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25751 Paul Richardson in the 1900 United States Federal Census
Name: Paul Richardson
Age: 2
Birth Date: Jul 1897
Birthplace: Indiana
Home in 1900: Shawswick, Lawrence, Indiana
Race: White
Gender: Male
Relation to Head of House: Son
Marital Status: Single
Father's name: Horace Richardson
Father's Birthplace: Indiana
Mother's name: Sarah Richardson
Mother's Birthplace: Indiana
Occupation: View on Image
Household Members:
Name Age
Horace Richardson 52
Sarah Richardson 38
Charles Richardson 15
Persus Richardson 13
Cora Richardson 9
Paul Richardson 2
Susie Owens 28
Source Citation
Year: 1900; Census Place: Shawswick, Lawrence, Indiana; Roll: 385; Page: 28B; Enumeration District: 0077; FHL microfilm: 1240385
Source Information

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/1900usfedcen/3926697/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=2442

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===============================
Paul Bedford Richardson in the U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918
Name: Paul Bedford Richardson
City: Buffalo
County: Erie
State: New York
Birthplace: Indiana,United States of America
Birth Date: 13 Jul 1897
Father's Birthplace: Bedford, Indiana, US
Draft Board: 11
Age: 21

Occupation:

Nearest Relative: Horace Richardson

Height: Medium/Build: Medium

Color of Eyes:Gray/Hair:Black

Signature:Paul Bedford Richardson

Source Citation
Registration State: New York; Registration County: Erie; Roll: 1712128; Draft Board: 11
Source Information

actual image:
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=============================
Paul B. Richardson in the U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014
Name: Paul B. Richardson
SSN: 028-10-0995
BORN: 13 Jul 1897
Died: 22 Aug 1988
State (Year) SSN issued: Massachusetts (Before 1951)
Source Citation
Number: 028-10-0995; Issue State: Massachusetts; Issue Date: Before 1951

========================== 
Richardson, Paul (I27817)
 
25752 Paul Whitin
Massachusetts, Births and Christenings
Name: Paul Whitin
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 03 Dec 1767
Birthplace: NORTHBRIDGE,WORCESTER,MASSACHUSETTS
Indexing Project (Batch) Number: C50115-1 , System Origin: Massachusetts-ODM , GS Film number: 0873751 IT 3

Citing this Record
"Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQ6H-F96 : accessed 15 April 2015), Paul Whitin, 03 Dec 1767; citing NORTHBRIDGE,WORCESTER,MASSACHUSETTS, ; FHL microfilm 0873751 IT 3.
============================== 
Whitin, Paul (I29141)
 
25753 Pawtucket, Rhode Island City Directory:

Henry Fairbanks driver boards 25 East avenue Pawtucket RI 1892
Crawford M. Fairbanks Fairbanks James H. & Co. carriage repository 510 and 512 Mill, C. F. 418 Broad, same location Pawtucket RI 1892
Crawford M. Fairbanks James H. Fairbanks & Co. 332 and 334 Mill, C. F. house at Philadelphia, Penn. Pawtucket RI 1890
Crawford M. Fairbanks Fairbanks James H.& Co. carriage repository 332 and 334 Mill, C. F. 242 Broad, same location Pawtucket RI 1890
Charles A. Fairbanks house Dexter avenue near Linden Pawtucket RI 1891
Courtland F. Fairbanks laborer boards Dexter avenue near Linden Pawtucket RI 1891
Crawford M. Fairbanks James H. Fairbanks & Co. 332 and 334 Mill, C. F. house 242 Broad, same location Pawtucket RI 1891
Crawford M. Fairbanks Fairbanks James H. & Co. carriage repository 332 and 334 Mill, C. F. 242 Broad, same location Pawtucket RI 1891
Alice G. Fairbanks house 129 Dexter avenue Pawtucket RI 1892
Charles A. Fairbanks Pawtucket RI 1892
Courtland F. Fairbanks laborer boards 129 Dexter avenue Pawtucket RI 1892
Crawford M. Fairbanks James H. Fairbanks & Co. 510 and 512 Mill, C. F. house 418 Broad, same location Pawtucket RI 1892

1910 Rhode Island Census:
The following members are all from the same household.
Last Name First Name Census Year State
Fairbank Crawford 1910 RI Age 62
Fairbank Reta 1910 RI Age: 40
Fairbank George 1910 RI Age: 15
Fairbank Ruth 1910 RI Age: 4 
Fairbanks, Crawford Merritt (I1766)
 
25754 Pennsylvania, Church and Town Records, 1708-1985 about Gerald Giffith Whiting
Name: Gerald Giffith Whiting
Birth Date: 24 Mar 1901
Event Type: Baptism
Baptism Date: 16 Mar 1902
Baptism Place: Carlisle, Cumberland, Pennsylvania
Father Name: X F Whiting
Mother Name: Grace D Whiting
Organization Name: Allison United Methodist Church
==========================================
1910; Census Place: Carlisle Ward 3, Cumberland, Pennsylvania; Roll: T624_1335; Page: 2A; Enumeration District: 0005; Image: 98; FHL microfilm: 1375348 265 W Pomfret Street
30/31 Whiting Harry F head male white 39 married 1st time 15 yrs NY NY NY professor college
Grace D wife fem white 37 married 1st time 15 yrs mother of 3:3 living
Penn Penn Penn
Lawrence D son male white 14 single Pennsylvania New York Pennsylvania
Russell F son male white 13 single Pennsylvania New York Pennsylvania
Gerald G son male white 09 single Pennsylvania New York Pennsylvania
====================================
1920; Census Place: Beaver Ward 3, Beaver, Pennsylvania; Roll: T625_1531; Page: 6A; Enumeration District: 12; Image: 426. 155 Commerce Street
120/133 Whiting Henry F head rents male white 49 married NY NY NY Civil Engineer Railroad
Grace D wife fem white 47 married Penn Penn {enn
Russell son male white 22 married Penn NY Penn Clerk Office Steel Mill
Gerald son male white 19 single Penn NY Penn Clerk Stenographic Clerk
Steel Mill
====================================
1930; Census Place: Beaver Falls, Beaver, Pennsylvania; Roll: 1996; Page: 2A; Enumeration District: 30; Image: 87.0; FHL microfilm: 2341730
34/35 Whiting Gerald G head owns $4500 radio male white 29 married 1st time at age 23
Penn NY Penn Clerk Steel Mill
Leona B wife fem white 24 married 1st time at age 19 Penn Penn Penn
Barbara M dau fem white 1 9/12 single Penn Penn Penn
Henry F father male white 59 married 1st time at age 21 NY NY NY Draysman Railroad
==================================== 
Whiting, Gerald Griffith (I13753)
 
25755 Pennsylvania, Church and Town Records, 1708-1985 about Lawrence Derland Whiting
Name: Lawrence Derland Whiting
Birth Date: 6 Mar 1896
Event Type: Baptism
Baptism Date: 8 Nov 1896
Baptism Place: Carlisle, Cumberland, Pennsylvania
Father Name: Harry F Whiting
Mother Name: Grace C
Organization Name: Allison United Methodist Church
=====================================
1900; Census Place: Carlisle Ward 3, Cumberland, Pennsylvania; Roll: 1400; Page: 5B; Enumeration District: 4; FHL microfilm: 1241400. 265 West Pomfret Street
114/114 Whiting H F head white male Jun 1870 29 married 5 years NY NY NY Professor of Latin Rents house
Grace D wife white fem Nov 1872 27 married 5 years mother of 2:2 living
Penn Penn Penn
Lawrence son white male Mar 1896 04 single Penn Penn Penn
Russell F son white male Apr 1897 03 single Penn Penn Penn
Derland Jennie E mother in law white fem Feb 1847 53 widow mother of 3:2 living
Penn Penn Penn
====================================
1910; Census Place: Carlisle Ward 3, Cumberland, Pennsylvania; Roll: T624_1335; Page: 2A; Enumeration District: 0005; Image: 98; FHL microfilm: 1375348 265 W Pomfret Street
30/31 Whiting Harry F head male white 39 married 1st time 15 yrs NY NY NY professor college
Grace D wife fem white 37 married 1st time 15 yrs mother of 3:3 living
Penn Penn Penn
Lawrence D son male white 14 single Pennsylvania New York Pennsylvania
Russell F son male white 13 single Pennsylvania New York Pennsylvania
Gerald G son male white 09 single Pennsylvania New York Pennsylvania
====================================
World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 about Lawrence Derland Whiting
Name: Lawrence Derland Whiting
County: Centre
State: Pennsylvania
Birthplace: Pennsylvania;United States of America
Birth Date: 6 Mar 1896
Race: Caucasian (White)
FHL Roll Number: 1877834
DraftBoard: 0
========================================
1920; Census Place: Louisville Ward 3, Jefferson, Kentucky; Roll: T625_579; Page: 11A; Enumeration District: 81; Image: 958. Crescent Avenue Court
208/218 Whiting Lawrence head male white 23 married Penn NY Penn Clerical Packing Company
Anna wife fem white 26 married Penn Penn Penn
======================================
1930; Census Place: Louisville, Jefferson, Kentucky; Roll: 753; Page: 11A; Enumeration District: 6; Image: 237.0; FHL microfilm: 2340488. 2625 Jesse Avenue
220/241 Whiting Laurence W Sr head owns $3500 radio male white 34 married 1st time at age 23 Penn New Jersey Penn Chemist Seru
Anna S wife fem white 36 married 1st time at age 25 Penn Penn Penn
Anna M dau fem white 09 single KY Penn Penn
Laurence Jr son male white 06 single KY Penn Penn
=====================================
Kentucky Death Records, 1852-1953 about Lawrence D Whiting
Name: Lawrence D Whiting
Death Date: 29 Apr 1946
Death Location: Jefferson
Age: 50
Gender: Male
Ethnicity: White
Birth Date: 6 Mar 1896
Birth Location: Carlisle, Pennsylvania
Spouse's Name: Anna Whiting
Father's Name: Henry F Whiting
Father's Birth Location: New York
Mother's name: Grace Derland
Mother's Birth Location: Pennsylvania
Cause of Death: Accute Appendicitis
========================================= 
Whiting, Lawrence Derland (I13742)
 
25756 Pennsylvania, Church and Town Records, 1708-1985 about Russell Freeman Whiting
Name: Russell Freeman Whiting
Birth Date: 13 Apr 1897
Event Type: Baptism
Baptism Date: 6 Feb 1898
Baptism Place: Carlisle, Cumberland, Pennsylvania
Father Name: Harry F Whiting
Mother Name: Grace C
Organization Name: Allison United Methodist Church
=====================================
1900; Census Place: Carlisle Ward 3, Cumberland, Pennsylvania; Roll: 1400; Page: 5B; Enumeration District: 4; FHL microfilm: 1241400. 265 West Pomfret Street
114/114 Whiting H F head white male Jun 1870 29 married 5 years NY NY NY Professor of Latin Rents house
Grace D wife white fem Nov 1872 27 married 5 years mother of 2:2 living
Penn Penn Penn
Lawrence son white male Mar 1896 04 single Penn Penn Penn
Russell F son white male Apr 1897 03 single Penn Penn Penn
Derland Jennie E mother in law white fem Feb 1847 53 widow mother of 3:2 living
Penn Penn Penn
====================================
1910; Census Place: Carlisle Ward 3, Cumberland, Pennsylvania; Roll: T624_1335; Page: 2A; Enumeration District: 0005; Image: 98; FHL microfilm: 1375348 265 W Pomfret Street
30/31 Whiting Harry F head male white 39 married 1st time 15 yrs NY NY NY professor college
Grace D wife fem white 37 married 1st time 15 yrs mother of 3:3 living
Penn Penn Penn
Lawrence D son male white 14 single Pennsylvania New York Pennsylvania
Russell F son male white 13 single Pennsylvania New York Pennsylvania
Gerald G son male white 09 single Pennsylvania New York Pennsylvania
====================================
1920; Census Place: Beaver Ward 3, Beaver, Pennsylvania; Roll: T625_1531; Page: 6A; Enumeration District: 12; Image: 426. 155 Commerce Street
120/133 Whiting Henry F head rents male white 49 married NY NY NY Civil Engineer Railroad
Grace D wife fem white 47 married Penn Penn {enn
Russell son male white 22 married Penn NY Penn Clerk Office Steel Mill
Gerald son male white 19 single Penn NY Penn Clerk Stenographic Clerk
Steel Mill
====================================
1930; Census Place: Precinct 9, Jefferson, Alabama; Roll: 31; Page: 1B; Enumeration District: 131; Image: 3.0; FHL microfilm: 2339766. Hanson Road
20/20 Whiting Russell F head owns $5000 male white 32 married 1st time at age 21 Penn NY Penn Stationary Engineer Steel and Brass Company
Ruby J wife fem white 33 married 1st time at 22 years Alabama North Carolina Georgia
James son male white 09 single Penn Ala Penn
Russell Jr son male white 06 single Penn Ala Penn
Donald son male white 6/12 single Alabama Penn Alabama
==================================
U.S. Veterans Gravesites, ca.1775-2006 about Russell Freeman Whiting
Name: Russell Freeman Whiting
Service Info.: LT COL US ARMY AIR CORPS WORLD WAR I, WORLD WAR II
Birth Date: 13 Apr 1897
Death Date: 21 Mar 1970
Service Start Date: 14 Jun 1917
Interment Date: 25 Mar 1970
Cemetery: Barrancas National Cemetery
Cemetery Address: Naval Air Station, 80 Hovey Road Pensacola, FL 32508
Buried At: Section 31 Site 784
==================================
Florida Death Index, 1877-1998 .ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=7338&enc=1> about Russell Freeman Whiting
Name: Russell Freeman Whiting
Death Date: 21 Mar 1970
County of Death: Brevard
State of Death: Florida
Age at Death: 72
Race: White
Birth Date: 13 Apr 1897

=============================
Social Security Death Index about Russell Whiting
Name: Russell Whiting
SSN: 416-09-3803
Last Residence: 32780 Titusville, Brevard, Florida, United States of America
Born: 13 Apr 1897
Died: Mar 1970
State (Year) SSN issued: Alabama (Before 1951) 
Whiting, Russell Freeman (I13743)
 
25757 Pennsylvania, Church and Town Records, 1708-1985 about Walter Shennan Whiting
Name: Walter Shennan Whiting
Birth Date: 11 Apr 1866
Event Type: Baptism
Baptism Date: 16 Oct 1866
Baptism Place: Camden, Camden, New Jersey
Father Name: Stephen B Whiting
Mother Name: Kate B Whiting
Sponsors: The Parents and Mrs. Albert H Draper
Organization Name: St Paul´s Episcopal Church

========================================
1870; Census Place: Camden North Ward, Camden, New Jersey; Roll: M593_856; Page: 735; Image: 494. Taken July 1870
593/644 Whiting Stephen B 36 male white Engineer $10,000/20,000 Connecticut
Kate B. 30 fem white Keeping House Massachusetts
Clara M. 10 fem white Illinois
Charles W. 07 male white New Jersey
Walter S. 04 male white New Jersey
Albert D. 11/12 male white New Jersey born in June
Henry, Catherine 19 fem white domestic servant Demarara South Africa
Parents foreign born cannot write
===================================
1880; Census Place: Pottsville, Schuylkill, Pennsylvania; Roll: T9_1193; Family History Film: 1255193; Page: 506.2000; Enumeration District: 228; Image: 0508.
Household Record 1880 United States Census

Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
Stephen B. WHITING Self M Male W 46 CT Mechanical Engineer CT CT
Kate B. WHITING Wife M Female W 40 MA Keeping House RI MA
Charles W. WHITING Son S Male W 17 NJ At School CT MA
Clara M. WHITING Dau S Female W 20 IL At Home CT MA
Walter S. WHITING Son S Male W 14 NJ At School CT MA
Albert D. WHITING Son S Male W 11 NJ At School CT MA
Howard E. WHITING Son S Male W 8 PA At School CT MA
S. Edgar WHITING Son S Male W 6 PA At School CT MA
Martha SANDS Other W Female W 50 PA Domestic Servant PA PA
Ellen MOORE Other S Female W 19 PA Domestic Servant IRE IRE

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
Census Place Pottsville, Schuylkill, Pennsylvania
Family History Library Film 1255193
NA Film Number T9-1193
Page Number 506B
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
================================
1900; Census Place: Pottsville, Schuylkill, Pennsylvania; Roll: 1485; Page: 4B; Enumeration District: 184; FHL microfilm: 1241485. Greenwood Hill
92/95 Whiting Walter S head white male Apr 1866 34 married 6 years New Jersey Penn New York Hardware Store
Rents house
Maude C wife white fem Dec 1872 27 married 6 years mother of 3:3 living New Jersey NY NY
Walter S jr. son white male Mar 1896 4 single Penn NJ NJ
Marjorie E dau white fem July 1898 01 single Penn NJ NJ
No Name son white male Dec 1899 5/12 single Penn NJ NJ
Doughtery Nellie servant white fem Aug 1876 23 single Scot Scot Scot Imm 1893 7 years in country Cook
Condron Mary servant white fem Oct 1883 16 single Penn Penn Penn nurse girl
================================
Wisconsin, State Censuses, 1895 and 1905 about Walter S Whiting
454 Whiting Walter S head White male 38 married New Jersey: Conn & Mass Manufacturer Owns mortgaged farm
Maud C wife white male [fem] 32 married New Jersey New York
Walter S Jr son white male 09 single Penn NJ
Marjorie dau white fem 06 single Penn NJ
Alfred C son white male 05 single Penn NJ
Eleanor dau white fem 04 single Wisconsin New Jersey
Pomphue, Mary servant fem white 24 single Germ Germ
Johnana, Bernhard gardener white male 29 single Germ Germ
Hermel George coachman white male 34 single
Christensen Martin servant white male 42 single Denmark
Christenen Chris servant white male 38 single Norway
==============================
Massachusetts: Middlesex County, Cambridge, Mt. Auburn Cemetery about Walter S. Whiting
Surname: Walter S. Whiting
Birth Date: ??, 1866
Death Date: ??, 1907
Notes: See Stephen B. Whiting 
Whiting, Walter Sherman (I1184)
 
25758 Percy Haris W Whiting
in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837-1915

Name: Percy Haris W Whiting
Registration Year: 1886
Registration Quarter: Apr-May-Jun
Registration district: Chippenham
Parishes for this Registration District: View Ecclesiastical Parishes associated with this Registration District
Inferred County: Wiltshire
Volume: 5a
Page: 64
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======
1886
Percy Whiting
in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837-1915

Name: Percy Whiting
Registration Year: 1886
Registration Quarter: Apr-May-Jun
Registration district: Chesterton
Parishes for this Registration District: View Ecclesiastical Parishes associated with this Registration District
Inferred County: Cambridgeshire
Volume: 3b
Page: 495
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======
1891
Jervey Whiting
in the 1891 England Census

Name: Jervey Whiting
[Percy Whiting]
Gender: Male
Age: 5
Relationship: Son
Birth Year: 1886
Father: Ephriam Whiting
Mother: Carolene Whiting
Birth Place: Teversham, Cambridgeshire, England
Civil Parish: Teversham
Street Address: NOT GIVEN
Occupation: SCHOLAR
Condition as to marriage: NOT GIVEN
Residence Place: Teversham, Teversham, Cambridgeshire, England
Sub registration district: Fulbourn
ED, Institution or Vessel: 12
Neighbors: View others on page
Piece: 1281
Folio: 114
Household Members:
Name Age
Ephriam Whiting 42
Carolene Whiting 39
William Whiting 10
Alfred Whiting 7
Jervey Whiting 5
David Whiting 2
Source Citation
The National Archives of the UK (TNA); Kew, Surrey, England; Class: RG12; Piece: 1281; Folio: 114; Page: 9
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======
1901
Percy Whiting
in the 1901 England Census

Name: Percy Whiting
Age: 15
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1886
Relation to Head: Son
Gender: Male
Father: Ephriam Whiting
Mother: Caroline Whiting
Birth Place: Leversham, Cambridgeshire, England
Civil Parish: Leverington
Search Photos: Search for 'Leverington' in the UK City, Town and Village Photos collection
Ecclesiastical parish: St Leonard
Town: Leverington
County/Island: Cambridgeshire
Country: England
Street address:
Occupation: AGRICULTURAL LABOURER WORKERGOREFIELD
Condition as to marriage: SINGLE
Registration district: Wisbech
Sub-registration district: Leverington
ED, institution, or vessel: 1
Neighbors: View others on page
Piece: 1554
Folio: 6
Page Number: 3
Household schedule number: 18
Household Members:
Name Age
Ephriam Whiting 52
Caroline Whiting 49
Ellen Whiting 28
Alfred Whiting 17
Percy Whiting 15
David Whiting 12
Source Citation
Class: RG13; Piece: 1554; Folio: 6; Page: 3
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======
1911
Percy Whiting
in the 1911 England Census

Name: Percy Whiting
Age in 1911: 25
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1886
Relation to Head: Head
Gender: Male
Birth Place: Teversham, Cambridgeshire, England
Civil Parish: Terrington St Clement
Search Photos: Search for 'Terrington St Clement' in the UK City, Town and Village Photos collection
County/Island: Cambridgeshire
Country: England
Street address: Race Course Row, Terrington St Clement, Norfolk
Marital Status: Married
Occupation: Farm Labourer
Registration district: Wisbech
Registration District Number: 187
Sub-registration district: Terrington St Clement
ED, institution, or vessel: 2
Household schedule number: 113
Piece: 9312
Household Members:
Name Age
Percy Whiting 25
Clara Whiting 26
Source Citation
Class: RG14; Piece: 9312; Schedule Number: 113
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======
1915
Percy W Whiting
in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1837-1915

Name: Percy W Whiting
Spouse Surname: Miller
Registration Year: 1915
Registration Quarter: Oct-Nov-Dec
Registration district: Wisbech
Parishes for this Registration District: Search for Wisbech in the London Times
Inferred County: Cambridgeshire
Volume: 3b
Page: 1877
Records on Page:
Name
Clara Miller
Elsie A Pruden
John S Thompson
Percy W Whiting
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======
1918
Percy Walter Whiting
in the UK, Soldiers Died in the Great War, 1914-1919

Name: Percy Walter Whiting
Birth Place: Feversham, Cambs
Residence: St. Clements, Norfolk
Death Date: 12 Apr 1918
Death Place: France and Flanders
Enlistment Place: Norwich, Norfolk
Rank: Private
Regiment: Lancashire Fusiliers
Battalion: 11th Battalion
Regimental Number: 31442
Type of Casualty: Died of wounds
Theatre of War: Western European Theatre
Comments: Formerly 148164, R.F.A.
Other Records: Search for 'Percy Walter Whiting' in other WWI collections
War Diaries (France, Belgium, Germany): Search for 'Lancashire Fusiliers' in the WWI War Diaries (France, Belgium, Germany) collection
War Diaries (Gallipoli): Search for 'Lancashire Fusiliers' in the WWI War Diaries (Gallipoli) collection
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====== 
Whiting, Percy Haris Walter (I1358)
 
25759 Percy Steel Harwood
in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1837-1915

Name: Percy Steel Harwood
Registration Year: 1890
Registration Quarter: Jan-Feb-Mar
Registration district: Depwade
Parishes for this Registration District: Search for Depwade in the London Times
Inferred County: Norfolk
Volume: 4b
Page: 301
Records on Page:
Name
Percy Steel Harwood
Mary Whiting
© 2019, Ancestry.com
++++++++++
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==========  
Family F1285
 
25760 Percy Whiting in the 1911 England Census
Name: Percy Whiting
Age in 1911: 11/12
Estimated birth year: abt 1910
Relation to Head: Son
Gender: Male
Birth Place: Bristol
Civil Parish: Bristol
County/Island: Gloucestershire
Country: England
Street address: 76 Bloy St, Easton, Bristol
Marital Status: Single
Registration district: Bristol
Registration District Number: 319
Sub-registration district: St George
ED, institution, or vessel: 42
Household schedule number: 53
Piece: 14988
Household Members:
Name Age
Isaac Whiting 38
Agnes Whiting 35
Charlie Whiting 13
Nellie Whiting 11
Albert Whiting 6
Lilian Whiting 4
Gladys Whiting 11/12
Violet Whiting 11/12
Percy Whiting 11/12
Source Citation
Class: RG14; Piece: 14988; Schedule Number: 53
Source Information
Ancestry.com. 1911 England Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.
Original data: Census Returns of England and Wales, 1911. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives of the UK (TNA), 1911.

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========================== 
Whiting, Percy (I1248)
 
25761 Perhaps the Sarah Fairbanks who died in Wrentham Sept 6, 1779?

Need more details. jww 
Fairbanks, Sarah (I1405)
 
25762 Persus Richardson in the 1900 United States Federal Census
Name: Persus Richardson
Age: 13
Birth Date: Apr 1887
Birthplace: Indiana
Home in 1900: Shawswick, Lawrence, Indiana
Race: White
Gender: Female
Relation to Head of House: Daughter
Marital Status: Single
Father's name: Horace Richardson
Father's Birthplace: Indiana
Mother's name: Sarah Richardson
Mother's Birthplace: Indiana
Occupation: View on Image
Household Members:
Name Age
Horace Richardson 52
Sarah Richardson 38
Charles Richardson 15
Persus Richardson 13
Cora Richardson 9
Paul Richardson 2
Susie Owens 28
Source Citation
Year: 1900; Census Place: Shawswick, Lawrence, Indiana; Roll: 385; Page: 28B; Enumeration District: 0077; FHL microfilm: 1240385
Source Information

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/1900usfedcen/3926697/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=2442

actual image:
http://interactive.ancestry.com/7602/004118636_00542/3926697?backurl=http%3a%2f%2fsearch.ancestry.com%2f%2fcgi-bin%2fsse.dll%3fdb%3d1900usfedcen%26h%3d3926697%26indiv%3dtry%26o_vc%3dRecord%3aOtherRecord%26rhSource%3d2442&ssrc=&backlabel=ReturnRecord 
Richardson, Persus (I27815)
 
25763 Peter Beverley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter Beverley (1668-1728) was a Speaker of the House of Burgesses and Treasurer of Virginia. He was born in Jamestown.[1]

Ancestry and family[edit]
Beverley was the first of three sons born to Major Robert Beverley and his wife, Mary of Yorkshire, England. He married Elizabeth Peyton, the daughter of Major Robert Peyton, and had three daughters: Susanna, Elizabeth and Anne.[1] His daughter, Elizabeth, married William Randolph II around 1705 and had five children that lived to adulthood.[2][3] His daughter, Susanna, married Sir John Randolph. His daughter Anne married Henry Whiting. Peter was the grandfather of Elizabeth Whiting who married Dr. John Clayton. Peter was also the grandfather of Peyton Randolph, a speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses, chairman of the Virginia Conventions, and the first President of the Continental Congress[citation needed]; as well as the great-grandfather of Beverley Randolph, the eighth Governor of Virginia[2] and William Fitzhugh's wife, Ann Bolling Randolph Fitzhugh.[4]

The Randolphs were lineal descendants of Pocahontas.[5]

References[edit]
^ Jump up to: a b Standard, W.G. (1895). "Major Robert Beverley and His Descendants". In Bruce, Philip A.. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography III. Richmond, Virginia: The Virginia Historical Society. pp. 169-170.
^ Jump up to: a b Page, Richard Channing Moore (1893). "Randolph Family". Genealogy of the Page Family in Virginia (2 ed.). New York: Press of the Publishers Printing Co. pp. 249-272.
Jump up ^ Glenn, Thomas Allen, ed. (1898). "The Randolphs: Randolph Genealogy". Some Colonial Mansions: And Those Who Lived In Them : With Genealogies Of The Various Families Mentioned 1. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Henry T. Coates & Company. pp. 430-459.
Jump up ^ Randolph, Robert Isham (1936). The Randolphs of Virginia: A Compilation of the Descendants of William Randolph of Turkey Island and His Wife Mary Isham Of Bermuda Hundred (PDF).
Jump up ^ Louise Pecquet du Bellet, Some Prominent Virginia Families, p. 161
[hide] v t e
Speakers of the Virginia House of Burgesses
Stegg Hill Sr. Scarborough Harmer Harwood Major Dew Chiles Whitby Hill Sr. Moryson Smith Hill Sr. Bland Soane Wynne Warner Godwin Warner Travers Kemp Ballard Hill Jr. Kendall Allen Milner Ludwell Carter W. Randolph Carter Beverley Harrison Beverley McCarty Holloway J. Randolph Robinson P. Randolph
External links[edit]
Peter Beverley at Find a Grave

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Beverley

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Jamestown, Virginia.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born 1669

DEATH: Also shown as Died 1728
==============================
Lady Susannah Beverley Randolph

women sewing
Born ca. 1692
Member of prestigious Virginia family
Wife of only knight in the colony
Managed large household
Mother of accomplished offspring
Died sometime after 1754
Early years

Susannah Beverley Randolph was born about 1692 and became a wife about 1718 – there are no records of the exact dates. If truly 26 at the time of her marriage, she was rather mature for a colonial bride – but certainly not alone in taking her vows at that age. Her eldest sister was the wife of her husband's eldest brother, which may suggest how they met. Whatever the uncertainties, there is no doubt that Sir John found her to be an excellent mate, or that she reared children of unusual ability.

Truly a lady

In almost two centuries of colonial Virginia history, there was only one woman who had a certifiable claim to the title of “Lady” – Susannah Beverley Randolph. Courtesy, of course, bestowed the honor of "lady" on every woman of "the better sort," and certainly most of "the middling class." But she was the wife of Sir John Randolph, the only Virginian knighted from the day Roanoke Island was settled in 1585 until independence was declared in 1776.

Prestigious Virginia family

To be a Randolph was to be a member of the most powerful clan in 18th-century Virginia. Sir John was the most accomplished lawyer in the colony, and a public servant of the first rank. But Susannah Beverley brought to her marriage a connection to a family nearly as distinguished. Her kinsmen had been high government officials and prominent planters. One had written a history of the colony in 1705 that was still in print 242 years later.

It appears – again the records are silent – that she bore her first child, a son named Beverley, about 1720. Peyton, named for his maternal grandmother's family, was born in 1721. John, known to historians as "The Tory," but sincerely respected by his contemporaries, was born in 1727 or 1728. Her only daughter, Mary, followed, but the year of her birth is uncertain.

Considerable domestic responsibilities

Apart from her children, Susannah Randolph had charge of a domestic establishment that was among Williamsburg's largest and best. Moreover, there were three plantations, at least one of which had houses of some sort that may have required her management. Her husband's position required frequent and fine entertaining of clients and associates, an activity that also required her attention.

Sir John's obituary in the Virginia Gazette stated: "As he received a noble Income, for Services in his Profession and Emploiments, so he, in some Measure, made a Return, by a most generous, open and elegant Table . . . But the Plenty, Conduct, and Hospitality, which appeared there, reflect an equal Praise on himself and his Lady."

Young widow

Widowed in 1737, she was entrusted with a share in the supervision of her husband's estate for the benefit of their children and for herself. When Sir John penned the portion of his will specifying his bequests, he began with "my dear and most beloved wife who for her faithfulness affection and prudence deserves to be remembered in the first place." She was given the use of his property in Williamsburg for her life, after which it became Peyton Randolph's.

In the care of the estate, she had the assistance of her two brothers-in-law, but she seems to have been quite capable of acting for herself. In 1740, after the family's tobacco inspection and warehousing facilities on nearby College Creek expanded, she petitioned the General Assembly for an increase in the rents. Her petition was granted.

Life in Williamsburg society

After Sir John’s death, Susannah Randolph still moved in Williamsburg's social circle and remained the object of the considerate attention of the friends she and her husband had shared. Among them was William Byrd II, who was a member of the colony's Council and General Court, the scion of another first family, and the master of Westover plantation on the James River.

Byrd and his wife were old and particular friends, and his diaries record visits to the Widow Randolph many evenings when business carried him to the city. Sometimes she sent a carriage to meet him at the ferry. They played cards, drank tea, or merely visited. In the words of a Colonial Williamsburg historian, Byrd had "special ties of affectionate concern for her welfare, and pleasure in her company."

By 1751, and perhaps earlier, Susannah had the company of son Peyton and his wife as well. In 1745, when he was entitled to his share in the income of his father's estate, he married Betty Harrison. Peyton may have lived with his mother all along, but by 1751 the house was referred to as if it were already his, suggesting that he was in residence and in charge.

Burial site unknown

The records of Bruton Parish Church show that Susannah Randolph had two slaves baptized in 1754. It is her last appearance in the historical record. Neither the date of her death nor the place of her burial is known.

For further reading:

Sir John Randolph
Peyton Randolph
John "The Tory" Randolph
James River - "Old Muddy James and the Flow of History"
Betty Harrison Randolph
The Peyton Randolph House
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GIVEN NAMES: Also shown as Susannah 'Susan'

DEATH: Also shown as Died England.
 
Beverley, Susannah (I25010)
 
25764 Peter Beverley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter Beverley (1668-1728) was a Speaker of the House of Burgesses and Treasurer of Virginia. He was born in Jamestown.[1]

Ancestry and family[edit]
Beverley was the first of three sons born to Major Robert Beverley and his wife, Mary of Yorkshire, England. He married Elizabeth Peyton, the daughter of Major Robert Peyton, and had three daughters: Susanna, Elizabeth and Anne.[1] His daughter, Elizabeth, married William Randolph II around 1705 and had five children that lived to adulthood.[2][3] His daughter, Susanna, married Sir John Randolph. His daughter Anne married Henry Whiting. Peter was the grandfather of Elizabeth Whiting who married Dr. John Clayton. Peter was also the grandfather of Peyton Randolph, a speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses, chairman of the Virginia Conventions, and the first President of the Continental Congress[citation needed]; as well as the great-grandfather of Beverley Randolph, the eighth Governor of Virginia[2] and William Fitzhugh's wife, Ann Bolling Randolph Fitzhugh.[4]

The Randolphs were lineal descendants of Pocahontas.[5]

References[edit]
^ Jump up to: a b Standard, W.G. (1895). "Major Robert Beverley and His Descendants". In Bruce, Philip A.. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography III. Richmond, Virginia: The Virginia Historical Society. pp. 169-170.
^ Jump up to: a b Page, Richard Channing Moore (1893). "Randolph Family". Genealogy of the Page Family in Virginia (2 ed.). New York: Press of the Publishers Printing Co. pp. 249-272.
Jump up ^ Glenn, Thomas Allen, ed. (1898). "The Randolphs: Randolph Genealogy". Some Colonial Mansions: And Those Who Lived In Them : With Genealogies Of The Various Families Mentioned 1. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Henry T. Coates & Company. pp. 430-459.
Jump up ^ Randolph, Robert Isham (1936). The Randolphs of Virginia: A Compilation of the Descendants of William Randolph of Turkey Island and His Wife Mary Isham Of Bermuda Hundred (PDF).
Jump up ^ Louise Pecquet du Bellet, Some Prominent Virginia Families, p. 161
[hide] v t e
Speakers of the Virginia House of Burgesses
Stegg Hill Sr. Scarborough Harmer Harwood Major Dew Chiles Whitby Hill Sr. Moryson Smith Hill Sr. Bland Soane Wynne Warner Godwin Warner Travers Kemp Ballard Hill Jr. Kendall Allen Milner Ludwell Carter W. Randolph Carter Beverley Harrison Beverley McCarty Holloway J. Randolph Robinson P. Randolph
External links[edit]
Peter Beverley at Find a Grave

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Beverley

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Jamestown, Virginia.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born 1669

DEATH: Also shown as Died 1728 
Beverley, Elizabeth Peyton (I25009)
 
25765 Peter Beverley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter Beverley (1668-1728) was a Speaker of the House of Burgesses and Treasurer of Virginia. He was born in Jamestown.[1]

Ancestry and family[edit]
Beverley was the first of three sons born to Major Robert Beverley and his wife, Mary of Yorkshire, England. He married Elizabeth Peyton, the daughter of Major Robert Peyton, and had three daughters: Susanna, Elizabeth and Anne.[1] His daughter, Elizabeth, married William Randolph II around 1705 and had five children that lived to adulthood.[2][3] His daughter, Susanna, married Sir John Randolph. His daughter Anne married Henry Whiting. Peter was the grandfather of Elizabeth Whiting who married Dr. John Clayton. Peter was also the grandfather of Peyton Randolph, a speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses, chairman of the Virginia Conventions, and the first President of the Continental Congress[citation needed]; as well as the great-grandfather of Beverley Randolph, the eighth Governor of Virginia[2] and William Fitzhugh's wife, Ann Bolling Randolph Fitzhugh.[4]

The Randolphs were lineal descendants of Pocahontas.[5]

References[edit]
^ Jump up to: a b Standard, W.G. (1895). "Major Robert Beverley and His Descendants". In Bruce, Philip A.. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography III. Richmond, Virginia: The Virginia Historical Society. pp. 169-170.
^ Jump up to: a b Page, Richard Channing Moore (1893). "Randolph Family". Genealogy of the Page Family in Virginia (2 ed.). New York: Press of the Publishers Printing Co. pp. 249-272.
Jump up ^ Glenn, Thomas Allen, ed. (1898). "The Randolphs: Randolph Genealogy". Some Colonial Mansions: And Those Who Lived In Them : With Genealogies Of The Various Families Mentioned 1. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Henry T. Coates & Company. pp. 430-459.
Jump up ^ Randolph, Robert Isham (1936). The Randolphs of Virginia: A Compilation of the Descendants of William Randolph of Turkey Island and His Wife Mary Isham Of Bermuda Hundred (PDF).
Jump up ^ Louise Pecquet du Bellet, Some Prominent Virginia Families, p. 161
[hide] v t e
Speakers of the Virginia House of Burgesses
Stegg Hill Sr. Scarborough Harmer Harwood Major Dew Chiles Whitby Hill Sr. Moryson Smith Hill Sr. Bland Soane Wynne Warner Godwin Warner Travers Kemp Ballard Hill Jr. Kendall Allen Milner Ludwell Carter W. Randolph Carter Beverley Harrison Beverley McCarty Holloway J. Randolph Robinson P. Randolph
External links[edit]
Peter Beverley at Find a Grave

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Beverley

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Jamestown, Virginia.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born 1669

DEATH: Also shown as Died 1728 
Beverley, Elizabeth Ann (I25008)
 
25766 Peter Beverley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter Beverley (1668-1728) was a Speaker of the House of Burgesses and Treasurer of Virginia. He was born in Jamestown.[1]

Ancestry and family[edit]
Beverley was the first of three sons born to Major Robert Beverley and his wife, Mary of Yorkshire, England. He married Elizabeth Peyton, the daughter of Major Robert Peyton, and had three daughters: Susanna, Elizabeth and Anne.[1] His daughter, Elizabeth, married William Randolph II around 1705 and had five children that lived to adulthood.[2][3] His daughter, Susanna, married Sir John Randolph. His daughter Anne married Henry Whiting. Peter was the grandfather of Elizabeth Whiting who married Dr. John Clayton. Peter was also the grandfather of Peyton Randolph, a speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses, chairman of the Virginia Conventions, and the first President of the Continental Congress[citation needed]; as well as the great-grandfather of Beverley Randolph, the eighth Governor of Virginia[2] and William Fitzhugh's wife, Ann Bolling Randolph Fitzhugh.[4]

The Randolphs were lineal descendants of Pocahontas.[5]

References[edit]
^ Jump up to: a b Standard, W.G. (1895). "Major Robert Beverley and His Descendants". In Bruce, Philip A.. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography III. Richmond, Virginia: The Virginia Historical Society. pp. 169-170.
^ Jump up to: a b Page, Richard Channing Moore (1893). "Randolph Family". Genealogy of the Page Family in Virginia (2 ed.). New York: Press of the Publishers Printing Co. pp. 249-272.
Jump up ^ Glenn, Thomas Allen, ed. (1898). "The Randolphs: Randolph Genealogy". Some Colonial Mansions: And Those Who Lived In Them : With Genealogies Of The Various Families Mentioned 1. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Henry T. Coates & Company. pp. 430-459.
Jump up ^ Randolph, Robert Isham (1936). The Randolphs of Virginia: A Compilation of the Descendants of William Randolph of Turkey Island and His Wife Mary Isham Of Bermuda Hundred (PDF).
Jump up ^ Louise Pecquet du Bellet, Some Prominent Virginia Families, p. 161
[hide] v t e
Speakers of the Virginia House of Burgesses
Stegg Hill Sr. Scarborough Harmer Harwood Major Dew Chiles Whitby Hill Sr. Moryson Smith Hill Sr. Bland Soane Wynne Warner Godwin Warner Travers Kemp Ballard Hill Jr. Kendall Allen Milner Ludwell Carter W. Randolph Carter Beverley Harrison Beverley McCarty Holloway J. Randolph Robinson P. Randolph
External links[edit]
Peter Beverley at Find a Grave

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Beverley

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Jamestown, Virginia.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born 1669

DEATH: Also shown as Died 1728 
Peyton, Elizabeth (I25007)
 
25767 Peter Beverley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter Beverley (1668-1728) was a Speaker of the House of Burgesses and Treasurer of Virginia. He was born in Jamestown.[1]

Ancestry and family[edit]
Beverley was the first of three sons born to Major Robert Beverley and his wife, Mary of Yorkshire, England. He married Elizabeth Peyton, the daughter of Major Robert Peyton, and had three daughters: Susanna, Elizabeth and Anne.[1] His daughter, Elizabeth, married William Randolph II around 1705 and had five children that lived to adulthood.[2][3] His daughter, Susanna, married Sir John Randolph. His daughter Anne married Henry Whiting. Peter was the grandfather of Elizabeth Whiting who married Dr. John Clayton. Peter was also the grandfather of Peyton Randolph, a speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses, chairman of the Virginia Conventions, and the first President of the Continental Congress[citation needed]; as well as the great-grandfather of Beverley Randolph, the eighth Governor of Virginia[2] and William Fitzhugh's wife, Ann Bolling Randolph Fitzhugh.[4]

The Randolphs were lineal descendants of Pocahontas.[5]

References[edit]
^ Jump up to: a b Standard, W.G. (1895). "Major Robert Beverley and His Descendants". In Bruce, Philip A.. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography III. Richmond, Virginia: The Virginia Historical Society. pp. 169-170.
^ Jump up to: a b Page, Richard Channing Moore (1893). "Randolph Family". Genealogy of the Page Family in Virginia (2 ed.). New York: Press of the Publishers Printing Co. pp. 249-272.
Jump up ^ Glenn, Thomas Allen, ed. (1898). "The Randolphs: Randolph Genealogy". Some Colonial Mansions: And Those Who Lived In Them : With Genealogies Of The Various Families Mentioned 1. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Henry T. Coates & Company. pp. 430-459.
Jump up ^ Randolph, Robert Isham (1936). The Randolphs of Virginia: A Compilation of the Descendants of William Randolph of Turkey Island and His Wife Mary Isham Of Bermuda Hundred (PDF).
Jump up ^ Louise Pecquet du Bellet, Some Prominent Virginia Families, p. 161
[hide] v t e
Speakers of the Virginia House of Burgesses
Stegg Hill Sr. Scarborough Harmer Harwood Major Dew Chiles Whitby Hill Sr. Moryson Smith Hill Sr. Bland Soane Wynne Warner Godwin Warner Travers Kemp Ballard Hill Jr. Kendall Allen Milner Ludwell Carter W. Randolph Carter Beverley Harrison Beverley McCarty Holloway J. Randolph Robinson P. Randolph
External links[edit]
Peter Beverley at Find a Grave

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Beverley

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Jamestown, Virginia.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born 1669

DEATH: Also shown as Died 1728 
Beverley, Ann (I5155)
 
25768 Peter Beverley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter Beverley (1668–1728) was a Speaker of the House of Burgesses and Treasurer of Virginia. He was born in Jamestown.[1]

Ancestry and family[edit]
Beverley was the first of three sons born to Major Robert Beverley and his wife, Mary of Yorkshire, England. He married Elizabeth Peyton, the daughter of Major Robert Peyton, and had three daughters: Susanna, Elizabeth and Anne.[1] His daughter, Elizabeth, married William Randolph II around 1705 and had five children that lived to adulthood.[2][3] His daughter, Susanna, married Sir John Randolph. His daughter Anne married Henry Whiting. Peter was the grandfather of Elizabeth Whiting who married Dr. John Clayton. Peter was also the grandfather of Peyton Randolph, a speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses, chairman of the Virginia Conventions, and the first President of the Continental Congress[citation needed]; as well as the great-grandfather of Beverley Randolph, the eighth Governor of Virginia[2] and William Fitzhugh's wife, Ann Bolling Randolph Fitzhugh.[4]

The Randolphs were lineal descendants of Pocahontas.[5]

References[edit]
^ Jump up to: a b Standard, W.G. (1895). "Major Robert Beverley and His Descendants". In Bruce, Philip A.. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography III. Richmond, Virginia: The Virginia Historical Society. pp. 169–170.
^ Jump up to: a b Page, Richard Channing Moore (1893). "Randolph Family". Genealogy of the Page Family in Virginia (2 ed.). New York: Press of the Publishers Printing Co. pp. 249–272.
Jump up ^ Glenn, Thomas Allen, ed. (1898). "The Randolphs: Randolph Genealogy". Some Colonial Mansions: And Those Who Lived In Them : With Genealogies Of The Various Families Mentioned 1. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Henry T. Coates & Company. pp. 430–459.
Jump up ^ Randolph, Robert Isham (1936). The Randolphs of Virginia: A Compilation of the Descendants of William Randolph of Turkey Island and His Wife Mary Isham Of Bermuda Hundred (PDF).
Jump up ^ Louise Pecquet du Bellet, Some Prominent Virginia Families, p. 161
[hide] v t e
Speakers of the Virginia House of Burgesses
Stegg Hill Sr. Scarborough Harmer Harwood Major Dew Chiles Whitby Hill Sr. Moryson Smith Hill Sr. Bland Soane Wynne Warner Godwin Warner Travers Kemp Ballard Hill Jr. Kendall Allen Milner Ludwell Carter W. Randolph Carter Beverley Harrison Beverley McCarty Holloway J. Randolph Robinson P. Randolph
External links[edit]
Peter Beverley at Find a Grave

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Beverley

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Jamestown, Virginia.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born 1669

DEATH: Also shown as Died 1728 
Beverley, Peter (I5110)
 
25769 Peter Browne
BAPTISM: 26 January 1594/5 at Dorking, co. Surrey, England, son of William Browne.
FIRST MARRIAGE: Mrs. Martha Ford, widow, by about 1626, at Plymouth.
SECOND MARRIAGE: Mary, by about 1631, at Plymouth.
CHILDREN (by Martha): Mary, Priscilla
CHILDREN (by Mary): Rebecca, and a child whose name has not been discovered.
DEATH: 1633, probably in the autumn when a sickness was spreading through Plymouth.
Peter Browne's English origins were discovered in 2004, when I published the results of my research into his origins in The American Genealogist, 79(July 2004):161-178. Peter Browne was baptized in Dorking, co. Surrey, England on 26 January 1594/5, the son of William Browne. The Browne family appears to have had several associations with the Mullins family of Dorking, who also came on the Mayflower. Peter Browne's brother John Browne came to Plymouth Colony about 1632 and settled in Duxbury, the next town just to the north of Plymouth. John Browne was baptized in Dorking on 29 June 1600.

On 12 January 1621, Peter Browne and John Goodman had been cutting thatch for house roofing all morning. They ate some meat and went for a short walk to refresh themselves, when their two dogs (an English mastiff and a English spaniel) spied a great deer and gave chance. Peter and John followed and quickly got lost. They wandered around the entire afternoon in the rain, and spent the night in a tree (and pacing back and forth under it) fearing that they had heard lions roaring in the woods. The next day they made their way up a hill, spotted the Bay, reoriented themselves, and made it back home to an extremely worried Colony that had already sent out two exploring parties in an attempt to find them.
This oak and birch tankard is believed to have belonged to Mayflower passenger Peter Browne. It is on display at the Pilgrim Hall Museum in Plymouth.
This oak and birch tankard is believed to have belonged to Mayflower passenger Peter Browne. It is on display at the Pilgrim Hall Museum in Plymouth.

In a partial list of the house locations of the Pilgrims made out in 1620, John Goodman and Peter Browne appear to have been neighbors on the south side of the Street and the ocean side of the Highway. Peter Browne was apparently still living there during the 1623 Division of Land. By about 1626, he married Martha Ford, who arrived as one of the only female passengers on the ship Fortune in 1621. She gave birth almost immediately after arriving, but husband Ford apparently died during the voyage or shortly after arrival. In the 1627 Division of Cattle he, his wife Martha (Ford), his daughter Mary Browne, and his stepchildren John and Martha Ford were included with the Samuel Fuller and Anthony Anable families. About a year later, Peter and Martha would have daughter Priscilla (perhaps named after Mayflower passenger Priscilla Mullins who was also from Dorking), but wife Martha would die shortly thereafter. Peter remarried to a woman named Mary, whose maiden name has not been discovered. With her, he had a daughter Rebecca born about 1631, and another child who was born about 1633 and died before reaching adulthood (the name of this child has not been discovered).

Peter Browne died in 1633, probably during the general sickness that occurred that autumn and also killed neighbor Samuel Fuller, Mayflower passenger Francis Eaton, and several others in Plymouth. His estate inventory, taken 10 October 1633, shows that he owned 130 bushels of corn, six melch goats, one cow, eight sheep, and a number of pigs, among other things. Peter Browne and his brothers were all weavers, which explains why he had more sheep than anyone else in Plymouth at the time.
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http://mayflowerhistory.com/browne/ 
Brown, Peter (I26001)
 
25770 Peter H. Whiting was born in Claverack, Columbia Co., N.Y. Jan. 1, 1791, the son of Job Whiting who was in the U.S. Census there in 1790 and who removed soon thereafter to Blenheim Twp., Schoharie Co., N.Y. before 1800. In 1815 he and (by tradition) two or three brothers removed to Venice, Ohio (now a part of sandusky). One of the brothers is said to have settled in the Cleveland, Ohio area and the others went west. Peter came to St. Clair Co., Michigan in 1818 where we first find him in published records as one of 33 signers of a petition to Congress by inhabitants of St. Clair Co., Territory of Michigan, dated Mar. 18, 1822, requesting that a law be enacted to provide for a circuit court to be established in each county. On May 31, 1825 he was a voter at an election held in Cottrellville, St. Clair
=================================
1790 United States Federal Census 1790 United States Federal Census
Name: Job Whiting
Township: Claverack
County: Columbia
State: New York
Number of Free White Males Under 16: 2
Number of Free White Males 16 and Over: 1
Number of Free White Females: 2
Number of Household Members: 5
================================
1800 United States Federal Census 1800 United States Federal Census
Name: Job Whiting
Township: Blenheim
County: Schoharie
State: New York
Free White Males Under 10: 1
Free White Males 10 to 15: 1
Free White Males 26 to 44: 1
Free White Females Under 10 : 1
Free White Females 26 to 44 : 1
Number of Household Members Under 16 : 3
Number of Household Members Over 25 : 2
Number of Household Members: 5
================================
1810 United States Federal Census 1810 United States Federal Census
Name: Job Whiting
Township: Blenheim
County: Schoharie
State: New York
Free White Males Under 10: 2
Free White Males 10 to 15: 1
Free White Males 16 to 25: 1
Free White Males 45 and Over: 1
Free White Females Under 10: 1
Free White Females 10 to 15: 1
Free White Females 16 to 25: 2
Free White Females 45 and Over: 1
Number of Household Members Under 16: 5
Number of Household Members Over 25: 2
Number of Household Members: 10
=================================
1820 United States Federal Census 1820 United States Federal Census
Name: Job Whiting
Township: Blenheim
County: Schoharie
State: New York
Enumeration Date: August 7, 1820
Free White Males - 10 thru 15: 1
Free White Males - 26 thru 44: 1
Free White Males - 45 and over: 1
Free White Females - 26 thru 44: 2
Free White Females - 45 and over: 1
Number of Persons - Engaged in Agriculture: 2
Free White Persons - Under 16: 1
Free White Persons - Over 25: 5
Total Free White Persons: 6
Total All Persons - White, Slaves, Colored, Other: 6
===================================
1830 United States Federal Census 1830 United States Federal Census
Name: Job Whiting
Home in 1830: Blenheim, Schoharie, New York View Map
==================================
1840 United States Federal Census 1840 United States Federal Census
Name: Job Whiting
Township: Blenheim
County: Schoharie
State: New York
Free White Persons - Males - 70 thru 79: 1
Free White Persons - Females - 70 thru 79: 1
Total - All Persons (Free White, Free Colored, Slaves): 2
Persons Employed in Agriculture: 1
Total Free White Persons: 2
Total All Persons - Free White, Free Colored, Slaves: 2
=================================== 
Whiting, Job (I11785)
 
25771 Peter Whiting in the England & Wales, Christening Index, 1530-1980
Name: Peter Whiting
Gender: Male
Christening Date: 3 Apr 1801
Christening Place: Wivelsfield, Sussex, England
Father: Richard Whiting
Mother: Jane
Source Information

Ancestry.com. England & Wales, Christening Index, 1530-1980 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2008


http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/bivri_EnglandBirth/3496958/printer-friendly?gss=angs-g&new=1&rank=1&msT=1&gsfn=peter&gsfn_x=0&gsln=whiting&gsln_x=0&msypn__ftp=Wivelsfield%2c+Sussex%2c+England&MSAV=1&msbdy=1801&msfng=richard&msfns=whiting&msmng=caroline&cp=0&catbucket=rstp&uidh=qxa&pcat=ROOT_CATEGORY&recoff=7+8+40+41&ml_rpos=1 
Whiting, Peter (I2154)
 
25772 Petter Whiting in entry for Ann Whiting
England, Sussex, Parish Registers, 1538-1910
Attach to Family Tree
COPY PRINT SOURCE BOX SHARE
Name: Ann Whiting
Event Type: Christening
Event Date: 03 Mar 1754
Event Place: Slaugham, Slaugham, Sussex, England
Gender: Female
Father's Name: Petter Whiting
Mother's Name: Mary Whiting

https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/QJD6-THJD 
Whiting, Ann (I1744)
 
25773 Philadelphia Passenger Lists, 1800-1945 about Jabish Whiting
Name: Jabish Whiting
Arrival Date: 23 Jul 1817
Port of Departure: Hull, England
Ship Name: Richard and Ann
Port of Arrival: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Microfilm Roll Number: M425_24
Account of Passengers embared from Hull on board the Richard & Ann for Philadelphia.
Names Profession Luggage
Peacock Whiting Farmer
Jabish Whiting Taylor Six boxes of wearing apparel & one of books
John Whiting Farmer
=========================================================================
Re: Whiting/Brackenbury/Coleman &&

Classification: Query
Surnames: Whiting, Hall, Ambler
I am new to Ancestry.com, so a little unfamiliar with the process. However, I do have some information about a Jabez Whiting . I have not verified any of this yet but it should be fairly reliable. It comes from a family history collected by my great-aunt. According to her records, the Jabez Whiting
Whiting in our family was born in Boston Boston, Lincolnshire, England on 4 April 1790. His father was Peacock Whiting and his mother was Elizabeth Hall.

He emigrated to the United States, arriving in Philadelphia PA on 20 June 1817. He married Betsey Betsey T. Ambler on 24 August 1837. He died on 17 April 1878. I would be interested to know how this compares to other information you have about Whiting familiy members in England There may have been more than one Jabez Whiting around that time (the one I have information about could have been named after one of his other relative) or one of his parents may connect up to people about whom you have information. I hope this is useful to you.
===============================================================================
1820; Census Place: Clifford, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania; Roll M33_112; Page: 13; Image: 24.
Whiting Peacock 1-2-0-0-1-1-1-0-1-0-0-7-2
Free White males under 10:1
of 10 and under 16:2
0f 26 and under 45:1
of 45 and upwards: 1
Free White females under 10:1
0f 16 and under 26: 1
Foreigners not naturalized: 7
Persons engaged in agriculture:2
=============================================================================
1830 U S Census: Harford, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, Page: 34; NARA Roll: M19-162; Family History Film: 0020636
John Whiting 2-2-0-0-0-1-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-1-1-1-0-1-0-0-0-0-0-0-0
Males under 5:2
of 5 and under 10:2
of 30 and under 40:1
Females of 5 and under 10:1
of 10 and under 15:1
of 15 and under 20:1
of 30 and under 40:1
=========================================================================
1840; Census Place: Harford, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania; Roll 476; Page: 372; Image: 764; Family History Library Film: 0020551.

John T Whiting 1-2-1-0-0-0-1-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-1-0-0-1
Males under 5:1
5 and under 10:2
10 and under 15:1
40 and under 50:1
Fem 10 and under 15:1
30 and under 40:1
=========================================================================
1850; Census Place: Herrick, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania; Roll M432_829; Page: 270B; Image: 538.
124/132 Eliza Dimmick 48 fem New York
Amanda 09 fem Penn attended school
Peacock Whiting 86 male England pauper
======================================================================= 
Whiting, Peacock (I5301)
 
25774 Philadelphia Passenger Lists, 1800-1945 about Jabish Whiting
Name: Jabish Whiting
Arrival Date: 23 Jul 1817
Port of Departure: Hull, England
Ship Name: Richard and Ann
Port of Arrival: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Microfilm Roll Number: M425_24
Account of Passengers embared from Hull on board the Richard & Ann for Philadelphia.
Names Profession Luggage
Peacock Whiting Farmer
Jabish Whiting Taylor Six boxes of wearing apparel & one of books
John Whiting Farmer
=========================================================================
From: Martin I Hall > Subject: East Yorkshire-Bridlington Area-Help Required Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 15:24:19 -0400
WHITING Peacock WHITING married Elizabeth HALL at Langtoft with Cottam in 1788. Four children-Jabez(1790), John Hall((1791), Lydia(1793) and Ann(1796). ====================================================================

Re: Whiting/Brackenbury/Coleman &&

Classification: Query
Surnames: Whiting, Hall, Ambler
I am new to Ancestry.com, so a little unfamiliar with the process. However, I do have some information about a Jabez Whiting . I have not verified any of this yet but it should be fairly reliable. It comes from a family history collected by my great-aunt. According to her records, the Jabez Whiting
Whiting in our family was born in Boston Boston, Lincolnshire, England on 4 April 1790. His father was Peacock Whiting and his mother was Elizabeth Hall.

He emigrated to the United States, arriving in Philadelphia PA on 20 June 1817. He married Betsey Betsey T. Ambler on 24 August 1837. He died on 17 April 1878. I would be interested to know how this compares to other information you have about Whiting familiy members in England There may have been more than one Jabez Whiting around that time (the one I have information about could have been named after one of his other relative) or one of his parents may connect up to people about whom you have information. I hope this is useful to you.
===============================================================================
1840; Census Place: , La Salle, Illinois; Roll 63; Page: 119; Image: 241; Family History Library Film: 0007643.
Jabiz Whiting 1-0-0-0-0-0-0-1-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-1
Males under 5:1
50 and under 60
Females 30 and under 40:1
===========================================================================
1850; Census Place: Deer Park, Lasalle, Illinois; Roll M432_115; Page: 254B; Image: 161.
1157/1168 Jabez Whiting 60 male Tailor $ 1850 England
Betsy S 47 fem Conn
Adolphus C 10 male Illinois
John A 08 male Illinois
Eli Simmons 20 male farmer Mass
E. C. Gleason 39 fem school teacher Conn
Sarah E Smith 12 fem Mich
Clarinda 07 fem Illinois
===========================================================================
1860; Census Place: Deer Park, Lasalle, Illinois; Roll M653_197; Page: 814; Image: 159; Family History Library Film: 803197.
135/135 Jabez Whiting 70 male farmer $6000/1250 England
1295/1316 Betsey 58 fem Connecticut
Adolphus 20 male Illinois
John 18 male Illinois
Lydia Moore 14 fem Illinois
Julia Hall 23 fem teaching school New York
===========================================================================
1870; Census Place: Deer Park, La Salle, Illinois; Roll M593_243; Page: 95A; Image: 194; Family History Library Film: 545742.
161/157 Whiting Jacob 74 male white farmer $10,000 England parents foreign born
Theodocia B or F 64 fem white Keeping house Connecticut
Mary J 30 fem white at home New York father foreign born
Mary 03 fem white at home Illinois
Edith 02 fem white at home Illinois
baby 01 male white at home Illinois
========================================================================= 
Whiting, Jabez (I5296)
 
25775 Philip Alfred Whiting (my great grandfather) is the son of James William Whiting, but not Marion Alexandra (Dixon). His mother is Clara Henrietta Raschdorff (born Webster). James and Clara belatedly married in 1918. Source: davewhiting66@hotmail.com Family F239
 
25776 Phillip Whittingham
England, Cheshire Bishop's Transcripts, 1598-1900
Attach to Family Tree
COPY PRINT SOURCE BOX SHARE
Name: Phillip Whittingham
Event Type: Christening
Event Date: 15 Mar 1673
Event Place: Audlem, Cheshire, England
Gender: Male
Father's Name: Thomas Whittingham
No image available
Search collection
About this collection
GS Film number: 1655364 , Digital Folder Number: 004011830 , Image Number: 00948

https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/NHNC-KBW 
Whittingham, Phillip (I1730)
 
25777 Phillippus Whittingham
England, Cheshire Bishop's Transcripts, 1598-1900
Attach to Family Tree
COPY PRINT SOURCE BOX SHARE
Name: Phillippus Whittingham
Event Type: Marriage
Event Date: 17 Jul 1617
Event Place: Sandbach, Cheshire, England
Gender: Male
Spouse's Name: Margreta Lea
No image available
Search collection
About this collection
GS Film number: 2068518 , Digital Folder Number: 004011985 , Image Number: 00643


https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/NC82-12F 
Lea, Margreta (I1732)
 
25778 Phoebe Beech and Phoebe Harris are both cited as being the wife of this Thomas Whiting. There is a marriage record of Phoebe Harris to a Thomas Whiting in 1837
==========
Wootton and Hardingstone are neighboring parishes in Northamptonshire
=========
1814
Phobe Beech
in the Northamptonshire, England, Church of England Baptisms, 1813-1912
Name: Phobe Beech
Age: 0
Birth Date: Abt 1814
Baptism Date: 20 Feb 1814
Baptism Place: Wootton, Northamptonshire, England
Parish as it Appears: Wootton
Register Type: Bishops Transcripts
Search Photos: Search for 'Wootton' in the UK City, Town and Village Photos collection
Phillimore Ecclesiastical Parish Map:
View this parish
Father: Moses Beech
Mother: Sarah Beech
Source Citation
Northamptonshire Record Office; Northampton, England; Register Type: Bishops Transcripts

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/NorthamptonshireBaptisms/2599263/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&rhSource=8914

Actual Image:

http://interactive.ancestry.com/9200/004021574_00309?pid=2599263&backurl=//search.ancestry.com//cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv%3D1%26db%3DNorthamptonshireBaptisms%26h%3D2599263%26tid%3D%26pid%3D%26usePUB%3Dtrue%26usePUBJs%3Dtrue%26rhSource%3D8914%26indivrecord%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true

=========
1841
Phoebe Whiting
in the 1841 England Census
Name: Phoebe Whiting
Age: 25
Estimated birth year: abt 1816
Gender: Female
Where born: Northamptonshire, England
Civil Parish: Wootton
Hundred: Wymersley
County/Island: Northamptonshire
Country: England
Street address: Green Lane
Registration district: Hardingstone
Sub-registration district: Milton
Neighbors: View others on page
Piece: 813
Book: 20
Folio: 16
Page Number: 25
Household Members:
Name Age
Thomas Whiting 25
Pheobe Whiting 25
William Whiting 2
Source Citation
Class: HO107; Piece: 813; Book: 20; Civil Parish: Wootton; County: Northamptonshire; Enumeration District: 6; Folio: 16; Page: 25; Line: 23; GSU roll: 438881

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/uki1841/8851368/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&rhSource=7572

Actual Image:

http://interactive.ancestry.com/8978/NTHHO107_813_814-0262?pid=8851368&backurl=//search.ancestry.com//cgi-bin/sse.dll?db%3Duki1841%26indiv%3Dtry%26h%3D8851368%26indivrecord%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true
=========
1851
Pheobe Whitney
in the 1851 England Census
Name: Pheobe Whitney
Age: 39
Estimated birth year: abt 1812
Relation: Wife
Spouse's Name: Thomas Whitney
Gender: Female
Where born: Piddington, Northamptonshire, England
Civil Parish: Wootton
Phillimore Ecclesiastical Parish Maps:
View related Ecclesiastical Parish
County/Island: Northamptonshire
Country: England
Street address: No. 123 Water Lane
Occupation: Not Given
Condition as to marriage: Married
Registration district: Hardingstone
Sub-registration district: Brafield
ED, institution, or vessel: 6
Neighbors: View others on page
Household schedule number: 126
Piece: 1738
Folio: 321
Page Number: 30
Household Members:
Name Age
Thomas Whitney 39
Pheobe Whitney 39
William Whitney 22
Mary Whitney 8
Louisa Whitney 6
Elizabeth Whitney 4
Source Citation
Class: HO107; Piece: 1738; Folio: 321; Page: 30; GSU roll: 87693

© 2017, Ancestry.com

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/uki1851/4278334/printer-friendly

Actual Image:

http://interactive.ancestry.com/8860/NTHHO107_1738_1739-0612?pid=4278334&backurl=//search.ancestry.com//cgi-bin/sse.dll?db%3Duki1851%26indiv%3Dtry%26h%3D4278334%26indivrecord%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true
=========
1861
Phoeby Whitting
in the 1861 England Census
Name: Phoeby Whitting
Age: 48
Estimated birth year: 1813
Relation: Wife
Spouse's Name: Thomas Whitting
Gender: Female
Where born: Hardingstone, Northamptonshire, England
Civil Parish: Wootton
County/Island: Northamptonshire
Country: England
Street address: Green Lane
Occupation:Not Given
Condition as to marriage:Married
Registration district: Hardingstone
Sub-registration district: Milton
ED, institution, or vessel: 1
Neighbors: View others on page
Household schedule number: 46
Piece: 932
Folio: 8
Page Number: 9
Household Members:
Name Age
Thomas Whitting 48
Phoeby Whitting 48
Jane Whitting 16
Elizabeth Whitting 14
Emma Whitting 8
Everett Whitting 7
Sarah Beech 77
Source Citation
Class: RG 9; Piece: 932; Folio: 8; Page: 9; GSU roll: 542723


http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/uki1861/23514732/printer-friendly

Actual Image:

http://interactive.ancestry.com/8767/NTHRG9_929_934-0634?pid=23514732&backurl=//search.ancestry.com//cgi-bin/sse.dll?db%3Duki1861%26indiv%3Dtry%26h%3D23514732%26indivrecord%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true
=========
1871
Pheobe Whiting
in the 1871 England Census
Name: Pheobe Whiting
Age: 60
Estimated birth year: abt 1811
Relation: Wife
Spouse's Name: Thomas Whiting
Gender: Female
Where born: Hardingstone, Northamptonshire, England
Civil Parish: Wootton
Town: Wootton
County/Island: Northamptonshire
Country: England
Registration district: Hardingstone
Sub-registration district: Milton
ED, institution, or vessel: 1
Street: Cottage
Occupation: Dressmaker
Condition as to Marriage: Married
Household schedule number: 18
Piece: 1479
Folio: 8
Page Number: 7
Household Members:
Name Age
Thomas Whiting 60
Pheobe Whiting 60
Emma Whiting 19
Everritt Whiting 17
Mary Whiting 10
Barnard Goodman 50
Source Citation
Class: RG10; Piece: 1479; Folio: 8; Page: 7; GSU roll: 828791

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/uki1871/8309438/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&rhSource=8767

Actual Image:

http://interactive.ancestry.com/7619/NTHRG10_1478_1481-0120?pid=8309438&backurl=//search.ancestry.com//cgi-bin/sse.dll?db%3Duki1871%26indiv%3Dtry%26h%3D8309438%26indivrecord%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true

=========
1881
Pheobe Whiting
in the 1881 England Census
Name: Pheobe Whiting
Age: 67
Estimated birth year: abt 1814
Relationship to Head: Head
Gender: Female
Where born: Hardingstone, Northamptonshire, England
Civil Parish: Wootton
County/Island: Northamptonshire
Country: England
Street address: Wootton
Marital Status: Widow
Occupation: Formerly Dressmaker
Registration district: Hardingstone
ED, institution, or vessel: 1
Piece: 1542
Folio: 13
Page Number: 19
Household Members:
Name Age
Pheobe Whiting 67
Eliza Ellen Maule 17
Source Citation
Class: RG11; Piece: 1542; Folio: 13; Page: 19; GSU roll: 1341372

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/uki1881/16772430/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&rhSource=7619

Actual Image:

http://interactive.ancestry.com/7572/NTHRG11_1541_1545-0268?pid=16772430&backurl=//search.ancestry.com//cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv%3D1%26db%3Duki1881%26h%3D16772430%26tid%3D%26pid%3D%26usePUB%3Dtrue%26usePUBJs%3Dtrue%26rhSource%3D7619%26indivrecord%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true
=========
1883
Phoebe Whiting
in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1837-1915
Name: Phoebe Whiting
Estimated birth year: abt 1814
Registration Year: 1883
Registration Quarter: Jan-Feb-Mar
Age at Death: 69
Registration district: Northampton
Parishes for this Registration District: Search for Northampton in the London Times
Inferred County: Northamptonshire
Volume: 3b
Page: 59

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/FreeBMDDeath/36505958/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&rhSource=9841 
Beech, Phoebe (I2372)
 
25779 Photo: Baptism - William Whiting 7 Sep 1645
Category: Other
Description: William the sonne of Gyles Whyting & Susanna the daughter of Thomas Sansom
Attached To: William Whiting (1645-1711)

Actual Image:

http://mv.ancestry.com/viewer/6a9a3946-fb09-4e6d-a195-4d214fb77064/84929541/32515852174

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

Photo: Burail - William Whiting 13 Jan 1712/3
Category: Other
Attached To: William Whiting (1645-1711)

Actual Image:

http://mv.ancestry.com/viewer/5a3512ae-0d9e-499a-ad4e-27bd02504c0b/84929541/32515852174 
Whiting, William (I1527)
 
25780 pid L85K-G5P

GIVEN NAMES: Also shown as Edna K

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Moorefield, Butte, Idaho, United States.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Moorefield, Butte, Idaho, United States. 
Patten, Edna Kay (I17874)
 
25781 Pilestown, Rensselaer, New York could be Filestown or PITTSTOWN.
Trying to put together a missing link in my tree. I have a letter written from Pilestown on February 7, 1813 from a Nathan and Sarah Whiting (husband and wife) to their son Nathan B. Whiting in Stonington, Ct. Besides the general chit-chat it mentions, "Sally is married to one Mr. Thomas Scribing and I believe is very well.

Your brother Amos is dead

and we have got another son 3 1/2 years old and his name is Palmer Lewis...." At the end of the letter he signs it and under his signature he wrote...
N.B. Sally Scribing in Oct 1812 was 20 Names Nancy Whiting 18 1812 Polly Whiting 14 Oct 1812Phebe Whiting the 12 July 1810 Lydia Whiting the 10 June 1812 Amos is no more Palmer Lewis Whiting June 3 1/2 1812 Also on the other side of the letter he wrote...
Samuel C. Whiting Gideon W. Whiting Joseph C. Whiting David W. Whiting Ann Elisa Whiting those children was Nathaniel Whiting's children was an uncle to Nathan B. Whiting.
If this sounds familar to anyone please write me. I have the genealogy from Nathan Burrows Whiting down, but I can't figure out who his parents (Nathan and Sarah) are, nor his uncle (Nathaniel). Thanks.. 
Whiting, Amos L. (I3849)
 
25782 PINCHON FAMILY IN ENGLAND AND AMERICA BY J.C. PYNCHON

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Springfield, Essex, England.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born 1607

!SPOUSE: MARRIAGE: Book: New England Marriages Prior to 1700: Clarence Almon

This Henry Smith (1607-1687) from New Buckenham, Norfolk, Eng., a yeoman and husbandman, md to Elizabeth who came to Mass 1637 with sons John and Seth, is often confused with Capt. Henry Smith and a Reverend Henry Smith. Their families are different but often merged. This needs careful defining.

!Watertown 1636.Wetherfield 1637.Pastor.

!A goldsmith of Adermanbury, St. Mary's Parish, London, England. Data from Fred H. Knapp

!Green book 4, sec P. Will dated 2 Aug 1683, Will proved 3 Mar 1687. 
Smith, Henry (I26442)
 
25783 place of death unsure. birth date set as 1644 instead of 1643/44 by Gen Dict of 1st Sett. of N.E., page 135. The John who married Hannah is called: perhaps s. of the preced. Other sources must be cited to prove connection. file: fam0000001.htm lists birth as 12 Dec 1643 listing same parentage. Perhaps the latter date is the christening? This source does not list family.

Doug Bingham Files lists birth as 7 Dec 1643 Dedham, Suffolk Co., Massachusetts. Dedham was in Suffolk, now is in Norfolk. lists death 14 Sep 1706 Wrentham, Norfolk County, Massachusetts.

Gene Pool Individual Records:

John Fairbanks
Birth: 7 December 1643 Dedham, Suffolk County, MA
Death: 14 September 1706 Wrentham, Norfolk County,MA Marriage: , ,
Parents: John Fairbanks Sarah Fiske

[12 mo is February in our calendar, not December]

John Fairbanks
Birth: 7 February 1643 Dedham, Norfolk, MA
Death: 5 February 1660 Dedham, Norfolk, MA,
Marriage: , , Hannah Whiting
Parents: John Fairbanks Sarah Fiske

[Dunno where they got that death date...I'll bet his kids would be surprised! Actually, it is the death date of the oldest son, Joshua]

Moved to Wrentham from Dedham in 1677.
He received by the will of his father, all of his real estate, or rights, within the town of Wrentham, and some money.

Will dated Aug. 29, 1706; probated Oct. 1, 1706. The will mentions his wife Hannah, sons John, Joshua and Nathaniel, and daughters Hannah, Mary, Sarah and Deborah. Suffolk Wills, Vol. 16, Fol. 188.
It is erroneously stated in the Dedham Records, Vol. 1, p. 12, that he married Mary Whiting. Mary was Hannah's sister, born August 12, 1658. See Hannah Whiting's will, Suffolk Probate Records, Lib. 18, Fol. 396.

December 25, 1668, witness to will of Richard Church of Hingham with father and Joshua Fisher234 
Fairbanks, Lieutenant John (I1297)
 
25784 Police officer at Boston, MA.
==================================================

Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988
Name: Willard Jackson Whiting
Event Type: Birth
Birth Date: 15 Aug 1815
Birth Place: Holliston, Massachusetts
Father Name: Daniel Whiting
Mother Name: Sarah Whiting
=================================================== 
Whiting, Willard Jackson (I3372)
 
25785 Polly and family need to be verified. Tremain, Mary Polly (I5690)
 
25786 Poplar, London
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2007)
Poplar
Poplar all saints church 1.jpg
All Saints Church, Poplar
Poplar is located in Greater London PoplarPoplar
Poplar shown within Greater London
OS grid reference TQ375805
– Charing Cross 5.5 mi (8.9 km) W
London borough Tower Hamlets
Ceremonial county Greater London
Region London
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town LONDON
Postcode district E14
Dialling code 020
Police Metropolitan
Fire London
Ambulance London
EU Parliament London
UK Parliament Poplar and Limehouse
London Assembly City and East
List of places UK England London
Coordinates: 51.5066°N 0.0178°W

Poplar is a historic, mainly residential area of East London, England, in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It is about 5.5 miles (8.9 km) east of Charing Cross. Historically a hamlet in the parish of Stepney, Middlesex, in 1817 Poplar became a civil parish. In 1855 the Poplar District of the Metropolis was formed, which also included Bromley and Bow. The district became the Metropolitan Borough of Poplar in 1900 which was abolished in 1965. The district centre is Chrisp Street Market. Poplar contains notable examples of public housing including the Lansbury Estate and Balfron Tower.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
=====================================
1901
Mary A Burton in the 1901 England Census
Name: Mary A Burton
Age: 7
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1894
Relation to Head: Daughter (Child)
Gender: Female
Father: James Burton
Mother: Mary A Burton born:
Birth Place: Poplar, London, England
Civil Parish: Twickenham
Ecclesiastical parish: Holy Trinity
County/Island: Middlesex
Country: England
Street address:
Registration district: Brentford
Sub-registration district: Twickenham
ED, institution, or vessel: 11
Neighbors: View others on page
Piece: 1188
Folio: 123
Page Number: 38
Household schedule number: 251
Household Members:
Name Age
James Burton 36
Mary A Burton 31 born: Nallis, Suffolk, England
Lily Burton 12
Mary A Burton 7
George A Burton 6 born: Poplar, London, England
Arthur Burton
Frank Burton 4
Hilda Burton 2
Source Citation
Class: RG13; Piece: 1188; Folio: 123; Page: 38

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/uki1901/1779810/printer-friendly

actual image:

http://interactive.ancestry.com/7814/MDXRG13_1187_1189-0551/1779810?backurl=http%3a%2f%2fsearch.ancestry.com%2f%2fcgi-bin%2fsse.dll%3fdb%3duki1901%26indiv%3dtry%26h%3d1779810&ssrc=&backlabel=ReturnRecord
================================= 
Burton, Mary A (I29269)
 
25787 Portrait and Biographical Album of Racine and Kenosha Counties, Wisconsin ...
tired life in Burlington, Wis., was born in U the town of Rupert, Bennington County, \'t., August 12, 1807. His father with the family removed thence to the town of Sandgate, in the winter of 1809. The following summer they were visited by an uncle of our subject, Demmon Whiting. and Mr. Sheldon relates what was to him, a three-year old boy, a most interesting experience, the killing of a woodehnck. The animal was discovered in a field of clover not far from the house and his uncle securing a handspike or billet of wood which was used in rolling logs together, preparatory to burnmg them, managed to get between the chuck and his hole and droye him in a cleft in a rock near by, from which there was no escape
-ance at school in the winter. except at the entrance where he went in. Mr. Whiting then began to punch the animal, and young Orson thought he had never heard such a screeching before. It was not long before the woodchuck was killed,and triumphantly displayed to the little fellow.
In the month of January, 1812, the Sheldon family consisting of the parents, two sons and a daughter, removed with a span of horses and sleigh to Warsaw, Genesee County, N. Y., carrying with them what household goods they could put into the sleigh. They settled on a heavily timbered farm, their home being a one-roomed log cabin, the floor of which was made of basswood logs split in halves and laid closely together with the bark side down. They had no cellar, but a small hole had been dug for the potatoes and other garden vegetables. A large open space was sawed out of the logs in one end of the room and filled up with stones for a fire-place with no jambs, the chimney being made of sticks of wood, and plastered on the inside with clay. A loft or low room above served as a sleeping apartment. On the fire was placed the customary backlog and backstick, together with another log for a forestick and all three were hauled into the house, by a horse. Three years were pleasantly passed there and then the father purchased one of the two hotels in the village, to which he removed, carrying it on for four years, when it was exchanged for a farm in an adjoining town, upon which our subject resided until /XRSON SHELDON, who is now living a re- =
seventeen years of age, working at farm labor with no intermission except his three months’ attend'l‘hen he did the chores night and morning, and supplied the wood for the household fires.
Mr. Sheldon then felt that he was competent to teach a district school, and after passing what he considered a searching examination ,obtained a certificate from the Board of Inspectors. He succeeded well in this enterprise, and the only acts of disobedienee of much importance, were soon quelled. As was the custom, he boarded round among the scholars, but as he did not like teaching, began serving an apprenticeship to the cabinet-maker’s trade with Howard Bosworth, of Warsaw, N. Y. He boarded with his employer, and during the year he stayed with him was nearly starved, so he decided to leaveand went to another cabinet-maker in the same town, with whom he remained until he had attained his majority. Going to LeRoy, N. Y., he there worked at his trade until the following January, when he went to Buffalo, but as he found no suitable employment there, continued on to Niagara Falls, and crossed the river on the ice below the Falls to Canada, a perilous venture, but fortunately safely accomplished. Until the following spring he worked in a shop at Lundy’s Lane, when he returned to Warsaw and formed a partnership with Horatio N. Farnham, they building a shop in Pike, Allegany County. After a year, Mr. Sheldon bought out his partner, continuing the business alone for two years, when he sold out.
In the meantime he had married Miss Rose Ann Lippit, and they kept house in the rear end of the shop, occupying sleeping rooms in the second story. On selling out, his wife returned to her parents in
Otsego County, N. Y., while he went to Detroit Mich., and worked as a journeyman until the next spring, when he returned to the East and brought his wife and child to Detroit, where he worked at his trade for a few months. He finally decided to locate in Utiea, Macomb County, Mich., where he engaged in cabinet-making for two years, and then followed merchandising in company with Lewis D. Owen, under the firm name of Sheldon & Owen for two years, when the business was disposed of.
Mr. Sheldon remained in Utica ten years, and held the office of Justice of the Peace nearly all of that time. He was elected a member of the House of Representatives the first year after the admission of the State to the Union, and received the nomination for the next year and would doubtless have been elected but declined to run, as he intended removing to Wisconsin. In the following January his sleigh was fitted up with a heavy canvas cover and in it Mr. Sheldon, his wife and three children and James C. McKesson and his wife and child started for this State. They stopped at Mound Prairie, and Mr. McKesson located on a farm that is still his home. Mr. Sheldon left his family with a settler on the prairie while he started out on foot ix) seek a loca, turning through Delavan he there met William C.Allen, an attorney-at-law located there, and formed a pleasant acquaintance with him which lasted during Mr. Allen's life-time. Our subject next went to Elkhorn, to Spring Prairie and thence to Burlington, Rochester and Waterford, after which he returned to Burlington, where he unexpectedly met Benjamin Forbes, an old acquaintance of Warsaw, N. Y., by whom he was urged to locate at that place.
Mr. Sheldon finally decided to do so and soon afterward removed his family to Burlington, renting the upper story of Mr. Forbes’ brick house. He now had only $2 left and a chopping ax and hoe. After cutting up a tree to supply fire wood for his family, he obtained work at chopping wood for fifty cents per day with Mr. Gregg, a brickmaker and subsequently did the same work at the same price for ()regon Perkins through the winter. In the spring he helped Mr. Perkins put in the crops on a fine farm now owned by the gentleman’s son, Frederick S. Perkins.
In the meantime Mr. Sheldon had spoken to the mercantile firm of Perkins & Son, with reference to obtaining a clerkship, as their present clerk did not suit. The old gentleman said “we want a clerk, but we don’t want to be mistaken in our man.” Mr. Sheldon then wrote to Mt. Clemens, Mich., and to Robert P. Eldridge, then Secretary of State, and from him and all the county officers and leading business men of that city received letters of recommendation which he presented to Mr. Perkins, who expressed himself pleased with them, and in consequence employed our subject.
At the expiration of three years, as the firm was largely engaged in farming and the milling business, they desired to close out, and made Mr. Sheldon a proposition to buy their stock and rent their store, which he did, continuing the business alone for a year, when he formed a partnership with James A. Stevens, who was formerly a merchant of Michigan. This connection continued a year and a half, when Mr. Sheldon sold his interest to Andrew Sawyer, and bought a lot upon which he built a brick store and continued business successfully for some years. The financial panic of 1857 then came on, bringing failure to many large business houses throughout the country.
In the course of his business, Mr. Sheldon had invested largely in railroad stocks and in real estate, both regarded as profitable investments and thus the money panic found him encumbered with indebtedness which he could not lneet, and be was compelled to make an assignment, thus losing his entire possessions. a homestead residence in Scottsville, Monroe County, N. Y., which she sold, using the proceeds to redeem the family home which was sold on the foreclosure of mortgage. The store was sold on two mortgages, but was finally redeemed by the
son, Hiram A. Sheldon, who now owns and 0ccupies it as a hardware store.
In 1845 Mr. Sheldon had been elected a member of the Territorial Legislature, and re-elected the following year, serving two terms with credit to himself and satisfaction to his constituents. After
he was forced to dispose of his business he engaged 'in clerking with Messrs. Parsons dz Conover, drygoods merchants of Burlington, with whom he remained two years, after which in connection with his son, H. A. Sheldon, he engaged in the hardware business remaining in charge during the Civil War,while the son fought at the front. Soon afterward ‘he went to Mt. Carroll, lll., where another son, H.E. Sheldon, was engaged in the drug and medicine business, remaining with him a pogtion of the time for three years, during which time he spent two months on a trip to Oregon, and settled up the estate of his deceased brother William, who had long been a resident of Oregon. Some time afterward we find Mr. Sheldon in Madison City, Dak., where for three summers he worked upon a farm that was owned conjointly by his two sons before hundred acres of land.
Mr. Sheldon then returned to Burlington, where, in the midst of his family he is now living a retn-ed life, and here expects to spend the remainder of his days. He is now in his eighty-fifth year, and feels that his life journey is almost over, but with Mrs. Sheldon fortunately had ,first house. mentioned, and 'I‘. M. Martin, containing several ‘
a Christian ’s hope in his heart he will meet death, and crossing the dark river, join the dear kindred and friends gone before and dwell with them in happy unity before the throne of the Heavenly
f Father through a never ending eternity.
http://books.google.com/books?id=Hl00AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA665&lpg=PA659&ots=1mmD_8G8He&dq=%22Demmon+Whiting%22&output=text#c_top 
Sheldon, Orson (I19013)
 
25788 Portrait Biographical Album of Calhoun Co., Michigan [Chicago, Chapman Bros. 1891]
The lady whom our subject won for his wife was Miss Augusta Whiting, a native of Rockland, Plymouth County, Mass., with whom he was joined in matrimonial bonds June 14, 1876. The date of her birth was May 25, 1844. Her parents having come to this State, she attended Albion College and was graduated in the Class of '63. She subsequently took a post-graduate course of one year. She is a lady of high literary qualifications and of ability in preparing music for the press, and has put her talents to good use in preparing articles for the press and in work done for literary societies. She spent three years in the lecture field, and ably assisted her brother in his work as a lecturer, composer and author, and has herself published articles in Eastern periodicals and music books. Her literary productions, aside from the work done for societies, are mainly to be found in the "Banner of Light,'' and her music in the "Spiritual Harp." She is interested in all reforms, and has a prominent place in the social life of the neighborhood.
The father of Mrs. Anthony was Albert Whiting, a native of Rockland, Mass., and a shoe manufacturer in his native State. The family record from the middle of the seventeenth century is as follows: James Whiting, of Hingham, Mass., married Mary Beals in 1647, and in 1658 received a land grant in the town. His house was burned by the Indians in 1676. He died in 1710 leaving a large landed estate in Hingham, Scituate, Abington and Hanover. His son, James, Jr., born July 15, 1651, died February 20, 1725, after a lifelong residence in Hingham; Benjamin Whiting, born in 1693, and a son of the above, married Sarah Tower in 1716 and settled at Queen Anne's Corners. His son Thomas, born January 29, 1718, married Lydia Pratt and settled on Whiting Street, Hanover, being one of the earliest residents there. He died September 23, 1793, and his son Thomas kept up the home in Hanover. The latter was born June 3, 1743, married Rachel Peakes in November, 1770, and died December 13,1805. He had six children, the fourth of whom was Charles, who was baptized
June 27, 1784, and married Betsey Pool, of Abington. The oldest child of this couple was Albert, father of Mrs. Anthony.
The mother of Mrs. Anthony bore the maiden name of Rachel G. Bennett. Her marriage to Mr. Whiting was solemnized in East Bridgewater, Mass., March 8, 1835, and her home was made in Rockland until 1853, when they came to Michigan. They settled in Brooklyn, Jackson County, and the husband engaged in farming until his death, which occurred in 1859. His widow removed to Albion in 1860, and died there in 1874. Mr. Whiting possessed strong mental powers and an even temperament; he was a Free-thinker. The mother of Mrs. Anthony traces her paternal line back to very early times in England. The first of the family to come to America settled in Abington, Mass., and was of the fourth generation prior to herself. Nathaniel Bennett, of the next generation, was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and died of disease during the service. His son George served through the War of 1812, and finally died of consumption. His fourth child was Mrs. Whiting. The maternal grandmother of Mrs. Anthony was Leah Gardner, who was connected with the English families of Marlborough, North Guilford and Dudley.
Mr. and Mrs. Whiting were the parents of three children, one of whom died in childhood. Those who grew to maturity were Albert Bennett and Augusta, now the wife of our subject. Albert was born December 14, 1835, received a common-school education and spent one year in a private academy. He began lecturing when but eighteen years old, and continued in the lecture field about eighteen years. He was unusually eloquent, and his phenomenal powers as a medium brought him prominently before the people in most of the large cities of the Union. He atone time submitted to a most thorough examination before Harvard professors, and much interest attached to a debate on spiritualism which took place at Decatur, this State, between him and the Rev. Joseph Jones, a minister in the Methodist Church. Mr. Whiting often improvised poems upon subjects given him by persons in his audience. A large number of his poems were set to music by himself, and published by Peters, of New York. He also published a work called "Religion and Morality." His biography, written by his sister, was published by William White & Co., of Boston, in 1872. This brilliant man was called to try the realities of the other world in September, 1871.


BIRTH: Also shown as Born Hingham, Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States.

DEATH: Also shown as Died Deceased

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States.

DEATH: Also shown as Died 22 Jan 1783 
Whiton, Benjamin (I32269)
 
25789 Portrait Biographical Album of Calhoun Co., Michigan [Chicago, Chapman Bros. 1891]
The lady whom our subject won for his wife was Miss Augusta Whiting, a native of Rockland, Plymouth County, Mass., with whom he was joined in matrimonial bonds June 14, 1876. The date of her birth was May 25, 1844. Her parents having come to this State, she attended Albion College and was graduated in the Class of '63. She subsequently took a post-graduate course of one year. She is a lady of high literary qualifications and of ability in preparing music for the press, and has put her talents to good use in preparing articles for the press and in work done for literary societies. She spent three years in the lecture field, and ably assisted her brother in his work as a lecturer, composer and author, and has herself published articles in Eastern periodicals and music books. Her literary productions, aside from the work done for societies, are mainly to be found in the "Banner of Light,'' and her music in the "Spiritual Harp." She is interested in all reforms, and has a prominent place in the social life of the neighborhood.
The father of Mrs. Anthony was Albert Whiting, a native of Rockland, Mass., and a shoe manufacturer in his native State. The family record from the middle of the seventeenth century is as follows: James Whiting, of Hingham, Mass., married Mary Beals in 1647, and in 1658 received a land grant in the town. His house was burned by the Indians in 1676. He died in 1710 leaving a large landed estate in Hingham, Scituate, Abington and Hanover. His son, James, Jr., born July 15, 1651, died February 20, 1725, after a lifelong residence in Hingham; Benjamin Whiting, born in 1693, and a son of the above, married Sarah Tower in 1716 and settled at Queen Anne's Corners. His son Thomas, born January 29, 1718, married Lydia Pratt and settled on Whiting Street, Hanover, being one of the earliest residents there. He died September 23, 1793, and his son Thomas kept up the home in Hanover. The latter was born June 3, 1743, married Rachel Peakes in November, 1770, and died December 13,1805. He had six children, the fourth of whom was Charles, who was baptized
June 27, 1784, and married Betsey Pool, of Abington. The oldest child of this couple was Albert, father of Mrs. Anthony.
The mother of Mrs. Anthony bore the maiden name of Rachel G. Bennett. Her marriage to Mr. Whiting was solemnized in East Bridgewater, Mass., March 8, 1835, and her home was made in Rockland until 1853, when they came to Michigan. They settled in Brooklyn, Jackson County, and the husband engaged in farming until his death, which occurred in 1859. His widow removed to Albion in 1860, and died there in 1874. Mr. Whiting possessed strong mental powers and an even temperament; he was a Free-thinker. The mother of Mrs. Anthony traces her paternal line back to very early times in England. The first of the family to come to America settled in Abington, Mass., and was of the fourth generation prior to herself. Nathaniel Bennett, of the next generation, was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and died of disease during the service. His son George served through the War of 1812, and finally died of consumption. His fourth child was Mrs. Whiting. The maternal grandmother of Mrs. Anthony was Leah Gardner, who was connected with the English families of Marlborough, North Guilford and Dudley.
Mr. and Mrs. Whiting were the parents of three children, one of whom died in childhood. Those who grew to maturity were Albert Bennett and Augusta, now the wife of our subject. Albert was born December 14, 1835, received a common-school education and spent one year in a private academy. He began lecturing when but eighteen years old, and continued in the lecture field about eighteen years. He was unusually eloquent, and his phenomenal powers as a medium brought him prominently before the people in most of the large cities of the Union. He atone time submitted to a most thorough examination before Harvard professors, and much interest attached to a debate on spiritualism which took place at Decatur, this State, between him and the Rev. Joseph Jones, a minister in the Methodist Church. Mr. Whiting often improvised poems upon subjects given him by persons in his audience. A large number of his poems were set to music by himself, and published by Peters, of New York. He also published a work called "Religion and Morality." His biography, written by his sister, was published by William White & Co., of Boston, in 1872. This brilliant man was called to try the realities of the other world in September, 1871.

The lady whom our subject won for his wife was Miss Augusta Whiting, a native of Rockland, Plymouth County, Mass., with whom he was joined in matrimonial bonds June 14, 1876. The date of her birth was May 25, 1844. Her parents having come to this State, she attended Albion College and was graduated in the Class of '63. She subsequently took a post-graduate course of one year. She is a lady of high literary qualifications and of ability in preparing music for the press, and has put her talents to good use in preparing articles for the press and in work done for literary societies. She spent three years in the lecture field, and ably assisted her brother in his work as a lecturer, composer and author, and has herself published articles in Eastern periodicals and music books. Her literary productions, aside from the work done for societies, are mainly to be found in the "Banner of Light,'' and her music in the "Spiritual Harp." She is interested in all reforms, and has a prominent place in the social life of the neighborhood.
The father of Mrs. Anthony was Albert Whiting, a native of Rockland, Mass., and a shoe manufacturer in his native State. The family record from the middle of the seventeenth century is as follows: James Whiting, of Hingham, Mass., married Mary Beals in 1647, and in 1658 received a land grant in the town. His house was burned by the Indians in 1676. He died in 1710 leaving a large landed estate in Hingham, Scituate, Abington and Hanover. His son, James, Jr., born July 15, 1651, died February 20, 1725, after a lifelong residence in Hingham; Benjamin Whiting, born in 1693, and a son of the above, married Sarah Tower in 1716 and settled at Queen Anne's Corners. His son Thomas, born January 29, 1718, married Lydia Pratt and settled on Whiting Street, Hanover, being one of the earliest residents there. He died September 23, 1793, and his son Thomas kept up the home in Hanover. The latter was born June 3, 1743, married Rachel Peakes in November, 1770, and died December 13,1805. He had six children, the fourth of whom was Charles, who was baptized
June 27, 1784, and married Betsey Pool, of Abington. The oldest child of this couple was Albert, father of Mrs. Anthony.
The mother of Mrs. Anthony bore the maiden name of Rachel G. Bennett. Her marriage to Mr. Whiting was solemnized in East Bridgewater, Mass., March 8, 1835, and her home was made in Rockland until 1853, when they came to Michigan. They settled in Brooklyn, Jackson County, and the husband engaged in farming until his death, which occurred in 1859. His widow removed to Albion in 1860, and died there in 1874. Mr. Whiting possessed strong mental powers and an even temperament; he was a Free-thinker. The mother of Mrs. Anthony traces her paternal line back to very early times in England. The first of the family to come to America settled in Abington, Mass., and was of the fourth generation prior to herself. Nathaniel Bennett, of the next generation, was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and died of disease during the service. His son George served through the War of 1812, and finally died of consumption. His fourth child was Mrs. Whiting. The maternal grandmother of Mrs. Anthony was Leah Gardner, who was connected with the English families of Marlborough, North Guilford and Dudley.
Mr. and Mrs. Whiting were the parents of three children, one of whom died in childhood. Those who grew to maturity were Albert Bennett and Augusta, now the wife of our subject. Albert was born December 14, 1835, received a common-school education and spent one year in a private academy. He began lecturing when but eighteen years old, and continued in the lecture field about eighteen years. He was unusually eloquent, and his phenomenal powers as a medium brought him prominently before the people in most of the large cities of the Union. He atone time submitted to a most thorough examination before Harvard professors, and much interest attached to a debate on spiritualism which took place at Decatur, this State, between him and the Rev. Joseph Jones, a minister in the Methodist Church. Mr. Whiting often improvised poems upon subjects given him by persons in his audience. A large number of his poems were set to music by himself, and published by Peters, of New York. He also published a work called "Religion and Morality." His biography, written by his sister, was published by William White & Co., of Boston, in 1872. This brilliant man was called to try the realities of the other world in September, 1871. 
Whiting, Charles (I9584)
 
25790 Portrait Biographical Album of Calhoun Co., Michigan [Chicago, Chapman Bros. 1891]
The lady whom our subject won for his wife was Miss Augusta Whiting, a native of Rockland, Plymouth County, Mass., with whom he was joined in matrimonial bonds June 14, 1876. The date of her birth was May 25, 1844. Her parents having come to this State, she attended Albion College and was graduated in the Class of '63. She subsequently took a post-graduate course of one year. She is a lady of high literary qualifications and of ability in preparing music for the press, and has put her talents to good use in preparing articles for the press and in work done for literary societies. She spent three years in the lecture field, and ably assisted her brother in his work as a lecturer, composer and author, and has herself published articles in Eastern periodicals and music books. Her literary productions, aside from the work done for societies, are mainly to be found in the "Banner of Light,'' and her music in the "Spiritual Harp." She is interested in all reforms, and has a prominent place in the social life of the neighborhood.
The father of Mrs. Anthony was Albert Whiting, a native of Rockland, Mass., and a shoe manufacturer in his native State. The family record from the middle of the seventeenth century is as follows: James Whiting, of Hingham, Mass., married Mary Beals in 1647, and in 1658 received a land grant in the town. His house was burned by the Indians in 1676. He died in 1710 leaving a large landed estate in Hingham, Scituate, Abington and Hanover. His son, James, Jr., born July 15, 1651, died February 20, 1725, after a lifelong residence in Hingham; Benjamin Whiting, born in 1693, and a son of the above, married Sarah Tower in 1716 and settled at Queen Anne's Corners. His son Thomas, born January 29, 1718, married Lydia Pratt and settled on Whiting Street, Hanover, being one of the earliest residents there. He died September 23, 1793, and his son Thomas kept up the home in Hanover. The latter was born June 3, 1743, married Rachel Peakes in November, 1770, and died December 13,1805. He had six children, the fourth of whom was Charles, who was baptized
June 27, 1784, and married Betsey Pool, of Abington. The oldest child of this couple was Albert, father of Mrs. Anthony.
The mother of Mrs. Anthony bore the maiden name of Rachel G. Bennett. Her marriage to Mr. Whiting was solemnized in East Bridgewater, Mass., March 8, 1835, and her home was made in Rockland until 1853, when they came to Michigan. They settled in Brooklyn, Jackson County, and the husband engaged in farming until his death, which occurred in 1859. His widow removed to Albion in 1860, and died there in 1874. Mr. Whiting possessed strong mental powers and an even temperament; he was a Free-thinker. The mother of Mrs. Anthony traces her paternal line back to very early times in England. The first of the family to come to America settled in Abington, Mass., and was of the fourth generation prior to herself. Nathaniel Bennett, of the next generation, was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and died of disease during the service. His son George served through the War of 1812, and finally died of consumption. His fourth child was Mrs. Whiting. The maternal grandmother of Mrs. Anthony was Leah Gardner, who was connected with the English families of Marlborough, North Guilford and Dudley.
Mr. and Mrs. Whiting were the parents of three children, one of whom died in childhood. Those who grew to maturity were Albert Bennett and Augusta, now the wife of our subject. Albert was born December 14, 1835, received a common-school education and spent one year in a private academy. He began lecturing when but eighteen years old, and continued in the lecture field about eighteen years. He was unusually eloquent, and his phenomenal powers as a medium brought him prominently before the people in most of the large cities of the Union. He atone time submitted to a most thorough examination before Harvard professors, and much interest attached to a debate on spiritualism which took place at Decatur, this State, between him and the Rev. Joseph Jones, a minister in the Methodist Church. Mr. Whiting often improvised poems upon subjects given him by persons in his audience. A large number of his poems were set to music by himself, and published by Peters, of New York. He also published a work called "Religion and Morality." His biography, written by his sister, was published by William White & Co., of Boston, in 1872. This brilliant man was called to try the realities of the other world in September, 1871.

The lady whom our subject won for his wife was Miss Augusta Whiting, a native of Rockland, Plymouth County, Mass., with whom he was joined in matrimonial bonds June 14, 1876. The date of her birth was May 25, 1844. Her parents having come to this State, she attended Albion College and was graduated in the Class of '63. She subsequently took a post-graduate course of one year. She is a lady of high literary qualifications and of ability in preparing music for the press, and has put her talents to good use in preparing articles for the press and in work done for literary societies. She spent three years in the lecture field, and ably assisted her brother in his work as a lecturer, composer and author, and has herself published articles in Eastern periodicals and music books. Her literary productions, aside from the work done for societies, are mainly to be found in the "Banner of Light,'' and her music in the "Spiritual Harp." She is interested in all reforms, and has a prominent place in the social life of the neighborhood.
The father of Mrs. Anthony was Albert Whiting, a native of Rockland, Mass., and a shoe manufacturer in his native State. The family record from the middle of the seventeenth century is as follows: James Whiting, of Hingham, Mass., married Mary Beals in 1647, and in 1658 received a land grant in the town. His house was burned by the Indians in 1676. He died in 1710 leaving a large landed estate in Hingham, Scituate, Abington and Hanover. His son, James, Jr., born July 15, 1651, died February 20, 1725, after a lifelong residence in Hingham; Benjamin Whiting, born in 1693, and a son of the above, married Sarah Tower in 1716 and settled at Queen Anne's Corners. His son Thomas, born January 29, 1718, married Lydia Pratt and settled on Whiting Street, Hanover, being one of the earliest residents there. He died September 23, 1793, and his son Thomas kept up the home in Hanover. The latter was born June 3, 1743, married Rachel Peakes in November, 1770, and died December 13,1805. He had six children, the fourth of whom was Charles, who was baptized
June 27, 1784, and married Betsey Pool, of Abington. The oldest child of this couple was Albert, father of Mrs. Anthony.
The mother of Mrs. Anthony bore the maiden name of Rachel G. Bennett. Her marriage to Mr. Whiting was solemnized in East Bridgewater, Mass., March 8, 1835, and her home was made in Rockland until 1853, when they came to Michigan. They settled in Brooklyn, Jackson County, and the husband engaged in farming until his death, which occurred in 1859. His widow removed to Albion in 1860, and died there in 1874. Mr. Whiting possessed strong mental powers and an even temperament; he was a Free-thinker. The mother of Mrs. Anthony traces her paternal line back to very early times in England. The first of the family to come to America settled in Abington, Mass., and was of the fourth generation prior to herself. Nathaniel Bennett, of the next generation, was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and died of disease during the service. His son George served through the War of 1812, and finally died of consumption. His fourth child was Mrs. Whiting. The maternal grandmother of Mrs. Anthony was Leah Gardner, who was connected with the English families of Marlborough, North Guilford and Dudley.
Mr. and Mrs. Whiting were the parents of three children, one of whom died in childhood. Those who grew to maturity were Albert Bennett and Augusta, now the wife of our subject. Albert was born December 14, 1835, received a common-school education and spent one year in a private academy. He began lecturing when but eighteen years old, and continued in the lecture field about eighteen years. He was unusually eloquent, and his phenomenal powers as a medium brought him prominently before the people in most of the large cities of the Union. He atone time submitted to a most thorough examination before Harvard professors, and much interest attached to a debate on spiritualism which took place at Decatur, this State, between him and the Rev. Joseph Jones, a minister in the Methodist Church. Mr. Whiting often improvised poems upon subjects given him by persons in his audience. A large number of his poems were set to music by himself, and published by Peters, of New York. He also published a work called "Religion and Morality." His biography, written by his sister, was published by William White & Co., of Boston, in 1872. This brilliant man was called to try the realities of the other world in September, 1871. 
Whiting, Thomas (I9201)
 
25791 Portrait Biographical Album of Calhoun Co., Michigan [Chicago, Chapman Bros. 1891]
The lady whom our subject won for his wife was Miss Augusta Whiting, a native of Rockland, Plymouth County, Mass., with whom he was joined in matrimonial bonds June 14, 1876. The date of her birth was May 25, 1844. Her parents having come to this State, she attended Albion College and was graduated in the Class of '63. She subsequently took a post-graduate course of one year. She is a lady of high literary qualifications and of ability in preparing music for the press, and has put her talents to good use in preparing articles for the press and in work done for literary societies. She spent three years in the lecture field, and ably assisted her brother in his work as a lecturer, composer and author, and has herself published articles in Eastern periodicals and music books. Her literary productions, aside from the work done for societies, are mainly to be found in the "Banner of Light,'' and her music in the "Spiritual Harp." She is interested in all reforms, and has a prominent place in the social life of the neighborhood.
The father of Mrs. Anthony was Albert Whiting, a native of Rockland, Mass., and a shoe manufacturer in his native State. The family record from the middle of the seventeenth century is as follows: James Whiting, of Hingham, Mass., married Mary Beals in 1647, and in 1658 received a land grant in the town. His house was burned by the Indians in 1676. He died in 1710 leaving a large landed estate in Hingham, Scituate, Abington and Hanover. His son, James, Jr., born July 15, 1651, died February 20, 1725, after a lifelong residence in Hingham; Benjamin Whiting, born in 1693, and a son of the above, married Sarah Tower in 1716 and settled at Queen Anne's Corners. His son Thomas, born January 29, 1718, married Lydia Pratt and settled on Whiting Street, Hanover, being one of the earliest residents there. He died September 23, 1793, and his son Thomas kept up the home in Hanover. The latter was born June 3, 1743, married Rachel Peakes in November, 1770, and died December 13,1805. He had six children, the fourth of whom was Charles, who was baptized
June 27, 1784, and married Betsey Pool, of Abington. The oldest child of this couple was Albert, father of Mrs. Anthony.
The mother of Mrs. Anthony bore the maiden name of Rachel G. Bennett. Her marriage to Mr. Whiting was solemnized in East Bridgewater, Mass., March 8, 1835, and her home was made in Rockland until 1853, when they came to Michigan. They settled in Brooklyn, Jackson County, and the husband engaged in farming until his death, which occurred in 1859. His widow removed to Albion in 1860, and died there in 1874. Mr. Whiting possessed strong mental powers and an even temperament; he was a Free-thinker. The mother of Mrs. Anthony traces her paternal line back to very early times in England. The first of the family to come to America settled in Abington, Mass., and was of the fourth generation prior to herself. Nathaniel Bennett, of the next generation, was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and died of disease during the service. His son George served through the War of 1812, and finally died of consumption. His fourth child was Mrs. Whiting. The maternal grandmother of Mrs. Anthony was Leah Gardner, who was connected with the English families of Marlborough, North Guilford and Dudley.
Mr. and Mrs. Whiting were the parents of three children, one of whom died in childhood. Those who grew to maturity were Albert Bennett and Augusta, now the wife of our subject. Albert was born December 14, 1835, received a common-school education and spent one year in a private academy. He began lecturing when but eighteen years old, and continued in the lecture field about eighteen years. He was unusually eloquent, and his phenomenal powers as a medium brought him prominently before the people in most of the large cities of the Union. He atone time submitted to a most thorough examination before Harvard professors, and much interest attached to a debate on spiritualism which took place at Decatur, this State, between him and the Rev. Joseph Jones, a minister in the Methodist Church. Mr. Whiting often improvised poems upon subjects given him by persons in his audience. A large number of his poems were set to music by himself, and published by Peters, of New York. He also published a work called "Religion and Morality." His biography, written by his sister, was published by William White & Co., of Boston, in 1872. This brilliant man was called to try the realities of the other world in September, 1871.

the realities of the other world in September, 1871.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born 15 Jul 1651

DEATH: Also shown as Died 20 Feb 1724/1725

BIRTH: Also shown as Born 13 Jul 1651

BIRTH RITE: Also shown as Christening 13 Jul 1651

DEATH: Also shown as Died 20 Feb 1724/1725
 
Whiton, James II (I8924)
 
25792 Possibly is same person as:

Anna Frances FAIRBANKS - International Genealogical Index/NA
Gender: F Birth: 19 Apr 1859 Manchester Twp, Hillsboro, New Hampshire

Anna Frances FAIRBANKS - International Genealogical Index/NA
Gender: F Birth: 19 Aug 1859 Manchester Twp, Hillsboro, New Hampshire? 
Fairbanks, Anna Frances (I3813)
 
25793 Possibly the Asa listed in the 1790 Massachusetts census in Franklin, Massachusetts Page 201 with 2 adult males, 3 juvenile males and 1 adult female or page 203 with 1 adult male and 5 adult females. The former is more likely:

SUFFOLK COUNTY, MA 1790 CENSUS File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Peg Buckman ======================================================================= USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, data may be freely used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages CANNOT be reproduced in any format for profit or any other presentation. Permission from the submitter is required before this file can be used in any other format or system. ======================================================================= Heads of Families, Massachusetts SUFFOLK COUNTY 1790 Legend: Columns: 5=All Free White Females 1=Name of Head of Family 6=All Other Free Persons 2=First Name 7=Slaves 3=Free White Males over 16 8=City/Town 4=Free White Males under 16 9=Page #

Fairbanks Billi 1 2 1 Franklin Town 201
Fairbanks Asa 2 3 1 Franklin Town 201
Fairbanks Asa 1 5 Franklin Town 201 
Fairbanks, Asa Jr (I1862)
 
25794 Possibly the Dorcas Fairbanks mentioned in Colonial Families of the United States of America, Vol. 2, page 262

Possibly the Dorcas Fairbanks mentioned in Colonial Families of the United States of America, Vol. 2, page 262

1850; Census Place: Boston, Erie, New York; Roll: M432_500; Page: 13; Image: 27.
180/181 Ami Whiting 44 male farmer $5000 Massachusetts
Claucy 43 fem New York
Mark 12 male New York attended school
Jane 08 fem New York attended school
Dorcus 81 fem Vermont
Joseph Rech 14 male New York attended school 
Fairbanks, Dorcas (I4767)
 
25795 Possibly the Ira E listed in the Leominster, Worcester, Massachusetts City Directory:

Ira E. Fairbanks employed W. D. Earl & Co. boards Linden House Leominster MA 1885, 1886
Ira E. Fairbanks employed W. D. Earl & Co. boards Linden House Leominster MA 1889, 1890
Ira E. Fairbanks employed L. Electric Light Co. boards Linden House Leominster MA 1890, 1891
Ira E. Fairbanks Leominster MA 1891, 1892

Flint Genealogical Society
PO Box 1217, Flint Michigan 48439-1217
Cemetery Index
FAIRBANK IRA E. 20A 
Fairbanks, Ira Erwin (I1434)
 
25796 Possibly the Stephen listed in the Boston City Directory, 1805, which was prior to his marriage, and his establishment as a Saddler and Harness Maker:

Boston, Massachusetts Directory, 1805

Surname Given Name Occupation Address
Fairbanks Gerry hatter 109 Orange Street
Fairbanks Stephen chaise maker 18 Orange Street
Fairbanks John clock maker 32 Orange Street 
Fairbanks, Stephen (I3715)
 
25797 Posted by Karlene 4 Nov 1999 Genforum
Trying to put together a missing link in my tree. I have a letter written from Pilestown on February 7, 1813 from a Nathan and Sarah Whiting (husband and wife) to their son Nathan B. Whiting in Stonington, Ct. Besides the general chit-chat it mentions, "Sally is married to one Mr. Thomas Scribing and I believe is very well. Your brother Amos is dead and we have got another son 3 1/2 years old and his name is Palmer Lewis...." At the end of the letter he signs it and under his signature he wrote...
N.B. Sally Scribing in Oct 1812 was 20 Names Nancy Whiting 18 1812 Polly Whiting 14 Oct 1812Phebe Whiting the 12 July 1810 Lydia Whiting the 10 June 1812 Amos is no more Palmer Lewis Whiting June 3 1/2 1812 Also on the other side of the letter he wrote...
Samuel C. Whiting Gideon W. Whiting Joseph C. Whiting David W. Whiting Ann Elisa Whiting those children was Nathaniel Whiting's children was an uncle to Nathan B. Whiting.
If this sounds familar to anyone please write me. I have the genealogy from Nathan Burrows Whiting down, but I can't figure out who his parents (Nathan and Sarah) are, nor his uncle (Nathaniel). Thanks.. 
Lewis, Sarah (I3842)
 
25798 Posted by Karlene 4 Nov 1999 Genforum
Trying to put together a missing link in my tree. I have a letter written from Pilestown on February 7, 1813 from a Nathan and Sarah Whiting (husband and wife) to their son Nathan B. Whiting in Stonington, Ct. Besides the general chit-chat it mentions, "Sally is married to one Mr. Thomas Scribing and I believe is very well. Your brother Amos is dead and we have got another son 3 1/2 years old and his name is Palmer Lewis...." At the end of the letter he signs it and under his signature he wrote...
N.B. Sally Scribing in Oct 1812 was 20 Names Nancy Whiting 18 1812 Polly Whiting 14 Oct 1812Phebe Whiting the 12 July 1810 Lydia Whiting the 10 June 1812 Amos is no more Palmer Lewis Whiting June 3 1/2 1812 Also on the other side of the letter he wrote...
Samuel C. Whiting Gideon W. Whiting Joseph C. Whiting David W. Whiting Ann Elisa Whiting those children was Nathaniel Whiting's children was an uncle to Nathan B. Whiting.
If this sounds familar to anyone please write me. I have the genealogy from Nathan Burrows Whiting down, but I can't figure out who his parents (Nathan and Sarah) are, nor his uncle (Nathaniel). Thanks.. 
Whiting, Nathan (I3841)
 
25799 Prichard Names

http://www.mocavo.com/visit?q=london+england&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.archive.org%2Fstream%2Fconwayparishregi00conw%2Fconwayparishregi00conw_djvu.txt&m=4d501659d1807018a6f514a3989d1954&i=17268895564351360602&title=Full+text+of+%22The+Conway+parish+registers%2C+in+the+rural+deanery+of+Arllechwedd%2C+Diocese+of+Bangor%2C+C 
Richard =Prichard, Thomas (I1859)
 
25800 Probably the Billi Fairbanks listed in the 1790 Massachusetts census in Franklin (page 201) with household of 1 adult male, 2 juvenile males and 1 adult female. If this Billing did not live in Franklin, then there must be another not in file. Born in Wrentham, married in Medway which is near Franklin, he is the most distinct possibility, and his father and brother, Asa and Asa, Jr. both lived in Franklin:

SUFFOLK COUNTY, MA 1790 CENSUS File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Peg Buckman ======================================================================= USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, data may be freely used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages CANNOT be reproduced in any format for profit or any other presentation. Permission from the submitter is required before this file can be used in any other format or system. ======================================================================= Heads of Families, Massachusetts SUFFOLK COUNTY 1790 Legend: Columns: 5=All Free White Females 1=Name of Head of Family 6=All Other Free Persons 2=First Name 7=Slaves 3=Free White Males over 16 8=City/Town 4=Free White Males under 16 9=Page #

Fairbanks Billi 1 2 1 Franklin Town 201
Fairbanks Asa 2 3 1 Franklin Town 201
Fairbanks Asa 1 5 Franklin Town 201 
Fairbanks, Billings (I1891)
 

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