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Treat, Hannah

Female 1659 - 1707  (48 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Treat, Hannah was born on 1 Jan 1659 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, United States; was christened on 1 Jan 1660 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut (daughter of Treat, Governor Robert and Trapp, Jane, daughter of Treat, Governor Robert and Tapp, Jane); died on 3 Mar 1707 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; was buried in 1706 in Palisado Cemetery, Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut, United States.

    Notes:

    !Mather, Horace E., Mather Genealogy, Hartford,Conn,1890, p.73,102;The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, (Boston:David Clapp and son, printer)Vol 33, 1879, pp.101-02,2;(Boston:Drake, G.Samuel, Publ)Vol 5, 1851, p. 460;(Albany: Munsell, J.)Vol 16, 1862, p. 153;(Boston:Thomas Prince, Printer and Publisher)Vol 6, 1852, p. 20; She was the dau of Gov Robert Treat

    Hannah married Mather, Samuel about 1670. Samuel was born on 5 Sep 1650 in Dorchester, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States; was christened on 7 Sep 1651 in Dorchester, Norfolk, Massachusetts; died on 18 Mar 1727 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; was buried in 1727 in Palisado Cemetery Windsor Hartford County Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. John was born in 1675 in Bradford, New Haven, Connecticut; died in 1679.
    2. Mather, Samuel was born in 1677 in Branford, New Haven, Connecticut; died on 6 Feb 1745 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut; was buried in Feb 1746.
    3. Mather, Hannah was born in Sep 1682 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; died in DECEASED; was buried in 1683.
    4. Mather, Cotton was born in 1683 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut; died on 7 Nov 1717; was buried in Nov 1717.
    5. Mather, Azariah was born on 29 Aug 1685 in Windsor, Colony of Connecticut, British Colonial America; died on 11 Feb 1736 in Saybrook, Middlesex, Connecticut, United States; was buried in Feb 1736.
    6. Mather, Ebenezer was born in 1687 in Connecticut; died in 16 Apr.
    7. Mather, Elisabeth was born in 1691 in Connecticut; died on 17 Jan 1696; was buried in Jan 1696.
    8. Mather, Nathaniel was born on 30 May 1695 in Aquebogue, Suffolk, New York, United States; died on 20 May 1748 in Suffolk, New York, United States; was buried in May 1748.
    9. Mather, Benjamin was born in 1696 in Connecticut; died in DECEASED.
    10. Mather, John was born in 1699 in Connecticut; died in DECEASED.
    11. Mather, Joseph was born on 22 Sep 1700 in of Windsor, Connecticut; died on 7 Nov 1717 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut, United States.
    12. Mather, Nathaniel was born on 18 Mar 1716 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut; died on 3 Aug 1770.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Treat, Governor Robert was born on 23 Feb 1622 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; was christened on 25 Feb 1624 in Trendale, Pitminister, Somerset, England (son of Treat, Richard and Coleman, Sarah, son of Treat, Richard Sr. and Gaylord, Alice, son of Treat or Trott, Governor Richard and Gaylord, Alice); died on 12 Jul 1710 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, United States; was buried in Jul 1710 in Old Cemetery, Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, United States.

    Notes:



    BIRTH RITE: Also shown as Christening Pitminster, Somerset, England.

    Robert Treat
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Robert Treat
    Governor
    In office
    1683 – (interrupted from 1687 to 1689) – 1698
    Preceded by William Leete
    Succeeded by Fitz-John Winthrop
    Personal details
    Born February 23, 1624
    Pitminster, Somerset, England
    Died July 12, 1710 (aged 86)
    Milford, Connecticut
    Spouse(s) Jane Tapp Treat
    Occupation Farmer/politician
    Robert Treat (February 23, 1624 – July 12, 1710) was an American colonial leader, militia officer and governor of the Connecticut Colony between 1683 and 1698.

    Contents [hide]
    1 Biography
    2 Career
    3 Death
    4 Notable descendants
    5 References
    6 Further reading
    7 External links
    Biography[edit]
    Treat was born in Pitminster, Somerset, England and emigrated to Massachusetts with his family when he was fifteen. His father was Richard Treat and his mother was Alice Gaylord. His family were early settlers at Wethersfield, Connecticut. He settled in Milford, Connecticut in 1639 and became one of the leaders of the New Haven Colony, serving in the General Court as its assembly was known.

    On Christmas Day, 1647 he married Jane Tapp in Milford, with whom he had eight children. Their great-grandson, Robert Treat Paine, signed the Declaration of Independence. Jane died on October 31, 1703. He then married Mrs. Elizabeth (Powell) Bryan, the daughter of Elder Michael and Abigail Powell of Boston, on October 24, 1705. She was twice widowed before marrying Gov. Treat. She died on January 10, 1706.[1]

    Career[edit]
    When the Connecticut Charter of 1662 forced the New Haven Colony to merge with Connecticut in 1665, Treat led a group of dissidents who left the colony. They moved to New Jersey in 1666 where they were joined by other dissidents from Branford, Connecticut, another part of the former New Haven Colony. The dissidents from Branford were led by Abraham Pierson, Sr. Robert Treat wanted the new community to be named Milford, New Jersey. Pierson, a devout Puritan, preferred the name New Ark, and this place is now known as Newark.[2] Robert himself returned to Milford, Connecticut in 1672 and lived there the rest of his life.

    Treat headed the colony's militia for several years, principally against the Narragansett Indians. This included participating in King Philip's War in 1676. He served on the Governor's Council continuously from 1676 to 1708.

    First elected Governor in 1683, Treat was supplanted by Sir Edmund Andros in 1687, making Connecticut part of the Dominion of New England. Treat is credited with having a role in concealing the state's charter in the Charter Oak, and resumed his job as governor when the dominion scheme fell apart in 1689. He was re-elected annually until being defeated by Fitz-John Winthrop in 1698.

    Death[edit]
    Treat died in Milford, New Haven County, Connecticut, on July 12, 1710. He is interred at Milford Cemetery in Connecticut.[3]

    Notable descendants[edit]
    His descendants include:

    Robert Treat Paine (1731–1814), signer of the Declaration of Independence
    Stephen Crane (1871–1900), author (The Red Badge of Courage)
    Thomas Edison (1847–1931), inventor
    Sidney Mason Stone (1803-1882), architect
    Margaret Sidney (1844-1924) author of Five Little Peppers children's series.
    Charles H. Treat (1842–1910), Treasurer of the United States from 1905 to 1909
    Charles W. Woodworth (1865–1940), entomologist
    Treat Williams (b. 1951), Actor/Director/Singer/Pilot[4]
    William W. Treat (May 23, 1918 - January 10, 2010), Judge/Banker/Founder of Bank Meridian/Founder of the National College of Probate Judges/Chairman of the NH Republican Party from 1954-58[5]
    References[edit]
    Jump up ^ "Robert Treat". Connecticut State Library. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
    Jump up ^ New Jersey Opinion: Where Did This Name Come From? by Abraham Resnick — New York Times — February 25, 1990
    Jump up ^ "Robert Treat". The Political Graveyard. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
    Jump up ^ Treat Williams
    Jump up ^ William Treat obituary
    Further reading[edit]
    Edward Paul Rindler, "The Migration from the New Haven Colony to Newark, East New Jersey: A Study of Puritan Values and Behavior, 1630-1720" PhD dissertation u of Pennsylvania; Dissertation Abstracts International (1978), 38#11 pp 6792–6792 online
    External links[edit]
    Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Treat.
    Robert Treat family tree Some Descendents at the Wayback Machine (archived March 27, 2007)
    Robert Treat directing landing of founders of Newark, Adolph Treidler poster


    Political offices
    Preceded by
    William Leete Governor of the Connecticut Colony
    1683–87 Succeeded by
    Sir Edmund Andros
    as Governor of the Dominion of New England
    Preceded by
    Sir Edmund Andros
    as Governor of the Dominion of New England Governor of the Connecticut Colony
    1689–98 Succeeded by
    Fitz-John Winthrop
    Authority control
    WorldCat VIAF: 11286618 LCCN: n85185594
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Treat

    He married 1) Jane Tapp and 2) Elizabeth (Powell) Bryan.
    ==============================

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    Robert Treat
    Governor of the Colony of Connecticut, 1683-1698
    Born: ca. 1624, Pitminster, Somerset, England
    College: None
    Political Party: None
    Offices: Surveyor of Milford Lands, 1639-1640, 1652
    Tax Collector, Wethersfield, 1647
    Deputy, New Haven Colony General Court, 1653,1655-1659
    Chief Military Officer of Milford, 1654
    Magistrate, New Haven Colony, 1660-1664
    Town Clerk, Newark, New Jersey, 1666-1667
    Newark Delegate to New Jersey Legislature, 1667-1672
    Assistant, General Court of the Colony of Connecticut, 1673-1676
    Deputy Governor, Colony of Connecticut, 1676-1683, 1699-1709
    Governor, Colony of Connecticut, 1683-1698
    Died: 12 July 1710, Milford, Connecticut

    Robert Treat was baptized February 25, 1624/5 at Pitminster, Somerset, England, the son of Richard and Alice (Gaylord) Treat, and was one of ten children. His family immigrated to Watertown, Massachusetts about 1638, and by 1639 was in Wethersfield, Connecticut. Robert, then 16 years old, had moved on to Milford by November 1639 and is listed in the town records as one of those designated to survey lands, an unusual honor for his age. He returned to Wethersfield after the survey and was elected ratemaker (tax collector) there in 1647. In that same year, he married Jane Tapp, the daughter of Edmund Tapp. According to tradition, they were married at the Tapp house at a spinning bee on Christmas night. However, no record of the marriage appears in the State Library's Barbour Collection of Connecticut Vital Records or Church Records Index.

    By 1649 the couple had moved to Milford, which was part of the New Haven Colony. There, with the lands he had purchased and with lands received from his father-in-law, Robert Treat became a holder of extensive properties. The residents of Milford elected him, on several occasions, to buy and divide public lands. He became known as a person who had a talent for settling boundaries and other disputes between people. He also served as a trustee, an executor of wills, and an appraiser of property, with his name in many of the early probate records.

    Robert Treat was a Deputy from Milford to the General Court of the New Haven Colony in 1653. He served as chief military officer of Milford in 1654 and then four more years as Deputy, 1655-59. In 1660 he was appointed as a Magistrate of the New Haven Colony. Robert and Jane Treat's seven children were born in Milford.

    Charles I, King of England, had been condemned and beheaded in 1649 during Oliver Cromwell's rule. The judges of the Parliamentary Court that passed the king's death sentence were known as regicides. Charles II, Charles' son, was restored to power in 1660. He received information that two of the regicide judges, William Goffe and Edward Whalley, were hiding in the New Haven Colony. Charles II sent an order to the New Haven Colony in 1661 to find and arrest these judges. The New Haven colonial legislature ordered all officials of the colony to comply and make thorough searches in their home areas. Robert Treat ordered the Milford search, but Goffe and Whalley were not found. They did, however, stay there for some time afterward, and were reported to have had Robert Treat as a friend.

    Settlement of both the Colony of Connecticut and the New Haven Colony had started without official charters, at a time when there was much political upheaval in England. Conditions stabilized when Charles II was restored to the throne. Charles II began to interest himself matters concerning the American colonies, one issue being the legality of the Colony of Connecticut. Connecticut realized that if it did not send a representative to the king, penalties and unfavorable conditions could be imposed upon it. In 1662 the Colony of Connecticut sent John Winthrop, a consummate diplomat, to England to obtain a charter. The New Haven Colony did not send anyone. The king, in listening to Winthrop, decided to grant a charter, but merged the New Haven Colony with the Colony of Connecticut.

    The merger came as a surprise to most inhabitants of the New Haven Colony, and many of them were unhappy with the situation. Robert Treat, although upset, continued serving in his position as magistrate for four more years. Treat served briefly in the General Court of the newly-merged Colony of Connecticut but in 1666 moved to New Jersey, where he and several others purchased land for what became the town of Newark. He served as the Newark town clerk for a year and as Newark's delegate to the New Jersey colonial legislature from 1667 until 1672.

    In 1672, Robert Treat returned to Connecticut. He was immediately made second-in-command of the New Haven forces that were mustering for a war with the Dutch. From 1673-1676, he was elected as an Assistant to the General Court of the Colony of Connecticut. The year 1675 saw an uprising of Native American tribes throughout New England, known as King Phillip's War after the English name for the Wampanoag Indian chief, Metacomet. Robert Treat was made Major and Commander-in-Chief of the Connecticut forces, which, under his leadership, helped save the town of Springfield, Massachusetts from destruction.

    The war ended in August of 1676, when King Phillip was killed. Treat was then elected as Deputy Governor of the Colony of Connecticut, filling in the remainder of the term of the preceding Deputy Governor, William Leete, who had been advanced to the governorship when Governor John Winthrop had died. Governor William Leete died in April of 1683. Robert Treat became acting governor, and then was elected to the post annually for the next fifteen years.

    One major problem that Robert Treat inherited as a new governor in 1683 was Sir Edmund Andros. Governor of New Jersey and New York until 1683, Andros had claimed since 1675 that his jurisdiction included much of Connecticut. He had sent armed forces to enforce the claim, but Connecticut turned them back. Connecticut appealed to England, but nothing was settled.

    By 1683, Andros had been made Governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony and Thomas Dongan was the new governor of New York. Dongan continued Andros' policies by claiming all lands west of the Connecticut River for New York. Governor Treat and members of the Court of Assistants met with Dongan and, through diplomacy, were able to settle the matter with only the loss of the town of Rye to New York. However, the following years saw several writs issued against the Connecticut Colony in an attempt to divide Connecticut between New York and Massachusetts.

    Charles II died in 1685 and his brother, James, no friend of Connecticut, came to the throne. It was James' plan to unite all the New England colonies, and he appointed Andros as Governor of the Dominion of New England. Andros demanded that Connecticut give up its Charter.

    The Connecticut General Assembly was alarmed, for the Charter of 1662 was a generous one, and members of the Assembly feared that Andros would take away some of the liberties of the citizens of Connecticut. Governor Treat responded by diplomatically delaying the legal proceedings, over many months, on the grounds that some legal processes had not been done correctly and that Connecticut's appeal to the king should receive a response. But on October 31, 1687, Edmund Andros came to Hartford in person to receive Connecticut's Charter.

    An afternoon meeting was the main feature of Andros' visit. Governor Treat took the opportunity to speak of how the Colony of Connecticut had been built with hard work and sacrifice and what the Charter meant to the citizens. It was an era when speeches of several hours were not uncommon. According to legend, Treat spoke throughout the afternoon and into the evening, when the candles were lit. The Charter was on the table. Suddenly there was a rush of wind from a door, blowing the candles out. By the time they were relit, the Charter was gone, hidden in an oak tree (later known as the Charter Oak) until the danger was past.

    Andros never physically possessed the Charter of 1662, but still took control of Connecticut. Governor Robert Treat was made one of fifty advisors to Andros, and did what he could to maintain favorable conditions. King James was deposed in 1688, and Andros was thrown out of power in 1689. The Colony of Connecticut resumed its former government, with Robert Treat as governor. However, in 1692 a political crisis for Connecticut arose when the new governor of New York, Benjamin Fletcher, arrived with an appointment that gave him full power to command Connecticut's militia as well as the military forces of New York. Robert Treat refused to transfer command. The General Assembly of Connecticut voted to send Fitz-John Winthrop, the son of John Winthrop, Jr., to England to obtain a decision as to whether the Charter of 1662 was still valid, and 2,200 of 3,000 freemen backed up that vote. Winthrop left for England late in 1693 and made his case before the King and Queen early in 1694. A report prepared by the royal attorney and solicitor-general confirming the validity of the Charter of the Colony of Connecticut was ratified by the crown on April 19, 1694. The Charter formed the basis of Connecticut's government until a new state constitution was written in 1818.

    Robert Treat was seventy-six in 1692, and ready for someone else to serve as governor. Fitz-John Winthrop was elected in 1693, and Robert Treat was elected to the position of Deputy Governor, where he served for the next ten years.

    Robert Treat died July 12, 1710 in Milford and is buried in the Milford Center Cemetery. His first wife, Jane, died October 31, 1703. He had married again on October 24, 1705, to Mrs. Elizabeth (Powell) Bryan, the daughter of Elder Michael and Abigail Powell of Boston. She was twice widowed before marrying Gov. Treat. She died January 10, 1706.

    The grandson of Governor Treat's oldest son, Samuel, was Robert Treat Paine, a signer of the Declaration of Independence.

    Bibliography
    Champion, Henry. "Life and Character of Robert Treat," in Fish, Stuyvesant, ed. Anthon Genealogy. New York: privately printed, 1930 [CSL call number CS 71 .A62 1930].
    Ford, George Hare. "Robert Treat: Founder, Farmer, Soldier Statesman, and Governor." Papers of the New Haven Colony Historical Society 8 (April 1914): 162-80 [CSL call number 974.62 N445p].

    National Cyclopedia of American Biography. New York: James White & Company, 1900, s.v. "Treat, Robert", vol. 10, p. 323 [CSL call number E 176 .N27].

    Norton, Frederick Calvin. The Governors of Connecticut. Hartford: Connecticut Magazine Co., 1905 [CSL call number HistRef F 93 .N 88 1905].

    Raimo, John W. Biographical Dictionary of American Colonial and Revolutionary Governors, 1607-1789. Westport, CT: Meckler Books, 1980 [CSL call number E 187.5 .R34].

    Scully, Charles A. Robert Treat, 1622-1710. Philadelphia, 1959.

    Treat, John Harvey, A.M. The Treat Family: A Genealogy of Trott, Tratt, and Treat. Salem, Massachusetts: The Salem Press & Printing Company, 1893 [CSL call number 929.2 T712t].

    World Book Encyclopedia. 1994 ed. Chicago: World Book, Inc., 1994, s.v. "Charter Oak" [CSL call number AE 5 .W55 1994].

    Portrait
    There is no known portrait of Robert Treat.
    Prepared by the History and Genealogy Unit, Connecticut State Library, April 1999.

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    ==================================

    BURIAL: Also shown as Buried Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, United States.

    BIRTH RITE: Also shown as Christening Pitminster Trull, Somerset, England.

    BURIAL: Also shown as Buried Old Cemetery, Milford, New Haven, CT.

    Robert married Tapp, Jane. Jane was born in 1628 in England; died on 31 Oct 1703 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, United States. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Tapp, Jane was born in 1628 in England; died on 31 Oct 1703 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, United States.
    Children:
    1. Treat, Samuel was born in Sep 1648 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, United States; was christened on 3 Sep 1648 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, United States; died on 18 Mar 1716 in Eastham, Barnstable, Massachusetts, United States; was buried in Mar 1716 in Eastham, Barnstable, Massachusetts, United States.
    2. Treat, Major John was born in Oct 1650 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut; was christened on 20 Oct 1650 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut; died on 1 Aug 1714 in Newark, Essex, New Jersey.
    3. Treat, Mary was born on 1 May 1652; was christened on 30 Mar 1652 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut; died in DECEASED.
    4. Treat, Captain Robert was born on 14 Aug 1654 in Connecticut; was christened on 14 Aug 1654 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut; died on 20 Mar 1720.
    5. Treat, Sarah Mary was born on 9 Oct 1656 in Connecticut, United States; was christened in Oct 1656; died in 1656.
    6. Treat, Abigail was born about 1658 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut; was christened on 19 Feb 1660 in Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts; died in 1702 in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut.
    7. 1. Treat, Hannah was born on 1 Jan 1659 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, United States; was christened on 1 Jan 1660 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut; died on 3 Mar 1707 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; was buried in 1706 in Palisado Cemetery, Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut, United States.
    8. Treat, Henry C was born in 1663 in Connecticut, United States; died in DECEASED.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Treat, Richard Sr. was born on 28 Aug 1584 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; was christened on 28 Aug 1584 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; died on 14 Feb 1668 in Pitminster, Somerset, England.

    Richard married Gaylord, Alice. Alice was born in 1594 in England; was christened on 10 May 1594 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; died on 21 Oct 1644 in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; was buried in Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Gaylord, Alice was born in 1594 in England; was christened on 10 May 1594 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; died on 21 Oct 1644 in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; was buried in Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut.
    Children:
    1. Treat, Honor was born on 19 Mar 1615 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; was christened on 19 Mar 1616 in Church Of St. Andrew & St. Mary, Pitminster, Somersetshire, England; died on 21 Nov 1705 in Weathersfield, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; was buried in Weathersfield, Hartford, Connecticut, United States.
    2. Treat, Sarah was born on 3 Dec 1620 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; was christened on 3 Dec 1620 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; died in 1673 in Newack, New Jersey; was buried in Newark, Essex County, New Jersey.
    3. 2. Treat, Governor Robert was born on 23 Feb 1622 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; was christened on 25 Feb 1624 in Trendale, Pitminister, Somerset, England; died on 12 Jul 1710 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, United States; was buried in Jul 1710 in Old Cemetery, Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, United States.
    4. Treat, Richard was born on 9 Jan 1623 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; was christened on 9 Jan 1623 in Trendle, Somerset, England; died in Feb 1693 in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; was buried in Feb 1693 in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut, USA (Wethersfield Village Cemetery).
    5. Treat, Susannah Elizabeth was born in 1629 in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut; was christened on 8 Oct 1629 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; died in 1709.
    6. Treat, Lieutenant James was born on 20 Jul 1634 in Pitminster, Somerset, England; was christened on 20 Jul 1634 in Trendale, Pitminister, Somerset, England; died on 12 Feb 1709 in , Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut; was buried on 12 Feb 1709.