This HTML database was produced by an unregistered copy ofGED4WEBİ version 2.78
Whooten, Richie {I889} (b. , d. ?)
Given Name: Richie
Note: Twin of Ronnie
Given Name: P M
Note: Living Individual, details withheld
Given Name: B A
Note: Living Individual, details withheld
Given Name: Elizabeth Maude "Betty"
Given Name: Oletta Sylvia
Given Name: Lois
Given Name: C
Note: Living Individual, details withheld
Given Name: Charlotte
Given Name: George
Given Name: Martha Eleanor Gerturde
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mail
Death: 31 AUG 1996 Temple City, Los Angeles, California
Given Name: William Simpson
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mail
Death: 29 APR 1939 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Given Name: Thomas
Note: "Telegraph Horton's by RUTH HORTON METZLER (10/08/1999)
COLONEL THOMAS HORTON
born undoubtedly at Saddington, Leicestershire, probably in 1600; diedin Ireland of malaria on the military march from Ross to Waterford,between 3 July 1649 and 25 Oct. 1649; probably married --- (-) by1641.
Thomas, second son of Wi1liam, was born in Saddington, where hisparents were married in 1597. The family removed to Gumley sometimeafter his father purchased the manor of Gumley in 1608.
In his youth, Thomas entered service in the household of Sir ArthurHaselrig/ Heslerig; a wealthy Puritan whose manor was located ninemiles northeast of Gumley at Mosley. Here he was trained as afalconer. Sir Arthur, whose considerable career in national politicshas been noticed by several historians, delighted in the countrypastimes of hawking and falconry. Oliver Cromwell, a long-time friendof Sir Arthur, also loved hawking and this circumstance combined withthe common religious and political views which both men held, broughtthem together--all three of them in fact--in the fields ofLeicestershire.
Thomas Horton's life was unquestionably shaped by these two who werehis contemporaries, Cromwell (to whose cause Thomas devoted his life,was born in 1599) and Sir Arthur Haselrig. Ironically, a thirdindividual whose life affected Thomas Horton to a high degree, wasalso born in 1600: Charles I who became King of England in 1625. SinceThomas played an important role in the momentous events of his time,much more is known of his life than of any of his Leicestershirefamily. And strangely enough, perhaps for the same reason, very littleis known about his son's life.
The momentous events that engulfed England during Thomas's lifetimemust be dealt with here, however briefly, for some understanding ofthem seems essential to an appreciation of his place in history and inthis genealogy.
Thomas Horton was born in the final years of the reign of Elizabeth I.The succession to the throne of James I in 1603 marked the beginningof a course that would eventually lead to the complex series ofstruggles known as the English Civil War (1642-1649).
Politically, Englishmen were divided between those whose chief loyaltywas to the crown and those who wished to limit royal power,particularly the landed gentry and local officials in counties andcities. At the highest level it was a struggle between Parliament andtwo kings, James I, 1603-1625, and Charles 'I, 1625-1649.
Economically, from Parliament down, Englishmen of all levels weredeeply divided. Charles's eleven-year suspension of Parliament(1629-1649) only increased opposition to his taxation measures, histampering with industry and trade, and his foreign policy bred awidespread suspicion of corruption in the court.
Religiously, there were highly sensitive questions involving the powerand intolerance of the established Anglican Church (within whichPuritanism was emerging with diversity and promise of powerfulpossibilities), the continued strength of Roman Catholicism especiallyin Ireland, the demands of the Presbyterian Church in Scotland, andthe steady spread throughout the countryside of the Bible (authorizedby James I in the English language) which gave every literateEnglishman a new sense of individual control over his spiritualdestiny.
The unrest in England was further subjected to attempts of theSpanish, French and Dutch courts to influence events in England totheir own benefit, while internally the vacillations of the kings andthe intrigues of a host of civil, ecclesiastical, and military leadersthroughout the British Isles added chaos. Such was the tumultuoushalf-century into which Thomas Horton was born.
His native Leicestershire had been well known for its religious fervorfrom the time of John Wycliffe's service as rector of nearbyLutterworth (1374-1384). At Market Harborough, five miles southeast ofGumley, the wealthy Puritan Robert Smythe founded in 1614 a grammarschool, which was built, with his bequest. Thomas appears to have hada fair education, probably in Market Harborough, as evidenced by thelanguage of his will and his firm signature on a public document, soonto be discussed.
Brought together, then, in the country pastime of hawking, Sir ArthurHaselrig, Oliver Cromwell and Thomas Horton shared common views, andin time, a camaraderie developed which lasted until their deaths.Haselrig and Cromwell are both of record as favoring the Petition ofRight of 1628, by which Parliament attempted to check the power of theking, and both consistently championed local rights. Their statedsympathies clearly led them away from the established authorities,both king and church. Thomas Horton's association with these twoprominent Puritans was to have a profound effect on the course of hislife.
Although Anglican persecution of the Puritan sect increased underArchbishop Laud, Haselrig and Cromwell for a time saw no need to jointhe Separatist Puritans, who had gone to Holland as early as 1607 andby 1621 were living at Plymouth Plantation in the New World. Rather,their course of statesmanship was based on the hope that Charles Iwould soften his attitude concerning political and religious rights ofthe individual.
By the end of the 1620's, however, harvests in England were bad,poverty was rife, and the prospects of improved rights werediscouraging. Not surprisingly, many Puritans became interested inemigrating to the New World; a large company departed under theleadership of John Winthrop, Sr., in the great fleet of 1630 whichresulted in a ring of little towns edging Boston harbor inMassachusetts.
Cromwell and Haselrig joined with another group of wealthy Puritansunder the leadership of John Winthrop, Jr., with the intention ofestablishing a settlement on 1,500 acres at the mouth of theConnecticut River, to be called Saybrook. In 1635 Winthrop led a partyof servants and workmen, together with livestock and supplies, tobuild a fort and manor houses for the "most prominent Puritan lordsand gentlemen," who were to follow.
Although there is no documentary evidence, (the earliest records ofSaybrook are not extant) there are reasons to believe that ThomasHorton was among the servants whom Haseirig sent to Saybrook. First,his several biographers have been unable to account for hiswhereabouts after he left the Haseirig household (if he did leave)prior to 1643. Second, it is highly unlikely that Thomas could havebeen commissioned a colonel in the Parliamentarian army in 1643without prior military experience. Such experience could well havebeen acquired in skirmishes, say, under Capt. John Mason, with theIndians in the Connecticut valley during the early Saybrook years.Third, it is apparent that a number of Cromwell's soldiers were drawnfrom the colonies, as was Mason himself, who settled at Saybrook about1637, but returned to serve under Sir Thomas Fairfax in England.Lastly, it is of record that Haselrig agreed to send servants toSaybrook to prepare for his planned emigration.
In Alveston, Warwickshire, Back in England, which Thomas Horton may ormay not have left, a solitary parish record exists: Thomas Horton andwife baptized their son Thomas Horton on 13 Feb. 1641. Attempts todate to prove or disprove this connection have been unsuccessful, andit remains the most probable record of the place and date of birth ofThomas's "only Sonne Thomas Horton". A summary of the facts, which ledto this conclusion, is given with the son's life below.
Sir Arthur Haseirig, as well as other prominent Puritans, had found itimpossible to sell his estate without attracting the attention ofCharles I's government, which was concerned with any revenuepossibilities from the landed gentry. Cromwell had been prevented bythe king from emigrating and by 1641 was an outspoken Member ofParliament like Haselrig. On 4 Jan.1642, Charles I named Sir Arthur asone of those "Five Members" of Parliament who were ringleaders in"prolonged and treasonous attempts to wrench away" his royalauthority. Lacking parliamentary support to enforce his orders fortheir arrest, Charles I left both the House of Commons and thenLondon, never to return until the time of his death. During therestless months of 1642 there were certain negotiations, but both theParliamentarians and the Royalists "desperately searched about for thematerials of war" as one historian puts it.
At Edgehill near Kineton, only 10 miles southeast of Alveston, on 23Oct. 1642, the two sides met in conflict for the first time. Haselrigwas there, having raised a troop of horse in Essex's army, and foughtunder the command of Sir William Balfour. Quite likely Thomas Hortonwas there too, mounted on a horse, which Sir Arthur provided. IfCromwell was at Edgehill at all, it was as an observer.
However, by the spring of 1643, Cromwell had not only raised his owntroop in his Native Huntingdonshire, but began to extend it into aregiment which would become a positive army, the New Model. And by May1643, both Cromwell and Horton were colonels, Thomas in the army ofSir Thomas Fairfax; Sir Arthur was also an officer, commanding aregiment of cuirassiers in July 1643.
On 24 June 1643, Parliament resolved that Thomas Horton be recommendedto Lord Inchiquin "to have the command which Sir William Ogle formerlyhad in Ireland." Deep-seated resentment against the King'santi-Catholic policies still remained from the Irish rising of Oct.1641. Most of the principal action of the Civil War took place in thenorthern and eastern parts of England, where Fairfax and Cromwelldefeated the King's forces at Marston Moor in 1644 and at Naseby in1645, forcing Charles to flee to Scotland.
Col. Thomas Horton seems to have held the command in Ireland untilearly 1648, when a fresh revolt of Royalists broke out in South Walesand Parliamentary troops were assigned there. Col. Horton was sentthere to "second Cromwell's operations", which he did "ably" Col. J.Philip Jones, born in Swansea, Wales about 1618, Parliamentarianofficer also, became an associate of Thomas Horton when Jones was"hurried thither with a company of men from Swansea to reinforce theParliamentary troops Under Col. Horton. He took part with Horton inall the subsequent marches until Horton came up with the Royalistforces at St. Fagans." This Philip Jones was later named in both ofThomas Horton's wills.
Col. Thomas Horton had led an indecisive action against Col. Powellnear Carmarthen followed by another "defeat, which he inflicted onCol. John Payer's forces... also indecisive" Then one of his mostnotable victories occurred on 8 May 1648, between St. Fagans andPeterstown in Wales, where he totally routed a Royalist force of 8,000and took 3,000 prisoners, having about 3,000 in his own troops.
Shortly after this, Cromwell joined his forces with Horton's inpursuing the Royalists as far as Tenby Castle, where five or sixhundred of them were holding out in an apparently impregnableposition. While Cromwell moved on, Horton besieged Tenby and broughtabout its surrender on 31 May. For both of these victories Parliamentordered thanksgivings and settled lands confiscated from the Royalistson Col. Horton and his brigade. The levying of the fine of £20,000 onthe counties of South Wales, according to an act passed 23 Feb. 1648/9appears to have been entrusted to Jones and Horton
With South Wales now subdued, the main Parliamentarian force movedacross Great Britain to defeat the Scottish army at Preston innorthern England. Probably Thomas remained in South Wales as amilitary administrator.
Finally, on 6 Dec. 1648, the victorious army under Fairfax andCromwell entered London, arrested the king, expelled the Presbyterianmajority from Parliament, and established a High Court of Justice totry the king as a war criminal. Thomas Horton was certainly in Londonat this time, for along with other New Model Army officers and anumber of prominent Leicestershire men, he was appointed a judge ofthe High Court. He attended the sessions every day and, when thefateful moment came, was the forty first of the fifty-seven signers ofthe warrant for the execution of the king. There is some evidence thatonly the first twenty-eight men signed voluntarily, the rest requiringpersuasion. Whatever the truth may be, the execution took place infront of Whitehall on an icy 30 Jan. 1649. The way was now open forthe establishment of the Puritan Commonwealth for which Thomas hadfought so valiantly. Cromwell would be named Lord Protector in 1653,and Sir Arthur Haselrig would become one of the most powerful men inEngland in the coming decade.
Col. Horton apparently returned shortly to South Wales, where he nowhad an estate and was to serve Cromwell as a commissioner. But earlyin the summer of 1649 his regiment was drawn by lot to go intoIreland. Prompted perhaps by his imminent departure, he took up pen on3 July and wrote his will, "in the presence (and probably also thehouse) of John St. Loe, John Fennell, and Margaret St. Loe" inCardiff. This will, and another that Thomas wrote a few months later,contain many valuable clues which provide a clear identification ofThomas himself, as well as highly significant a clues concerning hisson.
The 3 July 1649 will mentions for the first time "my only Sonne ThomasHorton" to whom he left the bulk of his estate; the son to be executorwhen he reached the age of twenty-one. Until then, five "gardianes"are named to oversee the will and to "manage his estate to his solebenefitt and best advantage", a deliberate choice of wording whichsuggests that the testator left no other survivors, neither wife nordaughters. Since Col. Horton had often gone into battle since Edgehillin 1642, his wife may have been previously provided for, if in factshe was living on 3 July 1649.
Thomas's will leaves small bequests to several members of his family:his mother Isabell Horton, his sisters Elizabeth and Mary, and hisbrothers John, James, Andrew and William. The bequests to Andrew andWilliam are apparently for sums already loaned to them, which were nowforgiven. The amount for William and his wife is fifty pounds,considerably larger that the other bequests. Since it is certain thatWilliam had left Gumley and had not kept in touch with the family, itwould seem that Thomas knew of William's marriage and whereabouts. Aparticularly enigmatic reference is a small bequest to his "brotherHenry Freeman" whose identity is unknown.
Thomas remembered his Puritan mentor Sir Arthur Haselrig and his wifeDorothea, John and Margaret St. Loe, Col. J. Philip Jones and WalterCradock all with small sums to be used to buy memorial rings. Suchrings were a custom of the time, especially with family or friends whowere not in financial straits.
Thomas named as guardians: Col. J. Philip Jones, John Saintloe/St. Loe(variously spelled in the will), Walter Cradock and Thomas's brothersJohn and James Horton. They were specifically charged to see thatyoung Thomas "may be educated in the Grace of God and in Knowledge ofthe Ghospel of Jesus Christ... and I do give Them or any three of Thempower to order and mannage his estate".
Thomas signed and sealed his will, with the St. Loes and John Fennell,his "faithful Servant", acting as witnesses. He may have left Cardifffor Ireland within the week with his newly reorganized regiment. Partof his old regiment had refused to go to Ireland and had disbanded.Cromwell himself was appointed to command the campaign.
By mid-October 1649, the army was on the march between Ross andWaterford in Ireland. Although the campaign was generally going well,the weather was dreadful, and illness, particularly "low malarialfever", was taking a heavy toll of the army, One historian reportsthat as many as a thousand men were lost to disease that season. Amongthose, struck dawn was Thomas Horton.
Shortly before his death, probably in mid-October 1649, Thomas wrotean addition to his earlier will. In the second-will, which was undatedbut witnessed by Oliver Latham and Richard Eljer, he disposed ofnumerous horses, saddles, bridles, clothing, and weapons in hispossession at the time, giving most of them to his army comrades. Aparticularly touching gift is that of his horse called "Haselrigg" toCromwell. Twelve pounds, forty shillings (probably his cash in hand)was to be divided among the sixty men of his regiment. An additionalbequest of special interest was ten pounds for the "Saints in Wales"to be dispersed at the discretion of Mr. Cradock, 'Minister of theGhospel", and Col. Jones. This would appear to be intended for thegroup of baptized believers of which Thomas was apparently a member;the inclusion of Col. Jones's name here places him with the group.
Exactly when Thomas first had joined a Baptist congregation is notclear. Baptist congregations took the name from their belief thatadult baptism by immersion was an outward sign of Christian faith andrepentance. The denomination had begun in England by 1608 andexperienced a period of rapid growth during the Commonwealth period. ABaptist congregation meeting in the Glass House in London recordedmany adult baptisms in the spring of 1649. Those months following theexecution at Whitehall were a time of spiritual uncertainty for manyPuritans, and, for some, guilt resulting from their part in the deathof the king. Thomas may have joined this group, along with John Myles,a former chaplain with the Parliamentarian forces in South Wales.Myles returned for a time to Ilston, Glamorganshire, with renewed zealto preach spiritual peace to war-weary Welshmen. Sampson Mason, apossible relative of Capt. John Mason, has also been identified withthis congregation. After serving under Cromwell, the younger Masonbecame a Baptist and returned to New England where he and Myles werelater among the founders of the first Baptist church in Massachusetts,at Rehoboth, later Swansea.
Thomas Horton's appointment of a Baptist minister as one of his son'sguardians in his first will, and the bequest for the "Saints in Wales"in his second, are strong evidence that he had experienced a spiritualconversion, either in London or after his return to Wales asCromwell's commissioner. Apparently the St. Loes were also in thefaith, for in his first will, Thomas refers to John as "my brother(cymri lanro)", an affectionate term that I read as "my Welsh Brotherin the Church."
In his second will Thomas left a final £10 to his "Good Brother" JohnHorton, all other goods or money in Ireland to be disposed of by Lomaxand "my loving Servant" John Fennell, who was probably at his side ashe completed dictating his will. Thomas died without signing it andwas undoubtedly buried in a soldier's unmarked grave on Irish soil. Hewas about forty-nine years of age.
Aside from the second will, which is rich in details of a soldier'slife, we have eloquent if brief details of Thomas's death from apersonal letter written by Oliver Cronwell. Writing on 25 Oct.1649 tothe Speaker of Parliament, Cromwell added a postscript noting that"Colonel Horton is lately dead of the country disease leaving a sonbehind him." In Nov. Cromwell's own cousin being another victim, hewrote in a letter, commenting on both deaths so near and dear to him:"Thus you see how God mingles out the cup unto us."
Thomas supplemental will was carefully carried by Oliver Latham andRichard Eljer to Cardiff, where it was appended to and recorded withhis earlier will. Together the two documents were proved on 16 Jan.1650/1.
Regarding the wife of Thomas Horton, nothing has been found in therecords to prove that she did or did not survive him. If she wasWelsh-born, as tradition in the American Horton family suggests, shemay have been a daughter or other relative of John and Margaret St.Loe; I have not searched any records for their family in Cardiff. Thispossibility is enhanced by the fact that Thomas wrote his will intheir presence and appointed John St. Loe as a guardian of his son.
Possibly Thomas's wife was a sister or close relative of his armyfriend Philip Jones; several of the Jones name were baptised in theIlston congregation of Rev. Myles and later emigrated to Rehoboth andSwansea, Massachusetts.
A third possible wife for Thomas might be a hometown girl of theFreeman family at Gumley, Leicestershire. I have not searched in thatfamily. Seemingly he had long been absent from Gumley, and his youngson was in Cardiff, Wales, in 1649. But who was the Henry Freemanmentioned in Thomas's first will?
A fourth, and least likely, possibility is a Rachel (Smith) Hortonmentioned in the 13 Jan. 1660 will of her brother Richard Smith of St.Dunstan's West, London. Richard stipulated that she was to receive"one third part of the land called Welshman's." This Rachel Horton hadat least one child, for her brother mentions "the heirs of her body.She would have been the right age to be the widow of Thomas Horton,"the land called Welshman's" is intriguing, and the Milton,Massachusetts, settler Thomas Horton gave the name Rachel to his onlydaughter. But nothing further is known of her.
In summary, Col. Thomas Horton may have married a girl from Gumley,Leicestershire, or South Wale's; of this marriage he unquestionablyhad one son, Thomas Horton, who was perhaps baptized at Alveston,Warwickshire, on 13 Feb. 1641 and thus about eight years of age whencalled under age on 3 July 1649. This son, I believe was the ThomasHorton who emigrated to New England, lived in Milton from 1662 to1704, and later removed to Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: "Telegraph Horton's by RUTH HORTON METZLER
Title: Document on research done by BY RUTH HORTON METZLER
This document is in the NYC public library in the genealogy
Author: RUTH HORTON METZLER
Publication: "Telegraph Horton's
Text: This document is in the NYC public library in the genealogy
"Telegraph Horton's by RUTH HORTON METZLER (10/08/1999)
COLONEL THOMAS HORTON
born undoubtedly at Saddington, Leicestershire, probably in 1600; died
in Ireland of malaria on the military march from Ross to Waterford,
between 3 July 1649 and 25 Oct. 1649; probably married --- (-) by
1641.
Thomas, second son of Wi1liam, was born in Saddington, where his
parents were married in 1597. The family removed to Gumley sometime
after his father purchased the manor of Gumley in 1608.
In his youth, Thomas entered service in the household of Sir Arthur
Haselrig/ Heslerig; a wealthy Puritan whose manor was located nine
miles northeast of Gumley at Mosley. Here he was trained as a
falconer. Sir Arthur, whose considerable career in national politics
has been noticed by several historians, delighted in the country
pastimes of hawking and falconry. Oliver Cromwell, a long-time friend
of Sir Arthur, also loved hawking and this circumstance combined with
the common religious and political views which both men held, brought
them together--all three of them in fact--in the fields of
Leicestershire.
Thomas Horton's life was unquestionably shaped by these two who were
his contemporaries, Cromwell (to whose cause Thomas devoted his life,
was born in 1599) and Sir Arthur Haselrig. Ironically, a third
individual whose life affected Thomas Horton to a high degree, was
also born in 1600: Charles I who became King of England in 1625. Since
Thomas played an important role in the momentous events of his time,
much more is known of his life than of any of his Leicestershire
family. And strangely enough, perhaps for the same reason, very little
is known about his son's life.
The momentous events that engulfed England during Thomas's lifetime
must be dealt with here, however briefly, for some understanding of
them seems essential to an appreciation of his place in history and in
this genealogy.
Thomas Horton was born in the final years of the reign of Elizabeth I.
The succession to the throne of James I in 1603 marked the beginning
of a course that would eventually lead to the complex series of
struggles known as the English Civil War (1642-1649).
Politically, Englishmen were divided between those whose chief loyalty
was to the crown and those who wished to limit royal power,
particularly the landed gentry and local officials in counties and
cities. At the highest level it was a struggle between Parliament and
two kings, James I, 1603-1625, and Charles 'I, 1625-1649.
Economically, from Parliament down, Englishmen of all levels were
deeply divided. Charles's eleven-year suspension of Parliament
(1629-1649) only increased opposition to his taxation measures, his
tampering with industry and trade, and his foreign policy bred a
widespread suspicion of corruption in the court.
Religiously, there were highly sensitive questions involving the power
and intolerance of the established Anglican Church (within which
Puritanism was emerging with diversity and promise of powerful
possibilities), the continued strength of Roman Catholicism especially
in Ireland, the demands of the Presbyterian Church in Scotland, and
the steady spread throughout the countryside of the Bible (authorized
by James I in the English language) which gave every literate
Englishman a new sense of individual control over his spiritual
destiny.
The unrest in England was further subjected to attempts of the
Spanish, French and Dutch courts to influence events in England to
their own benefit, while internally the vacillations of the kings and
the intrigues of a host of civil, ecclesiastical, and military leaders
throughout the British Isles added chaos. Such was the tumultuous
half-century into which Thomas Horton was born.
His native Leicestershire had been well known for its religious fervor
from the time of John Wycliffe's service as rector of nearby
Lutterworth (1374-1384). At Market Harborough, five miles southeast of
Gumley, the wealthy Puritan Robert Smythe founded in 1614 a grammar
school, which was built, with his bequest. Thomas appears to have had
a fair education, probably in Market Harborough, as evidenced by the
language of his will and his firm signature on a public document, soon
to be discussed.
Brought together, then, in the country pastime of hawking, Sir Arthur
Haselrig, Oliver Cromwell and Thomas Horton shared common views, and
in time, a camaraderie developed which lasted until their deaths.
Haselrig and Cromwell are both of record as favoring the Petition of
Right of 1628, by which Parliament attempted to check the power of the
king, and both consistently championed local rights. Their stated
sympathies clearly led them away from the established authorities,
both king and church. Thomas Horton's association with these two
prominent Puritans was to have a profound effect on the course of his
life.
Although Anglican persecution of the Puritan sect increased under
Archbishop Laud, Haselrig and Cromwell for a time saw no need to join
the Separatist Puritans, who had gone to Holland as early as 1607 and
by 1621 were living at Plymouth Plantation in the New World. Rather,
their course of statesmanship was based on the hope that Charles I
would soften his attitude concerning political and religious rights of
the individual.
By the end of the 1620's, however, harvests in England were bad,
poverty was rife, and the prospects of improved rights were
discouraging. Not surprisingly, many Puritans became interested in
emigrating to the New World; a large company departed under the
leadership of John Winthrop, Sr., in the great fleet of 1630 which
resulted in a ring of little towns edging Boston harbor in
Massachusetts.
Cromwell and Haselrig joined with another group of wealthy Puritans
under the leadership of John Winthrop, Jr., with the intention of
establishing a settlement on 1,500 acres at the mouth of the
Connecticut River, to be called Saybrook. In 1635 Winthrop led a party
of servants and workmen, together with livestock and supplies, to
build a fort and manor houses for the "most prominent Puritan lords
and gentlemen," who were to follow.
Although there is no documentary evidence, (the earliest records of
Saybrook are not extant) there are reasons to believe that Thomas
Horton was among the servants whom Haseirig sent to Saybrook. First,
his several biographers have been unable to account for his
whereabouts after he left the Haseirig household (if he did leave)
prior to 1643. Second, it is highly unlikely that Thomas could have
been commissioned a colonel in the Parliamentarian army in 1643
without prior military experience. Such experience could well have
been acquired in skirmishes, say, under Capt. John Mason, with the
Indians in the Connecticut valley during the early Saybrook years.
Third, it is apparent that a number of Cromwell's soldiers were drawn
from the colonies, as was Mason himself, who settled at Saybrook about
1637, but returned to serve under Sir Thomas Fairfax in England.
Lastly, it is of record that Haselrig agreed to send servants to
Saybrook to prepare for his planned emigration.
In Alveston, Warwickshire, Back in England, which Thomas Horton may or
may not have left, a solitary parish record exists: Thomas Horton and
wife baptized their son Thomas Horton on 13 Feb. 1641. Attempts to
date to prove or disprove this connection have been unsuccessful, and
it remains the most probable record of the place and date of birth of
Thomas's "only Sonne Thomas Horton". A summary of the facts, which led
to this conclusion, is given with the son's life below.
Sir Arthur Haseirig, as well as other prominent Puritans, had found it
impossible to sell his estate without attracting the attention of
Charles I's government, which was concerned with any revenue
possibilities from the landed gentry. Cromwell had been prevented by
the king from emigrating and by 1641 was an outspoken Member of
Parliament like Haselrig. On 4 Jan.1642, Charles I named Sir Arthur as
one of those "Five Members" of Parliament who were ringleaders in
"prolonged and treasonous attempts to wrench away" his royal
authority. Lacking parliamentary support to enforce his orders for
their arrest, Charles I left both the House of Commons and then
London, never to return until the time of his death. During the
restless months of 1642 there were certain negotiations, but both the
Parliamentarians and the Royalists "desperately searched about for the
materials of war" as one historian puts it.
At Edgehill near Kineton, only 10 miles southeast of Alveston, on 23
Oct. 1642, the two sides met in conflict for the first time. Haselrig
was there, having raised a troop of horse in Essex's army, and fought
under the command of Sir William Balfour. Quite likely Thomas Horton
was there too, mounted on a horse, which Sir Arthur provided. If
Cromwell was at Edgehill at all, it was as an observer.
However, by the spring of 1643, Cromwell had not only raised his own
troop in his Native Huntingdonshire, but began to extend it into a
regiment which would become a positive army, the New Model. And by May
1643, both Cromwell and Horton were colonels, Thomas in the army of
Sir Thomas Fairfax; Sir Arthur was also an officer, commanding a
regiment of cuirassiers in July 1643.
On 24 June 1643, Parliament resolved that Thomas Horton be recommended
to Lord Inchiquin "to have the command which Sir William Ogle formerly
had in Ireland." Deep-seated resentment against the King's
anti-Catholic policies still remained from the Irish rising of Oct.
1641. Most of the principal action of the Civil War took place in the
northern and eastern parts of England, where Fairfax and Cromwell
defeated the King's forces at Marston Moor in 1644 and at Naseby in
1645, forcing Charles to flee to Scotland.
Col. Thomas Horton seems to have held the command in Ireland until
early 1648, when a fresh revolt of Royalists broke out in South Wales
and Parliamentary
Repository:Name: New York Library Genealogy Dept.Page: Colonel Horton
Quality of data: 2
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Steve Dowling (email dowling@clark.net)
Title: Cousin - He sent me his research on the family history
Author: Steve Dowling
Text: As I was looking through your website, I remembered that I learned
from
>David Horton <hdavid@mt-vernon.com> that John Horton (1672-1742) was
a
>corporal in Corporal in King Williams War, 1694-1695.Page: Steve has 1602 Mowsley Connecticut
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mailPage: Bonnie has born abt 1600 Saddington, Leicestershire, England
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: "Telegraph Horton's by RUTH HORTON METZLER
Title: Document on research done by BY RUTH HORTON METZLER
This document is in the NYC public library in the genealogy
Author: RUTH HORTON METZLER
Publication: "Telegraph Horton's
Text: This document is in the NYC public library in the genealogy
"Telegraph Horton's by RUTH HORTON METZLER (10/08/1999)
COLONEL THOMAS HORTON
born undoubtedly at Saddington, Leicestershire, probably in 1600; died
in Ireland of malaria on the military march from Ross to Waterford,
between 3 July 1649 and 25 Oct. 1649; probably married --- (-) by
1641.
Thomas, second son of Wi1liam, was born in Saddington, where his
parents were married in 1597. The family removed to Gumley sometime
after his father purchased the manor of Gumley in 1608.
In his youth, Thomas entered service in the household of Sir Arthur
Haselrig/ Heslerig; a wealthy Puritan whose manor was located nine
miles northeast of Gumley at Mosley. Here he was trained as a
falconer. Sir Arthur, whose considerable career in national politics
has been noticed by several historians, delighted in the country
pastimes of hawking and falconry. Oliver Cromwell, a long-time friend
of Sir Arthur, also loved hawking and this circumstance combined with
the common religious and political views which both men held, brought
them together--all three of them in fact--in the fields of
Leicestershire.
Thomas Horton's life was unquestionably shaped by these two who were
his contemporaries, Cromwell (to whose cause Thomas devoted his life,
was born in 1599) and Sir Arthur Haselrig. Ironically, a third
individual whose life affected Thomas Horton to a high degree, was
also born in 1600: Charles I who became King of England in 1625. Since
Thomas played an important role in the momentous events of his time,
much more is known of his life than of any of his Leicestershire
family. And strangely enough, perhaps for the same reason, very little
is known about his son's life.
The momentous events that engulfed England during Thomas's lifetime
must be dealt with here, however briefly, for some understanding of
them seems essential to an appreciation of his place in history and in
this genealogy.
Thomas Horton was born in the final years of the reign of Elizabeth I.
The succession to the throne of James I in 1603 marked the beginning
of a course that would eventually lead to the complex series of
struggles known as the English Civil War (1642-1649).
Politically, Englishmen were divided between those whose chief loyalty
was to the crown and those who wished to limit royal power,
particularly the landed gentry and local officials in counties and
cities. At the highest level it was a struggle between Parliament and
two kings, James I, 1603-1625, and Charles 'I, 1625-1649.
Economically, from Parliament down, Englishmen of all levels were
deeply divided. Charles's eleven-year suspension of Parliament
(1629-1649) only increased opposition to his taxation measures, his
tampering with industry and trade, and his foreign policy bred a
widespread suspicion of corruption in the court.
Religiously, there were highly sensitive questions involving the power
and intolerance of the established Anglican Church (within which
Puritanism was emerging with diversity and promise of powerful
possibilities), the continued strength of Roman Catholicism especially
in Ireland, the demands of the Presbyterian Church in Scotland, and
the steady spread throughout the countryside of the Bible (authorized
by James I in the English language) which gave every literate
Englishman a new sense of individual control over his spiritual
destiny.
The unrest in England was further subjected to attempts of the
Spanish, French and Dutch courts to influence events in England to
their own benefit, while internally the vacillations of the kings and
the intrigues of a host of civil, ecclesiastical, and military leaders
throughout the British Isles added chaos. Such was the tumultuous
half-century into which Thomas Horton was born.
His native Leicestershire had been well known for its religious fervor
from the time of John Wycliffe's service as rector of nearby
Lutterworth (1374-1384). At Market Harborough, five miles southeast of
Gumley, the wealthy Puritan Robert Smythe founded in 1614 a grammar
school, which was built, with his bequest. Thomas appears to have had
a fair education, probably in Market Harborough, as evidenced by the
language of his will and his firm signature on a public document, soon
to be discussed.
Brought together, then, in the country pastime of hawking, Sir Arthur
Haselrig, Oliver Cromwell and Thomas Horton shared common views, and
in time, a camaraderie developed which lasted until their deaths.
Haselrig and Cromwell are both of record as favoring the Petition of
Right of 1628, by which Parliament attempted to check the power of the
king, and both consistently championed local rights. Their stated
sympathies clearly led them away from the established authorities,
both king and church. Thomas Horton's association with these two
prominent Puritans was to have a profound effect on the course of his
life.
Although Anglican persecution of the Puritan sect increased under
Archbishop Laud, Haselrig and Cromwell for a time saw no need to join
the Separatist Puritans, who had gone to Holland as early as 1607 and
by 1621 were living at Plymouth Plantation in the New World. Rather,
their course of statesmanship was based on the hope that Charles I
would soften his attitude concerning political and religious rights of
the individual.
By the end of the 1620's, however, harvests in England were bad,
poverty was rife, and the prospects of improved rights were
discouraging. Not surprisingly, many Puritans became interested in
emigrating to the New World; a large company departed under the
leadership of John Winthrop, Sr., in the great fleet of 1630 which
resulted in a ring of little towns edging Boston harbor in
Massachusetts.
Cromwell and Haselrig joined with another group of wealthy Puritans
under the leadership of John Winthrop, Jr., with the intention of
establishing a settlement on 1,500 acres at the mouth of the
Connecticut River, to be called Saybrook. In 1635 Winthrop led a party
of servants and workmen, together with livestock and supplies, to
build a fort and manor houses for the "most prominent Puritan lords
and gentlemen," who were to follow.
Although there is no documentary evidence, (the earliest records of
Saybrook are not extant) there are reasons to believe that Thomas
Horton was among the servants whom Haseirig sent to Saybrook. First,
his several biographers have been unable to account for his
whereabouts after he left the Haseirig household (if he did leave)
prior to 1643. Second, it is highly unlikely that Thomas could have
been commissioned a colonel in the Parliamentarian army in 1643
without prior military experience. Such experience could well have
been acquired in skirmishes, say, under Capt. John Mason, with the
Indians in the Connecticut valley during the early Saybrook years.
Third, it is apparent that a number of Cromwell's soldiers were drawn
from the colonies, as was Mason himself, who settled at Saybrook about
1637, but returned to serve under Sir Thomas Fairfax in England.
Lastly, it is of record that Haselrig agreed to send servants to
Saybrook to prepare for his planned emigration.
In Alveston, Warwickshire, Back in England, which Thomas Horton may or
may not have left, a solitary parish record exists: Thomas Horton and
wife baptized their son Thomas Horton on 13 Feb. 1641. Attempts to
date to prove or disprove this connection have been unsuccessful, and
it remains the most probable record of the place and date of birth of
Thomas's "only Sonne Thomas Horton". A summary of the facts, which led
to this conclusion, is given with the son's life below.
Sir Arthur Haseirig, as well as other prominent Puritans, had found it
impossible to sell his estate without attracting the attention of
Charles I's government, which was concerned with any revenue
possibilities from the landed gentry. Cromwell had been prevented by
the king from emigrating and by 1641 was an outspoken Member of
Parliament like Haselrig. On 4 Jan.1642, Charles I named Sir Arthur as
one of those "Five Members" of Parliament who were ringleaders in
"prolonged and treasonous attempts to wrench away" his royal
authority. Lacking parliamentary support to enforce his orders for
their arrest, Charles I left both the House of Commons and then
London, never to return until the time of his death. During the
restless months of 1642 there were certain negotiations, but both the
Parliamentarians and the Royalists "desperately searched about for the
materials of war" as one historian puts it.
At Edgehill near Kineton, only 10 miles southeast of Alveston, on 23
Oct. 1642, the two sides met in conflict for the first time. Haselrig
was there, having raised a troop of horse in Essex's army, and fought
under the command of Sir William Balfour. Quite likely Thomas Horton
was there too, mounted on a horse, which Sir Arthur provided. If
Cromwell was at Edgehill at all, it was as an observer.
However, by the spring of 1643, Cromwell had not only raised his own
troop in his Native Huntingdonshire, but began to extend it into a
regiment which would become a positive army, the New Model. And by May
1643, both Cromwell and Horton were colonels, Thomas in the army of
Sir Thomas Fairfax; Sir Arthur was also an officer, commanding a
regiment of cuirassiers in July 1643.
On 24 June 1643, Parliament resolved that Thomas Horton be recommended
to Lord Inchiquin "to have the command which Sir William Ogle formerly
had in Ireland." Deep-seated resentment against the King's
anti-Catholic policies still remained from the Irish rising of Oct.
1641. Most of the principal action of the Civil War took place in the
northern and eastern parts of England, where Fairfax and Cromwell
defeated the King's forces at Marston Moor in 1644 and at Naseby in
1645, forcing Charles to flee to Scotland.
Col. Thomas Horton seems to have held the command in Ireland until
early 1648, when a fresh revolt of Royalists broke out in South Wales
and Parliamentary
Repository:Name: New York Library Genealogy Dept.
Note: Served in Englands Army during Englands Civil War. He died in Irelandof malaria on the military march from Ross to Waterford, between 3July 1649 and 25 Oct. 1649;
Source: (Death)
Abbreviation: Steve Dowling's source # 31
Title: LDS Ancestral File Edtn v.4.17
Steve viewed record 02/21/1998
Author: dowling@clark.netPage: AFN 4HWR-L7
May 19 1687 Springfield Mass
Source: (Death)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mail
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Cardiff Castle - Battle of St. Fagens
Author: Wales and the World index page http://www.cymru-wales.net/index.html
Publication: http://www.cymru-wales.net/w-se-01.html
Text: Places: south east waleS (1)
Cardiff, Kenfig, Llanelly (Gwent), Gilwern, Clydach, Pontypool
Return to Wales and the World index page
The entries here are updated and added to from time to time so keep it
monitored
Cardiff (Caerdydd)
* Twice burnt by the Welsh
* Ferocious Civil War battle
* Valleys coal drives city's growth
* Neglected docks community
* Shirley Bassey's birthplace
* City full of fine attractions
* Museum has American surrender flag
Cardiff is the capital of Wales, and will house the Wesh Assembly when
it arrives in 1999 (there's criticism of the Assembly site debacle on
the CymruComment site - see index page for link).
Cardiff derives its name from "caer" meaning "fort" and "dyf", a form
of the River Taf which flows through the city. In early times, the
name was spelt in various ways, often with a "K", such as "Kerdif" -
in fact that's how many Cardiffians pronounce the name today.
While there were certainly earlier settlements in the area (including,
it's thought, a Scandinavian slave-trading post) the town proper and
its castle were started by the Normans under Robert Fitzhammon. The
Welsh put the town and the castle to flames in 1158 (led by Ifor Bach)
and again (led by Owain Glyndwr) in 1404.
A bloody battle in the second Civil War took place near St Fagans on
the western edge of Cardiff in 1648 when generals Poyer and Laugharne
- who had defected from the Parliamentarian side and had swept
across South Wales unopposed from Poyer's stronghold at Pembroke -
were heavily defeated by Cromwell's Model Army led by Colonel Horton.
More than a thousand died and it's said the local river ran red with
blood.
In 1810, the city had a population of just 1,870. It owes its rapid
growth as a major port during the 19th Century to the opening of the
Merthyr to Cardiff canal to serve the booming coal and iron ore mines
which transformed and disfigured the valleys to the north of the city.
Between July 1940 and March 1944, the city was heavily bombed with
around 300 losing their lives.
Cardiff is still an important port, but it is long past its heyday.
Over the past decade much of the area around the old docks has been
extensively redeveloped and that's where a new building to house the
Welsh Assembly will be built.
At the heart of this redevelopment area is Butetown, which used to be
known as Tiger Bay (singer Shirley Bassey was born there), a
long-standing multi-racial community that owed its life and vitality
to the docks. Today, it is a neglected community that has never seen
its rightful share of the many millions poured into the redevelopment
happening alongside.
The city has several of the finest tourist attractions in Wales,
including Cardiff Castle, which has a Norman keep, Roman walls,
medieval apartments and the magnificent main building designed by
William Burges for the Marquess of Bute in the 19th century.
On the same site is the Welch Regiment military museum (the "Welch"
stems from a mispelling by some fool 18th Century clerk which nobody
dared correct afterwards because the note containing it was approved
by the King!). Its many historical exhibits include the American flag
surrendered to Welsh soldiers when they captured Fort Detroit during
the 1812 war fought in defence of Canada. It also has a vast tabletop
model of an action fought by Welsh soldiers against the French the day
before the Battle of Waterloo.
Just north of Cardiff is Bute's fairytale castle, Castell Coch, also
designed by Burges, an exotically-designed folly that has to be seen
to be believed, built over the ruins of a medieval castle. It gets its
name (Coch is Welsh for red) from the colour of the stone of the
original castle. Surrounded by thick woods, the castle is a favourite
of filmakers.
At St Fagans, now a pretty village, is the Welsh Folk Museum (recently
renamed the Museum of Welsh Life, a title many people dislike
including people who work there) which - with many old buildings
transferred from many parts of Wales, a well-stocked museum and an old
mansion (St Fagan's Castle) furnished as it would have been in the
17th Century - needs at least two days to get round adequately.
The city houses the National Museum of Wales, the Welsh Office and the
national rugby stadium (currently being rebuilt at £120m to host the
Rugby World Cup final in 1999 - it'll be the first UK stadium to have
a retractable roof).
Cardiff is also the home (Sophia Gardens) of Glamorgan Cricket Club,
the current County champions, and has one of the best rugby sides in
Britain, playing at the Arms Park alongside the new stadium. Cardiff
RFC always seems to be in conflict with the Welsh Rugby Union and is
currently threatening to go and play in England unless it gets its way
over something or other.
The city did have Wales's only Olympic-sized swimming pool, the Empire
Pool - which had very much become the people's pool - and one of the
finest Industrial & Maritime Museums in Britain, but they're both
about to be pulled down - the pool to make way for the stadium, the
musuem for yet more bay redevelopment - without any clear idea of
replacement (see CymruComment for a view of that stupid situation,
too).
Event: Type: ECW
Date: 1648
Place: St Fagans, Cardiff, Wales
Death: BET 3 JUL 1649 AND 25 OCT 1649 Ireland
Given Name: Rachel
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mail
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas source on Rachel Horton 1669
Title: Bonnie Douglas source on Rachel Horton 1669
Author: BonnieJ222@aol.com
Text: Birth: Milton, Norfolk, Mass. Vital Records
Chr: Braintree, Norfolk, Mass. Church Records
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Natalie Fix [mailto:wyrdfolke@earthlink.net]
Title: Horton line
Author: Richard Anderson
Text: Sources for this are :
> 1. Brouderbund's Family Tree Maker
> 2. WFT CD # 18
> 3. SSDI
> 4. Rehoboth Vital Records
> 5. Information supplied by Richard Anderson son of Mary J. Horton
> Anderson
> 6. Maine Archives ( Vital Records )
> 7. Newspaper Obits
> 8. Bristol County Records
> 9. Census Records
>
> HORTON
>
> 1. Thomas HORTON b. 1638 , Springfield , Hampden , MA d. Bef. 08 Mar
1715/16 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.+ Sarah HARMON b. 01 May 1652 ,
Braintree , MA. m. Abt. 1668 , MA., d. Bef . Dec. 1693 , Milton , MA.
Parents= Nathaniel HARMON and Mary BLISS
2. Ann HORTON
2. Esther HORTON
2. Rachel HORTON b. 06 Aug 1669 , Milton , Norfolk , MA d. WFT Est.
1675-1776
2. John HORTON , Corp. b. 06 June 1672 , Milton , Norfolk ,
MA d. 15 Oct 1742 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
+ Mehitable GARNSEY/GARNZEY b. 02 Nov 1673 , Milton ,
Norfolk , MA ., m. 1689 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA., d. ???? Milton ,
Norfolk ,MA. parents= John GARNZEY/GARNSEY and wife Elizabeth Unknown
3. Thomas HORTON b. 15 Apr 1690 , Swansea , Bristol, MA d. 10 Jul 1733
, Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
3. Sarah HORTON b. 1692 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA., d. 15 Aug 1725 ,
Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. John HORTON Jr. b. Abt. 21 Mar 1695/96 Swansea or Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA., d. 10 Jan 1796 , Glocester , R.I.
3. Jotham HORTON b. 1689 , Swansea , Bristol ,MA d. Abt. 1797
+ Hannah MARTIN b. unk. , m. 29 May 1729, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Nov 1739 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
Parents= ????
4. Mercy HORTON b. 05 May 1730, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Nathan HORTON b. 01 Oct 1733, Rehoboth , Bristl , MA.
4. Sarah HORTON b. 11 Nov 1735, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Hannah HORTON b. 19 Dec. 1738, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 07
Aug 1813 , Manchester , N.H.
* 2nd Wife of Jotham HORTON : + Penelope ROUND b. Abt. 1719 ,
Swansea, Bristol , MA. , m. Abt. 1740 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d.
unk. Parents = George ROUND and Susannah COLE
4. James HORTON b. 10 Jul 1741, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 1833 ,
Military History : S13450 , MA line
4. Bernard " Barnet " HORTON b. 06 May 1744 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,
MA. , d. 01 May 1835 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA.
+ Mehitable COLE b. 03 Jun 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Oct 1765 , d. 24 Feb 1820 ,
Parents = Barnard COLE and his wife Sarah
5. Barnet HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Hannah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mary HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Sarah HORTON > b. ?? d. ??
5. Wheeler HORTON b. 10 NOv 1766 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 13
Nov 1857 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA
+ Lucretia LINDLEY b. 22 May 1770 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Sep 1792 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 23 Dec 1855 , Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA.
Parents = Isaiah LINDLEY and Anne CHANNING
6. Ann Lucretia HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Isaiah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Olive HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Sybil HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Gideon HORTON b. 1794 d. 27 Feb 1874 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
6. Benson HORTON b. 24 Dec 1797 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , d. 30
May 1875, Dighton , Bristol , MA
+ Pamela ( Permilla ) BRIGGS , 13 Nov 1801 , Dighton , Bristol , MA.
, m. Abt. 1820 , d. 01 Sep 1864 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
Abiathar BRIGGS and Pamela PALMER
7. Isaac Newton HORTON b. 17 Jan 1824 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , 07
Apr 1905.
+ Lucy A. SEEKEL b. Abt. 1829 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , m. 15 Dec
1847, Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. Jun 1852 , Parents =
8. John A. HORTON b. 07 Jun 1852 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 27
Nov > 1875 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
2nd Wife of Isaac Newton HORTON :
+ Mary Russell SEEKEL b. 18 Oct 1822 , Taunton /Myricks , Bristol ,
MA., m. 28 Jul 1853 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 01 Sep 1903 ,
Berkley/Myricks , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
8. Mary Ann HORTON b. 23 Oct 1854 , d. ??
8. Flora Etta HORTON b. 24 Dec 1857 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d.
Aft.1900
9. Charles Linwood HORTON b. 14 Jun 1876 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 29 Jul 1953 , Foxborough , MA.
+ Flora Gertrude WASHBURN b. 25 Jan 1878 , Lakeville , Bristol , MA.
, m. 06 Jun 1896 , d. 22 Jul 1952 , North Easton , Bristol , MA. ,
Parents = Salmon Milton WASHBURN and Jerusha Walker RECORD
10. Linwood Washburn HORTON b. 09 Feb 1897 Myricks , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Feb 1897 buried , Mayflower Hill Cemetery , Taunton , Bristol ,
MA.
10. Dorris Evelyn Washburn HORTON b. 16 Nov 1900 , Brockton ,
Plymouth , MA. , d. 29 Jun 1963 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
+ Lester Malcom HOBBS b. 24 Jul 1900 , Milo , Piscataquis , ME. , m.
1919 , d. 24 Dec 1968 , Raynham/Taunton , MA. Parents = William L.
HOBBS and Anna L. GLOVER of ME.
11. Lester Milton HOBBS b. living
1st Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Evelyn STRAIGHT b. ?? d. ??
12. Joann HOBBS b. Abt. 1946 , Name changed to ANDREWS adopted by
Evelyn's 2nd husband , m. George JOSEPH , no children.
2nd > Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS
+ Hope Lillian HARDING b. 08 Apr 1926 , m. 27 Feb 1950 , ME. , d. 25
Feb 1965 North Easton , Bristol , MA.
12. Natalie Anne HOBBS b. living
12. William Charles HOBBS b. living
3rd Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Mrs. Pauline Farrell b. living , No Children of This Marriage
11. Natalie HOBBS b. Abt 1922 , d. Abt 1922 age 6 months
10. Lewellyn Russell HORTON b. 27 Jan 1904 , d. 21 May 1982.
10. Mary J. HORTON b. 01 Apr 1905 , d. 01 Jan 1991 m. Niles ANDERSON
10. Alford L. HORTON b. 02 Jul 1907 , d. 10 Jan 1985 , m. three times
10. Arlene S. HORTON b. 22 Dec 1909 , d. 21 Mar 1996 , m. Charles K.
McALONY
10 Barbara G. HORTON b. 23 Mar 1912 , d. 30 May 1982 , m. Hiram E.
SMITH
10. Rachel Elizabeth HORTON b. 28 Sep 1914 , d. FLA. , m. 2nd-Raymond
E. PACKARD d. WW II , 3rd.- MATRINO , 1st marriage annuled by father
C.L.HORTON
8. Frederick Newton HORTON b. 02 Apr 1860 , d. ??
8. Henry Hudson HORTON b. 11 Nov 1862 , d. ??
8. Edgar Edward HORTON b. 20 Nov 1864 , d. ??
7. Cynthia E. HORTON b. 1841 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
6. Lindley HORTON b. 1812 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5. Patience HORTON b. 27 Feb 1769 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5 Lydia HORTON b. 20 May 1771 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Rhoba HORTON b. 10 Jul 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Jotham HORTON b. 30 Jul 1753 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. Jonathan HORTON b. 1702 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA d. 20 Jun 1774 ,
North Castle .
3. David HORTON b. 1702 , Swansea , Bristol , MA
3. Hezekiah HORTON b. 01 Sep 1714 , MA. , d. 19 Aug 1787 , Guilford ,
Windham , VT.
3. Mary HORTON b. Abt. 1708.2nd Wife of John HORTON , Corp. :
+Lydia BROWN b. ?? , m. 29 Nov 1744 , Swansea , Bristol , MA . , d. ??
2. Jonathan HORTON b. Bef 12 Jul 1675 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d.
??
2. Thomas HORTON b. 03 Oct 1677 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. Mar
1745/46 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2. David HORTON b. 14 Oct 1679 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. 07 Jan
1751/52 , Milton , Norfolk , MA
2. Solomon HORTON b. 11 Jan 1681/82 , Milton , Norfolk , MA. , d. Jan
1824/25 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2nd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Susannah KENEY b. 1640 , m. 25 Dec 1693 , Milton , Norfolk
,MA. , d. Bef. Jun 1700
3rd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Katherine HARRISON m. 08 Jun 1700 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MAQuality of data: 2
Christening: 29 SEP 1674 Massachusetts
Death: BET 1675 AND 1776
Given Name: Jonathan
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mail
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas source on Johathan Horton 1675
Title: Bonnie Douglas source on Johathan Horton 1675
Author: BonnieJ222@aol.com
Text: Birth: Milton, Norfolk, Mass., Vital Records
Chr: Braintree, Norfolk, Mass., Church Records
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Natalie Fix [mailto:wyrdfolke@earthlink.net]
Title: Horton line
Author: Richard Anderson
Text: Sources for this are :
> 1. Brouderbund's Family Tree Maker
> 2. WFT CD # 18
> 3. SSDI
> 4. Rehoboth Vital Records
> 5. Information supplied by Richard Anderson son of Mary J. Horton
> Anderson
> 6. Maine Archives ( Vital Records )
> 7. Newspaper Obits
> 8. Bristol County Records
> 9. Census Records
>
> HORTON
>
> 1. Thomas HORTON b. 1638 , Springfield , Hampden , MA d. Bef. 08 Mar
1715/16 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.+ Sarah HARMON b. 01 May 1652 ,
Braintree , MA. m. Abt. 1668 , MA., d. Bef . Dec. 1693 , Milton , MA.
Parents= Nathaniel HARMON and Mary BLISS
2. Ann HORTON
2. Esther HORTON
2. Rachel HORTON b. 06 Aug 1669 , Milton , Norfolk , MA d. WFT Est.
1675-1776
2. John HORTON , Corp. b. 06 June 1672 , Milton , Norfolk ,
MA d. 15 Oct 1742 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
+ Mehitable GARNSEY/GARNZEY b. 02 Nov 1673 , Milton ,
Norfolk , MA ., m. 1689 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA., d. ???? Milton ,
Norfolk ,MA. parents= John GARNZEY/GARNSEY and wife Elizabeth Unknown
3. Thomas HORTON b. 15 Apr 1690 , Swansea , Bristol, MA d. 10 Jul 1733
, Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
3. Sarah HORTON b. 1692 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA., d. 15 Aug 1725 ,
Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. John HORTON Jr. b. Abt. 21 Mar 1695/96 Swansea or Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA., d. 10 Jan 1796 , Glocester , R.I.
3. Jotham HORTON b. 1689 , Swansea , Bristol ,MA d. Abt. 1797
+ Hannah MARTIN b. unk. , m. 29 May 1729, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Nov 1739 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
Parents= ????
4. Mercy HORTON b. 05 May 1730, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Nathan HORTON b. 01 Oct 1733, Rehoboth , Bristl , MA.
4. Sarah HORTON b. 11 Nov 1735, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Hannah HORTON b. 19 Dec. 1738, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 07
Aug 1813 , Manchester , N.H.
* 2nd Wife of Jotham HORTON : + Penelope ROUND b. Abt. 1719 ,
Swansea, Bristol , MA. , m. Abt. 1740 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d.
unk. Parents = George ROUND and Susannah COLE
4. James HORTON b. 10 Jul 1741, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 1833 ,
Military History : S13450 , MA line
4. Bernard " Barnet " HORTON b. 06 May 1744 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,
MA. , d. 01 May 1835 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA.
+ Mehitable COLE b. 03 Jun 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Oct 1765 , d. 24 Feb 1820 ,
Parents = Barnard COLE and his wife Sarah
5. Barnet HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Hannah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mary HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Sarah HORTON > b. ?? d. ??
5. Wheeler HORTON b. 10 NOv 1766 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 13
Nov 1857 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA
+ Lucretia LINDLEY b. 22 May 1770 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Sep 1792 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 23 Dec 1855 , Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA.
Parents = Isaiah LINDLEY and Anne CHANNING
6. Ann Lucretia HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Isaiah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Olive HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Sybil HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Gideon HORTON b. 1794 d. 27 Feb 1874 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
6. Benson HORTON b. 24 Dec 1797 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , d. 30
May 1875, Dighton , Bristol , MA
+ Pamela ( Permilla ) BRIGGS , 13 Nov 1801 , Dighton , Bristol , MA.
, m. Abt. 1820 , d. 01 Sep 1864 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
Abiathar BRIGGS and Pamela PALMER
7. Isaac Newton HORTON b. 17 Jan 1824 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , 07
Apr 1905.
+ Lucy A. SEEKEL b. Abt. 1829 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , m. 15 Dec
1847, Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. Jun 1852 , Parents =
8. John A. HORTON b. 07 Jun 1852 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 27
Nov > 1875 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
2nd Wife of Isaac Newton HORTON :
+ Mary Russell SEEKEL b. 18 Oct 1822 , Taunton /Myricks , Bristol ,
MA., m. 28 Jul 1853 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 01 Sep 1903 ,
Berkley/Myricks , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
8. Mary Ann HORTON b. 23 Oct 1854 , d. ??
8. Flora Etta HORTON b. 24 Dec 1857 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d.
Aft.1900
9. Charles Linwood HORTON b. 14 Jun 1876 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 29 Jul 1953 , Foxborough , MA.
+ Flora Gertrude WASHBURN b. 25 Jan 1878 , Lakeville , Bristol , MA.
, m. 06 Jun 1896 , d. 22 Jul 1952 , North Easton , Bristol , MA. ,
Parents = Salmon Milton WASHBURN and Jerusha Walker RECORD
10. Linwood Washburn HORTON b. 09 Feb 1897 Myricks , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Feb 1897 buried , Mayflower Hill Cemetery , Taunton , Bristol ,
MA.
10. Dorris Evelyn Washburn HORTON b. 16 Nov 1900 , Brockton ,
Plymouth , MA. , d. 29 Jun 1963 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
+ Lester Malcom HOBBS b. 24 Jul 1900 , Milo , Piscataquis , ME. , m.
1919 , d. 24 Dec 1968 , Raynham/Taunton , MA. Parents = William L.
HOBBS and Anna L. GLOVER of ME.
11. Lester Milton HOBBS b. living
1st Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Evelyn STRAIGHT b. ?? d. ??
12. Joann HOBBS b. Abt. 1946 , Name changed to ANDREWS adopted by
Evelyn's 2nd husband , m. George JOSEPH , no children.
2nd > Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS
+ Hope Lillian HARDING b. 08 Apr 1926 , m. 27 Feb 1950 , ME. , d. 25
Feb 1965 North Easton , Bristol , MA.
12. Natalie Anne HOBBS b. living
12. William Charles HOBBS b. living
3rd Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Mrs. Pauline Farrell b. living , No Children of This Marriage
11. Natalie HOBBS b. Abt 1922 , d. Abt 1922 age 6 months
10. Lewellyn Russell HORTON b. 27 Jan 1904 , d. 21 May 1982.
10. Mary J. HORTON b. 01 Apr 1905 , d. 01 Jan 1991 m. Niles ANDERSON
10. Alford L. HORTON b. 02 Jul 1907 , d. 10 Jan 1985 , m. three times
10. Arlene S. HORTON b. 22 Dec 1909 , d. 21 Mar 1996 , m. Charles K.
McALONY
10 Barbara G. HORTON b. 23 Mar 1912 , d. 30 May 1982 , m. Hiram E.
SMITH
10. Rachel Elizabeth HORTON b. 28 Sep 1914 , d. FLA. , m. 2nd-Raymond
E. PACKARD d. WW II , 3rd.- MATRINO , 1st marriage annuled by father
C.L.HORTON
8. Frederick Newton HORTON b. 02 Apr 1860 , d. ??
8. Henry Hudson HORTON b. 11 Nov 1862 , d. ??
8. Edgar Edward HORTON b. 20 Nov 1864 , d. ??
7. Cynthia E. HORTON b. 1841 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
6. Lindley HORTON b. 1812 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5. Patience HORTON b. 27 Feb 1769 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5 Lydia HORTON b. 20 May 1771 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Rhoba HORTON b. 10 Jul 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Jotham HORTON b. 30 Jul 1753 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. Jonathan HORTON b. 1702 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA d. 20 Jun 1774 ,
North Castle .
3. David HORTON b. 1702 , Swansea , Bristol , MA
3. Hezekiah HORTON b. 01 Sep 1714 , MA. , d. 19 Aug 1787 , Guilford ,
Windham , VT.
3. Mary HORTON b. Abt. 1708.2nd Wife of John HORTON , Corp. :
+Lydia BROWN b. ?? , m. 29 Nov 1744 , Swansea , Bristol , MA . , d. ??
2. Jonathan HORTON b. Bef 12 Jul 1675 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d.
??
2. Thomas HORTON b. 03 Oct 1677 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. Mar
1745/46 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2. David HORTON b. 14 Oct 1679 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. 07 Jan
1751/52 , Milton , Norfolk , MA
2. Solomon HORTON b. 11 Jan 1681/82 , Milton , Norfolk , MA. , d. Jan
1824/25 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2nd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Susannah KENEY b. 1640 , m. 25 Dec 1693 , Milton , Norfolk
,MA. , d. Bef. Jun 1700
3rd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Katherine HARRISON m. 08 Jun 1700 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MAQuality of data: 2
Christening: --Not Shown--
Given Name: Thomas
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mail
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas source on Thomas Horton 1677
Title: Bonnie Douglas source on Thomas Horton 1677
Author: BonnieJ222@aol.com
Text: Birth: Milton, Norfolk, Mass., Vital Records
Chr: Braintree, Norfolk, Mass., Church Records
Marr: Rehoboth, Bristol, Mass., Vital Records
Death: Rehoboth, Bristol, Mass Vital Records
Information from book Thomas Horton of Milton & Rehoboth,
Massachusetts by Margaret Jenks and Frank Seymour
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Thomas Horton of Milton and Rehoboth, Massachusett
Title: Family history book
Author: Margaret Jenks and Frank Seymour
Publication: 12727 NE 116th Lane, F8, Kirkland, WA 98033
Text: Library of Congress Dewey No. 929/.2/0973 19
Contorol No. Library of Congress 84150841 //r902
Notes: Vol 3 cover titile: Thomas Horton of Milton & Rehoboth, Mass.
Vols 2- Thomas Horton
"Privately printed"--T.p. verso
Includes bibliographies and indexes.
Repository:Name: Library of Congress
Address: Washington DC
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Natalie Fix [mailto:wyrdfolke@earthlink.net]
Title: Horton line
Author: Richard Anderson
Text: Sources for this are :
> 1. Brouderbund's Family Tree Maker
> 2. WFT CD # 18
> 3. SSDI
> 4. Rehoboth Vital Records
> 5. Information supplied by Richard Anderson son of Mary J. Horton
> Anderson
> 6. Maine Archives ( Vital Records )
> 7. Newspaper Obits
> 8. Bristol County Records
> 9. Census Records
>
> HORTON
>
> 1. Thomas HORTON b. 1638 , Springfield , Hampden , MA d. Bef. 08 Mar
1715/16 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.+ Sarah HARMON b. 01 May 1652 ,
Braintree , MA. m. Abt. 1668 , MA., d. Bef . Dec. 1693 , Milton , MA.
Parents= Nathaniel HARMON and Mary BLISS
2. Ann HORTON
2. Esther HORTON
2. Rachel HORTON b. 06 Aug 1669 , Milton , Norfolk , MA d. WFT Est.
1675-1776
2. John HORTON , Corp. b. 06 June 1672 , Milton , Norfolk ,
MA d. 15 Oct 1742 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
+ Mehitable GARNSEY/GARNZEY b. 02 Nov 1673 , Milton ,
Norfolk , MA ., m. 1689 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA., d. ???? Milton ,
Norfolk ,MA. parents= John GARNZEY/GARNSEY and wife Elizabeth Unknown
3. Thomas HORTON b. 15 Apr 1690 , Swansea , Bristol, MA d. 10 Jul 1733
, Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
3. Sarah HORTON b. 1692 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA., d. 15 Aug 1725 ,
Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. John HORTON Jr. b. Abt. 21 Mar 1695/96 Swansea or Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA., d. 10 Jan 1796 , Glocester , R.I.
3. Jotham HORTON b. 1689 , Swansea , Bristol ,MA d. Abt. 1797
+ Hannah MARTIN b. unk. , m. 29 May 1729, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Nov 1739 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
Parents= ????
4. Mercy HORTON b. 05 May 1730, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Nathan HORTON b. 01 Oct 1733, Rehoboth , Bristl , MA.
4. Sarah HORTON b. 11 Nov 1735, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Hannah HORTON b. 19 Dec. 1738, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 07
Aug 1813 , Manchester , N.H.
* 2nd Wife of Jotham HORTON : + Penelope ROUND b. Abt. 1719 ,
Swansea, Bristol , MA. , m. Abt. 1740 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d.
unk. Parents = George ROUND and Susannah COLE
4. James HORTON b. 10 Jul 1741, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 1833 ,
Military History : S13450 , MA line
4. Bernard " Barnet " HORTON b. 06 May 1744 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,
MA. , d. 01 May 1835 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA.
+ Mehitable COLE b. 03 Jun 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Oct 1765 , d. 24 Feb 1820 ,
Parents = Barnard COLE and his wife Sarah
5. Barnet HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Hannah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mary HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Sarah HORTON > b. ?? d. ??
5. Wheeler HORTON b. 10 NOv 1766 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 13
Nov 1857 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA
+ Lucretia LINDLEY b. 22 May 1770 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Sep 1792 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 23 Dec 1855 , Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA.
Parents = Isaiah LINDLEY and Anne CHANNING
6. Ann Lucretia HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Isaiah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Olive HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Sybil HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Gideon HORTON b. 1794 d. 27 Feb 1874 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
6. Benson HORTON b. 24 Dec 1797 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , d. 30
May 1875, Dighton , Bristol , MA
+ Pamela ( Permilla ) BRIGGS , 13 Nov 1801 , Dighton , Bristol , MA.
, m. Abt. 1820 , d. 01 Sep 1864 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
Abiathar BRIGGS and Pamela PALMER
7. Isaac Newton HORTON b. 17 Jan 1824 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , 07
Apr 1905.
+ Lucy A. SEEKEL b. Abt. 1829 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , m. 15 Dec
1847, Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. Jun 1852 , Parents =
8. John A. HORTON b. 07 Jun 1852 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 27
Nov > 1875 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
2nd Wife of Isaac Newton HORTON :
+ Mary Russell SEEKEL b. 18 Oct 1822 , Taunton /Myricks , Bristol ,
MA., m. 28 Jul 1853 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 01 Sep 1903 ,
Berkley/Myricks , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
8. Mary Ann HORTON b. 23 Oct 1854 , d. ??
8. Flora Etta HORTON b. 24 Dec 1857 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d.
Aft.1900
9. Charles Linwood HORTON b. 14 Jun 1876 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 29 Jul 1953 , Foxborough , MA.
+ Flora Gertrude WASHBURN b. 25 Jan 1878 , Lakeville , Bristol , MA.
, m. 06 Jun 1896 , d. 22 Jul 1952 , North Easton , Bristol , MA. ,
Parents = Salmon Milton WASHBURN and Jerusha Walker RECORD
10. Linwood Washburn HORTON b. 09 Feb 1897 Myricks , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Feb 1897 buried , Mayflower Hill Cemetery , Taunton , Bristol ,
MA.
10. Dorris Evelyn Washburn HORTON b. 16 Nov 1900 , Brockton ,
Plymouth , MA. , d. 29 Jun 1963 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
+ Lester Malcom HOBBS b. 24 Jul 1900 , Milo , Piscataquis , ME. , m.
1919 , d. 24 Dec 1968 , Raynham/Taunton , MA. Parents = William L.
HOBBS and Anna L. GLOVER of ME.
11. Lester Milton HOBBS b. living
1st Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Evelyn STRAIGHT b. ?? d. ??
12. Joann HOBBS b. Abt. 1946 , Name changed to ANDREWS adopted by
Evelyn's 2nd husband , m. George JOSEPH , no children.
2nd > Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS
+ Hope Lillian HARDING b. 08 Apr 1926 , m. 27 Feb 1950 , ME. , d. 25
Feb 1965 North Easton , Bristol , MA.
12. Natalie Anne HOBBS b. living
12. William Charles HOBBS b. living
3rd Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Mrs. Pauline Farrell b. living , No Children of This Marriage
11. Natalie HOBBS b. Abt 1922 , d. Abt 1922 age 6 months
10. Lewellyn Russell HORTON b. 27 Jan 1904 , d. 21 May 1982.
10. Mary J. HORTON b. 01 Apr 1905 , d. 01 Jan 1991 m. Niles ANDERSON
10. Alford L. HORTON b. 02 Jul 1907 , d. 10 Jan 1985 , m. three times
10. Arlene S. HORTON b. 22 Dec 1909 , d. 21 Mar 1996 , m. Charles K.
McALONY
10 Barbara G. HORTON b. 23 Mar 1912 , d. 30 May 1982 , m. Hiram E.
SMITH
10. Rachel Elizabeth HORTON b. 28 Sep 1914 , d. FLA. , m. 2nd-Raymond
E. PACKARD d. WW II , 3rd.- MATRINO , 1st marriage annuled by father
C.L.HORTON
8. Frederick Newton HORTON b. 02 Apr 1860 , d. ??
8. Henry Hudson HORTON b. 11 Nov 1862 , d. ??
8. Edgar Edward HORTON b. 20 Nov 1864 , d. ??
7. Cynthia E. HORTON b. 1841 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
6. Lindley HORTON b. 1812 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5. Patience HORTON b. 27 Feb 1769 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5 Lydia HORTON b. 20 May 1771 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Rhoba HORTON b. 10 Jul 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Jotham HORTON b. 30 Jul 1753 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. Jonathan HORTON b. 1702 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA d. 20 Jun 1774 ,
North Castle .
3. David HORTON b. 1702 , Swansea , Bristol , MA
3. Hezekiah HORTON b. 01 Sep 1714 , MA. , d. 19 Aug 1787 , Guilford ,
Windham , VT.
3. Mary HORTON b. Abt. 1708.2nd Wife of John HORTON , Corp. :
+Lydia BROWN b. ?? , m. 29 Nov 1744 , Swansea , Bristol , MA . , d. ??
2. Jonathan HORTON b. Bef 12 Jul 1675 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d.
??
2. Thomas HORTON b. 03 Oct 1677 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. Mar
1745/46 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2. David HORTON b. 14 Oct 1679 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. 07 Jan
1751/52 , Milton , Norfolk , MA
2. Solomon HORTON b. 11 Jan 1681/82 , Milton , Norfolk , MA. , d. Jan
1824/25 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2nd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Susannah KENEY b. 1640 , m. 25 Dec 1693 , Milton , Norfolk
,MA. , d. Bef. Jun 1700
3rd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Katherine HARRISON m. 08 Jun 1700 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MAQuality of data: 2
Christening: 18 NOV 1677 Braintree, Norfolk County, Mass.
Death: ABT FEB 1745/46 Rehoboth, Bristol County, Mass.
Given Name: David
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mail
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas source on David Horton 1679
Title: Bonnie Douglas source on David Horton 1679
Author: BonnieJ222@aol.com
Text: Birth: Milton, Norfolk, Mass., Vital Records
Chr: Braintree, Norfolk, Mass., Church Records
Marr: Milton, Norfolk, Mass., Vital Records
Death: Milton, Norfolk, Mass., Vital Records
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Natalie Fix [mailto:wyrdfolke@earthlink.net]
Title: Horton line
Author: Richard Anderson
Text: Sources for this are :
> 1. Brouderbund's Family Tree Maker
> 2. WFT CD # 18
> 3. SSDI
> 4. Rehoboth Vital Records
> 5. Information supplied by Richard Anderson son of Mary J. Horton
> Anderson
> 6. Maine Archives ( Vital Records )
> 7. Newspaper Obits
> 8. Bristol County Records
> 9. Census Records
>
> HORTON
>
> 1. Thomas HORTON b. 1638 , Springfield , Hampden , MA d. Bef. 08 Mar
1715/16 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.+ Sarah HARMON b. 01 May 1652 ,
Braintree , MA. m. Abt. 1668 , MA., d. Bef . Dec. 1693 , Milton , MA.
Parents= Nathaniel HARMON and Mary BLISS
2. Ann HORTON
2. Esther HORTON
2. Rachel HORTON b. 06 Aug 1669 , Milton , Norfolk , MA d. WFT Est.
1675-1776
2. John HORTON , Corp. b. 06 June 1672 , Milton , Norfolk ,
MA d. 15 Oct 1742 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
+ Mehitable GARNSEY/GARNZEY b. 02 Nov 1673 , Milton ,
Norfolk , MA ., m. 1689 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA., d. ???? Milton ,
Norfolk ,MA. parents= John GARNZEY/GARNSEY and wife Elizabeth Unknown
3. Thomas HORTON b. 15 Apr 1690 , Swansea , Bristol, MA d. 10 Jul 1733
, Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
3. Sarah HORTON b. 1692 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA., d. 15 Aug 1725 ,
Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. John HORTON Jr. b. Abt. 21 Mar 1695/96 Swansea or Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA., d. 10 Jan 1796 , Glocester , R.I.
3. Jotham HORTON b. 1689 , Swansea , Bristol ,MA d. Abt. 1797
+ Hannah MARTIN b. unk. , m. 29 May 1729, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Nov 1739 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
Parents= ????
4. Mercy HORTON b. 05 May 1730, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Nathan HORTON b. 01 Oct 1733, Rehoboth , Bristl , MA.
4. Sarah HORTON b. 11 Nov 1735, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Hannah HORTON b. 19 Dec. 1738, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 07
Aug 1813 , Manchester , N.H.
* 2nd Wife of Jotham HORTON : + Penelope ROUND b. Abt. 1719 ,
Swansea, Bristol , MA. , m. Abt. 1740 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d.
unk. Parents = George ROUND and Susannah COLE
4. James HORTON b. 10 Jul 1741, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 1833 ,
Military History : S13450 , MA line
4. Bernard " Barnet " HORTON b. 06 May 1744 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,
MA. , d. 01 May 1835 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA.
+ Mehitable COLE b. 03 Jun 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Oct 1765 , d. 24 Feb 1820 ,
Parents = Barnard COLE and his wife Sarah
5. Barnet HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Hannah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mary HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Sarah HORTON > b. ?? d. ??
5. Wheeler HORTON b. 10 NOv 1766 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 13
Nov 1857 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA
+ Lucretia LINDLEY b. 22 May 1770 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Sep 1792 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 23 Dec 1855 , Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA.
Parents = Isaiah LINDLEY and Anne CHANNING
6. Ann Lucretia HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Isaiah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Olive HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Sybil HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Gideon HORTON b. 1794 d. 27 Feb 1874 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
6. Benson HORTON b. 24 Dec 1797 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , d. 30
May 1875, Dighton , Bristol , MA
+ Pamela ( Permilla ) BRIGGS , 13 Nov 1801 , Dighton , Bristol , MA.
, m. Abt. 1820 , d. 01 Sep 1864 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
Abiathar BRIGGS and Pamela PALMER
7. Isaac Newton HORTON b. 17 Jan 1824 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , 07
Apr 1905.
+ Lucy A. SEEKEL b. Abt. 1829 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , m. 15 Dec
1847, Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. Jun 1852 , Parents =
8. John A. HORTON b. 07 Jun 1852 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 27
Nov > 1875 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
2nd Wife of Isaac Newton HORTON :
+ Mary Russell SEEKEL b. 18 Oct 1822 , Taunton /Myricks , Bristol ,
MA., m. 28 Jul 1853 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 01 Sep 1903 ,
Berkley/Myricks , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
8. Mary Ann HORTON b. 23 Oct 1854 , d. ??
8. Flora Etta HORTON b. 24 Dec 1857 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d.
Aft.1900
9. Charles Linwood HORTON b. 14 Jun 1876 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 29 Jul 1953 , Foxborough , MA.
+ Flora Gertrude WASHBURN b. 25 Jan 1878 , Lakeville , Bristol , MA.
, m. 06 Jun 1896 , d. 22 Jul 1952 , North Easton , Bristol , MA. ,
Parents = Salmon Milton WASHBURN and Jerusha Walker RECORD
10. Linwood Washburn HORTON b. 09 Feb 1897 Myricks , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Feb 1897 buried , Mayflower Hill Cemetery , Taunton , Bristol ,
MA.
10. Dorris Evelyn Washburn HORTON b. 16 Nov 1900 , Brockton ,
Plymouth , MA. , d. 29 Jun 1963 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
+ Lester Malcom HOBBS b. 24 Jul 1900 , Milo , Piscataquis , ME. , m.
1919 , d. 24 Dec 1968 , Raynham/Taunton , MA. Parents = William L.
HOBBS and Anna L. GLOVER of ME.
11. Lester Milton HOBBS b. living
1st Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Evelyn STRAIGHT b. ?? d. ??
12. Joann HOBBS b. Abt. 1946 , Name changed to ANDREWS adopted by
Evelyn's 2nd husband , m. George JOSEPH , no children.
2nd > Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS
+ Hope Lillian HARDING b. 08 Apr 1926 , m. 27 Feb 1950 , ME. , d. 25
Feb 1965 North Easton , Bristol , MA.
12. Natalie Anne HOBBS b. living
12. William Charles HOBBS b. living
3rd Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Mrs. Pauline Farrell b. living , No Children of This Marriage
11. Natalie HOBBS b. Abt 1922 , d. Abt 1922 age 6 months
10. Lewellyn Russell HORTON b. 27 Jan 1904 , d. 21 May 1982.
10. Mary J. HORTON b. 01 Apr 1905 , d. 01 Jan 1991 m. Niles ANDERSON
10. Alford L. HORTON b. 02 Jul 1907 , d. 10 Jan 1985 , m. three times
10. Arlene S. HORTON b. 22 Dec 1909 , d. 21 Mar 1996 , m. Charles K.
McALONY
10 Barbara G. HORTON b. 23 Mar 1912 , d. 30 May 1982 , m. Hiram E.
SMITH
10. Rachel Elizabeth HORTON b. 28 Sep 1914 , d. FLA. , m. 2nd-Raymond
E. PACKARD d. WW II , 3rd.- MATRINO , 1st marriage annuled by father
C.L.HORTON
8. Frederick Newton HORTON b. 02 Apr 1860 , d. ??
8. Henry Hudson HORTON b. 11 Nov 1862 , d. ??
8. Edgar Edward HORTON b. 20 Nov 1864 , d. ??
7. Cynthia E. HORTON b. 1841 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
6. Lindley HORTON b. 1812 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5. Patience HORTON b. 27 Feb 1769 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5 Lydia HORTON b. 20 May 1771 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Rhoba HORTON b. 10 Jul 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Jotham HORTON b. 30 Jul 1753 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. Jonathan HORTON b. 1702 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA d. 20 Jun 1774 ,
North Castle .
3. David HORTON b. 1702 , Swansea , Bristol , MA
3. Hezekiah HORTON b. 01 Sep 1714 , MA. , d. 19 Aug 1787 , Guilford ,
Windham , VT.
3. Mary HORTON b. Abt. 1708.2nd Wife of John HORTON , Corp. :
+Lydia BROWN b. ?? , m. 29 Nov 1744 , Swansea , Bristol , MA . , d. ??
2. Jonathan HORTON b. Bef 12 Jul 1675 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d.
??
2. Thomas HORTON b. 03 Oct 1677 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. Mar
1745/46 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2. David HORTON b. 14 Oct 1679 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. 07 Jan
1751/52 , Milton , Norfolk , MA
2. Solomon HORTON b. 11 Jan 1681/82 , Milton , Norfolk , MA. , d. Jan
1824/25 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2nd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Susannah KENEY b. 1640 , m. 25 Dec 1693 , Milton , Norfolk
,MA. , d. Bef. Jun 1700
3rd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Katherine HARRISON m. 08 Jun 1700 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MAQuality of data: 2
Christening: 2 NOV 1679 Braintree, Norfolk County, Mass.
Death: 7 JAN 1752 Milton, Norfolk County, Bristol Mass.
Given Name: Solomon
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mail
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas source on Solomon Horton 1682
Title: Bonnie Douglas source on Solomon Horton 1682
Author: BonnieJ222@aol.com
Text: Birth: Milton, Norfolk, Mass., Vital Records
Marr: Milton, Norfolk, Mass., Vital Records
Death: Rehoboth, Bristol, Mass., Vital Records
IGI Batch Marriage sealing
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Natalie Fix [mailto:wyrdfolke@earthlink.net]
Title: Horton line
Author: Richard Anderson
Text: Sources for this are :
> 1. Brouderbund's Family Tree Maker
> 2. WFT CD # 18
> 3. SSDI
> 4. Rehoboth Vital Records
> 5. Information supplied by Richard Anderson son of Mary J. Horton
> Anderson
> 6. Maine Archives ( Vital Records )
> 7. Newspaper Obits
> 8. Bristol County Records
> 9. Census Records
>
> HORTON
>
> 1. Thomas HORTON b. 1638 , Springfield , Hampden , MA d. Bef. 08 Mar
1715/16 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.+ Sarah HARMON b. 01 May 1652 ,
Braintree , MA. m. Abt. 1668 , MA., d. Bef . Dec. 1693 , Milton , MA.
Parents= Nathaniel HARMON and Mary BLISS
2. Ann HORTON
2. Esther HORTON
2. Rachel HORTON b. 06 Aug 1669 , Milton , Norfolk , MA d. WFT Est.
1675-1776
2. John HORTON , Corp. b. 06 June 1672 , Milton , Norfolk ,
MA d. 15 Oct 1742 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
+ Mehitable GARNSEY/GARNZEY b. 02 Nov 1673 , Milton ,
Norfolk , MA ., m. 1689 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA., d. ???? Milton ,
Norfolk ,MA. parents= John GARNZEY/GARNSEY and wife Elizabeth Unknown
3. Thomas HORTON b. 15 Apr 1690 , Swansea , Bristol, MA d. 10 Jul 1733
, Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
3. Sarah HORTON b. 1692 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA., d. 15 Aug 1725 ,
Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. John HORTON Jr. b. Abt. 21 Mar 1695/96 Swansea or Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA., d. 10 Jan 1796 , Glocester , R.I.
3. Jotham HORTON b. 1689 , Swansea , Bristol ,MA d. Abt. 1797
+ Hannah MARTIN b. unk. , m. 29 May 1729, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Nov 1739 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
Parents= ????
4. Mercy HORTON b. 05 May 1730, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Nathan HORTON b. 01 Oct 1733, Rehoboth , Bristl , MA.
4. Sarah HORTON b. 11 Nov 1735, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Hannah HORTON b. 19 Dec. 1738, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 07
Aug 1813 , Manchester , N.H.
* 2nd Wife of Jotham HORTON : + Penelope ROUND b. Abt. 1719 ,
Swansea, Bristol , MA. , m. Abt. 1740 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d.
unk. Parents = George ROUND and Susannah COLE
4. James HORTON b. 10 Jul 1741, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 1833 ,
Military History : S13450 , MA line
4. Bernard " Barnet " HORTON b. 06 May 1744 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,
MA. , d. 01 May 1835 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA.
+ Mehitable COLE b. 03 Jun 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Oct 1765 , d. 24 Feb 1820 ,
Parents = Barnard COLE and his wife Sarah
5. Barnet HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Hannah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mary HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Sarah HORTON > b. ?? d. ??
5. Wheeler HORTON b. 10 NOv 1766 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 13
Nov 1857 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA
+ Lucretia LINDLEY b. 22 May 1770 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Sep 1792 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 23 Dec 1855 , Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA.
Parents = Isaiah LINDLEY and Anne CHANNING
6. Ann Lucretia HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Isaiah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Olive HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Sybil HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Gideon HORTON b. 1794 d. 27 Feb 1874 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
6. Benson HORTON b. 24 Dec 1797 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , d. 30
May 1875, Dighton , Bristol , MA
+ Pamela ( Permilla ) BRIGGS , 13 Nov 1801 , Dighton , Bristol , MA.
, m. Abt. 1820 , d. 01 Sep 1864 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
Abiathar BRIGGS and Pamela PALMER
7. Isaac Newton HORTON b. 17 Jan 1824 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , 07
Apr 1905.
+ Lucy A. SEEKEL b. Abt. 1829 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , m. 15 Dec
1847, Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. Jun 1852 , Parents =
8. John A. HORTON b. 07 Jun 1852 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 27
Nov > 1875 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
2nd Wife of Isaac Newton HORTON :
+ Mary Russell SEEKEL b. 18 Oct 1822 , Taunton /Myricks , Bristol ,
MA., m. 28 Jul 1853 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 01 Sep 1903 ,
Berkley/Myricks , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
8. Mary Ann HORTON b. 23 Oct 1854 , d. ??
8. Flora Etta HORTON b. 24 Dec 1857 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d.
Aft.1900
9. Charles Linwood HORTON b. 14 Jun 1876 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 29 Jul 1953 , Foxborough , MA.
+ Flora Gertrude WASHBURN b. 25 Jan 1878 , Lakeville , Bristol , MA.
, m. 06 Jun 1896 , d. 22 Jul 1952 , North Easton , Bristol , MA. ,
Parents = Salmon Milton WASHBURN and Jerusha Walker RECORD
10. Linwood Washburn HORTON b. 09 Feb 1897 Myricks , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Feb 1897 buried , Mayflower Hill Cemetery , Taunton , Bristol ,
MA.
10. Dorris Evelyn Washburn HORTON b. 16 Nov 1900 , Brockton ,
Plymouth , MA. , d. 29 Jun 1963 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
+ Lester Malcom HOBBS b. 24 Jul 1900 , Milo , Piscataquis , ME. , m.
1919 , d. 24 Dec 1968 , Raynham/Taunton , MA. Parents = William L.
HOBBS and Anna L. GLOVER of ME.
11. Lester Milton HOBBS b. living
1st Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Evelyn STRAIGHT b. ?? d. ??
12. Joann HOBBS b. Abt. 1946 , Name changed to ANDREWS adopted by
Evelyn's 2nd husband , m. George JOSEPH , no children.
2nd > Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS
+ Hope Lillian HARDING b. 08 Apr 1926 , m. 27 Feb 1950 , ME. , d. 25
Feb 1965 North Easton , Bristol , MA.
12. Natalie Anne HOBBS b. living
12. William Charles HOBBS b. living
3rd Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Mrs. Pauline Farrell b. living , No Children of This Marriage
11. Natalie HOBBS b. Abt 1922 , d. Abt 1922 age 6 months
10. Lewellyn Russell HORTON b. 27 Jan 1904 , d. 21 May 1982.
10. Mary J. HORTON b. 01 Apr 1905 , d. 01 Jan 1991 m. Niles ANDERSON
10. Alford L. HORTON b. 02 Jul 1907 , d. 10 Jan 1985 , m. three times
10. Arlene S. HORTON b. 22 Dec 1909 , d. 21 Mar 1996 , m. Charles K.
McALONY
10 Barbara G. HORTON b. 23 Mar 1912 , d. 30 May 1982 , m. Hiram E.
SMITH
10. Rachel Elizabeth HORTON b. 28 Sep 1914 , d. FLA. , m. 2nd-Raymond
E. PACKARD d. WW II , 3rd.- MATRINO , 1st marriage annuled by father
C.L.HORTON
8. Frederick Newton HORTON b. 02 Apr 1860 , d. ??
8. Henry Hudson HORTON b. 11 Nov 1862 , d. ??
8. Edgar Edward HORTON b. 20 Nov 1864 , d. ??
7. Cynthia E. HORTON b. 1841 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
6. Lindley HORTON b. 1812 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5. Patience HORTON b. 27 Feb 1769 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5 Lydia HORTON b. 20 May 1771 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Rhoba HORTON b. 10 Jul 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Jotham HORTON b. 30 Jul 1753 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. Jonathan HORTON b. 1702 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA d. 20 Jun 1774 ,
North Castle .
3. David HORTON b. 1702 , Swansea , Bristol , MA
3. Hezekiah HORTON b. 01 Sep 1714 , MA. , d. 19 Aug 1787 , Guilford ,
Windham , VT.
3. Mary HORTON b. Abt. 1708.2nd Wife of John HORTON , Corp. :
+Lydia BROWN b. ?? , m. 29 Nov 1744 , Swansea , Bristol , MA . , d. ??
2. Jonathan HORTON b. Bef 12 Jul 1675 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d.
??
2. Thomas HORTON b. 03 Oct 1677 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. Mar
1745/46 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2. David HORTON b. 14 Oct 1679 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. 07 Jan
1751/52 , Milton , Norfolk , MA
2. Solomon HORTON b. 11 Jan 1681/82 , Milton , Norfolk , MA. , d. Jan
1824/25 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2nd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Susannah KENEY b. 1640 , m. 25 Dec 1693 , Milton , Norfolk
,MA. , d. Bef. Jun 1700
3rd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Katherine HARRISON m. 08 Jun 1700 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MAQuality of data: 2
Source: (Death)
Abbreviation: Natalie Fix [mailto:wyrdfolke@earthlink.net]
Title: Horton line
Author: Richard Anderson
Text: Sources for this are :
> 1. Brouderbund's Family Tree Maker
> 2. WFT CD # 18
> 3. SSDI
> 4. Rehoboth Vital Records
> 5. Information supplied by Richard Anderson son of Mary J. Horton
> Anderson
> 6. Maine Archives ( Vital Records )
> 7. Newspaper Obits
> 8. Bristol County Records
> 9. Census Records
>
> HORTON
>
> 1. Thomas HORTON b. 1638 , Springfield , Hampden , MA d. Bef. 08 Mar
1715/16 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.+ Sarah HARMON b. 01 May 1652 ,
Braintree , MA. m. Abt. 1668 , MA., d. Bef . Dec. 1693 , Milton , MA.
Parents= Nathaniel HARMON and Mary BLISS
2. Ann HORTON
2. Esther HORTON
2. Rachel HORTON b. 06 Aug 1669 , Milton , Norfolk , MA d. WFT Est.
1675-1776
2. John HORTON , Corp. b. 06 June 1672 , Milton , Norfolk ,
MA d. 15 Oct 1742 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
+ Mehitable GARNSEY/GARNZEY b. 02 Nov 1673 , Milton ,
Norfolk , MA ., m. 1689 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA., d. ???? Milton ,
Norfolk ,MA. parents= John GARNZEY/GARNSEY and wife Elizabeth Unknown
3. Thomas HORTON b. 15 Apr 1690 , Swansea , Bristol, MA d. 10 Jul 1733
, Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
3. Sarah HORTON b. 1692 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA., d. 15 Aug 1725 ,
Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. John HORTON Jr. b. Abt. 21 Mar 1695/96 Swansea or Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA., d. 10 Jan 1796 , Glocester , R.I.
3. Jotham HORTON b. 1689 , Swansea , Bristol ,MA d. Abt. 1797
+ Hannah MARTIN b. unk. , m. 29 May 1729, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Nov 1739 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
Parents= ????
4. Mercy HORTON b. 05 May 1730, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Nathan HORTON b. 01 Oct 1733, Rehoboth , Bristl , MA.
4. Sarah HORTON b. 11 Nov 1735, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Hannah HORTON b. 19 Dec. 1738, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 07
Aug 1813 , Manchester , N.H.
* 2nd Wife of Jotham HORTON : + Penelope ROUND b. Abt. 1719 ,
Swansea, Bristol , MA. , m. Abt. 1740 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d.
unk. Parents = George ROUND and Susannah COLE
4. James HORTON b. 10 Jul 1741, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 1833 ,
Military History : S13450 , MA line
4. Bernard " Barnet " HORTON b. 06 May 1744 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,
MA. , d. 01 May 1835 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA.
+ Mehitable COLE b. 03 Jun 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Oct 1765 , d. 24 Feb 1820 ,
Parents = Barnard COLE and his wife Sarah
5. Barnet HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Hannah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mary HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Sarah HORTON > b. ?? d. ??
5. Wheeler HORTON b. 10 NOv 1766 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 13
Nov 1857 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA
+ Lucretia LINDLEY b. 22 May 1770 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Sep 1792 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 23 Dec 1855 , Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA.
Parents = Isaiah LINDLEY and Anne CHANNING
6. Ann Lucretia HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Isaiah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Olive HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Sybil HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Gideon HORTON b. 1794 d. 27 Feb 1874 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
6. Benson HORTON b. 24 Dec 1797 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , d. 30
May 1875, Dighton , Bristol , MA
+ Pamela ( Permilla ) BRIGGS , 13 Nov 1801 , Dighton , Bristol , MA.
, m. Abt. 1820 , d. 01 Sep 1864 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
Abiathar BRIGGS and Pamela PALMER
7. Isaac Newton HORTON b. 17 Jan 1824 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , 07
Apr 1905.
+ Lucy A. SEEKEL b. Abt. 1829 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , m. 15 Dec
1847, Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. Jun 1852 , Parents =
8. John A. HORTON b. 07 Jun 1852 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 27
Nov > 1875 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
2nd Wife of Isaac Newton HORTON :
+ Mary Russell SEEKEL b. 18 Oct 1822 , Taunton /Myricks , Bristol ,
MA., m. 28 Jul 1853 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 01 Sep 1903 ,
Berkley/Myricks , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
8. Mary Ann HORTON b. 23 Oct 1854 , d. ??
8. Flora Etta HORTON b. 24 Dec 1857 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d.
Aft.1900
9. Charles Linwood HORTON b. 14 Jun 1876 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 29 Jul 1953 , Foxborough , MA.
+ Flora Gertrude WASHBURN b. 25 Jan 1878 , Lakeville , Bristol , MA.
, m. 06 Jun 1896 , d. 22 Jul 1952 , North Easton , Bristol , MA. ,
Parents = Salmon Milton WASHBURN and Jerusha Walker RECORD
10. Linwood Washburn HORTON b. 09 Feb 1897 Myricks , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Feb 1897 buried , Mayflower Hill Cemetery , Taunton , Bristol ,
MA.
10. Dorris Evelyn Washburn HORTON b. 16 Nov 1900 , Brockton ,
Plymouth , MA. , d. 29 Jun 1963 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
+ Lester Malcom HOBBS b. 24 Jul 1900 , Milo , Piscataquis , ME. , m.
1919 , d. 24 Dec 1968 , Raynham/Taunton , MA. Parents = William L.
HOBBS and Anna L. GLOVER of ME.
11. Lester Milton HOBBS b. living
1st Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Evelyn STRAIGHT b. ?? d. ??
12. Joann HOBBS b. Abt. 1946 , Name changed to ANDREWS adopted by
Evelyn's 2nd husband , m. George JOSEPH , no children.
2nd > Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS
+ Hope Lillian HARDING b. 08 Apr 1926 , m. 27 Feb 1950 , ME. , d. 25
Feb 1965 North Easton , Bristol , MA.
12. Natalie Anne HOBBS b. living
12. William Charles HOBBS b. living
3rd Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Mrs. Pauline Farrell b. living , No Children of This Marriage
11. Natalie HOBBS b. Abt 1922 , d. Abt 1922 age 6 months
10. Lewellyn Russell HORTON b. 27 Jan 1904 , d. 21 May 1982.
10. Mary J. HORTON b. 01 Apr 1905 , d. 01 Jan 1991 m. Niles ANDERSON
10. Alford L. HORTON b. 02 Jul 1907 , d. 10 Jan 1985 , m. three times
10. Arlene S. HORTON b. 22 Dec 1909 , d. 21 Mar 1996 , m. Charles K.
McALONY
10 Barbara G. HORTON b. 23 Mar 1912 , d. 30 May 1982 , m. Hiram E.
SMITH
10. Rachel Elizabeth HORTON b. 28 Sep 1914 , d. FLA. , m. 2nd-Raymond
E. PACKARD d. WW II , 3rd.- MATRINO , 1st marriage annuled by father
C.L.HORTON
8. Frederick Newton HORTON b. 02 Apr 1860 , d. ??
8. Henry Hudson HORTON b. 11 Nov 1862 , d. ??
8. Edgar Edward HORTON b. 20 Nov 1864 , d. ??
7. Cynthia E. HORTON b. 1841 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
6. Lindley HORTON b. 1812 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5. Patience HORTON b. 27 Feb 1769 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5 Lydia HORTON b. 20 May 1771 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Rhoba HORTON b. 10 Jul 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Jotham HORTON b. 30 Jul 1753 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. Jonathan HORTON b. 1702 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA d. 20 Jun 1774 ,
North Castle .
3. David HORTON b. 1702 , Swansea , Bristol , MA
3. Hezekiah HORTON b. 01 Sep 1714 , MA. , d. 19 Aug 1787 , Guilford ,
Windham , VT.
3. Mary HORTON b. Abt. 1708.2nd Wife of John HORTON , Corp. :
+Lydia BROWN b. ?? , m. 29 Nov 1744 , Swansea , Bristol , MA . , d. ??
2. Jonathan HORTON b. Bef 12 Jul 1675 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d.
??
2. Thomas HORTON b. 03 Oct 1677 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. Mar
1745/46 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2. David HORTON b. 14 Oct 1679 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. 07 Jan
1751/52 , Milton , Norfolk , MA
2. Solomon HORTON b. 11 Jan 1681/82 , Milton , Norfolk , MA. , d. Jan
1824/25 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2nd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Susannah KENEY b. 1640 , m. 25 Dec 1693 , Milton , Norfolk
,MA. , d. Bef. Jun 1700
3rd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Katherine HARRISON m. 08 Jun 1700 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MAPage: Natalie has dates as 1824/25
Quality of data: 2
Death: JAN 1724/25 Rehoboth, Bristol County, Mass.
Given Name: Sarah
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Imported GEDCOM file Bob White (RDWhite17@aol.com
Title: GEDCOM file imported on Apr 6 1999. RDWhite17@aol.com
Author: Bob White
Text: 2 DATE 1689/1690
2 PLAC Rehoboth, Bristol Co., Mass.
Ref: New England Marriages prior to 1700, page 389 Marriage listed as
occurring @@ 1698.
Family History: New England Families #2
(II) John Horton, son of Thomas Horton
(q. v.), was born at Milton, Massachusetts,
June 6, 1672. With several brothers he settled
in Rehoboth. He had sons: John, Jonathan,
and several others.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Imported GEDCOM file
Title: GEDCOM file imported on Apr 9 1999.
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mail
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas source on Sarah Horton 1692
Title: Sarah Horton 1692
Author: BonnieJ222@aol.com
Text: Birth: book Thomas Horton of Milton & Rehoboth mass. by Margaret Jenks
pg 1251
Marr: Rehoboth Vital Records & above book
Death: Rehoboth Vital Records & above book age 33 yrs
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Thomas Horton of Milton and Rehoboth, Massachusett
Title: Family history book
Author: Margaret Jenks and Frank Seymour
Publication: 12727 NE 116th Lane, F8, Kirkland, WA 98033
Text: Library of Congress Dewey No. 929/.2/0973 19
Contorol No. Library of Congress 84150841 //r902
Notes: Vol 3 cover titile: Thomas Horton of Milton & Rehoboth, Mass.
Vols 2- Thomas Horton
"Privately printed"--T.p. verso
Includes bibliographies and indexes.
Repository:Name: Library of Congress
Address: Washington DC
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Natalie Fix [mailto:wyrdfolke@earthlink.net]
Title: Horton line
Author: Richard Anderson
Text: Sources for this are :
> 1. Brouderbund's Family Tree Maker
> 2. WFT CD # 18
> 3. SSDI
> 4. Rehoboth Vital Records
> 5. Information supplied by Richard Anderson son of Mary J. Horton
> Anderson
> 6. Maine Archives ( Vital Records )
> 7. Newspaper Obits
> 8. Bristol County Records
> 9. Census Records
>
> HORTON
>
> 1. Thomas HORTON b. 1638 , Springfield , Hampden , MA d. Bef. 08 Mar
1715/16 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.+ Sarah HARMON b. 01 May 1652 ,
Braintree , MA. m. Abt. 1668 , MA., d. Bef . Dec. 1693 , Milton , MA.
Parents= Nathaniel HARMON and Mary BLISS
2. Ann HORTON
2. Esther HORTON
2. Rachel HORTON b. 06 Aug 1669 , Milton , Norfolk , MA d. WFT Est.
1675-1776
2. John HORTON , Corp. b. 06 June 1672 , Milton , Norfolk ,
MA d. 15 Oct 1742 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
+ Mehitable GARNSEY/GARNZEY b. 02 Nov 1673 , Milton ,
Norfolk , MA ., m. 1689 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA., d. ???? Milton ,
Norfolk ,MA. parents= John GARNZEY/GARNSEY and wife Elizabeth Unknown
3. Thomas HORTON b. 15 Apr 1690 , Swansea , Bristol, MA d. 10 Jul 1733
, Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
3. Sarah HORTON b. 1692 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA., d. 15 Aug 1725 ,
Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. John HORTON Jr. b. Abt. 21 Mar 1695/96 Swansea or Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA., d. 10 Jan 1796 , Glocester , R.I.
3. Jotham HORTON b. 1689 , Swansea , Bristol ,MA d. Abt. 1797
+ Hannah MARTIN b. unk. , m. 29 May 1729, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Nov 1739 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
Parents= ????
4. Mercy HORTON b. 05 May 1730, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Nathan HORTON b. 01 Oct 1733, Rehoboth , Bristl , MA.
4. Sarah HORTON b. 11 Nov 1735, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Hannah HORTON b. 19 Dec. 1738, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 07
Aug 1813 , Manchester , N.H.
* 2nd Wife of Jotham HORTON : + Penelope ROUND b. Abt. 1719 ,
Swansea, Bristol , MA. , m. Abt. 1740 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d.
unk. Parents = George ROUND and Susannah COLE
4. James HORTON b. 10 Jul 1741, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 1833 ,
Military History : S13450 , MA line
4. Bernard " Barnet " HORTON b. 06 May 1744 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,
MA. , d. 01 May 1835 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA.
+ Mehitable COLE b. 03 Jun 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Oct 1765 , d. 24 Feb 1820 ,
Parents = Barnard COLE and his wife Sarah
5. Barnet HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Hannah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mary HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Sarah HORTON > b. ?? d. ??
5. Wheeler HORTON b. 10 NOv 1766 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 13
Nov 1857 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA
+ Lucretia LINDLEY b. 22 May 1770 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Sep 1792 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 23 Dec 1855 , Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA.
Parents = Isaiah LINDLEY and Anne CHANNING
6. Ann Lucretia HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Isaiah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Olive HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Sybil HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Gideon HORTON b. 1794 d. 27 Feb 1874 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
6. Benson HORTON b. 24 Dec 1797 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , d. 30
May 1875, Dighton , Bristol , MA
+ Pamela ( Permilla ) BRIGGS , 13 Nov 1801 , Dighton , Bristol , MA.
, m. Abt. 1820 , d. 01 Sep 1864 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
Abiathar BRIGGS and Pamela PALMER
7. Isaac Newton HORTON b. 17 Jan 1824 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , 07
Apr 1905.
+ Lucy A. SEEKEL b. Abt. 1829 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , m. 15 Dec
1847, Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. Jun 1852 , Parents =
8. John A. HORTON b. 07 Jun 1852 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 27
Nov > 1875 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
2nd Wife of Isaac Newton HORTON :
+ Mary Russell SEEKEL b. 18 Oct 1822 , Taunton /Myricks , Bristol ,
MA., m. 28 Jul 1853 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 01 Sep 1903 ,
Berkley/Myricks , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
8. Mary Ann HORTON b. 23 Oct 1854 , d. ??
8. Flora Etta HORTON b. 24 Dec 1857 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d.
Aft.1900
9. Charles Linwood HORTON b. 14 Jun 1876 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 29 Jul 1953 , Foxborough , MA.
+ Flora Gertrude WASHBURN b. 25 Jan 1878 , Lakeville , Bristol , MA.
, m. 06 Jun 1896 , d. 22 Jul 1952 , North Easton , Bristol , MA. ,
Parents = Salmon Milton WASHBURN and Jerusha Walker RECORD
10. Linwood Washburn HORTON b. 09 Feb 1897 Myricks , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Feb 1897 buried , Mayflower Hill Cemetery , Taunton , Bristol ,
MA.
10. Dorris Evelyn Washburn HORTON b. 16 Nov 1900 , Brockton ,
Plymouth , MA. , d. 29 Jun 1963 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
+ Lester Malcom HOBBS b. 24 Jul 1900 , Milo , Piscataquis , ME. , m.
1919 , d. 24 Dec 1968 , Raynham/Taunton , MA. Parents = William L.
HOBBS and Anna L. GLOVER of ME.
11. Lester Milton HOBBS b. living
1st Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Evelyn STRAIGHT b. ?? d. ??
12. Joann HOBBS b. Abt. 1946 , Name changed to ANDREWS adopted by
Evelyn's 2nd husband , m. George JOSEPH , no children.
2nd > Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS
+ Hope Lillian HARDING b. 08 Apr 1926 , m. 27 Feb 1950 , ME. , d. 25
Feb 1965 North Easton , Bristol , MA.
12. Natalie Anne HOBBS b. living
12. William Charles HOBBS b. living
3rd Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Mrs. Pauline Farrell b. living , No Children of This Marriage
11. Natalie HOBBS b. Abt 1922 , d. Abt 1922 age 6 months
10. Lewellyn Russell HORTON b. 27 Jan 1904 , d. 21 May 1982.
10. Mary J. HORTON b. 01 Apr 1905 , d. 01 Jan 1991 m. Niles ANDERSON
10. Alford L. HORTON b. 02 Jul 1907 , d. 10 Jan 1985 , m. three times
10. Arlene S. HORTON b. 22 Dec 1909 , d. 21 Mar 1996 , m. Charles K.
McALONY
10 Barbara G. HORTON b. 23 Mar 1912 , d. 30 May 1982 , m. Hiram E.
SMITH
10. Rachel Elizabeth HORTON b. 28 Sep 1914 , d. FLA. , m. 2nd-Raymond
E. PACKARD d. WW II , 3rd.- MATRINO , 1st marriage annuled by father
C.L.HORTON
8. Frederick Newton HORTON b. 02 Apr 1860 , d. ??
8. Henry Hudson HORTON b. 11 Nov 1862 , d. ??
8. Edgar Edward HORTON b. 20 Nov 1864 , d. ??
7. Cynthia E. HORTON b. 1841 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
6. Lindley HORTON b. 1812 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5. Patience HORTON b. 27 Feb 1769 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5 Lydia HORTON b. 20 May 1771 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Rhoba HORTON b. 10 Jul 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Jotham HORTON b. 30 Jul 1753 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. Jonathan HORTON b. 1702 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA d. 20 Jun 1774 ,
North Castle .
3. David HORTON b. 1702 , Swansea , Bristol , MA
3. Hezekiah HORTON b. 01 Sep 1714 , MA. , d. 19 Aug 1787 , Guilford ,
Windham , VT.
3. Mary HORTON b. Abt. 1708.2nd Wife of John HORTON , Corp. :
+Lydia BROWN b. ?? , m. 29 Nov 1744 , Swansea , Bristol , MA . , d. ??
2. Jonathan HORTON b. Bef 12 Jul 1675 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d.
??
2. Thomas HORTON b. 03 Oct 1677 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. Mar
1745/46 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2. David HORTON b. 14 Oct 1679 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. 07 Jan
1751/52 , Milton , Norfolk , MA
2. Solomon HORTON b. 11 Jan 1681/82 , Milton , Norfolk , MA. , d. Jan
1824/25 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2nd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Susannah KENEY b. 1640 , m. 25 Dec 1693 , Milton , Norfolk
,MA. , d. Bef. Jun 1700
3rd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Katherine HARRISON m. 08 Jun 1700 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MAQuality of data: 2
Blessing: Date: AUG 1725
Place: Cem Miller Brg. Rehoboth, Massachusetts
Death: 15 AUG 1725 Rehoboth, Bristol County, Mass.
Given Name: Jonathan
Note: Family History: New England Families #2
(III) Jonathan Horton, son of John Horton,
was born in Milton or Rehoboth, about
1700. He married (first) October 28, 1725,
Anne Millerd; (second) Elizabeth (???).
Children born at Rehoboth by first wife:
Susanna, August 24, 1728; Anne, December
22, 1730; Jonathan, July 1, 1733; Lileas,
July 22, 1735; Amos, August 20, 1737; Rebeckah,
July 27, 1739; Comfort, mentioned below;
William, April 21, 1745; Job, June 26,
1747; Freelove, October 17, 1749. Children
by second wife: Perry, June 13, 1754; Samuel,
January 30, 1756; Elizabeth, September
15, 1758.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Imported GEDCOM file Bob White (RDWhite17@aol.com
Title: GEDCOM file imported on Apr 6 1999. RDWhite17@aol.com
Author: Bob White
Text: 2 DATE 1689/1690
2 PLAC Rehoboth, Bristol Co., Mass.
Ref: New England Marriages prior to 1700, page 389 Marriage listed as
occurring @@ 1698.
Family History: New England Families #2
(II) John Horton, son of Thomas Horton
(q. v.), was born at Milton, Massachusetts,
June 6, 1672. With several brothers he settled
in Rehoboth. He had sons: John, Jonathan,
and several others.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Imported GEDCOM file
Title: GEDCOM file imported on Apr 9 1999.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Imported GEDCOM file on Presidents
Title: GEDCOM file imported on 15 Jul 2001.
bct@dcs.hull.ac.uk
Publication: http://dsa-slave1.hull.ac.uk:8888/Rcn%3dBrian%20C%20Tompsett%2c%2
0ou%3dComputer%20Science%2c%20o%3dUniversity%20of%20Hull%2c%2
0c%3dGB Brian Tompsett
1 ADDR $$http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/ Department of Computer Science
http://www.hull.ac.uk/ University of Hull
www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/presidents.ged
Text: This file is adapted from Funk & Wagnells Special Edition "The
Presidents".
It is meant as an easy reference companion to the GEDCOM file(s)
available
for the american presidents. A complete BK5 data set for all 42
presidents
(mostly information from the previously existing individual .GED
files) is
also available from the author of this LaTeX file
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mail
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Thomas Horton of Milton and Rehoboth, Massachusett
Title: Family history book
Author: Margaret Jenks and Frank Seymour
Publication: 12727 NE 116th Lane, F8, Kirkland, WA 98033
Text: Library of Congress Dewey No. 929/.2/0973 19
Contorol No. Library of Congress 84150841 //r902
Notes: Vol 3 cover titile: Thomas Horton of Milton & Rehoboth, Mass.
Vols 2- Thomas Horton
"Privately printed"--T.p. verso
Includes bibliographies and indexes.
Repository:Name: Library of Congress
Address: Washington DC
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas source on Johnathan Horton 1695
Title: Bonnie Douglas source on Johnathan Horton 1695
Text: Birth: book Thomas Horton of Milton & Rehoboth Mass. by Margaret Jenks
pg 8
Marr: Rehoboth, Bristol, Mass Vital Records
Death: same book as above
Source: (Burial)
Abbreviation: Robert Downie White <RDWhite17@aol.com>
Title: File tranported 04/07/99. GEDCOM
Author: Robert Downie White
Reference: Bush-380
Death: 20 JUN 1774 Rehoboth, Bristol County, Mass.
Burial: 1774 C Horton cem. Rehoboth, Massachusetts
Given Name: John
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Imported GEDCOM file Bob White (RDWhite17@aol.com
Title: GEDCOM file imported on Apr 6 1999. RDWhite17@aol.com
Author: Bob White
Text: 2 DATE 1689/1690
2 PLAC Rehoboth, Bristol Co., Mass.
Ref: New England Marriages prior to 1700, page 389 Marriage listed as
occurring @@ 1698.
Family History: New England Families #2
(II) John Horton, son of Thomas Horton
(q. v.), was born at Milton, Massachusetts,
June 6, 1672. With several brothers he settled
in Rehoboth. He had sons: John, Jonathan,
and several others.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Imported GEDCOM file
Title: GEDCOM file imported on Apr 9 1999.
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas (e mail BonnieJ222@aol.com)
Title: Horton Family Researcher Bonnie Douglas (BonnieJ222@aol.com
Sent me her file on the Horton family Tree by mail
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Bonnie Douglas source on John Horton 1696
Title: John Horton 1696
Author: BonnieJ222@aol.com
Text: Marr: Swansee, Bristol, Mass., Vital Records
Death: Glocester, Rhode Island Vital Records
See book by Margaret Jenks
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Thomas Horton of Milton and Rehoboth, Massachusett
Title: Family history book
Author: Margaret Jenks and Frank Seymour
Publication: 12727 NE 116th Lane, F8, Kirkland, WA 98033
Text: Library of Congress Dewey No. 929/.2/0973 19
Contorol No. Library of Congress 84150841 //r902
Notes: Vol 3 cover titile: Thomas Horton of Milton & Rehoboth, Mass.
Vols 2- Thomas Horton
"Privately printed"--T.p. verso
Includes bibliographies and indexes.
Repository:Name: Library of Congress
Address: Washington DC
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Natalie Fix [mailto:wyrdfolke@earthlink.net]
Title: Horton line
Author: Richard Anderson
Text: Sources for this are :
> 1. Brouderbund's Family Tree Maker
> 2. WFT CD # 18
> 3. SSDI
> 4. Rehoboth Vital Records
> 5. Information supplied by Richard Anderson son of Mary J. Horton
> Anderson
> 6. Maine Archives ( Vital Records )
> 7. Newspaper Obits
> 8. Bristol County Records
> 9. Census Records
>
> HORTON
>
> 1. Thomas HORTON b. 1638 , Springfield , Hampden , MA d. Bef. 08 Mar
1715/16 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.+ Sarah HARMON b. 01 May 1652 ,
Braintree , MA. m. Abt. 1668 , MA., d. Bef . Dec. 1693 , Milton , MA.
Parents= Nathaniel HARMON and Mary BLISS
2. Ann HORTON
2. Esther HORTON
2. Rachel HORTON b. 06 Aug 1669 , Milton , Norfolk , MA d. WFT Est.
1675-1776
2. John HORTON , Corp. b. 06 June 1672 , Milton , Norfolk ,
MA d. 15 Oct 1742 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
+ Mehitable GARNSEY/GARNZEY b. 02 Nov 1673 , Milton ,
Norfolk , MA ., m. 1689 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA., d. ???? Milton ,
Norfolk ,MA. parents= John GARNZEY/GARNSEY and wife Elizabeth Unknown
3. Thomas HORTON b. 15 Apr 1690 , Swansea , Bristol, MA d. 10 Jul 1733
, Rehoboth , Bristol ,MA.
3. Sarah HORTON b. 1692 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA., d. 15 Aug 1725 ,
Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. John HORTON Jr. b. Abt. 21 Mar 1695/96 Swansea or Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA., d. 10 Jan 1796 , Glocester , R.I.
3. Jotham HORTON b. 1689 , Swansea , Bristol ,MA d. Abt. 1797
+ Hannah MARTIN b. unk. , m. 29 May 1729, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Nov 1739 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
Parents= ????
4. Mercy HORTON b. 05 May 1730, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Nathan HORTON b. 01 Oct 1733, Rehoboth , Bristl , MA.
4. Sarah HORTON b. 11 Nov 1735, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
4. Hannah HORTON b. 19 Dec. 1738, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 07
Aug 1813 , Manchester , N.H.
* 2nd Wife of Jotham HORTON : + Penelope ROUND b. Abt. 1719 ,
Swansea, Bristol , MA. , m. Abt. 1740 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d.
unk. Parents = George ROUND and Susannah COLE
4. James HORTON b. 10 Jul 1741, Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 1833 ,
Military History : S13450 , MA line
4. Bernard " Barnet " HORTON b. 06 May 1744 , Rehoboth , Bristol ,
MA. , d. 01 May 1835 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA.
+ Mehitable COLE b. 03 Jun 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Oct 1765 , d. 24 Feb 1820 ,
Parents = Barnard COLE and his wife Sarah
5. Barnet HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Hannah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mary HORTON b. ?? d. ??
5. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d.
5. Sarah HORTON > b. ?? d. ??
5. Wheeler HORTON b. 10 NOv 1766 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 13
Nov 1857 , Rehoboth, Bristol , MA
+ Lucretia LINDLEY b. 22 May 1770 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , m. 27
Sep 1792 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA. , d. 23 Dec 1855 , Rehoboth ,
Bristol , MA.
Parents = Isaiah LINDLEY and Anne CHANNING
6. Ann Lucretia HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Isaiah HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Mehitable HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Olive HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Sybil HORTON b. ?? d. ??
6. Gideon HORTON b. 1794 d. 27 Feb 1874 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
6. Benson HORTON b. 24 Dec 1797 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , d. 30
May 1875, Dighton , Bristol , MA
+ Pamela ( Permilla ) BRIGGS , 13 Nov 1801 , Dighton , Bristol , MA.
, m. Abt. 1820 , d. 01 Sep 1864 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
Abiathar BRIGGS and Pamela PALMER
7. Isaac Newton HORTON b. 17 Jan 1824 , Dighton , Bristol , MA. , 07
Apr 1905.
+ Lucy A. SEEKEL b. Abt. 1829 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , m. 15 Dec
1847, Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. Jun 1852 , Parents =
8. John A. HORTON b. 07 Jun 1852 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 27
Nov > 1875 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
2nd Wife of Isaac Newton HORTON :
+ Mary Russell SEEKEL b. 18 Oct 1822 , Taunton /Myricks , Bristol ,
MA., m. 28 Jul 1853 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d. 01 Sep 1903 ,
Berkley/Myricks , Bristol , MA. , Parents =
8. Mary Ann HORTON b. 23 Oct 1854 , d. ??
8. Flora Etta HORTON b. 24 Dec 1857 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. , d.
Aft.1900
9. Charles Linwood HORTON b. 14 Jun 1876 , Taunton , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 29 Jul 1953 , Foxborough , MA.
+ Flora Gertrude WASHBURN b. 25 Jan 1878 , Lakeville , Bristol , MA.
, m. 06 Jun 1896 , d. 22 Jul 1952 , North Easton , Bristol , MA. ,
Parents = Salmon Milton WASHBURN and Jerusha Walker RECORD
10. Linwood Washburn HORTON b. 09 Feb 1897 Myricks , Bristol , MA. ,
d. 09 Feb 1897 buried , Mayflower Hill Cemetery , Taunton , Bristol ,
MA.
10. Dorris Evelyn Washburn HORTON b. 16 Nov 1900 , Brockton ,
Plymouth , MA. , d. 29 Jun 1963 , Taunton , Bristol , MA
+ Lester Malcom HOBBS b. 24 Jul 1900 , Milo , Piscataquis , ME. , m.
1919 , d. 24 Dec 1968 , Raynham/Taunton , MA. Parents = William L.
HOBBS and Anna L. GLOVER of ME.
11. Lester Milton HOBBS b. living
1st Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Evelyn STRAIGHT b. ?? d. ??
12. Joann HOBBS b. Abt. 1946 , Name changed to ANDREWS adopted by
Evelyn's 2nd husband , m. George JOSEPH , no children.
2nd > Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS
+ Hope Lillian HARDING b. 08 Apr 1926 , m. 27 Feb 1950 , ME. , d. 25
Feb 1965 North Easton , Bristol , MA.
12. Natalie Anne HOBBS b. living
12. William Charles HOBBS b. living
3rd Marriage of Lester Milton HOBBS :
+ Mrs. Pauline Farrell b. living , No Children of This Marriage
11. Natalie HOBBS b. Abt 1922 , d. Abt 1922 age 6 months
10. Lewellyn Russell HORTON b. 27 Jan 1904 , d. 21 May 1982.
10. Mary J. HORTON b. 01 Apr 1905 , d. 01 Jan 1991 m. Niles ANDERSON
10. Alford L. HORTON b. 02 Jul 1907 , d. 10 Jan 1985 , m. three times
10. Arlene S. HORTON b. 22 Dec 1909 , d. 21 Mar 1996 , m. Charles K.
McALONY
10 Barbara G. HORTON b. 23 Mar 1912 , d. 30 May 1982 , m. Hiram E.
SMITH
10. Rachel Elizabeth HORTON b. 28 Sep 1914 , d. FLA. , m. 2nd-Raymond
E. PACKARD d. WW II , 3rd.- MATRINO , 1st marriage annuled by father
C.L.HORTON
8. Frederick Newton HORTON b. 02 Apr 1860 , d. ??
8. Henry Hudson HORTON b. 11 Nov 1862 , d. ??
8. Edgar Edward HORTON b. 20 Nov 1864 , d. ??
7. Cynthia E. HORTON b. 1841 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
6. Lindley HORTON b. 1812 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5. Patience HORTON b. 27 Feb 1769 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
5 Lydia HORTON b. 20 May 1771 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Rhoba HORTON b. 10 Jul 1747 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
4. Jotham HORTON b. 30 Jul 1753 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA
3. Jonathan HORTON b. 1702 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA d. 20 Jun 1774 ,
North Castle .
3. David HORTON b. 1702 , Swansea , Bristol , MA
3. Hezekiah HORTON b. 01 Sep 1714 , MA. , d. 19 Aug 1787 , Guilford ,
Windham , VT.
3. Mary HORTON b. Abt. 1708.2nd Wife of John HORTON , Corp. :
+Lydia BROWN b. ?? , m. 29 Nov 1744 , Swansea , Bristol , MA . , d. ??
2. Jonathan HORTON b. Bef 12 Jul 1675 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d.
??
2. Thomas HORTON b. 03 Oct 1677 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. Mar
1745/46 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2. David HORTON b. 14 Oct 1679 , Milton , Norfolk , MA . , d. 07 Jan
1751/52 , Milton , Norfolk , MA
2. Solomon HORTON b. 11 Jan 1681/82 , Milton , Norfolk , MA. , d. Jan
1824/25 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MA.
2nd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Susannah KENEY b. 1640 , m. 25 Dec 1693 , Milton , Norfolk
,MA. , d. Bef. Jun 1700
3rd Wife of Thomas HORTON :
+ Katherine HARRISON m. 08 Jun 1700 , Rehoboth , Bristol , MAQuality of data: 2
Christening: 17 SEP 1727 Cong. Ch., Rehoboth, Massachusetts
Death: 10 JAN 1796 Glocester, Rhoda Island
This HTML database was produced by an unregistered copy ofGED4WEBİ version 2.78 .