Notes


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Matches 80,651 to 80,700 of 82,552

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80651 The death of Luke Hall was registered at Monterey, Vol. 102, p. 37, in 1856. He died 7 October 1856 at Monterey at age 78 years of Old Age. he was a widower and worked as a Farmer. Her was born in New Marlboro. His parents were Elisha and Hannah Hall. Hall, Luke (I1738)
 
80652 The death of Martha Granger was registered at New Marlboro, Vol. 111, p. 61, in 1857. She died on 6 October 1857 in New Marlboro, age 84 years, of Old Age. She was a widow and was born in Canaan. The names of her parents was not given. Newell, Martha (I3557)
 
80653 The death of Milo Hall was registered at New Marlborough, Vol. 283, p. 51, in 1876. He died 10 December 1876, age 76 years, in New Marlborough of Cystitis. He was a Farmer, married, and living in New Marlborough. He was born in New Marlborough. His parents were E & Mary Hall. Their birthplaced were not specified. Hall, Milo (I3616)
 
80654 The death of Moses Hall was registered at New Marlborough, Vol 211, p. 48 (1868). Hall, Moses (I1603)
 
80655 The death of Nathan Webb Hall was registered at Southbridge, Vol. 95, p. 153, in 1855. He died 2 August 1855 in Southbridge of Heart Disease at age 61 years. He was working as a Laborer and was married. He was born in Uxbridge and his father was Nathan W. Hall. The name of his mother was not known. Hall, Nathan Webb (I979)
 
80656 The death of Olive Walden was registered at Mendon, Vol. 402, p. 523, in December 1889. She died on 24 December 1889 in Mendon at age 89 years, 7 months, and 8 days of Old Age. She was a widow and Housewife. She was born in Gloucester, RI. her parents were William Hawkins and Mary Wade, both born Gloucester, RI.

The death is listed as 24 Dec 1890 on her headstone. I assume that the records had the year wrong. 
Hawkins, Olive (I2482)
 
80657 The death of Phineas Granger was registered at New Marlboro, Vol. 75, p. 38, in 1853. He died on 7 November 1853, aged 83 years, in New Marlboro of Consumption. He was married, a farmer, and born in Suffield. The names of his parents were unknown. Granger, Phineas (I3556)
 
80658 The death of Susan Hall was registered at Southbridge, Vol. 321, p. 424, in 1880. She died on 11 February 1880 at age 85 years and 6 months of Pneumonia. She was a widow lliving in Southbridge. She was born in Oxford, Mass., and her parents were Craft Davis, born Oxford, and Catherine Streeter, born unknown. Davis, Susan "Suky" (I1376)
 
80659 The death of William Granger was registered at New Marlborough, Vol. 319, p. 49, in 1880. He died on 4 January 1880, age 83 years, 1 month, and 30 day, in New Marlborough of Gangrene. He was a Farmer, married, living in New Marlborough. His parents were Phineas and Martha Granger. Phineas was born in Suffield, Conn., and Martha in Canaan, Conn. Granger, William (I3572)
 
80660 The death of William Hall was registered at New Marlborough, Vol. 220, p. 46, in 1869. He died 1 May 1869, aged 59 years, in New Marlborough, of Pneumonia. He was a farmer, widower, and living in New Marlborough. He was born in New Marlborough. His parents were John and Jane Hall, both born New Marlborough. Hall, William (I3617)
 
80661 The Descendants of Thomas Durfee of Portsmouth Rhode Island
https://ia800208.us.archive.org/34/items/descendantsoftho00lcreed/descendantsoftho00lcreed.pdf

William Hall's wife, Mary "Polly" Durfee is the daughter of James Durfee and Mary Burrington. The relevant pages are 241, 242, and 403, 404. Eleven children are listed including George Hall born 10 September 1805. The book mentions that James Durfee removed his family to Madison, New York in 1803. That is where William Hall and Mary Durfee's son George was most likely born.

pp. 413-414

XI.  --  HALL, AMELIA CHARITY (William 2d, George 1st). Born in Madison, N. Y., November 18, 1813; died in Springdale, Iowa, August 22, 1860; married in Salem, Iowa, in August 1849, to BRINTON DARLINGTON, agent of Cheyenne and Arrapahoe Indians, son of Stephen and Rachel (---) Darlington; born in Fayette Co., Pa., December 3, 1804; died in Indian Territory, at Indian Agency, May 1, 1872.

Their chidren were:

WILLIAM T. DARLINGTOB; who was a soldier in the Union army during the War of Rebellion.

SARAH A. DARLINGTON, born in Muscatine, Ia., May 22, 1853; married in Indian Territory, January 27, 1872 to JACOB A. COVINGTON, of West Virginia, son of Elijah and Catherine (---) Covington; born in Wheeling, West Va., May 10, 1844. They were living in 1902 at 3629 Sunset Place, Fremont Station, Seattle, Wash.

Their children were (first four were born at Cheyenne Agency, Indian Territory):

1st.  --  KATHERINE A. COVINGTON, born August 8, 1873; married in Fremont, Wash., May 7, 1892, to EDWARD C. JOHNSON, of Vermont.  They reside at Seattle, Wash.

2d. --  WILLIAM D. COVINGTON, born August 28, 1875; living in 1902 at Seattle, Wash., where he is a stenographer in the office of Depot Q. M., U. S. A,; he was a soldier in the Spanish-American War; serving as Q. M. Sergt. in Co. B, 1st Washington Vol. Infty.; was wounder twice, for which he receives a pension.

3d.  --  LOUISE ALICE COVINGTON, born August 31, 1879.

4th.  --  MABEL ELECTA COVINGTON, born July 28, 1882.

5th.  --  SARAH BIRD COVINGTON, born in Cardwell, Kas., December 19, 1888.

6th.  --  ELIZABETH BELL COVINGTON, born in Fremont, Wash., January 1, 1894.

Mr. Jacob Covington served four years in the Union Army during the War of Rebellion; as Sergt. in Co. D, 40th Regt. N. Y. Vols. Infty., and as Lieut. in same Co., and Regt.. In 1902, he was a clerk in the County Treasurer's Office at Seattle, Wash. 
Hall, Amelia Charity (I17246)
 
80662 The Descendants of Thomas Durfee of Portsmouth Rhode Island
https://ia800208.us.archive.org/34/items/descendantsoftho00lcreed/descendantsoftho00lcreed.pdf

William Hall's wife, Mary "Polly" Durfee is the daughter of James Durfee and Mary Burrington. The relevant pages are 241, 242, and 403, 404. Eleven children are listed including George Hall born 10 September 1805. The book mentions that James Durfee removed his family to Madison, New York in 1803. That is where William Hall and Mary Durfee's son George was most likely born.

p. 413

X. --  HALL, MARY (William 2d, George 1st).  Born in Madison, N. Y., January 28, 1810; married ERASTUS LAMB.

Their children were :

MARION L. LAMB. Living in Sherburne, N. Y. Married  ----  BRONSON. 
Hall, Mary (I17245)
 
80663 The Descendants of Thomas Durfee of Portsmouth Rhode Island
https://ia800208.us.archive.org/34/items/descendantsoftho00lcreed/descendantsoftho00lcreed.pdf

William Hall's wife, Mary "Polly" Durfee is the daughter of James Durfee and Mary Burrington. The relevant pages are 241, 242, and 403, 404. Eleven children are listed including George Hall born 10 September 1805. The book mentions that James Durfee removed his family to Madison, New York in 1803. That is where William Hall and Mary Durfee's son George was most likely born.

pp. 412-413

IX.  --  HALL, JOSEPH (William 2d, George 1st).  Born in Madison, N.Y., April 14, 1807, married LYDIA M. -----, of New York.

Their children were :

1st.   --  ALEXANDER M. HALL, born May 13, 1840; died in Linn Co., Oregon, June 3, 1899; married in Sacramento, Cal., to MATTIE J. FRANKS, of Place Co., Cal., daghter of William and Mary (-----) Franks; born in Missouri. Living in Woodland, Yolo Co., Cal., in 1902.

Their children were :

a.  --  MARY M. HALL, born June 27, 1875; married to ---- ANDERSON

Their children were :

1st.  -- CHARLES ORLANDO ANDERSON, born July 22, 1894.
2d.  --  HAZLE M. ANDERSON, born August 8, 1896.

b.  --  WILLIAM M. HALL, born December 20, 1876.
c.  --  MARTHA E. HALL, born August 19, 1879.
d.  --  EMMA L. HALL, born November 16, 1881.
e.  --  ADDIE E. HALL, born September 11, 1884.
f.  --  HENRY HALL, born October 4, 1886.
g.  --  ELSIE MAY HALL, born January 18, 1889.
h.  --  ALICE HALL, born July 6, 1892.

2d.  --  HANNAH HALL, living at Blacks, Cal.  Married to ---- POLLARD.

3d.  --  LODAMAN HALL, born February 12, 1837; died December 1, 1878; married to  ---- GALLUP.

Their children were :

a.  YOUNGS. A. GALLUP.
b.  EVERETT E. GALLUP.
c.  MARY E. GALLUP.
d.  WILLIAM GALLUP.
e.  GEORGE GALLUP.

4th.  --  SARAH HALL, died September 18, 1869; married to ----- MOUNT.

Their children were :

a.  ARTHUR S. MOUNT.
b.  FRANCES MOUNT.

5th.  --  LYDIA M. HALL, died January 4, 1879; married to ----- CARDWELL.

Their children were : 

a.  CLARA CARDWELL
b.  LIZZIE CARDWELL
c.  WILLIAM CARDWELL.
d.  CYRUS CARDWELL.
e.  GEORGE CARDWELL.
f.  ADA CARDWELL. 
Hall, Joseph Head (I17244)
 
80664 The Descendants of Thomas Durfee of Portsmouth Rhode Island
https://ia800208.us.archive.org/34/items/descendantsoftho00lcreed/descendantsoftho00lcreed.pdf

William Hall's wife, Mary "Polly" Durfee is the daughter of James Durfee and Mary Burrington. The relevant pages are 241, 242, and 403, 404. Eleven children are listed including George Hall born 10 September 1805. The book mentions that James Durfee removed his family to Madison, New York in 1803. That is where William Hall and Mary Durfee's son George was most likely born.

p. 410

VI. --  HALL, DAVID (William 2d., George 1st). Born in Portsmouth, R.I., January 7, 1802; married March 18, 1824, to LUCY BACON.

Their children were:

1st.  --  JERMOND D. HALL.
2d. --  MARIETTA HALL.
3d.  --  CLARKSON A. HALL.
4th.  --  ANSON B. HALL.
5th.  --  LUCIUS S. HALL.
_______________

From FindaGrave:

WESTERN NEW YORKER, June 24, 1880
David Hall of Wethersfield died June 16, 1880 at the age of 78 years, 5 months, 11 days. He was born in Portmouth, R. I. and at age 10 months he and his parents moved to Madison, Madison county. In the Spring of 1824 he made first trip on foot to Wyoming county. The route of Orangeville, North Wethersfield, Java Lake, Sardinia, Springville, Merrill's Tavern, Well's Settlement and then finding more wilderness he turned back. Being handy with tools and a capital axman he found employment until the fall when he footed it back to Madison. In the spring of 1831, he, his wife, and two children came and settled in Hermitage where he resided until his death.

This tribute containing trip details is by C. A. Hall in the Western New Yorker. The Historical Wyoming, April 1955, pages 79-80, contains information on the early days of the Hall family.

Possible Match:
Maple Grove Cemetery
Death Records Pg. No. 8-F
Daniel Hall (as typed in copy)
Birth: January 7, 1802; Rhode Island
Death: July, 1880
Interment: September 25, 1890
Nearest: Wm and Mary Hall 
Hall, David (I17242)
 
80665 The Descendants of Thomas Durfee of Portsmouth Rhode Island
https://ia800208.us.archive.org/34/items/descendantsoftho00lcreed/descendantsoftho00lcreed.pdf

William Hall's wife, Mary "Polly" Durfee is the daughter of James Durfee and Mary Burrington. The relevant pages are 241, 242, and 403, 404. Eleven children are listed including George Hall born 10 September 1805. The book mentions that James Durfee removed his family to Madison, New York in 1803. That is where William Hall and Mary Durfee's son George was most likely born.

pp. 410-412

VII.  --  HALL, SARAH (William 2d, George 1st).  Daughter of William and Mary (Durfee) Hall, of Portsmouth, R. I., and Waterville, Oneida Co., N.Y.; born in Madison, N.Y., November 15, 1803; died in Iowa, February 2, 1870; married March 10, 1825, to PETER COLLINS, son of Joseph and Hannah (---) Collins; died in Iowa, August 8, 1875.

Their children were :

I.   --  JOSEPH COLLINS, born March 17, 1826.
II.  --  THOMAS ELWOOD COLLINS, born May 5, 1830; married near Bangor, Marshall Co., Iowa, April 25, 1855, to SARAH WILLIAMS, daughter of Dr. Dearman and Mary (Farmer) Williams.

There children were :

1st.  --  ALCAEUS COLLINS, born October 10, 1856.
2d.  --  ALICE COLLINS, born November 20, 1858.
3d.  --  OVELLA S. COLLINS, born October 4, 1860.
4th.  --  OLIVE COLLINS, born June 29, 1862.
5th.  --  WILLIAM DEARMAN COLLINS, born April 9, 1864.
6th.  --  GALEN PETER COLLINS, born January 1, 1867.
7th.  --  FRANKLIN EDWARD COLLINS, born February 23, 1871.
8th.  -- ARTHUR ELWOOD COLLINS, born August 10, 1875.

III.  --  HANNAH E. COLLINS, born December 20, 1831; died August 3, 1888; married in Salem, Iowa, August 20, 1851, to ISAAC B, PALMER, son of Abram and Catherine (Bradshaw) Palmer; born August 15, 1827.

Their children were :

a.  --  SHEFFIELD PALMER, born June 9, 1858.
b.  --  ESTHER PALMER, born February 17, 1866.
c.  --  ELMA PALMER, born January 8, 1868; died January 6, 1901.
d.  --  EDWARD PALMER, born November 25, 1835; died January 24, 1867; married in Friends Meeting, at Bangor, Marshall Co., Iowa, to JOHN F. WILLIAMS, son of Dr. Dearman and Mary (Farmer) Williams; born  in Pennville, Morgan Co., Ohio, August 17, 1831.

Their children were :

1st.  --  MARY I. WILLIAMS, born August 22, 1857.
2d.  --  FRED H. WILLIAMS, born August 28, 1858; died August 8, 1882.
3d.  --  ANNA B. WILLIAMS, born November 27, 1864.

V.  --  MAHLON D. COLLINS (Rev.), born August 13, 1838; living (1901) in Philadelphia, Pa.; married September 24, 1856, to KETURAH ANN WILLIAMS, daughter of Dr. Dearman and Mary (Farmer) Williams.

Their children were :

a.  --  RALPH P. COLLINS, born December 26, 1858.
b.  --  LILLIAN W. COLLINS, born September 7, 1862; died in 1871.
c.  --  MARY ELIZA COLLINS, born January 6, 1864; died in 1865.
d.  --  EDITH H. COLLINS, born December 25, 1866; died in 1868.
e.  --  STELLA FRANCES COLLINS, born December 20, 1869; died in 1871.
f.  --  HERBERT EDWIN COLLINS, born March 27, 1872.
g.  --  MABEL W. COLLINS, born October 18, 1873.
h.  --  CENTENELLA COLLINS, born July 19, 1876.
i.  --  ROY VINSON COLLINS, born May 22, 1879.

VI.  --  ANNA F. COLLINS, born April 7, 1846; died in Clay Co., Mo., April 30, 1874 ("drowned with two daughters while crossing a river"); married May 1, 1864, to BENINE WILLIAMS, of Muscatine, Ia., son of Dr. Dearman and Mary (Farmer) Williams.

There children were :

a.  --  MAHLON J. WILLIAMS.
b.  --  BENJAMIN F. WILLIAMS. 
Hall, Sarah (I17243)
 
80666 The Descendants of Thomas Durfee of Portsmouth Rhode Island
https://ia800208.us.archive.org/34/items/descendantsoftho00lcreed/descendantsoftho00lcreed.pdf

William Hall's wife, Mary "Polly" Durfee is the daughter of James Durfee and Mary Burrington. The relevant pages are 241, 242, and 403, 404. Eleven children are listed including George Hall born 10 September 1805. The book mentions that James Durfee removed his family to Madison, New York in 1803. That is where William Hall and Mary Durfee's son George was most likely born.

pp. 407-410

IV.  --  HALL, WILLIAM (William 2d, George 1st.).  Born in Portsmouth, R.I., July 21, 1898; died in Orangeville, Wyoming Co., N. Y., February 14, 1887; married in Orangeville, Wyoming Co., N.Y., December 4, 1824, to ANNA BUTLER, or Orangeville, N. Y., daughter of Phineas and Chrloe (Hammond) Butler; born in Kennebec, Maine, February 22, 1804; died in Orangeville, N. Y., April 6, 1844.

Their children were:

XXI.  -- 1st. GEORGE HALL, born October 5, 1825; died April 26, 1827.

XXII.  --  2d.  PHINEAS HALL, born March 1, 1828; died January 14, 1848.

XXIII.  --  3d.  CHLOE HALL, born May 12, 1831; died May 21, 1875.

XXIV,  --  4th.  DAVID HALL, born February 24, 1834.

XXV.  --  5th.  ANNA HALL, born December 19, 1843.

Mr. Hall married a second time, November 10, 1857, to MARTHA SNELL, daughter of John and Sarah (Macomber) Snell. She died May 1, 1852. They had one child.

XXVI.  --  MARY A. HALL, born September 2, 1849.

The parents of William Hall with their family removed from Portsmouth, R. I., to Madison, N. Y., when he was about four years old. He lived with them until 1823, when he came to reside in Orangevill, Wyoming Co., N. Y., and there spent the remaining years of his life, where all his children were born.

His daughter Chloe Hall, never married. She taught school until her health failed; after which she resided at the old homestead. Her brother, David Hall, Esq., writes of her as follows : "She was very conscientious in all her doings; was a member of the Baptist Church, and lived a life consistent with what the professed Christian should be."

Mr. Hall writes also of his father: "Father affiliated with the Society of Friends, of which meeting he was a member. He led a quiet life on the farm, and I think his honesty and integrity were never questioned. He took but little interest in politics, voting with the Whigs and Republicans whenever he went to the polls."

His children have been held in high estimation in the communities where they have found homes, inheriting the worthy characteristics of their parents.

XXIV.  --  HALL, DAVID (William 3d, William 2d, George 1st). Born in Orangeville, Wyoming Co., N. Y., February 24, 1834; living in Orangeville, Wyoming Co., N. Y., in 1902; married in Orangeville, Wyoming Co., N. Y., November 1, 1860, to REBECCA A. HEAD, or Orangeville, N. Y., daughter of Joseph and Caroline (Bullard) Head; born in Orangeville, N. Y., May 10, 1836; died in Orangeville, N. Y., October 25, 1882.

Their children were (born in Orangeville, N. Y.):

1st.  --  CAROLINE R. HALL, born February 24m 1863; unmarried. Living, September, 1901, in Orangeville, N. Y., at the home of her birth. She has for many years been a successful teacher in the public schools of Orangeville, N. Y.

2nd. --  MAUD M. HALL, born December 5, 1867; married March 25, 1888, in Orangeville, N. Y., to BURT COOK, of Orangeville, N. Y.  They were living in Orangeville, N. Y., in 1902.

Their children were (born in Orangeville, N. Y.):

1st. -- JESSE COOK, born June 29, 1889.
2d. -- THEO. COOK, born December 28, 1893.

Mr. Cook is by occupation a farmer.

3d.  --  ANNA G. HILL, boirn April 22, 1870; married in Orangeville, N.Y., February 20, 1900, to JOHN RAMSEY, of Orangeville, N. Y.; son of Daniel and Verona (Norton) Ramsey; born in Orangeville, N. Y., April 1, 1978.

Mrs. Ramsey was formerly matron of the home for the poor, of Wyoming Co., N.Y.

4th  --  BURTON D. HALL, born March 14, 1873; resides in Orangeville, N. Y., on his farm joining his father's place; married March 28, 1893, to CHRISTIANA FISHER.

Their children were (born in Orangeville, N.Y.):

1st.  --  STELLA HALL, born January 27, 1894.
2d.  --  HAROLD HALL, born May 16, 1895.
3d.  --  HOWARD HALL, born April 23, 1898.

Mr. David Hall married a second time in Orangeville, N. Y., September 21, 1892, to MYRTA M. SPINK, or Orangeville, N. Y., daughter of Jonathan O. and Lavinia A. (Wilcox) Spink; born in Orangeville, N. Y., and has always resided here.

David Hall, Esq., has always resided on the place where he was born, where he has been engaged in agriculturem and for some years past has added apiculture; thus, during the summer months, his time has been divided between the farm and the bees.

In politics he is a Republican; having an official record confined to the town in which he resides, where for nearly twenty-five years he has served the town either as assessor, justice of the peace or supervisor. He was brought up under the influence of the Society of Friends and though not a member of their meeting, thinks their way religiously.

XXV.  --  HALL, ANNA  (William 3d, William 2d, George 1st).  Born in Orangeville, Wyoming Co., N. Y., December 19, 1843; died in Johnsonburg, Wyoming Co., N. Y., August 22, 1877; married in Orangeville, Wyoming Co., N. Y., November 29, 1863, to DANIEL LINCOLN, of Orangeville, N. Y., son of Ichabod and Melinda (Griffin) Lincoln; born in Orangeville, N. Y., November 18, 1836; died in Orangeville, N. Y., July 11, 1896.

Their children were:

a.  --  1st.  MARIA LINCOLN, born May 4, 1865; died August 31, 1896; married October 12, 1885, to FRED. BAKER.

Their children were:

1st.  --  ANNA MAY BAKER, born August 24, 1886.
2d.  --  WILLIAM BAKER, died in infancy.
3d.  --  MARGUERITE BAKER, born August 12, 1894.

b.  --  2nd.  MARY LINCOLN, born July 5, 1866; married April 23, 1889, to FRED WAGONER. They had ALICE MARIA WAGONER, born August 31, 1892.

c.  --  3d.  ALICE LINCOLN, born April 15, 1870; married April 4, 1889, to CHARLES WAGONER.

Anna Hall Lincoln while an infant was adopted into the family of Daniel Butler, her cousin, who resided in Wyoming Co., N. Y., by whom she was brought up and with whom she lived until her marriage, after which she, with her husband, settled on a farm in Orangeville, near Johnsonburg, where she continued to reside until her death. It is said of her, that she was a regular attendant at church. As to her membership we are not informed.

XXVI.  --  HALL, MARY A. (William 3d, William 2d., George 1st).  Boarn in Orangeville, N. Y., September 2, 1849; married in Orangeville, N. Y., October 29, 1873, to ELIAS HILLIKER, of Colden, Erie Co., N.Y., son of Stephen and Phebe A. (Macomber) Hilliker; born in Colden, Erie Co., N. Y., August 27, 1846. They were living in Aurura, Erie Co., N. Y., in 1897. They have son EDWIN HILLIKER, born Mary 28, 1877. Mary A. (Hall) Hilliker was brought up in the family of her brother, David, under the tutelage of her sister Chloe. After her marriage she resided for a few years in Orangeville, after which she removed with her husband to Erie Co., N.Y., where they have resided most of the time since, in the village of Aurora, near Buffalo. 
Hall, William (I17240)
 
80667 The Descendants of Thomas Durfee of Portsmouth Rhode Island
https://ia800208.us.archive.org/34/items/descendantsoftho00lcreed/descendantsoftho00lcreed.pdf

William Hall's wife, Mary "Polly" Durfee is the daughter of James Durfee and Mary Burrington. The relevant pages are 241, 242, and 403, 404. Eleven children are listed including George Hall born 10 September 1805. The book mentions that James Durfee removed his family to Madison, New York in 1803. That is where William Hall and Mary Durfee's son George was most likely born.

pp. 406ff

II. HALL, RUTH (William 2d, George 1st); born in Portsmoth, R. I., April 28, 1795; died in North Stonington, Conn., January 11, 1875; married in Madison Co., N. Y., October 6, 1817, to Job S. Collins, of Utica, N. Y., son of Joseph, born in Hopkinton, R. I.; died in Utica, N. Y., December 5, 1870.

Their children were:

I.  --  ELECTA J. COLLINS, born in Morrisville, N. Y., August 22, 1818, and weighed 2 1/2 lbs.; died in Great Barrington, Mass., October 18, 1896; married in New Hartford (near Utica), N. Y., January 11, 1844, to Abel Francis Collins, of North Stonington, Conn.; born in North Stonington, Conn., January 22, 1809; died in Great Barrington, Mass., June 15, 1886.

Their children were:

1st.  -- FRANK W. COLLINS, born February 6, 1845; died December 16, 1887.

2d.  --  CLARKSON A. COLLINS, born December 16 1853, of New York City.

3d.  --  A. CHALKLEY COLLINS, born March 27, 1857, at Great Barrington, Mass.

II.  --  CLARKSON T. COLLINS (M.D.); born January 8, 1821; died in 1881.

III. --  CHALKLEY COLLINS (M.D.) ; born Janueary 10, 1826; died in 1844. 
Hall, Ruth (I17238)
 
80668 The Descendants of Thomas Durfee of Portsmouth Rhode Island
https://ia800208.us.archive.org/34/items/descendantsoftho00lcreed/descendantsoftho00lcreed.pdf

William Hall's wife, Mary "Polly" Durfee is the daughter of James Durfee and Mary Burrington. The relevant pages are 241, 242, and 403, 404. Eleven children are listed including George Hall born 10 September 1805. The book mentions that James Durfee removed his family to Madison, New York in 1803. That is where William Hall and Mary Durfee's son George was most likely born.

p. 412

VIII.  --  HALL, GEORGE (William 2d, George 1st). Born in Madison, N. Y., September 10, 1805; married ____.

Their children were:

1st.  --  SAMUEL G. HALL.
2d.  --  MARY D. HALL, married ____ BROWNELL, of Portsmouth, R. I. 
Hall, George (I12655)
 
80669 The Descendants of Thomas Durfee of Portsmouth Rhode Island
https://ia800208.us.archive.org/34/items/descendantsoftho00lcreed/descendantsoftho00lcreed.pdf

William Hall's wife, Mary "Polly" Durfee is the daughter of James Durfee and Mary Burrington. The relevant pages are 241, 242, and 403, 404. Eleven children are listed including George Hall born 10 September 1805. The book mentions that James Durfee removed his family to Madison, New York in 1803. That is where William Hall and Mary Durfee's son George was most likely born.

pp: 240-241

115. Durfee, James (Samuel 3rd, William 2d, Thomas 1st). Son of Samuel and Mercy (Durfee) Durvey, of Tiverton, R. I.; born in Tiverton, R.I., July 14, 1749; died in Madison, N.Y.; married in Tiverton, R.I., September 26, 1773, to Mary Burrington, of Portsmouth, R. I., daughter of Robert and Sarah (Brown) Burington; born in Portsmouth, R. I., October 10, 1755; died in Madison, N.Y., in April 1844.

Their children were:
...
275. -- 2d.  Mary, born June 24, 1776.
...

The home of Mr. Durfee was in Tiverton, R. I., where all of his children were born, and where his oldest daughter was married. His residence was on his farm, which he cultivated. His grandson, Stephen Durfee, states the "he sold his farm and two slaves," and his granddaughter write that he removed to Madison, N. Y., in 1803, and purchased a farm near Madison, on which he lived only a few years, dying probaby in 1805, when his oldest son, Samuel, was but 16 years old. The family remained together at the new home until, one by one, they started in life for themselves. Samuel succeeded in becoming the owner of the homestead, and finally it passed into the possession of his son, Benjamin A. Durfee.

Mrs. Hammond, of Milford, Kent Co., Del., write in her letter of May 8, 1896, of the death of her uncle, Burrington Durfee as follows:

"Burrington Durfee's death was singular as well as sad. He was building with a carpenter shingling, when some birds kept flying over his head. He threw up his hand with a chisel in it to frighten them off. It flew out of the handle, came down, strick him on his thoigh, severed an artery -- bled to death -- barely reached his home. He was a promising young man."

No record of the date of his death has been give. He was unmarried.
__________

pp. 403ff

HALL

275. Durfee, Mary (James 4th, Samuel 3d, wm. 2d, Thomas 1st). Daughter of James and Mary (Burrington Durfee, of Tiverton, R. I., and Madison, N. Y.; born in Tiverton, R. I., June 24, 1776; died in Madison, N. Y., January 26, 1816; married William Hall, of Portsmoth, R. I., son of George and Charity (Fish) Hall; born in POrtsmouth, R. I., March 3, 1767; died in Waterville, Oneida Co., N. Y., September 1, 1853.

Their children were :

I.      --  JAMES HALL, born August 24, 1793.
II.     --  RUTH HALL, born April 28, 1795.
III.    --  CLARISSA HALL, born December 2, 1796.
IV.    --  WILLIAM HALL, born July 21, 1798.
V.     --  STEPHEN HALL, born April 22, 1800; died June 28, 1812. Killed by falling tree.
VI.    --  DAVID HALL, born January 7, 1802.
VII.   --  SARAH HALL, born November 15, 1803.
VIII.  --  GEORGE HALL, born September 10, 1805.
IX.    --  JOSEPH HALL, born April 14, 1807.
X..    --  MARY HALL, born May 28, 1810.
XI.    --  AMELIA CHARITY HALL, born November 18, 1813

Mr. Hall was a farmer and belonged to the Society of Friends, or Quakers. His children were good citizens and sometimes help offices of trust.

I. -- HALL, JAMES (William 2dm George 1st). Born in Portsmouth, R. I., August 24m 1793; died in Westfield, Hamilton Co., Ind., September 5, 1872; married in Brookfield, Madison Co., N.Y., November 10, 1817, to MARY KENYON, of Brookfield, N. Y., daughter of Gideon and Sarah (Larkin) Kenyon; born in Hopkinton, Washington Co., R. I., November 30, 1793; died in West Ely, Marion Co., Mo., March 17, 1867.

Their children were:

XII. --  1st.  GEORGE KENYON HALL, born March 27, 1819.
XIII.  --  2d.  EARL JERMOND HALL, born February, 13, 1821.
XIV  --  3d.  ELMA MARIA HALL, born September 27, 1822; died in Madison, N. Y., January 1, 1825
XV.  --  4th  TIMOTHY LARKIN HALL, born May 12m 1824.
XVI.  --  5th  SARAH KATHERINE HALL, born October 21, 1826.
XVII.  --  6th.  MARTHA ANN HALL, born May 5, 1828.
XVIII.  --  7th  MARY JANE HALL, born October 7, 1830.
XIX.  --  8th  WELTHA FRANCES HALL, born December 12, 1832; died in Chilicothe, Mo., December 12 1870.
XX.  --  9th  JAMES EDWARD C, HALL, born October 3, 1834.

XII.  -- HALL, GEORGE KENYON (James 3d, William 2d, George 1st). Born in Madison, N. Y., March 27, 1819; died in Fall River, Mass., August 20, 1847; married in Hopkinton, P. I., January 9, 1845, to CAROLINE C. KENYON, of Hopkinton, R. I., daughter of Peleg and Thankful (Collins) Kenyon, born in Cranston, R. I., November 19, 1822. Living in Scot, Scott Co., Kansas.

Their children were :

1st.  --  JAMES MARION HALL, born November 30, 1845; died in Hamilton, N. Y., November 21, 1862

XIII.  --  HALL, EARL JERMOND (James 3d, William 2d, George 1st). Born in Madison, N. Y., February 2, 1821 ; married in Morrisville, Madison Co., N.Y., October 12, 1853, to SARAH C. LARKIN, of Brookfield, N. Y., daughter of James Kenyon and Emma (Collins) Larkin, born in Brookfield, N. Y., August 13, 1832.

Their children were : 

1st.  --  CLARENCE EARL HALL, born in Indianapolis, Ind., July 29, 1854.
2d.  --  FRANCES EMILY HALL, born in Indianapolis, Ind., January 16, 1861.

Mr. Hall was a contractor and builder, also a machinist. Mrs. Hall was a physician. Their children were pharmacists, and resided with their parents at Fort Scott, Kansas, in 1897, when at that time neither were married.

XV.  --  HALL, TIMOTHY LARKIN (James 3d, William 2d, George 1st). Born in Madison, N. Y., May 12, 1824. Living in Scott, Kansas, in 1899. Married in Hopkinson, R. I., December 12, 1850, to CAROLINE C. (KENYON) HALL (widow of his brother Geo. K. Hall), daughter of Peleg and Thankful (Collins) Hall; born in Cranston, R. I., November 19, 1822; died in Scott, Kansas, in October, 1899.

Their children were :

1st.  --  LAURA HALL, born July 2, 1852; died in Westfield, Ind., July 29, 1875.
2d.  --  AMELIA HALL, born April 7, 1862; died in Indianapolis, Ind., September 9, 1869.

XVI.  --  HALL, SARAH KATHERINE (James 3d, William 2d, George 1st). Born October 21, 1826; married JOHN TALCOTT.

There children were :

1st.  WARREN TALCOTT.
2d.   JAMES C. TALCOTT.
3.    ELIZABETH TALCOTT.
4th.  ERMINA TALCOTT.
5th.  EARL TALCOTT.
6th.  GUY TALCOTT.
7rh.  FRANCES TALCOTT.

XVII.  --  HALL, MARTHA A. (James 3d, William 2d, George 1st). Born May 5, 1828 ; living in Chillicother, Mo., in 1897; married in Chillicothe, Mo., November 4, 1872, to HENRY W. BOTSFORD. They had no children.

XVIII. HALL, MARY J. (James 3d, William 2d, George 1st).  Born October 7, 1830; living in Conconully, Washington, in 1897; married in Chillicothe, Mo., July 24, 1871, to JOHN SAMPSON, who came to America in 1830; born in Yorkshire, England, August 8, 1808; died in Chillicothe, Mo., August 19, 1882.

XX.  --  HALL, JAMES E. C. (James 3d, William 2d, George 1st). Born October 3, 1834; married in Brookfield, N. Y., to BASHA FOSTER, of Brookfield, N. Y.; daughter of Charles and Marion (---) Foster. They were living in Gresham, Oregon, in 1901. 
Durfee, Mary "Polly" (I12654)
 
80670 The earliest documented Lewis in any Lewis family lineage Lewis, Marshall (I20603)
 
80671 The earliest documented Lewis in any Lewis family lineage Lewis, George Founder (I20501)
 
80672 The early life of Dexter W. Hall ended at his late home in Pamelia at midday on Monday, July 18. Another month, and his age would have reached the limit that the Psalmist declared man's to be, three score years and ten. He was born and has spent his entire life in this immediate vicinity. In 1852 he married Abigail A. Butler of Brownville, who survives him. There were five children, two of whom are living, Stella May Hall of Pamelia, and Fran D. Hall of Black River. He leaves two sisters, Mrs. Mary W. Sheldon, of Blenheim, Ont., and Mrs. Sarah. J. Hovey of Detroit, Mich. He was a member of the Christian church and his strict integrity and Christ-like spirit accorded with his profession. He was of retiring disposition, fond of quiet home life. The funeral rites were held at Sanfords Corners Church

children: Alice, Stella, Frank, Mary 
Hall, Dexter W. (I9399)
 
80673 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F6994
 
80674 The Essex Genealogist, Vol. 19, p. 194 (1999).

Henry Cook to Henry Birdsall (mortgage)

(1:15) On the 11th of the 10th month 1649, Henry Cook (butcher) of Salem, for 10 pounds, mortgaged his house & shop and 1 acre of ground adjoining in Salem, to Henry Birdsall, as by his deed, dated the 10th of 10ber 1649 appeareth. 
Cooke, Henry (I11612)
 
80675 The family home was located at 13 Dukes Court, London, England. Allen, George (I1665)
 
80676 The following incident in the life of Hannah Hall is found in a history of Newport county, R. I. :

"General La Fayette used to frequently stop at the home of Hannah's parents; she was a child at the time, and the General used to tend her; one day while in his care at a window, the window fell and injured her hand ; this was previous to the battle of Rhode Island, which was fought in August, 1778. When General La Fayette visited America in 1825, he called to see Hannah, then Mrs. Gifford." 
Hall, Hannah (I103470)
 
80677 The following is directly from the book, HALLS OF NEW ENGLAND by Rev. David B. Hall, 1883:

James Hall, residence St. Dennis near Baltimore, MD; his wife dead in the autumn of 1829, leaving a son and a daughter, the son married and his wife dead at Nassau, West Indies, 1874, leaving two sons of eleven and nine years old. 

After the death of his parents, James went to live with his sister, Mrs. Blake and at her death went to Peter Brown's of Stafford, a tanner and shoemaker, where his brother Benjamin was an apprentice and in 1810, at the marriage of his brother Jonathan
C, he went to live with him and remained four years, after which he studied at several schools to prepare for college and then went to live with his Uncle, Dr. Nathan Smith, whose first wife was Elizabeth, the daughter of General Jonathan and Thankful (Sherman) Chase. 

Dr. Smith was a professor of surgery at Yale College, and James Hall lived with him three years and studied medicine while assisting him as steward at his house.  Dr. Smith also gave lectures at Bowdoin College, ME, in which James Hall was his assistant and dissector and graduated there in 1822 and settled in the practice of medicine at Claremont, NH, where he married a Miss Sumner. 

He afterwards removed to Windsor, VT and boarded in the family of Jonathan Hall whose son Israel married two of his nieces.  He had a good practice in Windsor for two years, when in 1829, his left knee became affected with rheumatism and he had been under the necessity of using a crutch and a cane ever since. The following winter he spent in Cuba, West Indies, and having seen enough of slavery in Cuba, he spent the next two winters (those of 1830 and 1831), in Haiti. 

From the next June to November, he was laid up in the Infirmary at Baltmore, MD when hearing that a vessel was about to sail for Liberia, Africa with emigrants. He applied for passage and was taken on a mattress in a carriage to the vessel, he then weighed 91 lbs., with boots and overcoat, etc. His three medical attandants gave their opinion of him as follows: Dr. Wright said, "Mr. Hall will never reach the Cape of Chesapeake;" Dr. Baker said, "he will not reach the coast of Africa;" but Dr. Smith who better understood Dr. Hall's will power said "he will arrive safely, but will fall with the coast fever." He arrived at Monrovia after a passage of thirty days and had gained a little over a pound a day; and during his stay of two years was able to do efficient professional work in the colony. 

Soon after his return to America, June 1833, he was commissioned in the Maryland Colonization Society under the state patronage to found a new colony at Cape Palmas, having visited the cape the year previous and brought it to the notice of the public as a place favorable for such an enterprise.  In November 1833, he set sail from Baltimore in the Brig Ann and was successful in purchasing the territory desired and in planting the colony or state, of which he remained in charge as governor until June 1836.  He then chartered a vessel and traded on the coast for the next four years. In 1840, he accepted a general agency of the Maryland Colonization Society, having the main direction of ill affairs both in Africa and in this country, under a board of managers.  The duties of this position, together with that of commercial agent of the American Colonization Society, he continued to discharge for twenty years, and until the breaking out of the Civil War in 1861, since which Maryland emigration had ceased and Dr. Hall had rendered only occasional service to the American Colonization Society.

While in Africa, Dr. Hall built a ship for a merchant citizen of Liberia, which bore his name (James Hall), and on the stern was carved a crutch and a hook cane as his coat of arms. He devoted nearly forty years of his life to the cause of  African Colonization; not however as an advocate of any general deportation of the colored people of this country, but for the relief it afforded to the manumitted in the days of salvery and the colonization of Africa.

The following was taken directly out of a book entitled "Ancestry of a few of The Descendants of Edward Hall of Rehoboth, Mass., with intermarriages", author unknown:

"Dr. James Hall, who died at Claremont, Elkridge, on Saturday, in the 88th year of his age, was buried in his lot in Green Mount Cemetery in this city yesterday.  The funeral services were held in Grace Protestant Episcopal Church, and a large
assemblage of friends and neighbors witnessed the last sad rites. It was the end of one of the most remarkable men that ever left this state for a career on another continent. It was Doctor Hall who did such wonderful work in Liberia." 
Hall, Dr. James (I788)
 
80678 The following is directly t taken from the HALLS OF REHOBOTH by Rev. David B. Hall, 1883:

"In very early life he exhibited a rare love of books and study, and was generally at the head of his classes in school; his father was greatly pleased and determined to give him a liberal education in hope that he would become a minister of
the Gospel, and fervently prayed many years that such might be the case.  He graduated at Yale College in 1839, with the first honors of his class, one member of which was United Stated Senator Dawes of Massachusetts, another if the Rev. I. N.
Tarbox of Boston.  In December 1839, he embarked on shipboard at Boston for Mobile, Ala., and when at sea but a few hours a violent storm arose and he was shipwrecked, but finally escaped alive and was at home again in a few days; yet not
content, he re-shiped and arrived safely in Mobile where he engaged in teaching school for a year; at the same time he studied law, and was admitted to the bar, but as his health failed he was constrained to go farther north, and in 1841 he
settled at St. Louis, Mo., where after a hard struggle with adverse circumstances, he succeeded in establishing himself in a lucrative business.  In the spring of 1847, he was appointed by Gov. Edwards, circuit attorney for the county, and
afterwards was strongly recommended as a fit appointment to succeed Judge Blair, of the court of common pleas, and in the summer of 1850, he received the nomination for the state senate, but being absent from the state, and unable to attend
personally to the canvass, he lost his election.  After an absence of more than eight years, he returned to his native place and married, Aug. 29, 1847, Sarah Chase Smith, dau. of Dr. David H. S. C. Smith.  They had long been engaged, and had
constantly corresponded, and the interest of the meeting can better be imagined than described.  It is said there never was such a meeting in Sutton.  They met to part no more till death should separate them for a little while; and they left
their native place and friends together, never to return.  She died at her home in St. Louis, Jan. 13, 1849, at the age of 27, and her child, born and died the day before was laid upon her bosom and buried with her. This was the severest trial
of his life, even so great, that he longed to depart and be with his beloved dead; continual sickness followed, and his desire was granted, he died March 29, 1851, ae. 33 years, and was buried in Christ Cemetery, St. Louis." 
Hall, David Nichols (I1358)
 
80679 The following is directly taken from the HALLS OF REHOBOTH by Rev. David B. Hall, 1883:



"In very early life he exhibited a rare love of books and study, and was generally at the head of his classes in school; his father was greatly pleased and determined to give him a liberal education in hope that he would become a minister of
the Gospel, and fervently prayed many years that such might be the case. He graduated at Yale College in 1839, with the first honors of his class, one member of which was United Stated Senator Dawes of Massachusetts, another if the Rev. I. N.
Tarbox of Boston. In December 1839, he embarked on shipboard at Boston for Mobile, Ala., and when at sea but a few hours a violent storm arose and he was shipwrecked, but finally escaped alive and was at home again in a few days; yet not
content, he re-shiped and arrived safely in Mobile where he engaged in teaching school for a year; at the same time he studied law, and was admitted to the bar, but as his health failed he was constrained to go farther north, and in 1841 he
settled at St. Louis, Mo., where after a hard struggle with adverse circumstances, he succeeded in establishing himself in a lucrative business. In the spring of 1847, he was appointed by Gov. Edwards, circuit attorney for the county, and
afterwards was strongly recommended as a fit appointment to succeed Judge Blair, of the court of common pleas, and in the summer of 1850, he received the nomination for the state senate, but being absent from the state, and unable to attend
personally to the canvass, he lost his election. After an absence of more than eight years, he returned to his native place and married, Aug. 29, 1847, Sarah Chase Smith, dau. of Dr. David H. S. C. Smith. They had long been engaged, and had
constantly corresponded, and the interest of the meeting can better be imagined than described. It is said there never was such a meeting in Sutton. They met to part no more till death should separate them for a little while; and they left
their native place and friends together, never to return. She died at her home in St. Louis, Jan. 13, 1849, at the age of 27, and her child, born and died the day before was laid upon her bosom and buried with her. This was the severest trial
of his life, even so great, that he longed to depart and be with his beloved dead; continual sickness followed, and his desire was granted, he died March 29, 1851, ae. 33 years, and was buried in Christ Cemetery, St. Louis." 
Hall, David Nichols (I1358)
 
80680 The following is taken directly from a book entitled John Adams and the America Revolution, A Decision Arrived At, by Catherine Drinker Bowen 1951, pages 299 - 300. The paragraphs concern a conversation that took place between Abigail and John
Adams. It states:



"Your mother had a new dress," she said., "of peach-colored taffeta. And a peach-colored bonnet, trimmed with white satin ribbons. Have you not noted it? Mr. John Hall, last night, admired the costume excessively when he was here. Ladies  
Hall, Liuetenant John (I179)
 
80681 The following is taken directly from a book entitled John Adams and the America Revolution, A Decision Arrived At, by Catherine Drinker Bowen 1951, pages 299 - 300. The paragraphs concern a conversation that took place between Abigail and John Adams. It states:

"Your mother had a new dress," she said, "of peach-colored taffeta. And a peach-colored bonnet, trimmed with white satin ribbons. Have you not noted it?  Mr. John Hall, last night, admired the costume excessively when he was here. Ladies" - Abby paused, finished with a touch of ribaldry highly surprising - "ladies do not wear satin ribbons to catch flies with." 

John stared, then leaped from his chair. "In God's name!" he said. "Not Mr. Hall?  Not my mother and old John Hall . . . Abby!"  John shouted indignantly. "Is my mother going to marry that old _______?" 

Abby looked serenely at her husband over her work. "There is no need to swear and rant," she said. "The thing is decided. He has admired her for years. Anyone but you, would have seen it long ago. But you had best let her tell you herself." Abby's face showed infinite satisfaction. "I have done all I could to further the match. Your mother will have companionship as she grows old. You and your brothers have shown scant sympathy, to my way of thinking. Lieutenant Hall is a fine man; old widowers are very amiable toward womenkind. Moreover he has a commodious house.  And if he works with his hands - why, have I not heard you say often that manual labor is ennobling?" Abby folded her work, rose from her chair. "I might add," she finished, "that your mother's marriage will enable you to move your wife, your daughter, and your son to Boston at our mutual convenience."
____________________

From the John Alden Silver Book, part 1, p.490-491:

... She married second at Braintree, 3 December 1766 (VR, 874; Ch Rec, Braintree Fams, #2100), as his third wife, Lieut. John Hall, son of John and Mary (Newell) Hall, born at Rehoboth, 27 March 1698 (VR, 630); died 27 September 1780, in 83rd year, buried in Hancock Cemetery, Braintree (Braintree Old, 133; "Old Braintree Cem." 17).

John Hall, a cooper, married first, at Hingham, 27 April 1732 (Hist. Hingham, 2:283, 408), Jerusha King, who died there 1 December 1745, age 35 (Braintree Fams, #2100, Hist. Hingham, 2:283); they had four children recorded in Hingham. He married second at Braintree, 12 June 1748 (Braintree Fams, #2100), Sarah Marsh, daughter of John and Sarah (Wilson) Marsh (Ch Rec, Braintree Fams, #3249), born at Braintree, 3 March 1704 (VR, 684); died 23 February 1765, age 60, buried Hancock Cemetery, Braintree (Braintree Old, 133, "Old Braintree Cem,", 17). Susannah is buried next to her first husband and John Hall is buried next to his second wife, obituaries call her Mrs. Hall, but the cemetery monument makes no note of her second marriage. 
Hall, Lt. John (I179)
 
80682 The following is taken directly from the HALLS OF NEW ENGLAND by Rev. David B. Hall, 1883:

"Franklin Hall worked on his father's farm until after his brother David had graduated, then at the age of twenty years he began a course of preparation for a profession, he studied at Millbury Academy and afterwards at Westminster Academy and
at graduation took the valedictory; he studied law in 1843 with Judge Ira M. Barton and Hon. P. C. Baron, of Worcester, Mass., and was admitted to the bar in 1846 and settled in a good practice at Worcester; in August 1862, he enlisted in Co.
E., 42d Regt., Mass. Vols., Capt. Fred I. Stiles, which joined Gen. Bank's expedition for New Orleans; after with his regiment to Boston and was honorably discharged; but while in the service he contracted a physical disability which has caused
him such sickness and suffering ever since; he was appointed magistrate by Gov. Briggs in 1864; for the sake of a more congenial climate he went to Philadelphia, and engaged in business where he remained four years; he then went to New Orleans
and engaged in the General Newspaper Advertisement Agency alone on a small capital which he has continued with varied success until the preset time; residence Philadelphia, Pa., office 713 Sanson Street; he has kindly furnished the record of
his near of kin and pedigree to Nehemiah Hall, of Uxbridge, Mass.  Franklin Hall, Esq., m. in Worcester June 17, 1856." 
Hall, Franklin (I1359)
 
80683 The following is taken from "Prominent American Families with British Ancestry" by London House and Maxwell of New York, 1971, page 2726:

"Maurice Arthur Hall, Office of the Legion of Honour (France), Officer of the Order of the Lion and Sun (Persia), Knight of the Order of Christ (Portugal), Member of the Society of the Cincinnati and Hon. Citizen of Vendome (France)., b. 5 July 1878; educ. Sorbonne, B. des Arts (1897); m. 22 June 1925, in London, Grace Iona, dau. of the Rev. Albert Hugh Douglas Brunner, of Nashville, Tennessee, by his wife, Alice Surface."

Residences - r Bis Rue Clement Marot, Paris France, and Clos du Prieure, St. Arnoult Touques, Calvados, France; 1748 Shippan Avenue, Stamford, CT, USA.

Clubs - Travellers (Paris); Union Interalliee (Paris); Golfers (Paris)

Arms -  Argent three talbot's heads couped, sable, langued gules between as many cross-corsslets one and two azure.

Crest - A dragon's head couped azure collared argent holding in the mouth a cross-corsslet also argent.

Motto - Suaviter Et Fortiter

Grant - College of Arms, London, 1959.
_____________

SAR 21 Sept 1904 - Descendant of Timothy Hall 
Hall, Maurice Arthur (I4896)
 
80684 The following is the only data that is available at this time (24 Feb 1996) concerning Bela Hall:



Bela lived in Windsor, VT until 1840 when he removed to the west, being childless, his only daughter who had married Mr. Stevens of Windsor, having died. Rev. R. S. Hall, D.D. said that Bela Hall was a kinsman of his on his mother's side.
This is a strong proof that they both were the descendants of Edward Hall, the first of Rehoboth. 
Hall, Bela (I437)
 
80685 The following is the only data that is available at this time (24 Feb 1996) concerning Bela Hall:

Bela lived in Windsor, VT until 1840 when he removed to the west, being childless, his only daughter who had married Mr. Stevens of Windsor, having died.  Rev. R. S. Hall, D.D. said that Bela Hall was a kinsman of his on his mother's side.
This is a strong proof that they both were the descendants of Edward Hall, the first of Rehoboth. 
Hall, Bela (I437)
 
80686 The following is Violet Heming's obituary in the Sunday New York Times, Late City Final Edition (July 5, 1981):



Violet Heming, an English-born actress who made her American debut in 1908 as Wendy in "Peter Pan" and grew into a succesful comedy star, died yesterday (July 4, 1981) at her home on the Upper East Side. She was 86 years old.



Miss Heming, a member of an established English theater family, performed in scores of Broadway plays and on tour in the 1920's and 1930's. She retired from the stage in 1945 to marry Judge Bennett Champ Clark, a former United States Senator
from Missouri. President Harry S. Truman was best man at the wedding of his former Senate colleague.



Miss Heming later returned to the stage occasionally and also appeared on television.



She was born in Leeds, England, and came to this country as a child. After appearing at the age of 12 in "Peter Pan" with Charles Frobman's children's company, she played Rebecca in "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" until she outgrew the part and
to take on other juvenile roles in New York, Chicago and on tour.



She made her mark in an adult role opposite George Arliss in "Disraeli" on a two-year run starting in the fall of 1912. Thereafter, she was in great demand, especially for comedy parts.



She was a founding member with Helen Hayes and Mary Pickford, of the Institute of the Woman's Theater, a group formed in 1926 to assist young women with stage aspirations.



During her career, she shared the limelight with such notables as Dorothy Gish, Cornelia Otis Skinner and Peggy Wood. Her motion picture credits included "The Man Who Played God," again with Mr. Arliss, and the Young Bette Davis, in 1932. A
New York Times reviewer calld Miss Heming's performance "excellent."



After her marriage, she returned to the New York stage in 1952 with Cloris Leachman and Betsy von Furstenburg in "Dear Barbarians," a comedy that lasted four performances.



Mr. Clark, a longtime friend of President Truman who appointed him to the Federal bench, died in 1954 while vacationing with his wife. She leaves no immediate survivors. Internment will be at Arlington National Cemetery. 
Heming, Mabel Violet (I1670)
 
80687 The following Persons joined in Marriage by Rev. J J Bliss --

May 25. 1834.  Mr. Willson D Bent of Sandwich and Miss Phebe Cahoon of Sandwich
_____

First name(s)       Miss Phebe
Last name       Cahoon
Sex       Female
Father's first name(s)       -
Father's last name       -
Mother's first name(s)       -
Mother's last name       -
Event       Marriage
Year       1834
Event date       25 May 1834
Location       Sandwich
County       Barnstable
State       Massachusetts
Country       United States
Spouse's first name(s)       Mr Willson D.
Spouse's last name       Bent
Spouse's sex       Male
Spouse's marital status       Married
Spouse's father's first name(s)       -
Spouse's father's last name       -
Spouse's mother's first name(s)       -
Spouse's mother's last name       -
FamilySearch film number       000775836
Record set       United States Marriages
Category       Birth, Marriage & Death (Parish Registers)
Subcategory       Civil Marriage & Divorce
Collections from       Americas, United States 
Family F8794
 
80688 The following was written in Yankee Magazine by William Basel. The copy of the article I received did not have a date on it, but it is retyped in its entirety here.

Grizzly Adams roamed the California mountains in the 1850's hunting, capturing, and training bears. He was a shoemaker from Medway, Massachusetts. Although he went by the name of James Capen Adams after he became famous, research suggests
that Grizzly was actually Jame's younger brother, John, who was born in 1812.

Young John Adams loved the outdoors and frequently hunted and trapped animals. He abadoned a wife and three children to head west, which may explain why he used his brother's name later.

Adams got his nickname and his reputation after he killed a female grizzly bear and adopted her cub. He went on to accumulate a menagerie of eagles, cougars, mountain lions, and other animals that he took to San Francisco in 1856, where he
opened a "Mountaineer Museum." Dressed in skins and a hate made from a wolf's head and shoulder, he was as much an attraction as his animals. His beard was white, his hair bushy and gray, and his body was stitched with scars acquired while
training his animals. A blow from a grizzly gave him a fractured skull that never healed properly.

In April of 1860, Adams came back east to run an animal show for P. T. Barnum. Although it was a huge success, his health continued to deteriorate. He sold his animals to Barnum and agreed to undertake one last tour of Connecticut and
Massachusetts. Apparently he hoped to make a little money to leave his wife before his death, which he sensed was imminent.

The tour crisscorssed Connecticut in July, drawing an overflow crowd of 5,000 to New Haven. By mid-August it was in New Bedford, Massachusetts and Adams was failing fast. But P. T. Barnum had promised him a $500 bonus if he finished out the
ten week tour, and Adams was determined to earn it. By the ninth week, in Boston, he was too weak to lead the bears in their opening porcession, but he managed to put them thorugh their tricks for the crowd.

As soon as the ten-week tour was over, Adams collected his bonus and went to his wife's home in Charlton, Massachusetts. There, in October, he died at the age of 48. He was, in his own words, "a used-up man." 
Adams, John Capen "Grizzly" (I4753)
 
80689 The funeral of Mrs. Emma L. Hall, who died yesterday at her home in Seattle, was held this afternoon from the Whiteside funeral parlors in this city. Rev. C.E. Todd, pastor of the First Methodist church, preached the funeral sermon. Interment was had in the Forest cemetery. Mrs. Edith L. Sylvester of this city is a daughter of the deceased. Keith, Eunice Leach (I64611)
 
80690 The gravestone has a flag on it. It is in the James Gilmore plot. Hall, Thomas Percy (I100931)
 
80691 The Hall monument is located on the lot that Williams Latham recorded as his #12 and #13. He recorded that the two stones had no inscriptions. Betty Carbonara records this on her map. Hall, David (I64345)
 
80692 The Hall recorded with this death date is listed as a Major Ephraim Hall, age 50. Hall, Epheriam "Ephriam" (I23011)
 
80693 The Hall-Tobey Bible

The following was transcribed by Kathryn Hall (Nov 2006) from a copy of the notes in a Bible believed to belong to the Erastus Gilbert Hall family, perhaps passed along to his son Seth Hall, now in the hands of Mary (Hall) Caliban.
_____________

Marriages

Luke Hall
Ruby Pease                Coneticutt [sic]

John Pope Tobey        February 18th 1816 In
Temperance Wing       Smyrna by Rev. J. Knight

Erastus Gilbert Hall      February 10th 1841 In
Hitty Orinda Tobey       Smyrna by Rev. E. Denison

Seth Everett Hall             June 7th 1866. In
Genie Cornelia Mead      Franklinville, NJ by Rev. S. Platt
Fayette McNair               August 3-1876

Henry Hamlin Hall           October 1st 1878. In
Ella Elizabeth Lee           Smyrna by Rev. G. R. Foster

John Tobey Hall             September 1st 1880. In
Kitty Bond Wellington     Prentiss Vale, Pa by [blank]

Seth Hall Born Aug 25, 1884       August 1st 1914
Hulda Hall Born April 2, 1879      Elgin Illinois, by
                                                   Rev. John McDonald
                                                   [in margin:] 376 Jay St.

Edith Hall Born Aug 1-1919                     March 21-1938
Fred Gustafson Born Nov. 11-1917        Dubuque, I [illegible]
                                                                 Rev. Sand[illegible]-1204-12th St.

Seth [illegible]
[living] Hall
[illegible] Caliban                                        Nov. 24, 1963

Births
Children of  Luke Hall and Ruby Pease Hall
__________

Luke Hall Jr.              1794
Ruby Hall                   1796
Fanny Hall                  December 1803
Flora Hall                    February 11th 1805
Daniel Spencer Hall    February 1808
Hezakiah Cooley Hall   May 9th 1810
Erastus Gilbert Hall      May 20th 1813
Dolly Hall                      April 5th 1816
Loren and Lyman Hall died in their childhood
____________

Children of John Pope Tobey and Temperance Wing Tobey
Eliza Avaline Tobey                 October 15th 1816
Hitty Orinda Tobey                   December 16th 1818
John Freeman Tobey              January 18th 1821=6-12-198 [sic]
Edmund Pursell Tobey             December 25th 1822
Betsey Tobey                          January 11th 1825
Persis Tobey                            March 15th 1827
Antoinette A. Tobey                 April 17th 1831
_____

Children of Erastus Gilbert Hall and Hitty O. Tobey Hall
Seth Everett Hall             March 31st 1845
Esther Selina Hall            June 24th 1848
John Tobey Hall               April 28th 1851
Henry Hamlin Hall            February 23rd 1854
Jay Gilbert Hall                 January 22nd 1856
Fred DeMott Hall               May 7th 1858
Charley Hall                      October 18th 1862
__________

Children of Seth Everett Hall and Genie C. Mead Hall
Genie Cornelia Hall            December 17th 1867
__________

Children of Seth Everett Hall and Fayette McNair Hall
Mary Hitty Hall      May 17th 1877
Flora Bell Hall      January 2nd 1879
Guy Hall      April 14th 1882
John Hall      Jan 3rd 1884
Seth Hall       August 25th 1886
Frank and Fred Hall      Jan 18th 1889
__________

Children of John Tobey Hall and Kitty Wellington Hall
Earl Tobey Hall      February 19th 1884
Claude Wellington Hall      June 10th 1887
__________

Children of Henry Hamlin Hall and Ella Lee Hall
Cepha Winifred Hall      October 29th 1881
Alice Hitty Hall      October 6th 1884
Clara Lucile Hall      July 13th 1887
__________

Childen of Seth Hall and Hulda Newquist Hall
Edith Margaret Selda Hall      August 1-1919
__________

Children of Edith Gustafson and Fred Gustafson
Myrtle May Gustafson      October 21, 1938
Frederick Raymond Gustafson      April 4-1941
__________

Children of Seth Hall and Gladys Taylor Hall

[?]
__________

Deaths

Jay Gilbert Hall                     January 22nd 1856
Charley Hall                          October 27th 1862
Genie C. Mead Hall               November 25th 1868
John P. Tobey                       April 3rd 1888 (97 years 10 mo) [sic]
husband of Temperance
Temperance Tobey               December 29th 1888

Alice H. Hall -- Daughter of Henry and Ella Hall at Sherburne Hill     April 6th 1899
Henry Hamlin Hall                    "              "      "                                  May 15th 1899

Rev. Otis Wing                      April 1897--98 years
  "   David Wing
Persis Wing-Peck                  Dec 8
_______________

                                                  Born                         Died
David Wing                                March 20th 1768      Nov 17th 1839
Desire Vincent                           June 18th 1772        Nov 9th 1842
Mahitable                                    Dec 10th 1792        1794
Infant                                          Dec 1794                1794
Temperance Wing-Toby [sic]     June 26th 1795        Dec 30th 1888
                                                                                    93 years
Arathusa                                    Apr, 28th 1797         Feb 23rd 1859
Otis Wing                                     Apr, 10th 1799        April 30tth1897
                                                                                     98 years
Desire Wing                                 Jan 14th 1801         Dec 12th 1880
Joanna                                          April 27th 1803       Apr 9th 1829
Abigal [sic]                                    July 3d [sic]1805     July 15th 1829
Persis Wing-Peck-Jessie T           Sept Sept [sic]-2nd 1807     Dec 8th 1897
                                                                                                 90 years
David                                             June 21st 1810

Rosanna                                         Jan 29th 1813          July 5th 1855
Joseph V                                         Oct 14th 1815        1898
__________

                                                  Born                    Died
John Pope Toby [sic]
wife Temperance Wing
children
Eliza Avaline (Matthewson)       Oct 15 1816
Hittie Orinda (Hall)                      Dec 16 1818
John Freeman                             Jan 18 1821        June 14 1904
                                                                                 North Otrelic 8 [?]
Edmund Purcell                            Dec 25 1822
Betsy (Calkins)                            Jan 11 1825
Persis (Hill)                                   March 15 1827
Antonett [sic]A. (Johnson) (Brown)   April 17 1831
__________
                                                  Born                      Died
Flora Bell Hall                             Jan 2nd 1879       April 24th 1900
Seth Everett Hall                        Mar. 31 1845        April 9th 1922
Guy J. Hall                                  April 14th 1882     Dec. 26 1932
Fayette McNair Hall                     Sept. 8th 1848     Oct 30th 1934
Seth Hall                                      Aug 25th 1886     Oct 1951 [?] 
Hall, Luke (I17745)
 
80694 The history of the family of James Rising is abstracted from the NEHGS Register, Vol. 63, pp. 333-341 (1909), by Louis Marinus Dewey, Esq., of Westfield, Mass.

"James Rising of Boston removed to the Bermudas, where he was a church member, and brought letters from the pastor there, Nathaniel White, being admitted to the Salem, Mass., Church about 1662. He removed to Windsor, Conn., where he kept a ferry, and died at Suffield, Conn., 11 Sept. 1688.

"He married, 7 July 1657, Elizabeth Hinsdale, daughter of Robert of Medfield. She died at Windsor, in 1669, as did another wife who died 2 Apr. 1674.

"Children:
i.  James, d. unm. at Suffield 24 July 1690. His inventory, taken 12 Aug. 1690, amounted to £12 5s., 'to go to John Rising for caring for his brother during his sickness.'
ii.  John, b. abt. 1660.
iii. Moses, who was appointed guardian in 1720 to Moses, son of John Rising, late of Suffield, deceased, a minor less than 17 years old.
Perhaps others." 
Rising, James (I2497)
 
80695 The history of the family of James Rising is abstracted from the NEHGS Register, Vol. 63, pp. 333-341 (1909), by Louis Marinus Dewey, Esq., of Westfield, Mass. Rising, John (I2494)
 
80696 The identity of Mary's parents is in dispute.

In many sources (including the Standish Silver Book), it is given as Judah (Job's brother) and Mehitable Faunce. However, the following note is in the Alden Silver Book (Vol. 16, part 5, p. 15 and 16), which should reflect later research; however, for as much detail as the writer provides, I disagree with his contention.

My reasoning is that we do not know when Judah Hall (b. 1686) died. I discovered that his son Judah Jr. was granted administration of his estate in February 1647/48, meaning that Judah Sr. had died by then. And we have (less reliable) sources to suggest that Mehitable (Faunce) Hall died in or before May 1761.

I suspect the sale recorded in May 1761 was the sale by the administrator Judah Hall, Jr. of his parent's land as divided equally by the eight heirs. I suspect that Judah, Jr. had acquired the shares of his brothers Abner, James, Enoch and Sylvanus to give control of 58ths, his brother Giles held his share, and the two orphan sons of his deceased brother Thomas made the seventh share. and then Mary as a sister would get her share. James had previously died and Judah Jr was his estate's administrator.

-----

From Alden Silver Book.

Judah3 and Mehitable (Faunce) Hall cannot be the parents of Mary Hall who m. as his second wife Joseph Samson (MF 14:61). Judah's father Elisha2 Hall (John1) was the father-in-law of William Cooke. Tabitha3 (Hall) Cooke (William's wife), daughter of Elisha Hall. Job3 Hall (Elisha2, John1), born Sept. 1691 (Barnstable Fam 1:456) is the most likely father of Mary (Hall) Samson). Job's last recorded child was Simeon Hall, b. Kingston 23 Nov. 1731.

Mary was probably a late unrecorded child of Job and Sarah (Dexter) Hall. An earlier account states that Mary was "apparently dau. of Judah and Mehitable (--) Hall" (MF 14:61) and continues with "Judah & Giles Hall implied [sic] bros. of Mary Hall." Judah and Mehitable (Faunce) Hall had seven sons, recorded at Yarmouth , and no known daughters. Their son Job is the father of Samson's first wife Sarah Hall. Giles, a separate grantor with Joseph and Mary Samson of 1/8, would not be Mary's father. Giles4 born 14 July 1721, son of Judah and Mehitable (Faunce) Hall, is presumably the grantor. Mehitable (Faunce) Hall's three youngest sons are not old enough to be Mary's father. The wife and children, if any of their oldest son Judah (1711-1800), have not been identified. Abner and James Hall (2nd and 3rd sons of Mehitable [Faunce) Hall) have what appear to be complete families. The fourth son Giles was a grantor. Mary presumably is a later unrecorded daughter of Job and Sarah (Dexter) Hall and a younger sister of Sarah (Hall) Samson. Job was born at Yarmouth 14 September 1691.

An extensive study of several men named Judah Hall was done in an attempt to identify Mary (Hall) Samson's parents. it is unclear which of many contemporary Judah Halls was the grantor of 5/8. The reason the 5/8 + 18 + 1/8 + 1/8 of the grantors is still unclear. Further research in Hall records might resolve this mystery.

On 27 March 1717 Judah Hall, yeoman of Plymouth, for £200 paid by Job Hall, yeoman of Yarmouth, sold all "my farm" where "I not long since dwelt" in Pembroke; lots 136, 138, and 128. William Cooke's right to drown to keep up his dam was reserved. (Plymouth Co. LR, 13:92R-93, ack. 27 March 1717, rec. 31 Aug. 1717). On 26 April 1731, yeoman of Kingston, and his wife Tabitha for £490 sold their dwelling house, barn, and 100 acres in Kingston to Judah Hall, weaver of Yarmouth (Plymouth Co. LR 28:68R-69, ack. 9 Dec. 1731, rec. 15 Sept. 1733).

On 5 Aug 1739 William Cooke, yeoman of Kingston, sold for £80 to Judah Hall and Job Hall in "equal halves" two parcels of land in Kingston; one parcel of about 20 acres, and the other of about four acres (ibid. 33:59, ack. [unclear] Aug, , rec. 25 Aug. 1739). On 20 Nov. 1740 Judah Hall and Job Hall, yeomen of Kingston, for £80 sold to William Cooke, yeoman of Kingston, the two parcels of land in Kingston that they had purchased from Cooke (ibid, 33:234, ack. and rec. 20 Nov. 1740).

On 21 December 1743 Samuell Seabury, yeoman of Duxbury, sold three lots (139, 140, and 141) in Kingston for £70 to Judah Hall Jr., bloomer of Kingston. Seabury reserved the privilege to drown some of the land (ibd. 36:95R-96, ack. 21 Dec. 1743, rec. 12 Jan 1743[/44]).

On 20 April 1749 Judah Hall, yeoman of Kingston, for £270 bill of credit paid by James Hall of Kingston, sold lots 139 and 140 in Kingston (upper land of Marshfield). Samuel Seabury's privilege of "drowning" what was necessary for his iron works was reserved. Silvanus Hall and Abner Wall were witnesses (ibid., 40:38, ack. 12 May, rec. 17 May 1749).

On 28 June 1756 [?1758 blurred terminal digit] Judah Hall, bloomer[blurred location --?Kingston], administrator of the estate of James Hall, late of Pembroke, for £16 sold 30 acres in Kingston (lot 136) to William Sever and John Sever, merchants of Kingston. Sarah Hall, widow of James, surrendered her dower. James, explicitly stated, has purchased this land from Judah in 1749 (ibid., 57:173R, ack. 4 July 175?, rec. 19 Aug. 1773).

On 1 October 1760 Judah Hall, yeoman or bloomer of Kingston, for £130 sold lot 141 that he had purchased from Samuel Seabury (and formerly owned by by the proprietors of Marshfield) to Peter West, bloomer of Kingston.West allowed Judah to drown from 1 Oct. to 1 April; Hannah Hall and Mary Hall were witnesses (ibid., 41:106, ack. 19 Mar 1750[/1]); rec. 9 July 1751). Peter West married, as his third wife, Tabitha Wright, a granddaughter of William Cooke and Tabitha (Hall) Cooke (MF 12:159-60, 197).

On 21 May 1761 Asahel Hall, son of Thomas Hall, chose John Faunce as his guardian. Judah Hall was surety with Faunce.  The same day John Faunce, with Judah Hall as surety, both yeoman of Kingston, was appointed guardian of Thomas Hall, son of Thomas Hall. Edward Winslow and Penelope Winslow were witnesses to several documents in this file (Plymouth Co. PR #8,878). The two boys are almost certainly the sons of Thomas and Hannah Hall. The elder Thomas was a younger brother of Judah Hall (1711-1800).
____________

From Standish Silver Book, p. 61

On 1 May 1761, ack. 22 May 1761, Judah Hall and Giles Hall of Kingston; Joseph Samson and wife Mary of Duxbury sold to John Maclaughhling Jr. 7/8th part of farm in Kingston, "sd Joseph Samson & Mary his wife sell 1/8 part -- including 1/8 part belonging to orphan children."
------

From Alden Silver Book (Vol. 16, part 5, pp. 16-17)

On 1 May 1761 Judah Hall, yeoman of Kingston, and Giles Hall, yeoman of Kingston; and Joseph Samson yeoman and Mary Samson, his wife, of Duxbury sold an undivided farm of 85 acres in Kingston for £143 to (Samson's nephew) John Maclaughhling Jr. Judah sold 5/8ths, Giles
sold 1/8th, and Joseph and Mary sold 1/8th, "And is the whole of said farm including one eighth   Part more belonging to [unnamed] orphan children." (Plymouth Co. LR 47:151, ack. 22 May 1761, rec. 1 Feb. 1762) It is unclear whether the Samson couple or all of the grantors sold the 1/8 that was owned by the unnamed orphans. Were the orphan's Sarah (Hall) Samson's children or of Thomas Hall? 
Hall, Mary (I14929)
 
80697 The intention of marriage between Bezaleel Barton 2d and Hannah Powers, both of Croydon, has been published in this town as the law directs March 8, 1813 by Jacob Haven, Town Clerk. Family F1074
 
80698 The intention of marriage between Zina Goldthwait of Croydon and Anna Howard of New Grantham has been published as the law requires, March 14, 1815 by Jacob Haven, Town Clerk. Family F1592
 
80699 The John Hall who married Esther Hubbard and the John Hall who married Mary Willis were two different people. This is easily demonstrated because they both have children being born at the same time. However, many esearchers conflate these two different John Halls.

My working assumption - and this is something that I am currently working on for the Hall Families of New England study I am involved with (https://www.albionseed.com) - is that the John Hall born to Daniel Hall and Phebe Ward in 1717 was the John Hall who married Esther Hubbard and died in 1808 and is buried with his wife in the Old Farm Hill Cemetery in Middletown.

The key records of that family from the Barbour collection are:

Ancestry.com. Connecticut Town Records, pre-1870 (Barbour Collection)

HALL, John, s. Daniel & Phebe, b. May 26, 1717 (Vol. LR2, p. 26)

HALL, John, 2nd, m. Esther HUBBARD, Sept. 21, 1749 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, Esther, d. John & Esther, b. July 20, 1750 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, John, s. John & Esther, b. Apr. 27, 1752 (Vol. 2, p. 247)
---, Elizabeth, d. Jno. & Esther, b. May 15, 1754 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, Hannah, d. Jno.. & Esther, b. Mar. 29, 1756 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, David, s. Jno. & Esther, b. Feb. 15, 1758 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, Phebe, d. Jno. & Esther, b. Mar. 12 1760 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, Jonathan, s. Jno & Esther, b. Mar. 12, 1762 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, Ruth, d. Jno. & Esther, b. Sept. 13, 1764 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, John, d. July 16, 1808 (Vol. 2, p. 257)

That death date for John at aged 92 based on the headstone with the memorial for Esther also in same cemetery with death in 1797 seems like good evidence for this John being the son of Daniel Hall and Phebe Ward.

The records for the John Hall and Mary Willis family give fewer clues.

HALL, John, Carpenter, m. Mary WILLIS, Dec. 14, 1752 (Vol. 2, p. 344)
---, John, s. John & Mary, b. Jan. 22, 1753 (Vol. 2, p. 344)
---, Mary, d. John & Mary, b. Dec. 15, 1754 (Vol. 2, p. 344)
---, Thomas, s. John & Mary, b. Oct. 14, 1756 (Vol. 2, p. 244)
---, William, s. John & Mary, b. Nov. 6, 1758 (Vol. 2, p. 344)

A death record for a John Hall in Middletown of 25 December 1786 has been put up, but I cannot find the source for this so it is difficult to prove who it is for (eg, age at death).

The record below has been widely interpreted are being Mary's death record.

HALL, w. John, d. Oct. 1, 1762 (Vol. 1, p. 6)

This is definitely not Mary (Willis) Hall. FindaGrave morial for Mary Hall of Hartford died in 1825 where she is represented as widow of John Hall of Middletown and the sister of her daughter in law memorialized on the same memorial is more convincing:

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/146471549

At this point I do not know who the widow of John who died in 1762 was. 
Hall, John II (I21501)
 
80700 The John Hall who married Esther Hubbard and the John Hall who married Mary Willis were two different people. This is easily demonstrated because they both have children being born at the same time. However, many esearchers conflate these two different John Halls.

My working assumption - and this is something that I am currently working on for the Hall Families of New England study I am involved with (https://www.albionseed.com) - is that the John Hall born to Daniel Hall and Phebe Ward in 1717 was the John Hall who married Esther Hubbard and died in 1808 and is buried with his wife in the Old Farm Hill Cemetery in Middletown.

The key records of that family from the Barbour collection are:

Ancestry.com. Connecticut Town Records, pre-1870 (Barbour Collection)

HALL, John, s. Daniel & Phebe, b. May 26, 1717 (Vol. LR2, p. 26)

HALL, John, 2nd, m. Esther HUBBARD, Sept. 21, 1749 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, Esther, d. John & Esther, b. July 20, 1750 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, John, s. John & Esther, b. Apr. 27, 1752 (Vol. 2, p. 247)
---, Elizabeth, d. Jno. & Esther, b. May 15, 1754 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, Hannah, d. Jno.. & Esther, b. Mar. 29, 1756 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, David, s. Jno. & Esther, b. Feb. 15, 1758 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, Phebe, d. Jno. & Esther, b. Mar. 12 1760 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, Jonathan, s. Jno & Esther, b. Mar. 12, 1762 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, Ruth, d. Jno. & Esther, b. Sept. 13, 1764 (Vol. 2, p. 257)
---, John, d. July 16, 1808 (Vol. 2, p. 257)

That death date for John at aged 92 based on the headstone with the memorial for Esther also in same cemetery with death in 1797 seems like good evidence for this John being the son of Daniel Hall and Phebe Ward.

The records for the John Hall and Mary Willis family give fewer clues.

HALL, John, Carpenter, m. Mary WILLIS, Dec. 14, 1752 (Vol. 2, p. 344)
---, John, s. John & Mary, b. Jan. 22, 1753 (Vol. 2, p. 344)
---, Mary, d. John & Mary, b. Dec. 15, 1754 (Vol. 2, p. 344)
---, Thomas, s. John & Mary, b. Oct. 14, 1756 (Vol. 2, p. 244)
---, William, s. John & Mary, b. Nov. 6, 1758 (Vol. 2, p. 344)

A death record for a John Hall in Middletown of 25 December 1786 has been put up, but I cannot find the source for this so it is difficult to prove who it is for (eg, age at death).

The record below has been widely interpreted are being Mary's death record.

HALL, w. John, d. Oct. 1, 1762 (Vol. 1, p. 6)

This is definitely not Mary (Willis) Hall. FindaGrave morial for Mary Hall of Hartford died in 1825 where she is represented as widow of John Hall of Middletown and the sister of her daughter in law memorialized on the same memorial is more convincing:

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/146471549

At this point I do not know who the widow of John who died in 1762 was. 
Hubbard, Esther (I21492)
 

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