Descendants of the William Carpenters of the Bevis (1638)
Carpenter Cousins Encyclopedia of Carpenters - 2024 Update

Notes


2905. Amasa Carpenter

Amasa, s. Oliver & Prudence, b. Oct. 17, 1782; 1; 248


2908. Elisha Carpenter

Resided in Pomfret, Conn. and Fall River, Mass.


Mary Wilber

Of Troy.


James Peckham

Resided in Fall River and Middleboro, Mass.


Benjamin G. Irish

Resided in Little Compton, R.I.


6816. John Simmons Carpenter

Resided in Fall River, Mass.


2910. Oliver Carpenter Jr.

Resided in Ashford, Conn.  A deacon.


6823. Ellen Maria Carpenter

CENSUS:
1880 United States Census
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
Alvin R. WALKER   Self   M   Male   W   50   CT   Sells Artists Material   CT   CT
Amy A. WALKER   Wife   M   Female   W   44   CT   Home   CT   CT
Ellen M. CARPENTER   SisterL   S   Female   W   49   CT   Artist   CT   CT
Mary B. GORE   Other   S   Female   W   36   NH   Artist In Store   NH   NH
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place Quincy, Norfolk, Massachusetts
 Family History Library Film   1254549
 NA Film Number   T9-0549
 Page Number   111B

http://www.askart.com/AskART/artists/biography.aspx?searchtype=BIO&artist=2447
Biography from AskART:

Ellen Carpenter was a popular landscape painter in oil and watercolor and teacher of art in Boston, Massachusetts. She had hundreds of pupils and many close friends including the poet, John Greenleaf Whittier. Her work can be found in the Bugbee Memorial Library of Danielson, Connecticut; the Boston Grand Lodge of the Masons; and the Marlborough, Massachusetts Public Library.

She was known to have painted in the White Mountains of New Hampshire as well as the South, Pacific Coast, California including Yosemite in the 1870s. Her paintings such as "A View from Mariposa Trail of the Yosemite Valley" (1870s), "Pleasant Valley on the Merrimach" (sic), and "Lake Amitash in Amesbury" were described as "revealing at times the menacing suggestion of great rivers and of high solitary mountains." (Rubinstein) Among many commissions of hers were more than 100 watercolor depictions of old homesteads of Marlboro, Massachusetts, and they were used to illustrate a book, "Historical Reminiscences of Marlborough", by Ella Bigelow.

Carpenter was born in Killingly, Connecticut, grew up in that state and Massachusetts, and studied in Worcester, Massachusetts with Thomas Edwards and at the Lowell Institute (beginning 1864) and in Paris with Robert Fleury. She traveled in Europe at various times: 1867, 1873, 1878, and 1889, and also sketched in Egypt and Algiers.

Her birth date is cited as 1830, 1831 and 1836.

Source:
"American Women Artists", by Charlotte Streifer Rubenstein
Source: "An Encyclopedia of Women Artists of the American West" by Phil Kovinick and Marian Yoshiki-Kovinick

The following update was provided in June of 2006 by John R. Carpenter a Carpenter Family Genealogist who is a 5th cousin, 4 times removed from the artist.

1) Ellen Maria Carpenter was born 28 Nov 1830 in Killingly, Middlesex, CT of Oliver Carpenter Jr. (b. 1793 CT) and Amy Smith (b. abt 1793 of CT).  She died in Boston, Suffolk, MA.  Ellen is a descendant of William Carpenter (b. 1605 England) the immigrant who settled in Rehoboth, Bristol, MA in 1638.

2) In the 1880 US Federal Census, Ellen was living with her sister Amy Ann (b. 17 Jul 1838 in Killingly) and her husband Alvin A. Walker in Quincy, Norfolk, MA. Alvin’s occupation was listed as a Seller of Artist Material.

Ellen is listed as an Artist in this Census along with Mary B. Gore (b. abt 1844 NH) and is listed as an Artist in Store.  All resided in the same household.

3) Ellen Maria Carpenter was an Abbot Academy teacher from 1877 to 1878 in Andover.

Sources:
1) A Genealogical  History of the Rehoboth Branch of the Carpenter Family in America.  Also known as the Carpenter Memorial. Published 1898 By Amos B. Carpenter - Press of Carpenter & Morehouse, Amherst, MA.
2)  1880 US Federal Census
3)  http://www.rootsweb.com/~macandov/schools/ abbotsacad.html
Historical Sketches of Andover by S. L. Bailey, and A Singular School, by S.M. Lloyd, 1979, pp 39-40


2916. William Carpenter

Number 1422 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 207.
Family on page 354 (# 466)   A Farmer and later a lawyer.
He moved to Providence, Saratoga county in 1798, in 1811 he moved to Glenville
Township, Schenectady county, NY where he later died.  See the notes in the CM
regarding his 13 years of public service in Saratoga county.

He may have been known as William Freeman Carpenter.


2917. James Carpenter

Number 1423 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 207.
Family on page 354 (# 467)   A Farmer.
Residence: Providence, Saratoga county, NY.  For some reason some of his
descendants spell their names as "CARPENTIER."

BIRTH:
Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988
Name: James Carpenter
Event Type: Birth
Birth Date: 20 Feb 1771
Birth Place: Attleboro, Massachusetts
Father Name: Elisha Carpenter
Mother Name: Anna Freeman
Source Information:
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.
Original data: Town and City Clerks of Massachusetts. Massachusetts Vital and Town Records. Provo, UT: Holbrook Research Institute (Jay and Delene Holbrook).

MARRIAGE:  1803 (image)
Name:  Henritty Ballard
Event Type:  Marriage
Marriage Date:  30 Jan 1803
Marriage Place:  Attleboro, Massachusetts
Spouse Name:  James Carpenter
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.
Original data:  Town and City Clerks of Massachusetts. Massachusetts Vital and Town Records. Provo, UT: Holbrook Research Institute (Jay and Delene Holbrook).
SEE ALSO:
Name:  Henritty Ballard
Gender:  Female
Spouse:  James Carpenter
Marriage Date:  30 Jan 1803
City:  Attleboro
County:  Bristol
Source:  Family History Library, Salt Lake City, UT, Film # 1987017 items 2-6.
Source Information
Dodd, Jordan, Liahona Research, comp. Massachusetts, Marriages, 1633-1850 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.
Original data:  With some noted exceptions all marriage records in this collection can be found at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah, and may be available through Family History Centers throughout the United States. See table below for information listed.
SEE ALSO:
Name: James Carpenter
Birth Date:
Birthplace:
Age:
Spouse's Name: Henritty Ballard
Spouse's Birth Date:
Spouse's Birthplace:
Spouse's Age:
Event Date: 30 Jan 1803
Event Place: Attleboro,Bristol,Massachusetts
Father's Name:
Mother's Name:
Spouse's Father's Name:
Spouse's Mother's Name:
Race:
Marital Status:
Previous Wife's Name:
Spouse's Race:
Spouse's Marital Status:
Spouse's Previous Husband's Name:
Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M50002-1
System Origin: Massachusetts-ODM
GS Film number: 0982348 IT 1
Reference ID:
Citing this Record:
"Massachusetts, Marriages, 1695-1910," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FCQC-64J : accessed 17 May 2015), James Carpenter and Henritty Ballard, 30 Jan 1803; citing reference ; FHL microfilm 0982348 IT 1.

CENSUS: 1850 US Census - Living with daughter Eli and her family.
Name: James Carpenter
Event Type: Census
Event Year: 1850
Event Place: Galway, Saratoga, New York, United States
Gender: Male
Age: 79
Race: White
Race (Original):
Birth Year (Estimated): 1771
Birthplace: Massachusetts
Household ID: 18
House Number: 18
Line Number: 6
Affiliate Name: The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)
Affiliate Publication Number: M432
Affiliate Film Number: 593
GS Film Number: 444309
Digital Folder Number: 004203146
Image Number: 00279
Household Role Gender Age Birthplace
Gilbert Lomis M 40 New York
Ellis H Lomis F 35 New York
Ellis H Lomis F 8 New York
James Carpenter M 79 Massachusetts
Citing this Record:
"United States Census, 1850," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MC1J-DKR : accessed 23 Sep 2014), James Carpenter in household of Gilbert Lomis, Galway, Saratoga, New York, United States; citing family 18, NARA microfilm publication M432.

DEATH: Death information from his gravestone "Carpenter" in Providence,
Sartoga county, NY.  His wife is buried with him.
On Sun, 1 Nov 1998 00:40:27 -0800 "Ken Warkentin"
provided the gravestone information.  Ken states Marcia Buffet who lives in
Northern New York did the research.

GRAVE:
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=128020314
James Carpenter
Birth:  Feb. 20, 1771
Death:  Oct. 3, 1858
h/o Henrietta Ballard
Burial:
Barkersville Cemetery
Barkersville
Saratoga County
New York, USA

Created by: Gary LaMothe
Record added: Apr 15, 2014
Find A Grave Memorial# 128020314

BOOK:
History of Saratoga County, New York, with illustrations biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers
by Sylvester, Nathaniel Bartlett, 1825-1894 - Published 1878 - 514 pages.
https://books.google.com/books?id=j8spAQAAMAAJ&q=carpenter#v=snippet&q=elisha%20carpenter&f=false
James Carpenter is mentioned on ...
9th Brigade of the County of Saratoga - 24th Regiment.
Page 91 - Listed as a Lieutenant on 4 Apr 1808.  (His younger brother Elisha is listed as an Ensign on the same date)
Page 91 - Listed as a Captain on 11 Feb 1811.


Henrietta "Henritty" Ballard

FAMILY:
She had a brother named Stephen?  No it apparently was her father. See below.
This means the ancestry as posted needs to be redone. More data then redo.
-----Original Message-----
From: alan "alan"
Sent: Sunday, May 17, 2015 5:22 PM
To: John R Carpenter 2
Subject: a little less perplexity at this end
Further developments.
Henrietta was Stephen's daughter. Stephen lived a good part of his life in
a small town called Richmond, New Hampshire. There he was married and had
four children, Henrietta being the eldest. He was then, apparently
widowed, for he married again. Stephen's headstone sits in front of his
daughter's memorial in the Carpenter cemetery; he was born in 1737 and
died in 1827, just a few years before Henrietta who died in 1841.
We are looking for more information, hopefully some clue as to how
Henrietta got from Richmond to Attelsboro, or to Providence; there are
reports of the marriage of James and Henrietta in both locations.
Thank you for jump starting the search once again.
~alan

BIRTH:
Marriage indicates she was of, Attleboro and her name as Henritty Ballard.

GRAVE:
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=128009975
Henrietta B. Ballard
Birth:  1782
Death:  Nov. 10, 1841
w/o James Carpenter
mother of 8 children 3 lawyers and 1 doctor
Burial:
Barkersville Cemetery
Barkersville
Saratoga County
New York, USA

Created by: Gary LaMothe
Record added: Apr 15, 2014
Find A Grave Memorial# 128009975

GRAVE2:
Name: HENRIETTA B CARPENTER
Event Type: Burial
Event Place: Galway, Saratoga, New York, United States
Cemetery: Barkersville Cemetery
Birth Date: 1782
Marriage Date:
Death Date: 10 Nov 1841
Maiden Name:
Affiliate Image Identifier: 1427207
Latitude: 43.082218170166
Longitude: -74.0350036621094
Affiliate Create Date: 2012-06-12 20:15:17
Citing this Record:
"BillionGraves Index," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KSGX-R8Q : accessed 17 May 2015), HENRIETTA B CARPENTER, 10 Nov 1841; citing Barkersville Cemetery, Galway, New York, BillionGraves (http://www.billiongraves.com : 2012).


6832. James Solon Carpenter

Number 3052 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 354.
No family listed.  A Lawyer who resided in New York City.

NAME:
He changed his surname to Carpentier.

CENSUS: 1880 US Census
Name: James S Carpentier
Event Type: Census
Event Year: 1880
Event Place: New York, New York, New York, United States
District: 175
Gender: Male
Age: 76
Marital Status: Married
Race: White
Race (Original): W
Occupation: Lawyer
Relationship to Head of Household: Self
Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Self
Birth Year (Estimated): 1804
Birthplace: New York, United States
Father's Birthplace: Massachusetts, United States
Mother's Birthplace: New Hampshire, United States
Sheet Number and Letter: 81D
Affiliate Name: The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)
Affiliate Publication Number: T9
Affiliate Film Number: 0874
GS Film Number: 1254874
Digital Folder Number: 004242242
Image Number: 00595
Household Role Gender Age Birthplace
James S Carpentier Self M 76 New York, United States
Jane W Carpentier Wife F 55 Ireland
Henry Jung Other M 35 Germany
Charles Diewdonne Other M 28 Germany
Lizzie Murphy Other F 24 Ireland
Citing this Record:
"United States Census, 1880," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MZ6S-NM6 : accessed 24 Sep 2014), James S Carpentier, New York, New York, New York, United States; citing sheet 81D, NARA microfilm publication T9.

DEATH: Death information from his gravestone in Providence,
Sartoga county, NY.
On Sun, 1 Nov 1998 00:40:27 -0800 "Ken Warkentin"
provided the gravestone information.
Ken states Marcia Buffet who lives in Northern New York did the research.

Per "alan cohen"  September 23, 2014
Born Carpenter, James will be the first Carpentier when he changes it’s spelling for business
purposes; his younger brothers and his second cousin Harriet will follow his precedent.

GRAVE:
Name: James S. Carpenter
Event Type: Burial
Event Place: Galway, Saratoga, New York, United States
Cemetery: Barkersville Cemetery
Birth Date: 21 Apr 1804
Marriage Date:
Death Date: 02 Mar 1885
Maiden Name:
Affiliate Image Identifier: 1586779
Latitude: 43.082218170166
Longitude: -74.0350036621094
Affiliate Create Date: 2012-06-28 14:47:02
Citing this Record:
"BillionGraves Index", index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K3TC-CZ2 : accessed 24 Sep 2014), James S. Carpenter, .
SEE ALSO:
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=17379269
James S Carpentier
Birth:  Apr. 21, 1804, USA
Death:  Mar. 2, 1886
New York, USA
He is buried in Greenwood
Burial:
Barkersville Cemetery
Barkersville
Saratoga County
New York, USA

Created by: Thomas Dunne
Record added: Jan 10, 2007
Find A Grave Memorial# 17379269


6835. Dr. Reuben Socrates Carpentier

Number 3055 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 354.
No family listed.  Resided in New York City and attended Columbia College.
A Physician.

GRAVE:
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=17379282
Reuben S. Carpentier
Birth:  Jul. 14, 1812, USA
Death:  Dec. 18, 1874
New York, USA
Burial:
Barkersville Cemetery
Barkersville
Saratoga County
New York, USA

Created by: Thomas Dunne
Record added: Jan 10, 2007
Find A Grave Memorial# 17379282
NOTE: See image at:
http://billiongraves.com/pages/record/Reuben-S-Carpentier/1404779#given_names=Reuben&family_names=Carpentier


6837. Eli Ballard Carpenter

Number 3057 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 354.
No family listed.  He died young.

Basic descendants presented by "alan cohen"  September 23, 2014

GRAVE:
Eli Ballard Carpenter
Birth:  unknown
Death:  Jul. 3, 1820
Burial:
Barkersville Cemetery
Barkersville
Saratoga County
New York, USA

Created by: Gary LaMothe
Record added: Apr 15, 2014
Find A Grave Memorial# 128020171


6839. Horace Walpole Carpentier

Number 3051 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 354.
No family listed.  Unmarried. He resided in Oakland, CA where he was mayor of
that city and was a member of the Assembly of that state.  After he retired he
moved back to New York City, NY.

CENSUS: 1900 US Census
Name: H W Carpentier
Age: 75
Birth Date: Jul 1824
Birthplace: Rhode Island
Home in 1900: Manhattan, New York, New York
Ward of City: New York
Street: East 37-St South   <-----------  Important for Dean Lang info.
House Number: 108    <-----------   "
Sheet Number: 2
Number of Dwelling in Order of Visitation: 23
Family Number: 23
Race: White
Gender: Male
Relation to Head of House: Head
Marital Status: Single
Father's Birthplace: United States
Mother's Birthplace: United States
Occupation: Attorney
Can Read: Yes
Can Write: Yes
Can Speak English: Yes
House Owned or Rented: O
Home Free or Mortgaged: F
Farm or House: H
Neighbors: View others on page
Household Members:
Name Age
H W Carpentier 75
Harietta Carpentier 35  <----- sister - Single - b. Jan 1815 CT Age 85 but listed as age 35!
Caroline Crocker 55  <----- Housekeeper
R T Babtist 50     <----- attendant (colored servant) - likely R. T. Baptist
May Dwyer 50     <----- Irish Cook
Emma North 34     <----- Swedish Servant
Emma Olson 20     <----- Swedish Servant
Jenny Simon 36     <----- Irish Servant
Dean Lang 43 <----------- Dean Lung! - Listed as Companion - See his section below.
Jim Mah 45 <---- Chinese Cook
Source Citation
Year: 1900; Census Place: Manhattan, New York, New York; Page: 2; Enumeration District: 0748; FHL microfilm: 1241114
Source Information
Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
Original data: United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900. T623, 1854 rolls.

CENSUS: 1905 New York State Census
Name: Harris W   [Horace W Carpentier]
Birth Year: abt 1825
Birth Place: United States
Age: 80
Gender: Male
Race: White
Residence Year: 1905
Residence: Galway, Saratoga, New York, USA
Relationship to Head: Head
Election District: 01
Household Members:
Name Age
Harris W Carpentier 80  <---- Looks like Horris on census image
Caroline B Crocker 60  <--- boarder
Dean Ding 46    <------- Dean Lung !
Source Citation
New York State Archives; Albany, New York; State Population Census Schedules, 1905; Election District: E.D. 01; City: Galway; County: Saratoga; Page: 2
Source Information
Ancestry.com. New York, State Census, 1905 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.
Original data: New York, State Census, 1905. Population Schedules . Various County Clerk Offices, New York.

CENSUS: 1910 US Census
1910 United States Federal Census
Name:  Horace W Carpentier
Age in 1910:  85
Birth Year:  abt 1825
Birthplace:  New York
Home in 1910:  Galway, Saratoga, New York
Race:  White
Gender:  Male
Relation to Head of House:  Head
Marital Status:  Single
Father's Birthplace:  Massachusetts
Mother's Birthplace:  New Hampshire
Neighbors:
Household Members:
Name    Age
Horace W Carpentier  85
Caroline B Crocket  65
Anna T Walters  55
Jim Mak  55
Robert F Rapter  64
Source Citation: Year: 1910; Census Place: Galway, Saratoga, New York; Roll: T624_1076; Page: 7B; Enumeration District: 0104; FHL microfilm: 1375089.
Source Information:
Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006.
Original data: Thirteenth Census of the United States, 1910 (NARA microfilm publication T624, 1,178 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C.

DEATH: Death information from his gravestone in Providence, Sartoga county, NY.
On Sun, 1 Nov 1998 00:40:27 -0800 "Ken Warkentin"
provided the gravestone information.
Ken states Marcia Buffet who lives in Northern New York did the research.

GRAVE:
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=128020622
Horace Walpole Carpentier
Birth: 1824
Death: 1918 s/o James Carpenter Burial: Barkersville Cemetery Barkersville Saratoga County New York, USA
Created by: Gary LaMothe Record added: Apr 15, 2014 Find A Grave Memorial# 128020622
SEE Image at:
http://billiongraves.com/pages/record/Horace-Walpole-Carpentier/1275895#given_names=Horace&family_names=Carpentier


E-MAIL: Subject: Horace Carpentier
Date:      Sun, 17 Dec 2000 20:49:58 -0800
From:    alan cohen
To:      now jrcrin001@cox.net - now @cox.net
I have been involved in the "rewriting" of the history of Berkeley, California. Berkeley, a neighboring community to Oakland, is situated in Alameda  County. Horace Carpentier played a major role in the creation of Oakland, Alameda County, and Berkeley. The record is sparce, the man has been thoroughly villified as the result of his most egregious political activity, but he remains a briliant figure in the early history of his area. As the result of his endeavors in this area, he became quite rich and returned in his final years to the New York area where he made substantial endowments to Columbia University.
In truth, I have pretty much abandoned the search for useful information about this man. I rather think that, as sparce as my materials are, I have pulled more together on this man than any other researcher thus far. As I say, his importance to the development of the region has been vastly underestimated in all accounts.
I am enclosing the first few paragraphs of a chapter draft that deals in particular with this man. Perhaps you have access to materials that I have not. Pehaps you will be able to help.
Incidently, Horace never married, and thus has no issue. He died around 1909.
Thanks. . Alan Cohen.

HORACE CARPENTIER.
Horace Walpole Carpentier was born to James and Henrietta (Ballard) Carpentier on March 6, 1824.  At the time of Horace's birth, his father was 53 years old.  His parents had been married for twenty one years and already had five living children.  Horace, their seventh child, was their youngest.  The family lived in Galway (or Providence), New York, a small community in Saratoga County.  Sometime prior to Horace's birth, his grandfather changed the family name from Carpenter to Carpentier, the only branch of the family to employ this (Francophied) spelling.
Of the older brothers and sisters, Sarah married a man named Stokes Hall, who, like her father was a farmer, and continued her life as a married woman in Galway.  They had one daughter, Maria, whose name would become anathema in East Bay real estate.  Maria married James Williamson and it is quite possible that they had a daughter (Sarah) born in California.  Horace's sister Anna married Edward Smith, also a farmer, and moved to Michigan.  Sister Alice, for whom Alice Street in Oakland is named, married Herbert L. Loomis.
Brother Edward, in 1847 a member of the New York State Assembly, was an attorney and followed Horace to the West Coast where he played a relatively important part in this history.  Edward played a role in a number of important business dealings with his brother, but he had his own law firm, Clarke & Carpentier, in San Francisco.  Edward made a great deal of money while in California, and returned with it to New York in 1881.
Brother James, 20 years Horace's senior, was also an attorney.  He remained a resident of New York.  At the time of Horace Carpentier's death, he listed no living relatives.
Among the (secondary) Carpentier relatives, one cousin is made especially conspicuous by her importance to the history of Oakland and Berkeley.  Harriet Carpentier was Horace's first cousin once removed, the granddaughter of his father's brother,  William Carpentier.  She was born in July of 1815, making her some nine years older than Horace.  Many court proceedings which surrounded the complexity of the Carpentier land claims refer to Harriet as his sister; this was not the case, and Horace never bothered to correct the misconception.  While playing her important part, and at one time being listed as one of the wealthiest people in the State, there is no evidence that Harriet ever set foot inside of California, let along outside of New York.  Several historians have suggested that his spinster niece did actually come to California to house-keep for her uncle, but this is probably apocryphal and founded on the fact that Horace was known to be constantly in the company of various "nieces" none of whom were actually blood relatives.  In June of 1861 a Harriet Carpentier was listed as a member of the Oakland Congregational Church.  She was later "removed by letter".  Her "membership" was likely an attempt on Horace's part to establish her "residence" in the State.
Horace was a bright and promising young man.  He completed his education at Columbia University in 1848, graduating with a  degree in law.  He left New York a short time later, and arrived in California on August 8, 1849 aboard the sailing ship "Panama", amongst the 200 passengers who had sailed around the "Horn".   It is quite possible that while on this voyage he met the man who would soon become his partner in law and East Bay real estate, Andrew Moon.
MORE:  Sun, 24 Dec 2000  From:  "~alan"
To:  "John Carpenter"
Dear John. . .
Thank you much. Enclosed is some more information. Perhaps I should explain.
Around 1985 I and a friend began writing a history of Berkeley. At the time,
the labor was divided such that he did most of the research, I did most of
the writing. And figuring out. Much figuring out was needed since nobody had
ever done original research on this topic; several books have been written,
all have leaned on an early version which was written to enhance the image
of the community, mostly from a chamber-of-commerce sort of perspective. In
the extant versions, Horace Carpentier is given a relatively minor role, and
effectively vilified in the process.
We read every document, every transaction recorded with the county, every
entry in the Board of Supervisors journal, every newspaper article, etc. We
amassed a ton of information which was arranged into two bodies. First what
we called an encyclopedia, which gives alphabetical access to all designated
topics, and second in a chronology, which lists every morsel by date. Both
documents are extensive. From this we patched together our story. It
currently floats among readers. It is dense yet fascinating. In total,
Horace emerges as a very major character.
The writing partnership dissolved when my partner moved from the area. I
assumed custody of all books, materials, etc. He has no further interest in
the project. I have written, in draft form, most of the book; all but the
final chapter which exists in outline with the data still resting in the two
repositories noted above.
So, I went back and looked over what we had. Short of sending you the
Carpentier chapter, I have enclosed the encyclopedic data on the
Carpentiers. Some of this information does extend your own. Some of it is
questionable. Some of it may be useless, but that is what happens when you
exclude nothing when collecting. There is always time, later, to weed out
the irrelevant. Stuff tossed out too early is difficult to retrieve.
The question in my mind is the person we know as Harriet, and who is known
to be Horace's cousin. It seems from what you offer that there is only one
Harriet and that is his sister. It would be nice to get this clarified,
because sister/cousin Harriet plays a very essential role in the Carpentier
machinations here and abouts, back then.
Without the details, I should mention that Horace single handedly created
Oakland California, Alameda County (in which Oakland lies) and was the fifth
partner in the great railroad (with Crocker, Hopkins, etc). He was
responsible for the continental railroad to terminate not in San Francisco,
which was the initial plan, but in Oakland, on, it turns out, how own
property. He then saw to it that the railroad, as it was initially developed
out of Oakland, went first to a virtually unpopulated and undeveloped parcel
of land, where it terminated as a spur line. This spur line served, at the
time nothing. It did terminate, however, on land that he had acquired,
albeit in the names of others since he had exhausted his 160 allotted acres
in Oakland, and which is now Berkeley. Of course he was no less responsible
for the location of the University of California in Berkeley, a site that
was not even being considered by the College site committee. The story goes
on and on, with Horace having his hand in most everything, as his wealth
steadily increased. Out of this, of course, derived his villainous
reputation.
Harriet/Alice is of interest since he place all of his Oakland properties in
her name, he serving with her power of attorney. His holdings were highly
questioned, however the impossibility of dealing with an absentee owner gave
him a substantial advantage. Harriet/Alice never set foot on the West Coast,
but in her name was held most of Oakland, not to mention the entire
waterfront and control of a major coastal port.
It would be nice to clarify some of these relationships. If you have
anything that might be of use, or can suggest any alternative sources, I
would be grateful.    Again. . . thanks. . .  alan.
CARPENTIER, THE FAMILY, General Information:
The New York City Directory of 1837 lists a James S. (Solon?), attorney & counselor at 21 Spruce; home at 1 Rose.  His business address is changed to 85 Nassau in the 1840 edition and in 1841 his residence is changed to 46 Dominick.  In the 1844-45 directory he is listed as a lawyer at 34 Liberty and Edward R. (Rutledge?) appears as a lawyer at the same address.  The father was listed as a farmer in the Carpenter Family Memorial.  In the 1846-47 edition Edward is now at 27 Beekman and James is at 136 Nassau and boarding at 350 Broadway.  Reuben S.(Socrates?) now appears as a druggist at Cross and Mulberry.  In 1847-48 Edward is a lawyer at 25 Pine but James and Reuben are the same as 46-47.  In 1848-49 Edward again moves his practice to 116 William and his home to 55 Greenwich; James now lives at 41 Walker and Reuben is doing business at 3 Cross.  There are no changes in the 48-49 or 50-51 except that in the latter Reuben is listed as a physician.  It remains the same until 1853-54 when Edward is no longer listed.
Horace appears in the 1905-06 directory as living at 108 E. 37th St. (no occupation listed) and appears as such through the 1913-14 edition.  In 1915 he is listed as trustee for Columbia University.
There are several references to Horace W. and Edward R. Carpenter (not Carpentier) in a Carpenter family genealogy (the above-mentioned "Memorial"), listed at the Sutro Library. (Sutro CS71 C3 1898; pp.354, 658, 741).  Got it 12/88 and bingo!
We now know that the family name was originally Carpenter and was changed, probably by Horace's father as there seems to be no other variations earlier than that.
In the 1913 Crocker-Langley Business directory we have an A. Carpentier, Inc., Res. Alameda, Importers and Shipping at 209 California.  And also we find an Edward L. Carpentier, Chauffeur, res. 1749 Larkin, and an F. G. Carpentier, physician at 34 Ellis.
In an article in the San Francisco Examiner 7/26/1893 there is a little gossip concerning a servant in the family in California.  "Mrs. Canning used to be a servant in the Carpentier's family.  She bought a cheap lot with her savings.  That lot is worth $200,000.00 now, and she is able to give away $100,000.00 to churches, in addition to keeping Michael Davitt in funds - you know he married her niece."
CARPENTIER, Alice H.
Horace's sister who married Herbert L. Loomis.  Alice Street in Oakland is named for her.   She is definitely not his only sister as recorded often in local histories.
Residence in Providence, N. Y., a farmer and clothier.
CARPENTIER, Alphonse
See: Baker, 1914 Vol. 2 p. 303.  This guy is not an immediate family name and probably quite distant if at all.  There are references to other Carpentiers later on but they seem to come directly from France.
CARPENTIER, Anna
Sister to Horace, married Edward Smith and resided in Michigan on a farm.
CARPENTIER, Edward Rutledge
Edward was born in New York, probably Saratoga County, possibly Galway and even more likely, Providence, like his brother Horace.
He was a member of the New York State Assembly in 1847.
First came to California in 1850 (according to Wood).  He was listed as a resident of New York City on 6/18/1852 and at that time (?) was also listed as a Commissioner of Deeds for the State of California (a Notary Public type of thing).  I assume he arrived here shortly after his brother in that his listings in the New York Directory are current to the 1853-54 issue when he no longer appears.
On 2/28/1853 he petitioned the U. S. Board of Land Commissioners (re: private land claims) for 4,000 acres between the lands of Castro, Peralta and Estudillo.  Appealed several times, he never got what he hoped for.  It was being held by the Sheriff.  The claim was ultimately rejected 6/30/1855.  Where this item came from I don't know but it is very curious in wording and content.
He was also later on the board of directors at the Oakland Waterfront Co.
There is record (at Boalt) of Edward representing his brother in court in Oct. 1855.
He bought into "Sister's Claim" 11/9/1858???
5/10/1859 Edson Adams gets Edward's power of attorney.
He amassed a large fortune in California at a very early date.  He was a close friend of Henry H. Byrne, who died at an early age leaving his estate of $90,000.00 (less some minor legacies) to Edward.  Edward returned to New York in 1881.
We know that he ran into J. Ross Browne in Algiers sometime in the early '60s, possibly 1864.
We know he died before his brother Horace and probably quite a bit before in light of the dispositions set out in Horace's will.  We know of trip Horace had made to the Bay Area in 1902 that had to be cut short in order to return east due to an illness and death.  This may have been Edward.  May not.
[Our chronology has an Edwin (2/20/1877) and an Edmund (10/6/1874).  He was a partner in the law firm of Clarke and Carpentier.  See: Hittel Vol. 4 p. 489.  Carpentier & Clark in HSQ 33:352.]

CARPENTIER, Harriet N.
Harriet was born in Glenville New York, on 7/22/1815, the  daughter of William, who was the son of William, who was James'(Horace's father) brother.  Convoluted enough?  She was Horace's cousin.
Harriet, great granddaughter of Elisha died Oct 31, 1902 age 88
Horace's spinster cousin lived in New York. With her power of attorney (given him 6/14/1852) he did much!
She is a claimant and intervener in many of the documents concerning the appeal on the title of Rancho San Antonio as well as Rancho Potrero(?) de Palos Colorados in Contra Costa County.
She apparently never set foot in California and never saw any of the land she "owned".  Throughout all the court hearings she is referred to as his sister, and Horace doesn't seem to have bothered to correct them.  It is also suggested that she never actually paid him any money, and that the deals between him and his cousin were entirely fabricated for his surreptitious dealings.
To illustrate how useful she was to her uncle, we site the 1859 Assessor's Book in 1859.  Harriet is listed as having been assessed $15,000.00.  She never even set foot in California.  Horace is not listed in the first 50 at all???
There is a H. N. Carpenter mentioned in Black: San Diego & Imperial Counties (Chicago, 1913) page 12.
In June of 1861 a Harriet Carpentier was listed as a member of the Oakland Congregational Church.  She was "removed by letter" whatever that means, but so were a lot of other people.  Rosa Shattuck, for example.
CARPENTIER, Horace Walpole (Major General, sometimes Colonel)
Horace was born in Galway (actually Providence), Saratoga County, New York on 3/6/1824.  He was the son of James and Henrietta Ballard Carpentier.  He graduated from Columbia University in 1848 as a lawyer.
He arrived in San Francisco, California on 8/8/1849 after sailing around the "Horn".  On that day the American ship, the "Panama" arrived in San Francisco with 200 passengers from New York.  A Mr. Leonard, George Dornin, an Andrew Moon, et al. were on board.  I will assume that Mr. Carpentier was as well; Moon claims that it was his ship and that he took Carpentier on as chaplain.
In Libera Martina Spinazze's Index of the Argonauts of California,  Horace is listed as a member of the Pioneer Association of San Francisco (see: Hastings, p.361) and SCP.
On 1/30/1850 the Democratic Republican General Committee convened to select a candidate for the election being held 2/2/1850 for State Senator; they chose Horace Carpentier to run. Carpentier was defeated by Elcan Heydenfeldt.  This is probably where he first had contact with the machine with which David C. Broderick ruled California politics for the next 4+ years.  He became well acquainted with all the influential politicians especially the displaced New Yorkers of which Broderick was one.
Also in 1850 he ran, unsuccessfully, for the office of State Superintendent of Public Instruction.

MORE:
----- Original Message -----
From: "alan cohen"
To:
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 5:02 PM
Subject: carpenter
> this letter is to John Carpenter, with whom I had a brief correspondence a
> few years back. At that time I was seeking any and all information
> available on Horace W. Carpentier. The project I was working on was a
> historical account of Berkeley, California. This project has drawn itself
> out much longer than I had expected.
>
> I did receive, from you, extensive geneological information concerning the
> Carpenter family, of which the man I sought was a member. I was asked to
> forward any additional information I might find on HWP. It is now time to
> share.
>
> The book: A History of Berkeley, From the Ground Up, can be found only
> online at www.historyofberkeley.org.
> Horace is featured throughout. There is, as you will see, a chapter
> limited to him as well. Horace Carpentier was a fascinating character,
> bright, ingenious in his many business and political dealings, villified
> by many, a benefactor to higher education, and at one time owning a very
> respectable chunk of California. He is responsible for the creation of
> Oakland California, as well as Alameda County in which Oakland lies. His
> motives, it is clear, were not civic. Horace was careful to leave as
> indistinct a track of his activities as was possible; there is only one
> photograph of him that I have ever seen (it is included in the book)and he
> was loath to provide any information about himself under any
> circumstances. Clearly a man to be admired.
>
> I appreciate the information that was sent, even though it is limited with
> respect to the material i needed and sought. Please feel free to use the
> information provided at this web site, with suitable reference with regard
> to its source.
>
> And good luck with your ongoing quest for the Carpenter family
>
> ~alan cohen

The book: A History of Berkeley, From the Ground Up, can be found only online at:
www.historyofberkeley.org
By Alan Cohen < minahuni@speakeasy.net >
Copyright 2007-2008 (used with permission)
Chapter 14
http://www.historyofberkeley.org/horace_carpentier.html
Horace Carpentier

Horace Walpole Carpentier was born to James and Henrietta (Ballard) Carpentier on March 6, 1824. At the time of Horace's birth, his father was 53 years old. His parents had been married for twenty one years and already had five living children. Horace, their seventh child, was their youngest. The family lived in Galway (or Providence), New York, a small community in Saratoga County. Sometime prior to Horace's birth, his grandfather changed the family name from Carpenter to Carpentier, the only branch of the family to employ this (Francophied) spelling.

Of the older brothers and sisters, Sarah married a man named Stokes Hall, who, like her father was a farmer, and continued her life as a married woman in Galway. They had one daughter, Maria, who married James Williamson; it is quite possible that they had a daughter (Sarah) born in California.

Horace's sister Anna married Edward Smith, also a farmer, and moved to Michigan. Sister Alice, for whom Alice Street in Oakland is named, married Herbert L. Loomis.

Brother Edward, in 1847 a member of the New York State Assembly, was an attorney and followed Horace to the West Coast where he played a relatively important part in this history. Edward played a role in a number of important business dealings with his brother, but he had his own law firm, Clarke & Carpentier, in San Francisco. Edward made a great deal of money while in California, and returned with it to New York in 1881.

Brother James, 20 years Horace's senior, was also an attorney. He remained a resident of New York. At the time of Horace Carpentier's death, he listed no living relatives.

Among the (secondary) Carpentier relatives, one cousin is made especially conspicuous by her importance to the history of Oakland and Berkeley. Harriet Carpentier was Horace's first cousin once removed, the granddaughter of his father's brother, William Carpentier. She was born in July of 1815, making her some nine years older than Horace. Many court proceedings which surrounded the complexity of the Carpentier land claims refer to Harriet as his sister; this was not the case, and Horace never bothered to correct the misconception. While playing her important part, and at one time being listed as one of the wealthiest people in the State, there is no evidence that Harriet ever set foot inside of California, let along outside of New York. Several historians have suggested that a spinster niece did actually come to California to house-keep for her uncle, but this is probably apocryphal and founded on the fact that Horace was known to be constantly in the company of various "nieces" none of whom were actually blood relatives. In June of 1861 a Harriet Carpentier was listed as a member of the Oakland Congregational Church. She was later "removed by letter". Her "membership" was likely an attempt on Horace's part to establish her "residence" in the State.

Horace was a bright and promising young man. He completed his education at Columbia University in 1848, graduating with a degree in law. He left New York a short time later, and arrived in California on August 8, 1849 aboard the sailing ship "Panama", amongst the 200 passengers who had sailed around the "Horn". It is quite possible that while on this voyage he met the man who would soon become his partner in law and East Bay real estate, Andrew Moon.

Political Beginnings
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
It seems evident from the events which were to follow, that Horace Carpentier arrived in San Francisco with established political connections, for he had no sooner arrived than he was well into the local political life. In the Spring of 1850 he set up his law office, presumably with Andrew Moon and Edson Adams. Adams had arrived in San Francisco in July of 1849 and had gone directly to the mines. On his return trip, in March of 1850, he met Horace Carpentier who likewise had made a brief trip into the gold country. This trip came in the wake of Carpentier's early political defeats.

Horace Carpentier had competed unsuccessfully in the new State’s first election, for the Democratic nomination as State Senator. Failing to secure the nomination, he then ran, again without success, for the position of State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Failing that he went to look for gold.

In May of 1850 Adams, then aged 26, located himself on the "Encinal" of Vicente Peralta's land, and established his claim to 160 acres by "squatting". He was soon afterward joined by partners Moon and Carpentier who claimed their 160 acres adjacent to his, one to the east and one to the west. This constituted a tract of land of something over 200 city blocks bounded on the south by the estuary, on the north by 14th Street, with a yet to be delineated Broadway bisecting the parcel. Their pursuit of possessory rights culminated in the incorporation of the town of Contra Costa, quickly renamed Oakland.

Carpentier's political aspirations did not die with his first two defeats. In January of 1851 he was given the position of Senate Enrolling Clerk, a job which placed him in a favorable niche from where he would make the acquaintance of many other politically inspired men. While so serving, he was employed doing extra work on the Industrial Commission, on the Senate Finance Committee, and early the next year on the Committee of Navigation and Commerce, a position which would give birth to his waterfront schemes. In 1852 he also occupied the position of State Prison Inspector, holding this assignment until the Spring of the following year. If he had not previously been acquainted with them, he now became politically involved with several men who would serve him well in his ambitious schemes. These associations included Napoleon B. Smith, brother of Henry Smith (of Santa Clara County) and a member of the Legislature in 1852, and David Broderick, the political boss of San Francisco who was elected president of the State Senate in January of 1851. "President of the State Senate" has since become the office of Lieutenant Governor. Broderick, it should be noted, was closely affiliated with Governor Bigler, a man forever sympathetic with the efforts of Mr. Carpentier. Some accounts have gone so far as to suggest that Broderick actually controlled Bigler. The relationship between Broderick and Carpentier was as much a business relationship as a political one.

The Ferry
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In August of 1851, Carpentier and Moon obtained a ferry licence from the Contra Costa Court of Sessions (predecessor of the Board of Supervisors), placed the licence in brother Edward's name, and began a ferry service between “Oakland” and from San Francisco. Soon afterwards the operation was turned over to fellow New Yorker, Charles Minturn, under a contract which provided Carpentier a monopoly in the ferry business for the next 20 years. Eight years later, a competing ferry service was initiated by James B. LaRue with the express purpose of defeating the Carpentier monopoly. It is worthy of note that the Carpentier/Minturn ferry activity was conducted from a pier not far from LaRue's, and across the slough from the Carpentier property. Reaching the estuary's deep water from Carpentier's property would have required a considerably longer pier. While legal efforts on the part of the Carpentiers failed to defeat his competition, the matter was soon thereafter resolved by simply buying out LaRue.

Incorporation of the Town of Oakland
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
When the Encinal was purchased from Vicente Peralta in 1852, Carpentier drew upon his established relationships and persuaded Napoleon Smith to introduce the bill which would incorporate the "town" of Oakland. The introduction of the bill was planned for April 29, 1852; the legislative session was due to adjourn in May. On May 1, State Senator J. Fry introduced another bill to declare San Antonio Slough, which was too shallow to navigate, navigable. This would mark the first visible signs of his incipient waterfront scheme. The bill provided funds to dredge the slough and thereby provide access. At that point Carpentier instructed Peter Portois, a San Francisco architect, to create a map favorable to his plans for incorporation, and presented this to the Legislature which was in a hurry to adjourn. Bigler signed both Acts and on May 4, 1852 the ball was rolling. It is not unthinkable that Carpentier penned both of these bills.

The town of Oakland was to be managed by a board of trustees, from which Carpentier immediately disqualified himself. The board was made up of Moon, A. W. Burrell (who had recently built Oakland's first hotel on the corner of 1st and Broadway [then Main St] on land given him by Carpentier and Adams), Amadee Marier, and Alpheus Staples. It is remarkable that so little is known of Burrell, Marier, and Staples. Their inclusion is likely to have been no more than a formality, their functions nil. Francis K. Shattuck, another Carpentier cohort, was appointed clerk.

The Oakland Waterfront
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two weeks after the installation of the new board, the entire waterfront of the Encinal was turned over to Carpentier at the first town council meeting on May 12, 1852. In exchange for his right to operate the waterfront forever, he promised to build a wharf and a school house. The school house was completed in July of 1852 at Fourth and Clay Streets. The first teacher was Hannah Jayne who would become the wife of Edson Adams in 1855. The initial terms of the waterfront agreement were not agreeable to all, and when Marier dissented, Carpentier promised to post a bond insuring the ultimate return of the property to the town. When Marier remained reluctant to sign, Shattuck's willingness to accede provided in the needed signatures.

While successful in getting his way politically, Carpentier did not endear himself to the hearts of the populace. Displeased with the waterfront conveyance, not to mention the secret elections, some citizens (of which there were not many in those days) protested by rioting and doing damage to Carpentier property. When such occurrences were imminent, Carpentier and Adams would escape harm by rowing out into the Bay, and return to file suit against the "evildoers". While some were against him, others were there to offer support, the latter being in a position to profit themselves by following in the shadow of this master of entrepreneurs.

When the town brought suit against Carpentier for any of a number of major complaints, the town was represented by John B. Watson, a legal partner of Horace Carpentier. The outcome was inevitable. A few years later this same legal flim flam would be repeated when another Carpentier associate, City Attorney, John B. Felton, would likewise represent the City's interest against Carpentier.

Desiring to offend no more than was necessary, as well as to reduce as best he could his inevitable visibility, Horace transferred title to the Oakland waterfront to his cousin Harriet in August of 1854. Through her power of attorney, Horace continued to manage "her" business with the waterfront.

It would be well to note in this context that Horace Carpentier was a charismatic man, generally well-liked if not approved of, and inclined to win the confidence of the most skeptical. He has been described as having a "suave, slender figure, fathomless blue eyes, prim mouth, and a thin aristocratic nose..." He spoke fluent Spanish, a tongue he picked up as a needed exigency for dealing with his Spanish speaking clients, and was inclined to not only wear a large crucifix around his neck, but to represent himself as a former "padre", thereby gaining their confidence. It has been said that Mr. Carpentier was a man without scruples, but his persuasive skills and municipal visions were unimpeachable. J. Ross Browne wrote frequently of encounters with the man and condemned him roundly for his finger in everybody's pie, including Browne's own, but in all these instances one can clearly read a barely veiled respect and even affection for Horace Carpentier.

In March of 1852 Carpentier made a deal with two of the Castro brothers, Victor and "J. J.", which would provide him half of all their land occupied by squatters plus additional lands if Carpentier would take the legal initiative in order to secure their title on that occupied land. Later that year the Castro brothers extended their contract with Carpentier, enlisting his help in dealing with the U.S. Land Commission. From that point on, Horace Carpentier was the "attorney of record" for various Castro litigation.

In June of 1854 Horace obtained power of attorney for his cousin Harriet and placed all of his Oakland properties in her name along with the waterfront. In large measure, Oakland had an absentee landlord represented by a local attorney. This action magnificently complicated all further efforts in dealing with the contested waterfront.

The 12th Street Bridge
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In October of 1852, the Supervisors of Contra Costa County contracted with Trustan Gilman for the construction of a bridge over the San Antonio Slough, at 12th Street. Ready access was needed, short of traveling around the end of the "lake", when moving between Clinton and Oakland. The cost would be $7,400. With the events which were to follow already regarded as a fait accompli, by January of 1853 Carpentier had already sold a quarter of his interest in the bridge to his partner Edson Adams, including the land upon which the bridge stood. The bridge would be completed in August of 1853. In June of 1853, with the county suddenly short in the needed funding, Carpentier leapt into the breach, offering to buy and to improve the bridge, and to cut the Town of Oakland into a portion of the tolls which he planned on collecting, but only until such time as the town was able to buy the bridge. The toll taker was his partner John B. Watson.

Rather than awaiting opportunity, Carpentier had clearly orchestrated these events, setting the stage for his proprietorship of the 12th Street Bridge, well in advance of its completion. As late as November of 1854 Gilman's fees had not yet been satisfied. In May of 1855 a bill was introduced within the proceedings of the Alameda County Board of Supervisors proposing that Carpentier's by now very controversial bridge be made into a public highway. In January of 1857, Carpentier was still in possession of his bridge and the city opted to offer him competition by building a free bridge across the slough at 7th Street. By July of that year the 7th Street Bridge was completed. The 12th Street bridge later went on to become the 12th Street Dam, thereby creating Lake Merritt.

Carpentier in the State Assembly
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In November of 1852 Horace Carpentier was successfully elected to the State Assembly for the 4th district which encompassed Contra Costa County. He won this election with 590 votes out of a constituency which included only 130 voters. Historians have suggested that this was a case of ballot stuffing. That same month he engineered a sheriff's sale for delinquent taxes which left him in titled possession of 220 acres of the Peralta Reserve. In July of the following year, he repeated this tactic which left his brother Edward in legal possession of everything in Rancho San Antonio that had not already been nailed down. It was this maneuver which seriously compromised the magnitude of the sale to the partners of Joseph Irving.

Creation of Alameda
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
County While serving as a State Assemblyman, he encountered a measure of political censure from the governing body of Contra Costa County, with especial reference to his acquisition of the waterfront. His response to this was to remove himself from under the political/legal control of the county, by fabricating a county of his own. This was done in concert with Henry Smith who had been elected in Santa Clara to the State Legislature in 1852. Together they drafted a bill which would remove portions of both counties to form the new Alameda County. This bill was approved and in March of 1853 Alameda County came into being. The county seat was to be in Alvarado, home of Henry Smith. In April of 1853 Carpentier introduced a bill to change the specifics of the incorporation, moving the county seat to Oakland. This bill, however, failed. He next introduced another bill that would divide Alameda County just south of Oakland, effectively discarding the offending portions, making Horace's life considerably more manageable. This bill failed as well. It was not long, however, before Smith lost his political support and Oakland became the center of the County's political life.

In 1859 the State Supreme Court wrote an opinion to the effect that the waterfront grant and contracts were void. The case was retried and Carpentier was found to have acted fraudulently. He immediately appealed and the decision was of course reversed. Since the matter of legal remedy (concerning the voided waterfront grant) was maintained by the governing body of Oakland, Carpentier took actions that appeared to be an effort to hedge his bets. He bought into the "Sisters Title" scam that had been so well employed by Robert Simson and William Chittenden. It would be many years yet before the waterfront issue was suitably resolved.

Pressing his claims on this basis he lost twice but secured many quit claim fees in the process; he later "sold" his rights to the "Sisters Title" to his brother Edward who persisted in employing them to his ongoing financial advantage.

Carpentier and Durant
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In June of 1853 Horace Carpentier was named a Trustee of Durant's Academy, along with Timothy Dwight Hunt, Joseph Benton, and Edward Walsworth. In his behalf, it should be noted that Carpentier had a history of support to educational institutions which was substantial, and while he may have profited just a little from the real estate transactions involved with the location of the University in Berkeley, he later contributed heavily to this same institution. His activities as a trustee, as well as his relationship with Durant, are silent, and the nature of their business association can only be inferred from the evidentiary trail which has been left. Neither of these men did anything to encourage a public awareness of their long standing and mutually beneficial relationship. Durant did request his being on the board, and it was Horace Carpentier who suggested that Durant include Walsworth in the same capacity. Reverend Walsworth was in Marysville at the time, and the Reverend Brayton was sent to relieve him, providing for his participation in the local activities.

The City of Oakland
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
On March 25, 1854, by the process of incorporation, the Town of Oakland became the City of Oakland. On April 17, 1854, his reputation notwithstanding, Horace Carpentier was elected the city's first mayor. This in spite of the fact that the city council that was elected at the same time was described as being substantially anti-Carpentier. As the Council’s first matter of business, it set about to both regain the waterfront and to limit Carpentier’s monopoly by providing competition to their new mayor's enterprises. On August 5, 1854, Alderman A.D. Eames, formally a Carpentier cohort, set in motion an ordinance to provide for a second wharf within the city of Oakland. His measure passed 8 to 6 and was later supported by a petition signed by 170 of Oakland's citizens. The wharf was to be installed at the southwest corner of the Encinal. Mayor Carpentier refused to sign the measure. A month later it was made policy over the mayor's objections, with support lent by George Blake and Mr Kelsey. With this action political war was effectively declared on the city's Mayor.

While serving as mayor, Carpentier made a bid for the Democratic nomination to office of Attorney General of the State of California, but did not succeed. Within the two years following the end of his reign as mayor (1855), the Carpentier matters were pressed with increased vigor by the governing fathers of the city. In 1857 James LaRue obtained the licence for his competing ferry line, beginning his ineffectual attempt to interrupt the Carpentier monopoly. In the meanwhile, Horace Carpentier's attention was being drawn elsewhere, as new horizons began to present themselves.

More on The Waterfront
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In March of 1868 the City of Oakland passed an ordinance that would presumably enable them to end the waterfront controversy. A week later the Oakland Waterfront Company was created, with Horace Carpentier as director, then Mayor Sam Merritt as Vice President, and Leland Stanford as Treasurer. On March 31, 1868, all of Carpentier's interest in the waterfront (i.e., all of Harriet Carpentiers interest in the waterfront) was transferred to the City of Oakland, through the Waterfront Company; all but a small waterfront lot which Carpentier (Harriet) deeded directly to the city. The company was capitalized at five million dollars. The stock was distributed as follows: Horace got 23,000 shares, or 46%, Stanford got 17,500 shares, or 35%, Felton (the city attorney and a close associate of Carpentier) received 5,000 or 10%, and Edward Carpentier together with Lloyd Tevis received the remaining 4,500 shares, or 9%. Together the Carpentier brothers owned 51%.

On the same date as the transfer of Carpentier's interest to the city, a contract was made between him and Stanford for conveyance of a sizable portion of the waterfront to the Western Pacific Railroad. On April 1, 1868, the Waterfront Company deeded 500 acres of waterfront and exclusive right-of-way to the Western Pacific (later to become the Southern Pacific) Railroad. In return, the railroad promised to complete its tracks from Niles Canyon, not through San Jose, around the Bay and up to San Francisco, but directly to Oakland, requiring only increased ferry service to complete the journey to San Francisco.

Carpentier's association with the founding fathers of the railroad system in and out of California was long and profitable. His ability to finesse the location of the Western Terminus of the transcontinental railroad system to Oakland was the result of this association. As a result of these efforts, the railroad also extended its service along a spur line into Berkeley, providing the basis for the development of a community in conjunction with the planned college. Because of this major transportation link between Berkeley and Oakland, the state was able to see its way clear to purchase the Berkeley site from the College of California. The year of 1868 was momentous in the history of Berkeley.

The Telegraph
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 1853 the California State Telegraph Company completed its first state-wide telegraph system. From 1857 to 1867 Carpentier served as the president of this company. Other directors included J Mora Moss, Henry Height, and William Ralston. In 1860 this company absorbed the Alta California Telegraph Company, thereby coming into possession of the controlling lines between San Jose, San Francisco, Stockton, Sacramento, Nevada City, and Marysville. In 1861 the Overland Telegraph Company was incorporated, of which Horace was also president. The Overland Company constructed a junction with the Pacific Telegraph Company, owned by Western Union. By 1887 Western Union owned all three companies.

In September of 1861, Horace and partners Moss, Beale, and Herman Wohler bought the Arroyo Seco Rancho from Andres Pico. This Rancho extended into Sacramento, Amador, and San Joaquin counties and occupied a total area of 11 square leagues.

Purchasing his way into William Ralston's Bank of California in 1864, he later became a director. In 1875 Horace Carpentier was listed as the ninth richest man in Alameda County with a property value of well over a million dollars. This figure belies his real wealth and actual holdings. He has been named as being at one time the largest landowner in the State of California.

Carpentier and Peralta As early as 1852, Carpentier had established an attorney/client relationship with Domingo Peralta. Offering to protect Domingo from the very hazards that he was in fact providing, he eventually extracted in the form of unpaid legal fees nearly all of the Reserve and large portions of the Homestead. While this bleeding of the Peralta lands was taking place, Domingo offered few complaints. When he changed legal representation, he was served by one or another of Carpentiers affiliates. Clearly Horace had major dibs on the Peralta Berkeley property, and he tolerated no intrusion into this portion of his domain. While his interest in the East Berkeley area is not quite explicit, it does become evident as we examine the working relationship between Carpentier and Shattuck, Higley, Robinson, Pioche, and others. Clearly his interest in this section of town was more than casual, as he proceeded to promote the installation of a dead end railroad line into what was then no more than a remote, unpopulated, entirely undeveloped section of privately owned turf.

As the political foundation of Horace Carpentier was lost to attrition and the increasing complexity of the East Bay communities, Horace found less and less interest in his local projects. Horace live far longer than all of his of his contemporaries, and he was not known to make many friends in his later years. Still owning a major share of present day Berkeley, none of which was in his own name, he moved back to New York during the early 1880's. There were various visits to the West Coast, some in response to demands that he attend courtroom hearings regarding many of the familiar issues that dragged on for years. The sale of his property was conducted from his New York home, with sales continuing well into the beginning years of the present century. In 1912 he sold off the remainder of his California holdings to C.A. Cooper and Company.

The Disbursement of the Carpentier Fortune Following his retirement from active business pursuits, Horace Carpentier engaged successfully in trade with the Orient. This activity increased his fortune substantially. He traveled back and forth to China, and acquired a Chinese valet (Ting Lung) who resided with Carpentier in his New York home. After returning from China in 1901 Carpentier endowed Columbia University, upon whose board of Trustees he sat, with a $100,000 chair in Chinese Language and Literature. Several years later he increased that gift with an additional $12,000 as a memorial to his now deceased companion, the misnamed "Dean Lung Professorship", honoring Ting Lung for his patience and loyalty. In his will he added yet another $300,000 to his established gift to Columbia University. In 1903 he gave the Columbia University Law School $300,000 in memory of his brother James.

Horace Carpentier died in New York on January 31, 1918. He was 94 years old. Mr Carpentier was buried at the family home in Galway. His will provided more than a million dollars to Barnard College, One hundred thousand dollars to the University of California and another one hundred thousand to the Pacific Theological Seminary. His estate totaled in excess of three and a half million dollars. Prior to his death, before he had given away a major portion of his estate, he was noted to be worth more than twenty million dollars. The Carpentier home in New York City was donated to Barnard College in 1917. The disposition of his Oakland home at Third and Alice is not known. The area is now occupied by the warehouses of Oakland's produce district.

Horace Carpentier was the last of his family to die. In addition to his distribution of funds among the various charitable and educational institutions, Carpentier's only other beneficiaries were a few of the young women that he had "adopted" as "nieces". Among these his favorite for many years was Maud Burk (1872-1948). While the other young woman came and went, Ms Burk remained a part of his life for many years. He had introduced her to the works of the classic writers, and managed to turn her tastes to the Greek and Latin poets, and to the works of Shakespeare. He became extremely possessive of this young woman and prevented at least one marriage on the grounds of terminating their relationship. She visited him for the last time in 1906. By then she had already married and became the "Lady Cunard", heir to the shipping fortune and the mother of Nancy Cunard. Maud was not mentioned in his will.

Horace Carpentier had arrived in California in 1849, and was a member of the Society of California Pioneers. Many years later, long after he had established his residency in New York City, he was asked by the Society to author his own biographic statement, to be included among a collection of those of the other members. The following constitutes his entire submission:

"Of no unworthy parentage —puritan of the Puritans— I was born, much as others are born, a diminutive savage, in 1824.
Without education or culture I have lived a rather long and busy life doing many common things in a common way and perhaps a few things well; a life, as I see it, of mixed good and ill, and with little or nothing in it of special interest to others or even to myself, or that can be worth a remembrance in the annals of your society.
There may be others, masters of fiction and rhetoric, who could invent for me a larger and more rounded history, but this seems to be about the best that I can do.
Yours very truly, H.W.C."

108 East 37 Street, New York July 7, 1901
SEE ALSO:

*****************************************

DEAN LUNG:
Dean Lung (aka Ting Lung) was the butler/valet/friend/companion (later listed as a
Student & Traveler) of Horace W. Carpentier for over 45 years.  There are many stories unproven about him and his relationship with HWC. While very sick, possibly from a beating, Dean presented to HWC money he had saved over his employment. This money, reported in different amounts, went to Columbia University President Seth Low in a 28 June 1901 letter that started the Chinese sturdies at the University. Dean lived for several more years dying between 1905 and 1910 in NY. His burial location is not known.
Dean Lung was born in Feb 1857 in China and was living in Manhattan, NY in 1900 and was enumerated as "Dean Lang". He immigrated to America in 1875 even though this may have been a second immirgation date for him. He is also cited on the 1905 NY Census in Galway, NY. However he is not on the 1910 US Census with the Carpentier family.

BOOK: 1902
The International Year Book by Harry Thurston Peck - January 1, 1902
Publisher:  Dodd, Mead
Published on:  Dec 31, 1902
Pages:  1038
https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=XUsxAQAAMAAJ&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA195
Page 196 -
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY. On October 7, 1901, Dr. Seth Low (q.v.) resigned the presidency of Columbia University in consequence of his nomination for mayor of New York on the Fusion ticket opposing that of Tammany Hall, and Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler (q.v.), dean of the school of philosophy, was chosen acting president.  ...
Columbia received about $354,120 in gifts and bequests during the academic year. The most important gift was an anonymous one of $100,000 for the establishment of a department of Chinese languages, literatures, religion, and law, and especially for a chair to be known as the Dean Lung Professorship of Chinese. Later in 1901 it appeared that General Carpenter was the donor of this gift. President Low also reports the gift of $12,000 from Dean Lung himself. “I doubt," said the president, “whether the history of education supplies the record of any similar gift from a Chinainan to a university of the western learning."

ARTICLE:
The Talk of the Town - March 28, 1931 Issue
Dean Lung
By Charles Cooke and James Thurber
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1931/03/28/dean-lung
The New Yorker, March 28, 1931 P. 13
Talk story about the chair of the Chinese which was given to Columbia Univ. by General Horace Carpentier and named in honor of his valet Dean Lung. In 1901, it was given with $100,000. Lung, the General's valet, had stuck through with his master after the gold rush and once the General took him on a trip to the Orient as a reward for his services. Later the General contributed another $150,000 to Columbia. ...  --- Link to 1931 article requires subscription.

ARTICLE:
Living Legacies
East Asian Studies at Columbia: The Early Years by Wm. Theodore de Bary
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/alumni/Magazine/Spring2002/AsianStudies.html
A brief history of Columbia’s East Asian studies department by one of its most eminent pioneering scholars
Not least among the things that got Columbia off to an early start in Chinese studies was the letter (below) sent in 1901 by Dean Lung to President Seth Low, who was about to become mayor of New York that year.

Some have supposed that the “Dean” in this name was an academic title, a thought perhaps stemming from the widespread belief in the West that learning in China had been the preserve, if not almost a monopoly, of an edu cated Confucian elite. Actually, however, “Dean” was just an ordinary Chinese surname (usually rendered “Ding” or “Ting”), and it belonged to the manservant of a Columbia Trustee—a personal valet whose relatively humble status did not preclude his testifying to the deep respect for learning that Confucianism had engendered in most Chinese.
Whatever the “fund for Chinese learning” amounted to at Columbia in those days, it could not have been much. The first contribution to Chinese studies had been made only the year before by an alumnus and Trustee William Barclay Parsons ’1879C ’82E in the form of a gift of Chinese books to the library. That same year the eminent scholar in Indo-Iranian studies, Abraham Valentine Williams Jackson, urged President Low to set up instruction in Chinese studies, but it was clearly the initiative of Dean Lung, and the deep respect held for him by the Trustee General Horace Walpole Carpentier, that led the latter to contribute the substantial sum (for those days) of $226,000 to set up an endowment for Chinese studies. The endowment was established in memory of Dean Lung, as a tribute to this “Chinese person” who was not just his valet but also a friend, admired for his personal qualities and love of learning.
Prompted in part by this action, the noted Columbia anthropologist Franz Boas made a powerful plea in 1902 for Columbia and the American Museum of Natural History together to establish “a great Oriental School” that would “imbue the public with a greater respect for the achievements of Chinese civilization.” In “A Plea for a Great Oriental School,” Boas, referring to the collections being acquired for the museum by Berthold Laufer, said, “We hope by means of these collections to bring out the complexity of Chinese culture, the high degree of technical development achieved by the people, the love of art which pervades their whole life, and the strong social ties that bind the people together. . . .”
Then, expressing a view often repeated later in the century, he added, “Under present conditions a more extended knowledge of East Asiatic cultures is a matter of great national importance . . . and in order to deal intelligently with the problems arising in this area we require a better knowledge of the people and of the countries with which we are dealing. . . . It was hoped that the establishment of these collections [at the Museum] would give an impetus for the universities of our city, particularly Columbia University, to take up the establishment of an East Asian Department. This hope has been fulfilled at an unexpectedly early date. Through the gift of General Carpentier a Department of Chinese has been established at Columbia University. . . .”
...

BOOK:  2002
The Expanding Roles of Chinese Americans in U.S.-China Relations: Transnational Networks and Trans-Pacific Interactions (East Gate Book) May 31, 2002
by Peter H. Koehn and Xiao-Huang Yin
Series: East Gate Book
Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Routledge; 1 edition (May 31, 2002)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9780765609496
ISBN-13: 978-0765609496
ASIN: 0765609495
Section: A Neglected Minority in a Neglected Field - see sample on line at:
https://books.google.com/books?id=OdDyRFWUVPkC&pg=PA169&lpg=PA169&dq=Dean+Lung+Professional+in+Columbia+University&source=bl&ots=h02-Kzkx3T&sig=s95xoH-q2USWkFOenuAoqwh8vMg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiYx4y6uqLeAhXnxFQKHZIMAKIQ6AEwDHoECAUQAQ#v=onepage&q=Dean%20Lung%20&f=false
Page 169-170
Individuals
One of the earliest examples of Chinese American philanthropy in the favored area of promoting education involves Yung Wing (Rong Hong, 1824-1912), a graduate of Yale College in 1854.
...
An even more touching example involves Dean Lung, an immigrant to America employed as a domestic by General Horace W. Carpentier. Carpentier, a Columbia University graduate, was as irascible as he was generous. Once, when drunk, he beat his servant into unconsciousness. The general subsequently asked Dean Lung what he could do for him as an expression of gratitude for his years of patient and faithful service. According to author S.W. Kung, Lung replied "you pay me for my service. I desire for myself nothing more. But United States people know little about Chinese culture and philosophy. Could you do something about that?" Kung adds:
General Carpenter (sic), deeply moved by the unique request, arranged with Columbia, and then gave an extremely large contribution to establish
the Chinese department and library. It is still recognized as one of the best Chinese foundations in the country. What was even more astounding was the gift of $12,000 from Dean Lung himself, representing his entire savings from his many years' labor.
Columbia proceeded to establish a Chinese department and the Dean Lung Professorship of Chinese Studies.

ARTICLE:
FEBRUARY 22, 2017
Lee Tung Foo and Dean Lung
https://montanatude.blog/2017/02/22/lee-tung-foo-and-dean-lung/
...
Dean Lung came to my attention through his professional attachment with former Oakland mayor Horace Walpole Carpentier. Dean was Carpentier’s butler for many years, mostly after 1888, when they left Oakland for New York City.
There are various accounts of their time together – but the details never quite jive. Dean Lung left Horace’s household (was beaten and fired… quit after a beating…), then returned for several years (because he offered to after Horace’s home burned… because he practiced Confucian ideals…), then, on his death bed (or not…) in 1901, Dean presented Horace with every nickel he’d ever been paid while in his employ.
(Picture of Dean and his 1901 letter)
Somehow (Horace in a fit of guilt and remorse… Dean in an inspired moment…) Dean’s money went to Columbia University for its East Asian Studies Department, and establishment of the Dean Lung Professorship (which still exists).
Awesome factoid: A few hours north of campus, in Galway, Saratoga County – long-time home of the Carpentier family – there is actually a Dean Lung Road. Local gossip carries on today – that the asylum-sanitarium ruin located on Dean Lung Road, on some old Carpentier property, is haunted by the ghost of Horace Carpentier.
...

WEB PAGE:
Department of East Asian Languages & Cultures
http://ealac.columbia.edu/department/short-history/
Department History
“I send you herewith a deposit check for $12,000 as a contribution to the fund for Chinese Learning in your university.” This letter, signed by “Dean Lung, a Chinese person”, was written to Columbia President Seth Low by the valet of University Trustee General Horace Walpole Carpentier in 1901. Dean Lung’s remarkable generosity prompted Carpentier to give additional donations totaling $200,000 in honor of his friend and employee for the endowment of Chinese studies at the University. Thus was founded what would become the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures. In 1902 the University appointed its first professor of Chinese, Friedrich Hirth, previously of the University of Munich. Hirth began with the intention of using his own books to support the study of China at Columbia, but in the same year the University received a substantial donation of books from the government of imperial China, founding the University’s Chinese book collection, which would form the basis of what is now the C.V. Starr East Asian Library. Later holders of the founding Dean Lung Professorship have included L. Carrington Goodrich, Hans Bielenstein, and its current occupant Madeleine Zelin.
...

CASE FILE:  -  (no images on line)
Name: Dean Lung
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 1859
Age: 46
Occupation: Student & Traveler
Address: 108 E 37th St; New York; New York  <----- Carpentier addess in 1900
Comments: Status as Traveler Established
Port & Entry Date: 1874
Picture: 1
Interrogation: 1
Document Date: 1894-1905
Case Description: R
Case Number(s): 96, 149
Box: 326
Source Information
Ancestry.com. New York, Index to Chinese Exclusion Case Files, 1898-1943 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 1998.
Original data: United States, National Archives and Records Administration. Index to 'Chinese Exclusion' Case Files of the New York District Office of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, ca. 1882-1960. New York, USA. National Archives and Records Administration--Northeast Region (New York), [April 1998].


2922. Elisha Carpenter

Number 1428 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 207.
Family on page 355 (# 468).  A farmer.
Elisha was famous for his ready wit - his reputation survived into the late
1800s. One story was that he was met in a dark and lonely place by a highwayman
armed with a shotgun.  When his money was demanded, Elisha replied, "Money! I
have not a continental; but take my life and if there is any thing in it I will
go you halves."  the robber said, "Good Evening," and disappeared in the
darkness.

SEE:  Saratoga County, New York Will Testators. Maybe the following?
http://www.sampubco.com/ny/nysaratoga2.htm
CARPENTER, ELISHA            PROVIDENCE    46-6-419
CARPENTER, ELISHA            GREENFIELD    46-6-437

BOOK:
History of Saratoga County, New York, with illustrations biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers
by Sylvester, Nathaniel Bartlett, 1825-1894 - Published 1878 - 514 pages.
https://books.google.com/books?id=j8spAQAAMAAJ&q=carpenter#v=snippet&q=elisha%20carpenter&f=false
Elisha Carpenter is mentioned on ...
9th Brigade of the County of Saratoga - 24th Regiment.
Page 91 - Listed as an Ensign on 4 Apr 1808.  (Likely the son Elisha - see father's notes for more listings.)


6841. Mary Carpenter

Number 3060 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 355.
No family listed.


6843. David Carpenter

Number 3062 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 355.
No family listed.


6844. George S. Carpenter

Number 3063 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 355.
No family listed.
He married a Susan, daughter of Daniel Zeers of Toledo, NY.  She died at
Toldeo.


6845. James Carpenter

Number 3064 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 355.
No family listed.


2923. Rev. James Carpenter

Number 1431 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 207 - no family listed.
A Baptist Minister.  Elected representative to State Legislature in 1825 & 1830.

CENSUS: 1840 US Census
1840 United States Federal Census
Name: J Carpenter
Home in 1840 (City, County, State): Readsboro, Bennington, Vermont
Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29: 2
Free White Persons - Males - 60 thru 69: 1
Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 14: 1
Free White Persons - Females - 50 thru 59: 1
Persons Employed in Agriculture: 1
Free White Persons - Under 20: 1
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49: 2
Total Free White Persons: 5
Total All Persons - Free White, Free Colored, Slaves: 5
Source Citation: Year: 1840; Census Place: Readsboro, Bennington, Vermont; Roll: 539; Page: 283; Image: 584; Family History Library Film: 0027438.

DEATH: See image: RIN 14006 James Carpenter Death.jpg
Vermont, Vital Records, 1760-1954
Name: James Carpenter
Event: Death
Event Date: 01 Sep 1843
Event Place: Readsboro,, Vermont, United States
Gender: Male
Age: 65
Estimated Birth Year: 1778
Father:
Mother:
Spouse: Olive Carpenter
Spouse's Father:
Spouse's Mother:
Film Number: 27501
Digital Folder Number: 004542977
Image Number: 00590


Olive Perry

CENSUS: 1850 US Census - on same page as David Carpenter and living with son Elias Carpenter - See image: RIN 93133 David Carpenter 1850.jpg

Olive PERRY (AFN: 1F3J-6DX)
Birth:   24 Jan 1785   Woodstock,, Ct
Death:   24 Mar 1869   Whitingham,, Vt
Father:  Elijah PERRY (AFN: 1CMJ-L2G)
Mother:  Irene CHILD (AFN: 1CMJ-L3N)


6846. Perry Carpenter

NAME: AFN 1F3J-0L5 has him as Perry Carpenter b. abt 1806 in VT. MA Births has Daniel Perry Carpenter. Dan P. Carpenter per 1860 census. D. Perry per 1880 US Census. Daniel P. per VT Vital records.

NOTE:  Compare RIN 93133 - This is Perry and the other is Daniel Perry.


Lucy H. Whitcomb

NOTE:  Listed with two spouses.  They were confused with each other.  One is Perry and the other Daniel Perry. I believe Daniel Perry is correct. JRC

BIRTH: MA?


6850. Elias Carpenter

CENSUS: 1860 US Census - see image: RIN 94326 Daniel Perry Carpenter 1860.jpg
On same page as brother Daniel Perry.


6852. Aura P. Carpenter

CENSUS: Listed below Olive Perry Carpenter while residing with Olive's son Elias. Relationship unknown to whom.


6853. Winslow L. Carpenter

CENSUS: Listed below Olive Perry Carpenter while residing with Olive's son Elias. Relationship unknown to whom.


2926. Richard Carpenter

Number 1432 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 207
Family on page 801 (#1734) - Note conflict of 7 children.
Died aged 93 or 94 years.  Elected represenative of Readsboro, VT in 1822 and
also held the office of Justice of the Peace.

Per the Carpenter Memorial; "Irregular family. No. of family not given to
Richard's name.  Richard's wife was 'Annie', he was among the first settlers of
Readsboro, VT."  Only one of seven children (Calvin) listed in the Carpenter
Memorial.
"Annie" may have been his second wife.

CENSUS: 1850 US Census - See image: RIN 141776 Daniel Carpenter 1850.jpg - On same page as son Daniel.


Annie or Anise

Apparently, Anise was probably the step mother, and Annie the mother?


6855. Willard Carpenter

United States Census, 1870 - See image: RIN 141809 Willard Carpenter 1870.jpg
Name: Willard Carpenter
Estimated Birth Year: 1806
Gender: Male
Age in 1870: 64y
Color (white, black, mulatto, chinese, Indian): White
Birthplace: Massachusetts
Home in 1870: Vermont, United States
 Household Gender Age
Willard Carpenter  M 64y
Abigail Carpenter  F 62y
Willard Gibson M 15y


2937. Reuben Carpenter

Number 1442 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 208.
Family on page 355 (# 469)
Residence; Schenectady, NY.  A farmer.


6862. Sarah Carpenter

Number 3065 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 355.


6863. Charlotte Carpenter

Number 3066 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 355.
No family listed.


2938. Elisha or Elihue Carpenter

Number 1443 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 208.
Family on page 355 (# 470)
Residence; Not known.  A shoemaker.
On the marriage record his name is spelled "Elihue".

WEB PAGE: http://www.rootsweb.com/~nychauta/CENSUS/Inde1825a.htm
1825 New York State Census - Index
Head of Household      Town
Carpenter, Ellihue     Ellery
Carpenter, Ezra        Villenova
Carpenter, Oliver      Ellery
Carpenter, Timothy     Gerry
Carpenter, William     Ellicott


2940. George Washington Carpenter

Number 1445 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 208.
Family on page 355 (# 471)
Residence; Shelburne, MA.   A farmer.

GRAVE: images
George Washington Carpenter
Birth: 9 Aug 1795 Sutton, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 13 Aug 1868 (aged 73) Shelburne, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Shelburne Center Cemetery, Shelburne, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA
Plot: Right of Gate Row 2
Memorial #: 70936268
Bio:
He married Anna Dole on Sep 18,1822 at Shelburne,MA.
Gravesite Details AE 73 yrs
Family Members
Parents
Reuben Carpenter                 1757-1802
Sally Miller Carpenter                 1754-1798
Spouse
Anna Dole Carpenter                 1799-1867
Siblings
Lydia Carpenter Goodell                 1782-1853
Salley Carpenter                 1786-1789
Children
Sarah Ann Carpenter Andrews                 1823-1904
Maria Trowbridge Carpenter Anderson                 1825-1865
Lydia Warren Carpenter Andrews                 1828-1908
George Parker Carpenter                 1830-1904
Walter Wright Carpenter                 1833-1924
Bethia Ward Carpenter                 1838-1904
Dorinda Adelaide Carpenter Smith                 1841-1910
Created by: DeeB (47264619)
Added: 6 Jun 2011
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/70936268/george-washington-carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 December 2020), memorial page for George Washington Carpenter (9 Aug 1795–13 Aug 1868), Find a Grave Memorial no. 70936268, citing Shelburne Center Cemetery, Shelburne, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by DeeB (contributor 47264619) .


Anna Throwbridge Dole

GRAVE:  images
Anna Dole Carpenter
Birth: 15 Feb 1799 Shelburne, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 2 Nov 1867 (aged 68) Shelburne, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Shelburne Center Cemetery, Shelburne, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA
Plot: Right of Gate Row 2
Memorial #: 70936269
Inscription: Cracked Stone
Family Members
Parents
Parker Dole                 1764-1834
Anna Trowbridge Dole                 1770-1852
Spouse
George Washington Carpenter                 1795-1868
Siblings
Clarissa Dole Long                 1792-1871
Betsey Dole Hubbard                 1794-1862
Dorinda Dole Smead                 1805-1880
Children
Sarah Ann Carpenter Andrews                 1823-1904
Maria Trowbridge Carpenter Anderson                 1825-1865
Lydia Warren Carpenter Andrews                 1828-1908
George Parker Carpenter                 1830-1904
Walter Wright Carpenter                 1833-1924
Bethia Ward Carpenter                 1838-1904
Dorinda Adelaide Carpenter Smith                 1841-1910
Created by: DeeB (47264619)
Added: 6 Jun 2011
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/70936269/anna-carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 December 2020), memorial page for Anna Dole Carpenter (15 Feb 1799–2 Nov 1867), Find a Grave Memorial no. 70936269, citing Shelburne Center Cemetery, Shelburne, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by DeeB (contributor 47264619) .


6871. Bethia Ward Carpenter

Number 3074 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 355.

CENSUS: 1880 US Census
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
George L. ANDREWS   Self   M   Male   W   40   CT   Carpenter   CT   CT
Sarah J. ANDREWS   Wife   M   Female   W   39   CT   Keeping House   CT   CT
Nellie ANDREWS   Dau   S   Female   W   18   CT   At School   CT   CT
Robert ANDREWS   Son   S   Male   W   17   CT   Carpenters Apprentice   CT   CT
Dorinda SMITH   Other   W   Female   W   39   MA   School Teacher   MA   MA
George SMITH   Other   S   Male   W   4   CT      CT   MA
Amelia SMITH   Other   S   Female   W   1   CT      CT   MA
Bethia CARPENTER   Other   S   Female   W   41   MA   School Teacher   MA   MA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place Winchester, Litchfield, Connecticut
 Family History Library Film   1254100
 NA Film Number   T9-0100
 Page Number   149A

GRAVE: images
Bethia Ward Carpenter
Birth: 23 Sep 1838 Shelburne, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: Jan 1904 (aged 65) Litchfield County, Connecticut, USA
Burial: South Cemetery, Shelburne, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA
Plot: Row 7 Stone 2
Memorial #: 68083631
Bio:
The body of Miss Bertha Wood [sic] Carpenter, a sister of Walter Carpenter of Shelburne Center, was taken to Shelburne yesterday from Winsted, Ct., for burial.
[published Saturday, January 9, 1904, Springfield Republican]

Family Members
Parents
George Washington Carpenter                 1795-1868
Anna Dole Carpenter                 1799-1867
Siblings
Sarah Ann Carpenter Andrews                 1823-1904
Maria Trowbridge Carpenter Anderson                 1825-1865
Lydia Warren Carpenter Andrews                 1828-1908
George Parker Carpenter                 1830-1904
Walter Wright Carpenter                 1833-1924
Dorinda Adelaide Carpenter Smith                 1841-1910
Created by: DeeB (47264619)
Added: 8 Apr 2011
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/68083631/bethia-ward-carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 16 December 2020), memorial page for Bethia Ward Carpenter (23 Sep 1838–Jan 1904), Find a Grave Memorial no. 68083631, citing South Cemetery, Shelburne, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by DeeB (contributor 47264619) .


2942. Seth Prime Carpenter

Number 1447 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 208.
Family on page 356 (#472)
Residence; Milford, MA.   A farmer and a shoemaker.
NOTE:
He married sisters who had parents James Barber and Nancy Parks.

MARRIAGE: 1829

CENSUS: 1830 US Census

MARRIAGE: 1831 - image
Name: Seth P. Carpenter
Gender: Male
Spouse: Diana Barber
Marriage Date: 12 Aug 1831
City: Milford
County: Worchester
Source: Family History Library, Salt Lake City, UT, Film # 0874025.
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, U.S., Compiled Marriages, 1633-1850 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.
Original data: Dodd, Jordan, Liahona Research, comp. Massachusetts, Marriages, 1633-1850. With some noted exceptions all marriage records in this collection can be found at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah, and may be available through Family History Centers throughout the United States. See table below for information listed.

CENSUS: 1840 US Census

CENSUS: 1850 US Census
Name: Seth P Carpenter
Gender: Male
Age: 47
Birth Year: abt 1803
Birthplace: Massachusetts
Home in 1850: Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
Occupation: Boot Maker
Industry: Footwear, Except Rubber
Real Estate: 15000
Line Number: 6
Dwelling Number: 90
Family Number: 130
Household Members:
Name Age
Seth P Carpenter 47
Diana Carpenter 42
Diana Carpenter 5
Nancy Carpenter 3
Hannah M Carpenter 0
Source Citation
Year: 1850; Census Place: Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts; Roll: 344; Page: 11a
Source Information
Ancestry.com. 1850 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
Original data: Seventh Census of the United States, 1850; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, 1009 rolls); Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29; National Archives, Washington, D.C.

CENSUS: 1855 Massachusetts State Census
Name: Seth P Carpenter
Gender: Male
Birth Year: abt 1803
Birth Place: Massachusetts
Residence: Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
Enumeration Year: 1855
Age: 52
Household Number: 333
Reel Number: 29
Volume Number: 41
Household Members:
Name Age
Seth P Carpenter 52
Dianna Carpenter 47
Ruben E Carpenter 23
Dianna Carpenter 1
Nancy M Carpenter 8
Hannah M Carpenter 5
Nancy Barber 74
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, U.S., State Census, 1855 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.
Original data: Massachusetts. 1855–1865 Massachusetts State Census [microform]. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.

CENSUS: 1860 US Census
Name: Seth P Carpenter
Age: 57
Birth Year: abt 1803
Gender: Male
Birth Place: Massachusetts
Home in 1860: Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts
Post Office: Milford
Dwelling Number: 948
Family Number: 1433
Occupation: Landlord
Real Estate Value: 35000
Household Members:
Name Age
Seth P Carpenter 57
Diana Carpenter 52
Diana Carpenter 15
Nancy M Carpenter 13
Hannah M Carpenter 10
Source Citation
Year: 1860; Census Place: Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts; Page: 176; Family History Library Film: 803529
Source Information
Ancestry.com. 1860 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
Original data: 1860 U.S. census, population schedule. NARA microfilm publication M653, 1,438 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.

CENSUS: 1865 Massachusetts State Census
Name: Seth P Carpenter
Gender: Male
Marital status: Married
Birth Year: abt 1802
Birth Place: Massachusetts
Residence: Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
Enumeration Year: 1865
Age: 63
Household Number: 751
Reel Number: 35
Volume Number: 39
Household Members:
Name Age
Seth P Carpenter 63
Dianna Carpenter 57
Reuben E Carpenter 33
Dianna Carpenter 20
Nancy M Carpenter 18
Hannah M Carpenter 15
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, U.S., State Census, 1865 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.
Original data: Massachusetts. 1855–1865 Massachusetts State Census [microform]. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.

CENSUS: 1870 US Census
Name: Seth P Carpenter
Age in 1870: 67
Birth Year: abt 1803
Birthplace: Massachusetts
Dwelling Number: 558
Home in 1870: Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts
Race: White
Gender: Male
Post Office: Mendon
Occupation: No Occupation
Male Citizen over 21: Y
Personal Estate Value: 200
Real Estate Value: 25000
Inferred Spouse: Diana Carpenter
Inferred Children: Diana Carpenter
Hannah M Carpenter
Household Members:
Name Age
Seth P Carpenter 67
Diana Carpenter 62
Diana Carpenter 25
Hannah M Carpenter 21
Source Citation
Year: 1870; Census Place: Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts; Roll: M593_654; Page: 385A; Family History Library Film: 552153
Source Information
Ancestry.com. 1870 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
Original data:
1870 U.S. census, population schedules. NARA microfilm publication M593, 1,761 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.

CENSUS: 1880 US Census
Name: Seth P. Carpenter
Age: 77
Birth Date: Abt 1803
Birthplace: Massachusetts
Home in 1880: Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
Street: North Bow Street
Dwelling Number: 97
Race: White
Gender: Male
Relation to Head of House: Self (Head)
Marital status: Married
Spouse's Name: Diana Carpenter
Father's Birthplace: Massachusetts
Mother's Birthplace: Massachusetts
Neighbors: View others on page
Household Members:
Name Age
Seth P. Carpenter 77
Diana Carpenter 73
Diana Carpenter 35
Hannah M. Carpenter 29
Source Citation
Year: 1880; Census Place: Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts; Roll: 565; Page: 624B; Enumeration District: 854
Source Information
Ancestry.com and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 1880 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2010. 1880 U.S. Census Index provided by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints © Copyright 1999 Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved. All use is subject to the limited use license and other terms and conditions applicable to this site.
Original data: Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C.
SEE ALSO:  Old School
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
Seth P. CARPENTER   Self   M   Male   W   77   MA      MA   MA
Diana CARPENTER   Wife   M   Female   W   73   MA   Keeping House   MA   MA
Diana CARPENTER   Dau   S   Female   W   35   MA   At Home   MA   MA
Hannah M. CARPENTER   Dau   S   Female   W   29   MA   At Home   MA   MA
Source Information:
 Census Place Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts
 Family History Library Film   1254565
 NA Film Number   T9-0565
 Page Number   624B

DEATH: image
Name: Seth Prime Carpenter
Gender: Male
Age: 82
Birth Date: abt 1802
Birth Place: Upton
Death Date: 11 Dec 1884
Death Place: Milford, Massachusetts, USA
Father: Ruben Carpenter
Mother: Hannah Cook
Source Citation
New England Historic Genealogical Society; Boston, Massachusetts; Massachusetts Vital Records, 1840???1911
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, U.S., Death Records, 1841-1915 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013.
Original data: Massachusetts Vital Records, 1840–1911. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.
Massachusetts Vital Records, 1911–1915. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.

GRAVE: images
Seth Prime Carpenter
Birth: 25 Nov 1802 Upton, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 11 Dec 1884 (aged 82) Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Memorial #: 99283547
Family Members
Spouses
Maria Barber Carpenter                 1806-1831
Diana Barber Carpenter                 1808-1889
Children
George Washington Carpenter                 1834-1837
Hannah Maria Carpenter                 1836-1843
Dianna Carpenter                 1845-1883
Created by: Candy Rypczyk (47046912)
Added: 20 Oct 2012
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/99283547/seth-prime-carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 December 2020), memorial page for Seth Prime Carpenter (25 Nov 1802–11 Dec 1884), Find a Grave Memorial no. 99283547, citing Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by Candy Rypczyk (contributor 47046912) .


Maria Barber

GRAVE: image
Maria Barber Carpenter
Birth: 9 Jul 1806 Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 12 Feb 1831 (aged 24) Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Memorial #: 99355403
Family Members
Parents
James Barber                 1779-1844
Nancy Parks Barber                 Unknown-1864
Spouse
Seth Prime Carpenter                 1802-1884
Siblings
William Barber                 1803-1863
Sarah Parks Barber Bixby                 1804-1858
Diana Barber Carpenter                 1808-1889
James Madison Barber                 1810-1873
Ann Matilda Barber                 1812-1849
John Parks Barber                 1816-1864
Hamlet Ellison Barber                 1818-1907
Gardner Parks Barber                 1823-1879
Created by: Candy Rypczyk (47046912)
Added: 21 Oct 2012
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/99355403/maria-carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 December 2020), memorial page for Maria Barber Carpenter (9 Jul 1806–12 Feb 1831), Find a Grave Memorial no. 99355403, citing Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by Candy Rypczyk (contributor 47046912) .


Diana Barber

GRAVE: image
Diana Barber Carpenter
Birth: 31 Mar 1808 Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 1889 (aged 80–81) Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Memorial #: 99355457
Family Members
Parents
James Barber                 1779-1844
Nancy Parks Barber                 Unknown-1864
Spouse
Seth Prime Carpenter                 1802-1884
Siblings
William Barber                 1803-1863
Sarah Parks Barber Bixby                 1804-1858
Maria Barber Carpenter                 1806-1831
James Madison Barber                 1810-1873
Ann Matilda Barber                 1812-1849
John Parks Barber                 1816-1864
Hamlet Ellison Barber                 1818-1907
Gardner Parks Barber                 1823-1879
Children
George Washington Carpenter                 1834-1837
Hannah Maria Carpenter                 1836-1843
Dianna Carpenter                 1845-1883
Created by: Candy Rypczyk (47046912)
Added: 21 Oct 2012
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/99355457/diana-carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 December 2020), memorial page for Diana Barber Carpenter (31 Mar 1808–1889), Find a Grave Memorial no. 99355457, citing Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by Candy Rypczyk (contributor 47046912) .


6875. George Washington Carpenter

Number 3078 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 356.

GRAVE:
George Washington Carpenter
Birth: 28 Jul 1834 Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 10 Aug 1837 (aged 3) Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Memorial #: 99355509
Family Members
Parents
Seth Prime Carpenter                 1802-1884
Diana Barber Carpenter                 1808-1889
Siblings
Hannah Maria Carpenter                 1836-1843
Dianna Carpenter                 1845-1883
Created by: Candy Rypczyk (47046912)
Added: 21 Oct 2012
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/99355509/george-washington-carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 December 2020), memorial page for George Washington Carpenter (28 Jul 1834–10 Aug 1837), Find a Grave Memorial no. 99355509, citing Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by Candy Rypczyk (contributor 47046912) .


6876. Hannah Maria Carpenter

Number 3080 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 356.

BIRTH: image
Name: Hannah Maria Carpenter
Gender: Female
Event Type: Birth
Birth Place: Milford, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
Father: Seth P. Carpenter
Mother: Diana Carpenter
Source Citation
Boston, Massachusetts; Vital Records of Milford, Massachusetts to the Year 1850
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, U.S., Compiled Birth, Marriage, and Death Records, 1700-1850 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2018.
Per image born 16 Aug 1835

DEATH:
Name: Hannah M. Carpenter
County: Worcester
Town: Milford
Death Date: 24 Jul 1843
Age: 6y 11m 8d
Place of Death: Milford
Volume: 9
Page: 138
Condition: Female/Child
Cause: Disease of the Heart
Father/Husband: Seth P. CARPENTER
Mother: Diana CARPENTER
Place of birth: Milford
Source Information
Philips, Beth, comp.. Massachusetts Deaths, 1844: Vol. 8, Barnstable to Hampshire; Volume 9, Middlesex to Worcester [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2001.
Original data: Boston, MA, USA: Boston State Archives, 1844.

GRAVE:
Hannah Maria Carpenter
Birth: 16 Aug 1836 Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 24 Jul 1843 (aged 6) Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Memorial #: 99355554
Family Members
Parents
Seth Prime Carpenter                 1802-1884
Diana Barber Carpenter                 1808-1889
Siblings
George Washington Carpenter                 1834-1837
Dianna Carpenter                 1845-1883
Created by: Candy Rypczyk (47046912)
Added: 21 Oct 2012
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/99355554/hannah-maria-carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 December 2020), memorial page for Hannah Maria Carpenter (16 Aug 1836–24 Jul 1843), Find a Grave Memorial no. 99355554, citing Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by Candy Rypczyk (contributor 47046912) .


6877. Diana Carpenter

Number 3082 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 356.

GRAVE:
Dianna Carpenter
Birth: 1 Mar 1845 Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 10 Jan 1883 (aged 37) Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Memorial #: 99355592
Family Members
Parents
Seth Prime Carpenter                 1802-1884
Diana Barber Carpenter                 1808-1889
Siblings
George Washington Carpenter                 1834-1837
Hannah Maria Carpenter                 1836-1843
Created by: Candy Rypczyk (47046912)
Added: 21 Oct 2012
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/99355592/dianna-carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 December 2020), memorial page for Dianna Carpenter (1 Mar 1845–10 Jan 1883), Find a Grave Memorial no. 99355592, citing Pine Grove Cemetery, Milford, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by Candy Rypczyk (contributor 47046912) .


6879. Hannah Maria Carpenter

Number 3081 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 356.


Lewis R. Barber

Probably a descendant of James Barber b. abt 1780.