Notes


Note    N1426         Index
Joseph was a blacksmith in the New Hampshire towns of Sutton, Concord, Warren and Henniker.

Notes


Note    N1439         Index
Sinclair was a horse farmer and breeder.

Notes


Note    N1444         Index
Iddo was a lumberman and farmer in Eustis, Maine.

Notes


Note    N1446         Index
Rosanna's name is incorrrectly recorded as "Sarah" in the UXBRIDGE VITAL RECORDS, page 397.

Notes


Note    N1463         Index
Moses was a minister. In Dearborn's HISTORY OF SALISBURY, NEW HAMPSHIRE (Page 776), Moses' ministry is remembered, as follows:

 Moses "sought and found the Saviour in early life and consecrated himself to the service of the Lord, uniting with the Christian church at West Salisbury, over which church he was ordained in 1857, preaching as opportunity offered in surrounding towns and particularly at Wilmot, where he formed a Christian church, the pastoral charge of which he held jointly with the church in Salisbury. He then went to Webster for five years, and thence to Somerset, Mass., two years, and while there was was invited to settle at the Broad Street Christian Church, at Providence, R.I., where he had a much larger sphere of usefulness, and since that time preaching in several place in that state. He possesses a commanding presence, a powerful and musical voice, a logical mind, and a large, warm, christian heart."

Notes


Note    N1479         Index
Daniel died of heart disease at the New Hampshire State Hospital in Concord.

Notes


Note    N1480         Index
George was a farmer. He suffered with, and died from, Bright's Disease.

Notes


Note    N1483         Index
Morrill was a mill operator in Franklin, New Hampshire. He died from heart disease.

Notes


Note    N1488         Index
Mary died from pneumonia.

Notes


Note    N1494         Index
Adella's death was caused by coronary thrombosis.

Notes


Note    N1507         Index
Amos was a farmer at Charleston and Bangor, where they were living at the time of the 1870 Census (NARA Microcopy M593, Roll 552, Page 132A, Dwelling 1204, Family 1350).

Notes


Note    N1524         Index
Enoch and Keziah had a total of 6 children.

Notes


Note    N1535         Index
Thomas was a carriage maker in Candia, New Hampshire.

Notes


Note    N1556         Index
Clara was a dress maker.

Notes


Note    N1557         Index
Edward was a farmer, carpenter and merchant. Sometime before 1860, he left Maine and moved to the American Midwest, living in Michigan and, later, Minnesota, where the family settled about 1870 (their daughter, Martha, was born there in June of 1870). He raised wheat and barley on his farm in Gordon Township, in the S.W. corner of Todd County. They moved on to Clinton County, Iowa, between 1882 and 1886.
 A portion of Edward's obituary in a Clinton newspaper reads as follows:

 "Mr. Scribner had followed his chosen trade of carpentry and in this capacity was well known throughout the city. It was in his home life, however, that the sterling manhood of the husband and father was best exemplified. Possessing a heart full of love as tender as a woman's, he was devoted to his wife and family. In trouble and in illness, father was always with them, and when the grandchildren came his greatest pleasure was in planning for their happiness" (Wilcox, DESCENDANTS OF EDWARD EATON SCRIBNER [op. cit.], 20).

 Sarah is a direct descendant of John Billington, one of the passengers on the "Mayflower."