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| Husband: John Samborne | |||
| Born: | ABT 1504 | at: | Timsbury, Somerset, England |
| Married: | ABT 1527 | at: | Timsbury, Somerset, England |
| Died: | Mar 1570 | at: | Timsbury, Somerset, England |
| Father: | Nicholas Samborne IV | ||
| Mother: | Elizabeth Brocas | ||
| Wife: Dorothy Tichborne | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Children | |||
/--Nicholas Samborne III
/--Walter Samborne
| \--Elizabeth Cricklade
/--Nicholas Samborne IV
| | /--Thomas Drew
| \--Margaret Drew
| \--
|--John Samborne
| /--
| /--John Brocas
| | \--
\--Elizabeth Brocas
| /--
\--Anne Rogers
\--Margery Lisle
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Dorothy Tichborne
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
| Husband: Kevin R. Schaffer | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | at: | ||
| Mother: | at: | ||
| Wife: Lucinda Kirk | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Kayli Schaffer [9590] | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Andrew Schaffer [9591] | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
/--
/--
| \--
/--Richard William Schaffer
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Kevin R. Schaffer
| /--
| /--William J. Theisen
| | \--
\--Eileen E. Theisen
| /--
\--Elizabeth Margaret Opel
\--Marie Henrietta Klein
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Lucinda Kirk
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
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\--
\--
[9412] This person is presumed living.
[9590] This person is presumed living.
[9591] This person is presumed living.
| Husband: Thomas Noble | |||
| Born: | 1606 | at: | England |
| Married: | 1620 | at: | England |
| Died: | at: | Massachusetts | |
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Sources: | [9777] | ||
| Wife: Rachel Gardner | |||
| Born: | 1608 | at: | England |
| Died: | at: | Massachusetts. USA | |
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Sources: | [9778] | ||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Thomas Noble [9761] [9760] [9762] | ||
| Born: | 1632[9760] | at: | England |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | 20 Jan 1704 | at: | Westfield, Hampden, Massachusetts, United States |
| Spouses: | Hannah Warriner | ||
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Thomas Noble
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Rachel Gardner
| /--
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| | \--
\--
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\--
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[9761] Thomas Noble was the immigrant ancestor of the largest family in the United States bearing the name of Noble. He was born as early as 1632, probably in some part of England. His exact origin and early history are involved in obscurity, the place of his birth, the names of his parents, and the year in which he came to his country, being alike unknown. He was, without doubt, here in 1653, and was the man mentioned by Drake, (History of Boston, p. 331) as admitted, on the 5th of January of that year, an inhabitant of Boston. The same year, he removed to Springfield, Mass., and opened an account at the store of John Pynchon. though not one of the founders, he may be considered as one of the early settlers of that ancient town, the first settlement having been made in 1636, only seventeen years before.
A few years after removing to Springfield, he visited England, as appears from an account-book of Mr. Pynchon. In 1664, in connection with several of his townsmen, he had liberty granted him to erect a saw-mill, on the west side of the Connecticut. Mr. Noble, though a man of activity and industry, seems to have early fallen into a habit of living "beyond his means," and as a natural result, soon found himself in debt. To secure the sums due to Henry Smith and John Pynchon, he was obliged, in 1667, to make over to Pynchon his house in Springfield, and all his lands, except a grant towards Windsor.
In the hope of improving his condition, and providing for the wants of a large and growing family, he was therefore ready to join those who were beginning a settlement at Westfield. The precise time of his removal to that place is not known. The lands there granted to him, July, 1666, on condition that he settled upon them before the last of May, 1667, having been forfeited by non-settlement, the grant was renewed, Jan. 9, 1668, and the time of the settlement extended to Nov. 10, 1668. At all events, he was there as early as Jan. 21, 1669, for at a meeting at Warronoco, (Westfield), at that date.
In his historical sketch of Westfield, Rev. Dr. Emerson Davis states, that Mr. Noble's residence in Westfield was about two and a half miles east of the present center of the town, on the farm where his son, Dea. Thomas Noble, afterwards resided, and which remained in the family until after the death, in 1791, of his great-grandson, Lieut. Stephen Noble, when it passed into the possession of Ambrose Day.
In Westfield he doubtless lived in peace and quite, until the commencement of "King Philip's" war, in 1675. Agriculture, necessarily the main pursuit of every one in the early history of a country, was his principal employment, although while at Springfield, during the winter, he worked a portion of the time as a tailor. At Westfield, he was so much prospered in his labors, as not only to bring up a large family of children well, but also to leave them at his death a respectable estate.
https://www.holcombegenealogy.com/data/p1008.htm
By James H. Holcombe 3600 Eaglerock Dr.
Atlanta, GA 30340
Last Will and Testament of Thomas Noble
"The last will and testament of Thomas Noble of Westfield, in ye county of Hampshire, in ye Province of the Massachusetts Bay in New England, being weak in body, but of perfect understanding.
Impr, I commend my soul into the hands of Christ my blessed Lord and Saviour and my body to Christian burial, in full faith of a blessed resurrection, through the rich Grace of God in Christ my Saviour.
Item, I give unto my son Thomas, that parcel of land lying in the farm purchased from Mr. Jn. Pynchon, from the gate beyond the house entering into the field bounded by the plowing land, the way to Springfield, John Noble's land and the drain all along the swamp.
Item, to my son Matthew, a tract of land in the same farm, lying by a ditch easterly and bounded at both ends by the river.
Item, I give unto my sons Mark and Luke, my little meadow, lying against the orchard of Noah Cooke and that homelot that I have bought and they have raised frames upon.
Item, I give the lot that the town gave me on the top of the hill against my house on the same farm, to all my six sons for pasture. Item, to my son James, a parcel of land and house upon it, on that farm that is fenced in, being six or seven acres more or less.
Item, I bequest the rest of this my farm lying bounded upon James northerly, Thomas on the east, Matthew on the south, ye river on the westerly sides, to all my sons, i.e., to my sons John, Thomas, Matthew, Mark, Luke and James, equally to be divided amongst them by my brother James Warriner and John Hitchcock of Springfield and by Capt Isaac Phelps of Westfield.
Item, I give to my son James, all my land in the plain, on this side the hundred acres and the lot by the way to Pochastuck.
Item, I give to my son John, the rest of my lot in ye fort meadow.
Item, I give unto my beloved wife, Hannah Noble, an acre of land reserved out of my son John's homelot; also half my dwelling house, that is to say, that end next the street, and halfe the land and orchard and barn we dwell on, and the other halfe of the house lot and barn to my son James, as also the thirds of all that I here will to my sons and after her decease, I give to my son James the whole of the house, houselot and barn and the acre reserved out of my son John's homelot.
Item, I give unto my four daughters, Hannah, Elizabeth, Mary and Rebecca L 20 apiece, to be paid them by my sons (viz.), Thomas, Matthew, Mark, Luke and James, to Mary and Rebecca about half a year after their marriage and a cow apiece at their marriage. And in case any of my children should dye, not leaving any issue behind them, then my will is that the legacies that I here give them, be equally divided among the surviving and also I order these my sons to find my wife fewel wood and two load of hay every year, so long as she shall remain widdow. Item, I give unto my wife also a cow and heifer, also all my household goods, which household goods I would have her at her pleasure dispose of to my two youngest daughters.
Item, my team (one yoak of oxen excepted), I give unto my three youngest sons, Mark, Luke and James. And for the well and faithful execution of this my last will, I ordain and make my beloved wife Hannah Noble and my son Thomas Noble joynt executors, to defray all my lawful debts and for that end leave one yoke of working cattle, a yoak and fatt oxen and the money in the Bay due me and all other dues, the which, when my debts are defrayed, the remainder I would have go to pay my daughter's portions. But in case the same shall be too little to clear my due debts, that then they are to raise what is sufficient out of the legacies, I have here given to my children, to do the same. In witness whereof I set to my hand and seal this eleventh day of May, Ano Dom., 1697.
Thomas Noble and a [seal] Signed & sealed in the presence of Edward Taylor Victory Sikes James Warriner
@1 [9777] [S44]
@1 [9778] [S44]
@1 [9760] [S81]
@1 [9762] [S44]
| Husband: Robert J. Cameron | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Wife: Mary Minnie Williams | |||
| Born: | 17 Aug 1863 | at: | |
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | Siloam Williams | ||
| Mother: | Mary Ann Phelps | ||
| Children | |||
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Robert J. Cameron
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--Siloam Williams
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Mary Minnie Williams
| /--Amos Phelps
| /--Jeremiah Phelps
| | \--Diadama Long
\--Mary Ann Phelps
| /--Amos Phelps
\--Margaret Collins
\--
| Husband: Philipp Peter Schmidt | |||
| Born: | 18 Apr 1796 | at: | Martenroth, Heidenrod, Rheingau-Taunus-Kreis, Hessen, Germany |
| Married: | 4 Apr 1830 | at: | |
| Died: | 16 Feb 1864 | at: | Martenroth, Heidenrod, Rheingau-Taunus-Kreis, Hessen, Germany |
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Wife: Katharine Margarethe Bremser | |||
| Born: | 24 Mar 1803 | at: | Martenroth, Heidenrod, Rheingau-Taunus-Kreis, Hessen, Germany |
| Died: | 17 Sep 1858 | at: | prb. Heidenrod-Martenroth, Germany |
| Father: | Johann Philipp Bremser | ||
| Mother: | Anna Maria Debus | ||
| Children | |||
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Philipp Peter Schmidt
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
/--Johann Wilhelm Bremser
/--Johann Peter Bremser
| \--Maria Elisabetha Huth
/--Johann Philipp Bremser
| | /--
| \--Maria Eva Elisabeth Bodenbach
| \--
|--Katharine Margarethe Bremser
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--Anna Maria Debus
| /--
\--
\--
| Husband: William Edward Bremser | |||
| Born: | 14 Dec 1877[11952] | at: | St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States |
| Married: | 2 Mar 1899 | at: | St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States |
| Died: | 12 Mar 1953[11953] | at: | Zion, Madison, Missouri, USA |
| Father: | Johann Carl Frederick Bremser | ||
| Mother: | Anne Marie Miller | ||
| Sources: | [11952] [11953] [11954] [11955] [11956] | ||
| Wife: Sarah Buckalow | |||
| Born: | 1875[11769] | at: | Newport, Jackson, Arkansas |
| Died: | 9 Dec 1899[11770] | at: | St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States |
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Sources: | [11769] [11770] [11771] [11772] [11773] | ||
| Children | |||
| Name: | William John Bremser [11815] [11816] [11817] [11818] | ||
| Born: | 8 Dec 1899[11815] | at: | St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | 8 Dec 1989[11816] | at: | Gulf Breeze, Santa Rosa, Florida, USA |
| Spouses: | Lydian Schneider | ||
/--Johann Henrich Bremser
/--Johann Philipp Bremser
| \--Antonette Regina Haiss
/--Johann Carl Frederick Bremser
| | /--
| \--Anna Margarethe Oberländer
| \--
|--William Edward Bremser
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--Anne Marie Miller
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Sarah Buckalow
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
@1 [14733] [S598]
@1 [11952] [S598]
@1 [11953] [S598]
@1 [11954] [S598]
@1 [11955] [S599]
@1 [11956] [S598]
@1 [11769] [S598]
@1 [11770] [S598]
@1 [11771] [S598]
@1 [11772] [S599]
@1 [11773] [S598]
@1 [11815] [S598]
@1 [11816] [S598]
@1 [11817] [S599]
@1 [11818] [S598]
| Husband: (--?--) | |||
| Wife: (--?--) | |||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Seth Dustin | ||
| Born: | 21 Oct 1825 | at: | Hartland, Niagara, New York, United States |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | 2 Dec 1903 | at: | Garden City, Rich, Utah, United States |
| Spouses: | Hannah Sophia Loveland , Ann Reid Everington | ||
| Husband: William Adie | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | ABT 18 Jan 1842 | at: | |
| Father: | William Adie | ||
| Mother: | |||
| Notes: | [12239] | ||
| Wife: Susan | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | ABT 9 Aug 1842 | at: | |
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Notes: | [12233] | ||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Jane Adie [12223] | ||
| Born: | ABT 1801 | at: | Stafford County, Virginia, USA |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | Stafford County, Virginia, USA | |
| Spouses: | John Fendall Bell | ||
| Name: | William Adie [12231] | ||
| Born: | ABT 1804 | at: | |
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Elizabeth Adie [12232] | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | John H. Adie [12235] | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
/--
/--
| \--
/--William Adie
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--William Adie
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Susan
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
[12239]
Ancestry.com Heads of Families in first US Census, VA:
Born 175? in VA
[12233] Stafford County Deeds etc. Book MM-412: Wife of William, John F. Bellgot a one-fifth interest in 150 acres and eight slaves from Elizabeth,her daughter, for $275.00.
[12223] Implied Marriages of Fairfax by Hiatt and Scott. See 1850 census, JohnF. Bell has died.
[12231] US Census 1850, headed house of Jane Adie Bell after death of John F. Bell
Stafford County Deeds etc. Book NN-6: Says son of deceased William inthis deed dated 9 August 1842. Susan just died, too. Sold hisone-fifth of William's real and personal property and Susan's dower toJohn F. Bell for $300.00.
Stafford County Deeds etc. Book NN-133: On 3 May 1842, John F. Bellpaid $500.00 to William Adie for slaves Dennis Green, about 50, MarySteward, about 20, her son Charles, about 2. It included the lifetimeuse of Elias Fox, about 18, which William got from his brother, John H.Adie, deceased.
Stafford County Deeds etc. Book OO-356: 8 Nov 1847 "William Adie beingtaken in execution under a writ of Capias ad Satisfaciendum at the suiteof Thomas M. Farrow for twelve dollars and thirty-eight cents with sixpercent interest thereon for the 20th day of July 1845 till paid & onedollar & forty-eight cents costs". Sold "his whole estate" to John H.Suttle (j.p.?) at auction for $14.50. Suttle then sold to John F. Bellfor a "valuable consideration", thereby getting the estate back.
[12232] Stafford County Deeds etc. Book MM-412: 21 Jan. 1842 -- Had one-fifthinterest in land of William Adie, deceased, sold to John F. Bell for$275.00, about 150 acres and eight slaves. Court asked in private ifit was okay, no problem with husband. Elizabeth is daughter ofWilliam. In addition, William H. Fitzhugh was given the followingproperty to guard for her against the use of her husband -- "one femaleslave Lethe with her future increase, one dark bay horse, one carryalland harness, one heifer and two hogs, all the beds, bedding, householdand kitchen furniture" which she alone should will or if no will, itshould go to all children.
[12235] Stafford County Deeds etc. Book NN-133: On 3 May 1842, John F. Bellpaid $500.00 to William Adie for slaves Dennis Green, about 50, MarySteward, about 20, her son Charles, about 2. It included the lifetimeuse of Elias Fox, about 18, which William got from his brother, John H.Adie, deceased.
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