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Richard Lyman was christened 1 on 30 Oct 1580 in High Ongar, Essex, England. He died 2 about 1640. He married Sarah.
Anderson, Robert Charles , The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633 [database online] , Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2000.
RICHARD LYMAN
ORIGIN: High Ongar, Essex MIGRATION: 1631 FIRST RESIDENCE: Roxbury REMOVES: Hartford 1636 CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: Admitted to Roxbury church as member #11: "Richard Lyman. He came to N.E. in the 9th month 1631. He brought children: Phillis, Richard, a Sarah._____ John. He was an ancient christian, but weak, yet after some time of trial & quickening he joined to the church; when the great removal was made to Conecticot he also went, & underwent much affliction, for going toward winter, his cattle were lost in driving, & some never found again; & the winter being cold & ill provided, he was sick and melancholy, yet after he had some revivings through God's mercy, and died in the year 1640" [ RChR 74]. FREEMAN: 11 June 1633 [ MBCR 1:368]. ESTATE: In the Hartford land inventory in February 1639[/40] Richard Lyman held six parcels: three acres and one rood with dwelling house, outhouses, yards and gardens; eight acres of upland; twenty acres of upland; seven acres in the South Meadow; two acres in the South Meadow; and six acres of swamp on the east side of the Great River [ HaBOP 271-72]. At an unknown date James Ensine purchased the six acre parcel of swamp on the east side of the Great River from Richard Lyman [ HaBOP 224]. In his will, dated 22 April 1640 and proved 27 January 1642[/3], Richard Lyman bequeathed to "my wife all my housing and lands during her life and one third part of my lands to dispose of at her death amongst my children as she pleaseth and I give her all my moveable goods"; "the other two parts of my land & house I give to my elder son Richard ... if he die without an heir, then I give it to my son Robert"; to "my daughter Sarah, besides the cattle I formerly have given her, my will is that my wife shall pay her £20 two years after my death"; to "my son John Lyman I give him £30 to be paid by my wife at twenty-two years of age"; to "my son Robert I give £24 at twenty-two years of age"; to "my daughter Fillis, the wife of William Hills I give 10s."; "my wife sole executrix" [ Manwaring 1:22-23]. The inventory of Richard Lyman was taken 6 September 1641 and totalled £83 16s. 3d. [ Manwaring 1:22]. In her will, dated 24 July [1642?], the "widow Lyman" made the following disposition of her goods: "The widow Lyman's mind is that her son Richard Lyman should perform her husband's will and that her son Robert should live with him till he be twenty-two years of age, and she gives Robert Lyman the third part of the housing & grounds, & for the performance of her husband's will she gives Richard all her moveable goods, both without the house and within, only her wearing clothes and some of her linen she will dispose of" [ Manwaring 1:23]. BIRTH: Baptized High Ongar, Essex, 30 October 1580, son of Henry and Elizabeth (Rande) Lyman [ TAG 30:187-90]. DEATH: Hartford between 22 April 1640 (date of will) and 3 March 1640/1 ("when his thirty acres were called the property of Richard Lyman, deceased" [ Moore Anc 349]). MARRIAGE: By 1611 Sarah _____; "Sarah Lyman, the wife of Richard Lyman," admitted to Roxbury church as member #20 [ RChR 74]. She died by 27 January 1642[/3] when her will was brought to court with that of her husband [ CCCR 1:81]. (Some older sources claim that Sarah was daughter of Richard Osborne of Halstead, Kent, but there is no support for this identification.) CHILDREN (baptisms in TAG 30:188):
i PHILLIS, bp. High Ongar, Essex, 12 September 1611; m. by about 1638 WILLIAM HILLS. ii RICHARD, bp. High Ongar 18 July 1613; d. soon.
iii WILLIAM, bur. High Ongar 28 August 1615.
iv WILLIAM, bp. High Ongar 8 September 1616; bur. there November 1616.
v RICHARD, bp. High Ongar 24 February 1617/8; m. by about 1644 Hepzibah Ford, daughter of THOMAS FORD (eldest child b. about 1644 [ Moore Anc 260-61, 354]).
vi SARAH, bp. High Ongar 8 February 1619/20; came to New England in 1631 with family [ RChR 74]; named in father's will, 22 April 1640; no further record.
vii ANNE, bp. Navestock, Essex, 20 April 1621; no further record.
viii JOHN, b. September 1623 ("if he live will be twenty-two year old in September 1645" [ CCCR 1:81]); m. Branford 12 January 1654[/5] Dorcas Plumb [BranVR Barbour 113], daughter of John Plumb.
ix ROBERT, b. September 1629 ("twenty-two in September 1651" [ CCCR 1:81]); m. Northampton 5 November 1662 Hepzibah Bascomb [ Pynchon VR 141].
COMMENTS: Lilian J. Redstone checked the High Ongar manorial court records for 25 April 1639 and discovered that Richard Lyman had surrendered his tenements of Petfield, Serleshope and Cachmans and a cottage in Pashfield to Richard Dike by 19 September 1631 [ TAG 30:190]. In 1632 William Pynchon, as Massachusetts Bay treasurer, paid £3 10s. to "Goodman Lyman for a fat hog for [to victual the pinnace for the taking of Dixie Bull]" [ MHSC 2:8:232]. On 5 September 1639 Richard Lyman complained against Sequassen for "burning up his hedge which before Mr. Governor formerly he promised to satisfy for, but yet hath not done it" [ CCCR 4]. BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTE: In 1938 Louis Effingham DeForest compiled a substantial account of the Lyman family [ Moore Anc 348-56]. Ten years later Mary Lovering Holman published a briefer account, but this time incorporating parish register entries which identify the English origin of the Lyman family [ Stevens-Miller Anc 383-84]. In 1954 Donald Lines Jacobus and Clarence Almon Torrey identified the mother of the immigrant [ TAG 30:187-90].
Sarah 1.Sarah married Richard Lyman.
They had the following children:
M i Richard Lyman
Aaron Cooke 1 died . He married Elizabeth Chard.
Elizabeth Chard died 1 on 18 Apr 1643 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut. She married Aaron Cooke.
Other marriages:Ford, Thomas
They had the following children:
M i Aaron Cooke 1 died .
Anderson, Robert Charles , The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633 [database online] , Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2000.
Aaron Cooke
ORIGIN: Dorchester, Dorsetshire MIGRATION: 1630 on Mary & John FIRST RESIDENCE: Dorchester REMOVES: Windsor 1637, Northampton 1661, Westfield 1668, Northampton 1678 CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: Admission to Dorchester church prior to 6 May 1635 implied by freemanship. FREEMAN: 6 May 1635 [ MBCR 1:371]. EDUCATION: Although his inventory does not include them, Aaron Cooke bequeathed several bibles and military books to various of his heirs. OFFICES: Connecticut jury, 1 June 1643, December 1644, 9 October 1645, 29 October 1646, 24 May 1647, 2 September 1647, 7 March 1649/50, 15 May 1650 [ CCCR 1:87; RPCC 20, 30, 37, 44, 47, 48, 52, 77, 82]. Called the court of Magistrates as "Capt: Aron Cooke," 11 October 1655 [ RPCC 153]. Hampshire jury, 24 September 1661, 25 March 1662 [ Pynchon Court 253, 259]. Commissioner to end small causes at Westfield, 27 July 1672, 13 October 1673, 10 April 1675 [ Pynchon Court 276, 277]. "Lieutenant Cooke is to be Commander in Chief" of a company of men to be prepared to go against the Dutch, 21 May 1653 [ CCCR 1:242]. On 11 March 1657/8 "Capt. Aron Cooke" is in the Windsor section of a list of troopers [ CCCR 1:309]. Confirmed as captain of the military company at Northampton, 5 July 1686 [ Pynchon Court 313]. ESTATE: On 1 September 1634 granted three acres in Dorchester "up Naponset" [ DTR 7]; on 22 November 1634 granted six acres for his "small and great lots at Naponset betwixt the Indian Field and the mill" [ DTR 8]. Granted sixteen acres for a Great Lot, 4 January 1635/6 [ DTR 14]. Granted "half an acre of ground over against his lot by the brook near the dead swamp to build his house upon," 5 July 1636 [ DTR 18]. On 2 January 1637/8 the town of Dorchester ordered that "Jo: Kingsley is limited for his marsh in the neck next Good: Gaylor's which was sold him by Aron Cooke to have only 4 acres" [ DTR 26]. On 8 September 1653 "Lieutenant Cooke is allowed fifty acres of meadow in Massacoe [Simsbury]," and in May 1661 "Lt. Cooke owns [this land] to be in his father Ford's improvement" [ CCCR 1:246-47]. On 14 March 1660/1 "Capt. Cook is required to desist in any further labor on the lower farm at Mussaco, until the matter be issued at General Court, in May next" [ CCCR 1:364], and on 16 May 1661 the court ordered respecting "Capt. Aaron Cook's grant at Mussaco" that the grant is still in force [ CCCR 1:367]. In his will, dated [illegible] August 1690 and proved 24 October 1690, "Aaron Cooke Sen[io]r of Northampton" bequeathed that as "my loving son Noah hath on his marriage my inheritance at Westfield given him, as my loving son Aaron had my inheritance at Windsor given him at his marriage, and as much as my son Noah hath left his dwelling at Hartford to come to look to my [decline?] & nurse me in my age at Northampton, I do will & bequeath my house & barn ... to my loving son Noah ... I mean my house in Northampton, likewise all my meadow ... with my pasture land next my brother John Strong's ... my son Noah paying my debts and giving such legacies as I shall after express as soon as he can do it without selling off the land, namely unto his brother my loving son" £40 if he releases the estate from any claims from him; to "my daughter Miriam Laids" £20 at her own dispose as an addition to her portion; to "my loving daughter Elizabeth Parsons" £20 in addition to her portion formerly, also "the great brass [tight binding] that was her own mother's"; to "Moses Cooke my grandson, of my son Moses deceased, born o f his wife Elizabeth [tight binding] Clark's daughter" a parcel of land of one hundred fifty acres, also a Bible; to "Elizabeth Cooke my granddaughter my son Moses' daughter" one cow more, also a bible; to "my grandson Aaron Cooke son of my son Aaron" three hundred acres; to "my son Aaron my leadering staff, sword, and best belt & the military book entitled [tight binding] and the cane leadering staff that my son Aaron Cooke hath the use of I give to the use of Northampton Foot Company"; to "my son Noah Cooke" clothing and a military book; to the Church of Christ at Northampton a silver bowl of £6 price; to "each of my grandchildren" a Bible; "my sons Aaron and Noah Cooke" executors [ HamLR A:1 (court)]. The inventory of the estate of Major Cook was taken 26 December 1690 and totalled £526 1s., including real estate valued at £410: "a house & homestead" and "land in the meadow, thirty-six acres," £330; "a parcel of land within the common fence by Elder Strong's," £30; "in Hartford Colony about three hundred acres," £30 10s.; and "one parcel of land in Windsor bounds," £20 [ HamPR 1:274]. BIRTH: Baptized Bridport, Dorsetshire, 20 March 1613/4, son of Aaron and Elizabeth (Chard) Cooke [ TAG 11:179-80]. DEATH: Northampton 5 September 1690. MARRIAGE: (1) By 1638 Mary Cooke, daughter of William and Martha (White) Cooke (and first cousin of STEPHEN TERRY ) [ DSGRM 25:54-55]; she died by 1650. (2) By 1650 Joan Denslow, daughter of NICHOLAS DENSLOW ; she died Westfield in April 1676. (3) New Haven 2 December 1676 Elizabeth Nash [ NHVR 1:43]; she died by 1688. (4) Hadley 2 October 1688 Rebecca (Foote) Smith [ Pynchon VR 224], widow of Philip Smith, daughter of Nathaniel Foote [ Wethersfield Hist 2:328]; although not mentioned in the will of her second husband, she survived him and died 6 April 1701. CHILDREN:
With first wife
i JOANNA, bp. Windsor 5 August 1638 [ WiVR 33; Grant 29]; m. Windsor 19 March 1656 Simon Woolcott [ WiVR 42].
ii AARON, bp. Windsor 21 February 1640[/1?] [ WiVR 33; Grant 29]; m. Hadley 30 May 1661 Sarah Westwood [ Pynchon VR 223].
iii MIRIAM, bp. Windsor 12 March 1642[/3?] [ WiVR 33; Grant 29]; m. Dorchester 8 November 1661 Joseph Leeds [ DVR 20].
iv MOSES, bp. Windsor 16 November 1645 [ WiVR 33; Grant 29]; m. Windsor 25 November 1669 (as "Moses Cooke of Warronock") Elizabeth Clarke [ WiVR 12].
With second wife
v SAMUEL, b. Windsor 21 November 1650 [ Grant 29], bp. Windsor 22 November 1650 [ WiVR 33];
vi ELIZABETH, b. Windsor 7 August 1653 [ WiVR 33: Grant 29]; by about 1677 Samuel Parsons [ NEHGR 148:219].
vii NOAH, b. Windsor 14 June 1657 [ WiVR 44; Grant 29];
ASSOCIATIONS: Aaron Cooke's mother was widowed the year after his birth, and she soon married THOMAS FORD , in whose family Cooke came to New England [ TAG 11:179-80]. COMMENTS: In his accounting of "what children has been born in Windsor from our beginning hither," compiled on 17 August 1677, Matthew Grant reported for "C[aptain] Aron Cook" seven children [ Grant 91]. (Pope also gives Aaron Cooke an eldest child Nathaniel, but Nathaniel Cooke of Windsor married in 1649, which would make him too old to be a son of Aaron.) Aaron Cooke had relatively few debt suits at court in the 1640s and 1650s [ RPCC 46, 90, 102, 115, 119]. At court in May 1656, Janne Maton of London successfully sued "Capt. Aron Cooke" for a debt of £26 [ RPCC 162]. On 4 December 1656 "Nicholas Maber servant to Capt. Cooke" was ordered to pay his master for corn he "feloniously took from him an paid to the Irishmen" [ RPCC 171]. On 4 March 1657[/8] Edward Messenger sued Capt. "Aron Cooke" for detaining a sow [ RPCC 186]. On 15 May 1650 and 7 June 1660, Timothy Trall sued "Capt. Aaron Cooke" for "defaming him in open Court" and won a small judgment [ RPCC 212, 214, 215]. Trumbull provides a concise but excellent summary of the life of Aaron Cooke [ Northampton Hist 415-18].
Thomas Ford 1, 2 was born 3 before 1591. He died 4 on 28 Nov 1676 in Northampton, Massachusetts. He married Ann.
Other marriages:Chard, Elizabeth
Anderson, Robert Charles , The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633 [database online] , Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2000.
THOMAS FORD
ORIGIN: Dorchester, Dorsetshire MIGRATION: 1630 in Mary & John FIRST RESIDENCE: Dorchester REMOVES: Windsor 1637, Northampton 1672 FREEMAN: Requested 19 October 1630 and admitted 18 May 1631 [ MBCR 1:79, 366]. In list of Windsor freemen, 11 October 1669 [ CCCR 2:519]. OFFICES: Chosen Dorchester selectman, 8 October 1633, 27 June 1636 [ DTR 3, 16]; Dorchester fenceviewer, 24 May 1635, 10 February 1634/5 [ DTR 6, 10]; committee to collect rate for fort, 6 January 1633/4 [ DTR 5]; committee to lay out land, 2 November 1635 [ DTR 12]. Deputy to Connecticut General Court from Windsor, 8 March 1637/8, 5 April 1638, 11 April 1639, 9 April 1640, 9 April 1641 (marked absent), April 1644, 18 May 1654 [ CCCR 1:13, 17, 27, 46, 64, 103, 256]. Connecticut committee on livestock, 8 February 1640/1 [ CCCR 1:60]. Grand jury, 15 May 1662 [ CCCR 1:379]. ESTATE: Ordered to build forty feet of fence (as his proportion for two cows), 3 April 1633 [ DTR 1]; granted two acres of land, 17 April 1635 [ DTR 11]; granted six acres fresh marsh, 17 December 1635 [ DTR 14]; granted two acres marsh, 27 June 1636 [ DTR 17]. Granted "50 acres at Massacoe, whereof four & forty hath been improved by him by plowing & mowing," 8 September 1653 [ CCCR 1:247]. On 14 May 1663 the "Court in answer to the request of Thomas Forde, which was to have some allowance in respect of his land sold to Mr. Fitch, which the said Forde forfeited to the country by mortgage, they granted him the sum of thirty pounds" [ CCCR 1:405], and on 16 October 1663 the "Court having considered the request of Tho[mas] Forde, by their vote d[eclare] that they see no cause to give Goodman Forde the six pounds odd, that he d[esires] in reference to his land at Podunck, now in Mr. Jos[eph] Fitche's hand" [ CCCR 1:409]. The inventory of the estate of Thomas Ford was taken 4 January 1676/7 and totalled £195 17s. 9d., with no real estate included [ HamPR 1:187]. BIRTH: By about 1591 based on date of first marriage. DEATH: Northampton 28 November 1676 [ Pynchon VR 157]. MARRIAGE: (1) Bridport, Dorsetshire, 19 June 1616 Elizabeth Cooke; she was Elizabeth Chard, widow of Aaron Cooke, and mother of AARON COOKE [ TAG 11:179-80]; she d. Windsor 18 April 1643 [ Grant 80 shows the death in this year, but not the day and month, the source ofwhich has not been found]. (2) Hartford 7 November 1644 "Ann Scott widow" [ HaVR 605], widow of Thomas Scott; she died Northampton 5 May 1675 [ Corbin , citing Northampton church records]. CHILDREN:
With first wife
i JOANNA, bp. Bridport 8 June 1617 [ TAG 16:41]; m. Dorchester 6 November 1633 ROGER CLAP .
ii ABIGAIL, bp. Bridport 8 October 1619 [ TAG 16:41]; m. by about 1637 as his second wife John Strong [ Waterman Gen 640-43].
iii THOMAS, bp. Holy Trinity, Dorchester, Dorsetshire, 21 September 1623; bur. there 6 October 1623 [ TAG 16:41].
iv HEPZIBAH, bp. Holy Trinity, Dorchester, 15 May 1625 [ TAG 16:41]; m. (1) Richard Lyman, son of RICHARD LYMAN ; m. (2) Northampton 7 October 1664 John Marsh [ Pynchon VR 141].
v HANNAH, bp. Holy Trinity, Dorchester, 1 February 1628/9; bur. there 28 March 1629 [ TAG 16:41].
With second wife
vi ANN, b. say 1657; m. Windsor 12 March 1676[/7] Thomas Newberry of Windsor [ CTVR 15]. ASSOCIATIONS: Through his first marriage Thomas Ford became stepfather of AARON COOKE [ TAG 11:179-80]. COMMENTS: Thomas Scott's daughters all married in the early 1640s, so their mother must have been born very early in the century (if not before 1600), and all these daughters were probably born in the 1620s. But the widow of Thomas Scott, after her marriage with Thomas Ford, is supposed to have had a daughter who married in 1676/7, and so may have been born about 1657. For all this to happen, the widow of Thomas Scott must have been a second wife, and not the mother of his daughters. BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTE: As with other families which quickly daughtered out, the best treatments of Thomas Ford appear in various "all-my-ancestor" books. One excellent account by DeForest is replete with biographical data and other information which places Ford in historical context [ Moore Anc 248-63]; unfortunately, however, DeForest pads his account with an overlong extract from Roger Clap's memoirs, which is perhaps justifed because a daughter of Thomas Ford married Roger Clap, but which does not really have much to say about Ford. A more concise, but more genealogically informative version is that prepared by Mary Holman [ Stevens-Miller Anc 1:354-56]. The basic research on the English records for Thomas Ford was published by Jacobus and Torrey in 1939 [ TAG 16:41-43]. In this article are some records for a Thomas Ford of Powerstock, Dorsetshire, which may or may not be relevant to our Thomas Ford. Torrey had earlier presented evidence on AARON COOKE which showed that he was stepson rather than son-in-law of Thomas Ford [ TAG 11:179-80].New England Genealogical and Historical Register. 1889. Vol. Page 153.
In footnote: "Thomas Ford and family came from England to Dorchester in the year 1630; and he was made freeman the same year. He had four daughters. Abigail married John Strong, the ancestor of Gov. Caleb Strong. Joanna became the wife of Roger Clap whom she married Nov. 6, 1633, when in the 17th year of her age; they lived together in the conjugal relation 57 years, and had 14 children, the youngest of whom, named Supply, Judge Sewall, in his Journal, styles 'a very desirable man.' Another daughter of Thomas Ford wedded Aaron Cooke [note: Aaron Cooke was actually a step-son -- see above]; Hepzibah married Richard Lyman.
Thomas Ford, Ensign Stoughton, William Phelps and William Gaylord were appointed by the General Court, March 4, 1633-4, 'to set the bounds between Boston and Roxbury'. Thomas Ford had a grant of land in Dorchester, June 27, 1636, and not far from that time, it may be, went to Windsor. On the 16th of January, 1636, old-style, two acres of land in Dorchester, on Mr. Ludlow's neck, were 'ordered' to John Holland, it being land formerly granted to Thomas Ford; also a 'little plott of marsh' without inclosure, Holland paying said Ford 'the charges he hath been at in ditching.' Mr. Ford was an active and useful man, both in Dorchester and in Windsor, and his name appears a number of times in the records of those towns. In 1633, the town of Dorchester ordered that a fort be built 'upon the Rocke above Mr. Johnson's' and a double rate to that end be paid to Thomas Ford and Roger Clap 'at the house of the said Thommas Ford.' While in Dorchester he was one of the twelve men selected by the plantation for ordering their affairs. He was chosen to that office June 27, 1636; constable in Windsor in 1654; approved to be made freeman at that place Oct 4, 1669 (Register, v. 247); was on the Grand Jury in 1662. He had a grant of 50 acres of land at Massncoe, now Simsbury, Conn., 'whereof forty-four acres had been improved by plowing and mowing as it was measured by Matthew Graunt'' ancestor of the late President Grant.
Mr. Ford married for his second wife Ann Scott, widow of Thomas Scott, of Hartford, Conn., Nov 7, 1644. Register xiii, 53. He subsequently removved to Northampton, Mass., where he died Nov 9, 1676. -- W.B. Trask"
Ann died 1 on 5 May 1675 in Northampton, Massachusetts. She married Thomas Ford.
Other marriages:Scott, Thomas
They had the following children:
F i Ann Ford
Thomas Scott 1 died . He married Ann.
Ann died 1 on 5 May 1675 in Northampton, Massachusetts. She married Thomas Scott.
Other marriages:Ford, Thomas
Roger Clap 1 died . He married 2 Joanna Ford on 6 Nov 1633 in Dorchester, Dorsetshire, England.
Joanna Ford [Parents] was christened 1 on 8 Jun 1617 in Bridport, Dorsetshire, England. She died . She married 2 Roger Clap on 6 Nov 1633 in Dorchester, Dorsetshire, England.
John Strong 1 died . He married 2 Abigail Ford about 1637.
Abigail Ford [Parents] was christened 1 on 8 Oct 1619 in Bridport, Dorsetshire, England. She died . She married 2 John Strong about 1637.
Thomas Newberry 1 died . He married 2 Ann Ford on 12 Mar 1676/1677 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut.
Ann Ford [Parents] was born 1 about 1657. She died . She married 2 Thomas Newberry on 12 Mar 1676/1677 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut.
Albert George Marshall [Parents] 1 was born 2, 3, 4, 5 in Apr 1877 in Pennsylvania. He died . He married 6 Sara L. about 1903.
Enumerated in 1880 US Census, 3rd Ward, McKeesport, Allegheny, PA, FHL Film 1255088, Natl Archives Film T9-1088, Page 404D, with father Get. Marshall: male, single, white, age 3, born PA, parents born PA
Sara L. 1 was born 2 about 1880 in Pennsylvania. She died . She married 3 Albert George Marshall about 1903.
They had the following children:
M i Richard Morris Marshall was born 1, 2 in 1908 in Pennsylvania. He died . M ii Albert Marshall 1 was born 2 about 1913 in Pennsylvania. He died .
Howard Johnson Marshall [Parents] 1, 2, 3, 4 was born 5, 6, 7 in Sep 1866 in Pennsylvania. He died 8 in 1940. He married Hattie Josephine Steer.
Other marriages:Stewart, Eolia Katherine
**Family history says that Howard left his family (probably after 1900). Edward Kornhauser (b. 1925) remembered his grandmother, Eolia Katherine, being told that her former husband had died. She had very little reaction. Both of them probably died after 1930.****
Enumerated at age 14 in 1880 census in Redstone, Fayette County, PA with uncle Johnson Carter, age 28, farm hand. Also, Ellen E. Carter, 25, and Charles C. Carter 6/12. All born in PA
Enumerated in 1880 US Census, 3rd Ward, McKeesport, Allegheny, PA, FHL Film 1255088, Natl Archives Film T9-1088, Page 404D, with father Get. Marshall: male, single, white, age 13, born PA, parents born PA, attends school
Trumbull Co, Ohio Directory 1889-90
Marshall J. Howard contractor and builder, 38 Washington av, Warren, OH - 1889, 1890McKeesport Directory, 1908; R.L.Polk & Co. Publishers, Pittsburg, Pa. Copyright 1907. pp 386-387.
Marshall Anna V., student, bds 330 6th av.
Marshall Cathleen, nurse McKeesport Hospital, bds same.
Marshall Florence M, seamstress, bds 1342 Jenny Lind.
Marshall Francis J., osteopath 341 5th av, h Pittsburg Pa.
Marshall Howard J, contr, h 330 6th av.
Marshall James B, l;ab, rms 142 7th av.
Marshall Joseph H, porter P R R, h 1320 Tube Works.
Marshall Mabel M, student, bds 330 6th av.
Marshall Samuel P, lab, h 1342 Jenny Lind.
Marshall Wm, pattern mkr, h rr 321 Shaw av.
Hattie Josephine Steer was born 1 in 1882. She died . She married Howard Johnson Marshall.
They had the following children:
F i Living
John Galbraith 1 died . He married Nancy Marshall.
Nancy Marshall 1 died . She married John Galbraith.
They had the following children:
M i Orville Morrow Galbraith
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