Number 776 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 137.
Family on page 256 and 257 (# 280).
A Farmer. He served in the Revolutionary war. He was called Captain in one
record. He served as a private several times. Example: TWO Caleb Carpenters
of Rehoboth enlisted on Dec. 8, 1776 in Capt. Nathaniel Carpenter's Company
in the Rhode Island Alarm - one served 2 days and the other 16 days.
See notes on page 137 and 138. He owned a lot of property.1 MILI He was called Captain and probably served in the Revolution as a
private; it appears he served as a private in the Lexington
scare in Captain Lyon's company. Two Caleb Carpenters of
Rehoboth enlisted Dec. 8, 1776, in Capt. Nathaniel Carpenter's
company in the ,RI alarm - one served two days and the
other 16. For additional information see reference
1 MILI
1 MILI
2 SOUR S203
3 TEXT pg 137
DEATH:
She died at age 100 years and 9 months.PARENTS:
William Bullock S112-JHR
birth: 29 April 1718
death: 10 December 1810
Susannah Kent S112-JHP
birth: 22 January 1716
death: 22 July 1780
Number 1890 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 257.
The Nancy Carpenter listed in the CM as born 21 Nov 1773 and the one listed as
born 22 Nov 1774 were once believed to be the same person. However, the
marriage date and known children do not match up!
A farmer and a shoemaker..
Resided in Camden, S.C. and Philadelphia. He was one of the
foremost naturalists of his day; he collection was by him
presented to Brown University, Providence, RI Mr. Blanding
first settled in Attleboro,,MA., and removed to Camden, S.C.
where he practised medicine and became an eminent scholar in
natural history. It is said that his cabinet of history was
probably larger than that of any one individual in the United
State.2 SOUR S203
3 TEXT pg 257
Number 782 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 139.
Possibly born or raised in Rehoboth, MA. He went south.
No family listed. Family listed is not proved.Did he go to IN via VA?
DEATH:
Caution - The 1843 death and burial in Hicks Cemetery, Franklin Township, Owen, Indiana, USA
is the other Sgt. John Carpenter.http://www.usgennet.org/usa/topic/colonial/census/1840/1840in_a.html
SOURCE: 1840 Census of Pensioners Revolutionary or Military Services;
With the names, ages, and places of residence
Returned by the marshalls of the several judicial districts; under
The Act for Taking the Sixth Census
Typed and Reformatted By: Kathy Leigh, July 17, 2001
INDIANA
A - D First Name Last Name Age Head of Household Town County Possible Spelling
John Carpenter 85 (NA) Franklin Owen
NAME:
Last name given as O'Neal but this is unlikely. At one point someone tried to force a connection with her husband John Carpenter with to Sgt. John Carpenter who had a wife named Mary O'Neal. The O'Neal was added to this record and kinda stuck. I have removed it.DEATH:
1840/1850 in Owens County, IN is the Maryy O'Neal the wife of Sgt. John Carpenter.
Number 783 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 139.
Family on page 257 (# 281).
This Stephen was killed by Indians.
The CM has the following note: Mrs. E. Barney writes that Stephen, the father
was killed in the Indian War in Seekonk or Providence. The compiler (Amos B.
Carpenter of the CM) thinks that must be a mistake. If either, it was probably
the son, Stephen number 783.BIRTH: image
Name Stephen Carpenter
Record Type Birth
Birth Date 12 Aug 1722
Birth Place Rehoboth, Massachusetts, USA
Father Stephen Carpenter
Mother Martha Carpenter
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, U.S., 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 Stephen Carpenter
Birth Date 12 Aug 1722
Birth Place Rehoboth, Massachusetts, USA
Relative chi:Stephen Carpenter; chi:Martha Carpenter
Source Vital Record of Rehoboth, 1642-1896. Marriages, Intentions, Births, Deaths, with Supplement containing the Record of 1896, Colonial Returns, Lists of the Early Settlers, Purchasers, Freemen, Inhabitants, the Soldiers serving in Philip's War and the Revolution.
Births
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Rehoboth, Massachusetts, U.S., Vital Records, 1642-1896 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2000.
Original data: Arnold, James N. Vital Record of Rehoboth, 1642-1896. Providence, RI, USA: Narragansett Historical Publishing, 1897.PROBATE: 1777 - many images - Same person?
Name Stephen Carpenter <--- of Attleborough
Probate Date 1777
Probate Place Bristol, Massachusetts, USA
Inferred Death Year 1777
Inferred Death Place Massachusetts, USA
Others Listed (Name)
Stephen Carpenter
Table of Contents 27 images
Cover Page 1 <----- Elijah Carpenter is 1 of 3 administrators
Guardianship Papers 2 – 4 <--- Child Rachel Carpenter
Petition Papers 5 – 6 <----- 30 Jan 1777 cited, 3 Feb 1777 cited
Order Papers 7 – 8
Account Papers 9 – 14
Inventory Papers 15 – 18 <--- 20 Mar 1777
Account Papers 19 – 22
Petition Papers 23 – 24 <---- 18 Mar 1778 mentions widow Susannah Carpenter with Gerhsom & John Carpenter (brothers?)
Miscellaneous 25
Account Papers 26 – 27 <--- CAUTION! Another Stephen Carpenter with a Peter Carpenter adminstrator follows March 1778 plus dates.
Source Citation
Bristol County (Mass.) Probate Records 1690-1881; Author: Bristol County (Massachusetts). Register of Probate; Probate Place: Bristol, Massachusetts
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, U.S., Wills and Probate Records, 1635-1991 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015.
Original data: Massachusetts County, District and Probate Courts.-------------------------------------------
NOTE:
Apparently there was two Elias Carpenters. One born in Woodstock, CT and another who was in Ulster county, NY in 1777 where he abandoned his farm or was killed. Not much information to go on here! It is speculated that either the son or grandson was there.Henry and Susanna Vesqueau Yaple were said to have occupied the
farm "formerly" belonging to Elias CARPENTER.
"RESIDENCE: Probably late 1771 or early 1772 the family moved
from Upper Milford Township, Northampton County, PA to (the
former Elias Carpenter Farm) the little Dutch colony of Pakatakan,
Ulster County, New York. In 1777 the settlement at Pakatakan was
entirely abandoned, due to the Tories attacks, but in 1783 the families
returned etc.etc."NOTE:
Delaware County was created in 1797 from Ulster and Otsego Counties.
The West and East Branches of the Delaware flow through the current county boundaries.BOOK:
CHAPTERS IN THE HISTORY OF DELAWARE COUNTY, NEW YORK, Delaware Co. Hist. Assn., 1949, by John Monroe.
Extracted from: https://harmdumond.tripod.com/id1.htmlSETTLEMENT AND DEATH OF HARMONUS DUMOND AT PAKATAKAN
"Between 1763 and 1778 at least forty families from Shandaken, Marbletown and the vicinity of Kingston had settled on the East Branch of the Delaware River in what is now Delaware County. These families came over Pine Hill by the route subsequently adopted for the old Sopus Turnpike.
...
"The little Dutch colony thus planted continues to increase by immigration, and within eight years numbered nine families. Of these, William Philip Henry Yaple came to the *** Elias Carpenter *** place in 1771. He evidently came to the settlement on more than one errand, for his fortunes were at once shared by Dumond's daughter Nelly. Other settlers were Simeon Von Waggoner, Slyter, Green, Hinebaugh and Bierch. All the settlers thus far had maintained friendly relations with the Indians, but during the first years of the Revolutionary troubles complications arose, by which the property, the freedom, and in some instances the lives of the colonists were sacrificed.
NOTE:
Compare to: https://archive.org/details/oldeulsterhistorjan1910king/page/12/mode/2up?q=%22Elias+Carpenter%22COMMENT:
PAKATAKAN became associated with Dean’s Corners which became Arkville in time.
SEE:
History of Arkville, New York
https://www.centralcatskills.com/arkville
Arkville had some of the first European settlers in Delaware County. Four Dutch families moved into the area in 1763, but after learning of an imminent attack by natives, escaped back to the safety of Kingston in Ulster County.
In 1887, artist J. Francis Murphy started the Pakatakan Artists colony. It was the first Artists Colony in New York State. Houses similar in style were established in this enclave, many standing to this day and all privately owned.
In the late 1800’s and the early 1900’s the Treyz and later Luzerne Chemical companies operated a large wood acid factory. The U&D hauled charcoal, wood alcohol, and the acid, which was used to make explosives.
The Rondout & Oswego Railroad arrived in Dean’s Corners, as Arkville was known, in 1871. Some historians say the station was built on the site of the Tuscarora Indian headquarters. The need to add an extra locomotive to climb Highmount made Arkville into an important stop along what was to become the Ulster & Delaware Railroad.
In 1905, Arkville became even more of a railroad hub when the Delaware and Eastern, later the Delaware and Northern provided a west bound connection to Margaretville, Andes, The Reservoir Towns, Downsville and East Branch.
Today Arkville is in the midst of a rebirth, with the Delaware and Ulster excursion rail ride, The Catskill Center for Conservation and Development and The Erpf Gallery, the Catskill Forest Association, the Catskill regional office of The Nature Conservatory all within walking distance of each other along Route 28 in the center of Arkville.
SEE ALSO:
Arkville is a hamlet in the Town of Middletown, Delaware County, New York, United States. It is located along New York State Route 28, one mile north of the village of Margaretville in the western Catskill Mountains. It has the ZIP code 12406.
Arkville is built either on or very close to the site of an old Lenape village called Pakatagkan.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arkville,_New_York
1399. Gershom "Gersham" Carpenter
Number 786 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 139.
Family on page 258 (#282). A cabinet maker and a farmer.Descendants of Gersham Carpenter submitted by:
Charles A. Carpenter (b.1947) of St. Cloud, FL.Gershom was a farmer and often made furniture for trade. This mostly chests, chairs and cabinets. He had a business with a James Halyburton some time in the early to mid 1780s and the business continued after Gersom died in 1793 under Halyburton.
See image: RIN 15271 Gershom Carpenter label.jpg
Gershom had two sons (Joseph & John) who are also listed as cabinet makers. It is assumed that Joseph being the eldest son inherited his fathers portion of the business and sold his portion to Halyburton before 1800 and went to MI.GRAVE: image
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=68744830
Gershom Carpenter
Birth: 1727
Death: Sep. 6, 1793
Family links:
Parents:
Stephen Carpenter (1696 - 1778)
Burial:
Swan Point Cemetery
Providence
Providence County
Rhode Island, USACreated by: Superkentman
Record added: Apr 22, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 68744830
suggestion for placesE-MAIL:
From: Matthew Baird mailto:matt.w.baird@gmail.com>
Sent: Friday, September 26, 2014 2:33 PM
To: jrcrin001@cox.net mailto:jrcrin001@cox.net>
Subject: Info on Gershom or Gersham Carpenter
Mr. Carpenter,
I am interested in finding information regarding a early member of your family Mr. Gershom Carpenter. I own a piece of furniture with his label and want to find out more about his life and work in Providence RI. I know he once worked with a Mr. Halyburton in the cabinet and chairmaking business. I know he passed away Sept. 1793.
Many thanks for your help and assistance in providing any info you may have.
Sincerely,
Matthew Baird
matt.w.baird@gmail.com mailto:matt.w.baird@gmail.com>
NAME: Cook or Cooke.
GRAVE: image
Hannah Cooke Carpenter
Birth: 17 Apr 1732 Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Death: 14 Sep 1809 (aged 77) Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Burial: Swan Point Cemetery, Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Plot: Group FUS, Location L, Lot 328
Memorial #: 42481894
Family Members
Parents
Capt Daniel Cooke 1691-1737
Mary Power Cooke 1696-1741
Spouse
Gershom Carpenter 1727-1793
Siblings
John Cooke 1715-1718
Nicholas Cooke 1717-1782
John Cooke 1721-1721
Mary Cooke 1722-1728
Anna Cooke Proud 1723-1751
Sarah Cooke Jacobs 1727-1802
Children
Joseph Carpenter 1751-1813
Martha Carpenter Jacobs 1757-1779
John Carpenter 1761-1787
Created by: Kim Jacobson (46593064)
Added: 2009-09-28T11:44:58.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/42481894/hannah_carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/42481894/hannah-carpenter: accessed July 7, 2024), memorial page for Hannah Cooke Carpenter (17 Apr 1732–14 Sep 1809), Find a Grave Memorial ID 42481894, citing Swan Point Cemetery, Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA; Maintained by Kim Jacobson (contributor 46593064).
3609. Nancy Ann "Ann" Carpenter
Number 1900 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 258.
No family listed. Married three times.NAME:
Nancy in the CM, but listed as Nancy Ann in a descendant letter then Ann on grave marker.Descendants of Gersham Carpenter submitted by:
Charles A. Carpenter (b.1947) of St. Cloud, FL.GRAVE: image
Ann Carpenter Crapon
Birth: 24 Feb 1762
Death: 9 May 1838 (aged 76)
Burial: Swan Point Cemetery, Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Memorial #: 163520877
Inscription: Mrs ANN CRAPON
Widow of
Capt. Christopher Crapon
& daughter of
Gershom Carpenter
Born Feb.24 1762:
Died May 9, 1838
Blessed are the dead,
who die in the Lord
Family Members
Parents
Gershom Carpenter 1727-1793
Siblings
Joseph Carpenter 1751-1813
Martha Carpenter Jacobs 1757-1779
John Carpenter 1761-1787
Created by: Marilyn (48904600)
Added: 2016-05-30T16:59:54.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/163520877/ann_crapon
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/163520877/ann-crapon: accessed July 7, 2024), memorial page for Ann Carpenter Crapon (24 Feb 1762–9 May 1838), Find a Grave Memorial ID 163520877, citing Swan Point Cemetery, Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA; Maintained by Marilyn (contributor 48904600).
Number 1901 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 258.
No family listed.Descendants of Gersham Carpenter submitted by:
Charles A. Carpenter (b.1947) of St. Cloud, FL.
A merchant.
Number 1898 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 258.
No family listed. A cabinet maker.Descendants of Gersham Carpenter submitted by:
Charles A. Carpenter (b.1947) of St. Cloud, FL.GRAVE: images
John Carpenter
Birth: 1761
Death: 6 Oct 1787 (aged 25–26) USA
Burial: Swan Point Cemetery, Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Plot: Loc L, Lot 328
Memorial #: 42482232
Bio: Son of Hannah Cooke and Gershom Carpenter. Buried next to his parents.
Inscription: In Memory of
Mr John Carpenter
Son of Mr. Gershom Carpenter
and Mrs. Hannah his wife,
who departed this life Oct.6th AD 1787
aged 26 years 4 months,& 12 Day's <---- b. about 25 May 1761
Family Members
Parents
Gershom Carpenter 1727-1793
Hannah Cooke Carpenter 1732-1809
Siblings
Joseph Carpenter 1751-1813
Martha Carpenter Jacobs 1757-1779
Ann Carpenter Crapon 1762-1838
Created by: Kim Jacobson (46593064)
Added: 2009-09-28T11:58:03.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/42482232/john_carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/42482232/john-carpenter: accessed July 7, 2024), memorial page for John Carpenter (1761–6 Oct 1787), Find a Grave Memorial ID 42482232, citing Swan Point Cemetery, Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA; Maintained by Kim Jacobson (contributor 46593064).
Number 1899 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 258.
No family listed.Descendants of Gersham Carpenter submitted by:
Charles A. Carpenter (b.1947) of St. Cloud, FL.
A farmer.
Number 1902 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 258.
No family listed.Descendants of Gersham Carpenter submitted by:
Charles A. Carpenter (b.1947) of St. Cloud, FL.GRAVE: image
Martha Carpenter Jacobs
Birth: 1757
Death: 7 Aug 1779 (aged 21–22)
Burial: Swan Point Cemetery, Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Memorial #: 129586004
Inscription: In memory of
Mrs. Martha Jacobs,
(wife of Mr. William Jacobs & Daughter
of Mr. Gershom & Mrs. Hannah Carpenter)
Who died Aug 7th 1779 in the 23.d
Year of her
Age
Family Members
Parents
Gershom Carpenter 1727-1793
Hannah Cooke Carpenter 1732-1809
Spouse
William Jacobs Unknown-1805
Siblings
Joseph Carpenter 1751-1813
John Carpenter 1761-1787
Ann Carpenter Crapon 1762-1838
Maintained by: CMWJR (50059520)
Originally Created by: T.V.F.T.H. (46496806)
Added: 2014-05-10T16:00:04.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/129586004/martha_jacobs
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/129586004/martha-jacobs: accessed July 7, 2024), memorial page for Martha Carpenter Jacobs (1757–7 Aug 1779), Find a Grave Memorial ID 129586004, citing Swan Point Cemetery, Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA; Maintained by CMWJR (contributor 50059520).
GRAVE: images
William Jacobs
Birth: unknown
Death: 19 Aug 1805 Uxbridge, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Prospect Hill Cemetery, Uxbridge, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Plot: Section 1S Row 8
Memorial #: 105404256
Bio:
Birth calculated circa 1750 - clkUxbridge Births pg 93
JACOBS
Benjamin s William & Comfort May 25 1781
Betsey d. William & Comfort Mar 27 1785
Dolphios s. William & Comfort Mar 11 1789
John s. William & Comfort May 23 1787
Joseph s William & Comfort May 30 1796
Martha d William & Comfort Sep 2 1793
Sally d William & Comfort Mar 18 1798
Susanah d William & Comfort Sep 13 1791
William s William & Comfort Sept 2 1802Uxb Marriages pg 264
JACOBS
Benjamin & Sophia Wood Oct 8 1820
Martha & David Walker of New Salem May 28 1812
William & Harriet Swasey Apr 2 1823Uxb Deaths pg 382
JACOBS
Benjamin, Mar 22, 1830 in his 49th y
Betsey (d William & Comfort, GR1) Oct 7 1798 in her 14th y
Comfort wid/William, Mar 14 1819 in her 60th y (58y 11m GR1)
pg 383
John (s. William & Comfort GR1) Oct 15 1798 in his 12 y
Sally Oct 25 1798 a 7m 7d
Susannah (d William & Comfort GR1) Oct 8 1798 in her 7th y (in her 8th y GR1)
William Aug 19, 1805 (a. 55y GR1)Inscription:
AEt. 55 years
CORRECTIONS-ADDITIONS WELCOME - PLEASE USE "EDIT"
Family Members
Spouses
Martha Carpenter Jacobs 1757-1779
Comfort Fish Jacobs 1759-1819
Children
Betsey Jacobs 1785-1798
John Jacobs 1787-1798
Martha Jacobs Walker 1788-1867
Susanah Jacobs 1791-1798
Sally Jacobs 1798-1798
Maintained by: S&E (47475092)
Originally Created by: Carolyn [Lee] Kelly (47510203)
Added: 2013-02-18T06:54:00.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/105404256/william_jacobs
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/105404256/william-jacobs: accessed July 7, 2024), memorial page for William Jacobs (unknown–19 Aug 1805), Find a Grave Memorial ID 105404256, citing Prospect Hill Cemetery, Uxbridge, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA; Maintained by S&E (contributor 47475092).
Number 790 in CARPENTER MEMORIAL on page 139.
Family on page 258 and 259 (# 283). A Weaver.He moved to Brattleboro VT before 1795. He was brought up a weaver and he
invented and constructed a loom whereby he wove all kinds of table linen, bed
spreads, etc. When he was an aged man he taught his grandchildren and nephews
to weave. He was called "The Smoking Peter". Peter and his brothers in law
James, son of Ebenezer , with the families moved to VT and bought
where they could buy the cheapest. They did not settle very near each other.
Peter took his wife with him to Vermont, James left his wife in
Rehoboth for two years.E-MAIL: Mon, 22 May 2000 From: Bruce E. Carpenter
The new LDS online data can be used to real advantage. For example someone
had recorded a Providence birth certificate for Peter Carpenter (Amos
Carpenter, p. 139), son of Stephen Carpenter of Rehoboth. There is no mother
listed for the birth. Previous opinion was that Martha Hunt was the mother
of Peter and that Martha Hunt was an American Indian as circumstantially
suggested in Amos Carpenter. Stephen and Martha had children every other
year until Peter. Then there is a four or five year gap after Peter, then
two or more children by presumably Martha. Then Martha passes away and
Stephen does not remarry for ten years. My reading of this is that Stephen
had a possible Narragansett mistress. After Peter was born to her things
naturally went badly between he and Martha for a number of years, but
finally settled down for a while. Naturally, Stephen didn't remarry after
Martha's death, and lived with his mistress for the decade until she faded
from the picture. The comments of the Mrs. Barney in the Amos Carpenter (p.
80) notation for Stephen Carpenter also can point to only Peter as having
the Indian ancestry. Thus Peter Carpenter was an illegitimate half-breed, a
rough road in 1700s Massachusetts. He also married his first cousin Jemima
Carpenter, who herself was a descendant of both Rehoboth William's sons
Samuel and William. Thus Peter's children descend twice from Samuel and also
from his brother William. Martha's grave is located respectfully next to
Stephens in front of the Newman church. BC
E-MAIL: Wed, 24 May 2000 From: "John F. Chandler"
Bruce wrote:
> The new LDS online data can be used to real advantage. For example someone
> had recorded a Providence birth certificate for Peter Carpenter (Amos
> Carpenter, p. 139), son of Stephen Carpenter of Rehoboth.
The LDS data online are just the same as they were when they were
available only in Family History Centers and a few libraries. In short,
they can provide many useful clues, but they are brimming full with
errors. For example, the vital records of Providence do not include the
birth of Peter Carpenter, nor of any other children of Stephen, with or
without a mother. Anything you find in the AF or the IGI needs to be
verified before you give it any credence. John Chandler
VERY VERY TRUE!!! JRC 5/2000.------------------------
BIRTH: image
Name: Peter Carpenter
Event Type: Birth
Event Date: 18 October 1734
Event Place: Rehoboth, Bristol, Plymouth Colony, British Colonial America (Rehoboth, Bristol, Plymouth Colony, British Colonial America)
Event Place (Original): Massachusetts, United States
Record Type: Birth
Digital Folder Number: 007578641
Image Number: 654
Citing this Record
"Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QG1K-94Z9 : Sat Mar 09 12:10:31 UTC 2024), Entry for Peter Carpenter, 18 October 1734.
NOTE:
See also image at Internet Archive - look for the last Peter on the first column.
https://archive.org/details/vitalrecordofreh00arno/page/574/mode/2upMARRIAGE: 1775
Name: Peter Carpenter
Sex: Male
Spouse's Name: Jemima Carpenter
Spouse's Sex: Female
Event Type: Marriage
Event Date: 24 Jun 1775 <---------------- I had 3 Aug 1775! Changed.
Event Place: Rehoboth, Bristol, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America
Event Place (Original): Rehoboth, Bristol, Massachusetts, United States
Source Details: p 127 item 11
Household Role Sex Age Birthplace
Jemima Carpenter Wife F
Digital Folder Number: 007577046
Microfilm Number: 1987644
Originating System: EASY
Indexing Batch: I01581-7
Citing this Record
"Massachusetts State Vital Records, 1841-1925", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FHG8-B65 : Thu May 23 01:16:26 UTC 2024), Entry for Peter Carpenter and Jemima Carpenter, 24 Jun 1775.MARRIAGE: 1877 - image <----- per image June 24th 1775 is clearly listed
Name: Peter Carpenter
Sex: Male
Spouse's Name: Jemima Carpenter
Event Type: Marriage
Event Date: 13 May 1877 <----- per image June 24th 1775 is clearly listed
Event Place: Rehoboth, Bristol, Plymouth Colony, British Colonial America
Event Place (Original): Rehoboth, Bristol, Massachusetts
Page Number: p 127 item 11
Household Role Sex Age Birthplace
Jemima Carpenter Spouse U
Digital Folder Number: 007577046
Microfilm Number: 1987644
Image Number: 343
Indexing Batch: I11740-0
Citing this Record
"Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q29P-492D : Sat Mar 09 02:52:03 UTC 2024), Entry for Peter Carpenter and Jemima Carpenter, 13 May 1877.MARRIAGE: image - 1758
Name: Peter Carpenter
Sex: Male
Spouse's Name: Elizabeth Munro
Spouse's Sex: Female
Event Type: Marriage
Event Date: 15 October 1758
Event Place: Rehoboth, Bristol, Plymouth Colony, British Colonial America (Rehoboth, Bristol, Plymouth Colony, British Colonial America)
Event Place (Original): Massachusetts, United States
Record Type: Marriage
Household Role Sex Age Birthplace
Peter Carpenter Husband M
Digital Folder Number: 007578641
Image Number: 325
Citing this Record
"Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QG1V-B27Q : Sat Mar 09 09:21:06 UTC 2024), Entry for Peter Carpenter and Elizabeth Munro, 15 October 1758.
SEE ALSO:
Name: Peter Carpenter
Sex: Male
Spouse's Name: Elizabeth
Spouse's Sex: Female
Event Type: Marriage
Event Date: 5 Aug 1758
Event Place: Rehoboth, Bristol, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America
Event Place (Original): Rehoboth, Bristol, Massachusetts, United States
Household Role Sex Age Birthplace
Elizabeth Wife F
Digital Folder Number: 007577046
Microfilm Number: 1987644
Originating System: EASY
Indexing Batch: I01581-7
Citing this Record
"Massachusetts State Vital Records, 1841-1925", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FHG8-JMH : Wed May 22 23:45:51 UTC 2024), Entry for Peter Carpenter and Elizabeth, 5 Aug 1758.
BIRTH:
Name: Elizabeth Munro
Sex: Female
Father's Name: John Munro
Father's Sex: Male
Mother's Name: Hannah
Mother's Sex: Female
Event Type: Birth
Event Date: 6 August 1738
Event Place: Bristol, Bristol, Rhode Island, United States
Event Place (Original): Bristol, Bristol, Rhode Island
Household Role Sex Age Birthplace
Hannah Mother F
John Munro Father M
Digital Folder Number: 004237494
Microfilm Number: 912787
Image Number: 13
Indexing Batch: I09122-7
Citing this Record
"Rhode Island Town Births and Baptisms Index, 1639-1932", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F8M2-RVM : Sun Mar 10 05:06:21 UTC 2024), Entry for Elizabeth Munro and John Munro, 6 August 1738.MARRIAGE: image
Name: Peter Carpenter
Sex: Male
Spouse's Name: Elizabeth Munro
Spouse's Sex: Female
Event Type: Marriage
Event Date: 15 October 1758
Event Place: Rehoboth, Bristol, Plymouth Colony, British Colonial America (Rehoboth, Bristol, Plymouth Colony, British Colonial America)
Event Place (Original): Massachusetts, United States
Record Type: Marriage
Household Role Sex Age Birthplace
Peter Carpenter Husband M
Digital Folder Number: 007578641
Image Number: 325
Citing this Record
"Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QG1V-B27Q : Sat Mar 09 09:21:06 UTC 2024), Entry for Peter Carpenter and Elizabeth Munro, 15 October 1758.DEATH: image
Name: Elizabeth Carpenter
Sex: Female
Spouse's Name: Peter Carpenter
Event Type: Death
Event Date: 31 October 1774
Event Place: Rehoboth, Bristol, Plymouth Colony, British Colonial America (Rehoboth, Bristol, Plymouth Colony, British Colonial America)
Event Place (Original): Massachusetts, United States
Record Type: Death
Household Role Sex Age Birthplace
Peter Carpenter Spouse U
Digital Folder Number: 007578641
Image Number: 893
Citing this Record
"Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QG1K-SCJH : Sun Mar 10 11:41:11 UTC 2024), Entry for Elizabeth Carpenter and Peter Carpenter, 31 October 1774.GRAVE:
Elizabeth Monroe Carpenter
Birth: 6 Aug 1738 Bristol, Bristol County, Rhode Island, USA
Death: 31 Oct 1774 (aged 36) Rehoboth, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Munroe Family Lot, Rehoboth, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA
Memorial #: 122498839
Bio:
Elizabeth Monroe Carpenter wife of Peter Carpenter
Family Members
Parents
John Munro 1701-1793
Hannah Rosbotham Munro 1711-1809
Siblings
Nathan Munro 1730-1806
Benjamin Munroe 1734-1818
John Munro 1742-1829
Created by: Alanna313 (47195275)
Added: 2013-12-30T19:45:07.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/122498839/elizabeth-carpenter
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/122498839/elizabeth-carpenter: accessed September 24, 2024), memorial page for Elizabeth Monroe Carpenter (6 Aug 1738–31 Oct 1774), Find a Grave Memorial ID 122498839, citing Munroe Family Lot, Rehoboth, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA; Maintained by Alanna313 (contributor 47195275).
Number 1904 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 258.
Number 800 in CARPENTER MEMORIAL on page 140.
MARRIAGE: 1775 - image
Name: Peter Carpenter
Sex: Male
Spouse's Name: Jemima Carpenter
Spouse's Sex: Female
Event Type: Marriage
Event Date: 24 Jun 1775
Event Place: Rehoboth, Bristol, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America
Event Place (Original): Rehoboth, Bristol, Massachusetts, United States
Source Details: p 127 item 11
Household Role Sex Age Birthplace
Jemima Carpenter Wife F
Digital Folder Number: 007577046
Microfilm Number: 1987644
Originating System: EASY
Indexing Batch: I01581-7
Citing this Record
"Massachusetts State Vital Records, 1841-1925", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FHG8-B65 : Thu May 23 01:16:26 UTC 2024), Entry for Peter Carpenter and Jemima Carpenter, 24 Jun 1775.
Number 792 in CARPENTER MEMORIAL on page 139.
Family on page 259 (# 284). A Farmer.It is probably this John of Rehoboth, private in the Lexington scare in Capt.
Lyon's Company served 7 days . Again in Capt Hicks company in Col Thomas
Regiment Dec 8,1776 served 15 days, marched from Rehopboth to Bristol. Again we
find a John Carpeneter who served in Capt John Dodges company at Warner Hill.
Enlisted 2 Apr 1778, served 1 month 29 days. He was a farmer.
Date: Sat, 10 Feb 2007 10:15:02 EST
From: Mzzcortezz@aol.com
Subject: [CARPENTER] Mrs Sarah Carp.d 1785
To: CARPENTER-L@rootsweb.com
Message-ID:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"United States Chronicle Junes 2, 1785
PROVIDENCE, June 2. Tuesday Evening last departed this life at Cranston,
inth 41st year of her age Mrs. Sarah Carpenter wife of John Carpenter. Her
remains will be interred this afternoon at the Family Burial-Place in Warwick:
The funeral will go from Widow Lockwood's House in Cranston at 2 o clock when
the attedance of the Friends and acquaintance of the Dceased is requested.
Number 1910 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 259.
No Family listed. A Mariner.BIRTH: image
Name: William Utter Carpenter
Birth Date: 25 Aug 1766
Birth Place: Providence, Rhode Island, USA
Father Name: John Carpenter
Mother Name: Sarah Carpenter
Page Number: 217
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Rhode Island, Vital Extracts, 1636-1899 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.
Original data: Arnold, James Newell. Rhode Island Vital Extracts, 1636–1850. 21 volumes. Providence, R.I.: Narragansett Historical Publishing Company, 1891–1912. Digitized images from New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.
Number 1911 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 259.
She married a house painter.
NUmber 793 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 139.
No family listed.He was Captian and had the command of a two gun battery in the Revolution, he was killed at the battle of Long Island 27 Aug 1776. He served under the command of Col. Henry Knox in a regiment of artillery. Letters of
administration were granted on the estate of Capt Benajah Carpenter, Gent. on May 9 1777.
SEE: 30 Sept 2001 E-mail below.E-MAIL: Thu, 15 Mar 2001 From: Bruce E. Carpenter "carpenter"
I typed in my distant uncle Benajah Carpenter's name on the excellent googles serach engine site.
Uncle Benajah was an artillery officer in the Revolution. His name came up with the great news his cap
is still extant in a museum in New York City. He was killed in the Battle of Brooklyn. Makes my day.
Bruce Carpenter
"One of the leather caps worn by the Rhode Island Company, that which belonged to Lieutenant Benajah Carpenter, may be seen in the museum of the Sons of the Revolution, in Fraunces Tavern, in New York City. It is a small black leather helmet, or cap, formed of six pieces of jacked leather sewn together, forming a cone shape, with a small brown and red tassel at the top. The odd-shaped front of heavy black jacked leather is decorated with a
gold painted anchor shaded with dark red, with the motto "For Our Country" painted above the anchor, in gilt letters on a red ground. Under the anchor, also in gilt letters on a red ground, is the Latin motto "In te, Domine,
speramus." At the base of the cap on both sides are two small brass buttons with bone backs, having on the face of each a convex anchor. Buttons stamped the same were worn on the jackets of brown faced with red. "
_____________________________
MORE:
When looking further uncle Benajahs name came up in the George Washington Papers now being published by the University of Virginia. There were two other Carpenters mentioned in the index. One a Richard.
BCE-MAIL: Mon, 16 Apr 2001 From: Phoebe Cortez - MzCortez@aol.com
VOLUME 1
Page 35: "RUN away from the Subscriber, an Apprentice Lad, named James Hopkins, 19 Years of Age, round favoured, of a fair Complexion, about 5 Feet 7 Inches high, and has black strait Hair: Had on a green outside Jacket,
green Breeches, a blue Surtout, white Worsted Hose, and took with him a Pair of blue Yarn Hose. He is by Trade a Chairmaker. Whoever takes up said Apprentice, and returns him to his Master, shall have Two Dollars Reward, and all necessary Charges, paid by BENAJAH CARPENTER N.B. All Masters of Vessels are cautioned against carrying away said Apprentice, as they would avoid the Penalty of the Law.
Providence, Dec. 15, 1774 Providence Gazette December 31, 1774"Number 1864 on page 254 in the Carpenter Memorial.
Family on page 426 (#605). Residence Lyndon, VT. He moved there in 1796 and
went into a school house to live until he could build a house of his own.
He was a soldier in the Revolutionary War - was engaged in the battle of
Monmouth, and Redbanks, and also in a skirmish at Harlem Heights, where he was
wounded by a musket ball which he received in his side and carried it with him
to his grave.
It was probably this Abel Carpenter who was Ensign in the 2nd RI
regiment, Israel Angel, colonel, and was promoted in the same company to 2nd
Lieutenant, services rendered in 1777 and 1778.
He reside in Lyndon at the time of his death. he was one of the select men of
the town for 20 years, and filled various other offices in town with honor to
himself and credit to the town. He never was confined to his bed a day in his
life by illness until his last sickness, 10 days before he died.
The family monument to Abel Carpenter Esq., one of the Revolutionary soldiers,
was the first monument errected in the cemetery at Lyndon, VT.
An Abel Carpenter served in the Revolutionary war as private in Captain Hicks
company, Col. Thomas Carpenter's regiment, Aug. 2, 1780; served 6 days; marched
to Tiverton on the RI alarm. The compiler of the Carpenter Memorial
is not sure if this last Abel Carpenter is the same as this Abel Carpenter.E-MAIL: Date: Sun, 30 Sept 2001 From: Phoebe Cortez - MzCortez@aol.com
Alphabetical List of Officers of the Continental Army - C - Fifteenth Virginia - page 145
Carpenter, Benajah (R. I.). Captain Lieutenant of Knox's Regiment Continental Artillery, 10th December, 1775;
killed at Long Island, 27th August, 1776.E-MAIL: From:
To:
Sent: Sunday, June 04, 2006 8:45 PM
Subject: Re: Benajah Carpenter
> In answer to Fred Murphy:
>
> << Am interested in Benajah Carpenter, born to Stephen Carpenter, Jr. and
> Jane Thurston Carpenter on 30 October 1748 at Rumford, Rhode Island. >>
>
> This Benajah Carpenter was born at Rehoboth, Mass., on 27 August 1748
> (Arnold, _Vital Record of Rehoboth_); 30 October 1748 is his date of baptism
> (Arnold, _Vital Record of Rhode Island_), which also occurred at Rehoboth (the
> original Rehoboth settlement, site of its First Congregational [or Newman]
> Church, became Rumford, East Providence, Rhode Island). That Benajah's baptismal
> record shows him as the son of Stephen Carpenter _Jr._ should not be construed
> as indicating that his paternal grandfather was necessarily also named
> Stephen but only that Benajah's father was the second-oldest Stephen Carpenter
> living in Rehoboth at the time. Online sources, probably repeating Amos B.
> Carpenter (1898)--whose work is not reliable--show Stephen Carpenter's parents as
> James and Grace (Palmer) Carpenter. Some of these say that Stephen is
> mentioned in the will of his grandfather Jonah Palmer (whose second wife,
> incidentally, was Abigail [Carpenter] Titus, dau. of William2 and Abigail [Briant]
> Carpenter of Rehoboth [formerly of Shalbourne, England].)
>
> << . . . on August 17. 1771 he married Sarah Taylor in Providence.
> Familytreemaker lists him as a captain and mariner who died at the battle of Long
> Island 27 August 1776, but Providence deeds records from 1773 to 1775 describe
> him as a chairmaker whose lathe and sundry tools were sold by administrators
> 8 July 1776 and whose real estate was sold 17 June 1778 at public auction.
> In 1779 Sarah Carpenter married Thomas Smart at Providence. Can someone
> reconcile these seemingly disparate sets of records? >>
>
> There's nothing inherently contradictory here: The description of Benajah as
> a captain is consistent with his having been a captain of artillery when he
> was killed (coincidentally, on his birthday) (Arnold, _VR of RI_). His
> description as a mariner could reflect a misinterpretation of his captain's title.
> On the other hand, there are many examples during this period of men who
> were occasionally identified in the records as mariners but whose primary
> occupation was something else. He could therefore easily have been both a
> chairmaker _and_ a mariner (perhaps a ship's carpenter). If, after consulting all
> the primary and secondary sources pertaining to Benajah, you find that the
> mariner label appears only in the secondary ones, you may properly conclude that
> if he was a mariner at all, it was not his main occupation.
>
> From what I've been able to gather from online postings, the administrators
> of Benajah's estate were John Carpenter (Stephen and Jane [Thurston]
> Carpenter's son John, 10 years older than their son Benajah, was the latter's
> youngest half-brother) and Mrs. Sarah Carpenter (Benajah's widow). (Presumably 8
> July 1776, the date on which you say his lathe and tools were sold by his
> estate administrators, is a typo.) If administrator John Carpenter is named in
> the deed of sale of the late Benajah's lathe and tools, it encourages the
> conclusion that Stephen and Jane (Thurston) Carpenter's son Benajah was a
> chairmaker. (The Providence record giving Capt. Benajah Carpenter's date and place
> of death and the conditions surrounding it also indicates that he had a
> daughter Jane [b. ca. 1773], presumably named after his mother, Jane [Thurston]
> Carpenter [see Arnold, _VR of RI_].)
>
> If any of the Providence deeds you mention, in which Benajah is described as
> a chairmaker, involve him as a grantor (seller), check for wife Sarah's
> signature or mention of her in the acknowledgement section (just below the
> signature[s]). You may find either--as an indication of her having relinquished
> her dower rights--even if she's not named in the body of the deed as a grantor
> with her husband. This would provide additional circumstantial evidence (as
> does Sarah's remarriage, to Thomas Smart in 1779) that she was the wife of
> the Benajah Carpenter who died in 1776 AND was a chairmaker.
>
> It seems fairly certain that Capt. Benajah and chairmaker Benajah were the
> same man. And leading to the same conclusion is that only one Benajah
> Carpenter is found in the respective birth, marriage, and death records of Rehoboth
> and Providence until 1778, when a Benajah Carpenter, born at Rehoboth, was
> presumably named after the recently deceased man.
>
> Your other questions shouldn't be difficult to answer if you're willing to
> do a little primary research.
>
> Gene Z.
> Correction to my reply to Fred Murphy (6/4/06):
>
> << From what I've been able to gather from online postings, the
> administrators of Benajah's estate were John Carpenter (Stephen and Jane [Thurston]
> Carpenter's son John, 10 years older than their son Benajah, was the latter's
> youngest half-brother) . . . >>
>
> John Carpenter was the son of Stephen Carpenter and his first wife, Martha
> Hunt (Arnold, _Vital Record of Rehoboth_).
>
> Gene Z.
MORE:
From:
To:
Sent: Tuesday, June 06, 2006 12:32 PM
Subject: Re: Benajah???
>
> In answer to Bruce Carpenter:
>
> << If the "8 July" is a "typo" as Gene suggests then it is a gross one. >>
>
> Concerning 8 July 1776--given in Fred Murphy's posting as the date on which
> the administrators of Benajah Carpenter's estate sold his lathe and
> tools--it's not "8 July" but "1776" that I assume is a typo. This is not because the
> day, month, and year, taken together, predate the death on Long Island of
> Revolutionary officer Benajah Carpenter, but because "letters of administration
> were granted to John Carpenter and Mrs. Sarah Carpenter, both of Providence,
> on the estate of Capt. Benajah Carpenter, Gent., May 9, 1777" (Amos B.
> Carpenter [1898]). It stands to reason that the administrators' sale of estate
> assets occurred after that date (probably on 8 July 1777 or 1778).
>
> << If Benajah was married to Sarah at death, then why was his property on
> public auction in 1778, a year before she remarried? >>
>
> Estate assets, particularly real estate, were commonly sold at public
> auction (vendue) when debts accruing to the estate were too great to be paid by
> other means.
>
> On 21 February 1794 "[a] petition of Sarah Smart, of Providence, in the
> State of Rhode Island, late widow of Benajah Carpenter, deceased, was presented
> to the House and read, praying relief in consideration of the loss of her said
> husband, who was killed while an officer in the Continental Army, in an
> engagement with the enemy on Long Island, the twenty-sixth [_sic_] of August, one
> thousand seven hundred and seventy-six" (_Journal of the House of
> Representatives of the United States_, 2:68). The petition was referred to the
> Secretary of War and was ultimately denied.
>
> << Actually Carpenter was a Captain-lieutenant, a rank equivalent to a first
> lieutenant today, one rank below captain. Amo Carpenter's reference to him
> as a "captain" may have refereed to him as a ships captain. >>
>
> For the present discussion, his actual rank is less important than his
> perceived rank. Apparently almost all contemporary records in which Benajah's
> rank is mentioned refer to him as "Capt.," which raises the possibility that the
> "mariner" label comes from a misinterpretation of his military title. (It's
> likely that Amos B. Carpenter's description of Benajah as "captain and
> mariner" came from one of the many Carpenter-descendant informants with whom he
> corresponded and who furnished much of the data he presents.) As I indicated
> previously, however, if a contemporary record were to be found that describes
> him as a mariner, it would not preclude his having been primarily a
> chairmaker.
>
>
> There is but _one_ birth record for a Benajah Carpenter in New England prior
> to 1778; _one_ marriage record at Providence (or elsewhere) of a Benajah
> Carpenter during this period; _one_ Providence death record of a Benajah
> Carpenter (he is called "Capt."); and _one_ record of letters of administration
> granted at Providence on the estate of a Benajah Carpenter (he is again called
> "Capt."). And I gather from Fred Murphy's posting that only _one_ Benajah
> Carpenter, described in one or more deeds as a chairmaker, purchased real estate
> in Providence, and that the estate of only _one_ Benajah Carpenter was
> administered after letters of administration were granted to John Carpenter and
> Mrs. Sarah Carpenter in May 1776 (none before that). Considering also the
> rarity of the forename Benajah, it is highly unlikely that there were two Benajah
> Carpenters of Providence (is there any local record in which the name is
> accompanied by "Sr." or "Jr."?), much less two of similar age who also died at
> about the same time.
>
> If the deed of sale involving the lathe and tools names the same
> administrators as the letters of administration, or if the deed pertaining to the real
> estate sold at public auction describes the same property as a deed of
> purchase in which Benajah is described as a chairmaker, it would be positive
> evidence that the Revolutionary officer and the chairmaker were the same person.
> I'm reasonably certain that one or both of these "ifs" will be confirmed.
> [Fred Murphy: Do you have copies of the relevant documents?]
>
> << The senior-junior problem could be easily solved by someone with access
> to Rehoboth records. >>
>
> Stephen Carpenter was born at Rehoboth on 7 June 1696, son of James
> Carpenter and his second wife, Grace Palmer; they had married there on 15 April 1695
> (Arnold, _VR of Rehoboth_). He appears to have been the oldest Stephen
> Carpenter at Rehoboth. Despite having married twice and fathered 13 children, the
> only vital record in which his name appears with the generational identifier
> "Jr." is for son Benajah's baptism. Stephen may not have been the oldest
> member of the church in which the baptism occurred, however: he and wife Martha
> joined the First Congregational Church of Rehoboth (the so-called Newman
> Church, now in Rumford, R.I.) on 4 July 1731. Another Stephen Carpenter and a
> Mary Carpenter (his wife?) had joined the church on 10 July 1726. This _may_
> explain Stephen's being identified as "Jr." in Benajah's baptismal record.
> A look at the original church record, on the other hand, may indicate that
> Arnold's transcription (in which "Jr." appears) is not accurate.
>
> << I wouldn't like Captain-lieutenant Carpenter made into a chairmaker, if
> he really wasn't. >>
>
> Nor would I.
>
> Gene Z.
MARRIAGE: 2
Rhode Island, Vital Extracts, 1636-1899
Name: Sarah Carpenter Father Name: Benajah Carpenter Marriage Date: 22
Aug 1779 Marriage Place: Rhode Island, USA Spouse Name: Thomas Smart Page
Number: 220
Number 794 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 139.
No family listed.BIRTH:
Name: Jacob Carpenter
Birth Date: 28 Aug 1750
Birth Place: Rehoboth, Massachusetts, USA
Relative: chi:Stephen Carpenter; chi:Jane Carpenter
Comments: 2d wife
Source: Vital Record of Rehoboth, 1642-1896. Marriages, Intentions, Births, Deaths, with Supplement containing the Record of 1896, Colonial Returns, Lists of the Early Settlers, Purchasers, Freemen, Inhabitants, the Soldiers serving in Philip's War and the Revolution.
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Rehoboth, Massachusetts, Vital Records, 1642-1896 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2000.
Original data: Arnold, James N. Vital Record of Rehoboth, 1642-1896. Providence, RI, USA: Narragansett Historical Publishing, 1897.
SEE ALSO: image
Name: Jacob Carpenter
Event Type: Birth
Birth Date: 28 Aug 1750
Birth Place: Rehoboth, Massachusetts
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).
NOTE:
Born 25 Aug 1750 in the Carpenter Memorial.
GRAVE: images
Rachel Ide Perrin
Birth: 2 Dec 1730 Rehoboth, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 16 Aug 1808 (aged 77)
Burial: Pioneer Burying Ground, Pittsford, Monroe County, New York, USA
Memorial #: 69604272
Wife of Jesse Perrin, whom she married on May 11, 1749 in Rehoboth, MA. Daughter of Daniel & Hannah Ide.
Family Members
Parents
Daniel Ide 1701-1753
Hannah Carpenter Lyon 1702-1768
Spouse
Jesse Perin 1726-1801
Siblings
Hannah Ide 1727-1753
Jonathan Ide 1733-1738
Lieut Ezra Ide 1736-1785
Daniel Ide 1739-1778
Children
Lemuel Perin 1749-1822
Daniel Perrin 1751-1751
Molly Perin Perrin 1754-1808
Jesse Perrin Jr 1756-1838
Glover Perrin 1762-1830
Calvin Perrin 1766-1850
Asa Perin 1775-1850
Maintained by: DustyStones (47304088)
Originally Created by: Vicki Masters Profitt (47201380)
Added: 2011-05-10T06:34:13.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/69604272/rachel_perrin
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/69604272/rachel-perrin: accessed July 7, 2024), memorial page for Rachel Ide Perrin (2 Dec 1730–16 Aug 1808), Find a Grave Memorial ID 69604272, citing Pioneer Burying Ground, Pittsford, Monroe County, New York, USA; Maintained by DustyStones (contributor 47304088).
GRAVE:
Jesse Perin
Birth: 24 Jan 1726 Rehoboth, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 15 Jan 1801 (aged 74) Savoy, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Ingraham Cemetery, Savoy, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, USA
Memorial #: 144767599
Bio:
Jesse was a captain in the Revolutionary War (Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the Revolutionary War, Vol 12, p 189). He was town clerk of Rehoboth from 1762 to 1787. He always signed his name "Jesse Perin." Several of his sons used this spelling while others went back to the older version. DAR Patriot #A089102.
Family Members
Parents
John Perrin 1692-1731
Rachel Ide Glover 1696-1780
Spouse
Rachel Ide Perrin 1730-1808
Siblings
Capt Timothy Perrin 1724-1815
Hulda Perrin 1731-1738
Children
Lemuel Perin 1749-1822
Daniel Perrin 1751-1751
Molly Perin Perrin 1754-1808
Jesse Perrin Jr 1756-1838
Glover Perrin 1762-1830
Edward Perrin 1764-1824
Calvin Perrin 1766-1850
Asa Perin 1775-1850
Created by: DustyStones (47304088)
Added: 2015-04-09T01:09:52.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/144767599/jesse_perin
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/144767599/jesse-perin: accessed July 7, 2024), memorial page for Jesse Perin (24 Jan 1726–15 Jan 1801), Find a Grave Memorial ID 144767599, citing Ingraham Cemetery, Savoy, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, USA; Maintained by DustyStones (contributor 47304088).
GRAVE: image
Lieut Ezra Ide
Birth: 6 Feb 1736
Death: 7 Sep 1785 (aged 49)
Burial: Newman Cemetery, East Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Memorial #: 81882270
Bio: Marriages:
[1] Sarah Allyn, Jan 26 1757
[2] Sarah Loring, Sep 24 1774Revolutionary War Marker
Source: Newton Cemetery Transcriptions by Marion Pearce Carter, 1932 ("The Old Rehoboth Cemetery, sometimes known as the Newman Cemetery, The Ring of the Town") and by Mr. David Jillson, 1850
Family Members
Parents
Daniel Ide 1701-1753
Hannah Carpenter Lyon 1702-1768
Spouses
Sarah Allyn Ide 1736-1773
Sarah Loring Ide 1738-1790
Siblings
Hannah Ide 1727-1753
Rachel Ide Perrin 1730-1808
Jonathan Ide 1733-1738
Daniel Ide 1739-1778
Children
Hannah Ide Hinckley 1758-1792
Lieut Jonathan Ide 1760-1790
Abel Ide 1762-1850
Sarah Ide Hunt 1764-1796
Ezra Ide 1767-1818
Eliphalet Ide 1769-1785
Jacob Ide 1771-1775
Infant Ide 1773-1773
Desire Loring Ide 1775-1777
Maintained by: CMWJR (50059520)
Originally Created by: Superkentman (46877580)
Added: 2011-12-12T15:20:56.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/81882270/ezra_ide
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/81882270/ezra-ide: accessed July 7, 2024), memorial page for Lieut Ezra Ide (6 Feb 1736–7 Sep 1785), Find a Grave Memorial ID 81882270, citing Newman Cemetery, East Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA; Maintained by CMWJR (contributor 50059520).
GRAVE: image
Daniel Ide
Birth: 20 Dec 1739
Death: 29 Aug 1778 (aged 38)
Burial: Newman Cemetery, East Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Memorial #: 141012575
Bio:
in 39 yr.
Birth date is from Rehoboth Vital RecordsSource: Newton Cemetery Transcriptions by Marion Pearce Carter, 1932 ("The Old Rehoboth Cemetery, sometimes known as the Newman Cemetery, The Ring of the Town") and by Mr. David Jillson, 1850 neither of which make any distinction between Newman Cemetery and Hunt Cemetery which are beside one another. Some of the stones no longer exist.
Parental links provided by find a grave member Marilyn Diaz (#47098929)
Family Members
Parents
Daniel Ide 1701-1753
Hannah Carpenter Lyon 1702-1768
Siblings
Hannah Ide 1727-1753
Rachel Ide Perrin 1730-1808
Jonathan Ide 1733-1738
Lieut Ezra Ide 1736-1785
Children
Daniel Ide 1766-1791
Created by: Bonnie Kehoe Gove (46881955)
Added: 2015-01-07T09:32:41.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/141012575/daniel_ide
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/141012575/daniel-ide: accessed July 7, 2024), memorial page for Daniel Ide (20 Dec 1739–29 Aug 1778), Find a Grave Memorial ID 141012575, citing Newman Cemetery, East Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA; Maintained by Bonnie Kehoe Gove (contributor 46881955).
GRAVE: image
Daniel Ide
Birth: 13 Oct 1766 Rehoboth, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 8 May 1791 (aged 24) Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Newman Cemetery, East Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Memorial #: 141012267
Bio: in 25 yr.Source: Newton Cemetery Transcriptions by Marion Pearce Carter, 1932 ("The Old Rehoboth Cemetery, sometimes known as the Newman Cemetery, The Ring of the Town") and by Mr. David Jillson, 1850 neither of which make any distinction between Newman Cemetery and Hunt Cemetery which are beside one another. Some of the stones no longer exist.
Family Members
Parents
Daniel Ide 1739-1778
Molly Brown Ide 1742-1781
Spouse
Sarah Bucklin Hunt 1768-1840
Created by: Bonnie Kehoe Gove (46881955)
Added: 2015-01-07T09:23:01.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/141012267/daniel_ide
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/141012267/daniel-ide: accessed July 7, 2024), memorial page for Daniel Ide (13 Oct 1766–8 May 1791), Find a Grave Memorial ID 141012267, citing Newman Cemetery, East Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA; Maintained by Bonnie Kehoe Gove (contributor 46881955).
GRAVE: image
Sarah Bucklin Hunt
Birth: 1768 Rehoboth, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA
Death: 23 Apr 1840 (aged 71–72) Rehoboth, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Newman Cemetery, East Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Memorial #: 19582267
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Family Members
Parents
Capt John Bucklin 1732-1790
Jemima Peck Bucklin 1744-1812
Spouses
Daniel Ide 1766-1791
Peter Hunt 1757-1838
Siblings
Freelove Bucklin Allyn 1764-1838
George Bucklin 1766-1850
Huldah Bucklin 1778-1843
Esther Bucklin 1782-1785
Children
Daniel Ide Hunt 1798-1848
Maintained by: Plantagenet Crown Dynasty (49922906)
Originally Created by: Superkentman (46877580)
Added: 2007-05-28T12:30:20.000Z
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/19582267/sarah_hunt
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/19582267/sarah-hunt: accessed July 7, 2024), memorial page for Sarah Bucklin Hunt (1768–23 Apr 1840), Find a Grave Memorial ID 19582267, citing Newman Cemetery, East Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA; Maintained by Plantagenet Crown Dynasty (contributor 49922906).
Number 1873 on page 255 in the Carpenter Memorial.
Family listed on same page.