Showing posts with label War of 1812. Show all posts
Showing posts with label War of 1812. Show all posts

Saturday, April 30, 2016

My 64 ~ Researching My 4th Great Grandparents : Andrew Leighton and Mary Weymouth



My 4th great grandfather, Andrew Leighton, was born on June 7, 1762, in Falmouth, Maine, the oldest son of the 13 children born to Joseph Leighton and Mercy Hall. His father was a prosperous land owner in Falmouth and North Yarmouth, and was a Quaker.

The 1790 U.S. Census for North Yarmouth (present-day West Cumberland) lists Andrew, with 2 males under 16, 2 males under 16, and 2 females. Andrew had married Mary Weymouth probably sometime between 1780 and 1790. Mary was the daughter of James and Molly Weymouth of Gray, Maine.

According to "A Leighton Genealogy," Andrew, his father and a Richard Loring, divided up a 100-acre lot in "the Gore," present-day Freeport, in 1790. He was also elected Captain in the provincial militia in 1808, and was a Justice of the Peace in 1817.

As well as being a prosperous lumber trader, marketing timber for the ships' masts of the day, he also "laid out" the road from Falmouth to Portland. And, in 1800, he built and operated what was known as Leighton's Tavern*, at West Cumberland on the Gray Road, along the stage route to Lewiston, Maine.


Leighton's Tavern



Andrew and Mary had twelve children. All but one lived into adulthood. Notably, their two sons, Joseph and Andrew, were lost at sea presumably off the Georges Bank, aboard one of the earliest and most successful privateers and blockade runners during the War of 1812, the "Dash." According to one account, the best young sailors of the vicinity were anxious to serve on the "Dash," so that her crew was the pick of the region. A local poetess, Eliza Dennison King (1846-1928), would later write:
...
She was manned by a crew of gallant lads
As ever a vessel's deck had trod,
A score and a hundred of them all -
And their fate is known to none but God.

They all belonged to the towns around,
They were brothers and cousins and comrades, too,
Full armed and equipped they put to sea,
And the skies were never a softer blue

But weeks and months and years sped on,
And hearts grew hopeless and cheeks grew pale,
And eyes are dim that have watched so long
To catch a glimpse of her home bound sail.
...

 Joseph and Andrew were 25 and 24 years old respectively. Another son, Stephen, who had also gone to sea in his youth, was also lost at sea, a mere 15 years old.



Capt. Andrew and Mary Leighton are buried in the Methodist Cemetery in West Cumberland, Maine.

Capt. Andrew Leighton Grave, West Cumberland, Maine


Mary Weymouth Leighton Grave, West Cumberland, Maine



* In 1971, the tavern was moved to Schooner Rocks, Cumberland Foreside, and restored. -- Phyllis Sturdivant Sweetser, ed., Cumberland, Maine, in Four Centuries [the Town, 1976], 164-5).


Sources:

Ancestry.com, U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current (Provo, UT, USA, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012), Ancestry.com.

Bennett, Thomas C., "Vital Records of Cumberland, Maine 1701-1892" (2014). Cumberland Books. Book 1.

Leighton, Perley M. A Leighton genealogy: descendants of Thomas Leighton of Dover, New Hampshire. Compiled by Perley M. Leighton based in part on data collected by Julia Leighton Cornman. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical  Society, 1989.)

"The Story of DASH : Freeport's Famous Privateer," Freeport (Me.) Historical Society (http://freeporthistoricalsociety.org/the-story-of-dash)




Tuesday, February 16, 2016

My 64 ~ Researching My 4th Great Grandparents : Thomas Cross, Lucy Hovey, and My Gorham Roots



My 4th great grandfather, Thomas Cross, was born in Ipswich, Massachusetts, and was baptized there on December 20, 1741. He was raised in the village of Bradford (present-day Haverhill) by his mother and father, Thomas Cross and and Sarah Bordman.

He married Lucy Hovey, daughter of Joseph Hovey and Rebecca Stickney, in Bradford, Massachusetts, in November of 1767. Beginning the following year, they began their large family, which numbered 10 children by the time they moved to Gorham, Maine.

Thomas farmed land which was part of Captain Phinney's first settlement in Gorham, and kept a store adjacent to the homestead. Besides farming and running his store, Thomas was appointed a deacon of the First Parish Church in the village, and continued in that capacity until his death. He was also a member of Gorham's Committee to Hire Soldiers during the Revolutionary War, and, as such, is a DAR Patriot (A028166).

McLellan, Hugh Davis, History of Gorham, Maine (Smith & Sale, 1903), p. 173.

All of the Cross sons settled in Portland, Maine, and two of their daughters found husbands there.

Their eldest son, Joseph, married Betsey Duston. They are buried in Eastern Cemetery, Portland, as are sons Thomas, Leonard and Amos Hovey. Leonard and Amos Hovey were part of Captain A.W. Atherton's Company, Lieutenant Colonel Martin Nichols' Regiment of the Massachusetts Militia (District of Maine), which was raised in Portland during the War of 1812.


Daughter Betsey married Captain Jonathan Stevens. They are buried in Pine Grove Cemetery in present-day Falmouth, Maine.

Daughter Sally married Captain Enoch Preble. One of their sons was Real Admiral George Henry Preble of the U.S. Navy, fondly known as "The Father of the American Flag." The Prebles were originally interred in Eastern Cemetery, Portland, but, as space required, and as the attraction of Evergreen Cemetery (on Stevens Avenue) grew, their remains were moved and reinterred in Evergreen.

Daughter Lucy married James Phinney (1741-1834) of Gorham. They are both buried in Eastern Cemetery in Gorham.

Daughter Lois, my 3rd great grandmother, married Allison Libby III, and they are both buried in North Street Cemetery, in Gorham.



Son William married Eliza Stevens, and was a sea captain. In a sad twist of fate, he passed away on the day before his father died, and, as McLellan writes in his History of Gorham, "father and son were borne to the grave on the same hearse." 

Thus were my 4th great grandfather, Thomas Cross, and my 3rd great grand uncle laid to rest in Gorham Cemetery:



Inscription

Here lies
Deac. Thomas Cross
born in Ipswich,
Ms. Nov. 18, 1741.
died Feb. 15, 1819;
having been a Deac. of this
Church 15 years.
Also in the same grave his son,
Capt. William Cross;
born Aug. 21, 1779,
died Feb. 14, 1819.
Remaining verse:
No passing mortals and surviving friends
Regard....eloquence of death
Who more than...angelic tongue


My 4th great grandmother, Lucy Hovey Cross, lived two more years, and is buried beside her husband, and with her two daughters, Rebekah (age 19) and Harriet (age 8).



Inscription

Here lies
Mrs. Lucy Cross
wife of Deac. Thomas Cross
born at Boxford, Ms. Mar. 16,
1748. Died May 21, 1821.
By her side lie their children
Rebekah Cross,
born Jan. 20, 1774,
died Apl. 11, 1794.
And Harriet Cross,
born Oct. 20, 1790,
died Mar. 14, 1798


***


Postscript: From 1978 to 1980, I was the Town Librarian in Gorham, Maine. I attended services and taught Sunday School at First Parish Church, and walked past the Gorham Cemetery on South Street every day on my way to work. Little did I know at the time that my 4th great grandparents were resting just over the wall...



Sources:

Ancestry.com. Maine, Death Records, 1617-1922 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010.

Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.

Daniel Hovey Association, The Hovey book, describing the English ancestry and American descendants of Daniel Hovey of Ipswich, Massachusetts, 1914.

Daughters of the American Revolution. "GRC National Index." Database. DAR Library. (http://services.dar.org/Public/DAR_Research/search_adb/default.cfm)

Deac. Thomas Cross and William Cross tombstone,  Gorham Cemetery, Gorham (Cumberland County), Maine; photographed by Pamela  Schaffner on 5 July 2012.

Find A Grave, database and images (http://findagrave.com : accessed  16 Feb 2016), memorial page for Joseph Cross (1768-1819), Find A Grave Memorial no. 101640076, citing Eastern Cemetery, Portland, Cumberland County, Maine.

Find A Grave, database and images (http://findagrave.com : accessed  16 Feb 2016), memorial page for Betsey Cross (unknown-1829), Find A Grave Memorial no. 101640062, citing Eastern Cemetery, Portland, Cumberland County, Maine.

Find A Grave, database and images (http://findagrave.com : accessed  16 Feb 2016), memorial page for Thomas Cross (1769-1833), Find A Grave Memorial no. 101640086, citing Eastern Cemetery, Portland, Cumberland County, Maine.

Find A Grave, database and images (http://findagrave.com : accessed  16 Feb 2016), memorial page for Betsey Stevens (1772-1838), Find A Grave Memorial no. 99202084, citing Pine Grove Cemetery, Falmouth, Cumberland County, Maine.

Find A Grave, database and images (http://findagrave.com : accessed  16 Feb 2016), memorial page for Sally Cross Preble (unknown-1848), Find A Grave Memorial no. 99202084, citing Evergreen Cemetery, Portland, Cumberland County, Maine.

Find A Grave, database and images (http://findagrave.com : accessed  16 Feb 2016), memorial page for Lucy Phinney (unknown-1863), Find A Grave Memorial no. 119022309, citing Eastern Cemetery, Gorham, Cumberland County, Maine.

Find A Grave, database and images (http://findagrave.com : accessed  16 Feb 2016), memorial page for Lois Cross Libby (1784-1860), Find A Grave Memorial no. 117092715, citing North Street Cemetery, Gorham, Cumberland County, Maine.

Find A Grave, database and images (http://findagrave.com : accessed  16 Feb 2016), memorial page for Leonard Cross (unknown-1867), Find A Grave Memorial no. 101640079, citing Eastern Cemetery, Portland, Cumberland County, Maine.

Find A Grave, database and images (http://findagrave.com : accessed  16 Feb 2016), memorial page for Amos Hovey Cross (1788-1842), Find A Grave Memorial no. 101640061, citing Eastern Cemetery, Portland, Cumberland County, Maine.

Fulk, Dori, comp.. Bradford Massachusetts Vital Records to 1850 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2000.


Lois Libby tombstone, North Street Cemetery, Gorham (Cumberland County), Maine; photographed by Pamela  Schaffner on 7 August 2013.

McLellan, Hugh Davis, History of Gorham, Maine (Smith & Sale, 1903).

Mrs. Lucy Cross, Rebekah Cross, and Harriet Cross tombstone, Gorham Cemetery, Gorham (Cumberland County), Maine; photographed by Pamela  Schaffner on 5 July 2012.

Pierce, Josiah, A history of the town of Gorham, Maine (Portland, Maine, Foster & Cushing, 1862).

Preble, George Henry, Genealogical sketch of the first three generations of Prebles in America, with an account of Abraham Preble the emigrant, their common ancestor, and of his grandson Brigadier General Jedediah Preble, and his descendants (D. Clapp and Sons, 1868).

Records of the Massachusetts volunteer militia called out by the governor of Massachusetts to suppress a threatened invasion during the war of 1812-14. Published by Brig. Genl. Gardner W. Pearson, the adjutant general of Massachusetts, under a resolve of the General court,  (1913), p. 241 : accessed 16 Feb 2016. Private Leonard Cross and Private Amos Hovey Cross in Captain A.W. Atherton's Company, Lieutenant Colonel Martin Nichols' Regiment. Massachusetts Militia; District of Maine. On April 16, 1814. Raised at Portland; digital images, www.hathitrust.org (http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/009833259).





Tuesday, November 11, 2014

52 Ancestors: #40 John Clayton, Jr. (1795-1876)



John Clayton, Jr., my fifth great grandfather, was born on this date in 1795 in Farmington, Maine, the fourth of ten children of John Clayton and Mary Austin, and their second son.

At the age of 19, in 1814, John enlisted as a private in Captain Nathaniel Russell's Company, of Lieut. Col. E. Sweet's Regiment of the Massachusetts Militia, which was raised at Farmington, and saw service mainly in Bath, Maine. Since he is often referred as Captain, he may have been promoted at some point.

Following his short military stint, John married Lucy Ames Pratt, of nearby Phillips, Maine, on August 6, 1820, in the small village of Industry, also in Franklin County.

Together, John and Lucy, had six children:

John Henry, b. 1821
Jonathan P., b. 1822
Bartholomew C., b. 1825
Elizabeth A., b. 1829
Maria and Martha (twins), b. 1835

John lost his wife Lucy on June 9, 1853, and he married a second time Mary Works of New Sharon, Maine, on January 30, 1855. For Mary, this was a second marriage as well. With Mary, he had a daughter, Ella.

Throughout his life, John lived and farmed around Franklin County, Maine, primarily Farmington and Strong.

I was fortunate to find John's and Lucy's graves last month during my trip to Maine. They are buried side by side in Gay Cemetery, in Farmington, along with their twin daughters, who died at 5 months of age.












Sources:

1850 US Census; Census Place: Strong, Franklin, Maine; Roll: M432_253; Page: 238A; Image: 460.

1860 US Census; Census Place: Farmington, Franklin, Maine; Roll: M653_435; Page: 634; Image: 48; Family History Library Film: 803435.

1870 US Census; Census Place: Farmington, Franklin, Maine; Roll: M593_543; Page: 50A; Image: 103; Family History Library Film: 552042.

Ancestry.com. War of 1812 Pension Application Files Index, 1812-1815 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2010.

Capt John Clayton tombstone,  Gay Cemetery, Farmington  (Franklin County), Maine; photographed by Pamela  Schaffner on 20 October 2014.

Direct Data Capture, comp. U.S., War of 1812 Service Records, 1812-1815 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 1999.

Lucy Clayton tombstone,  Gay Cemetery, Farmington  (Franklin County), Maine; photographed by Pamela  Schaffner on 20 October 2014.

"Maine, Births and Christenings, 1739-1900," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/F449-NPP : accessed 09 Nov 2014), John Cleyton, 11 Nov 1795; citing FARMINGTON,FRANKLIN,MAINE; FHL microfilm 10865.

"Maine, Marriages, 1771-1907," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/F4FD-55C : accessed 11 Sep 2014), John Claton and Lucy Prat, 06 Aug 1820; citing Industry, Franklin,Maine, reference ; FHL microfilm 11035.

Maria Clayton tombstone,  Gay Cemetery, Farmington  (Franklin County), Maine; photographed by Pamela  Schaffner on 20 October 2014.

Martha Clayton tombstone,  Gay Cemetery, Farmington  (Franklin County), Maine; photographed by Pamela  Schaffner on 20 October 2014.

Records of the Massachusetts volunteer militia called out by the Governor of Massachusetts to suppress a threatened invasion during the war of 1812-14 (Boston, Mass.: Wright & Potter printing co., state printers, 1913).

***

This is the 40th in a series, “52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks,” coordinated by Amy Johnson Crow at

You might also enjoy:



Tuesday, June 10, 2014

52 Ancestors: #23 Daniel Leighton (1787-1860)



Daniel Leighton, my 1st cousin 5x removed, was born on this date in 1787, in Falmouth, Maine, the third of six children born to Robert Leighton and  his cousin Hannah Leighton, and their second son.

 In 1814, Fort Edgecomb, near Wiscasset, became an important base
 in defending against a possible British attack on mid-coast Maine.
Photo credit : Wikipedia
At the age of 27, he journeyed northeast to Vassalboro, Maine, and on September 24, 1814, he joined Capt. J. Collins' Company of Lieut. Col. E. Sherwin's Regiment of the Massachusetts Volunteer Militia, with the junior officer rank of Ensign. There he saw action off the coastal town of Wiscasset, Maine.




Following his short military stint, he returned home to marry Hannah Cole, a Falmouth woman, the daughter of Ebenezer Cole and Elizabeth Field, who was four years his junior.Together, Daniel and Hannah had eleven children:

James, b. 1815
Elizabeth "Nancy", b. 1816
Sarah Elizabeth, b. 1819
Robert, b. 1821
Sewell Prince, b. 1822
Lois, b. 1824
Susan, b. 1825
Hannah, b. 1829
Daniel Edwin, b. 1831
Abigail, b. 1833
Andrew, b. 1836

Daniel is listed in the 1850 and 1860 as a farmer in Falmouth. In 1860, his household included Leonard and "Nancy" Wilson, his oldest daughter and son-in-law, and Edwin and Hannah Morrill, another daughter and son-in-law.

Daniel died in Falmouth on September 6, 1860, in Falmouth. His widow, Hannah, outlived him by 18 years, and is listed in the 1870 census, at age 79, living with their son Sewell.

Daniel and Hannah are both buried in the Methodist Cemetery, then known as being on Duck Pond Road in Cumberland, Maine. The road is now known as Goose Pond Road.

Maine Veterans Cemetery Record
for
Daniel Leighton

Present-day location of the Methodist Cemetery

Daniel Leighton's Grave
A cracked, sinking flagstone

Hannah Leighton's Grave

Sources:

1850 US Census; Census Place: Falmouth, Cumberland, Maine; Roll: M432_250; Page: 106B; Image: 398, Daniel Leighton.

1860 US Census; Census Place: Falmouth, Cumberland, Maine; Roll: M653_437; Page: 4; Image: 383, Daniel Leighton.

1870 US Census; Census Place: Falmouth, Cumberland,Maine; Roll: M593_539; Page: 231A; Image: 466, Hannah Leighton.

Direct Data Capture, comp. U.S., War of 1812 Service Records, 1812-1815 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 1999, Daniel Leighton.

Find A Grave, database and images (http://findagrave.com : accessed 10 June 2014), memorial page for Daniel Leighton (unknown–unknown), Find A Grave Memorial no. 96819615, citing Methodist Cemetery, Cumberland, Maine.

Find A Grave, database and images (http://findagrave.com : accessed 10 June 2014), memorial page for Hannah Leighton (unknown–1878), Find A Grave Memorial no. 96819581, citing Methodist Cemetery, Cumberland, Maine.

Leighton, Perley M. A Leighton genealogy: descendants of Thomas Leighton of Dover, New Hampshire. Compiled by Perley M. Leighton based in part on data collected by Julia Leighton Cornman. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical  Society, 1989.) pp. 103, 226.

"Maine, Veterans Cemetery Records, 1676-1918", index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/KXQZ-1XQ : accessed 10 Jun 2014), Daniel Leighton, 1860.

***


This is the 23rd in a series, “52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks,” coordinated by Amy Johnson Crow at No Story Too Small.

You might also enjoy:

Monday, May 26, 2014

52 Ancestors: #21 Hugh Libby (1793-1872)



Hugh Libby, my third great grand uncle, was born on this date in 1793, in Gorham, Maine, the seventh of thirteen children born to Allison Libby and Sarah Dam, and their 4th son.

In 1814, at the age of 21, Hugh, the son of a Revolutionary War patriot, joined a local militia raised in Portland, Maine, as a private in Captain Skillings' Company, in Lt. Col. Nichols' Massachusetts Regiment.



Twelve years later, Hugh married his cousin (their mothers were sisters), Theodosia Small, of Limington, in York County. They were married in Limington on March 23, 1826. From 1830 to 1870, Hugh is listed in censuses as either a "farm laborer" or "laborer" in Gorham. However, according to church records, in 1831 he was admitted to membership at the First Parish Church there, and served as its sexton for many years. He probably received a small stipend for such services.

Hugh and Theodosia together had five children:

Elizabeth, b. June 23, 1828, who died young
William Henry, b. Feb. 28, 1830
Ellizabeth Dam, b. Jan. 1, 1832
John Francis, b. May 17, 1834
Thomas Roby, b. Dec. 17, 1839

Hugh died July 8, 1872, in Limington.





Theodosia survived him by 22 years. As you can see from the death record above, they are both buried in the Small-Thompson Tomb, off the Shaving Hill Road, in Limington. One of the two American flags honors Hugh's service in the War of 1812.

Photo credit: Karen Watson / Ancestry.com


Photo credit: Karen Watson / Ancestry.com

Another descendant and Ancestry member, Karen Watson, and her father, spent the entire summer of 2005 clearing and restoring this burial site. Karen's dad made this beautiful sign. 

Credits:

1830 US Census; Census Place: Gorham, Cumberland, Maine; Page: 312; Roll Number: 46, Hugh Libby.

1840 US Census; Census Place: Gorham, Cumberland, Maine; Page: 531; Image: 993, Hugh Libby.

1850 US Census; Census Place: Gorham, Cumberland, Maine; Page: 278A; Image: 25, Hugh Libby.

1860 US Census; Census Place: Gorham, Cumberland, Maine; Page: 59; Image: 814, Hugh Libby.

1870 US Census; Census Place: Gorham, Cumberland, Maine; Page: 296B; Image: 67, Hugh Libby.

Ancestry.com. Maine, Birth Records, 1621-1922 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, Hugh Libby.

Ancestry.com. Maine, Death Records, 1617-1922 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, Hugh Libby.

Ancestry.com. U.S., Adjutant General Military Records, 1631-1976 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011

First Parish Church, Gorham, Maine, membership records; downloaded database from Gorham (Me.) Historical Society website (http://www.gorhamhistorical.com/vital-records), for Hugh Libby.

Libby, Charles Thornton. The Libby Family in America, 1602-1881 (Portland, B. Thurston and Co., 1881), p.167.

"Maine, Marriages, 1771-1907," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/F46G-MRM : accessed 24 May 2014), Hugh Libby and Theadosia Small, 23 Mar 1826; citing Limington, York, Maine, reference IN 319 p 233; FHL microfilm 11533.

McLellan, Hugh Davis, History of Gorham, Maine (Smith & Sale, 1903), pp.621,624.

"Public Member Trees," database, Ancestry.com, "Watson Jones Family Tree," for Hugh Libby (b. 26 May 1793), with linked images.

U.S., War of 1812 Service Records, 1812-1815 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 1999, Hugh Libby.

***

This is the 21st in a series, “52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks,” coordinated by Amy Johnson Crow at No Story Too Small.

You might also enjoy: