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Matches 21751 to 21800 of 31204

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   Notes   Linked to 
21751 They had no children. Abraham PEASE
 
21752 He married 1) Rachael Tibbals of Norfolk, Ct and 2) Tamsin Sears of
Sharon, Ct. He was a clothier and died in 1843 at age 81. 
Allen PEASE
 
21753 He was drowned in 1802 at about 3 years old. Alonzo PEASE
 
21754 She married Ira Patterson on 28 Aug 1837. Amanda S. PEASE
 
21755 She married Azias Pettibone of Granby, Ct. Betsy PEASE
 
21756 He married 1) Sally, daughter of Titus Ives and the mother of all of
his three children and 2) Susan, th ewidow of Joseph Benjamin of
Sheffield or Egremont, Mass. He was a farmer and for many years an
innkeeper in Canaan, Ct where he died. He was in the Revolutionary
War as a drummer. 
Calvin PEASE
 
21757 He settled early in Somers, Ct. He was one of the earliest settlers
in Stafford, the town next east of Somers. 
Daniel PEASE
 
21758 He died in infancy. Dudley PEASE
 
21759 He married Mary Ives, daughter of Joseph Ives of New Haven, on 8 Apr
1802. He learned the trade of clothier with his brother Allen in
Sharon, Ct and established the first factory for woolen clothes in his
native town. He later moved to Hartford, Ct, then to Albany, NY and
finally to Brooklyn, NY. 
Earl P. PEASE
 
21760 She married Abijah Pettibone of Simsbury, Ct. Electa PEASE
 
21761 She married Henry Lincoln on 10 Nov 1815. Electa PEASE
 
21762 She married Alfred Avery on 15 Oct 1816. Elizabeth PEASE
 
21763 She married John Allen. Elizabeth PEASE
 
21764 He married Tabitha Abbe on 29 May 1740. He was a merchant and
contractor in the time of the French War, acquired a large estate, and
was a magistrate in the town before his death at age 82. 
Ephraim PEASE
 
21765 He probably died as an infant. Ephraim PEASE
 
21766 She married Edmund Akin of Norfolk. Eunice PEASE
 
21767 He died young. Flavius PEASE
 
21768 He married Eleanor Day on 23 Sep 1804. Flavius PEASE
 
21769 Hiram Pease was the younger brother of Peter, Oberlin Ohio's first
settler, and was himself one of the earliest colonists, following the
trail from Stockbridge to Ohio in about 1828. He married Lydia Remile
on 3 May 1818. He was a farmer, wagon maker, and church deacon. He was
also a punster. His Epitaph reads: "Under this sod and under these
trees, Lies the body of Hiram A. Pease. He is not here, only his pod,
He shelled out his soul, And went back to God." 
Hiram Abiff PEASE
 
21770 They had seven sons and two daughters. Both parents died in 1731. Isaac PEASE
 
21771 She married Benjamin Root. Joannah PEASE
 
21772 John Pease came to America to Salem, Mass. with his family but after
his father who came in 1634. He is first really documented in the
settlement of his father's estate in 1644. He would appear to have
been a favorite of his grandmother, Margaret Pease, indicated by her
giving him in her will most of her property and there is some evidence
that he may have been adopted by his grandmother before his father's
death. After his father's death he was placed by his grandmother in
the care of Thomas Watson of Salem "to dispose of him as his own
child." He married first, Mary Goodell, who died in 1669, three days
after the birth of her fifth child. He married, second, Ann Cummings
who died in 1689 just before John. John settled as a "yeoman" in that
part of Salem known as "Northfields" which is now within the city
limits but was a farming district. His name is frequently found in
the Essex County and Salem Town records as grantee, grantor, or
witness to deeds, overseer of wills, constable, etc. He joined the
First Church at Salem on July 4, 1667 and was made a freeman on April
29, 1668. In the fall of 1681 he moved with his family, his two
eldest son's families and numerous neighbors to Fresh Water Brook,
then a part of Springfield, Mass. but which would become Enfield, Ct.
In 1682 he sold his land in Salem and listed his residence as now of
Enfield, Ct which is just south of Springfield. In the summer of 1689
disaster struck his family and John, his wife Ann and their daughter
Abigail all died within two weeks of each other. 
John PEASE
 
21773 This John Pease was married 30 Jan 1677 to Margaret Adams of Ipswich
Mass., daughter of James Adams and Francis Vassall found elsewhere in
this genealogy. He was apprenticed at Salem to a carpenter and joiner.
He is said to have to gone to Enfield Ct in 1679 with his brother
Robert, two years before they moved their families there. They had a
total of eight children. John was one of the most prominent men in
the history of the town of Enfield in its early days. He was
appointed "land measurer" by the town and was one of the first
Selectmen. 
John PEASE
 
21774 He married Elizabeth Booth. Jonathan PEASE
 
21775 This was found in OLMSTEDS OF AMERICA, p.100. Lorinda PEASE
 
21776 She married Giles Pettibone of Norfolk, Ct. Louisa PEASE
 
21777 She probably married Hugh Pasco as his second wife. Mary PEASE
 
21778 He married Jerusha, daughter of Deacon Hall of Norfolk, Ct. and died
in 1815 at age 51. He was a blacksmith. 
Nathaniel PEASE
 
21779 He married Mary Hobbs, daughter of Elizabeth Hobbs, on 15 Mar 1668 and
settled at Salem. He was in the French and Indian war in 1675 and was
living in 1714. The Mary Pease who was implicated in the Salem
witchcraft in 1692 was undoubtedly his wife. 
Nathaniel PEASE
 
21780 Nathaniel and Eunice Pease left Enfield, Ct. between 1760 and 1764,
soon after the birth of their third or fourth child and are said to be
amoung the first settlers of the town of Norfolk, Ct. where he died in
1818 at the age of 90. His wife died 21 Mar 1807 and is buried in
Norfolk. 
Nathaniel PEASE
 
21781 He married Daziah Pettibone of Norfolk and was a tanner and shoemaker.
He died in 1809 at age 43. 
Obadiah PEASE
 
21782 This was found in OLMSTEDS OF AMERICA, p.100 Octa S. PEASE
 
21783 She married Asahel Byington on 10 Sep 1807. Pelera PEASE
 
21784 Mary Rogness's - Spouse of second cousin 6 times removed Persis PEASE
 
21785 Peter married Ruth H. Crocker of Amherst, Ohio on 12 Jul 1821 and
first settled at Brownhelm, Ohio. He was the first settler of
Oberlin, Ohio in April 1833. He gives the following account of his
experience in pioneer life: "In the fall of 1816, at the age of 21 1/2
years, I left Stockbridge, my native place, to seek my fortune in the
West, and settled in what is now called Brownhelm, then an entire
wilderness, and known as town No. 6, in the nineteenth range of the
Connecticut Western Reserve. Three young men of us built the first
house in town, and wintered there in the employ of Col. Henry Brown of
Stockbridge, Mass. From whence a colony was formed of about twenty
families, who settled the town, enjoying the pleasures and suffering
the privations of a pioneer life, common to all new settlements. I,
with my family of five children, left Brownhelm in April, 1833, for
the express purpose of commencing the Oberlin enterprise, and we were
the first family that penatrated this, then dense forest, and thus
took a second trial of pioneering, which was much shorter than the
first, and I have been an eye witness to what God hath wrought in and
for this place, and for this great valley of the Mississippi, and do
praise and magnify his name!" 
Peter Pindar PEASE
 
21786 Phineas Pease settled in Stockbridge, MA after the Revolutionary War
in which he served as a musician. He built a house there about 1780
which is still standing and was lived in at least as late as the
1960s. He was a tanner and a shoemaker by trade. The following is
taken from the book Pease Genealogy. An apprentice to Mr. Phineas
Pease tells the following: Mr. Pease purchased a tract of land from
an Indian among the remaining natives of the place (Stockbridge,
Mass.) A part of the price was paid down, the remainder was put in a
note to be paid at stipulated times. The Indian one day came to Mr.
Pease saying he was going off to a distance hunting and expected to be
gone a long time and did not know what might happen. Desiring the
note to be in safe keeping, he wished he would "take him and keep him
until he returned." Mr. Pease told him that was not the way to do
business, possibly he might not be honest and would not give up the
note on his return, and so cheat hin out of his money. "No" said the
Indian. "Mr. Pease be a good man, he be honest, he no cheat poor
Indian." So it proved for Mr. Pease took the note and when after many
months the Indian returned, the note was restored and in due time
cancelled. 
Phineas PEASE
 
21787 !Taken from the "Olmsteds in America" book. Page 56. Polly H. PEASE
 
21788 He came to this country with his father in 1634 and settled in Salem.
Having lost his father at an early age, he was bound out by the court
to Thomas Root, to learn the trade of a weaver of woolen and linen. He
was also sometimes made keeper of the town herd of cattle, goats, etc.
He spent some time at Martha's Vineyard and was with a Salem company
in the French and Indian war in 1676. His wife's name was Sarah and
both suffered imprisonment in 1692 because suspected of witchcraft. 
Robert PEASE
 
21789 He was a passenger on the "Francis".

Robert Pease, the son of Robert and Margaret Pease of Great Baddow,
near Ipswich, County Essex, and brother of Elizabeth and John, was the
first member of this family to come to America. He arrived here on
the ship "Francis" from the port of Ipswich, England in late April
1634 and landed at Boston. He was accompanied by his brother John and
his eldest son Robert. Records show that neither Robert or John had
wives with them. Both Robert and John are listed as being twenty
seven years old but it is presumed that Robert was the elder. The son
Robert was listed as being age three years. They settled in Salem,
Massachusetts where Robert was a weaver. Robert's wife Marie and
other members of the family probably came in a later ship. It is
fairly clear that his mother, Margaret, also came with his family,
being referred to in church records as the widow Pease and also as
having died in 1644. Robert and John Pease both received land grants
in Salem in January 1637. Robert joined the First Church at Salem on
October 1, 1643. 
Robert PEASE
 
21790 He was in Andover, Mass in 1711 but afterwards settled in that part of
Enfield which is now Somers. 
Robert PEASE
 
21791 Robert Pease first settled at Salem in the "Northfields." In 1679 he
shared with his elder brother in the enterprise of leaving the sea
coast to seek out and make ready new homes for himself, his relatives
and neighbors, in the Connecticut Valley in what is now Enfield Ct.
They are said to have lived the first winter in an excavation in the
side of a hill near the site of the first meeting house. Two years
later, in 1681, he and John brought their father and their families to
Enfield. In 1685 Robert and John had extra land given them because
they had been the "first cummers." Robert and Abigail had four sons.
Robert died in 1744 at age 88 years. 
Robert PEASE
 
21792 7 children Salley PEASE
 
21793 Sallie A. Pease was the third member of the Pease family to follow the trail from Stockbridge to Ohio. Sallie Aurelia PEASE
 
21794 He married Zeruiah Chapin and lived and died in Enfield. Samuel PEASE
 
21795 Samuel Pease also settled in Enfield Ct. Samuel PEASE
 
21796 This first Samuel died in infancy. Samuel PEASE
 
21797 She married John Sampson of Beverly on 22 Oct 1677 and died before
1677. 
Sarah PEASE
 
21798 She married Minorias Day on 21 Aug 1804. Sarah PEASE
 
21799 At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Kenneth C PEAVEY
 
21800 At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Wayne Leonard PEAVEY
 

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