Johann & Mary Grimm Jung were Amish.----------child: Young, Maria Louise (1862 - 1911)
Unmarried.
William was a captain and navigator in the China trade. A man of keen intelligence and high culture.spouse: Noyes, Sarah Banks (1815 - 1903)
The Noyes Descendants, Vol. II says middle initial F.spouse: Noyes, Willard R. (1871 - )
Described as a "Cumberland pauper."spouse: Pote, Mary (*1756 - )
<b>John Giggey (Gige, Gigy, Giggy, Guigey, Guiggey) was a Loyalist who served with the Loyal American Regiment in Flushing Meadows, New York. He was a prisoner twice during the revolution. He was a volunteer, hence it can be assumed he was born in America. Upon arriving at Saint John (1783), he was granted 200 acres on the Kingston Peninsula near Saint John. In the early 1800's he abandoned the grant, and with his son, applied for another.spouse:
Esther Clark Wright in "Loyalist of New Brunswick" (ps 285) listed John Giggie Loyal American Regiment with a grant in Kings Co. Settled possibly in Westfield or Greenwick Parish.</b>
Anthony Gwynn was one of those who subscribed to the funds for the building of St. Paul's Church. He was a vestry man of that church 1749-1750, 1753. He was one of the signers of the letter Feb 3, 1741/42 desiring Matthew Plant to be minister of St. Paul's Church. He contributed 30li 9s 4d towards the purchase of an organ for this church in 1756.spouse: Gerrish, Mary (1720 - 1810)
Signed petition for a new town in 1762.
Landholder in Poughill, 1624.
She was very young when her mother, Grace (Dowrish) Gye, died suddenly without making a will. She was the youngest daughter named in the inquisition on her brother George and, according to the indenture quoted in it, was to receive 80 pounds as each of her older sisters did.spouse: Mavericke, John (<1578 - 1636)
Extract from the manuscripts of the late Col. Charles Edward Banks:spouse:
"Robert Geeye or Gye, by his wife Grace had six children, and, by a first wife, one son, Thomas. Alleged that he gave great sums to Radford Maverick to bring up his daughter Mary, and that Maverick bestowed her in marriage to John Maverick, his cousin german. Def't denies receipt of great sums of money and says he brought her up from childhood and gave her an education. She was the youngest daughter of Robert and Grace Gye and had a brother Gilbert and sisters Joan and Jane."
He was in the latter part of the reign of Elizabeth I, involved in chancery suits and in fines of the common pleas, with James Courtenay of Upcott, Esq. This litigation concerned lands at Upcott settled by Thomas Prowse in 1509 on Mary Prowse at her marriage to John Gye, patently this Robert's ancestors.
He was of Prowse, or Higher Dodderidge, in Sandford, and held lands also in Poughill, nearby at Upcott in Cheriton FitzPaine, and in Kingsbridge, south Devon, where the family had been settled as early as the fourteenth century.
Of Dodderidge, or Prowse, in Sandford. In 1558 he was styled "gent." in the will of James Mortymer of Sandford, who appointed him his trustee. It is possible that this Robert Gye's wife may have been a daughter of James Mortimer of Poughill, since, in 1622, a Robert Gye was styled cousin of Jane Mortimer of Poughill.
Evidently the man of this name mentioned in the will of Jane Mortimer of Poughill, 1622.
Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, & Kniffin, 2nd ed., 1885, McLean Co.
COL. ROWLAND E. HACKETT, a prominent citizen of Livermore, McLean County, was born October 25, 1825, in Minot, Me., and is a son of Salmon and Lorana (Noyes) Hackett, natives of Massachusetts; the former was a soldier of the war of 1812. Col Hackett was brought up in his native town until he was eighteen years of age, when he went to Massachusetts. He received a good education, attending the common schools and spending two years at Philip's Academy. At the age of twenty-two he went to Holliston, Mass., where he remained until he came to Kentucky in 1858, locating in Livermore, in this county. Here he engaged in the timber and lumber business, which he has followed ever since, with the exception of three years spent in the service of his country. He enlisted on October 22, 1861, in Company A, Twenty-sixth Kentucky (Federal) Infantry, of which he was elected first lieutenant. He was in the battles of Shiloh, Saltville and Nashville, and in the latter battle was severely wounded, the ball entering his mouth, knocked out two of his teeth, split his tongue, and passed entirely through him. The peculiar wound, and his almost miraculous recovery from it, is one of the many remarkable incidents of the late war. After the battle of Shiloh he was promoted to captain, and after the battle of Nashville to lieutenant-colonel; he was in all the battles and skirmishes in which his regiment participated, except while confined in the hospital. He was discharged in September, 1865, at Louisville, and returned to Evansville, to which place his family removed during the war; afterward returned to Livermore. He was married November 19, 1846, to Charlotte S. Mason, of Maine, a daughter of James and Mary A. (Everett) Mason, of that State. They have had seven
children, five of whom are living: Cora E. Lashbrook, Edgar B., Iola L., Everett M. and Frank F. Delmon R. and Eva A. are dead. Col. Hackett is a Republican in politics, formerly a Whig, but gave his first presidential vote in 1848 for Taylor.
Eli had a store in Mondamin and was the second postmaster in Mondamin from 1869 to 1886. He started the G.A.R. in Mondamin, Oct. 24, 1882. The Barnes Post 103 Grand Army of the Republic, 17 charter members. Officers were C.H. Burrows, Commander, T.J. Powell, S.V., W.B. Keith, J.V., E.J. Hagerman, Surgeon, John H. Noyes, Q.M., S.J. Linn, O.D. and R. Morgareidge, O.G. (Notes provided, with thanks, by Cidney Engberg.)spouse: Morgareidge, Amy Scott (1826 - 1889)
He was elected Mayor in 1881.
Apphia2 (Hale) Rolfe (Thomas1) of Newbury was born in Newbury probably in 1642. Coffin, in his "List of Early Settlers" (Reg., vol. 6, p. 341), giving her name "Hale, Apphia, ‘. 17 in 1659." Coffin's MS., given to Jas. W. Hale, also mentions her as the fourth child of Thomas1 Hale. She m. Benjamin2 Rolfe, as shown by the records of Newbury, 3 Nov., 1659. He was son of Henry1 and Honour Rolfe of Newbury, though Coffin strangely enough puts two additional generations between him and his mother, making her his great-grandmother, and mother of his father, whom Coffin makes his grandfather. He thus makes Benjamin2 Rolfe, who was m. in 1659, of the fourth generation of Rolfes in Newbury. He was a weaver, b. between 1637 and 1640, admitted freeman in 1659, and d. in Newbury in Aug., 1710, his wife having d. 24 Dec., 1708. The name was almost, though not quite, uniformly spelled Rolfe by the family in New England, and with almost equal unanimity was spelled Rolph by the branches of the family settled in New Jersey and on Long Island, a distinction which is kept up with substantial agreement to the present day. Besides these two spellings there are found on the records, not by members of the family but by others, the following: Rolf, Rolphe, Roffe, Roaf, Roaff, Ralph, Ralf and Rafe.spouse: Rolfe, Benjamin (1638 - 1710)
Joined in release to father of estate of brother Samuel4, 4 Feb., 1722-3. Same date reservation of money to be paid him in deed of father to brother John4. Same date received deed of homestead from his father, he to pay sisters Margaret, Mary, Ruth, Anne, Rebecca and Sarah, etc. (39:227-229).spouse: Swett, Judith (~1708 - 1791)
March, 1725-6, received from sister Mary Hale, single woman, deed of her interest in her brother Samuel's estate. 6 Dec., 1727, received like deed from sister Ruth Hale (51:91, 92). 28 Nov., 1733, received like deed from sister Anne Hale (67:18). 16 March, 1725-6, received from brother John4 and eighteen others, 4 a. in east part of second general pasture (51:92). 9 March, 1735-6, received from Richard Kelly, of Amesbury, deed of 5 a. marsh in Newbury, bounded easterly by Moses Little, southerly by James Ilsley, etc. (78:152).
At the time of his first marriage, David was an officer in the army. In 1803 David and Mary Hale, Susan Child and Isabella Child mortgaged a piece of property that had fallen to them as heirs of Thomas Child and in 1811 David Hale of Boston, bookseller, leased a house in Portland on Love Lane (Center St. today) to Sarah Cobham and Abigail Cobham for a rent of one cent a year for their natural lives. David was a cashier of the Maine Bank in Portland from about 1800 to 1807 when some irregularities at the bank caused him to relocate to Boston where he worked as a bookseller. A result of these irregularities appears to be that David won a lawsuit against Woodbury Storer, an officer of the bank.spouse: Noyes, Anna (1770 - 1799)
spouse: Moodey, Mary (~1727 - 1749)
He seems to have served in the French war 1758-61. In 1757(?) went to Albany in Col. Ephraim William's regiment. Was a lieutenant in the Sixth foot company of Newbury in 1761, and was generally known as Capt. Ezekiel Hale. Was a man of wealth and influence. He lived in that part of Newbury set off as West Newbury (at first Parsons) in 1819. No record is found of him in the Essex probate office, and none in the Essex Register of Deeds later than 1769. The last of his children appearing on the Newbury town records is Persis (1767), though four were afterward born. These facts seem to make it probable that he removed from Essex county in or soon after 1769 -- probably, if so, to some adjacent New Hampshire town, where his latest children were born. I find, however, no evidence of this other than that raised by disappearance from the records as above. In the various deeds to and from him, appearing on the Essex Registry, he is variously described as "husbandman," "yeoman" and "gentleman." He appears to have been a farmer and a man of handsome estate.