Served in the Civil War. Married 21 Dec 1866.
Served with 14th Vermont Infantry, Company H in the Civil War.
Name: Albert Noyes ,
Residence: Pittsfield, Vermont
Enlistment Date: 10 September 1862
Distinguished Service: DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
Side Served: Union
State Served: Vermont
Unit Numbers: 3025 3025
Service Record: Enlisted as a Private on 10 September 1862
Enlisted in Company H, 14th Infantry Regiment Vermont on 21 October 1862.
Wounded on 03 July 1863 at Gettysburg, PA (Wounded in back by a shell)
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: May 21, 1878
Death date: Nov 1967
Social Security #: 384-46-2272
Last residence: MI 48740
State of issue: MI
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: May 15, 1886
Death date: May 1964
Social Security #: 457-07-9933
Last residence: TX
State of issue: TX
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Dec 10, 1892
Death date: Dec 1985
Social Security #: 004-01-0594
Last residence: ME 04401
State of issue: ME
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Jan 12, 1893
Death date: Sep 1970
Social Security #: 525-92-4724
Last residence: NM 88030
State of issue: NM
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Nov 15, 1894
Death date: Jan 1978
Social Security #: 008-07-7390
Last residence: VT 05051
State of issue: VT
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: May 17, 1901
Death date: Nov 1969
Social Security #: 005-14-3886
Last residence: ME 04092
State of issue: ME
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Jan 27, 1905
Death date: Dec 1972
Social Security #: 022-03-9737
Last residence: MA 02188
State of issue: MA
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Feb 23, 1909
Death date: Sep 1971
Social Security #: 079-09-1101
Last residence: NY 13421
State of issue: NY
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Aug 13, 1910
Death date: Aug 1978
Social Security #: 004-20-7068
Last residence: ME 04330
State of issue: ME
Zip of last payment: 04330
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Oct 20, 1913
Death date: Apr 11, 1988
Social Security #: 002-07-8982
Last residence: 03102
State of issue: NH
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Nov 17, 1919
Death date: Jun 1976
Social Security #: 004-12-2710
State of issue: ME
[Brøderbund Family Archive #110, Vol. 2, Ed. 3, Social Security Records:
U.S., SS Death Benefit Records, Surnames Beginning with N, Date of
Import: Apr 28, 1996, Internal Ref. #1.112.3.29491.119]
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Nov 12, 1920
Death date: Jan 18, 1993
Social Security #: 505-16-8470
State of issue: NE
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Aug 4, 1923
Death date: Mar 1981
Social Security #: 019-14-9959
State of issue: MA
Zip of last payment: 83651
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Mar 11, 1928
Death date: Jan 18, 1989
Social Security #: 001-22-3463
Last residence: 84401
State of issue: NH
Individual: Noyes, Albert
Birth date: Sep 2, 1949
Death date: Mar 1984
Social Security #: 009-38-2354
Last residence: VT 05401
State of issue: VT
Zip of last payment: 05851
"Noyes Genealogy" says Albert D. and Caroline (Sukeforth) had two children die young. This has been disproven by census records showing two children who lived to maturity. The "Noyes Genealogy" also says Albert had a second marriage to Maria Fountain; no other record has been found of any such marriage.spouse: Sukeforth, Caroline "Carrie" A. (1842 - 1930)
Albert F. and Nellie (Snider) had four sons, d. y.spouse: Snider, Nellie (*1861 - )
At one time, Albert was caretaker of the cemetery at Eau Claire, Wisconsin.spouse: Elwell, Lucy F. (*1860 - 1939)
Ind: Bangor, Penobscot Co. No. 2, May 29, 1918. Pvt 1st Cl Mar 1, 1919. Org: 151 Dep Brig to June 10, 1918; Co K 302 Inf to Oct 18, 1818; Co. B, 320th Inf. to disch. Eng: Meuse-Argonne; Defensive Sector. Overseas: July 5, 1918 to May 30, 1919. Hon disch on demob: June 9, 1919. [Maine Military Men, 1917-18]spouse: Kinney, Ferne Bell (1893 - 1994)
Albert Noyes grew up a farmers son in Atkinson Maine. Although only receiving a sixth grade education, he found himself interested in the engineering of watches. He went to the Waltham Watch Factory in MA and was trained in watch making and repair. He went to Vermont to practice watch trade and then moved to Bangor, Maine and worked for many years in the front window of Rogers Jewelry Store repairing watches and clocks of all kinds. In October of 1917 he married his back home sweet heart, Fearne Kinney . In May of 1918 he was drafted into the service to fight WW1.
Private First Class Albert Jewett Noyes Age:26
Tag Number:2723761 320th Infantry 80th Division Company B
Took part in the Meuse-Argonne Offensive 11/1-11/7/18
Marched before President Woodrow Wilson and General Pershing in review December 25/18
Born in Atkinson, Maine December 10, 1982
Son of Milton David Noyes and Louise Hammond Ramsdell
Married Ferne Belle Kinney October 24th, 1917
Taken in LeMans, France after the armistice was signed in 1918.
From: Roster of Maine in the World War Vol. II- Noyes, Albert J.
Residence: Sebec Sta.
Ind: Bangor, Penobscot Co. No. 2, May 29, 1918.
Pvt. 1st cl Mar. 1/19
Org: 151 Dep Brig to June 10/18; Co K 302 Inf to Oct 18, 1918; Co B 320 Inf to disch.
Eng: Meuse-Argonne; Defensive Sector, 11/1 to 11/7/19
Overseas: July 5/18 to May 30/19
Hon disch on demob: June 9, 1918
Albert J. Noyes received no physical wounds in service, and was in good physical condition when discharged. It was reported that his character was excellent.
He was engaged in the banking business from the time he was eighteen years old, and for nearly twenty-five years had almost the entire charge of the First National Bank at Hyde Park. They resided at Hyde Park from the time of their marriage.spouse: Boardman, Ellen Cleora (1847 - 1897)
Individual: Noyes, Albertspouse: Miller, Grace (1889 - )
Birth date: Feb 13, 1887
Death date: Oct 1963
Social Security #: 540-10-0972
Last residence: OR
State of issue: OR
Blind from the age of ten.
They had no children but a niece, Ida Smith (Noyes), Mrs. J.J. Twamley lived with them from childhood.spouse: Smith, Emeline M. (1837 - 1921)
Came from California to Arizona in 1863, probably with the Lount party; listed Territorial Census, 1864, age 36, single, resident in Arizona 7 months, occupation - Miner, property valued at $1,500; an item in the Prescott Arizona Miner of September 7, 1864, indicates his early interest in the development of the country:
To Mr. George Lount and his associates, Mr. A.O. Noyes, Mr. Samuel O. Fredericks, Mr. A.C. Benedict and others, is due the credit of bringing the first saw and quartz mill into this part of Arizona. So long ago as March last Messers, Lount, Noyes and Fredericks started for San Francisco to purchase a mill. The delays in getting it forwarded to La Paz, and from La Paz, via Williams Fork, here, have been great, and such as would have discouraged men of less tenacity of purpose and indomitable perseverance. On the 30th ult. a portion of the machinery arrived, and Mr. Lount has gone back to a point upon the road where the balance was left, owing to the breaking of one of the wagons. He hopes to return here and have the saw mill in operation in a few weeks, and the quartz mill at a day not much later.
An article entitled "Milling and Mining in Yavapai County" written by H.A. Bigelow and printed in the Prescott Courier of January 14, 1886, contains the following:
In 1868 A.O. Noyes and Geo. W. Curtis having made money in the sawmill business, concluded to go into quartz mining, and brought out a complete 10-stamp steam quartz mill, for working gold ores. The mill was set up on the Nassayampa, a little below the mouth of Groom Creek, where there were a number of undeveloped quartz veins, and was generally known as the Umpqua mill. After expensive development of the veins in that section, without finding paying ores in quantity, the mill was moved five or six miles up the creek, where it became known as the Chase mill, as it worked ore principally from the Chase mine.
At that point they introduced new machinery for treating sulphoric ores, called the Paul & Wood process, which did not work well. Finally they moved the mill to Groom creek, near their sawmill, and ran it for a year or two on custom ores, and it was called the Aztlan mill, but ore sufficient to keep the mill running was not found, and it was sold to Bowers & Richards in 1875, who sold it to the Peek Mining Company. It was then refitted to work silver ores, and was run with marked success until the Peek Company built a mill at their mine. After that the Aztlan was sold to C.C. Bean, who ran it as a custom mill with fair success, and sold it to the Prescott Consolidated Milling and Mining Company.
His name appears in the U.S. Census of 1870 at Prescott, age 42, married, occupation - lumberman, property valued at $5,000; as a public official he was Treasurer of Yavapai County, 1865-66; Coroner of Yavapai County, 1870; Justice of the Peace at Prescott from January 1, 1871 to April 4, 1872; Member from Yavapai County, 7th Territorial Council, 1873; Justice of the Peace at Prescott from June 10, 1878 to December 31, 1880 and from June 6, 1881 to October 6, 1884; Probate Judge and ex-officio School Superintendent of Yavapai County, 1881-84; Justice of the Peace at Prescott from January 1 to June 4, 1893.
Member of Aztlan Masonic Lodge No. 177 (1), F.&A.M. at Prescott.
Children born in Saybrook, Conn., and St. Paul, Minn.spouse: Clark, Jennie L. (*1866 - )
Individual: Noyes, Albin
Birth date: Apr 17, 1916
Death date: Jan 1982
Social Security #: 019-05-2735
Last residence: NH 03865
State of issue: MA
Zip of last payment: 03865
Individual: Noyes, Alden
Birth date: Aug 27, 1903
Death date: Apr 1982
Social Security #: 001-10-7131
Last residence: NH 03580
State of issue: NH
Individual: Noyes, Aldred
Birth date: Aug 7, 1909
Death date: Feb 1953
Social Security #: 460-01-3583
State of issue: TX
Author of several works on financial subjects and connected with the "New York Evening Post".
Dana Family: Is financial editor of New York Post. Grad. Amherst, 1883. Res. New York; lecturer and author. LL.D., Amherst, 1920.
He is the author of "Thirty Years of American Finance".
It took nerves of steel and a fierce sense of conviction to stay aloof from the contagiously giddy investment atmosphere of the late 1920s, but Mr. Noyes, then financial editor of The New York Times, stood steadfast but alone in his unpopular views.
Ten months before the Crash, he warned of "reckless" speculation and continued to drum in the message--a bit too prematurely, some historians think--that a day of reckoning was at hand.
Mr. Noyes graduated from Amherst in 1883, covered the Panic of 1893, the speculative bubble of 1901 and even written the scholarly treatise, "The War Period of American Finance, 1908-25," but that guaranteed him no respect.
As he later wrote: "The speculative mania seemed by 1929 to have neither geographical nor social bounds. There were occasions, even in social conversation, when expression of disapproval or skepticism would provoke the same resentment as if the controversy had to do with politics or religion.
"It was not in all respects an agreeable task to point out in the Times what seemed to me the very visible signs of danger. Expression of such comment had to meet the denunciatory comment hat the writer was trying to discredit or stop American prosperity."
Individual: Noyes, Alexanderspouse: Bowers, Arene (~1898 - )
Birth date: Aug 21, 1894
Death date: Feb 1975
Social Security #: 264-10-8814
Last residence: FL 33505
State of issue: FL
Children born in Deer Isle and Castine, Maine.spouse: Smith, Hannah R. (*1808 - )
Followed the sea in early manhood and at the age of twenty-seven settled upon a farm in Harrison, which he carried on successfully for the rest of his life. He was an active and ambitious man and a skillful farmer, but was cut off in the prime of life in 1849, just as he was about to reap the fruits of his labor.
English poet. From the time of the publication of his first volume of poetry, "The Loom of the Years (1902), he regarded himself as a dedicated poet, though he made frequent lecture tours and was a visiting professor of modern English literature at Princeton University (1914-23). His numerous volumes include both narrative and lyric verse. Typical are "Forty Singing Seamen" (1907), "Drake, an English Epic" (1906), and "Tales of a Mermaid Tavern" (1913). His most ambitious poem is the trilogy "The Torch Bearers" (The Watchers of the Sky, 1922; The Book of the Earth, 1925, and The Last Voyage, 1930), a poetic summary of the growth of man's scientific knowledge of himself and the universe. Noyes had a popular following, though his tendency to diffuseness kept him off the roster of major poets. DeLANCEY FERGUSON, Brooklyn College.spouse: Daniels, Garnet (*1886 - 1926)
Wrote the poem "The Highwayman".
Alfred Noyes was the eldest son of Alfred and Amelia Noyes. His father was a grocer, and later, a teacher, and his mother was an invalid who never recovered from childbearing.
Noyes spent a happy childhood with his family and received his first education from his father. He later attended Queen's College, Oxford but did not attain a degree. While at university, he was physically active and was a dedicated and enthusiastic rower.
His first poem was published when he was still a student and only twenty-one years old. His first volume of verse was published in 1902 under the name The Loom Years.
In 1907, Noyes married an American woman, Garnett Daniels. A year later, he completed his epic poem, Drake which served to further enhance his reputation as a poet. His work was not without criticism, however, and he came under close public scrutiny for his condemnation of an Irish patriot, Roger Caseman who was convicted of treason.
He and his wife moved to the United States and lived in New Jersey, New York and California. While in the States, he received several honorary doctorates from universities including Yale, Syracuse, California and Edinburgh. In 1913, Noyes was invited to lecture at Harvard where he taught, among others, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Edmund Wilson. In 1914, he was given a three year appointment at Princeton.
After nineteen years of marriage, Noyes' wife died. A year later, he became a Catholic and his writing began to reflect his interest in spirituality and religion. It was at this time he published his trilogy, The Torch-Bearers, which included The Watchers of the Sky, The Book of Earth, and The Last Voyage.
In 1927, Noyes married Mary Angela Mayne Weld- Blundel. Together they had three children. It is an indication of Noyes' success as a writer that he was able to support his family on the money he earned from writing poetry.
One of his most noted poems is Highwayman. It was criticized by some as being anti-modern but it has an enduring appeal. The poem's use of strong images and a repeating verse structure create an overwhelmingly hypnotic effect. http://members.tripod.com/michaelroth/bio132.htm
Individual: Noyes, Alfred
Birth date: Nov 24, 1884
Death date: Apr 1974
Social Security #: 036-12-8927
Last residence: MA 01379
State of issue: RI
Individual: Noyes, Alfred
Birth date: Sep 27, 1892
Death date: Aug 1974
Social Security #: 017-24-6342
Last residence: MA 02601
State of issue: MA
Individual: Noyes, Alfred
Birth date: Jul 16, 1900
Death date: Jun 1956
Social Security #: 352-01-9112
State of issue: IL
Individual: Noyes, Alfred
Birth date: Aug 10, 1907
Death date: Jul 13, 1992
Social Security #: 514-26-3986
State of issue: KS
Individual: Noyes, Alfred
Birth date: May 6, 1914
Death date: Feb 20, 1993
Social Security #: 471-05-5682
Last residence: 98166
State of issue: MN
Individual: Noyes, Alfred
Birth date: Feb 11, 1919
Death date: Oct 1977
Social Security #: 336-18-8120
State of issue: IL
Zip of last payment: 46391
Individual: Noyes, Alfred
Birth date: Mar 26, 1922
Death date: Dec 1986
Social Security #: 381-28-0180
Last residence: MI 48612
State of issue: MI
Individual: Noyes, Alfred
Birth date: Jun 1, 1929
Death date: Mar 22, 1993
Social Security #: 511-22-2135
Last residence: 70433
State of issue: KS
Individual: Noyes, Alfred
Birth date: Jun 3, 1929
Death date: Dec 1975
Social Security #: 569-28-6286
State of issue: CA
After their marriage they lived in Noyes Mills, a small settlement in the town of Limestone, on a farm located across the road from the mill. Their children were all born in Limestone, Maine.spouse: Long, Ethel M. (1882 - 1973)
In the Fort Fairfield Review issue dated January 10, 1906 under Noyes Mills it states:
"Alfred Noyes is sawing and shipping about 35,000 laths per day. Patrick McCallan has 5 teams drawing lath wood to the mill. Charles Noyes was here last Friday doing business with his brother A. L. Noyes. Alex Montgomery is cutting lath wood for the mill.
George Shaw is running the snapdragen in A. L. Noyes's mill. Charles Foley, Luke Berry, Dan Chambers and son Aubrey all of Calais are sawing lath for A. L. Noyes."
In the October 13, 1909 issue of the same paper the fire at the mill is described as follows:
"Alfred L. Noyes' sawmill, Limestone, 2 miles north of the village, on the VanBuren road, was wholly burned Tuesday afternoon about 4:00 o'clock. The storehouse, containing a large quantity of kiln-dried lumber and the new seats for the Catholic church was also burned.
The fire started in the rear of the engine-house, which was separate from the main mill and soon jumped to the mill itself. The fire company from Limestone came out and succeeded in saving small houses occupied by some of the mill hands, also the house of Mr. Noyes and Daniel Getchell.
The loss is estimated as from $20,000 to $25,000. Insurance $10,000. All sympathize deeply with Mr. Noyes in the loss of his mill, which is a great injury to the country roundabout."
ALFRED L. NOYES, one of the principal mill- owners, lumberman and farmers of Limestone, Maine, where he was born, September II, 1877, is a member of an old and distinguished family in this State, and a son of Josiah M. and Sybil B. (Davis) Noyes, old and highly-respected residents of Limestone, where his father was engaged in business as a farmer and mill-owner for many years before his death. The childhood of Alfred L. Noyes was passed in his native town, and he attended there the local common schools, where he distinguished himself as a bright and industrious pupil. Upon completing his studies at these institutions, Mr. Noyes took up farming as an occupation, and has continued in that line up to the present time. He also engaged in the lumber business and became the owner of a sawmill in this vicinity. Besides carrying on an extensive business in this line Mr. Noyes has also become interested in various other industrial enterprises hereabouts, and is now the owner of a large grist mill and starch factory at Limestone. He has also been exceedingly interested in financial operations here and is at the present time a director in the Limestone Trust Company. Mr. Noyes is one of the leaders of the Republican party in this region, but, although he has held the office of selectman for a single term in this township, he is nevertheless, quite unambitious for political preferment of any kind, preferring to exert such influence as he is capable of in his capacity as private citizen. He is a well-known figure in fraternal circles, however, and is a member of Limestone Lodge, No.214, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, and holds the office of treasurer in the same. Although not a formal member of any church, Mr. Noyes attends the Methodist Episcopal church at Limestone, and is a liberal supporter of the work of the church society, especially in connection with its various benevolent and philanthropic undertakings. [History of Maine]
Executor of Hollis and Tristam's estates 1860 and 1866.spouse: Bamford, Minerva (1839 - 1916)
Served in the Navy during World War II.spouse: Cappallo, Lila May (1923 - 1988)
US Navy, SC2
Children born in Methuen and Haverhill, Massachusetts.spouse: Stewart, Rebecca (*1830 - )
WWI. Joined the National Guard 1914. Sent to the Mexican border. Stayed in the Guard and was a Sergeant in Company F, Eighth Regiment of Infantry. Later in France to the First Supply Train and served in five major battles.spouse: Hatfield, Alberta May (1897 - 1995)
Kansas and Kansans: Volume 4; Connelley, William E. A Standard History of Kansas and Kansans. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company, 1918.spouse: Gabriel, Mary Isabelle (*1880 - )
In 1869 at Ladore, Kansas, Doctor Gabriel married Mrs. Elizabeth (Hager) Hallowell. Mrs. Gabriel died at Parsons in 1891, leaving two children. The son, Harry E., is division superintendent of the Frisco Railway Company, with home at Willow Springs, Missouri, and is a praduate of the Parsons High School. The daughter, Mary, is the wife of Alfred Noyes, who is engaged in the insurance, real estate and musical instrument business, and resides on a farm near Parsons. Mrs. Noyes is a graduate of the Clinton Academy in Missouri. In 1894 at Parsons Doctor Gabriel married Mrs. Mary (Cassady) Brown, who died at Parsons in 1906.
Children born in New York, Omaha, Nebraska and Hamilton, Massachusetts.spouse: Harper, Nellie (*1860 - )
Alfred O. Noyes, who owns and cultivates a productive farm in Harrison,spouse: Walker, Frances Eugenia "Jennie" (1848 - )
Cumberland County, was born in this town, August 27, 1848, a son of Alfred and
Nancy C. (Brackett) Noyes. His father, who was a native of Falmouth, Me.,
followed the sea in early manhood, at the age of twenty-seven settling upon a
farm in Harrison, which he carried on successfully during the rest of his life.
He was an active and ambitious man and a skilful farmer, but was cut off in the
prime of life in 1849, just as he was about to reap the fruits of his labor. His
wife, Nancy, who was also a native of Harrison, became the mother of but one
child, Alfred 0., the subject of this sketch. She is still living, and resides
in Norway, Me.
Alfred O. Noyes received his education in the public schools, and was brought up
in the family of his grandfather Brackett, with whom he lived until attaining
his majority. After an experience of eight years in a coat manufactory in
Harrison village, he engaged in farming in Waterford, where he resided for nine
years, being subsequently engaged in the same occupation at Bolster's Mills for
one year. In 1890 he removed to his present farm in Harrison, which contains one
hundred acres of good land well improved. Mr. Noyes makes a specialty of raising
sweet corn and hay. Having formerly been quite extensively engaged in breeding,
he still keeps some choice selected stock, disposing of his milk in Turner
Centre. In politics he supports the Democratic party, and has served his town
capably as Highway Surveyor and in other offices, but prefers to give the major
part of his time and energies to the cultivation of his farm. His industry and
thrift have led to their natural result a fair competence; and he is classed
among the substantial citizens of the town.
Mr. Noyes has been twice married; and by his first wife, who was before marriage
Jennie Walker, a native of Harrison, he had one son, Erland F., who was born
August 28, 1877. On November 28, 1885, Mr. Noyes was married to Mintie B. Small,
his second wife, who was born at Bolster's Mills, June 6, 1845, daughter of Amos
Small, a prosperous farmer. Her parents are no longer living. Mr. Noyes is a
member of Mount Tyron Lodge, A. F. & A. M., of Waterford.
d.y.
Served in the Air Force some time before 1950. Dishonorable discharge.spouse: private
Two children died young.spouse: Edson, Rosetta (*1855 - )
The Noyes Descendants, Vol. I: Algernon was a prosperous farmer and a prominent man in the community where he lived and died. He was president of the old settlers club, and vice-president of the State Agricultural Society.spouse: Baker, Amy (*1854 - )
Memorial & Genealogical Record: A.F. Noyes followed in the steps of his worthy sire, for he was not only one of the most successful and progressive farmers of Dodge County, but as a citizen he was also a public-spirited, honorable and useful. He owes his nativity to the county and township in which he is now residing, and what is more, was born on a farm of which he is now the owner. His eyes first opened on the light of day November 1, 1848, and when he was about two or three years of age his parents moved to a farm which is now within the city limits of Beaver Dam, in which place he was first initiated into the mysteries of the "three R's," and where he completed a thorough, practical education. He spent three months of one winter in working at the tinner's trade, but was not pleased with the business, and came to the conclusion that the free, independent and wholesome life of the farmer was good enough for him, and time has shown the wisdom of his choice of vocation. He remained at home with his parents until he had attained his majority, at which time he moved to Southwestern Minnesota, where he bought a 200-acre tract of land and began farming for himself. He remained in that State for three years, but after losing his crops by grasshoppers, in the summer of 1873, he decided to return to his native county. He took charge of his father's farm for a year thereafter, then purchased forty acres for himself. In 1877 he bought the farm on which he is now residing, two miles east of Beaver Dam, where he has since continued to live and carry on his agricultural operations, being quite extensively and successfully engaged in the raising of stock. He has a handsome and comfortable residence, together with large barns and outbuildings of all necessary kinds, and about his fine place has made many modern improvements. Every nook and cranny of his farm is neatly kept and gives abundant proof of the energy, thought and care that have been bestowed upon it by this most thrifty and progressive of farmers. His estate comprises 690 acres in Beaver Dam Township, 610 acres of which is in one body. He is an influential and active member, and does much to promote the interest and success of the Farmer's Institute in Dodge County, and has given his best efforts, time and money to promote the science of agriculture, and is well known throughout his portion of the State as a champion of everything pertaining to the advancement of agriculture. He has also taken an active interest in the affairs of his Township, especially as regards educational and road matters and has done much to promote the best interests of his immediate vicinity. He was married in Dec. 1873 to Miss Amy BAker, a native of England and a daughter of William and Ann (Bradley) BAker, who came to America in 1851 and settled in Dodge County, Wis., of which section they were among the earliest settlers. Mrs. Baker died about 1856, but Mr. Baker is still living. To Mr. and Mrs. Noyes two children have been given: Bessie and William.
[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: Unitedspouse: Shedd, John S. (*1800 - )
States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of
Import: Apr 24, 1996, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.24459.27]
Individual: Noyes, Alice B.
Birth date: Sep 30, 1802
Birth place: ME
CD# 102 Discontinued
The Noyes Descendants, Vol. I says Alice E.