank, it became important to determine who was entitled to a share of the remainder... ." "The question arose ... in February 1666, and the next year a list of the eighty proprietors was made, excluding some latecomers and younger sons." The exclusion of 'younger sons' was not the only time the significance of birth order was mentioned in Mr. Jedrey's book.

"In the early 1690s, Josiah (Rev. John Cleaveland's grandfather) and Samuel moved to the Quinebaug Country... . In the fifteen years that followed, their brothers Isaac and Edward joined them there... ." Connecticut became more settled after King Philip's War, a war in which Moses, Jr., Aaron, and Samuel Cleaveland participated.

"In August 1710, he (Josiah Cleaveland, Jr.) married Abigail Paine, who, like so many Cleaveland brides, belonged to a family whose standing in the community was superior to that of the Cleavelands. Her father, Elisha, had migrated from Barnstable about 1700 and purchased 2,000 acres from Major Fitch. He had become one of the leading citizens of Canterbury [CT]."

"The second Josiah Cleaveland (an eldest son) was able to provide a better start in life for his children than any previous Cleaveland had done, but he did so according to the old family strategy. He gave his eldest son and namesake the bulk of the paternal estate that he had so carefully reassembled."

John Cleaveland, not being the oldest son, but the third, decided in 1739 that his future was at Yale. "John Cleaveland's decision to attend Yale was only the first step in a long process of finding his way in the world. But, given his family's background, it was a bold step forward. The Cleaveland family was no longer hampered by the illiteracy that had been the lot of their emigrant ancestor; nevertheless, their educational attainments were still not very high."

There was mutual dissatisfaction between John Cleaveland and Yale administrators, stemming from the New Light preaching, and Cleaveland was expelled from Yale. John Cleaveland eventually accepted a position as a minister in Massachusetts (Chebacco) rather than Connecticut (laws unfavorable to John's position were being passed in Connecticut). Yale eventually bestowed a degree upon John Cleaveland and also claimed him as one of their own (as a military chaplain) listed in a Yale publication.

"Before 1768, [Rev.] Cleaveland had not often felt called upon to comment upon political affairs (Note: an example of his pre-1768 writing can be found here and a 'bibliography' can be found here). "....in the fall of 1768 he wrote his first political essay for the newly founded Essex Gazette (most of his essays were under the pseudonym Johannes in Eremo -- John in the Wilderness)." With the Revolutionary War looming, there were plenty of issues for Rev. Cleaveland to address.
John Cleaveland's life would fill a book (literally!). "John and Mary Cleaveland had reason to be thankful, for God had vouchsafed them both her life and the lives of their first seven children. The children survived the rigors of childbirth and the dangers of adolescence; in fact, all but one saw their father to his grave in 1799."

"The World of John Cleaveland" provided a glimpse of the world of my Cleaveland and Paine ancestors and their place within it.

Note: All quoted material was from the Jedrey book.