Descendants of William Carpenter of Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony, now part of Bristol County, MA

Notes


1405. Elizabeth Runyon Carpenter

Number 890 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 154.
She married and went west with her husband.  See husband's notes.


James Wisner

NAME: Wisner not Wishner.
Elizabeth Runyon Carpenter m. James  Wisner (John, John, Kendrick, Johannes)
of Ornage Cunty, NY.       m. 2nd Hannah Smith dau of Henry
moved to Onondaga Co. in 1793 and died there 1828 (we have the will).
ELIZABETH (RUNYON) CARPENTER married JAMES WISNER of Warwick, Or. Co.  This is
my line.  Her daughter ELIZABETH WISNER, married JOEL MELVIN of Ontario Co.
and her son JOLENE WISNER married Joel's sister, LUCY MELVIN.  Both ELIZABETH
and JOLENE named their children MORREL or MORELL.  One was also named ADDISON.
Per Phoebe: On Tue, 2 Jun 1998 15:32:32 EDT MzCortez@aol.com .

E-MAIL: 10 Jan 2000 MzCortez@aol.com wrote:
> Dear Folks,
> On Nov 6, 1809 James Wisner who had gone from Orange Co. NY to Onondaga Co.
> NY about 8 yrs. previously, was granted guardianship of the following
> children in Onondaga County:
> Niles Camp inf son of Miles Camp late of the town of Camillus, who was about
> 3 yrs. old.
> Lucinda Corey, inf dau of Thomas Corey late of Camillus who was  about 14 yrs
> old.
> Does anyone have any information on any of the above or know if there was a
> relationship between the Camp and Corey children. I have no information that
> indicates a relationship between the Wisners, Carpenters, or Runyons and
> either the Camps or Coreys.
> Could Camp be another form of the name, DeCamp.
> James Wisner was the husband of Elizabeth Runyon Carpenter, dau of Moses
> Carpenter.
> Thank you,  Phoebe.
> Researching:  Moses Carpenter son of John Carpenter and Ruth Coe (?)
>               Mary Thompson dau of James Thompson and Mariah McDowell?
> NY: LI: Ruth Coe, Onondaga Co. Carpenter, Wisner (Munro, Reed, Redman)
> Chautaqua Co. Joel Melvin Orange Co.  Wisner, McDowell, Thompson.
E-MAIL: continued ... 13 Mar 2000
Dear Robin and John,
If I had the time to ply thru all the stuff I have.  Anyway, I am also
studying the Thompsons as my James Wisner, who married Elizabeth Runyon
Carpenter was the son of MARY THOMPSON.  Her parents are believed to be JAMES
THOMPSON and MARAH MCDOWELL.  There seem to be at least two Thompson
families, and sometimes I suspect three in Orange Co. and they are very
closely associated with the Carpenters, by location/deeds, etc. anyway.
Phoebe.
MORE:
JAMES WISNER was the grandson of ANNA (JAYNE) WISNER.   According to
one of the Jayne books.


1406. Joanna Carpenter

Number 891 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 154.
In a letter from her uncle John Carpenter in 1797 to his brother Isaac states
his brother's daughter Joanna was married.


1408. Abigail Carpenter

Number 893 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 154.


David Munro

Posted by Kathy Crowell on Mon, 12 Oct 1998
The township of Camillus, embracing the present towns of Elbridge and Van
Buren, was people mostly with settlers from New England. Among these, in the
year 1799, only nine years later than the first white
resident of the town, came David Munro, then a lad fourteen years old,
born December 8, 1784, and fifth in the line of descent from John Munro, who
emigrated from Scotland and settled in Massachusetts at an early period.
David accompanied his father, Squire Munro, who had been a soldier in the
Revolutionary war, and who then in the prime of life, being forty-two years of
age, came from New England, bringing with him his four sons,
John, David, Nathan and Philip A., all of them since well known throughout
the county, and settled near where the village of Elbridge now stands.
As David grew up to manhood, he developed into a large and powerful man, fully
marked with the characteristic family traits of enterprise, untiring industry,
economy and self-reliance.
In 1807 he was married to Abigail Carpenter, of the same town, and in 1808 he
purchased a farm on lot number eighty, Camillus, and settled where Camillus
village now stands, where only two frame houses were then erected.
The country was then covered with forests, and Mr. Munro cleared up his farm,
which was heavily timbered, doing much of the labor with his own hands. Here he
resided for fifty-eight years, enlarging his farm by the purchase of adjacent
lands from time to time. He died May 10, 1866, being over eighty years of age
at the time
of his decease. His wife was six years younger than himself, having been born
December 3, 1790, and she surviving him nearly two years.
There were eight children born of the marriage, of whom six still survive,
viz.: John C. Munro, born October 17, 1809; James M. Munro, born November 13,
1813;
David A. Munro, born August 18, 1818; Mary A., wife of Thomas W. Hill, of
Elbridge; Hannah, wife of Payne Bigelow, of Baldwinsville; and Lydia H., wife
of David Porter, of Lysander.
Mr. Munro carried on a large and very successful business in farming at the
earlier portion of his life, but the necessity of finding investments for the
constantly
increasing results of his foresight, energy and economy, occupied the most of
his attention in later years. He was the first postmaster in Camillus village,
holding the
office from 1811 to 1824, when he was succeeded by James R. Lawrence. He held
the office of justice of the peace for many years, and was also one of the
associate judges of the Court of Common Pleas for a long time, becoming
familiarly known to the people of the county as Judge Munro, by which
title he was commonly called. He was a member of the State Legislature in 1818,
1819, 1822, 1836, 1841, and again in 1842.
He was also a member of the convention which framed the third Constitution of
the State in 1846. He was a leading director in, and for a long time president
of the
old Bank of Salina. He was also an influential director in the Salt Springs
Bank from its incorporation to the time of his decease--an excellent portrait
of him being
engraved on the bills issued by that bank. There was no business enterprise
with which he was connected which he did not inspire with the spirit of
success. He was
constantly in contact with the leading minds of the county, and although his
early education was limited, his strong native sense, natural dignity of
presence, and the
innate force of his character, never failed to make due impression on every one
he met. In person he was tall, of full habit, and corpulent in later
life--hardy to the last
degree, riding or driving barehanded in the coldest weather, and he never
postponed a business engagement on account of storms or railroads.
Mr. Munro's manner of address was courteous but impressive, and his knowledge
of the men and events of the day was unsurpassed. Source: Bruce, Dwight H.
(Ed.), Onondaga's Centennial. Boston History Co., 1896, Vol. II, Biographical,
pp. 25-26.


3638. John C. Munro

CARPENTER, John Munro
Author: Kathy Crowell
Date: 3 Sep 1998 12:00 PM GMT
Classification: Biography
 John Munro Carpenter, "Syracuse, son of Calvin G. Carpenter, a Baptist clergyman, was born in
 the town of Romulus, N.Y., Aug. 13, 1842, and moved with his parents to Phelps, Ontario Co.,
 early in 1843, where he was reared on a farm. His mother was a daughter of Dea. John Munro, a
 member of an early and prominent family of Elbridge. Mr. Carpenter was married on March 11,
 1868, to Emma A., youngest daughter of George Draper, and in April, 1871, they came to
 Syracuse, where they have since resided. He was engaged in the insurance business here until
 1879, when he opened his present real estate office, one of the oldest in the city. In all his
 enterprises Mr. Carpenter has met with pronounced success, and in various ways has
 contributed not a little towards the growth and development of the city of his residence. His
 children are Grace L. (Mrs. Jesse T. Eddy), Stephen D. (a member of the U. S. navy), and
 Florence E." Source: Bruce, Dwight H. (Ed.), Onondaga's Centennial. Boston History Co., 1896,
 Vol. II, Family Sketches, p. 11.
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=message&r=rw&p=localities.northam.usa.states.newyork.counties.onondaga&m=6050


1409. Benjamin Carpenter

Number 886 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 153.
Family on page 275 & 276 (# 315).  A merchant.

E-MAIL:  Mon, 18 Dec 2000  From:  Robin Carpenter
... The 1790 U.S. Census lists three Carpenters in the town of Minisink in
Orange County NY:
Daniel          1-2-2-0-0
Benjamin        2-0-3-0-0
William         1-3-2-0-0
Benjamin and William are listed near each other, probably indicating
they were close neighbors.
(NOTE: Benjamin and William were son s of Benjamin & Eunice Carpenter. JRC)


Abigail Moore

She was 35 when she died.


3644. Benjamin Franklin Carpenter

Number 2118 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 275.
No family listed.  He was Merchant who resided in New York City.


3645. Dewitt Clinton Carpenter

Number 2119 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 276.
No family listed.  He was Merchant.


3646. Susan Abigail Carpenter

Number 2120 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 276.


Jane Blane

NAME: Jane Blane or Jane Morse.


3647. Andrew Jackson Carpenter

Number 2121 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 276.
No family listed.

Same person???
http://www.heritagequestonline.com/prod/genealogy/censusindeximagepage?l-offset=3&hit-count=5&orderBy=&given-name=Andrew&navId=18097&series-id=9&state-id=1&sur-name=Carpenter
1870   >   New York   >   WESTCHESTER   >   YONKERS       Series: M593   Roll: 1116   Page: 648
CARPENTER  ANDREW   38  M  W  NY  NY  WESTCHESTER  YONKERS  1870
Sarah 32 F W NY
Fred'k 14 m W NY
Ida 13 F W NY
Lilian 10 F W NY
William 6 M W NY
Howard 5 M W NY
Carpenter, Jane 62 F W NY


1410. William Carpenter

Number 887 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 153.
Family on page 276 (# 316).  A Farmer.
Letters of Administration were given to his wife Azuba or to his father-in-law
Freegift (Freegist) Cooley dated 30 Dec, 1809.

E-MAIL:  Mon, 18 Dec 2000  From:  Robin Carpenter
... The 1790 U.S. Census lists three Carpenters in the town of Minisink in
Orange County NY:
Daniel          1-2-2-0-0
Benjamin        2-0-3-0-0
William         1-3-2-0-0
Benjamin and William are listed near each other, probably indicating
they were close neighbors.
(NOTE: Benjamin and William were son s of Benjamin & Eunice Carpenter. JRC)


3648. Lewis Carpenter

Number 2122 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 276.
No family listed. A farmer.  He had two or three children.


1414. Michael Carpenter

Number 305 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 84
Family on page 154 (#131)
Residence Goshen, west division.  Appointed by Gov. Clinton an Ensign of a
company of Militia on 1 June 1776.  He married Dolly Smith of Goshen on
28 Dec 1777.  They were received into the church in June 1786 and four of their
children were baptised there: Michael aged 18, Elinor, Sarah and Nehemiah in
1810.  Son Michael was ordained into the ministry 22 April 1830.

E-MAIL:
From: "Terry Carpenter"
To:
Sent: Sunday, November 20, 2005 3:07 AM
Subject: Carpenter Marriages from Goshen, Orange Co. NY Presbyterian Church 1777
> These are probably in DAR records, posting them
> here for the list archives.  From the Washington
> Post issue of 20 May 1934 p. A8:
>
> "Genealogists Trace Families By Marriages / Old
> New York Records Industriously Copied by D.A.R. /
> The following marriages were recorded on the
> register of the Presbyterian Church at Goshen,
> Orange County, N.Y., and were copied for the
> Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine by
> Lila James Roney.
> Jan. 12, 1777 - James Carpenter and Mary Wells
> Jan. 26, 1777 - Moses Carpenter and Hannah Smith
> March 2, 1777 - William Carpenter and Hannah Vail
> March 15, 1777 - Samuel Carpenter and Sarah Smith
> Dec. 28, 1777 - Michael Carpenter and Dolly
> Smith"


3651. Dorothy Carpenter

Number 896 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.


3652. Hannah Carpenter

Number 897 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.


3653. Mary Carpenter

Number 898 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.


3654. Eleanor Carpenter

Number 899 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.


3655. Michael Carpenter

Number 900 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.
A Presbyterian minister and he went west.
No family listed.


3656. Sarah Carpenter

Number 901 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.


1415. William Carpenter

Number 306 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 84
Family on page 155 (#132)
He resided in Walkill, NY.  A farmer and currier.
Per page 155, William Carpenter of Walkill, NY, a tanner, will dated Sept. 12,
1814, mentions wife Hannah, daughters Eleanor, Phebe, and Abigail, sons William
and Benjamin.  Children not mentioned probably died prior.

Note: Wallkill is now in Orange County, NY and a portion of it was broken off and became Wallkill Hamlet in Ulster County, NY.

There are two similar or duplicate lines involving the descendants of Solomon Carpenter.  Either the Ensign or the Colonel Solomon Carpenter that is.
This William Carpenter (RIN 12763) appears to have his duplicate as RIN 60567.

E-MAIL:
From: "Terry Carpenter"
To:
Sent: Sunday, November 20, 2005 3:07 AM
Subject: Carpenter Marriages from Goshen, Orange Co. NY Presbyterian Church 1777
> These are probably in DAR records, posting them
> here for the list archives.  From the Washington
> Post issue of 20 May 1934 p. A8:
>
> "Genealogists Trace Families By Marriages / Old
> New York Records Industriously Copied by D.A.R. /
> The following marriages were recorded on the
> register of the Presbyterian Church at Goshen,
> Orange County, N.Y., and were copied for the
> Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine by
> Lila James Roney.
> Jan. 12, 1777 - James Carpenter and Mary Wells
> Jan. 26, 1777 - Moses Carpenter and Hannah Smith
> March 2, 1777 - William Carpenter and Hannah Vail
> March 15, 1777 - Samuel Carpenter and Sarah Smith
> Dec. 28, 1777 - Michael Carpenter and Dolly
> Smith"


3658. Samuel Carpenter

Number 903 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.
No family listed.  Possible twin to Hannah.


3659. Hannah Carpenter

Number 904 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.
No family listed.  Possible twin to Samuel.


3660. Phebe Carpenter

Number 905 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.
She and her husband resided in Cortland County, NY.  Her husband was a farmer
and a currier.


3662. Julia Carpenter

Number 907 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.


3663. Eleanor Carpenter

Number 908 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.


3666. Experience Carpenter

Number 911 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 155.


1416. Nehemiah Carpenter

Number 307 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 84
He resided in Walkill and Goshen in Orange county, NY.  Probably not married
per the above record.  Ancestor File lists a family for him though.

WILL: Will dated 1 Dec 1789 and proven 17 Jul 1790.  Wills to sister Hannah,
brothers Michael, William, James and Benjamin, nephew Solomon, eldest son of
Michael and William son of William.   NOTE: Does not mention wife or children!

He enlisted from Goshen in the Revolutionary war, was appointed by Gen. James
Clinton in 1776 as Quartermaster of his regiment.  He was in the assault of
Fort Montgomery in 1777. was taken prisoner and exchanged 25 Oct 1780, and was
appointed an Ensign.  He was honorably discharged 3 Nov 1783.
He was a member of the "Society of the Cincinnati"; his signiture was
on the roll. In a letter from John Schuyler, Secretary of the NY State
Society of the Cincinnati he says:
"While he was a prisoner, being a good writer, he made money in writing for the
British officers.  On one occasion he was called upon to get a drink of water
for one of the officers: the officer asked him if the water was poisoned, and
being very thristy himself he asked for the the cup, and he drank a very heavy
drink himself."
It is claimed that the foregoing record belongs to Nehemiah b. 29 June 1757,
the son of Nehemiah of Jamaica.  The compiler of the Carpenter Memorial thinks
this is a mistake and that it belongs to Nehemiah, son of Solomon of Goshen, b.
abt 1750.  It is evident that the latter served in the war and the State
Records refer to him when they speak of "Carpenter, Nehemiah, Ensign: appointed
29 June 1781, to date from 5 June 1779 when mustered as Ensign: late
Quartermaster of the 5th NY returned from captivity."  From official
records Nehemiah Carpenter, Ensign in 2nd NY Regiment: Phillip Cortland,
Colonel:Robert Cockran, Lt. Col., and Nicholas Fish, Major, 1777 to 1780.
The "Revolution Pledge Association" of the Goshen Precinct which contained
Goshen, Chester, Warwick, and a part of Blooming Grove, was signed  by the
folowing named CARPENTERs: James, Moses, Benjamin, Daniel, Samuel, Solomon,
Michael and William in 1775.  In Cornwell precinct were the signitures of John,
Benjamin, Timothy, Joseph Jr, John, Elijah, William and John - three Johns.
There can be added those that signed in Salisbury.

DEATH: Goshen Western Division.   SEE BELOW.
BIRTH: AF has birth as 1730 and the Carpenter Memorial has 1750.

E-MAIL: Submitted Tue, 4 Apr 2000 From: Phoebe Cortez at  MzCortez@aol.com.
She cites:   http://www.interment.net/data/us/ny/orange/cemetery_hill.htm .
Cemetery Hill Road Cemetery Middletown, Orange County, New York.
Contributed by Maude Conklin [mec@warwick.net].
Rte 17, to Orange County Fair grounds exit, make left at light, under next
light and make left on Cemetery road.  Large well maintained cemetery on your
right.  Recorded by Maude Conklin.  (partial listing)
Carpenter, Caroline J., w/o Nelson B. Carpenter 125/9/1883 - 56 yrs 2 mos 1 ds
Carpenter, Nehemia, 7/9/1790 - 40 yrs  (b. 1750)
Carpenter, Solomon, 6/24/1794 - 82 yrs (b. 1712)

OBIT: E-mail
Date: Sat, 10 Feb 2007 02:54:19 EST
From: Mzzcortezz@aol.com
Subject: [CARPENTER] death Nehemiah Carpenter
To: CARPENTER-L@rootsweb.com
Message-ID:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"

Died At Goshen, (New York) on the 10th ult. Mr. NEHEMIAH CARPENTER,  merchant
of that town. Per Penn Mercury and Univ. Adviser Aug 7, 1790


1417. James Carpenter

Number 308 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 84
Family on page 156 (#133)
Residence was in Goshen, a Merchant.  He was received into the church 22 June 1794.  Died aged 69 years.

E-MAIL: Tue, 10 Oct 2000 From: "Marcia Buffett"
Dear John:
Found this at the Fonda Archives today in a book entitled "Calendar of Wills". I love it because it is a collection of way back stuff that we can no longer actually get our hands on.
I'm researching the Dunning family who lived in the same area as my Carpenter family, ie. Hope and Northville, Hamilton Co. NY. Came across this:
Will of Jacob Dunning written 1770 Oct 15, probated Nov. 1, 1770 of Goshen precint, Orange Co., NY yeoman, mentions son John, Jacob and Benjamin, dau.. Bathsheba, Mehitabel and Mary. Real estate some in Wawayanda Patent and personal property. Exec. 3 sons Witnesses: James Carpenter of Orange co, schoolmaster, John Conkling and Elizabeth Dunning.
Don't know if you had all those Orange Co. Carpenter's or not but if you do, here is a tidbit for James..at least now we know he was a schoolmaster!
Marcia

E-MAIL:
From: "Analytix: RobinC"
To:
Sent: Thursday, April 21, 2005 1:54 PM
Subject: Trinity Church, NYC
Hello Carpenters:
I recently stopped by Trinity Church in Manhattan (NYC; Broadway just off
Wall Street), and reviewed the list of burials, finding six
Carpenters.  These Carpenters are all names I don't know at all (and I
don't find in ABC).  Here they are, in case someone can make use of them:
1.  George Carpenter, March 14, 1730 ae 65.
2.  George Pratt Carpenter
3.  Hallma, wife or Nemiagh Carpenter, Aug 10, 1755 ae 32.  (Yes, that's given as "Nemiagh")
4.  Hannah, daughter of James and Eleanor Carpenter Nov 5, 1775, ae 3 yrs.
5.  Harriet Carpenter, June 25, 1782, ae 52 years
6. John Carpenter, Nov 5, 1795, 18y, 10m, 21d.
Robin C.

E-MAIL:
From: "Terry Carpenter"
To:
Sent: Sunday, November 20, 2005 3:07 AM
Subject: Carpenter Marriages from Goshen, Orange Co. NY Presbyterian Church 1777
> These are probably in DAR records, posting them
> here for the list archives.  From the Washington
> Post issue of 20 May 1934 p. A8:
>
> "Genealogists Trace Families By Marriages / Old
> New York Records Industriously Copied by D.A.R. /
> The following marriages were recorded on the
> register of the Presbyterian Church at Goshen,
> Orange County, N.Y., and were copied for the
> Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine by
> Lila James Roney.
> Jan. 12, 1777 - James Carpenter and Mary Wells
> Jan. 26, 1777 - Moses Carpenter and Hannah Smith
> March 2, 1777 - William Carpenter and Hannah Vail
> March 15, 1777 - Samuel Carpenter and Sarah Smith
> Dec. 28, 1777 - Michael Carpenter and Dolly
> Smith"

WILL:
From: "Dennis Carpenter"
To:
Sent: Thursday, December 25, 2008 4:29 PM
Subject: [CARPENTER] 1817 Will of James Carpenter of Goshen, NY

Will of James Carpenter of Goshen, Orange, NY
dated March 14, 1817
mentions wife Mary
three children
daughter Mary, wife of Jeromus Johnson
daughter Fanny wife of Egbert Jansen
son James W. Carpenter
executors: son James W. Carpenter and my two sons in law Jeromus Johnson
and Egbert Jansen
witnesses: Thos. G. Evans, John Everett, Stephen Jackson
proved April 5, 1817
...
In the name of God Amen. I James Carpenter of the Town of Goshen in the
County of Orange and State of New York being weak in body but sound of
mind and understanding, Do this fourteenth day of March in the year one
thousand Eight hundred and seventeen make and publish this my last will
and Testament in manner following. First, I order and direct my
Executors herein after named to pay all my Just debts and funeral
expenses out of my Estate in short of time after my decease as
conveniently may be.
Secondly, To my beloved wife Mary Carpenter, give and bequeath the sum
of Three Thousand dollars also the one equal third part of my personal
estate after the payment of the debts, legacies and necessary expenses,
I also give to her a decent comfortable support and maintenance
(suitable to her justification) in my dwelling house and out of my
Estate for and during her natural life. --- Thirdly. To my daughter Mary
the wife of Jeromus Johnson, I give and bequeath the sum of Fifteen
Hundred dollars. To my daughter Fanny, the wife of Egbert Jansen, I give
& bequeath the sum of one Thousand Dollars also three feather beds,
bedding and furniture therefor complete, To my son James W Carpenter, I
give & devise all that certain lot or piece of land situate on the west
side of the main street in Goshen and adjoining the lands formerly of
Nathan Coleman, deceased, and Containing about Twenty five Acres to hold
the same to him, his heirs and assigns forever. I also give and bequeath
to my said son, James W Carpenter, all the monies I have heretofore
advanced to & for him & for the distillery. Fouthly, All the residue of
my Estate, real and personal. I give, devise and bequeath to my three
children, Mary Johnson, Fanny Jansen and James W Carpenter equally to be
divided between them. I have and to hold the same to them their heirs
and assigns forever, Fifthly, I do hereby nominate and appoint my son,
James W Carpenter, and my two sons in law, Jeremus Johnson and Egbert
Jansen, Executors to this my last will and Testament hereby revoking all
former & other will or wills by me theretofore made. IN WITNESS whereof
I have hereto set my hand and seal the day and year first above written
-----
Signed, sealed, published, pronounced & declaired by the said Testator
as is for his last will & Testament in the presence of us, who at his
request in his presence and in the presence of each other have
subscribed our names as witnesses thereto. The words _ and in lieu of
her dower in my said estate _ first obliterated. ------
Thos. G. Evans
John Everett
Stephen Jackson
James Carpenter SS
*
SAMPUBCO
Orange County, New York Will Testators Index CARPENTER, JAMES GOSHEN
NY-36-F-211


3669. Mary Carpenter

Number 913 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 156.
She married and resided with her merchant husband in New York City.

NEHGS - Marriage Notices from the New York Evening Post, 1801-1890
At Goshen on Tuesday the 2nd instant by the Rev. Mr. Ker, MR. JEROMUS JOHNSON, merchant of this City to MISS MARY CARPENTER, eldest daugh- ter of James Carpenter, Esq. of that place.  Date: 1802 3/8


Jeromus Egbert Johnson

Date: Sat, 10 Feb 2007 03:13:17 EST
From: Mzzcortezz@aol.com
Subject: [CARPENTER] marriage Mary Carp of goshen NY
To: CARPENTER-L@rootsweb.com
Message-ID:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"

NEHGS - Marriage Notices from the New York Evening Post, 1801-1890
Married  At Goshen (NY) on Tuesday, the 2d inst. by the Rev. Mr.  Ker, Mr.
Jeromus Johnson, merchant of this city to MISS MARY CARPENTER eldest  daughter
of JAMES CARPENTER, Esq of that place. Dated: 3/8/1802


3670. Frances "Fanny" Carpenter

Number 914 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 156.

NEHGS - Marriage Notices from the New York Evening Post, 1801-1890
At Goshen, Orange Co., N.Y. Thursday eve last by Rev Mr. Fisk, DR EGBERT JANSEN to FRANCES CARPENTER dau of James of that place. Date: 1817 1/17


Egbert Jensen Dr.

NAME: Jensen or Jenson.


3671. Eleanor Carpenter

Number 915 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 156.


3672. James W. Carpenter

Number 912 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 156.
No family listed.


1418. Benjamin Carpenter

Number 309 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 84
Family on page 156 (#134)
Residence, Minisink (now Deer Park) Orange county, NY which was sometimes
called "Carpenter's Point" owing to the Carpenters residing there.

He was in the Revolutionary war with Nehemiah, his brother, at the time that
Fort Mongomery was taken.  Benjamin was barely made his escape by throwing his
gun into the boat which was several feet from the shore, and plunging into the
river, caught hold of the edge of the boat, and thus made his escape.  He was
very athletic and active.

BENJAMIN CARPENTER -- Benjamin, son of Ensign Solomon Carpenter, was born at
Goshen April 15, 1755. He wed Margaret Decker, daughter of Major Decker. They
lived at Minisink (later Deer Park), N.Y. at a place sometimes called
Carpenter's Point. Benjamin served in the Revolution and, according to the
History of Orange County, made a bold escape when Fort Montgomery was taken by
the British. He died in 1821.
See Page 55 of the Col. Solomon Book.

MARRIAGE: Probably married twice?  Lucretia and Margaret Decker? Margaret is
probably the mother to the children listed. Margaret is not listed as spouse in the Carpenter Memorial.
As of Feb 2013 Lucretia was removed as spouse.

E-MAIL: Benjamin Carpenter/Katherine Westbrook bible record Port Jervis, NY.
Wed, 15 Dec 1999 From: Phoebe Cortez at: MzCortez@aol.com
Published in the Genealogical and Historical column
of the Wantage Recorder newspapers dated 18 May 1934
and 25 May 1934 - editted by Charles Stickney, written by
W. J. Coulter in his series on the Westbrook Family is
this transcription of the Benjamin Carpenter Bible presented
to the Minisink Valley Historical Society by Mrs Benj. Van
Fleet, Jan 30, 1920:
This self-interpreting bible containing the sacred text of the
old and new testaments by the late Reverend John Brown,
Minister of the Gospel, Haddington, NY printed by Hodge &
Campbell and sold at their respective bookshops MDCCXCII.
Family Record:
Benjamin Carpenter was born April 15th in the year of our Lord,
1755 in (in the vicinity of Middletown or thereabouts)
Margaret Decker Carpenter was born April 9th, 1770.
Sally Carpenter (dau.) was born May 2nd, 1790.
Eleanor Carpenter was born November 16th, 1793.
John Carpenter was born Feb. 6, 1796.
Solomon Carpenter was born Sept. 19, 1800 - 11 o'clock
in the morning; deceased, Dec. 17, 1885.
Benjamin Carpenter was born Jan. 17, 1803, on Monday,
in the morning.  He married Catherine Westbrook (child of
Severyne & Blandina Westbrook, as mentioned in father's
will)
James Carpenter was born April 6, 1805, Saturday, four o'clock
in the afternoon.
William Carpenter was born Jan. 26, 1807, deceased Jan. 2, 1809.
Margaret Carpenter was born Dec. 20, 1809 on Wednesday morning.
Hannah Carpenter was born Aug. 15, 1812, in the afternoon at seven
o'clock.
Benjamin Carpenter died Feb. 26 in the year of our Lord, 1820.  See
his and his wife's tombstone down near the Tri State Point Monument
at the very tip of Laurel Grove Cemetery, Port Jervis, NY
Benjamin Carpenter died Dec. 17, 1828.
Margaret Carpenter died Aug. 13, 1853.
Banjamin Carpenter, Junr.; was born Jan. 17, 1803
Katherine Westbrook, wife of Benjamin Carpenter, was born
31st of ____ (We omitted to copy month ) 1807 - the Church
record says July.
Lydia Carpenter was born April 27, 1827.
Margaret Carpenter was born Jan. 27, 1829.
John Carpenter was born Dec. 12, 1834.
Soveryne W. Carpenter was born Aug. 7, 1836.
Mary Emma Campbell was born Dec. 4, 1852.
Benjamin Manley Gibbs was born Oct. 17, 1861, Thursday.
Lydia Carpenter was married March 2, 1852.
Margaret Carpenter was married Dec. 30, 1856.
John Carpenter died Aug. 3, 1853.
Lydia Carpenter died March 3, 1854.
Mary Emma Campbell died Aug. 12, 1857.
Soveryne W. Campbell died Aug. 20, 1860.
Benjamin Manley Gibbs died Nov. 19, 1863, Thursday.
Cateham (Katherine) Carpenter deid Nov. 13, 1876.
Benjamin Carpenter died April 20, 1878.
Jonas Gibbs died April 20, 1891.
We have no further record on the Carpenter family."
The above transcription is exactly as it appears in the
newspaper - it may be copied to the Carpenter-L
mailing list.  I do not see a marriage of a Carpenter
to a Gibbs or Campbell in the Sussex county civil
register which suggests the marriages took place
in Orange County, NY.

http://www.minisink.org/hisdoor.html
An Extraordinary Race

On one occasion James D. Swartwout who formerly owned the Laux farm in the Neversink Valley; David Swartwout who owned the farm which is now occupied by the deserted oil station on the Huguenot road and Cornelius Westfall who was the owner of the farm directly across the Delaware over in Pike County from Mr. Wolverton's West Main Street this city had gone down to Easton in the same crew. Westfall being the steersman.

The Messrs. Swartwout who owned the raft made a quick sale and the next morning about 5 o=clock, at the finish of breakfast, Mr. James Swartwout addressing Mr. Westfall said, "Duck Legs, we're going home and you may go with us if you will agree that the last man at Uncle Ben Carpenter's will treat!" Uncle Ben Carpenter, great, great grandfather of Dr. C. N. Skinner, on his grandmother's side, had the hotel and ferry at Carpenter's Point, nearly 60 miles away. They had lunches prepared and the 60 miles race was on. James Swartwout was a large man, one of the strongest men in the valley and had a seven leagues stride.
...

DEATH: Also shown as Died Minisink, Orange, NY.
Benjamin Carpenter died Feb. 26 in the year of our Lord, 1820.  See
his and his wife's tombstone down near the Tri State Point Monument
at the very tip of Laurel Grove Cemetery, Port Jervis, NY


Margaret Decker

Daughter of Major Decker.


3675. Eleanor "Emnor" Carpenter

Lived at Deer Park, N.Y.


3677. Soloman Carpenter

Solomon Carpenter was born Sept. 19, 1800 - 11 o'clock
in the morning; deceased, Dec. 17, 1885.


3679. James Carpenter

James Carpenter was born April 6, 1805, Saturday, four o'clock
in the afternoon.


3680. William Carpenter

William Carpenter was born Jan. 26, 1807, deceased Jan. 2, 1809.


3681. Margaret Carpenter

She married a farmer.
Margaret Carpenter was born Dec. 20, 1809 on Wednesday morning


3682. Hannah Carpenter

Hannah Carpenter was born Aug. 15, 1812, in the afternoon at seven
o'clock.


1419. Anthony Willett Carpenter

Number 1042  in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 166.
Family on page 787 (#1682) -  Resided in Goshen.

CHILDREN: Two Johns who married?  What was the name difference? Both had children? Confusing.
Nope! Transcription error. The first died young.

E-MAIL:
From: Brian Kasler
To: 'John R. Carpenter'
Cc: 'Charles Hutson' ; 'Barbara'
Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2010 1:55 PM
Subject: RE: Amanda Malvina Carpenter Hutson
Just so everyone knows, I spoke today with the Historian of the New Utrecht Reformed Church and he said those children buried in their cemetery were not of John and Mary Carpenter. They belonged to John and Margaret Carpenter. This appears not to apply to our family. Someone along the line took the abbreviation for Margaret as meaning Mary.
Brian


Mary Moffatt

Father:  John MOFFAT (AFN:1NLW-WBP)
Mother:  Margaret LITTLE (AFN:1NLW-WQ6)

BOOK: Moffat Genealogies: Descent from Rev. John Moffat of Ulster County New York by R. Burnham Moffat, Privately printed 1909 by the Press of L. Middleditch Co., New York 1910.
On line at: http://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/m/moffat.pdf


3685. John Carpenter

Number 8376 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 787.  No family listed.

E-MAIL: From: Marcia Buffet
To: John R. Carpenter
Cc: KenW
Sent: Monday, September 30, 2002 11:43 AM
Subject: Another whole John Carpenter line!
Dear John:
For ages I have been trying to sort out the William B. Carpenter line and the Samuel B. Carpenter line (mostly to make sure that it didn't fit into my direct line as I have Sam's and Williams in about the same area).
(I THINK this is Union Mills Cem, Broadalbin NY but my notes are not clear as I was doing several cemeteries at once.)
William B. goes back to a John Carpenter born 1790 (don't know parentage of this John, do you???).
John Carpenter (b. 1790) died 5/20/1862 age 72 married to an Abigail born 1808 died Aug 9, 1857 age 47
dau. Anna Maria b. 1820 died Oct 21, 1849 in her 20th yr.
dau. Helena Mary b. 1832 died Jan 15, 1854 in her 22nd yr.
son William B. Carpenter b. 1834. He died in Battle of Wilderness near Spottsylvania Courthouse May 11, 1864. He was enlisted in the 77th Regiment NY Vol. Company E.
His wife was Angeline (?)  b. 1850 died Feb. 16, 1890 age 40.
So at least now I know that William B. goes back to this John. Where do we connect him??
...
Marcia Buffett pinezone@superior.net


3687. Anthony W. Carpenter a Twin

Number 8377 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 787.  No family listed.
A twin or are the birth/bap dates reflect two people?

http://genforum.genealogy.com/carpenter/messages/8136.html
Posted by: Sharyn (ID *****2722) Date: April 09, 2006 at 12:15:04
In Reply to: Re: ATTNY WILLIAM C. CARPENTER b. 1803 m. RUTH MABEE EASTPORT TO NY CITY by John R. Carpenter  of 8138
John, Thank you very much for your reply and the great piece of information you shared so kindly! I had no idea Sea Cliff was home to some Carpenter Loyalists but this could account for why William C. Carpenter went to Queens Co while his other siblings settled in Eastport.
Here is why I think your clue is so valuable:
William C. Carpenter's parents are Anthony W. Carpenter 1773-1827 and Mary ____? 1770-1827. Both died in Eastport Maine.
I think this Anthony W. who I found in Newmarket, Rockingham County, NH in 1790 is a descendant of Solomon Carpenter of Goshen NY which I found on your Carpenter CD!
Then Anthony W. Carpenter is found on a land petition in Charlotte County NB in 1807. (I have been waiting for this record from NB since December)
Anthony W. Carpenter's father had a sister, Elizabeth who married a Tory, Nathaniel Rogers and went to New Brunswick where it is possible that Anthony W. Carpenter went with this family or on his own.
I am very grateful for your help which has always been so generous and for the CARPENTER CD!
Sharyn


1423. Nehemiah Carpenter Jr.

Number 1045 in the Carpenter Memorial.
Family on page 288 (# 352).
He was a Patriot and he served under Col. Albert Pawling.  He was a blacksmith.

SAR:
U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970
Name: Nehemiah Carpenter
SAR Membership: 40018
Birth Date: 21 Jun 1760
Birth Place: Jamaica, Goshen, New York
Death Date: 19 Jan 1827
Death Place: Goshen, New York
Father: Nehemiah Carpenter
Mother: Priscilla Carpenter
Spouse: Elizabeth Thompson
Children: William W Carpenter
Source Citation: Volume: 201; SAR Membership Number: 40018.


Elizabeth Thompson

SAR:
U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970
Name: Elizabeth Thompson
SAR Membership: 40018
Birth Date: 27 Jun 1763
Death Date: 30 May 1805
Spouse: Nehemiah Carpenter
Children: William W Carpenter
Source Citation: Volume: 201; SAR Membership Number: 40018.


3691. Mary Carpenter

Number 2336 in the Carpenter Memorial.  She died young.
No family listed.


3692. Nicholas Carpenter

See Number 2339 in the Carpenter Memorial.
He died young (b. 28 Nov. 1785) per the CM.  Corrected records on this family
show the birth date as 28 Nov. 1795, which probably means there was two
Nicholas Carpenters.  One who died young, and one who went to Canada later.


3693. Sarah Carpenter

Number 2344 in the Carpenter Memorial.
No family listed.


3694. Abner Carpenter

Number 2337 in the Carpenter Memorial.
No family listed.


3696. Nicholas Carpenter

Number 2339 in the Carpenter Memorial.
No family listed.  He died young (b. 28 Nov. 1785) per the CM.  However, this
birth date of 28 Nov. 1795 is given in corrected versions.  He supposedly went
to Canada.


3698. Anna Carpenter

Number 2341 in the Carpenter Memorial.  She died young.
No family listed.


3699. James Carpenter

Number 2342 in the Carpenter Memorial.
No family listed.


3700. George Thompson Carpenter

Number 2343 in the Carpenter Memorial.
No family listed.