In honor of July 24 being Cousins Day, I share the following picture from the summer of 1982.
My grandmother, Helen (Hunter) Copeland (1907-1990) is in the middle, with her sister, Margaret Hunter (1905-1994) sitting next to her. She is surrounded by her three daughters, three sons-in-law, and nine grandchildren. She couldn't be any happier!
A Genealogy Blog about ancestors who lived in almost every state between Maine, Virginia, and Illinois
Thursday, July 24, 2014
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
Tombstone Tuesday ~ Henry and Jane Sewall
Several years ago, my husband and I explored the First Parish Burying Ground in Newbury, Massachusetts, where some of my early immigrant ancestors are buried.
My husband took the following picture of my 8th great-grandfather's gravestone.
Henry died on May 16, 1700, and his wife, Jane, died eight months later, on January 13, 1700/01.
The gravestone was erected by his eldest son, Justice Samuel Sewall.
Psalm 27, verse 10 reads: "When my father and my mother forsake me, then the Lord will take me up."
My husband took the following picture of my 8th great-grandfather's gravestone.
MR HENRY SEWALL (SENT BY
MR HENRY SEWALL HIS FATHER
IN YE SHIP ELSABETH & DORCAS
CAPT WATTS COMMANDER)
ARRIVED AT BOSTON, 1634.
WINTERD AT IPSWICH HELPD
BEGIN THIS PLANTATION 1635
FURNISHING ENGLISH SERVANTS
NEAT CATTEL & PROVISIONS
MARRIED MRS JANE DUMMER
MARCH YE 25 1646
DIED MAY YE 16, 1700
AETAT. 86. HIS FRUITFUL
VINE, BEING THUS DISJOIND
FELL TO YE GROUND JANAUARY
YE 13. FOLLOWING AETAT. 74.
PSAL - 27 - 10.
Henry died on May 16, 1700, and his wife, Jane, died eight months later, on January 13, 1700/01.
The gravestone was erected by his eldest son, Justice Samuel Sewall.
Psalm 27, verse 10 reads: "When my father and my mother forsake me, then the Lord will take me up."
Saturday, July 19, 2014
Surname Saturday ~ Henry Sewall of England and Massachusetts
Coventry, England Courtesy Wikimedia Commons |
Coventry is the red area in the image at right. According to The Descendants of Henry Sewall 1576-1656, by Eben W. Graves, an invaluable source for Sewall descendants, the Sewalls were in Coventry, or at least parts of Warwickshire, for generations. What I share here is only a brief summary of the wealth of information to be found in this book, which I purchased soon after its 2007 publication by the Newbury Street Press.
In 1591, Henry Sewall entered the Drapers Company of Coventry, for a nine-year apprenticeship. According to Wikipedia, the Drapers Company was a large trading guild in Coventry. A draper is an old term for one who sells cloth and dry goods.
At some point between 1611 and 1615, Henry moved about 100 miles north from Coventry to Manchester, where he, his wife, and his infant son are listed in the Manchester parish records in the summer of 1615.
Henry's wife was Anne Hunt, who died soon after the baptism of their son, Henry, in 1615. Not much is known about her except for the record of her burial on July 1, 1615. Within a year, Henry Sewall married Ellen (Mosley) Nugent, a young widow. They had six children, all of whom died young. The Sewall family lived in or near Manchester, England, from about 1615 to about 1631. By April 1634, Henry Sewall was back in Coventry, selling property in preparation for leaving England.
Newbury, Essex Co., Mass. Courtesy Wikimedia Commons |
Henry Sewall was a founder of the town of Newbury, Massachusetts, (where my early Lowell ancestors lived), which was settled in 1635. He later moved to Rowley, just south of Newbury. (See a great map of Essex County here.) Henry died, intestate, in Rowley in March 1655/6. It took a couple of years for his estate to be settled.
Generation 2: Henry Sewall, the only child to survive to adulthood, was baptized at Manchester Cathedral, Lancashire, on June 25, 1615. Various records imply a birth year between 1611 and 1614. He immigrated to New England on the ship Elizabeth & Dorcas in 1634, ahead of his father and step-mother. He was sent with plenty of provisions for setting up a new home for the family.
He spent his first winter in Ipswich (two towns south of Newbury in the above map), where he had received a grant of 40 acres. He sold this land in the spring of 1635 and, along with his father, became one of the first settlers of Newbury.
Henry married Jane Dummer at Newbury, Massachusetts, on March 25, 1646. In late 1646, Henry and Jane returned to England with his in-laws, the Dummers, and lived in England until 1659, where he served as a minister at North Baddesley, Hampshire. Henry (the son) visited his father, Henry, in New England once, in 1650, when he bought several parcels of land in Newbury.
Henry and Jane had eight children, five born in England between 1649 and 1659 (Hannah, Samuel, John, Stephen, Jane), and three born in Newbury between 1662 and 1668 (Anne, Mehitable, Dorothy). After Henry returned to New England in 1659 to finish settling his father's estate, it took him a couple of years for him to decide he would stay and he finally sent for his wife and children. They arrived in July 1661.
Henry died on May 16, 1700, in Newbury, Massachusetts, and was buried in the First Parish Burying Ground there. His wife, Jane, died eight months later on January 13, 1700/01 and was also buried at First Parish Burying Ground.
I descend from their oldest son, Samuel Sewall.
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
Pennsylvania Death Certificates, 1906-1944 Now on Ancestry.com
As Pennsylvania researchers probably already know, Pennsylvania death certificates (for 1906 through 1944) are now available at Ancestry.com. 1906-1924 were made available a few months ago; 1925-1944 were made available last week, and 1945-1963 should be available in the fall.
It was a big deal for Pennsylvania researchers when Pennsylvania made its death certificate indices available in early 2012. I wrote about the steps required to obtain PA death certificates here when I blogged about my great grandfather Percy Hunter. During 2012, I obtained over 20 death certificates for members of my maternal grandmother's extended family at $3 each.
Benefits of having the death certificates indexed at Ancestry.com include the ability to look for a name without knowing the specific death date AND the quality of the scan. Below is an example of the death certificate of my second great grandmother's twin, Christine Agnes Alston. (See a photo of the twins here.) The first image was scanned, printed and mailed to me, then I scanned it to save to my computer. I downloaded the second image from Ancestry.com.
It was a big deal for Pennsylvania researchers when Pennsylvania made its death certificate indices available in early 2012. I wrote about the steps required to obtain PA death certificates here when I blogged about my great grandfather Percy Hunter. During 2012, I obtained over 20 death certificates for members of my maternal grandmother's extended family at $3 each.
Benefits of having the death certificates indexed at Ancestry.com include the ability to look for a name without knowing the specific death date AND the quality of the scan. Below is an example of the death certificate of my second great grandmother's twin, Christine Agnes Alston. (See a photo of the twins here.) The first image was scanned, printed and mailed to me, then I scanned it to save to my computer. I downloaded the second image from Ancestry.com.
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