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Cleveland, Ohio

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James Fish

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Traveling with his wife, Mary (Wilcox) Fish, her mother, his three children, and his cousins, the trek was made by ox cart - a journey of 47 days. Ebenezer was said to have walked the whole way.
Traveling with his wife, Mary (Wilcox) Fish, her mother, his three children, and his cousins, the trek was made by ox cart - a journey of 47 days. Ebenezer was said to have walked the whole way.
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James settled on the southern portion of [[Lot 64]]. His homestead was just west of what is now Riverside Cemetery.
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James settled on the southern portion of [[Lot 66]]. His homestead was just west of what is now Riverside Cemetery. He also owned the land where the ________ Cemetery on Scranton now is.
==References==
==References==
Coates, William R., ''"A history of Cuyahoga County and the city of Cleveland"'', Chicago: American Historical Society, 1924, 1339 pgs.
Coates, William R., ''"A history of Cuyahoga County and the city of Cleveland"'', Chicago: American Historical Society, 1924, 1339 pgs.

Revision as of 22:51, 2 October 2006

James FISH (b. 1785), the first permanent white settler of Brooklyn, Ohio, was the son of Joseph FISH (b.1751) and Mary FISH. James set out from Groton, Connecticut in 1811 along with a large party of pioneers headed for the Western Reserve. Of these, only James and his cousins had this township as their destination.

James was first cousin to brothers Ebenezer FISH Jr. and Moses FISH, settlers of Lot 65 what is now known as Brooklyn Centre.

Traveling with his wife, Mary (Wilcox) Fish, her mother, his three children, and his cousins, the trek was made by ox cart - a journey of 47 days. Ebenezer was said to have walked the whole way.

James settled on the southern portion of Lot 66. His homestead was just west of what is now Riverside Cemetery. He also owned the land where the ________ Cemetery on Scranton now is.

References

Coates, William R., "A history of Cuyahoga County and the city of Cleveland", Chicago: American Historical Society, 1924, 1339 pgs.

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