1442. Susan or Susannah Carpenter
Number 880 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 152.
She was married at the house of her brother-in-law, Phillip Schuyler in
Clinton, NY. Her husband, Truman Hart was elected Judge and was also a member
of the New York Senate.
http://www.newenglandancestors.org:80/research/database/ny_probate/default.asp?f=g:\nehgs_db_images\Ny_probate\Cayuga_1310.gif&cnt=55&ffile=Cayuga_1309.gif
Guardians Auburn NY Surrogate
page 31
Gd Susannah Carpenter 11 yrs age on the 6th July last, child of John Carpenter, laate of town of Manlius Co Onondaga deceased. On petition of Abigal Woodruff, late Abigal Carpener, the mother of Susannah Carpenter app't Hezekial N. Woodruff of town of Scipio, Cayuga to be her guardian. .. 11 Oct 1806
Supplied by: Phebe Cortez MzCortez@aol.com
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Number 875 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 151.
She had two sons and two daughters. Names not given in the Carpenter
Memorial.
She had one son and two daughters.
No family per the CM.
3727. Isaac Carpenter van Duzen
No family per the CM.
She had five children. Names not given.
NAME: Hulse or Hustace.
Number 876 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 151.
E-MAIL: Sun, 5 Dec 1999 From: MzCortez@aol.com
Orange Co. PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD pgs. 1185-86
Tells about DANIEL REEVE and his wife RUTH ANN CARPENTER.
He was the son of Jeremiah and Hannah (Decker) Reeve - Decker/VanEtten
RUTH ANN CARPENTER states they were married in 1839.
REEVE CHILDREN:
Daniel C. attorney d 1871 age 30 Middletown
Valentine H. farmer d 1886
Martha J. "makes her home on the farm where her grandparents settled in 1804"
- does not say which grandparents.
Ruth A. is the wife of EDWARD SILK of Middletown her son: Reeve A. SILK
It then goes into the classical description of the Wm Carpenter of Rehoboth
history...
The lists descendancy as Wm, John, John, John (as in AB Carpenter) ISAAC b in
Goshen March 31, 1747. "His father, who was an early settler of Orange
County, was in July 1721 one of the men who gave land for the village of
Goshen to be laid out with its church parsonage, cemter, etc. He had eight
children. ISAAC was married to Mrs. Susanna (McKinney) Thompson, of
Scotch-Irish descent a lady several year younger than himself. Her parents
were Edward and Mary (Dekay) McKinney." MY comment - this sounds like
straight out of the ABCarpenter Memorial, except the Carpenter Memorial
indicates that she (Mrs. Susanna (McKinney) was born in Ireland - I don't
understand how that would be, given that she was a DeKay, and the Dekays
would have been in Or. co. before her birth.
Continuing on "ISAAC CARPENTER and his wife lived on his large estate, a part
of which is now known as the Reeve homestead, two and one-half miles south of
Middletown. ..dau: Susan and Ruth Ann. Susan m James VAN DUZER.
Phoebe.
Daniel Reeves and all his family were members of the Presbyterian Church.
They lived on the homestead of their grandfather which has been over 100 years
in the family.
Daniel graduated with honor from Union College in 1863 and from Albany Law
school in 1865. He settle in Middletown, NY where he was a prosperous lawyer,
a good counsellor and reliable citizen. He was called away early on Feb. 9,
1871.
1447. Elizabeth Runyon Carpenter
Number 890 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 154.
She married and went west with her husband. See husband's notes.
NAME: Wisner not Wishner.
Elizabeth Runyon Carpenter m. James Wisner (John, John, Kendrick, Johannes)
of Ornage Cunty, NY. m. 2nd Hannah Smith dau of Henry
moved to Onondaga Co. in 1793 and died there 1828 (we have the will).
ELIZABETH (RUNYON) CARPENTER married JAMES WISNER of Warwick, Or. Co. This is
my line. Her daughter ELIZABETH WISNER, married JOEL MELVIN of Ontario Co.
and her son JOLENE WISNER married Joel's sister, LUCY MELVIN. Both ELIZABETH
and JOLENE named their children MORREL or MORELL. One was also named ADDISON.
Per Phoebe: On Tue, 2 Jun 1998 15:32:32 EDT MzCortez@aol.com .E-MAIL: 10 Jan 2000 MzCortez@aol.com wrote:
> Dear Folks,
> On Nov 6, 1809 James Wisner who had gone from Orange Co. NY to Onondaga Co.
> NY about 8 yrs. previously, was granted guardianship of the following
> children in Onondaga County:
> Niles Camp inf son of Miles Camp late of the town of Camillus, who was about
> 3 yrs. old.
> Lucinda Corey, inf dau of Thomas Corey late of Camillus who was about 14 yrs
> old.
> Does anyone have any information on any of the above or know if there was a
> relationship between the Camp and Corey children. I have no information that
> indicates a relationship between the Wisners, Carpenters, or Runyons and
> either the Camps or Coreys.
> Could Camp be another form of the name, DeCamp.
> James Wisner was the husband of Elizabeth Runyon Carpenter, dau of Moses
> Carpenter.
> Thank you, Phoebe.
> Researching: Moses Carpenter son of John Carpenter and Ruth Coe (?)
> Mary Thompson dau of James Thompson and Mariah McDowell?
> NY: LI: Ruth Coe, Onondaga Co. Carpenter, Wisner (Munro, Reed, Redman)
> Chautaqua Co. Joel Melvin Orange Co. Wisner, McDowell, Thompson.
E-MAIL: continued ... 13 Mar 2000
Dear Robin and John,
If I had the time to ply thru all the stuff I have. Anyway, I am also
studying the Thompsons as my James Wisner, who married Elizabeth Runyon
Carpenter was the son of MARY THOMPSON. Her parents are believed to be JAMES
THOMPSON and MARAH MCDOWELL. There seem to be at least two Thompson
families, and sometimes I suspect three in Orange Co. and they are very
closely associated with the Carpenters, by location/deeds, etc. anyway.
Phoebe.
MORE:
JAMES WISNER was the grandson of ANNA (JAYNE) WISNER. According to
one of the Jayne books.
Number 891 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 154.
In a letter from her uncle John Carpenter in 1797 to his brother Isaac states
his brother's daughter Joanna was married.
Number 893 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 154.
Posted by Kathy Crowell
on Mon, 12 Oct 1998
The township of Camillus, embracing the present towns of Elbridge and Van
Buren, was people mostly with settlers from New England. Among these, in the
year 1799, only nine years later than the first white
resident of the town, came David Munro, then a lad fourteen years old,
born December 8, 1784, and fifth in the line of descent from John Munro, who
emigrated from Scotland and settled in Massachusetts at an early period.
David accompanied his father, Squire Munro, who had been a soldier in the
Revolutionary war, and who then in the prime of life, being forty-two years of
age, came from New England, bringing with him his four sons,
John, David, Nathan and Philip A., all of them since well known throughout
the county, and settled near where the village of Elbridge now stands.
As David grew up to manhood, he developed into a large and powerful man, fully
marked with the characteristic family traits of enterprise, untiring industry,
economy and self-reliance.
In 1807 he was married to Abigail Carpenter, of the same town, and in 1808 he
purchased a farm on lot number eighty, Camillus, and settled where Camillus
village now stands, where only two frame houses were then erected.
The country was then covered with forests, and Mr. Munro cleared up his farm,
which was heavily timbered, doing much of the labor with his own hands. Here he
resided for fifty-eight years, enlarging his farm by the purchase of adjacent
lands from time to time. He died May 10, 1866, being over eighty years of age
at the time
of his decease. His wife was six years younger than himself, having been born
December 3, 1790, and she surviving him nearly two years.
There were eight children born of the marriage, of whom six still survive,
viz.: John C. Munro, born October 17, 1809; James M. Munro, born November 13,
1813;
David A. Munro, born August 18, 1818; Mary A., wife of Thomas W. Hill, of
Elbridge; Hannah, wife of Payne Bigelow, of Baldwinsville; and Lydia H., wife
of David Porter, of Lysander.
Mr. Munro carried on a large and very successful business in farming at the
earlier portion of his life, but the necessity of finding investments for the
constantly
increasing results of his foresight, energy and economy, occupied the most of
his attention in later years. He was the first postmaster in Camillus village,
holding the
office from 1811 to 1824, when he was succeeded by James R. Lawrence. He held
the office of justice of the peace for many years, and was also one of the
associate judges of the Court of Common Pleas for a long time, becoming
familiarly known to the people of the county as Judge Munro, by which
title he was commonly called. He was a member of the State Legislature in 1818,
1819, 1822, 1836, 1841, and again in 1842.
He was also a member of the convention which framed the third Constitution of
the State in 1846. He was a leading director in, and for a long time president
of the
old Bank of Salina. He was also an influential director in the Salt Springs
Bank from its incorporation to the time of his decease--an excellent portrait
of him being
engraved on the bills issued by that bank. There was no business enterprise
with which he was connected which he did not inspire with the spirit of
success. He was
constantly in contact with the leading minds of the county, and although his
early education was limited, his strong native sense, natural dignity of
presence, and the
innate force of his character, never failed to make due impression on every one
he met. In person he was tall, of full habit, and corpulent in later
life--hardy to the last
degree, riding or driving barehanded in the coldest weather, and he never
postponed a business engagement on account of storms or railroads.
Mr. Munro's manner of address was courteous but impressive, and his knowledge
of the men and events of the day was unsurpassed. Source: Bruce, Dwight H.
(Ed.), Onondaga's Centennial. Boston History Co., 1896, Vol. II, Biographical,
pp. 25-26.
CARPENTER, John Munro
Author: Kathy Crowell
Date: 3 Sep 1998 12:00 PM GMT
Classification: Biography
John Munro Carpenter, "Syracuse, son of Calvin G. Carpenter, a Baptist clergyman, was born in
the town of Romulus, N.Y., Aug. 13, 1842, and moved with his parents to Phelps, Ontario Co.,
early in 1843, where he was reared on a farm. His mother was a daughter of Dea. John Munro, a
member of an early and prominent family of Elbridge. Mr. Carpenter was married on March 11,
1868, to Emma A., youngest daughter of George Draper, and in April, 1871, they came to
Syracuse, where they have since resided. He was engaged in the insurance business here until
1879, when he opened his present real estate office, one of the oldest in the city. In all his
enterprises Mr. Carpenter has met with pronounced success, and in various ways has
contributed not a little towards the growth and development of the city of his residence. His
children are Grace L. (Mrs. Jesse T. Eddy), Stephen D. (a member of the U. S. navy), and
Florence E." Source: Bruce, Dwight H. (Ed.), Onondaga's Centennial. Boston History Co., 1896,
Vol. II, Family Sketches, p. 11.
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=message&r=rw&p=localities.northam.usa.states.newyork.counties.onondaga&m=6050
Number 886 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 153.
Family on page 275 & 276 (# 315). A merchant.E-MAIL: Mon, 18 Dec 2000 From: Robin Carpenter
... The 1790 U.S. Census lists three Carpenters in the town of Minisink in
Orange County NY:
Daniel 1-2-2-0-0
Benjamin 2-0-3-0-0
William 1-3-2-0-0
Benjamin and William are listed near each other, probably indicating
they were close neighbors.
(NOTE: Benjamin and William were son s of Benjamin & Eunice Carpenter. JRC)
She was 35 when she died.
3741. Benjamin Franklin Carpenter
Number 2118 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 275.
No family listed. He was Merchant who resided in New York City.
Number 2120 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 276.
NAME: Jane Blane or Jane Morse.
3744. Andrew Jackson Carpenter
Number 2121 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 276.
No family listed.Same person???
http://www.heritagequestonline.com/prod/genealogy/censusindeximagepage?l-offset=3&hit-count=5&orderBy=&given-name=Andrew&navId=18097&series-id=9&state-id=1&sur-name=Carpenter
1870 > New York > WESTCHESTER > YONKERS Series: M593 Roll: 1116 Page: 648
CARPENTER ANDREW 38 M W NY NY WESTCHESTER YONKERS 1870
Sarah 32 F W NY
Fred'k 14 m W NY
Ida 13 F W NY
Lilian 10 F W NY
William 6 M W NY
Howard 5 M W NY
Carpenter, Jane 62 F W NY
Number 887 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 153.
Family on page 276 (# 316). A Farmer.
Letters of Administration were given to his wife Azuba or to his father-in-law
Freegift (Freegist) Cooley dated 30 Dec, 1809.E-MAIL: Mon, 18 Dec 2000 From: Robin Carpenter
... The 1790 U.S. Census lists three Carpenters in the town of Minisink in
Orange County NY:
Daniel 1-2-2-0-0
Benjamin 2-0-3-0-0
William 1-3-2-0-0
Benjamin and William are listed near each other, probably indicating
they were close neighbors.
(NOTE: Benjamin and William were son s of Benjamin & Eunice Carpenter. JRC)
Number 2122 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 276.
No family listed. A farmer. He had two or three children.
Number 314 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 85
A farmer and a merchant.E-MAIL: Reformed Dutch Church burial ground Poukeepsie, NY.
Sat, 1 Apr 2000 From: Willmack67@aol.com To: MzCortez@aol.com
99. Carpenter, David, s. of Joseph & Eliza, d. July 3, 1811, a. 1-9-17.
(b. abt 16 Sep 1809 - WAS JOSEPH A SON OF THIS DAVID?)
100. Carpenter, David, d. Mar. 4, 1825, a. 77-3-14.
(b. abt 18 Nov 1747)
(IS THIS BURIAL DATA FOR THIS DAVID? IT IS CLOSE!)
101. Carpenter, Maria, wid. of David, d. July 21, 1842 a. 81-11-13.
(b. abt 8 AUG 1760)
102. Carpenter, Mary, w. of David, d. Nov. 22, 1793, a. 41-9-2.
(b. abt 20 FEB 1752 - THIS IS CLOSE FOR WIFE!)
******** (words in brackets added by me. JRC)
E-MAIL: Sat, 1 Apr 2000 From: Lynn Brandvold - Willmack67@aol.com
To: Phoebe Cortez - MzCortez@aol.com
Interments in an UNNAMED GROUND, MILAN
"Old Gravestones of Dutchess County, New York" by J. W. Poucher published in
1924, pages 160-161.
Note: Some of Poucher's listings have been found to be inaccurate, so use
these with caution. If you find any inaccuracies in this listing please send
them to me so that I may correct them. Lynn Brandvold Thanks.
CLASSIFICATION: Family ground.
LOCATION: About three miles north of La Fayette, on the farm of Henry Killmer.
CONDITION: Thickly overgrown.
INSCRIPTIONS: 14 in number. Copied in August, 1914. by J. W. Poucher, M. D.
and Miss M. O. Johnston.
REMARKS: Unnamed ground.
2. Carpenter, Caleb, d. 1851, Oct. 14, a. 30 y. (B. 1821)
3. Carpenter, David, d. 1831, Apr. 23, a. 78-7-17. (B. 1753)
Number 853 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 150.
Number 933 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 157.
Family on page on page 279 (# 327).
Number 2188 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed. Residence: Jamacia.
Number 2190 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed.
Number 2193 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed.
Number 2194 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed.
Number 2195 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed.
Number 2196 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed.
Number 2197 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed.
Number 934 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 157.
Family on page on page 279 (# 328).Did Nathaniel marry twice? Maybe to a Nancy Hoskins (Hopkins)?
NOTE:
Per his brother Increase's April1837 will, Nathaniel was a witness to that will and of Victor, Ontario, New York.
This does cause a problem with the given death date of 1 May 1826! ANd even his son Nathaniel reportedly died on 12 Oct 1827.
Ellias Carpenter is also mentioned as a wittnesss, but relationship not clear.
Number 2205 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed.
Number 2198 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed. He reportedly died young.
Number 2206 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed.
Number 2207 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed.CENSUS: In 1880 US census with brother Benjamin.
Number 2199 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed. She reportedly died young. No birth date given in the above
record.
3769. Nehemiah Baylis Carpenter
Number 2203 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed. Residence: New York City.
Number 2208 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed. She died young. No birth date given.
Number 2209 in the Carpenter Memorial. Page 279.
No family listed. She died young. No birth date given.