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5301 == Biography ==Daniel Gorsuch, "Danyell Gorsuch of London, Marchant, late Alderman's deputy of Bishopsgate Ward living 1633"<ref name="VMHB24.1">Pleasants, J. Hall, [http://www.jstor.org/stable/4243492 "The Gorsuch and Lovelace Families"] ''The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography,'' Vol. 24, No. 1 (Jan., 1916), pp. 81-93, Virginia Historical Society, JSTOR.org accessed April 19, 2015</ref>

=== Origin ===Daniel was probably born in about March, 1568 (inscription on his monument said he was 69 and 6 months at his death October 8, 1638) at London, England.<ref name="MilFile">Heritage Consulting, [http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=millind&h=10867165&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt ''The Millennium File.''] Salt Lake City, UT, USA: Heritage Consulting. Original data: Heritage Consulting. The Millennium File. Salt Lake City, UT, USA: (Record ID Number: MH:S60)</ref> He was a son of [[Gorsuch-24|William Gorsuch]] and [[Hillson-2|Avice Hillson]].
The Visitation of London 1633-5 returned to following: "William Gorsuch of London, Marchant, descended out of Lancashire nigh Ormchurch," Married "Avice da. of ---- Hillson, brothers daughter to Robert Hillson of London, Marchant" (pg 83)<ref name="VMHB24.1"/>

=== Early Years ===Daniels' father died when he was still a minor. He was apprenticed to his Robert Hilson was a Mercer and so Daniel was apprenticed to him and was later admitted through him to the Freedom of the Mercer's Company in 1593.<ref name="Overman">Overman, S. Esmé, [http://ubbw.org.uk/Churches/Gorsuch.htm Dr. John Gorsuch] Churches Together in Benington and Walkern, St. Peter's Benington with St. Mary's Walkern, accessed November 26, 2014</ref> When Robert Hilson died, Daniel inherited property in the City of London.<ref name="Overman"/>

=== Family ===Daniel married Alice, "daughter of John Hall of London, marchant sometimes one of Bridge Maisters."<ref name="VMHB24.1"/><ref name="Mar">Yates Publishing, [http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=worldmarr_ga&h=482322&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt ''U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900''] Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.Original data - This unique collection of records was extracted from a variety of sources including family group sheets and electronic databases. (Record ID Number: MH:S26) </ref> The monumental inscription in the Walkern church shows that they had three children: one son and one daughter who lived past infancy, and one daughter who died young (pg 86).<ref name="VMHB24.1"/>

Children:<ref name="VMHB24.1"/># [[Gorsuch-22|John Gorsuch]], Rector of Walkhorne in Hertford 1632; mar Anne Lovelace# [[Gorsuch-183|Katherine Gorsuch]] d before October 6, 1638; mar Thomas Haynes
# Mary Gorsuch, died young

=== London ===With the property inherited from Robert Hilson, John and his family lived near Old St. Paul's within the city of London, possibly at Bishopsgate.<ref name="Overman"/> For many years, 1594 to 1618, John was elected every year to be one of the Wardens of London Bridge.<ref name="Overman"/>

=== Rectory of Walkhorne in Hertfordshire ===The Rectory was purchased on November 30, 1616, by William Beale of London, grocer, and from him, it was purchased by Daniel Gorsuch, merchant of London (pg 86).<ref name="VMHB24.1"/> On July 13, 1632, Daniel gave it to his son, John, as the rector, and Daniel subsequently built a new rectory for him there.<ref name="VMHB24.1"/>

=== Death and Legacy ===Daniel wrote his will on October 6, 1638, died on October 8, and his will was proved November 24, 1638 at the Prerogative Court at Canterbury.<ref name="VMHB24.1"/> According to the Bishop's Transcripts of the Walkern Hertz Register, "Danyell Gorsuch" was buried October 16, 1638 at the Walkern Church (pg 87).<ref name="VMHB24.1"/>
In the chancel of the Walkern church, there is a marble monument dedicated to Daniel, Alice, and their three children. It says, in part, "His Age Being Yn 69 Years 6 Monthes and Odd Days, Who Died the Eigthth Day October Ao DO 1638.<ref name="VMHB24.1"/> There is a picture of his monument in the [http://www.jstor.org/stable/4243492?seq=8 ''The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography.'']
Daniel's wife, Alice, wrote her will on July 7, 1662, and it was proved February 3, 1662/3 in the Perogative Court of Canterbury (pg 85).<ref name="VMHB24.1"/>

== Sources ==
<references />
=== See also: === * Haschemeyer, Sue N., [http://www.dunnuck.com/Bio-Gorsuch.html GORSUCH] Dunn*ck Family Genealogy accessed November 26, 2014
<!-- Please edit, add, or delete anything in this text. Thank you! -->

==To Add==

Daniel Gorsuch and Alice Hall Family

Daniel and Alice Gorsuch were the parents of three children:
John - Born at London in 1600. Married Anne Lovelace.1 See Reverend John Gorsuch and Anne Lovelace Family.
Katherine - Married Thomas Haynes of Auburn, Wiltshire. Their son Daniel married Elizabeth Lovelace, sister of Ann who married John Gorsuch.2

Mary - Died young.3
The family lived within the square mile of the city of London near Old St. Paul's and possibly at Bishopgate. Daniel became known as "Late Alderman's Deputy of Bishopgate." In 1622 and 1633, he held the office of Warden of the Mercer's Company.4
The three children almost certainly received their early schooling at home, although John likely went on to attend grammar school at either St. Paul's or the Mercer Company, each within a half mile of their home. On June 18, 1617, young John was admitted as a Fellow Commoner at Pembroke College, Cambridge. The term "Fellow Commoner" refers to a gentleman or nobleman in residence for a period of time, but not following any particular course of study. John graduated from Pembroke in 1620 with a Bachelor of Arts degree.5
Although John Gorsuch was admitted to his father's guild in 1622, he elected to continue his studies rather than to follow in his father's footsteps. In 1624 John received his Master of Arts degree at Pembroke and entered the Church. At Cambridge John was probably greatly influenced by King Charles I's desire to bring religious practices under control, to conduct services strictly according to the Book of Common Prayer with the use of plate, vestments and organ music.6
About this time, Daniel invested in real estate in Walkern, a Hertfordshire village between London and Cambridge, almost five miles northeast of Stevenge, England. One of the properties Daniel acquired at Walkern was St. Mary's, the local parish church that dates from the Saxon era of 950-1,000 A.D. In this time of change during the early 1600s, it was fairly common for wealthy individuals and corporations to invest in a church and the income thus derived from local tithing. Because the old parsonage was some distance from St. Mary's, Daniel built a new one that stands today in much the same configuration. The three floor structure was one of the first all brick houses built in England. Daniel knew the rector would take good care of the facility!7
During the 1630s and after John was appointed rector at St. Mary's, Daniel repaired and improved the church, building a burial monument for himself and his wife into the south wall of the chancel and adding a communion table behind the rails under a new east window.
Daniel was buried here on October 8, 1638. Hanging near the monument is the Gorsuch Coat of Arms that originally belonged to Daniel's uncle, Robert Hillson. Letter patents granted in 1577 allow the Hillson arms to be used by Gorsuch descendants.8
In a will dated October 6, 1638, Daniel left property in London to his wife and son. A sum of 500 pounds was left to his daughter Katherine, and his grandchildren were left property in Weston, a village less than a mile from Walkern. Friends and relatives, including cousin Edward Gorsuch of Lancashire, were left legacies of various kind.9
Daniel's wife Alice was still living at Weston in 1647.10 Alice died at Weston Parish, Hertfordshire, in January 1663.11 Her will proved at Prerogative Court of Canterbury on February 3, 1663, leaves sums of money to her grandchildren. Her property was left to grandson Daniel Gorsuch, who also was named executor.12
Their son John's marriage to Anne Lovelace about 1628 probably took place at St. Margaret's, near Anne's home at Bethersdon, Kent.13 Anne came from an old, distinguished family that has been traced through numerous generations. Lovelace ancestors reportedly include King Edward I of England and his opponent Robert the Bruce.

Footnotes on Daniel Gorsuch and Alice Hall Family
1.Michael Overman, "A Gorsuch Pedigree" (Walkern, Hertfordshire, England, 1982); S. Esme Overman, "Gorsuch - Parish Priest" (1982)2.Filing Case A at the Maryland Historical Society in Baltimore includes "The Gorsuch Notebook" by Robert Barnes. Barnes cites The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 28, p. 186
3.Ibid.
4.S. Esme Overman
5.Ibid.
6.Ibid.
7.Ibid.
8.Ibid.; Michael Overman
9.S. Esme Overman
10.S. Esme Overman11.Charles E. Moylan Jr., Maryland Genealogical Society Bulletin, Summer 1997, Volume 38, Number 3, p. 33212.J. Hall Pleasants, "The Gorsuch and Lovelace Families," The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume XXIV (Richmond, Virginia, 1916), p. 85
13.S. Esme Overman
• 
Gorsuch, Daniel (I57)
 
5302 == Biography ==Dirk was born in 1701. He married Alitje De Neuss in 1726. Dirk passed away in 1756.<ref>{{FindAGrave | 74893017}}
</ref>
[https://www.geni.com/people/Dirck-Keyser/6000000004045549188 Dirck Keyser on Geni.com]<br/>'''DISCLAIMER:''' Please note that this is NOT A SOURCE and that it is up to you as the researcher to independently verify information found on any trees on FamilySearch or Geni.com.
== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Dirck (I429)
 
5303 == Biography ==Ebenezer Dickens Dodge was born October 21, 1687 in New Shoreham, Newport, Rhode Island Colony. Son of [[Dodge-493|Tristram Dodge]] and [[Dickens-426|Dorcas Dickens]]. <ref> Entered by Norman Dodge, Tuesday, September 2, 2014. Replace this citation if there is another source.</ref>

== Sources ==
<references />

See Also:*Theron Royal Woodward, Dodge Genealogy Descendants of Tristram Dodge, Lanward Publishing County, in Chicago 1904, T. R. W. Pg. 8 & 13.
* "James Bailey and Norman Dodge, Dodge Family of New Shoreham, Rhode Island; A Genealogy of the Descendants of Tristram Dodge, (Dodge Family Association), Pg. 11.
<!-- Please edit, add, or delete anything in this text, including this note. Be bold and experiment! If you make a mistake you can always see the previous version of the text on the Changes page. --> 
Dodge, Ebenezer Dickens (I327)
 
5304 == Biography ==Edward Clarke (aka Clerk) was born in 1590 in Marsh Gibbon, Buckinghamshire, England. His parents names are not known at this time.
On 27 Jun 1619 in St John's Anglican Church, Hackney, Middlesex, England, Edward Clarke married Joane Austen, b: 1597 in Kensington, London, England.<ref> "England Marriages, 1538–1973 ," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NJPC-BZL : 10 February 2018), Edward Clarke and Joane Austen, 27 Jun 1619; citing Saint John,Hackney,London,England, reference , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 569,925. </ref>

The couple lived in Buckinghamshire and had at least a daughter:# Mary Jane Clarke (aka Clerk), b: 1620 in Marsh Gibbon, Buckinghamshire, England. <ref> "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N5NR-TBW : 11 February 2018, Mary Clerk, 27 Sep 1620); citing , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 919,239. </ref> She married John Paxson in 1740 in Buckinghamshire.
Joan (Austen) Clarke is said to have died around the same time as her husband, about 1628 in England. No Find A Grave Memorial has been found for either of them. Several of their Paxson grandchildren became members of the Society of Friends, Quakers, and emigrated to Pennsylvania in the 1680s, helping found the Paxson family in America.

== Sources ==
* Source: <span id='S-718285723'>S-718285723</span> Repository: [[#R-1149313785]] Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Page: Ancestry Family Tree Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=59047772&pid=716 * Repository: <span id='R-1149313785'>R-1149313785</span> Name: Ancestry.com

<references />

=== Acknowledgments ===
Thank you to [[Thomas-10063 | Michael Thomas]] for creating WikiTree profile Clarke-3459 through the import of Thomas family tree.ged on Aug 27, 2013. Click to the Changes page for the details of edits by Michael and others.

<!-- Please edit, add, or delete anything in this text. Thank you! --> 
Clarke, Edward (I755)
 
5305 == Biography ==Edward was born in Apr. 1830. He is the son of [[Dodge-2694|Thomas Dodge]] and [[Lnu-658|Charlotte Lnu]].<ref>Entered by [[Dodge-1352 |Norman Dodge]], Wednesday, 26 July 2017 . ''Replace this citation if there is another source.''</ref>

== Sources ==
<references />* 60. “Dodge Family of New Shoreham, Rhode Island; A Genealogy of the Descendents of Tristram Dodge,” Book, James Bailey and Norman Dodge, Dodge Family Association, Lakewood, CO, 2008, 1, including errata, [ISBN 0-9753026-5-5], Both volumes are on one CD titled “Tristram 2008” in two pdf files, Dodge Family of New Shoreham Rhode Island DFA 2008 vol1 S60.pdf. Pg. 193. 
Dodge, Edward H (I303)
 
5306 == Biography ==Elisabetha was born in 1806. She was the daughter of [[Mugele-5|Georg Mugele]] and [[Layh-6|Elisabetha Layh]]. She passed away after 1806.
== Sources ==
<references />* "Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558-1898," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V4TM-33Y : 11 February 2018), Georg Adam Mugele in entry for Elisabetha Dorothea Mugele, ; citing ; FHL microfilm 1,346,070. 
Mugele, Elisabetha Dorothea (I820)
 
5307 == Biography ==Eliza was born in 1820. She is the daughter of [[Keyser-291|William Keyser]] and [[Workman-1024|Margaret Workman]].
<ref>
Unsourced family tree handed down to [[Magyar-2|Skip Magyar]].
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Eliza (I1697)
 
5308 == Biography ==Ellen's baptism on April 27, 1641 appears in the register of St. Mary's Church in Marsh Gibbon<ref>Grundy, MJP. ''Paxson/Paxton Family in England (1640-1682)''. online [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~paxson/PaxsonEng.html rootsweb] (3/3/2015)</ref>.
''This profile is a collaborative work-in-progress. Can you contribute information or sources?'' <!-- This comment, and everything else, can be edited or removed. -->
== Sources ==

<references />
* import of kerr2012.ged on Nov 4, 2012 by [[Kerr-1233 | Bob Kerr]]
See also:

* ''Add [[sources]] here.''

== Acknowledgments ==Thank you [[Powell-5629 |Andrea Powell]] for contributing to this profile.
Author: Andrea Powell 
Paxson, Ellen (I744)
 
5309 == Biography ==Eva was born in 1800. She was the daughter of [[Mugele-5|Georg Mugele]] and [[Layh-6|Elisabetha Layh]]. She passed away after 1800.
== Sources ==
<references />* "Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558-1898," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V4R1-RH8 : 11 February 2018), Georg Adam Mugele in entry for Eva Maria Mugele, ; citing ; FHL microfilm 1,346,070. 
Mugele, Eva Maria (I819)
 
5310 == Biography ==Freelove Dodge was born on March 17, 1741 in Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York. Colony.


== Sources ==
<references />* Dodge Genealogy Descendants of Tristram Dodge. By Theron Royal Woodward.
* "Dodge Family of New Shoreham Rhode Island, A geanology of the Dscendants of Tristram Dodge by James Bailey and Norman Dodge" 
Dodge, Freelove (I319)
 
5311 == Biography ==Georg was born in 1812. He was the son of [[Mugele-5|Georg Mugele]] and [[Layh-6|Elisabetha Layh]]. He passed away after 1844.
== Sources ==
<references />* "Deutschland Heiraten, 1558-1929," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J4NS-92K : 11 February 2018), Georg Adam Mugele in entry for Georg Matthaeus Mugele and Rosina Magdalena Steinbach, 30 May 1843; citing Bizfeld; FHL microfilm 1,346,071. 
Mugele, Georg Matthaeus (I822)
 
5312 == Biography ==George Whetenhall was the son of William Whetenhall of East Peckham, Kent, and sheriff of the county under Henry VIII (Hasted, I, p. xc). He married Alice, daughter of Thomas Berkley of Hampshire, whose wife Elizabeth Neville was the daughter of Lord Abergavenny.

== Sources ==
<references />* The Marian Exiles: A Study in the Origins of Elizabethan Puritanism, by Christina Hallowell Garrett, publ. 2010 - https://books.google.com/books?id=mNZxec42AhEC&pg=PA324&lpg=PA324&dq=george+whetenhall+east+peckham+kent&source=bl&ots=62fGD2Ebkt&sig=ACfU3U1qpncEsN1VfbG_EoRPC4s1yNBJew&hl=en&ppis=_e&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjU-5zQt9jmAhVWV80KHbr6B6EQ6AEwCXoECAoQAQ#v=onepage&q=george%20whetenhall%20east%20peckham%20kent&f=false* The Early Works of Thomas Becon: ...being the Treatises Published by Him in the Reign of King Henry VIII, by Thomas Becon, publ. 1843 - https://books.google.com/books?id=QTUJAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA191&lpg=PA191&dq=mary+whetenhall+scott&source=bl&ots=jraK8kBVPH&sig=ACfU3U1YvCPJNEfij3ve9RE7EcVy8JaxHQ&hl=en&ppis=_e&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiz0IXOwtjmAhUHCM0KHRkaAogQ6AEwBnoECAoQAQ#v=onepage&q=mary%20whetenhall%20scott&f=false
Author: Anonymous Bethune
Author: RJ Horace 
Whetenell, George (I194)
 
5313 == Biography ==He left a will proved 27 Nov 1539, requesting burial in Our Lady chapel in the church of East Peckham, Kent.

== Sources ==* Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, 2nd edition, 3 vols. (Salt Lake City: Douglas Richardson, 2011), 1:602* <span id='Berry'></span>Berry, William. ''[[Space:County Genealogies. Pedigrees of the Families in the County of Sussex|County Genealogies. Pedigrees of the Families in the County of Sussex]]'' (Sherwood, Gilbert and Piper, London, 1830) [https://books.google.com/books?id=OeFEAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA165 Page 165]
Author: Susan Gore 
Whetenell, William (I192)
 
5314 == Biography ==He was the son of [[Wilsford-4|Thomas Wilsford]] and [[Culpepper-45|Elizabeth Culpepper]]. His first wife was Alice Simpson<ref>Philipot, John and Camden, William. ''The Visitation of Kent: Take in the Years 1619-1621''. [https://books.google.com/books?id=Xq1zM7rt9LkC&pg=PA53&lpg=PA53&dq=nethersole+wilsford&source=bl&ots=M2tPOt3G8E&sig=7Zz_0hWASiFfvzgbZybH54_HJfo&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjbsIiLkt_eAhVGneAKHcCzBkIQ6AEwDXoECAEQAQ#v=onepage&q=nethersole%20wilsford&f=false] The Visitation shows that he had a daughter named Peregrina who married John Nethersole; Francis's will, cited by Leslie Mahler in his TAG article, speaks of daughter Mrs. Nethersole</ref>. Francis Wilsford's second wife was Cecily (by her second marriage, Cecily was the mother of Elizabeth Besbeech and grandmother of Rev. Ralph Partridge's wife, Patience Bathurst)<ref>Leslie Mahler. "The English Ancestry of Patience (Bathurst) Partridge, Wife of Rev Ralph Partridge of Duxbury, Massachusetts." ''The American Genealogist'', Vol 86, No 2, Jul-Oct 2012 (published Dec 2013)</ref>. He passed away in 1597.
He wrote his will on 24 Jul 1594 in Nonington, with a codicil dated 28 Apr 1595, which was proved on 22 May 1598 by Francis Wylsford, executor [and son] <ref>Ref. PRC/32/38/156. Index of Canterbury Probate Records 1396-1858 https://wills.canterbury-cathedral.org/</ref>. Similarly an Inventory Ref. PRC/28/3/119 was made in 1598.<br>His will mentions: his wish to be buried beside his first wife in the chancell of Nonington church; his brother Sir Thomas Wilsford and wife and son Edward his cousin [=nephew]; his own wife [unnamed]; his son Field [also spelt Fylde]; son John, James, Henry [daughter Philip(?)], Francis; his son [in law] John Nethersole, who married his daughter [Peregrina]; his niece Rebecca Packnam; his sister [unnamed] Sandes; his friend Mr Wylliam Gibbs; Mr Wynter minister of Goodnestone; his father Sir Thomas Wyllsforde. The codicil mainly concerns the bond for the covenants for the apprenticeship of his son John Wylsforde and was made on 28 Apr 1595 in the presence of Anthonye Fielde and John Nethersole.<br> See e.g. <ref> https://search.ancestry.co.uk/cgi-bin/sse.dll?_phsrc=zXm9262&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true&indiv=1&dbid=1900&gsfn=francis&gsln=willford&gsln_x=NP_NN_NS&cp=11&msydy=1597&msypn__ftp=kent,%20england,%20united%20kingdom&msypn=5270&new=1&rank=1&uidh=6ih&redir=false&gss=angs-d&pcat=36&fh=0&h=15822&recoff=&ml_rpos=1&queryId=67caa5dec246f63ae9286602da7a8205</ref>

== Sources ==
<references />* "England Marriages, 1538–1973 ," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NNC2-WYF : 10 February 2018), Franncys Wilson and Cysbye Bosbeech, 11 Nov 1591; citing Chillenden, Kent, England, reference 1591/92, index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 1,751,813.* "The Old Parish of Nonington: a Small Place in East Kent History." [http://www.nonington.org.uk/st-marys-church/st-marys-church-nonington-the-1938-guide-and-more/] (Alice (Simpson) Wilsford's brass names her parents, husband, and death date (June 30, 1581).
* http://laddfamily.com/Files/Ladds%20in%20England/John%20Ladd.htm
* https://wills.canterbury-cathedral.org/* IHGS; The Tyler Collection; Notebook: SW Coltham; Notebook Number: 98 <ref>Ancestry.com. Kent, England, Tyler Index to Wills, 1460-1882 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. This collection was indexed by Ancestry World Archives Project contributors.</ref> 
Wilsford, Francis (I183)
 
5315 == Biography ==He was the youngest child. One source shows his wife as Elizabeth Enoch (she was the daughter of Stoffel Vansand and widow of John Enoch). <ref> http://www.ourfamilyhistories.com/hsdurbin/dur/souplis1.html </ref>

== Children ==His children with Elizabeth are known from a petition of 1774: "21 Dec 1774 - A petition from John Enouch, Jacob Supplee and Josiah Supplee, sons of Elizabeth Supplee, deceased, who was one of the daughters of Stoffel Vansand, deceased, John Moore and Jane his wife, a daughter of the said Elizabeth, Moses Yocum and Ann his wife, another of the daughters of the said Elizabeth, Jacob Wickerline and Charity his wife, also a daughter of the said Elizabeth, and John Jones and Catherine his wife, also a daughter of the said Elizabeth, was presented to the House and read, setting forth, that on the 4th day of June 1749, the said Stoffel Vansand made his last will and testament, and, among other things, thereby devised . . . viz. the Petitioners are hitherto deprived of the legacies bequeathed to them…”<ref> Pennsylvania Archives, Votes of Assembly, Series 8, Vol. VIII, pp. 7174-7175 </ref>

* Jacob
* Josiah
* Jane, m John Moore
* Ann, m Moses Yocum
* Charity, m Jacob Wickerline (aka Wager)
* Catherine, m John Jones

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Souplis, Jacob (I460)
 
5316 == Biography ==in 1650, Francis seems to have gone to Virginia for two years, probably to accompany and aid his sister, Anne Gorsuch. After December 1652 he was an exile on the Continent with Charles II and his retinue; but in 1658 he was back in England aiding the Royalist cause.
On August 5, 1659, he was arrested and imprisoned in the Tower of London, but he was freed upon the Commonwealth's collapse. He is mentioned by Pepys in his Diary, as being in London on Dec. 16, 1662 and perhaps was then employed in the Admiralty. On May 14, 1667, he is referred to as "appointed Governor of New York," in an English warrant to the Ordinance (Calendar of State papers, Colonial Series, America and West Indies 1661-1668, no 1480, p 466) and the earliest reference to his appointment appears in a newsletter as of April 13, 1667. While waiting to go to America he was, on June 13, 1667, commissioned as Lieutenant-colonel in a regiment raised by Col. Sir Walter Vane, with the Duke of York's approval. The evidences all point to his selection as governor as a reward for his royalist services and because he had been before in English-America
The Treaty of Breda was proclaimed in New York in 1668, Lovelace arrived in March and for several months was familiarized by Gov. Richard Nicolls with the administration. Lovelace had been instructed to continue unabated the policies of government that were in operation. About the middle of August 1668, he assumed full control. It was a time of epidemic diseases and deaths were numerous. he took hold of the situation with concern, he instituted regular Sessions of his executive council on Sept. 2, 1668 and its minutes to July 11, 1673, were the first regular English council minutes recorded in New York's. Since their publication in 1910 it can no longer be justly charged that Lovelace was arbitrary or incompetent. he was a conscientious man, and in tolerance was the equal of his predecessor, from whom he had inherited unfulfilled promises, unsettled problems, and precedents in administration which the Duke of York's required to be continued.
This made him cautious rather than phlegmatic in what he undertook. yet, in his five years in office, he transacted much business by himself, with his councilors, in the high court of assizes, or by commissions appointed by him and under his control. he not only watched over his vast territory, but entered into every phase of its needs and difficulties. His administration was harassed, internally and externally, by Indian troubles, boundary disputes, an insurrection in the Delaware country, a rebellion in New Jersey, and the incompatibilities of a mixed population of Dutch, English, Swedish, and other nationalities. he interested himself in better ferriage, roads and transportation by land and water; and the regulation of trade and extension of commerce. He instituted the first merchants' exchange and the first haven master of the port. he promoted shipbuilding and himself owned a fine ship, The Good Fame of New York. He extended settlements and laid out new villages and townships, and by purchase for the Duke freed Staten island from Indian control. he was tolerant toward religious sects, even to Quakers. he was Interested in Indian missions and though unsuccessful, made the first attempt to introduce the art of printing into the middle British colonies. he furthered the strengthening of fortifications and the raising of foot companies and troops of horse, keeping them in training. The drift whale, as well as sport fisheries, engaged his attention.
His intercolonial activities, especially with New England, are outstanding, for he institutes the first continuous post road between New York's and Boston, under a postmaster. It was while on a visit to Connecticut to promote this laudable object, that his vigilance lapsed, and he lost New York to a Dutch naval squadron, July 30-Aug.9, 1673. Had he been at his fort and used all the meager resources he had, the capitation could not have been prevented. The defenses of New York were not capable of withstanding an attack of a Dutch naval expedition, already encouraged by former triumphs. By the loss of New York's Lovelace was impoverished and degraded. All his property was stripped from him, first by the Dutch, then by his countrymen, some for debts to the Duke of York's, others for unpaid property or mortgages, or other private debts in New York. Litigation over these debts continued many years.
While traveling in the Mediterranean, in 1674, he was captured by Turks, taken to Algiers, and there stripped of his jewels and several hundred pounds. on being ransomed he returned to England, where he was pursued by the vindictiveness of the Duke of York, who claimed a debt of seven thousand pounds and was irritated by the loss of his is proprietary province. in January 1675, he was imprisoned in the Tower, but he was released in April on security, on account of being "dangerously ill of a dropsy". Meanwhile he had been under examination, for the loss of New York's, by a committee appointed by the King. his last months were spent in retirement at Woodstock, near Oxford, where he probably died in the latter part of 1675, as letters of administration were issued to his brother Dudley on December 22 of that year. This administration was still unsettled in 1686, when Dudley died.
In 1652, Francis Lovelace was in VA said to have been entrusted by Gov. Berkley of VA to carry news to King Charles II of the surrender of the colony to the representatives of Parliament with the latter's consent.Appointed Deputy Governor of Long Island and in 1668 became Governor of New York 1668-1673, until the city was captured by the Dutch July 30, 1673.
Lovelace's immediate forebears were Royalists supporting the Stuarts. He himself served as a Colonel for forces loyal to Charles I during the English War and was active in Wales, where he was governor of Carmarthen Castle until it capitulated to parliamentary forces in 1645.There is a letter from Gov. Francis Lovelace of NY to Gov Berkley of VA dated Dec. 6, 1669, which refers to appointment of Thomas Todd of Mobjack Bay guardian to the will Whitbey's son by his niece Mr. Kath Gorsuch.

He was a soldier in the King's army in Scotland. (Louis XIV)
Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography, Vol I - IV
Burgesses and Other Prominent Persons


Name: Colonel Francis Lovelacewas son of Sir William Lovelace, and brother of Richard Lovelace, the poet, served Charles I in Wales and commanded Caermathen from 1644 until it was captured by Langhorne in October, 1645. His estate was sequestered by the parliamentarians and in 1650 he came to Virginia. At the surrender of Virginia to the parliamentary commissioners in 1652, he was allowed to repair to Charles II, with the news. After the restoration he was made governor of New York from 1667 to 1673. His sister Anne married Rev. John Gorsuch, of England and Virginia.

=== Origin ===Francis Lovelace was born c. 1621 at Shoulden, Kent, England.<ref>''The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record.'' (Page 175) New York, NY: New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, 1870-. (Online database accessed February 1, 2015: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2011.)</ref> He was the third son of [[Lovelace-9|Sir William Lovelace]], of Bethersden and Woolwich, Kent, and [[Barne-2|Anne Barne]]. Richard Lovelace, the poet, was his older brother.
His family was NOT closely related to the barony Lovelace of Hurley. However, Francis is sometimes confused with [[Lovelace-739|Francis Lovelace]], son of Richard Lovelace, 1st Baron Lovelace. Also, the profiled Francis Lovelace, 2nd governor of New York, was succeeded by John Lovelace, 4th Baron Lovelace of Hurley, as the 3rd proprietary governor of New York Colony.


=== Family ===
Francis married Blanche Talbot.

=== English Civil War ===Francis served as a Colonel in the Royalist army for King Charles I during the English Civil War.

=== Governor of New York ===Francis was appointed by the Duke of York as the second proprietary governor of the colony of New York.<ref name="Wik">Wikipedia contributors, [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Lovelace Francis Lovelace] Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, accessed February 1, 2015</ref>

=== Returned to England ===After the colony was briefly reclaimed by the Dutch in 1673, Francis was recalled to England in disgrace. His properties in the colony and in England were confiscated, and in January 1675, Francis was confined to the Tower of London. He was held under questioning until April 1675, when he was finally released, apparently due to poor health.

== Death and Legacy ==Francis died before 22 December 1675 at Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England, dishonored and destitute.

== Sources ==
<references />* Richardson, Douglas: ''Magna Carta Ancestry'', 2nd edn. (2011), 4 vols, [https://books.google.com/books?id=8JcbV309c5UC&pg=RA2-PA53 Volume 3, page 53], LOVELACE 16iii. Also ''Royal Ancestry'' (2013) 3:634.
* [https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Lovelace,_Francis_(DNB00) DNB] - confused, in spite of its own warning. Most of this article applies to the Governor. But he was not the son of the 1st Baron or the grandfather of the 4th Baron (also Governor of New York).
* [https://archive.org/stream/englisharmylists01dalt#page/n31/ English army lists and commission registers, 1661-1714 Page 1]

*The Parlett-Hern Family Home Page:Information about Francis Lovelace
* Ancestry.com, OneWorldTree The Generations Network, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA*ancestry.com http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=65838841&pid=1049


----

==Research notes==
[[Brown-13495|Brown-13495]] 10:26, 4 July 2018 (UTC) No baptism, marriage or death found on FreeReg, FindMyPast or FamilySearch.
Author: Cynthia B 
Lovelace, Francis (I72)
 
5317 == Biography ==Israel Dodge, son of Tristram Dodge was born about 1646. <ref name="TRWDodge">Theron Royal Woodward. ''Dodge Genealogy Descendants of Tristram Dodge''. Chicago, Illinois: Lanward Publishing Co., 1904. [http://archive.org/stream/cu31924029840448#page/n11/mode/2up Woodward -Dodge]</ref> He married Hannah Weeks.<ref name="TRWDodge"/>


Israel Dodge was the second son of Tristram Dodge. After the arrival of Tristram Dodge Sr from the north of England near the River Tweed to Block Island, Rhode Island, in 1661, his four sons (including Israel) followed him in 1667. These sons were named as "Freemen" in July, 1670. The first settlers to Block Island were Baptist.
Israel died soon after 1729, being over eighty years of age.<ref>J Roy Dodge, A History and Genealogy of the Dodge Family, (Dodge, LaFayette, NY (1971), p 11</ref>
Oct. 1, 1720, Israel Dodge of New London, late of Block Island, sold land located in Block Island, formerly belonging to his father, Tristram, to his brothers John, Tristram and William of Block Island. He was on a farm in North Parish (Montville) New London, Connecticut, in 1694. In 1705, the Queen's Court reported him settled there on Indian Fields. As the New London records were burned by Benedict Arnold on September 6, 1781, it is difficult to give dates concerning the family of Israel. He appears to have disposed of all of his real estate before his death. In 1707, he bought land in Montville of Samuel Rogers. In 1719, he and wife Hannah gave his son John a part of this land.<ref>Theron Royal Woodward, Member New England Historic Genealogical Society, Old Colony Historical Society, Dodge Genealogy Descendants of Tristram Dodge, (Lanward Pub Co, Chicago, IL (1904), p 7</ref>

Family links:
Parents:
* Tristram Dodge (1607 - 1683); Ann Unknown
* Spouse: Hannah (Weeks) Dodge*
* Children: Israel Dodge (1646 - 1729)

* John Dodge (1689 - 1776)* Son of Israell (1646 - 1729)
* Mary Dodge Fox (1700 - 1742)* who is this?

*Calculated relationship
Burial: Unknown. Created by: N Todd. Find A Grave Memorial# 33424595<ref>[https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=33424595 Find A Grave]</ref>

== Sources ==
<references />* Book: Book Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island Comprising of Three Generations of Settlers Who Came before 1690, by John Osborne Austin, Originally Printed 1887, Copied 1967, p. 66 Tristam Dodge, These are the only Children of Tristam Dodge, Sr. listed in this book.
* 1. John Dodge, Sr. I (1644-1733), m. Mary Enos (Innes)
* 2. Tristram Dodge, Jr. II (1646-1733), m. Dorcus Dickens
* 3. Israel Dodge, (1648 - ?), m. Hannah Weeks
* 4. William Dodge, Sr. (1650-1731), m. Sarah George
* 5. Ann Dodge, (1660-1723), m. Hon. John Rathbone, Jr. II
* These are the only children listed as Tristram Dodge, Sr. I's.
* See uploaded page
* James Bailey and Norman Dodge, Dodge Family of New Shoreham Rhode Island. A Genealogy of the Descendants of Tristram Dodge. 2008, Pg. 9 ,10 & 11.

=== Acknowledgments ===* Thank you to [[Wahl-370 | Mary Wahl]] for creating WikiTree profile Dodge-1150 through the import of wahl20130526.ged on May 26, 2013
* Thank you to [[Smith-40964 | Phil Smith]] for creating WikiTree profile Dodge-1034 through the import of wiki30april2013.ged on Apr 30, 2013.

<!-- Please edit, add, or delete anything in this text. Thank you! -->

---- 
Dodge, Israel (I332)
 
5318 == Biography ==Jacob Souplis Keyser was born July 13, 1707, in Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a son of Pieter Dirck Keyser and Margaret (Souplis) Keyser. <ref> ''The Keyser family : descendants of Dirck Keyser of Amsterdam, '' by Charles Shearer Keyser, William F. Fell & Company, Publishers, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1889, page 122 digitized here: https://archive.org/details/keyserfamilydesc00keys/page/122 </ref> On September 26, 1730, in Philadelphia, Philadelphia county, Pennsylvania, Jacob Keiser married Margaret Conrade. <ref> "Pennsylvania, Church Marriages, 1682-1976," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q2WF-R418 : accessed 19 January 2019), Jacob Keiser and Margaret Conrade, 26 Sep 1730; citing Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, various churches and archives, Pennsylvania; FHL microfilm 823,996 </ref> Children of Jacob and Margaret are:
*Jacob Keyser, died 1781, married Hannah Miller, a daughter of Wichard Miller

*Benjamin Keyser, born 1746, died August 11,1808, married Ann Nice

*Joseph Keyser, died September 16, 1793, unmarried
*John Keyser, born circa 1732, died February 14, 1817, married Rebecca Nedrow (DAR Ancestor #A065466)

== Researcher's Notes ==The descendants of Jacob Souplis Keyser begins on this page: https://archive.org/details/keyserfamilydesc00keys/page/144

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Jacob Souplis (I431)
 
5319 == Biography ==Jacob was the son of [[Keyser-63|Andreas Keyser]] and [[Lucken-4|Hannah Lucken]]. He married Elizabeth ''unknown'' and they had no living children in 1786. Jacob passed away in 1786.<ref>[https://archive.org/details/keyserfamilydesc00keys/page/142 ''The Keyser family : descendants of Dirck Keyser of Amsterdam''] by Charles Shearer Keyser, William F. Fell & Company, Publishers, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1889.</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Jacob (I426)
 
5320 == Biography ==James was born in 1759. He was the son of [[Heaton-638|John Heaton]] and [[Paxson-175|Abigail Paxson]]. He passed away in 1824.
== Sources ==
<references />* https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=23657327&ref=acom
"New Jersey Deaths and Burials, 1720–1971." Index. FamilySearch, Salt Lake City, Utah, 2009, 2010. Index entries derived from digital copies of original and compiled records. 
Heaton, James (I677)
 
5321 == Biography ==Jane was born about 1806. She is the daughter of [[Keyser-291|William Keyser]] and [[Workman-1024|Margaret Workman]].
<ref>
Unsourced family tree handed down to [[Magyar-2|Skip Magyar]].
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Jane (I396)
 
5322 == Biography ==Jane was born in 1797. She was the daughter of [[Keyser-20|Andrew Keyser]] and [[Palmer-212|Mary Palmer]]. She passed away in 1876.
<ref>
Unsourced family tree handed down to [[Magyar-2|Skip Magyar]].
</ref>

{{Image|file=Palmer-212-3.jpg|caption=Mennonite Card of the Andrew and Mary Palmer Keyser Family; page 2 (backside of card)
}}
'''1st Marriage''' to George Oscar Blare, son of James Blare and Elizabeth Wilson Blare. First husband of Jane Keyser Blare Thompson. Surname also found spelled "Blair". George died 27 Feb 1844 and is buried at Mitchell Cemetery in Warren IN. <ref>https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/24536675/george-o.-blare</ref>
'''2nd Marriage''' to Ezra C. Thompson who was born in 1798 and only lived to age 58, passing away on March 1, 1857 in IN.
'''1870 United States Federal Census''' for Jane Thompson, age 75; born in Pennsylvania and now living in Salamonie, Huntington, IN. She can read and write. She lives alone.
'''Burial of 2nd husband Ezra C. Thompson''' who was born in 1798 and died March 10, 1857 at about age 58. He died in Huntington County, IN and is buried there at Mitchell Cemetery in Warren IN.<ref>MEMORIAL ID 25291452</ref>
'''Burial''' Jane was born 2 Aug 1797 in PA and died 18 Sept 1875 in Huntington County IN. She is buried at Mitchell Cemetery in Warren, IN. Her spouse was George O. Blare. Other family listed at Lot Blare, Permelia Thompson and Joseph Blare, and Thomas Blare.<ref>https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/25291528</ref>{{Image|file=Keyser-888.jpg
|caption=Jane Keyser Blair Thompson
}}


== Sources ==

Ancestry Family Trees

Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Mennonite Vital Records, 1750-2014

U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1700s-Current

1870 United States Federal Census


<references /> 
Keyser, Jane (I415)
 
5323 == Biography ==Jane's baptism on March 14, 1652/3 is recorded in the register of St. Mary's Church in Marsh Gibbon.<ref>Grundy, MJP. ''Paxson/Paxton Family in England (1640-1682)''. online [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~paxson/PaxsonEng.html rootsweb] (3/3/2015)</ref>.
''This profile is a collaborative work-in-progress. Can you contribute information or sources?''

== Sources ==
<references />

See also:

* ''Add [[sources]] here.''


== Acknowledgments ==Thank you [[Powell-5629 |Andrea Powell]] for contributing to this profile.
* [[Bradley-3871 | John Bradley]], Thursday, July 10, 2014
* import of kerr2012.ged on Nov 4, 2012 by [[Kerr-1233 | Bob Kerr]]
Author: Andrea Powell 
Paxson, Jane (I749)
 
5324 == Biography ==Jesse was born Jan 16, 1788 in Washington County, PA.. He was the son of [[Keyser-20|Andrew Keyser]] and [[Palmer-212|Mary Palmer]]. He passed away June 15th 1825 in Belmont County, OH.<ref>{{FindAGrave | 89460495}}</ref><ref>Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Mennonite Vital Records, 1750-2014</ref>

{{Image|file=Palmer-212-3.jpg|caption=Mennonite Card of the Andrew and Mary Palmer Keyser Family; page 2 (backside of card)
}}
'''Marriage''' Jesse married Nancy Dunfee on 4 Dec 1807. <ref>Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current</ref><ref>Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Mennonite Vital Records, 1750-2014</ref>{{Image|file=Keyser-886.jpg|caption=Marriage Record of Jesse and Nancy Dunfee Keyser from Ancestry.com
}}

'''Family and Children'''
Father - Andrew Keyser (1759-1835)
Mother - Mary Palmer (1760-1844)
Spouse - Nancy Dunfee (1789-1878)
Children:
:Isaac Keyser (1800-)
:John A. Keyser (1810-1888)
:Roseanna Keyser (1812-)
:Oliver Keyser (1813-1881)
:Andrew Keyser (1815-1895)
:Isaac Keyser (1818-1898)
:Ophelia Keyser (1818-)
:Rosannah Keyser (1820-)
:Mary Loraine Keyser (1822-1889) (Mrs. Riley)
:Jesse Jackson Keyser (1825-1904)
'''Death'''14 Jun 1825 in Mead, OH.<ref>Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Mennonite Vital Records, 1750-2014</ref>Probate Records filed in OH. <ref>Ohio, Wills and Probate Records, 1786-1998 for Jesse Keyser</ref><br/>'''Burial:''' Both Jesse and Nancy are buried at Keyser Cemetery Belmont, Belmont County, Ohio<ref>Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current</ref>
==Sources==
<references />
*Ohio, Wills and Probate Records, 1786-1998 for Jesse Keyser

*https://catorfamilies.com

*Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Mennonite Vital Records, 1750-2014

*Ohio, County Marriages, 1774-1993

*Ohio, Marriages, 1803-1900

*Ohio, Wills and Probate Records, 1786-1998

*U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1700s-Current 
Keyser, Jesse (I412)
 
5325 == Biography ==Joan (aka Joane) Austen was christened at St. Mary Abbots, Anglican Church, Kensington, London, England, on February 6, 1597, indicating she had been born just before that date. Her parents were John Austen (aka Austin) and Lucy (Unknown) Austen.<ref> "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JWDL-BV6 : 11 February 2018, Joan Austen, 06 Feb 1597); citing , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 845,231. </ref>
On 27 Jun 1619 in St John's Anglican Church, Hackney, Middlesex, England, Joan Austen married [[Clarke-3459 | Edward Clarke]], b: 1590 in Marsh Gibbon, Buckinghamshire, England.<ref> "England Marriages, 1538–1973 ," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NJPC-BZL : 10 February 2018), Edward Clarke and Joane Austen, 27 Jun 1619; citing Saint John,Hackney,London,England, reference , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 569,925. </ref>

The couple lived in Buckinghamshire and had at least a daughter:# Mary Jane Clarke (aka Clerk), b: 1620 in Marsh Gibbon, Buckinghamshire, England. <ref> "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N5NR-TBW : 11 February 2018, Mary Clerk, 27 Sep 1620); citing , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 919,239. </ref> She married John Paxson in 1740 in Buckinghamshire.
Joan (Austen) Clarke is said to have died around the same time as her husband, about 1628 in England. No Find A Grave Memorial has been found for either of them. Several of their Paxson grandchildren became members of the Society of Friends, Quakers, and emigrated to Pennsylvania in the 1680s, helping found the Paxson family in America.



== Sources ==
<references />

* "Family Tree," database, <i>FamilySearch</i> (http://familysearch.org : modified 13 May 2016, 23:20), entry for Joane Austen(PID https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/4:1:M9D6-248); contributed by various users.* Source: <span id='S-718285723'>S-718285723</span> Ancestry Family Trees: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=59047772&pid=715. Repository: <span id='R-1149313785'>R-1149313785</span> [[#R-1149313785]] Ancestry.com

== Acknowledgments ==
* Thank you to [[Thomas-10063 | Michael Thomas]] for creating WikiTree profile Joane-16 through the import of Thomas family tree.ged on Aug 27, 2013. Click to the Changes page for the details of edits by Michael and others. 
Austen, Joane (I756)
 
5326 == Biography ==Johann was born about 1760. He was the son of [[Mugele-7|Johann Mugele]] and [[Weidmann-50|Anna Weidmann]]. He passed away after 1761.
== Sources ==
<references />* "Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558-1898," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N5LN-VTB : 10 February 2018), Peter Mugele in entry for Johann Georg Mugele, 23 May 1760; citing ; FHL microfilm 1,340,181. 
Mugele, Johann Georg (I826)
 
5327 == Biography ==Johann was born in 1811. He was the son of [[Mugele-5|Georg Mugele]] and [[Layh-6|Elisabetha Layh]]. He passed away after 1844.
== Sources ==
<references />* "Deutschland Heiraten, 1558-1929," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J4NS-929 : 11 February 2018), Georg Adam Mugele in entry for Johann Peter Mugele and Eva Christina Kuhbach, 26 Feb 1843; citing ; FHL microfilm 1,346,071. 
Mugele, Johann Peter (I821)
 
5328 == Biography ==Johann was born in 1845. He was the son of [[Mugele-4|Georg Adam Mugele]] and [[Thor-11|Louise Christiane Thor]]. He passed away after 1845.

===Baptism===
Baptism Date: 20 Jul 1845

Baptism Place: Bitzfeld, Württemberg, Germany

== Sources ==
<references />* FHL Film Number:1346071, Germany, Births and Baptisms, 1558-1898. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013. 
Mugele, Johann Georg Adam (I813)
 
5329 == Biography ==Johannes Keyser was born July 25, 1721 in Germantown, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, the son of Pieter Dirck Keyser and Margaret Souplis. (Note: Johannes was the second child of this name, in this family. The child previously named Johannes was born June 25, 1709 and died September 23, 1711.<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/bicentennialreun00keys/bicentennialreun00keys_djvu.txt The Keyser family descendants of Dirck Keyser of Amsterdam"], page 122.</ref> Johannes Kayser ''[sic]'' married Barbara Funck ''[sic]'' on April 20, 1747, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.<ref>[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q2WF-RLMV Pennsylvania, Church Marriages, 1682-1976]</ref>

Children of Johannes and Barbara are:<br/>
*Johann Keyser married Margaret Allen
*Margaret Keyser
*Christian Keyser married Barbara Evans Conrad
*Henry Keyser
*Charles Keyser
*Barbara Keyser
*Michael Keyser married Catherine Hessin (DAR Ancestor A065483)
== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Johannes (I434)
 
5330 == Biography ==John was born after 1628 & was the son of [[Gorsuch-193|John Gorsuch]] & [[Lovelace-8|Anne Lovelace]]. <ref>Baptism - Name: John Gorsuch
Gender: Male
Christening Date: 18 May 1631
Christening Date (Original): 18 MAY 1631
Christening Place: SAINT BOTOLPH BISHOPSGATE,LONDON,LONDON,ENGLAND
Father's Name: John Gorsuch
Mother's Name: Ann

Indexing Project (Batch) Number: P00161-1
System Origin: England-ODM
GS Film number: 942.1 L1 V26BOT V1-3

Citing this Record"England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V5L5-4TB : 11 February 2018, Ann in entry for John Gorsuch, 18 May 1631); citing , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 942.1 L1 V26BOT V1-3.</ref>
John, born about 1630; was bequeath certain freeholds in Weston,England, by his grandfather, Daniel Gorsuch. <ref>Musser and allied families : a genealogical study with biographical notes [database on-line]. Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.Original data: Musser and allied families : a genealogical study with biographical notes. New York: The Company, 1941</ref> [https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/16315/dvm_GenMono002841-00062-1?pid=69&backurl=https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/89279162/person/342062887676/gallery&usePUB=true&_phsrc=bHc16988&usePUBJs=true#?imageId=dvm_GenMono002841-00063-1]


== Sources ==
<references />
Musser and allied families : a genealogical study with biographical notes [database on-line]. Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005. Original data: Musser and allied families : a genealogical study with biographical notes. New York: The Company, 1941[https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/16315/dvm_GenMono002841-00062-1?pid=69&backurl=https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/89279162/person/342062887676/gallery&usePUB=true&_phsrc=bHc16988&usePUBJs=true#?imageId=dvm_GenMono002841-00063-1]
Author: Kern Brogan 
Gorsuch, John (I49)
 
5331 == Biography ==Joseph Cole (the 2nd Joseph Cole who was a son of [[Cole-68|John Cole]]). The first was [[Cole-531|Joseph Cole]] (b. c. 1690, d 1720), son of [[Cole-68|John Cole]] and his first wife, Johannah Garrett.

=== Origin ===Joseph Cole born c. 1726, probably Baltimore County, Maryland, a son of [[Cole-68|John Cole]] and his second wife, [[Hawkins-4120|Dinah Hawkins]].<ref name="Tuttle">Tuttle, Ralph E., compiler, [http://www.jeffcochapter.com/FamilyHistories/Cole/COLE%20DOCUMENT.pdf ''Some Descendants of John Cole (Born 1669 in Maryland) ...''] Page 10 [self published], accessed January 21, 2015</ref>

=== Marriage ===
Joseph married about 1760 to Ruth Cross.<ref name="Tuttle"/>

=== Property: Cole Church ===When he wrote his will in 1745, Joseph's father, John Cole, left him the "land where he now lives" called Cole Church which was 208 acres.<ref name="Tuttle"/><ref>Will Book 3, page 495, Annapolis, Maryland</ref>

=== Death and Legacy ===The Joseph Cole who died in 1720 named a wife and two children.<ref name="Tuttle"/> He could not have been the son of Dinah Hawkins, because John Cole and Dinah Hawkins were married in 1715.<ref name="Tuttle"/> That Joseph Cole (the first son by that name) died before 3-13-1719/20 at Patapsco River, Baltimore Co., Maryland. <ref>Jane Baldwin, Maryland Calendar of Wills, 1720-1726, Vol 5, p34)</ref>
This Joseph Cole, of this profile, who married Ruth Cross, probably died in Baltimore County, Maryland. We know he was living in Baltimore County in 1745, and we know he was living in 1752 when he married. According to Ralph Tuttle, we do not have record of Joseph's death (Pg 11).<ref name="Tuttle"/> (despite the reported year, 1795, per ancestry "trees").

== Sources ==
<references />
Author: Seely Foley
Author: Karol Bumpous
Author: Seely Foley
Author: Karol Bumpous
Author: Cynthia B
Author: Cynthia B
Author: Seely Foley
Author: Seely Foley 
Cole, Joseph (I210)
 
5332 == Biography ==Joshua was born in 1812, the third son and fifth of twelve children born to William Keyser and Margaret "Peggy" Workman. He married Margaret Milligan in 1835 and they had thirteen children. Joshua passed away in 1866 and is buried at Patterson Hill Cemetery, Bellaire, Belmont County, Ohio.<ref>
{{ FindAGrave | 111067844}}
</ref>


Children:

Sarah Keyser Tarbet (1838 - 1863)

Ermina Keyser Galloway (1839 - 1914)

James M Keyser (1841 - 1897)

Margaret Julia Keyser (1843 - 1917)

Hannah Jane Keyser Wise (1844 - 1923)

William Wallace Keyser

Mary Keyser Galloway (1848 - 1919)

John Smiley Keyser (1850 - 1936)

Addison Keyser 1852

Ella Keyser (1854 - 1919)

Emma Keyser Nelson (1857 - 1936)

Elizabeth Keyser Giffin (1862 - 1948)

== Sources ==
<references />
Author: Anonymous Magyar 
Keyser, Joshua W (I399)
 
5333 == Biography ==Katherine Gorsuch AKA Katherin<ref name="VMHB24.1">J. H. P., [http://www.jstor.org/stable/4243492 "The Gorsuch and Lovelace Families"] ''The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography,'' Vol. 24, No. 1 (Jan., 1916), pp. 81-93, Virginia Historical Society, JSTOR.org accessed May 20, 2015</ref>

=== Origin ===Katherine was born in 1607 at Walkern, Hertfordshire, England. She was a daughter of [[Gorsuch-23|Daniel Gorsuch]] and [[Hall-347|Alice Hall]].<ref name="VMHB24.1"/>

=== Family ===Katherine married to Thomas Haynes of Auborne, Wiltshire, England.<ref name="VMHB24.1"/>

=== Death and Legacy ===
Katherine died in 1629 at Berkshire, England.{{Citation needed}}

== Sources ==

<references />
* [http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=65838841&pid=1323 Ancestry Family Trees] Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.
Author: Cynthia B 
Gorsuch, Katherine (I59)
 
5334 == Biography ==Kirch was born in 1650. He was the son of [[Keyser-66|Dirck Gerritsz Keyser]] and [[van den Wyngaert-5|Cornelia Goverts van den Wyngaert]] He passed away in 1655. <ref>Record: https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-1-439306911-2-41015/kirch-keyser-in-myheritage-family-trees</ref>
Kirch Keyser Birth: 1650 - Germany Parents: Dirck Keyser, Cornelia Govertz Keyser (born Vandenwyngaard) Siblings: Dirck Keyser, Peter Keyser, Dirck Cornelissen Keyser, Anneken Keyser, Unknown Keyser

== Sources ==
<references />* Source: S-812300055 Repository: R-124367594 Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Ancestry Family Tree [http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=88970570&pid=409 Ancestry 409] Repository: R-1243675948 Ancestry.com
* Source: MyHeritage Family Trees MyHeritage.com [online database]. Lehi, UT, USA: MyHeritage (USA) Inc. https://www.myheritage.com/research/collection-1/myheritage-family-trees
* Family tree: Courtenay Web Site, managed by William Courtenay KERSHAW https://www.myheritage.com/site-439306911/courtenay 
Keyser, Kirch (I445)
 
5335 == Biography ==Margaret Hodges, daughter of [[Hodges-171 |Thomas]] & [[Waln-12 |Hannah (Waln) Hodges]], was born October 14, 1706.<ref name=Grundy>Grundy, MJP. ''Paxson Family in Colonial Bucks County''. online [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~paxson/PaxsonCol.html rootsweb] (3/3/2015)</ref>
She was a widow when she signed the certificate for her daughter Mary's marriage to Mahlone Worthington in November 1779.<ref name=Grundy/>

=== Children ===Children of James Paxson & his second wife Margaret Hodges<ref name=Grundy/>
#[[Paxson-178 |Thomas Paxson]]; born September 16, 1731; married [[Hambleton-120| Mary Hambleton]] with whom he had 7 children; died February 1 1812# [[Paxson-73 |Hannah Paxson]]; born about 1731; married [[Hambleton-20 |Stephen Hambleton]] (reported 1.1 (March 1), 1753 to Buckingham MM); died November 21, 1812# [[Paxson-112 |Jonas Paxson]]; born June 25, 1735; married (1) Mary Kester; Married (2) Mary Broadhurst; died August 6, 1796# James Paxson; born April 11, 1738; married Sarah Letch March 24, 1762 at Buckingham MM with whom he had 6 children; died in Lisbon Ohio# Jane Paxson; born August 3, 1739; married Joseph Pickering August 1762 at Buckingham MM; died February 13, 1792#Mary Paxson; born March 22, 1742/3; married (1) Joseph Smith of Wrightstown June 10, 1761 at Buckingham MM (no children); married (2) Mahlon Worthington 1779 with whom she had two daughters; died December 29, 1815#Margaret Paxson; born October 24, 1745; married William Townsend June 22, 1763 at Buckingham MM with whom she had 3 children; died before 1773
== Sources ==
<references/>
See also:
* "Our Quaker Ancestry" by Rusha Wesley 1945

== Acknowledgments ==* Thank you to [[Powell-5629|Andrea Powell]] for contributions to this profile
Author: Andrea Powell 
Hodges, Margaret (I722)
 
5336 == Biography ==Margaret is the daughter of [[Curwen-2|Garard Curwen]]. She married [[Sandys-8|George Sandys]].<ref name=author>''Americana, Volume 37'' (Madison, Wisconsin: National Americana Society, 1943), p. 205 , digital images, https://books.google.com/books?id=nW0KAQAAMAAJ&q=garrat+curwen&dq=garrat+curwen&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CDwQ6AEwBGoVChMIhdbA5Z2QyQIVUvFjCh309gVA. Google Books (http://books.google.com : accessed 14 November 2015).</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Curwen, Margaret (I175)
 
5337 == Biography ==Married: Mar. 27, 1784 in: Baltimore Co., MD Record type: This is a county court record. Gender: M More about: This record can be found at the Family History Library, Salt Lake City, UT, Film # 0013693-0013694. Spouse name: German, Rosannah Spouse gender: F <ref>TitleMaryland Marriages, 1655-1850; Publisher: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: MyFamily.com, Inc., 2004.Original data - Most of the records in this index may be found at the Maryland Historical Society or the Family History Library. More specific source information is listed with each entry.
</ref>
June 3, 1796, Benjamin Germain, Jr. and David Parlett vs. Jonathan Hudson. BA. Estate of Jonathan Hudson - Sophias Garden Regulated. Recorded (Chancery Record) 33, p. 493<ref>http://guide.mdsa.net/pages/item.aspx?ID=S512-2148</ref>
In 1803 - David Parlett received one hundred and twenty pounds for the extention of Belle-Air rd through his property<ref>http://aomol.msa.maryland.gov/000001/000560/html/am560--17.html</ref>

==Land Records==* December 1, 1793 - Sophia's Garden regulated, Lot 6. - Margaret Hudson, trustee of Jonathan Hudson, deceased. David Parlett was highest bidder.<ref>http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~mcmurtriecfr/richard/todd/mdadd.htm</ref>
* April 2, 1805 - Sophia's Garden regulated - John Todd deed to David Parlett<ref>BALTIMORE COUNTY COURT (Land Records) 1805-1805, WG 85, p. 0104, MSA CE 66-135</ref>


=== Birth ===
: Birth:
:: Date: ABT 1758
:: Place: Baltimore, Maryland
::: City: Baltimore
::: State: Maryland
::: Country: United States of America

=== Event ===
: Event:
:: Type: Owner
:: Place: One slave

== Sources ==
<references />* Godfrey Memorial Library, comp.. American Genealogical-Biographical Index (AGBI) [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 1999.Original data: Godfrey Memorial Library. American Genealogical-Biographical Index. Middletown, CT, USA: Godfrey Memorial Library.
Author: M M
Author: L Parlett
Author: Tammy Lorenz 
Parlett, David (I12)
 
5338 == Biography ==Mary Dodge was born on 31 Jan 1763 in Long Island, Queens, New York Colony.


== Sources ==
<references />* Dodge Genealogy Descendants of Tristram Dodge by Theron Royal Woodward. 
Dodge, Mary (I312)
 
5339 == Biography ==Mary was born about 1735. She is the daughter of [[Keyser-63|Andreas Keyser]] and [[Lucken-4|Hannah Lucken]]. Mary passed away in 1814.<ref>[https://archive.org/details/keyserfamilydesc00keys/page/142 ''The Keyser family : descendants of Dirck Keyser of Amsterdam''] by Charles Shearer Keyser, William F. Fell & Company, Publishers, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1889.</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Mary (I425)
 
5340 == Biography ==Mary was born in 1826. She is the daughter of [[Keyser-291|William Keyser]] and [[Workman-1024|Margaret Workman]].
<ref>
Unsourced family tree handed down to [[Magyar-2|Skip Magyar]].
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Mary Ann (I404)
 
5341 == Biography ==Mary, dau. of Richard Rich and Elizabeth Jenkes, m. Sir Thomas Wroth of Durrants, Middlesex (Enfield).
== Source ==* Collins, A. (1756). The Peerage, II, p. 236. London. [https://books.google.com/books?id=P15AAAAAYAAJ&dq=francis%20barley%20of%20hertfordshire%20and%20dorothy%20rich&pg=PA236#v=onepage&q&f=false Google Books].* Richardson, D. (2013). Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, V, p. 401-402. Kimball G. Everingham, Ed. Print.* Holbein, H. (1812). "The lady Rich," in Imitations of Original Drawings. London: Wm. Bulmer & Co. [https://books.google.com/books?id=YXVdAAAAcAAJ&lpg=PP351&ots=f9r0CBlFdk&dq=Thomas%20Pigot%20of%20Abington&pg=PP351#v=onepage&q&f=false Google Books].
<references />
See also...* GEDCOM: b. 1516/247 London or Enfield, Middlesex; Birth about 1520 (Royal Ancestry Bible 2005 Michel L Call Pedigree Chart 94); d. about 1573 or 8 JAN 1598 Middlesex, England
Author: Gillian Thomas
Author: Ann Johnson 
Rich, Mary (I103)
 
5342 == Biography ==Nathaniel Dickens was born on 1 Feb 1615 in Chesham, Buckinghamshire, England, United Kingdom. <ref> Entered by [[Dodge-400 | Charles Dodge]], Sunday, April 16, 2017 ''Replace this citation if there is another source.''</ref>

=== Name ===
: Name: Nathaniel /Dickens/
:: Given Name: Nathaniel:: Surname: Dickens<ref>Source: [[#S16]] Data: Text: Birth date: 1 February 1615Birth place: Chesham, Bucks, England Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepoolb&h=1271747&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt</ref>

=== Birth ===
: Birth:
:: User ID: E6598FFE-C5A2-4F92-BA03-F093C67C206B
:: Record ID Number: MH:IF347
:: Date: 1 FEB 1615:: Place: Chesham, Buckinghamshire, England<ref>Source: [[#S16]] Data: Text: Birth date: 1 February 1615Birth place: Chesham, Bucks, England Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepoolb&h=1271747&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt</ref>

=== Death ===
: Death:
:: User ID: AC782B4C-D8BE-4E70-B24D-63BBAFD7DA9F
:: Record ID Number: MH:IF348
:: Date: 18 OCT 1692
:: Place: Newshorehaam, Newport, Rhode Island, United States
=== User ID ===
: User ID: C40F3846-04D4-41FA-A4D0-0745B12F753D

== Sources ==
<references />* WikiTree profile Dickens-100 created through the import of Warner-Lilley Family Tree_2b.GED on Sep 5, 2011 by [[Warner-33 | Michael Robert Warner]]. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Dickens-100 Changes page] for the details of edits by Michael Robert and others.
* Source: <span id='S1'>S1</span> Record ID Number: MH:S1 User ID: D7EE7E0D-6B73-4CFB-8669-A0DEE2892A23 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461885205 * Source: <span id='S16'>S16</span> Record ID Number: MH:S16 User ID: 49723721-9DD2-443E-9C37-C8F7A6E68573 Author: Edmund West, comp. Title: Family Data Collection - Births Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2001. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=4618852056
* WikiTree profile Dickens-123 created through the import of TristramDodgedescendantsbyCLD1Nov2011.ged on Nov 1, 2011 by [[Dodge-367 | Charles Dodge]]. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Dickens-123 Changes page] for the details of edits by Charles and others.
* Source: <span id='S60'>S60</span> Type: Book Title: Dodge Family of New Shoreham, Rhode Island; A Genealogy of the Descendents of Tristram Dodge Periodical: Book Author: Bailey, James and Norman Dodge Publication: Dodge Family Association, Lakewood, CO, 2008 Volume: 1 Page: ISBN 0-9753026-5-5 Source Detail: Both volumes are on one CD titled ?Tristram 2008? in two pdf files. File: Dodge Family of New Shoreham Rhode Island DFA 2008 vol1 S60.pdf * WikiTree profile Dickens-123 created through the import of TristramDodgedescendantsbyCLD1Nov2011.ged on Nov 1, 2011 by [[Dodge-367 | Charles Dodge]]. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Dickens-123 Changes page] for the details of edits by Charles and others.
* Source: <span id='S60'>S60</span> Type: Book Title: Dodge Family of New Shoreham, Rhode Island; A Genealogy of the Descendents of Tristram Dodge Periodical: Book Author: Bailey, James and Norman Dodge Publication: Dodge Family Association, Lakewood, CO, 2008 Volume: 1 Page: ISBN 0-9753026-5-5 Source Detail: Both volumes are on one CD titled ?Tristram 2008? in two pdf files. File: Dodge Family of New Shoreham Rhode Island DFA 2008 vol1 S60.pdf
* WikiTree profile Dickens-86 created through the import of Warner-Lilley Family Tree.ged on Aug 29, 2011 by [[Warner-33 | Michael Warner]]. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Dickens-86 Changes page] for the details of edits by Michael and others.
* Source: <span id='S1'>S1</span> Record ID Number: MH:S1 User ID: D7EE7E0D-6B73-4CFB-8669-A0DEE2892A23 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461885205 * Source: <span id='S16'>S16</span> Record ID Number: MH:S16 User ID: 49723721-9DD2-443E-9C37-C8F7A6E68573 Author: Edmund West, comp. Title: Family Data Collection - Births Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2001. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=4618852056

: Source: [[#S-2122066708]]
:: Page: Ancestry Family Trees
:: Note:
:: Data: ::: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461885205
: Source: [[#S-2122066708]]
:: Page: Ancestry Family Trees
:: Note:
:: Data: ::: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461885205
: Source <span id='S-2121622354'>S-2121622354</span>
: Repository: [[#R-2122066709]]
: Title: Family Data Collection - Births
: Author: Edmund West, comp.: Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc.,
: Source <span id='S-2122066708'>S-2122066708</span>
: Repository: [[#R-2122066709]]
: Title: Ancestry Family Trees: Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.: Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this
source citation was created.<!-- Please edit, add, or delete anything in this text, including this note. Be bold and experiment! If you make a mistake you can always see the previous version of the text on the Changes page. -->
Author: Philip Smith 
Dickens, Nathaniel (I336)
 
5343 == Biography ==Peter was born in 1705. He was the son of [[Keyser-64|Pieter Keyser]] and [[Souplis-1|Margaret Souplis]]. He passed away in 1756.
<ref>Information is from '' The Keyser family : descendants of Dirck Keyser of Amsterdam, '' by Charles Shearer Keyser, William F. Fell & Company, Publishers, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1889, page 143
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Peter (I430)
 
5344 == Biography ==Rebecca was born January 9, 1732 (probably1733, alternative dating; marriage of parents was in Aug 1732) of [[Green-12869|Thomas Green]] in Baltimore, MD<ref>Baltimore County Families, 1659-1759, Robert William Barnes, Genealogical Publishing Company, 1989, pg: 279 <http://interactive.ancestry.com/48162/BaltimoreCoFamilies-002455-276/224577?backurl=&ssrc=pt_t6074706_p24078823159_kpidz0q3d24078823159z0q26pgz0q3d32787z0q26pgplz0q3dpid&backlabel=Return#?imageId=BaltimoreCoFamilies-002458-279></ref>


== Sources ==
<references />

*Dodd, Jordan, Liahona Research, comp.. Maryland Marriages, 1655-1850 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
*"Parents for Thomas Burgan of Baltimore County, Maryland." National Genealogical Society Quarterly, 101 (Mar 2013): 19–33. 
Green, Rebecca (I264)
 
5345 == Biography ==Robinson was born in 1827. He is the son of [[Keyser-291|William Keyser]] and [[Workman-1024|Margaret Workman]].
<ref>
Unsourced family tree handed down to [[Magyar-2|Skip Magyar]].
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Robinson (I405)
 
5346 == Biography ==Sarah was born in 1816. She is the daughter of [[Keyser-291|William Keyser]] and [[Workman-1024|Margaret Workman]].
<ref>
Unsourced family tree handed down to [[Magyar-2|Skip Magyar]].
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Sarah (I400)
 
5347 == Biography ==Sarah was born in 1845, the daughter of Amos Keyser and Margaret White. She married first to William Coffield in 1870 and second to Joshua Ruble in 1891. Sarah passed away in 1914.<ref>
{{FindAGrave | 79304287}}
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Sarah Harris (I393)
 
5348 == Biography ==Sibyl was born in 1811. She is the daughter of [[Keyser-291|William Keyser]] and [[Workman-1024|Margaret Workman]].
<ref>
Unsourced family tree handed down to [[Magyar-2|Skip Magyar]].
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Sibyl (I398)
 
5349 == Biography ==Smiley was born in 1821, the son of [[Keyser-291|William Keyser]] and [[Workman-1024|Margaret Workman]]. Smiley passed away in 1891.<ref>
{{FindAGrave | 81524542}}
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, Smiley S (I403)
 
5350 == Biography ==THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION WAS FOUND ON AN ANCESTRY PAGE FOR AMOS WORKMAN, THE PERSON WHO ADDED IT IS LISTED AS JWORKMAN. I AM ADDING IT TO THIS BIO AS I FEEL IT MAKES VALID POINTS. IF YOU HAVE ANY THOUGHTS OR EVIDENCE TO ANY OF THIS, PLEASE EMAIL ME AT abakerowen@yahoo.com

Questions about Amos Workman?
This is to attatch questions about the connections and sources for Amos Workman's connections to William Workman and Phoebe Critchfield, along with marriages to Jane Matheny and Jane Conner. I am not going to question the marriage to Rebeccah ? at this time, as there is a source for marriage to her and it does fit with his timeline events. .
I have been researching this branch of the Workmans and this particular Amos Workman for years always ending up with more questions than answers. I have found no solid evidence linking this Amos to William and Phoebe Workman. I have been in contact with other researchers as well- including Ralph Sayers and others. They were unable to find the connection either. .
We did find evidence of an Amos Workman being in Monongalia county, Virginia in 1796. Amos Workman came from Allegany, Maryland in 1796 and on 4 April, he purchased 100 acres in Monongalia county from John and Rachel Aldridge. It is not known whether he lived there or not, but on 8 Nov. 1813, he sold the land giving his residence as Belmont county, Ohio. this information is from Ralph Sayers Workman Family History. Also in that history-.
Stephen Workman and William Workman came to Monongalia county about 1798. On April 14, 1800 Stephen Workman purchased 250 acres known as London glades. There is no record of the elder, William purchasing any land. He posted a bond for the marriage in August 1807 of his son, John Workman to Mary Miller- daughter of Andrew Miller..
William Workman also posted bond for the 12 June 1816 marriage of Amos Workman to a Jane Matheny. In the records of Monongalia county, West Virginia marriages there is a record of a marriage: .
Date & Groom- June 12, 1816/ Amos Workman Bride- Jane Matheny Daughter of is blank bondsman William Workman.
Later information lists Jane Conner as marrying Amos Workman between 1816 and 1819? I am wondering if possibly Jane Conner and Jane Matheny are same person? Possibly, Jane Conner was married to a Matheny before marrying Amos Workman? I am suggesting this only because there seems to be a lot of discrepancy over the names and the marriages? I think this needs to be mentioned in any histories of this branch of the family since we have little or no information on either Jane Conner or Jane Matheny? .
As to a connection possibility for Jane Conner, I did find a family tree for another branch of the family that contains Conner families? .
Abraham Workman b. 13 nov 1779, son of Stephen Workman and Hester Critchfield, married a Grace Conner in 1784. This would suggest a connection between the Workman family and a Conner family? My personal thought right now is that yes, our Amos Workman was most likely a relative of the Workman/Critchfield branch and possibly Jane Conner was a relative of the Conners listed as connected to that family..
In going through my information for an actual burial place for Amos Workman, I did find that there was no burial site listed or found for him in Fayette county, Illinois, so the burial place listed in Belmont county, Ohio could very well be correct. .
I just wanted to attatch all of these questions and discrepancies to this history because everyone seems to be linking our Amos to the William Workman/Critchfield line without any actual facts other than someone else's tree!

== Sources ==
<references />
* www.workmanfamily.org/histories/AndersonBook
http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/27914654/person/12110040054
Author: Janice Tomaschefsky 
Workman, Amos (I522)
 

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