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William Hibbs

 

Descendants of William Hibbs Sr.

 

 

Generation No. 1

 

1. WILLIAM HIBBS1 SR. was born 1630 in Dean Forest, Goucester, England, and died March 06, 1685/86. He married JOANNE 1654 in Gloucester, England.

 

Notes for WILLIAM HIBBS SR.:

Executed by authorities of King James II of England for his Quaker beliefs.

 

Source:

E-Mail:

Sande Smith

sande_lee@hotmail.com

 

Child of WILLIAM SR. and JOANNE is:

2. i. WILLIAM HIBBS2 JR., b. January 23, 1663/64, Goucester, England; d. 1708, Byberry Twp, Philadelphia, Bucks County, Pennsylvania Colony.

 

 

Generation No. 2

 

2. WILLIAM HIBBS2 JR. (WILLIAM HIBBS1 SR.) was born January 23, 1663/64 in Goucester, England, and died 1708 in Byberry Twp, Philadelphia, Bucks County, Pennsylvania Colony. He married HANNAH HOWELL December 02, 1686.

 

Notes for WILLIAM HIBBS JR.:

Came to America on the Ship "KENT" in 1676. Married Hannah Howell on 2 December 1686 in the home of John Hart in Cheltham, PA, Quaker rites.

Children of WILLIAM JR. and HANNAH HOWELL are:

3. i. SARAH3 HIBBS.

ii. JOSEPH HIBBS, b. 1687; d. 1762; m. RACHEL WARING, 1711.

iii. JONATHON HIBBS, b. 1689; m. ELIZABETH.

 

 

Generation No. 3

 

3. SARAH3 HIBBS (WILLIAM HIBBS2 JR., WILLIAM HIBBS1 SR.) She married JONATHAN COOPER, son of WILLIAM COOPER and TOMASINE PORTER.

 

Notes for SARAH HIBBS:

Married Johnathan Cooper on 20 March 1714 in Abington Friends MM, Byberry Twp, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Colony.

 

Source: Sande Smith e_mail: sande_lee@hotmail.com June 28, 2001

Children of SARAH HIBBS and JONATHAN COOPER are:

4. i. HANNAH4 COOPER, b. March 29, 1719, Middletown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; d. May 20, 1792, Solesbury Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

ii. HANNAH COOPER, b. February 10, 1714/15, Pennsylvania; d. July 1716, Pennsylvania.

iii. JEREMIAH COOPER, b. November 30, 1716; d. 1748; m. REBECCA WILDMAN; b. 1741, Middletown, Pennsylvania.

iv. JOHNATHAN COOPER, b. July 01, 1721; d. May 06, 1797.

v. PHOEBE COOPER, b. November 29, 1723.

vi. JACOB COOPER, b. August 28, 1728.

vii. WILLIAM JACOB COOPER, b. March 01, 1729/30; d. June 23, 1775, Union County, South Carolina; m. ELIZABETH LYDIA CLARK.

 

 

Generation No. 4

 

4. HANNAH4 COOPER (SARAH3 HIBBS, WILLIAM HIBBS2 JR., WILLIAM HIBBS1 SR.) was born March 29, 1719 in Middletown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and died May 20, 1792 in Solesbury Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. She married JOHN BALDERSTON1 October 21, 1737 in Gwynedd Meeting, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, son of JOHN BALDERSTON and LYDIA SCARF. He was born March 07, 1715/16 in Norwich, Norfolk, England, and died July 09, 1778 in , Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

 

Notes for HANNAH COOPER:

Hannah was a member of an established Quaker family, whose early members had come to America with William Penn. William Penn was granted a charter by King Charles II to land north of Maryland on March 4, 1681 for the purpose of founding a colony based on religious toleration and the perfectionist tenets of the Society of Friends, or Quakers. He called it his "divine experiment," and he called his colony Pennsylvania. The Friends were instrumental in forming the character of the Commonwealth during its early days, and their influence and effect are still evident in Pennsylvania today.

 

Balderston Family History Balderston, Marion & Hortense B.C. Gibson (1970), 29.

 

More About HANNAH COOPER:

Burial: , Bucks County, Pennsylvania

 

Notes for JOHN BALDERSTON:

The first Balderston to come to America in 1727. In the list of apprentices in the Public Record Office in London, there is a record that John Balderston, son of John Balderston of Norwich, house carpenter, was apprenticed to John Stinyard of Norwich, worsted weaver, on January 6, 1713 or 14. The apprenticeship was for 8 years, and John gained his freedom in 1723.

 

John remained in England for a few years before taking the adventurous step of immigrating to the American colonies. It is not known exactly how John came to the New World; there are no ship records of his journey. However, he probably came as a "redemptioner," promising his professional services for a certain length of time to pay for his passage.

 

However he came to the colonies, about ten years after his arrival when he was freed from his debt, he married Hannah Cooper on October 21, 1737.

 

John could not marry Hannah unless he too became a Quaker. Since the members of the Balderston family had for a few generations been members of a dissenting faith, the Congregationalists, this was something John was fully prepared to do. He convinced the elders of Gwynedd Meeting in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania of the sincerity of his beliefs and the two were allowed to marry. Thus begins the Quaker heritage of the family.

 

John and Hannah settled in Bucks County Pennsylvania in the township of Upper Makefield and later in Solesbury. They prospered here and had eleven children, who in turn also prospered and had large families of their own, producing numerous descendants, many of whom still live in Bucks County area.

 

John also seems to have kept in touch with his relatives in England. John's cousin Bartholomew III, remembered John and his family in his will in 1761. Among his many bequests, he writes " I give to the children of John Balderston in America, township of Upper Makefield, county of Bucks, province of Pennsylvania, viz., John, Jonatha, Bartholomew, Timothy, Jacob, Hannah, Isaiah, Mordecai, Sarah and Lydia 50 pounds apiece, or to as many as shall survive me... to be put in the hands of their father who I look upon (by his way of writing) to be a moral, honest, man."

 

John did prove to be a faithful Quaker. After the Colonies declared their independence from England, he refused to take the Oath of Allegiance to the Revolutionary Government as prescribed by law in 1777. At first, his sons John, Jonathan, and Mordecai did likewise. As the time of his death in July 1778, his property was in danger of being seized by the government for his failure to take the oath. Also, there seems to have been some conflict about the will among his children. John's third son Bartholomew filed a caveat, implying that since his father did not comply with the Act of the General Assembly to take the Oath of Allegiance, the will was not legal. However, the court ruled that since the will was written in 1773 before the Act was passed, it was legally binding. Nevertheless, his first son John was barred from acting as executor because he also refused to take the Oath of Allegiance (Abstracts of Wills, Bucks County, 1685-1785, Book 4, p. 17). Later on, near the end of the war, in 1782, John, Jonathan, and Mordecai were listed as being members of Captain Lanning and Captain Kestor's regiments in Solesbury. The war was nearly over, so they probably were never engaged in battle, but it must have caused some conflict with the elders of the Society of Friends. The Revolutionary period was a very difficult time for the Society and its members. Quakers were of course opposed to the war because bloodshed and conflict went against their religious tenets. Nevertheless, many of the younger men were openly supportive of the cause of the colonists, and many entered into military service against the dictates of the elders. Bucks County was the scene of many historic conflicts between the British and the Continental Army, and it was a difficult for the young men to remain neutral amid such patriotic fervor.

 

John's wife Hannah died in 1792, leaving a will which mentions all of her children.

 

More About JOHN BALDERSTON:

Burial: , Bucks County, Pennsylvania

Occupation: 1713, Weaver

Sealed to parents (LDS): 2

Children of HANNAH COOPER and JOHN BALDERSTON are:

i. JOHN5 BALDERSTON, b. March 15, 1739/40, Solesbury Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; d. April 27, 1821, Solesbury Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; m. DEBORAH WATSON, October 21, 1767, Buckingham Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; b. March 23, 1743/44, Falls, , Pennsylvania; d. February 17, 1794.

ii. JONATHAN BALDERSTON, b. October 26, 1741, Solesbury Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; d. August 25, 1825; m. JANE ELY, May 01, 1771, , Bucks County, Pennsylvania; b. Abt. 1746, Solesbury Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; d. June 15, 1830, Solesbury Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

iii. BARTHOLOMEW BALDERSTON, b. September 04, 1743, , Bucks County, Pennsylvania; m. SARAH JOHNSON, June 23, 1764, Swede's Church, Ellicott Mills, Maryland; b. Abt. 1747, Swede's Church, Ellicott Mills, Maryland.

iv. TIMOTHY BALDERSTON, b. October 10, 1745, , Barnstable County, Massachussetts; d. May 14, 1827, Makefield Twp, Barnstable County, Massachussetts; m. RACHEL TWINING, April 04, 1770, , Wrightstown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; b. August 15, 1751, Newton, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; d. December 28, 1777.

v. JACOB BALDERSTON, b. December 27, 1748, , Bucks County, Pennsylvania; d. , York, Pennsylvania; m. MARY ANN KENNARD, November 25, 1769, Buckingham Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; b. Abt. 1749, Bedminister Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; d. , York, Pennsylvania.

vi. HANNAH BALDERSTON, b. January 11, 1751/52, , Bucks County, Pennsylvania; d. 1833, Jefferson, , Ohio; m. WILLIAM BEANS, January 28, 1767, Wrightstown Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; b. July 15, 1740, Solesbury Twp, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; d. December 14, 1847, , Jefferson County, Ohio.

vii. ISAIAH BALDERSTON, b. February 24, 1753, , Bucks County, Pennsylvania; d. September 05, 1817; m. MARTHA ELY, November 16, 1772, , Bucks County, Pennsylvania; b. Abt. 1757, , Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

viii. MORDECAI BALDERSTON3,4, b. January 31, 1755, Wrightstown, B. PA; d. April 21, 1820, Short Creek, Ohio; m. DEBORAH MICHENER, February 11, 1778; b. April 23, 1757, Plumstead Twp, Bucks County, PA; d. October 04, 1828, Short Creek, Ohio.

 

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