Notes
Notes for Ailric Carpenter, about 1166 - ----
Web site states:
Film #: 170397, Page #: 197, Ordinance #: 7084
Notes for Ralph Carpenter, about 1145 - ----
Web site states:
Ralph found in the Yorkshire Pipe Rolls in 1175.
Notes for Godwin Carpenter, about 1100 - ----
Web site states:
aka Godefroid in French, Godwin in Old English.
Per Raymond George Carpenter, American Genealogist: "In 1121 A.D. a Godwin Carpenter resided in Suffolk County, England."
Notes for William (The Carpenter) de Melun, about 1065 - ----
Web site states:
William De Melun, Lord of Melun, Knight - nick named "the Carpenter". William the Carpenter b. abt 1098 of Melun, Seine-Et--Marne, France [Guillaume] - Film #: 170395, Page #: 134, Ordinance #: 4799 (Bap. 11 Feb. 1908 Manti - Pre 1970 ordinances)
Notes for William de Melun, about 1048 - ----
Web site states:
This William would have been about 56 years of age in 1098. The leadership at the seige of Antioch per the "Gesta Francorum" averaged 40 years old. It was his son that fought at Antioch. Did this William fight against the Moors in Spain about 1080/85 AD or against the Saxons at the Battle of Hastings in 1066?
Notes for Herve de Melun, 1030 - ----
Web site states:
The vast majority of the early data for this line was researched and compiled by John R. Carpenter.
I first came in contact with John on the old "FidoNet". Since that time, we have corresponded by letter, fax and phone. At this point (August of 1997), he has no desire to obtain an Email address or surf the Internet. He can be reached at 5850 Yorkshire Ave., LaMesa, CA 91942.
Notes for Edward Brooks, ---- - ----
Web site states:
They had three children.
Notes for Louisa Gilbert, ---- - ----
Web site states:
"They had four children."
Notes for Anna Vose, ---- - ----
Web site states:
They had four children.
Notes for Frank Benjamin Carpenter, 4 Jul 1866 - ----
Web site states:
Resided at 20 Dexter St., Providence, R.I. He has in his possession the cane referred to under the family name of his grandfather.
Notes for Robert de Melun, about 1120 - ----
Web site states:
A Robert De Melun was Bishop of Hereford from 1164 to 1179. By default, he could have only come from William De Melun
Notes for Robert Carpenter, ---- - ----
Web site states:
Robert or Robert Le Carpenter found in Suffolk Curia Regis Rolls in 1212.
Notes for John Carpenter, 8 Oct 1626 - 23 May 1695
Web site states:
Number 17 in the Carpenter Memorial. Family on page 50.
Extensive notes on page 43 and 44. Captain of a Military Company.
Will dated 10 Nov 1694 reads "Now ancient, crazy in body, but sound in mind."
Notes for Thaddeus Warsaw Patchin, 17 May 1805 - 1892
Washington, D.C. City Directory, 1890 & 1891 lists the law firm of Patchin & Patten, located at 2506 K St. NW, as attorneys for national banks, with Thaddeus W. Patchin as a general partner.
Notes for Aaron Darwin Patchin, 4 Jan 1808 - 27 Jul 1864
[Was this the architect who built the four houses on Milligan Place, Greenwich Village, NY?? Web site states that "Aaron Patchin" was son-in-law to Gilbert Milligan, whose house first stood on the site. Since "our" Aaron lived in NY, had a wife Milligan, and lived in the appropriate era, it may be. In fact, it seems very likely, since this web site says that the Samuel Milligan daughter who married the architect Aaoron Patchin was named Isobel, and this very nicely matches the wife's name of "our" Aaron".]
Web site states about Patchin Place, in Greenwich Village, NY, the following:
In 1835, Gilbert and Lucy Milligan granted Patchin Place to their son-in-law Aaron Patchin, and the property remained in the Patchin family until 1920. The ten houses on this tiny cul-de-sac, entered by an iron gate on the sidewalk of West 10th Street, were reputedly built in 1848 as boarding houses for workers at Brevoort House hotel on Fifth Avenue. After the turn of the century, artists and writers discovered the charm of these small houses, isolated from, but accessible to, the Village's cafe life. O. Henry, Theodore Dreiser, John Reed, and, in later years, Abbott's close friend Djuna Barnes and e.e. cummings lived on Patchin Place. After 1917, modern improvements, such as indoor plumbing, electricity, and steam heat, were installed to attract wealthier, more stable tenants. Patchin Place and adjacent Milligan Place were among the city's earliest examples of urban gentrification.
In 1963, a new owner intended to tear down Patchin and Milligan Places to erect an apartment building, but community activists, led by Democratic district leader Ed Koch, saved the treasured enclaves. The Places were granted landmark status in 1969 and have changed little since Abbott's day [1936].
Notes for Caroline D. Patchin, 1840 - 21 Jun 1868
Web site states:
Caroline and her sister, Mary, drowned when Morning Star went down in 1868 as they were returning from the June 17th wedding of their cousin, Isabella Patchin Tiffany, where they acted as bridesmaids.
According to this web site, it was "women and children last" in this case. They say:
"The Morning Star" (Lake Erie, 1868). "The Morning Star" rammed into the "Courtlandt," a cargo ship. Both boats sank as one. Only after the all-male crew had secured places in the two lifeboats were a few of the "Morning Star's" first-class passengers (among them women and children) allowed to clamber aboard."
This web site says the following about the collision:
The Morning Star was a wooden side-wheel steamer of 243 ft. She ran over the bark Courtland in a night time collision and sank 6/21/1868 off Lorain, Ohio. All 23 people aboard drowned when the vessel rapidly sank. The Morning Star carried a cargo of iron bars and glass at the time of the wreck.
Notes for Mary H. Patchin, 1847 - 21 Jun 1868
Web site states:
Mary and her sister, Caroline, drowned when Morning Star went down in 1868 as they were returning from the June 17th wedding of their cousin, Isabella Patchin Tiffany, where they acted as bridesmaids.
According to this web site, it was "women and children last" in this case. They say:
"The Morning Star" (Lake Erie, 1868). "The Morning Star" rammed into the "Courtlandt," a cargo ship. Both boats sank as one. Only after the all-male crew had secured places in the two lifeboats were a few of the "Morning Star's" first-class passengers (among them women and children) allowed to clamber aboard."
This web site says the following about the collision:
The Morning Star was a wooden side-wheel steamer of 243 ft. She ran over the bark Courtland in a night time collision and sank 6/21/1868 off Lorain, Ohio. All 23 people aboard drowned when the vessel rapidly sank. The Morning Star carried a cargo of iron bars and glass at the time of the wreck.
Notes for Harvey Almeron Sackett, 1806 - 1879
Web site states:
He was by religious faith a Congregationalist, studied divinity and was graduated from the theological school of Yale College in 1835. For fifteen years after graduation he labored as a preacher and pastor in central and western New York. He then, partly through the in fluence of his wife, who had been a teacher, became deeply interested in the higher education of women, and applied himself to the work of stimulating public interest on that subject. He earnestly advocated the erection and endowment of a college for women that should afford equal advantages to those so long provided for men, and devoted not a little of his time and energy to securing, by public and private subscriptions, funds for that purpose. He was in fact the pioneer in that class of effort, which in six years resulted in the building of Elmira College, the first institution of its kind. He also took an active interest, with his wife, in establishing the New York Medical College for Women, of which he was a trustee to the end of his life.
Notes for Thomas Wooster, about 1656 - 4 Jan 1712/13
Web site states:
Source: The Descendants of Rev. William Worcester with notice of the CT Wooster Family" by Jonathan Fox Worcester
Notes for Phebe Tomlinson, 14 Aug 1656 - Mar 1738/39
Web site states:
Source: The Descendants of Rev. William Worcester with notice of the CT Wooster Family" by Jonathan Fox Worcester
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