
GENERATION SIX:
Lt. William Bartholomew III (no positive proof exists that William's father was William of Ipswich, but this is generally accepted as fact) was born in 1640 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts. William was a miller, carpenter/millright (June 1663), soldier, and merchant proprietor (from March 4, 1634/5". He also was a deputy Register for Whitingham, Paine, and Wade on August 14, 1647. William married Mary Johnson on December 17, 1663 in Roxbury, MA. William and Mary bought land in Boston, Massachusetts on July 26, 1659. William died in the spring of 1697 in Woodstock. Mary Johnson was born on April 10, 1642, and was christened on April 24, 1642, in Roxbury, Norfolk County, Massachusetts; and was still living in 1705 in Brantford, Connecticut. Mary was the daughter of Captain Isaac Johnson. William and Mary lived in Connecticut about the same time as The Great Plague of London swept in 1664-65. William was made an ensign of the New Roxbury County, Massachusetts on July 13, 1687. William resided in Deerfield when he served in King Phillip's War.
Their children were:
.....William Bartholomew (after his grandfather)
.....Mary Bartholomew (after her grandmother)
.....Ebenezer Bartholomew
.....ElizabethBartholomew.
GENERATION SEVEN
GENERATION EIGHT:
Abraham Bartholomew was born on June 28, 1798 in Branford Township, New Haven, Connecticut. He married (1) Hannah Page, daughter of Daniel Page and Hannah Johnson, on June 28, 1730 in Brantford, New Haven, Connecticut (2) Deborah ___ on October 25, 1770. Abraham died in Farmington. Hannah Page was born on July 3, 1713 in Branford Township, New Haven, Connecticut. Hannah died before October 25, 1770.
GENERATION NINE:
Abraham Bartholomew (farmer in Burlington, Conn.) was born on January 28, 1732 in Branford, New Haven, Connecticut. He married Eunice Orvis in Farmington, Connecticut. Abraham died in Farmington, New Cambridge, Connecticut in 1776. He was buried in the Old North Cemetary. Eunice Orvis was born February 26, 1740/1742 in Litchfield, Norfolk County, Connecticut/or Farmington, Hartford Count, CT. Eunice died May 13, 1825, New Britain, Hartford County, CT.
GENERATION TEN:
Ichabod Bartholomew (farmer/clothier) was born on February 11, 1772 in Farmington, Connecticut. Ichabod left Farmington, after 1798. and settled in Kirkland, New York until 1835, when he moved to Williamson (near Sodus Bay) New York, then he moved to Westfield Township, Medina County, Ohio. Ichabod married Rhoda Wood on October 18, 1798, in Farmington, Connecticut (now Avon, since 1830). They were married in the Northington Church. Ichabod died on January 19, 1852, in Westfield, Medina County, Ohio, at age 80 or 81. However, the tombstone, in the Crush Cemetery, shows him dying on March 16, 1851, at age 74 years, 17 days. Ichabod was in the War of 1812. Rhoda Wood was born on January 16, 1781, in Connecticut. Rhoda died March 16, 1865, in Westfield, Medina County, Ohio. Rhoda's father is thought to be Eli Wood. Eli was in the 1840 Census of Petitioners of the Revolutionary War. His second wife was named Rhoda. They lived in Smithfield, Madison County, New York. Rhoda was 88 years of age in 1840, thus we can estimate her birthday circa 1752. Rhoda (nee Wood) Bartholomew's mother died on April 15, 1841, age 88 years, thus her mother's birthday must have been after April 15th. Eli Wood, her father died on November 12, 1830, at age 78 years. Eli's first wife, Naomi is buried with them in the Wood Cemetary. The Wood cemetary is located on the Summer Gill farm, on a dirt road, from Pratt's Hollow to Marquisse Corners, south of Oneida, Madison County, New York. Naomi died on October 6, 1815, at age 64 years. Naomi and Eli's daughters are buried next to them:
WOOD:
There is a House Monument 1/2 mile north of the village of Madison on Solsville Road in Madison County, New York.
Eliphelet House and Lucretia Howell were married on January 15, 1756. in Tolland County, CT. They were recorded in the Second Congregation Church at Gilead. This church was organized in 1748. I am not sure how they relate to the WOODS, perhaps they both owned the same farm?
GENERATION ELEVEN:
Charles Bartholomew, millright, was born March 13, 1800. Charles lived in Medina County, Ohio; until 1867, when he moved to Milan, Monroe County, Michigan. Charles was a member of the M.E. Church. He married Asseneth Crush on June 19, 1837 in Medina County, Ohio. Charles die on April 18, 1870 in Michigan.Asseneth Crush was born on June 21, 1818, and died on January 31, 1861 in Medina County, Ohio. She is buried in the Crush Cemetary.
GENERATION TWELVE:
Charles Henry Bartholomew was born on November 19, 1841 in Medina County, Ohio. Charles married Ann Mariah Packard on October 6, 1861 in Tecumseh, Lenawee County, Michigan. Charles died on May 4, 1924 and is buried in Tecumseh, Lenawee County, Michigan in Brookside Cemetary.
Ann Mariah Packard was born on August 27, 1839 in Medina County, Ohio. She died July 23, 1909 in Tecumseh and is buried alongside Charles in Brookside Cemetary.
GENERATION THIRTEEN:
Harriet Assenia Bartholomew was born October 16, 1862 in Milan, Monroe County, Michigan. She married Frederick George Knight (Knecht) on May 2, 1883 in Tecumseh, Lenawee County, Michigan. Harriet died on April 22, 1957 in Tecumseh, Lenawee County, MI. She is buried in Brookside Cemetary in Tecumseh. Frederick George Knight was born on April 13, 1857 in New York. He died on March 8, 1926 in Raison Township, Lenawee County, MI>
LINKS TO MY OTHER HOMEPAGES:
OTHER BARTHOLOMEW LINKS:
Rebecca ? died May 18, 1738 in North Branford.Rebecca Frisbee, daughter of John Frisbee and Ruth Bowers (Rev. John Bowers) was born November 18, 1679; joined the church in 1694, and died in 1695, at age 16 (Smith, Hon. Ralph D. compiler Edward Frisbee of Brantford Connecticut). Branford, New Haven, Connecticut, was founded in 1638, when the New Haven Colony "purchased" land from the Indians. During the Revolution, a salt works provided salt to preserve food for the Continental Army. Thimble Island, an archipelago upon which Captain Kidd was said to have buried treasure in 1699, is in this area.
Sacred to the memory of three sisters(the daughters of Eli and Naomi Woods)
New England Colonists Web-Massachusetts Origins
Royals, Peerage, Saints, Knights, and Their Genealogy
NA/ Iroquois Links
The Sypniewski Family - Exploring All things Polish
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This page was last updated on April 23, 2012