1684 - 1767
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Generation: 1
- Nathaniel SPENCER b. 15 Jul 1684, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 6 Nov 1767, Spencertown, Columbia, New York.
Nathaniel m. Hannah Abt 1684. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 2. Elizabeth SPENCER
b. 4 Feb 1716/1717, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
Generation: 2
- Elizabeth SPENCER
(1.Nathaniel1) b. 4 Feb 1716/1717, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
Elizabeth m. Jedediah BRAINERD Jedediah (son of James BRAINERD and Hannah Or Anna RISLEY) b. 9 Aug 1720, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 18 Sep 1790, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 3. Amos BRAINERD, [child]
b. 18 Apr 1745, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 30 Jun 1749, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 4. Ozias BRAINARD
b. 10 Oct 1743, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Abt 1822, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 5. Lydia BRAINERD
b. 25 Dec 1746, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 6. Jedediah BRAINARD, Jr.
b. 11 Dec 1748, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Abt 1814, Mentor, , Ohio.
- 7. Elizabeth BRAINERD, [child]
b. 6 Dec 1750, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 27 Nov 1757, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 8. Anne BRAINERD, [child]
b. 16 Jul 1753, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 7 Dec 1757, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 9. Deborah BRAINERD
b. 12 Apr 1756, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 10. Amos BRAINARD
b. 3 Jan 1758, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 21 Nov 1833, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 11. Elizabeth BRAINERD
b. 18 May 1760, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 12. Candace BRAINERD
Generation: 3
- Amos BRAINERD, [child]
(2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 18 Apr 1745, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 30 Jun 1749, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Ozias BRAINARD
(2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 10 Oct 1743, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Abt 1822, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
Notes:
Moved to Brooklyn, Ohio in 1812 or 1813. 1817 Deed, for land which was part of LOTS 72 and 85 in Brooklyn, Ohio, lists the names of his six daughters (Anna Matthews, Jemima Abel, Rebecca Brainard, Miriam Brainard, Elizabeth Fish, and Delilah Brainard).
"Bounded on the northwestern corner by George Akin land and on the road and thence on the line of said lots to the Cuyahoga River thence on the banks of said river to Ira Brainard line, thence west on said Brainard line through said lots to the State Road, thence southwesterly on said road to the first mentioned corner containing 70 acres of which Rebecca is to have 15 acres. Miriam 15 acres and Ann, Jemima, Elizabeth, Delila are to have 10 each."
Ozias m. Elizabeth YOUNG Elizabeth (daughter of Samuel YOUNG and Rebecca BRAINERD) b. Abt 1747, Middle Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 13. Anna BRAINARD
b. Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 14. Jemima BRAINARD
b. 23 Dec 1766, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 31 Dec 1851.
- 15. Rebekah BRAINARD
b. 6 Jun 1769, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 16. Ozias BRAINARD, Jr.
b. 26 Apr 1771, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 2 Feb 1858, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 17. Miriam BRAINARD, [child]
b. 9 May 1773, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 26 Jul 1776, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 18. Bethuel BRAINARD, [infant]
b. 6 Apr 1775, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 10 Aug 1776, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 19. Miriam BRAINARD
b. 13 Feb 1777, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 1828.
- 20. Bethuel BRAINARD
b. 24 Feb 1779, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 1815.
- 21. Ira BRAINARD
b. 13 Apr 1781, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Munson,, Ohio ???.
- 22. Timothy BRAINARD
b. 11 May 1783; d. 1830.
- 23. Elizabeth BRAINARD
b. 19 Jul 1785, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 19 Aug 1823, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 24. Delilah BRAINARD
b. 4 Dec 1787, Middle Haddam, Middlesex Co., Connecticut; d. 13 Jan 1872, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- Lydia BRAINERD
(2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 25 Dec 1746, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Jedediah BRAINARD, Jr.
(2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 11 Dec 1748, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Abt 1814, Mentor, , Ohio.
Notes:
MIGRATION: Went with his brother, Amos, and his son to Brooklyn, Ohio but when only 50 miles away (in Mentor) took ill and died.
Jedediah m. Anna AIKEN, (Akins) 7 Nov 1771, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut. Anna (daughter of Thomas AIKEN and Hannah BRAINERD) b. Abt 1748; d. Abt 1820. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 25. David BRAINERD, [infant]
b. Abt 1772, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 26. Sabra BRAINERD
b. Abt 1773, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 27. Annie or Annis BRAINERD
b. 29 Dec 1775, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 28. Candace BRAINERD
b. Abt 1778, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 29. Sylvanus BRAINARD
b. Oct 1781, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Prob. Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 30. Cephas BRAINARD
b. 16 Nov 1784, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 20 Apr 1867, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 31. Jabez Spencer BRAINERD
b. May 1786, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Wisconsin.
- 32. Sophronia BRAINERD
b. Abt 1790, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 33. Job BRAINERD
b. May 1793, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Elizabeth BRAINERD, [child]
(2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 6 Dec 1750, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 27 Nov 1757, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Anne BRAINERD, [child]
(2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 16 Jul 1753, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 7 Dec 1757, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Deborah BRAINERD
(2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 12 Apr 1756, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Amos BRAINARD
(2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 3 Jan 1758, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 21 Nov 1833, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
Notes:
Note -- despite some confusion on my part about whether this Amos and the other one that I have in my files are one in the same, the proof that they are different is in "Pioneer Families of Cleveland, Ohio" where it states that Amos' (spouse of Rachel) daughter Nancy married the son of Amos and Martha Aiken Brainard.
BIOGRAPHY: This is taken from a book published in July 1896 "Memorial To The Pioneer Women Of The Western Reserve" which contains write-ups about the female pioneers in townships in the Western Reserve. Thank you to Betty Ralph for transcribing this for the site.
BROOKLYN
The northern boundary of this township was once bounded by Lake Erie, but in 1836 that part of it became ?Ohio City,? and years later was annexed to Cleveland. Its present boundaries are Independence on the east and Parma on the south.
Its first settlers were the BRAINARD and FISH families from Haddam, Ct., in the fall of 1811. These two families inter-married so often that it is safe to conclude that every Brooklyn BRAINARD one meets is descended from the first pioneer who bore the name of FISH and that every FISH that still resides in the township had a BRAINARD ancestor.
Ozias BRAINARD with his family, riding in a wagon drawn by oxen, left Old Haddam for Brooklyn and were six weeks on the road, only stopping long enough to eat, sleep and washing their clothes. Their house was the first one built on the south side of Big Creek, and the first apple trees in the vicinity were brought by them from the east. Two of these are still living and bearing fruit.
The nearest neighbor of the family was a squaw who, one day, appealed for food for her hungry papooses. As Mrs. BRAINARD had no bread in the house, she baked a quick johnny cake over the coals in the fireplace, and gave her a share which was gratefully received. Mrs. BRAINARD helped to found the First Methodist church of Brooklyn.
In 1815 came Jerusha RAY (Mrs. Amos BRAINARD) and Dorothy ELY (Mrs. William BRAINARD). Harriet and Charlotte, daughters of the latter, have lived single in the old home. They were fine looking women and so witty and genial that their society was much sought and young girls were always delighted to receive an invitation to the home of the ?BRAINARD girls.? The sisters made a beautiful home and an art of housekeeping.
Other daughters of the family were Philema and Jerusha. George BRAINARD married Delight HILL of Twinsburg. Their two daughters grew up in a home of plenty and their characters were formed by kind and upright parents. Mary married Samuel SLOAN and lives in West Virginia, Annie became Mrs. Sherry FISH and lives in Brooklyn.
In 1815 Jeremiah GATES came from Delhi, N.Y., on foot in order to examine the country between that place and Brooklyn. Satisfied with his survey, he returned home, married Phoebe DEMING and started back with her, making the trip, this time, with horse and wagon to Buffalo and thence to Cleveland by boat.
Their only daughter, Matilda, was the first white child born in the township. She married Isiah FISH, and died at the age of thirty-three.
As early as 1814, Seth BRAINARD with his wife Delilah came from Haddam, Ct., and bought a large tract of land, adding to it from time to time, until it numbered 100 acres. A fine inheritance for their children.
The same year came Elijah YOUNG and his wife Candace, also their son Warren and wife Mary DEAN. A covered wagon drawn by oxen brought them on they journey from Chatham, Ct., in forty days. They settled on farms in fine locations and put up their log cabins, one a double one.
The Seneca Indians were not infrequent callers, were friendly, but too much inclined to beg. Flour for some time was $18.00 a barrel, and brave Mary DEAN YOUNG had to exercise much forethought in providing bread for her little flock until land could be cleared for a crop of wheat. Once she was forced to open the oven door and remove the top crust of a johnny cake she was baking to quiet the hungry crying of her children.
Candace was a sprightly little lady, and always walked to the ?village,? as she called what is now the city of Cleveland, even after it had grown to be one of good size.
Her son, Warren YOUNG, was the first settler to construct a road through Big Creek valley. This was a serious but very necessary undertaking since the ?Loaf Hills? in rainy seasons supplied mud of the most baffling nature. Also he started the first toll gate kept in the township.
One of his daughters recalls her alarm when a big Indian, standing in the doorway of the road house, uttered a war whoop with all the power of his lungs. It was, however, only an expression of good feeling as he stalked away with the tobacco he had just begged.
Warren YOUNG kept the first tavern in the settlement, which means that Mary had to prepare beds and meals at all hours of the day or night. For many years this place, under different managers, was a tavern site.
Their three daughters Emmeline, Harriet and Emily, always resided in the township. Emmeline became the wife of Lawton ROSS, and the hospitality of her home was proverbial. They had no children but adopted two orphans, William CUSHMAN and Mary GREEN. Out of this grew a romance, for, when arrived at a suitable age, the pair were married.
Emmeline passed away at the age of eighty in the home to which she came as a bride. She had a gentle, sweet nature and was beloved by all.
Emily became Mrs. Samuel LOCKWOOD, and like her sisters was a notable housekeeper.
Harriet married Willard BRAINARD. Their daughters, Emmeline BRAINARD now Mrs. Abel FISH; Clarissa, Mrs. Leonard FISH; and Celia, Mrs. Lewis BRAINARD, settled near the childhood home.
Sarah B. YOUNG, who may have been a sister of Warren YOUNG, was born in East Haddam, Ct., came to Brooklyn in 1819, and married Jonathan FISH. George AIKEN of Haddam, Ct., aged forty-five years, and his wife, Tamzen HIGGINS, aged forty-three, came to Brooklyn in 1811. Mrs. AIKEN survived her husband nearly a quarter of a century, dying when a very old lady.
Her children were Cyrel, Jared, Julia, Laura, Caroline and William. They intermarried with the families of the earliest settlers. Cyrel married Harriet RUSSELL, Jared married Julia BRAINARD and lived in Amherst, Ohio, Caroline married Diodate CLARK, and William married Betsey CLARK, sister of Diodate.
Julia AIKEN married Alonzo CARTER, son of Lorenzo of Cleveland, and kept tavern with her husband on the West side opposite the foot of Superior St. A Julia AIKEN, also daughter of George and Tamison (or Tamzen) AIKEN, is recorded as being the wife of a RATHBUN, secondly of Abner COCHRAN.
Betsey CLARK AIKEN lived to be ninety-one years old. She is said to have been a most worthy pioneer, and held in the highest respect.
Joseph and Hannah COLE CLARK also lived in Haddam, Ct. Mr. CLARK died, and his widow with all but one of her ten children came to Brooklyn among its earliest settlers. Her children were of the foremost element of progress in the town and connected with leading families of Brooklyn and Cleveland.
They were Joseph, who married Clarissa DICKENSON; Corey, who married Mary SKINNER; and Diodate, who married Caroline AIKEN.
There were also six daughters in this family: Ruth, who became Mrs. Isaac ROBINSON; Mary, Mrs. Joseph BRAINARD; Phoebe, Mrs. Warren ELY; Betsey, Mrs. William AIKEN; Maria, Mrs. Erastus SMITH of Warrensville. Lydia and Hannah were the wives successively of Sylvanus BROOKS of Newburgh.
Martin KELLOGG, born in Chatham, Ct., in 1793 married Laura ADAMS, daughter of Benjamin ADAMS of West Chester, Mass., in 1818. Soon after, accompanied by his young wife, he started with others for a new home in Brooklyn. They traveled as was the usual way, by ox team, and it also took the usual time for the journey, forty days.
They settled upon a farm upon a part of which their son now lives in a fine residence. Mrs. KELLOGG?s children were all sons and, lacking sisters, they must have had to assist their mother in her household work more than is usual for boys to do.
Alfred married Louise ACKLEY, daughter of Asa ACKLEY, and old settler who lived on a farm near the Infirmary.
Among the noble pioneer women of Brooklyn was Mrs. Isaac HINCKLEY, nee Sarah SHEPARD of Chatham, Ct., who arrived here with her family in 1815. She had seven children, four of whom were daughters. They brought two ox teams, two cows, a horse and a dog. One of the wagons contained the household goods. The most valuable were the loom and spinning wheel, also the precious store of provisions that were to last the large family until the land was cleared and made productive. They reached their future home in the forest after six weeks of steady travel, and found themselves five miles from the little hamlet of Cleveland. The wilderness swarmed with bears, wolves, panthers, deer and other wild animals. Fires were kept burning all night and day, alternately fed by Mr. and Mrs. HINCKLEY for protection. Wolves came so close at night that they could hear the rustling of the leaves and twigs under their feet, also Indians passed closely by frequently, but usually were friendly, though their presence was always terrifying.
The log cabin had but two rooms and a loft reached by a ladder, where the children slept. The huge chimney was built of mud and cement, while the floor was of hewn logs. The loft was so open that the children could count the stars through the wide cracks, and often in winter snow would beat in over the bed and floor.
Mrs. HINCKLEY was a typical pioneer?s wife, standing by her husband?s side, day after day, burning brush or tilling the unclaimed land. The first year was one of peril and anxiety, for the store of provisions brought from Connecticut became so low that starvation threatened. For months they lived on pounded corn made into mush, supplemented by occasional game. Once Mr. HINCKLEY tried to mortgage his farm of 200 acres for a barrel of flour, so great was the extremity. But no flour could be obtained.
Like every other pioneer?s home, Mrs. HINCKLEY?s shuttle played no insignificant part in the home. Emily and Lucy were not old enough to be useful, but even the younger ones soon learned to wind bobbins for their mother.
It was a God-loving home. Morning and evening the bible was read, hymns sung, and earnest prayers were given for divine guidance. The nearest church was two miles distant, at first only a school-house, and it was the custom of the HINCKLEY children, as well as others to carry their shoes and stockings in their hands until within sight of the church, then sit down on a log and put them on, thus saving the wear of those precious articles at the expense of their feet.
These children were an honor to their mother after leaving the home nest. The youngest surviving one died in Iowa aged eighty-four. Emily married Herrick GOULD, and died in Newburgh in 1849. She was the mother of Mrs. Oliver HARTZELL of Cleveland. Lucy married Starkweather BRANCH of Cleveland, in 1827, and died the same year. Cleantha married Phineas SHEPARD, Jr., of Cleveland and died in 1886. She was the mother of Mrs. G. GUILFORD of Cleveland and Mrs. A. W. MEREDITH of Washington, Iowa.
Sarah HINCKLEY became Mrs. C.S. GATES of Brooklyn, and died in 1873, leaving four sons.
Mrs. Demas BRAINARD (Nancy) who came from Haddam, Ct., in 1818, had three daughters and a son who were all born in the township. Phoebe marred Alfred FISH, Lucinda married Leonard HUNTLEY, Betsey remained single, and Luther married Marcia SPRAGUE of Parma. She was born in Keene, N.H.
In 1824 Nathaniel GATES and his wife, Nancy SMITH, with her sister, Sally SMITH, came from Chatham, Ct., after a short stay in Delhi, N.Y. Their daughter Caroline married Dan WILLIAMS. Sally became Mrs. James PATTERSON and Mary GATES remained unmarried.
The settlement had now become prosperous. Roads through the hilly country surrounding had been laid out with the hardest kind of work. Good feeling prevailed as the settlers were mostly connected by marriage or by strong bonds of sympathy. But pioneer life was not all toil by any means, for much visiting back and forth kept warm the friendships. These visits were made in ox carts or on horseback.
About 1837 Levi LOCKWOOD and his wife, Tamison, came from Madrid, N.Y., with their grown-up family and kept the Brooklyn tavern. Their three daughters, Finette, afterward Mrs. Lewis WRIGHT of Fremont; Malvina who married Ducay LOSEY and Helen, who became Mrs. George MATHEWS, were all efficient aids in the business, and the generous fare and well kept rooms of that necessary institution the ?Country Tavern? were largely owing to the industry and zeal of these bright girls.
Malvina, the only one now living, is a useful woman of good mind and possessed of a singular gift of preparing herbs and roots for medical use. She had a fine disdain for doctors and their ?stuff,? and, had she come upon the stage of life years later, would have been an invaluable nurse, or even a physician herself, at least for her own sex.
Rev. Edward FULLER, with his wife Anne GREEN of Granston, R.I., came to Brooklyn and became a minister of the town. Mrs. FULLER was a lovely woman with a fund of cheerfulness that never failed and an inborn love of flowers and a gift for cultivating them. Her life was well rounded out with years.
She had unusual business faculty, and by her enterprise in allotting and recording of her property, made possible the incorporation of the village. Without such help, it would have been almost impossible.
Her eldest daughter, Mary FULLER, was a beautiful girl who early joined the Society of Friends in which faith her mother had been raised. Her rosy face beaming from the depth of a Quaker bonnet of drab silk, was a revelation to the townspeople who passed her. She married Thomas PINKHAM of Salem, and died at the age of thirty-one.
The youngest daughter, Anna FULLER, grew up in the retirement of the pretty village, and was married to her school teacher, William TREAT, and still resides in Brooklyn.
Brooklyn in those days was very attractive, occupying a high, sandy ridge which assured its healthfulness, and with a soil that was very productive. Society was at its best. Education advantages were held in high esteem. Much was thought of and done for young people. Debating societies, singing classes and informal parties were frequently held at some home or at the tavern. The last were not monopolized by the young, for there were many social events for real enjoyment held by their elders, where friends met early in the afternoon, visited, danced, and enjoyed a good supper.
The old tavern passed through many hands, and has finally disappeared. Many other changes also have taken place. A long viaduct spans the Big Creek valley and over the pioneers roads made with so much effort and toil, rush symbols of the new age, the automobile and the electric car.
Anna E. TREAT
Cuyahoga County USGenWeb
MARRIAGE: Revolutionary War records for his pension state that he was remarried in 1815 to Jerusha in Brooklyn, Ohio. Vouched for by Deacon Isaac Hinckley and Stephen Brainard (a distant relative). Further into the record, though, after Amos has died and his wife is filing for a pension, she gives the date of their marriage as 15 Jan 1813 in Haddam.
Amos m. Martha AIKEN Martha (daughter of Thomas AIKEN and Hannah BRAINERD) b. 24 Sep 1756, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 34. Amos Bradford BRAINARD
b. Abt 1783, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 35. William BRAINARD
b. 1784, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Abt 16 Jun 1868, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 36. Martha BRAINARD, [infant]
- 37. Martha BRAINARD
- 38. Ephraim BRAINARD
- 39. Demas BRAINARD
b. 3 Jul 1792, Haddam,, Connecticut, USA; d. 16 Dec 1882, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
- 40. Philena BRAINARD
b. 4 May 1804, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 5 Oct 1865.
Amos m. Jerusha RAY 15 Jan 1813, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut. Jerusha b. 1764; d. 1856, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio. [Group Sheet]
- Elizabeth BRAINERD
(2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 18 May 1760, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
Elizabeth m. Asa CHAPMAN Asa b. 12 Feb 1753. [Group Sheet]
- Candace BRAINERD
(2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1)
Generation: 4
- Anna BRAINARD
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
Anna m. Asahel MATTHEWS [Group Sheet]
- Jemima BRAINARD
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 23 Dec 1766, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 31 Dec 1851.
Jemima m. Abel ABEL, (Abell) [Group Sheet]
- Rebekah BRAINARD
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 6 Jun 1769, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Ozias BRAINARD, Jr.
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 26 Apr 1771, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 2 Feb 1858, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
Notes:
OBIT: Elyria Independent Democrat Obituary 10 Mar 1858 Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, OH
MIGRATION: From Haddam, CT Migrated 1814 Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, OH
BURIAL: Scranton Road Cemetery Transcription as found at:
http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohcuycem/ SCRANTON_RD_TRANS.htm
BURIAL: Last Name Brainard
First Name Ozias
MI - Name
Title
Suffix
Birth Date Apr. 26? 17??
Date of Death Mar. 12 1859?
Section B
Row 3
Tier
Grave
Notes Previous transcription indicates marker nearly illegible.
Inscription
Ozias m. Mary STRONG 13 Apr 1796, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut. Mary (daughter of Jabin STRONG and Betsey CURTIS) b. 10 Feb 1776, Middle Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Abt 6 Dec 1864, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 41. David Strong BRAINARD
b. 26 Oct 1797, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 12 Mar 1813, Genesee,, New York.
- 42. Indiana BRAINARD
b. 30 Dec 1799, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- 43. Betsey BRAINARD
b. 9 Jan 1802, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 10 May 1864, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 44. Titus A. BRAINARD
b. 30 Aug 1803, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 28 Oct 1826, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 45. Noah BRAINARD
b. 3 Sep 1805, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 10 Sep 1892, Painesville, Lake, Ohio.
- 46. Laura BRAINARD
b. 16 Jan 1806, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 17 Mar 1867.
- 47. David Strong BRAINARD
b. 27 Jul 1815/1816, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 26 Apr 1880, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- Miriam BRAINARD, [child]
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 9 May 1773, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 26 Jul 1776, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Bethuel BRAINARD, [infant]
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 6 Apr 1775, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 10 Aug 1776, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Miriam BRAINARD
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 13 Feb 1777, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 1828.
- Bethuel BRAINARD
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 24 Feb 1779, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 1815.
- Ira BRAINARD
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 13 Apr 1781, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Munson,, Ohio ???.
Ira m. Phebe Ackley COLE Phebe b. 5 Mar 1789, East Hampton,, Connecticut. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 48. Lydia BRAINARD
b. of Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 49. Ira BRAINARD
b. 7 Aug 1812, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 18 Dec 1892, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- Timothy BRAINARD
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 11 May 1783; d. 1830.
Timothy m. Martha COOK 6 Nov 1805, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut. Martha d. 10 May 1806. [Group Sheet]
Timothy m. Belinda TOD Aft 1806, , Cuyahoga, Ohio. [Group Sheet]
- Elizabeth BRAINARD
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 19 Jul 1785, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 19 Aug 1823, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
Notes:
MARRIAGE: BRAINARD, ELIZABETH and FISH, MOSES vol.0001 pg.0028 (Cuyahoga County Marriage Index)
Elizabeth m. Moses FISH 10 May 1814, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio. Moses (son of Ebenezer FISH, Sr. and Lydia FISH) b. 25 Oct 1789, Groton, New London, Connecticut; d. 14 Apr 1840, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 50. Eunice FISH
b. 22 Feb 1815, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 21 Apr 1884, , Clayton, Iowa; bur. Washington Chapel Cemetery, Washington, Iowa.
- 51. Bethuel FISH
b. 26 May 1816, ,, Ohio; d. 17 Jun 1872, Brooklyn Township, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 52. Ozias FISH
b. 16 May 1818; d. 4 Mar 1912, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 53. Daniel FISH
b. 20 Dec 1820, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. Jan 1902, Brooklyn Township, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 54. Levi FISH
b. 31 Jul 1822, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 27 Aug 1909, Coldwater, Branch, Michigan.
- Delilah BRAINARD
(4.Ozias3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 4 Dec 1787, Middle Haddam, Middlesex Co., Connecticut; d. 13 Jan 1872, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
Notes:
BIRTH:
Delilah Brainard was born December 4, 1787 according to Chatham Vital Records in Barbour Collection, Vol. 1, Pg. 11
(per Barbara Mitchell)
DEATH:
Year of death is in question. Obtained from monument at Broadview Cemetery that was badly weathered. See Notes in Seth Brainard's record.
Delilah m. Seth BRAINARD 27 Aug 1812, East Hampton,, Connecticut. Seth (son of Joel BRAINARD and Eunice BROOKS) b. 9 Jan 1792, Haddam Neck, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 13 Sep 1877, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 55. James Nelson BRAINARD
b. 30 Dec 1812, Middle Haddam, Middlesex Co., Connecticut; d. 7 Feb 1899, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 56. Eunice R. BRAINARD
b. 13 Jul 1814, Middle Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 16 Sep 1892, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
- 57. Asahel N. BRAINARD
b. 16 Jan 1816, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 6 Jan 1899, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
- 58. Aristarchus BRAINARD, [infant]
b. 1817, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 1817, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 59. Timothy BRAINARD, [infant]
b. 1818, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 1818, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 60. Samantha BRAINARD
b. 30 May 1820, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 1890/1899, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
- 61. Miriam BRAINARD
b. 1 May 1822, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 5 Nov 1895, South Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 62. Horace BRAINARD
b. 6 May 1825, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 5 Dec 1897, South Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 63. Riley BRAINARD
b. 16 Dec 1831, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 19 Jan 1908, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- David BRAINERD, [infant]
(6.Jedediah3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. Abt 1772, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Sabra BRAINERD
(6.Jedediah3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. Abt 1773, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Annie or Annis BRAINERD
(6.Jedediah3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 29 Dec 1775, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Candace BRAINERD
(6.Jedediah3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. Abt 1778, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Sylvanus BRAINARD
(6.Jedediah3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. Oct 1781, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Prob. Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
Sylvanus m. Clarissa GATES Clarissa (daughter of Nathaniel GATES and Hannah KNOWLTON) b. Abt 1786, Of Burlington, , Wi. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 64. Sophronia BRAINERD
- 65. Willard BRAINARD
b. Jul 1812; d. Bef 1880, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- Cephas BRAINARD
(6.Jedediah3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 16 Nov 1784, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 20 Apr 1867, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
Notes:
CENSUS: 1850 - Ohio Census for Brooklyn Township, Cuyahoga County
Cephas, 65, Conn
Lydia, 63, NY
Annis, 19
Amanda, 36
Orin, 26
Betsey McComber, 67
Cephas m. Lydia EDMUNDS 4 Oct 1821, Cuyahoga Ohio.. Lydia (daughter of Andrew EDMUNDS and Hulda KING) b. 21 Aug 1797, New York; d. 21 Mar 1867, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 66. Jesse K. BRAINARD
b. 17 Aug 1822, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 67. Orrin C. BRAINARD
b. 19 Nov 1823, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. Apr 1862, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 68. Annis C. BRAINARD
b. 27 Jun 1831, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- Jabez Spencer BRAINERD
(6.Jedediah3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. May 1786, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Wisconsin.
Notes:
Left his wife and took up with another woman whom he called his wife. Moved from Brooklyn to Burlington, Wisconsin.
Jabez m. Livia COLE 20 Jan 1812, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut. Livia d. 29 Oct 1889. [Group Sheet]
- Sophronia BRAINERD
(6.Jedediah3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. Abt 1790, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Job BRAINERD
(6.Jedediah3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. May 1793, Chatham, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- Amos Bradford BRAINARD
(10.Amos3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. Abt 1783, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut.
- William BRAINARD
(10.Amos3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 1784, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. Abt 16 Jun 1868, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
Notes:
His father's second wife was living with him at the time of the 1850 census.
Brooklyn, Ohio:
Wm. BRAINARD, 64, Farmer, Conn.
Dorothea, 57, Conn.
Charlotte, 32, Conn.
Mary, 26, Ohio
Jerusha, 24, Ohio
James, 20, Ohio
Wm. E., 37, Conn.
Jerusha, 87, Conn.
William m. Dorothy ELY 25 Aug 1809, Haddam,Middlesex,Connecticut. Dorothy (daughter of Joel ELY and Jerusha RAY) b. 19 Sep 1792, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 23 Apr 1867, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 69. William E. BRAINARD
b. 8 Nov 1811, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 25 Apr 1871.
- 70. George W. BRAINARD
b. 11 Sep 1814, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 20 Nov 1893, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio; bur. 23 Nov 1893, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 71. Charlotte BRAINARD
b. Oct 1817, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 72. Martha BRAINARD
b. Jun 1820, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 73. Jerusha BRAINARD
b. 29 Nov 1823, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 15 Sep 1856, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 74. John Crawford BRAINARD
b. 25 Nov 1825/1826, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 10 May 1900, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 75. James BRAINARD
b. 9 Jul 1830, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. Jul 1919, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- Martha BRAINARD, [infant]
(10.Amos3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1)
- Martha BRAINARD
(10.Amos3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1)
- Ephraim BRAINARD
(10.Amos3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1)
- Demas BRAINARD
(10.Amos3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 3 Jul 1792, Haddam,, Connecticut, USA; d. 16 Dec 1882, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
Notes:
Appeared in the 1850 Ohio Census as Amos (age 57), with Nancy (age 56), Betsey (27), and Lucinda (19)
OBIT: Name: Brainerd, Demas
Date: Dec. 19, 1882
Source: Cemetery record; Cleveland Necrology File, Reel #009.
Notes: Brainerd- Saturday, December 16, 1882, Demas Brainerd, aged 90 years 5 months and 13 days. Funeral services on Tuesday at 11 o'clock in the Brighton M. E. church. 12/16/1882. age 90. Brookmere Cemetery Cleveland, Ohio.
Demas m. Nancy BRAINARD 1818, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA. Nancy (daughter of Amos BRAINARD, (twin) and Rachel Ackley BRAINERD) b. 1 Feb 1794; d. 1 Mar 1860, Brooklyn Township, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA; bur. 1 Mar 1860, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio. [Group Sheet]
Children:
- 76. Luther BRAINARD
b. 6 Feb 1820, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA; d. 22 Jun 1904, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 77. Phebe BRAINARD
b. 19 Apr 1821, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 78. Betsey BRAINARD
b. 27 Apr 1823, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 1917, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
- 79. Lucinda BRAINARD
b. 26 Dec 1829, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
Demas m. Esther K. KNIGHT Aft 1860, , Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA. Esther b. 1809, ,, New York, USA; d. 10 Jul 1883, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA. [Group Sheet]
- Philena BRAINARD
(10.Amos3, 2.Elizabeth2, 1.Nathaniel1) b. 4 May 1804, Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 5 Oct 1865.
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