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Kellogg, Lieutenant Ezra

Male 1754 - 1833  (79 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Kellogg, Lieutenant Ezra was born on 9 May 1754 in Colchester, New London, Connecticut; died on 29 Sep 1833 in Great Barrington, Hampshire, Massachusetts.

    Notes:

    Page 175
    712. LIEUT. EZRA,(6) son of Abner (5) (228), b. in Colchester, 5 Sept." 1754; m.
    jn Great Barrington, Mass., 30 Apr l779, Mary Whiting, b. 11 Dec., 1758, dau.
    of Lieut. Gamaliel Whiting • of Great Barrington, b. 17 Sept., 1727, and Anna.
    Gillett, b. 18 Feb., 1738.
    He d. in Great, Barrington, 29 Sept., 1833, aged 79; she died there 11 May,
    1837, aged 78.
    He removed to Great Barrington in 1771 and became, a prominent citizen; sus-
    tained various offices and was long the principal deputy sheriff of the town. He
    was an honest and straightforward man and highly respected.
    During Shay's rebellion he was deputy sheriff and on one occasion the Shay's men"
    attempted to capture and “Handle” him, but he escaped and they attacked
    his house and threatened Mrs. Kellogg. They discharged a gun through the cur-
    tains of a bed on which she was lying, setting them on fire, and through the walls
    of the house. Some of these men were arrested and at their examination Dr.
    Budd testified: I went down to Mr. Kellogg's house; Dunham and others had
    their bayonets at Mrs. Kellogg's breast and swore they would kill her; I thought
    Mrs. Kellogg would faint away.”
    In his application for a pension, 1832, he stated sthat he was 77 years of age
    born in Colchester, Conn., 5 Sept.,1754; res.-there and in Lebanon until 1771,
    when be removed to Great Barrington. Belonged to a company of .Minute men
    and marched in Apr. 1775, in Boston under Capt. King and served in the siege
    until December. Early in 1776 was at Saratoga and vicinity protecting the in-
    habitants from the hostile Tories and Indians who were constantly infesting the
    Mowhawk Valley; latcr be was in Colonel Samuel Brewer's Reg. at Ticonderoga dur-
    ing the remainder ·of' the year. About the middle of July, Gen. Burgoyne was ad-
    vancing and he again volunteered under Colonel John Ashley to· go to Forts Ann and
    Edward, but the American army retreated before the enemy to Stillwater. The
    call for additional troops was so sudden and urgent that those of the volunteers
    who had horses mounted them in order to reach the front as soon as possible. He
    was in. the rear guard and the pressure was so great that he and others lost horses,
    saddles and bridles, quite a privation in those days. Arriving in Stillwater the
    company was permitted to return home, but had scarcely arrived there when they
    were again ordered to march, at once to Bennington, at which place they arrived.
    on the evening of the 16 Aug., 1777, the day on which the battle was fought. They
    were detailed that night to guard the prisoners and the next day to bury the dead.
    In Dec., 1777 he was detailed by his Capt., Goodrich, to guard, day and night,
    Gideon Smith, who had been adjudged by the Committee of Safety, an enemy to his country.
    Smith and some others we're banished.. Capt. Walter Pynchon,
    Deputy Quartermaster at the post of Great Burrington, who had his office in Ezra's
    house, appointed him, 1 Mar., 17811 an assistant in the department under him,
    assigning him duties as "wagon conductor for the management of the numerous
    transportation trains; also superintendent of cutting. weighing, packing and re-
    packing vast quantities of beef which were furnished to the army. He continued in
    the service until the end of the war.

    https://books.google.com/books?id=3eztAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA175&1pg=PA175&dq=Captain+Charles+Whiti
    ng+Elizabeth+Bradford&source=bl&ots=en9fYWwYWW&sig=GITwObMnsOJoJRVlzFubY5kVUjA&hl=en&s
    a=X&ei=pHeIVL6WOtP- yQT8kYCYAw&ved=OCEgQ6AEwCQ#v=onepage&q=Captain20Charles20Whiting20Elizabeth20Bra
    dford&f=false

    Ezra married Whiting, Mary about 1774. Mary (daughter of Whiting, Lieutenant Gamaliel and Gillett, Anna) was born on 11 Dec 1758 in of Great Barrington, Berkshire, Massachusetts; died on 11 May 1837 in Great Barrington, Hampshire, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Lukens Kellogg, Anastacia was born on 29 Feb 1780 in Gt. Barrington, Massachusetts; died on 4 May 1837 in Lockport, Niagara, New York.
    2. Kellogg, Henry was born on 7 Feb 1782 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts; died on 15 Oct 1805.
    3. Kellogg, Frances was born on 11 Apr 1784; died on 27 Apr 1827.
    4. Whiting Kellogg, Bernice was born on 6 Jul 1786 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts; died on 20 Aug 1823.
    5. Kellogg, Sarah was born on 12 Nov 1789; died on 5 Sep 1862.
    6. Kellogg, Mary was born on 12 Nov 1789 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts; died on 26 Jun 1872.
    7. Kellogg, Augustus was born on 23 Sep 1792 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts; died on 14 Oct 1793.
    8. Kellogg, Lydia Ann was born on 10 Oct 1793 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts; died on 9 Feb 1865.
    9. Kellogg, Nancy was born on 17 Oct 1795 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts; died on 13 Oct 1796.
    10. Kellogg, Nancy was born on 21 Nov 1798 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts; died on 2 Mar 1875.

Generation: 2