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1835. EXECUTIVE. *L POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT
1835. EXECUTIVE. *l POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT. Persons employed in the General Post Office, with the annual compensation of each. Where Compen Names. Offices. Born. sation. Dol. cts. Amos Kendall..., Postmaster General.... Mass. 6000 00 Charles K. Gardner Ass't P. M. Gen. 1st Div. N. Jersey250 0 00 SelahR. Hobbie.. Ass't P. M. Gen. 2d Div. N. York. 2500 00 P. S. Loughborough Chief Clerk Kentucky 1700 00 Robert Johnson. ., Accountant, 3d Division Penn 1400 00 CLERKS. Thomas B. Dyer... Principal Book Keeper Maryland 1400 00 Joseph W. Hand... Solicitor Conn 1400 00 John Suter Principal Pay Clerk. Maryland 1400 00 John McLeod Register's Office Scotland. 1200 00 William G. Eliot.. .Chie f Examiner Mass 1200 00 Michael T. Simpson Sup't Dead Letter OfficePen n 1200 00 David Saunders Chief Register Virginia.. 1200 00 Arthur Nelson Principal Clerk, N. Div.Marylan d 1200 00 Richard Dement Second Book Keeper.. do.. 1200 00 Josiah F.Caldwell.. Register's Office N. Jersey 1200 00 George L. Douglass Principal Clerk, S. Div.Kentucky -1200 00 Nicholas Tastet Bank Accountant Spain. 1200 00 Thomas Arbuckle.. Register's Office Ireland 1100 00 Samuel Fitzhugh.., do Maryland 1000 00 Wm. C,Lipscomb. do : for) Virginia. 1000 00 Thos. B. Addison. f Record Clerk con-> Maryland 1000 00 < routes and v....) Matthias Ross f. tracts, N. Div, N. Jersey1000 00 David Koones Dead Letter Office Maryland 1000 00 Presley Simpson... Examiner's Office Virginia- 1000 00 Grafton D. Hanson. Solicitor's Office.. Maryland 1000 00 Walter D. Addison. Recorder, Div. of Acc'ts do.. -
"The Carpenter Family in America."
"The Carpenter Family in America." HE printing of this work is now completed, and the sheets are in the hands of the binder.. The book will be ready for delivery on May I. Only 1 50 copies are issued, I oo of which are already subscribed for. If you or your friends desire additional copies, it would be well to make immediate application. Very truly, DANIEL H. CARPENTER, Maplewood, N. J. April 15, 1901. '. r .{_ ;,, .!,,Jl,. '-'- / l . --<.___ HISTORY AND GENEALOGY OF THE CARPENTER FAMILY IN AMERICA FROM THE SETTLEMENT AT PROVIDENCE, R. I. 1637-1901 BY DANIEL HOOGLAND CARPENTER OF MAPLEWOOD, N. J• "Tell ye your children of it, and let your children tell their children, and their children another generation." 'Joel i. 3. THE MARION PRESS JAMAICA, QuEENSBOROUGH, NEw-Y ORK I 9 0 I PREFACE. VERY few words will suffice for a Preface. All that I can say of the time, labor, and pa II tience spent in the preparation of this work has been told and re-told in the making of every family history. If in the end my work shall be found of an enduring value among its fellows, I will be content and feel that I am amply repaid for its production. I am greatly indebted to Mr. Amos B. Carpenter of Vermont, author of "The Carpenter Memorial," for very material aid in the making of my book. Without that aid, so generously furnished, my work would be in complete, and in fact every member of our two New England families owes him a debt of gratitude for his early searches relating to their genealogy and history. -
Transcript Episode 6: Awe, Part 3
NAME Ep 6 Pt 3 transcription.mp3 DATE June 13, 2020 DURATION 27m 36s 5 SPEAKERS Narrator Lauren Watrous Paul Bowen Gail in the field Jason Alden START OF TRANSCRIPT [00:00:01] Narrator Previously on The Secret Life of Death, Episode 6: Awe, part two. We discussed the evolution of gravestone art and symbology in New England at the turn of the 19th century and how it reflected the social, cultural and spiritual changes in post revolution America. After the deprivations and horrors of war, many were eager to embrace community and connection, but on their terms, with a more personal individual relationship with God. These new spiritual ideas and identities ushered in novel cultural and stylistic changes resulting, in a profusion of gravestone motif design by eighteen hundred. But as life stabilized, standardize and industrialized, so too did artistic impression in gravestone art. By 1820, most, if not all, gravestone design took the form of the willow and urn. At the end of our last show, we were still left wondering how the broken willow, soul-effigy-moon and stars motif of Relief Wilcox Town's gravestone in Halifax, Vermont, fit into all of this. While the elements of the design are not uncommon, their layout is very unique and sophisticated. So unique and sophisticated, you'd think that surely whoever carved this stone must be well known and easy to identify. Yeah, you'd think. [00:01:46] Narrator I'm Gail Golec, and this is The Secret Life of Death, Episode 6: Awe, part three. [00:02:06] Narrator Now, don't get me wrong. -
Journal of William Colbert for the Northumberland, Wyoming And
Introduction 3 Introduction: The Man and His Journal Early Methodist Episcopal circuit rider William Colbert (1764-1833) served circuits in Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware, and Virginia. He was admitted on trial in 1790 1 and into full connection in 1792, at which time he was also ordained a deacon. Colbert was ordained an elder in 1795. He served most of his time as a traveling minister and retired from the itinerancy in 1811. William Colbert was born near Baltimore in Poolesville MD on April 20, 1764. Historian George Peck wrote in 1860 2 that Colbert was remembered by those who heard him preach for his intolerance of noisy children, crowded barns and other unfavorable meeting conditions. He was, however, a dedicated man of God and served with distinction as a circuit rider and district superintendent (or, as it was then called, presiding elder). In November 1804 William Colbert married Elizabeth Stroud (1784- 1849), whose parents were the original founders of Stroudsburg PA. He died June 16, 1833, in Stroudsburg PA. William Colbert kept a journal of his travels – which ranks with Francis Asbury’s as one of the earliest definitive records of American Methodism and its circuits. While a three-volume edited, indexed and annotated transcription of Asbury’s journal has been published, no one has yet undertaken that task for Colbert’s journal. The original journal and a typewritten transcription are prized possessions within the special collections at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary in Evanston IL. In 1957, the Library of Congress microfilmed the typewritten copy. In 1964 the Central Pennsylvania Conference purchased a microfilm copy of the journal from the LOC. -
Benjamin Carpenter of Guilford, VT
Benjamin Carpenter Literally written in stone, his marble epitaph boldly declares that Benjamin Carpenter, Esquire ... Sacred to the memory of the Hon. Benjamine CARPENTER, Esq. Born in Rehoboth, Mass. A.D. 1726 A magistrate in Rhode Island in 1764. A public teacher of righteousness An able--eble advocate to his last for Democracy And the equal rights of a man. Removed to this town A.D. 1770, Was a field officer in the Revolutionary War. A founder of the first constitution and government of Vermont. A councilor of censors in A.D. 1794. A member of the council, and Lieut. Governor of the state in A.D. 1779. A firm professor of Christianity in the Baptist church 50 years. Left this world and 146 persons of lineal posterity. March 29, 1804 Aged 78 years, 10 months and 12 days with a strong Mind and a full faith of a more Glorious state hereafter. Stature about six feet--weight 200 Death had no terror. But on May 11, 1725 in the Providence of Massachusetts within the boundary of Bristol County and the 58 year old town of Swansea, a young male child was born to Edward Swanzey & Elizabeth Louise (Wilson) Carpenter. This child was their first son, a fourth generation Carpenter child born in America of an English immigrant named William Carpenter who came to America in 1638. The baby was named Benjamin, the name of both his paternal and maternal grandparents, two uncles and a few first cousins. What caused this young Benjamin to stand out in history? Was it because at age 50, then a pillar of the decade old society of Guilford, New York that he became a revolutionary, a field officer in a revolution defying his King? Or was this six foot, well built man a traitor to the State of New York before, during and after the American Independence? But, one state’s traitor was another’s founding father, for in July 1777 he helps start the Vermont Republic. -
Jonathan Carpenter and the American Revolution: the Journal of an American Naval Prisoner of War and Vermont Indian Fighter
Jonathan Carpenter and the American Revolution: The Journal of an American Naval Prisoner of War and Vermont Indian Fighter By JOHN K. AulXANDBR ONATHAN CARPENTER, JR. was born in Rehoboth, Massachusetts in J 1757. 1 Rehoboth remained his home until 1780. After receiving "a Common Education," he "worked at [the] farming business" until he was seventeen. He was then apprenticed to his uncle, Nathaniel Car penter, in December 1774 to learn the joiner trade. During the early 1770's, the young Carpenter supported colonial resistance to British rule. When fighting began and his uncle formed a company of volunteer soldiers in December 1775, Carpenter said that "nothing would do but I must go." From December 1775 to Oc tober 1777 he was in five different volunteer companies serving for a total of about eleven months. Carpenter's discussion of his services as a soldier are very brief, but he did see action during the New York City campaign of 1776. In December 1777, after deciding to try his luck as a privateersman, he joined the crew of the Reprisal. His luck was none too good; the Reprisal was captured in February 1778. For the next year and a half Carpenter was a British captive. In July 1779 he was exchanged to France where he entered on board the privateer, General Mifiin. His cruise home was highly profitable; he received at least £150 in prize money. Arriving in Boston in November 1779, Carpenter soon decided "to travil to the Northward County to [Vermont to] Seek my fortune." Carpenter had to fight more than the wilderness to find his "fortune." During the last half of 1780, he and many of his fellow Ver monters had to battle Indians led by Tories. -
Of Rehoboth, Massachusetts
WILLIAM3 CARPENTER (WILLIAM2–1) OF REHOBOTH, MASSACHUSETTS Eugene Cole Zubrinsky, FASG Ojai, California, 2008 Last revised 25 February 2018 Prepared for Carpenters’ Encyclopedia of Carpenters 2008 Update WILLIAM3 CARPENTER (William2 of Rehoboth, William1) was baptized at Shalbourne, Berkshire, England, on 25 December (not 22 November) 1631 and died at Rehoboth, Massachusetts, on 26 January 1702/3, aged 72. He married first at Rehoboth on 5 Octo- ber 1651, PRISCILLA BENNETT, who died there on 20 October 1663, probable daughter (widow?) of Edward Bennett of Weymouth, Massachusetts Bay Colony, and Rehoboth. William married second at Rehoboth on 10 12th month [February] 1663[/4], MIRIAM SALE, born between say 1644 (estimated age 20 at marriage) and about 1646 (see age at death) and died at Rehoboth on 1 May 1722, aged 76 (not 93), daughter of Edward Sale(s) (also Saile/Sails/Seal[l]e/Sall [the last probably comparable to Abigall]; occasion- ally S[e]arle[s]) of Weymouth and Rehoboth. All are buried in Old Rehoboth (Newman) Cemetery, in that part of Rehoboth now East Providence, Rhode Island (TAG 70:194, 204, 89:314–15; RVR 1:50, 178 [not 179], 2:234; Old Rehoboth Cem 14 [William “3rd”]; RI Cems 63, 69; BrCoPR 2:74–76; GM 1:253–54, 6:141–45; Rehoboth Hist 34, 38–39 [widow Bennett, 1646/7]; MBCR 1:98, 202–3, 225; PCR 4:83; NEHGR 65:63–65; Hotten 70; see also COMMENTS, below). [Sources are cited in full in KEY TO SOURCE NOTES, at the end of this sketch. The format below is patterned loosely after that used by Robert Charles Anderson in his Great Migration series.] IMMIGRATION: William3 was the third eldest of four Carpenter children who accom- panied their parents and paternal grandfather to Massachusetts on the Bevis in 1638 (see William2 of Rehoboth sketch, IMMIGRATION). -
A List of Revolutionary Soldiers and Sail- Ors
A LIST OF REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIERS AND SAIL ORS WHOSE GRAVES HAVE BEEN DESIGNATED BY THE MARKER OF THE SOCIETY. PREPARED BY HENRY A. MAY. THE marker of the Society, which has been fully described and figured in previous Registers, has been placed at the graves of 4,517 soldiers and sailors of the War of the Revolution. About 3,815 graves have been marked in 115 cities and towns of our own State, 693 in other States of the Union, and 9 in foreign countries. It is made either of iron or bronze, at a very moderate price, and can be procured from the maker on an order furnished by the Registrar. The origin and history of the markers is well expressed in the following extracts, made from the speech of Captain Nathan Appleton, one of the Vice-Presidents of our Society, on the occa sion of the celebration of the " Children of the American Revolu tion" at the Old South Meeting-house, July 4, 1895 : — " It [the design] is taken from the cross of Saint Louis, with some changes; and nothing could be more appropriate, as you will remember that it was during the reign of Louis XVI. of France, who was Grand Master of the Order, that Lafayette and the other Frenchmen of the army and navy came to the struggling colonies, and gave us the assistance we so much needed at the time. " In the centre of the cross is the ' Minute-man,' a copy of the statue, by Daniel C. French, which stands by the Concord Bridge, where was ' fired the shot heard round the world' on April 19, 1775. -
SENATE of a Quorum
1950 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENAT~ 1331 lives ·for their fellow men;· to the Committee favorable consideration of legislation out H. R. 4387. An act to authorize relief of on House Administration. lawing :...lcoholic-beverage advertising over authorized certifying officers of terminated By Mr. WOOD: _ the air and through the channels of inter war agencies in liquidation by the Treasury H. R. 7109. A bill to amend. section 3282 ·of state comm~rce, and bearing a total of 50 Department; and title 18 of the United States Code to lengthen signatures; to the Committee 0~1 Interstate H. R. 6212. An act to amend section 5 of the periods of limitation applicable to certain and Foreign Commerce. the Federal Firearms Act. offenses affecting, or which might affect, the CALL OF THE ROLL national security; to the Committee on the Judiciary. Mr. McMAHON. I suggest the absence By Mr. TAYLOR: SENATE of a quorum. H. J. Res. 410. Joint resolution establish The VICE PRESIDENT. The Secre ing a Federal Motor Vehicle Commission tary will call the roll. for the purpose of making uniform, laws per THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1950 taining to operation, ownership and control. The roll was called, and the following of motor vehicles; to the Committee on Inter (Legislative day of Wednesday, January Senators answered to their names: state and Foreign Commerce. 4~ 1950) Aiken Hill Murray By Mr. JAVITS: Anderson Hoey Myers H. Res. 456. Resolution to condemn the The Senate met at 12 o'clock meridian, Benton Holland Neely abduction of Greek children by Communist on th3 expiration of the recess. -
Peirce Genealogy
PEIRCE GENEALOGY. BEING THE RECORD OF THE POSTERITY OF JOHN PERS, AN EARLY INHABITANT OF WATERTOYVN, IN NEW ENGLAND, WHO CAME FROM NORWICH, NORFOLK COUNTY, ENGLAND; WITH NOTES ON THE HISTORY OF OTHER FAMILIES OF PEIRCE, PIERCE, PEARCE, ETC. BY FREDERICK CLIFTON PEIRCE, Es*j., THOR OF THE HISTORY OF GRAFTON, HISTORY OF B aRRE. COMPILER OF the Gibson- and H arwood Genealogies, and Resident Member of the New E ngland H istoric-G enealogical Society. I love the lineage of heroes; but I love merit more. Patents of nobility are bnt phantoms; true worth la within. Kings are nothing but men, and all men are equal. K in g F b b d e b ic k o f Pr u s s ia . WORCESTER ; PRESS OF C1IAS. HAMILTON No. 311 Main Str eet. 1 8 8 0 . The Hemotype PbintinoCo 126 Peapi.S t. Boston p g l f i - t g i t t o Copyright, 1880, Bv FREDERICK CLIFTON PEIRCE. 9 S J S - . J. S. W e s b y , Binder. Edition Limited. TO Col. Cfjomas (HHcnttoortl) $firrc, PR ESID E N T OP THE GALVESTON, HARRISBURG AND SAN ANTONIO RAILWAY, To w hose E nterprise and L iberality in th e Construction of ample T ransportation F acilities through Southern and W estern T exas, T he P eople of that Great Section o f Country owe a D ebt of Gra titu d e; and fo r w hom T H E AUTHOR OF THIS VOLUME E ntertains the H ighest P ersonal E steem for iiis I n tegrity, E nter prise, Sagacity and Libera lity , this work is fH o s t lUspectfulls Drtitratrti BT HIS FRIEND, TH E AUTHOR.