Showing posts with label Underhill Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Underhill Family. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2026

Amanuensis Monday -- 1784 Deed of John Underhill and John Underhill Jr. Buying Land in Rockingham County, New Hampshire From Peter Wells

This week's document for transcription is the 1784 Deed of Peter Wells selling 100 acres of land in Chester, Rockingham County, New Hampshire to John Underhill and John Underhill Jr. for £60.  

a)  Rockingham County, New Hampshire. Deeds 1785-1787:  pages 221-222, image 117 of 825:


a)  Rockingham County, New Hampshire. Deeds 1785-1787:  pages 223-224, image 118 of 825:


The transcription of this deed, starting on page 222 below them iddle of the right-hand page of the first image, with the assistance of FamilySearch Full-Text Search:

[Page 222 starting at the top of the left-hand page of the image]:

[in the right-hand margin]

Wells
to 
Underhill

[In the main body of the deed]

Know all men by these presents that I Peter Wells of New Chester in County 
of Grafton in the State of New Hampshire yeoman For & in consideration of 
Sixty pounds lawful money to me in hand before the delivery hereof well & truly 
paid by John Underhill Gent'n & John Underhill Jun yeoman both of Chester in 
the County & State aforesaid the receipt whereof I do hereby acknowledge have 
given granted bargained & sold & by there do give grant bargain sell alien con-
vey & confirm to them the said John Underhill & John Underhill jun in their heirs & 
assigns in equal Shares forever A certain parcel of Land situate & being in 
Chester aforesaid containing by estimation one hundred acres more or less, 
it being that hundred acre Lot in the second part of the second division 
that is Number 106 laid out to the right of Ephraim Gill laying in 
the eighteenth range bounded first at the Southeast corner a white oak

[Page 223 from top of left-hand page of the second image]

N'o. 106 then north west & by west 176 rods by the highway to a white oak N'o 106
then North 29 degrees East one hundred & forty five rods by the highway to a 
Maple N'o 106 then East to the Southeast 176 rods to a white oak N'o. 106, then 
South 29 degrees West about 160 rods to the first bounds mentioned. To 
have & to hold the said granted & bargained premises with all the privileges &  
appurtenances to the same appertaining to them the said John Underhill 
& John Underhill jun, their heirs & assigns free of all incumbrances whatsoever 
alio absolute Estate of inheritance in fee simple forever. And I the said Peter 
Wells for myself heirs Executors & administrators do covenant & engage to Warrant 
to use[?] & defend the above premises to them the said John Underhill & John 
Underhill Ju'r their heirs & assigns against the lawful claims or demands of 
any person or persons whatsoever In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand 
& seal this twenty third day of March Anno Domini 1784.
Signed Sealed & delivered in presence of us  }  Peter Wells    {seal}
Jauriel Harriman Thomas Wells                 }
Rockingham Chester March 23'd  Then the above named Peter Wells acknow-
leged this Instrument to be his free act & Deed before me 
                                                                       John Webster Just Peace 
Rec'd & Recorded 16th August 1785. Sam Brooks Rdr

The source citation for this deed record is:

"Rockingham County, New Hampshire, United States records," Deed of Peter Wells to John Underhill and John Underhill Jr, executed 23 March 1784, recorded 16 August 1785; imaged, FamilySearch   (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSRZ-PZM1?view=fullText : accessed 1 May 2026), Image Group Number 008298497, "Rockingham. Deeds, 1785-1787," pages 222-223, images 117-118 of  825; original records in Rockingham County, New Hampshire Register of Deeds.

This deed documents the sale of 100 acres of land in Chester, Rockingham County, New Hampshire, sold by Peter Wells of Grafton County to John Underhill and John Underhill Junior of Chester for £60 in lawful money on 23 March 1784 (recorded 16 August 1785).  

John Underhill (1720-1793) anmd his wife Joanna Healey (1718-1809) are my 6th great-grandparents, and John Underhill Junior (1745-1816) and his wife, Hannah Colby (1745-1791), are my 5th great-grandparents, through their son Amos Underhill (1772-1865) who married Mary Metcalf (1780-1855) in 1801 in Piermont, Grafton County, New Hampahire.

I found this record using the FamilySearch Full-Text Search feature by searching for John Underhill and New Hampshire. The Full-Text Search transcription missed, or misplaced, many words on the left-hand margin of the pages.

=========================================

Read other transcriptions of records of my relatives and ancestors on my Amanuensis Monday Posts page.

NOTE: Genea-blogger John Newmark (who writes the excellent TransylvanianDutch blog) started a Monday blog theme years ago called "Amanuensis Monday." John offers this definition for "amanuensis:"

"A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another."

The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/05/amanuensis-monday-1784-deed-of-john.html

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share your comments on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear online immediately.

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Monday, May 11, 2026

Amanuensis Monday -- 1774 Deed of John Underhill Buying Land in Rockingham County, New Hampshire From Joseph Colby

 This week's document for transcription is the 1774 Deed of Joseph Colby selling 60 acres of land in Chester, Rockingham County, New Hampshire to John Underhill for £165.    

a)  Rockingham County, New Hampshire. Deeds 1803-1805:  pages 148-149, image 318 of 724:


The transcription of this deed, starting on page 503 near the top of the right-hand page of the first image, with the assistance of FamilySearch Full-Text Search:

[Page 148 starting at the top of the left-hand page of the image]:

KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS , THAT 
I Joseph Colby of Chester in the County of Rockingham 
in the Province of Newhampshire in New England Yeoman 
For and in confideration of the sum of One hundred & Sixty five pounds 
lawful money to me in hand before the delivery hereof, well and truly paid by
John Underhill of Candia in the County & Province 
Yeoman 
the receipt whereof I do hereby acknowledge, have given, granted, bargained, sold, and by 
these presents, do give, grant, bargain, sell, alien, enfeof, convey and confirm unto the said John
Underhill his heirs and assigns forever, a Certain parcel of 
Land Situate & being in the Township of Chester in the County 
and Province aforesaid, containing by Estimation Sixty acres 
more or less, It being & containing all my homestead whereon 
I now dwell: Bounded as followeth vizt, Northerly on the high-
way called Pennicook Road , Southeasterly on Robert Runell's 
Land, and the highway Southwesterly on Sam'l Worthens Land 
and Northwesterly partly on Cap't John Underhill's Land 
and partly on Stephen Lufkins Land; together with the 
fences & buildings that are on & about the same.

To have and to hold the said granted premises with all the privileges and appurtenances to the 
same belonging ^appurtenances^ to him - the faid John Underhill his 
heirs and assigns to their only proper use and benefit forever. And I the said 
Joseph Colby for myself my - heirs, executors, and administrators, 
do hereby covenant, grant, and agree to and with the said John Underhill
his heirs, and assigns, that until the delivery hereof I am
the lawful owner of the said premises and am - seized and possessed thereof in 
My own right in fee simple , and have full power and lawful authority to grant and convey 
the same in manner aforesaid; that the said premises are free and clear of all and every incumbrance whatsoever, and that I and my                          heirs, executors and
Administrators, shall and will warrant the same to him the said John Underhill his
heirs and assigns against the lawful claims and demands of any person or persons whomsoever.
In Witness whereof I have hereunto Set my hand & seal the 
Second day of March in the fourteenth year of his Majestys 
Reign Anno Domini 1774 
Signed Sealed & delivered                                       his
in presence of                                               Joseph  X Colby    {seal}
Dorothy Emerson                                                   mark
Saml Emerson

 Rockingham ss  Chester March 2'd 1774, then the above
named Joseph Colby personally appearing acknowledged 
this Instrument to be his free act & deed , before me - 
                                              Saml Emerson Just Peace 

Recd & Recorded 8'th May 1804
                                                    Josiah Adams Rdr

The source citation for this deed record is:

"Rockingham County, New Hampshire, United States records," Deed of Joseph Colby to John Underhill, executed 2 March 1774, recorded 8 May 1804; imaged, FamilySearch   (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSRZ-LS7D-P?view=fullText : accessed 1 May 2026), Image Group Number 008298521, "Rockingham. Deeds, 1803-1804. 1803, 1804, 1804-1805," page 148, image 318 of 724; original records in Rockingham County, New Hampshire Register of Deeds.

This deed documents the sale of 60 acres of land in Chester, Rockingham County, New Hampshire, sold by Joseph Colby of Chester to John Underhill of Candia for £165 in lawful money on 2 March 1774 (recorded 8 May 1804).  

Joseph Colby is probably my 6th great-grandfather, born in 1708, father of Hannah (Colby) Underhill, and residing in Chester in 1768, for whom there is no death record or probate record in the New Hampshire records.  The Joseph Colby in this deed could also be Hannah's brother, Joseph Colby (1739-1839), who is the son of Joseph Colby (1708-after 1768).  Since the father Joseph Colby did not have a recorded probate record, I think that the Joseph Colby in this deed is likely the father Joseph Colby.

John Underhill (1745-1816) and his wife, Hannah Colby (1745-1791), are my 5th great-grandparents, through their son Amos Underhill (1772-1865) who married Mary Metcalf (1780-1855) in 1801 in Piermont, Grafton County, New Hampahire.

I found this record using the FamilySearch Full-Text Search feature by searching for Johnhj Underhill and New Hampshire. The Full-Text Search transcription missed, or misplaced, many words on the left-hand margin of the pages.

=========================================

Read other transcriptions of records of my relatives and ancestors on my Amanuensis Monday Posts page.

NOTE: Genea-blogger John Newmark (who writes the excellent TransylvanianDutch blog) started a Monday blog theme years ago called "Amanuensis Monday." John offers this definition for "amanuensis:"

"A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another."

The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/05/amanuensis-monday-1774-deed-of-john.html

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share your comments on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear online immediately.

Subscribe to receive a free daily email from Genea-Musings using www.Blogtrottr.com.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Life Memoir of John Underhill (1745-1816) of Plainfield, New Hampshire in 1814

  I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for the family of my 5th great-grandparents John and Hannah (Colby) Underhill in ABC Biography of the John and Hannah (Colby) Underhill Family of New Hampshire (1745-1816)based on my genealogical research over 38 years. 

I wondered what John Underhill might have told his grandchildren in a life memoir in 1814. 


(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic for John Underhill's life memoir
)

1)  I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 to   "Please write a life memoir for John Underhill based on the attached biography, as he might tell to his grandchildren in 1814."

2)  The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is: 


As I Remember It
Being the Life Recollections of
Sergeant John Underhill
of Chester and Plainfield, New Hampshire (1745 – 1816)


As told to his grandchildren -- Plainfield, New Hampshire, 1814

Come, sit close — the fire is low and the night is long

Well now. You want your old grandfather to talk, do you? John's children, Jonathan's little ones — all of you crowded in here like kittens in a basket. All right then. Move that stool, there. Put another log on. If I am going to tell you the whole of it, we shall need more warmth before I am done.

I am sixty-nine years old this summer, and there are mornings I feel the weight of every one of them. My hands are stiff before noon. My back — well, we shall say nothing about my back. But my memory, that is still sharp. Sharp enough, anyway, to carry you back to Chester, to the old Long Meadow road, to a time when this land was still a colony of the King of England, and none of us had yet learned the word republic.

I was born on the twentieth of June, 1745, in Chester, Rockingham County — though in those days we called it New Hampshire Colony, and beyond our northern farms lay a wilderness that men like your great-great-grandfather had only just begun to push back. Chester was a young town then, settled not thirty years before by Scots-Irish families who came with strong backs and strong opinions and not much else. We fit right in.

My Father's House

My father was John Underhill — yes, same name; it caused no end of confusion at the tavern — and my mother was Joanna Healey before she married him. They wed in 1741, and by the time I arrived I was already the third child, with my sister Betty and my brother William ahead of me. Before all was said and done there were ten of us at that table. Ten children. Think of that. Betty, William, myself, then Molly, Moses, David, Samuel, Jeremiah, Sarah, and last of all little Joanna, who came along when I was nearly grown. My mother fed us all, clothed us all, kept us all out of serious mischief — though Moses tested her patience considerable. I do not think my father ever counted us all at once for fear of the number.

We lived near the brick school house on the Long Meadow road — you will hear more of that road before I am done, for it runs through the whole of my life. The soil in Chester is thin and stony, as New Hampshire soil tends to be, but we knew no other kind and did not miss what we had never had. Father kept cattle and grew rye and corn, and in the winters we did what all New Hampshire farmers do: we endured.

I was a boy during the French and Indian War — King George's War, some called it then. There was fear in those years that the French and their Indian allies would come south from Canada and fall upon the settlements. The men of Chester kept their muskets primed. I remember my father coming home from a militia muster, telling my mother something in a low voice that she did not repeat to us children. I was perhaps eight or nine. I did not know it then, but I was learning the face of a man who carries fear quietly, so that those around him can sleep.

Hannah

I will tell you about your grandmother now, because no honest account of my life makes any sense without her.

The Colby family came to Chester from Amesbury, Massachusetts, sometime around 1760 — Hannah's father, Joseph Colby, moving his family north for the land, the way families did. Hannah was the fourth of five children, born on the fourteenth of February, 1744, though by the old calendar some wrote it as 1744 and some as 1745. It was Valentine's Day, which she thought was either a good omen or a great joke depending on her mood.

I first knew her as a neighbor's daughter. She had dark eyes and a direct way of looking at you that made you feel she was deciding something important about your character. She was quick with figures, quicker than most men I have known, and she had a laugh that carried across a room. I was smitten from the first time I heard it, though it took me the better part of two years to do anything useful about it.

We married in 1767, in Chester. I was twenty-two. She was twenty-two. We were young and thought we knew everything, which is the natural condition of the young and which I have long since forgiven in myself.

Her father, Joseph Colby, died in 1768, the year after we married. He left behind a sixty-acre homestead on the Long Meadow road — the same road where I had grown up, would you believe it. In 1774, we bought that land from Hannah's brother Joseph for one hundred and sixty-five pounds. It was Lot Number Forty, and it became ours. That farm was where we raised our children. That is where we spent the best years of our lives.

The Trouble with the King

I must speak now of the years when everything changed, because you cannot understand who you are without knowing what your grandfather did and why.

By the early 1770s, the trouble with England had been building for years. The Stamp Act, the Townshend duties, the soldiers in Boston — we heard of all of it in Chester, and we argued about it at meeting and at the tavern and over the fence between farms. All of the men were in the town militia and we trained regularly. Some men were cautious. Some were hot-headed. Most of us were somewhere in between — angry at being taxed and ordered about, but also aware that war is an awful thing and not to be wished for lightly.

I had a wife. I had children coming. We had just bought our farm. I had everything to lose. And yet when the time came, I went.

In July of 1777 — our country had been at war for two years by then, and things were not going well — the call came for men to join General Stark's brigade and march north to block the British. General John Burgoyne was pushing south from Canada with a large army, and if he was not stopped, he might split the colonies in two. I enlisted on the twenty-first of July as a Corporal in Captain Stephen Dearborn's company of Colonel Stickney's regiment. Hannah was home with the children — Joseph was seven, Amos was five, Nancy was three. She did not weep when I left, at least not where I could see.

The Battle of Bennington

We marched north and then west, a company of New Hampshire farmers with muskets and determination and not much else. On the sixteenth day of August, 1777, we met the enemy near the town of Bennington — though the fighting was actually in New York, just across the border, which is the sort of thing that only matters after the fact.

General Stark gave a speech before the battle that I have never forgotten. He pointed at the enemy camp and said — and I paraphrase, for I am old and memory condenses — that we would defeat those red-coats before nightfall, or Molly Stark would be a widow. The men roared. I roared with them, though I confess my stomach was not as brave as my voice.

The enemy was mostly Hessian soldiers — Germans hired by the British king to fight his battles for him, because he could not find enough Englishmen willing to come over and be shot at by New Hampshire farmers. They were professional soldiers, well-equipped. We were militia. The difference, I learned that day, matters less than people suppose, when the militia is fighting for its own land.

I will not pretend I was a hero. I loaded and fired, loaded and fired, stayed with my company, did not run. The noise of it — the smoke and the screaming and the terrible percussion of the guns — is not something you can describe to someone who has not heard it. I will only say that time does strange things in a battle. Some moments last an age. Others vanish entirely.

We won. Stark's men routed them — captured over seven hundred prisoners, killed two hundred more, took four cannon and a thousand muskets. It was a famous victory, and New Hampshire has been proud of it ever since, as well she should be.On that same day, the sixteenth of August, I was promoted to Sergeant. One of the officers, Lieutenant Ezekiel Lane was killed, and John Lane was named Lieutenant, and I became the Sergeant. But from that day forward I was Sergeant John Underhill, and I have worn the title quietly, without much fuss, for nearly forty years now.

I was discharged on the twenty-eighth of September, having traveled one hundred and ninety-two miles in service. I was paid thirteen pounds, fourteen shillings, and eight pence. I walked home to Chester with my fellow soldiers. Hannah met me at the door and looked me over carefully, the way she always did when I had been somewhere dangerous, checking for damage. Then she put me to work splitting wood, because the stack was low and winter was coming. That was Hannah.

The Second Time

You might think that one war was enough. But a few years later, in 1780, Chester was called upon to raise six men for service in the far north — the Coos country, up near Canada. The war was still grinding on. The frontier still needed watching.

I went again. This time we marched a hundred miles north to the Haverhill area in what they called the Cohos region. I was one of three men trusted to carry and distribute the travel money for the soldiers — two dollars a mile, a hundred miles, which adds up to a sum worth protecting. We served until the end of December. The north country in December is a hard place, and I am not sorry I was young and strong when I saw it.

I came home again. Hannah checked me for damage again. The wood was low again.

Our Children

Let me speak of your parents and their brothers and sisters, for they are the best thing Hannah and I ever did.

Joseph came first, in 1770. He was a serious boy who grew into a serious man — he has been up in Vermont these many years, in Cabot and Marshfield, farming and raising a family of his own. I am proud of him. 

Amos came in April of 1772. Amos was the one who could charm anyone, man or beast, into doing what he wanted. He married Mary Metcalf up in Piermont and they have done well. They moved to Erie County, New York in about 1810. I expect he will outlive us all, the rascal.

Nancy came in 1774, and Susan in 1778. Girls in this family have always had more sense than the boys, and those two were no exception.

Your father John was born in 1776 — the very year of the Declaration, which Hannah took as a sign of something, though she was never entirely specific about what. He is settled in Grafton with Mary Esther, and I am glad of it.

And then there is Jonathan — born the ninth of August, 1779, right here in Chester. Jonathan is the one who came with me when I bought this house in Plainfield. He married Sophia Slack right here in Plainfield in 1805, and they have built something worth building.

Six children your grandmother and I brought into this world, between 1770 and 1779. Hannah labored for every one of them on that farm on the Long Meadow road, in a house that was never quite warm enough in January and never quite cool enough in July, and she never once complained about it where I could hear.

Your Grandmother

Hannah died on the twelfth of September, 1791. She was forty-six years old. I will not dwell long here, because some things a man carries close and does not put into words for others to examine. I will only say that the house on the Long Meadow road was a different place after she was gone, and that I was a different man.

I stayed in Chester for some years after. I lived a while in Candia nearby. In 1801, I sold the homestead — seventy-eight acres by then, expanded from the original sixty — to Mary Brown, for six hundred dollars. It was time. The children were grown and scattered. The farm held too many voices in the walls.

I bought land in Plainfield that same year, from Nathaniel Garland, fifty-seven acres for seven hundred dollars. A man needs something to stand on. I held it until 1806, when I passed it to Jonathan, and he took me in along with it.That was eight years ago now. I am comfortable here. I am not without my creakings and complaints, but I am comfortable.

What I Would Have You Know

You are young, all of you. The youngest of you — I look at your face and I see your father in it, and I see Hannah in it, and I see something that is entirely your own, which is as it should be. You will do things in your lives that I cannot imagine. This country of ours is young too, and restless, and full of a confidence that sometimes frightens me and sometimes fills me with a joy I cannot name.

We were a colony when I was born. A possession of a king who had never set foot on this soil and did not know the name of a single man or woman who worked it. By the time your fathers were born, we were something new — a republic, the first real republic since the Romans, or so Mr. Jefferson would have us believe, and perhaps he is right.

I did not fight at Bennington because I was brave. I fought because the land was mine and the family was mine and no king three thousand miles away had the right to tell me otherwise. That is not heroism. That is simply a man standing on his own ground.

You come from a long line of people who stood on their own ground. Chester folk. New Hampshire folk. People who looked at stony soil and a short growing season and a winter that lasts half the year and said: yes, this will do, we will make something here. And we did.

Your grandmother made something here. Your father made something here. I made something here, however imperfectly. Now it is your turn.

There, now. The fire is low and your old grandfather is tired. You have had the whole of it, or as much of it as I can give you tonight. Go to bed, all of you. Leave me to the fire a while. I will sit here and think about the Long Meadow road.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Sergeant John Underhill died in Plainfield, New Hampshire, in 1816. He was seventy years old.

A Note to the Reader

The words above are imagined, but the facts are real. John Underhill was born in Chester, New Hampshire in 1745, served in the Revolutionary War, farmed the Long Meadow road for three decades, and died in Plainfield in 1816. Every date, every place, every name of family and neighbor is drawn from the historical record. What is invented is only the voice — the warmth of a grandfather by the fire, trying to give the past to those who will carry it forward.

===========================

3)  The Video Overview of John Underhill's life memoir, created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool, is:   

4)  I edited the Claude memoir text to correct minor inconsistencies and errors. Every large language model (LLM) AI tool writes descriptive text much better than I can write. The AI tools are very perceptive, insightful and inspiring, creating engaging text in seconds, including local and national historical events and social history detail when requested.

5)  This is historical fiction, based on my own genealogical research. It is what John Underhill  might have told his grandchildren in 1814.  

==============================================

Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/05/life-memoir-of-john-underhill-1745-1816.html

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com. Please note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

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Monday, May 4, 2026

Amanuensis Monday -- 1801 Deed of John Underhill Buying Land in Cheshire County, New Hampshire From Nathaniel Garland

This week's document for transcription is the 1801 Deed of Nathaniel Garland and his wife selling 57 acres of land in Plainfield, Cheshire County (now Sullivan County), New Hampshire to John Underhill for $700.    

a)  Cheshire County, New Hampshire. Deeds 1813-1814:  pages 502-503, image 543 of 866:


b)  Cheshire County, New Hampshire. Deeds 1813-1814:  pages 504-505, image 544 of 866:


The transcription of this deed, starting on page 503 near the top of the right-hand page of the first image, with the assistance of FamilySearch Full-Text Search:

[Page 503 starting near the top of the right-hand page of the first image]:

Know all men by these presents that I Nathaniel 
Garland of Plainfield in the County of Cheshire and 
of New Hampshire Trader For and in Consideration 
of the sum of Seven hundred dollars to me in hand 
Before the delivery hereof, well and Truly paid by John
Underhill
of Chester in the County of Rockingham & 
State of New Hampshire husbandman the Receipt where-
of I do hereby acknowledge hence given Granted bar-
gained sold, and by these presents do give Grant Bar-
gain Sell aliene enfeoff Convey and confirm unto 
the said John Underhill his heirs and assigns 
forever. A Certain Tract or percel of land lying in 
New Grantham and Plainfield, Bounded as follows viz 
Begining at a Stake and Stones Standing on the west 
side of the road that runs from R. C . Duncans to 
Enfield, about four Rods west of a dry hemlock Tree
marked thence north 71 deg west 123 rods to the west line
of New Grantham then on said ^Town^ line South 42 deg. west
to a Stake and Stones Standing on the East side of the 
road that leads ^from New Grantham^ from through Plainfield by Mr Harris to 
Labanon 30 rods to a Stake nd Stones thence in Plainfield 
on the east side of said Road North 19 deg west 112 Rods 
to a Stake and Stones thence North 82 deg. east 134 Rods 
to a Small Hemlock Tree marked Standing in the 
South west Corner of land owned by Moses Flanders 
upon the North bank of Great Brook ( so called ) 
Then up the Centre of said Brook to the road that 
Leads from Robert Duncans to Enfield, thence upon 
the west side of said Road to the first mentioned 
Bound about 83 rods, Containing about fifty Seven 
acres more or less.  To have and to hold the s'd 
Granted premises with all the privileges and appur-
tenances to the Same belonging to him the said John
Underhill his heirs and assigns to his and their only 
proper use and benefit forever. And I do Covenant 
with the said John Underhill his heirs and assigns 
that I am Lawfully Seized in fee of the premises 
that they are free of all Incumbrances that I have 
good right to sell and convey the same to him 
and that I will warrant and defend the same to 
the said John Underhill and his heirs and assigns 
forever against the Lawful claims and demands
of All persons. In witness whereof I have hereunto

[page 504, top of the left-hand page of the second image]

Set my hand and Seal this ninth day of
June in the year of our Lord one Thousand eight 
hundred and One. And I,         wife of the said 
do hereby release my right of Dower in the premises 
Signed Sealed and              }    
delivered in presence of us }   Nath'l Garland  {Seal} 
Simon Towle    }                  Rockingham ss . State of New
Israel Huse       }            Hampshire Chester June 9th 1801. 
                                Personally appearing the above named 
Nathaniel Garland, and Acknowledged the above 
Instrument to be his Voluntary Act & Deed 
                                      Before me Simon Towle Jus Peace 
Recd . 29 June 1814. Recorded & Examined pr
                                                 James Campbell Rcdr.

The source citation for this deed record is:

"Cheshire County, New Hampshire, United States records," Deed of Nathaniel Garland to John Underhill, executed 9 June 1801, recorded 29 June 1814; imaged, FamilySearch   (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSRH-F9ZN-4?view=fullText : accessed 1 May 2026), Image Group Number 008297918, "Cheshire. Deeds, 1813, 1814, 1813-1814," pages 503-504, images 543-544 of 866; original records in Cheshire County, New Hampshire Register of Deeds.

This deed documents the sale of 57 acres of land in Plainfield, Cheshire County, New Hampshire, sold by Nathaniel Garland and his wife of Plainfield to John Underhill of Chester for $700 in lawful money on 9 June 1801 (recorded 29 June 1814).  

John Underhill (1745-1816) and his wife, Hannah Colby (1745-1791), are my 5th great-grandparents, through their son Amos Underhill (1772-1865) who married Mary Metcalf (1780-1855) in 1801 in Piermont, Grafton County, New Hampahire.

I found this record using the FamilySearch Full-Text Search feature by searching for Johnhj Underhill and New Hampshire. The Full-Text Search transcription missed, or misplaced, many words on the left-hand margin of the pages.

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Read other transcriptions of records of my relatives and ancestors on my Amanuensis Monday Posts page.

NOTE: Genea-blogger John Newmark (who writes the excellent TransylvanianDutch blog) started a Monday blog theme years ago called "Amanuensis Monday." John offers this definition for "amanuensis:"

"A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another."

The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/05/amanuensis-monday-1801-deed-of-john.html

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share your comments on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear online immediately.

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Saturday, May 2, 2026

ABC Biography of the John and Hannah (Colby) Underhill Family of New Hampshire (1745-1816)

Using the ABC method described in Using Artificial Intelligence In the Ancestor Biography Creation (ABC) Process -- Updated, enhanced by further developments, here is another ancestor couple biography using the Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 AI tool.

1) The genealogical sketch for the family of my 5th great-grandparents John and Hannah (Colby) Underhill, including family members, record abstracts and sources, is in Genealogical Sketch of the John Underhill (1745-1816) and Hannah Colby (1750-1793) Family of Chester and Plainfield, New Hampshire.


(AI NotebookLM Infographic - John and Hannah (Colby) Underhill Family Biography)

2) For the Claude AI biography, I attached a PDF of the genealogical sketch for the specific ancestors using the plus (+) icon, and then prompted the AI tool with:  "You are an expert genealogist and family historian. Please create a biography based on information in the attached file for the John and Hannah (Colby) Underhill family. Include parents, siblings, spouses and children (with birth and death dates and places). Summarize life events, add historical events as appropriate, but do not add or embellish any extra genealogical details. Use section headings. Expand the information in each section to add more details. The tone should be engaging and suitable for family members."

3)  The Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 biography (lightly edited for accuracy) is: 


The Underhill Family of Chester and Plainfield
New Hampshire, 1745–1875
A Family Biography

Introduction

Among the earliest families to shape the rugged hill towns of New Hampshire, the Underhills of Chester left a legacy woven into the very fabric of colonial and Revolutionary-era New England. This biography follows the life of Sergeant John Underhill (1745–1816), who served in the Revolutionary War, and his wife Hannah Colby (1750–1791) — a couple whose story spans the final decades of colonial rule, the turbulence of the American Revolution, and the hopeful expansion of a new nation.

From the rocky farmland of Chester, Rockingham County, to the hills of Plainfield on the Connecticut River, their lives touched some of the most dramatic events of their age. John bore a musket at the Battle of Bennington; Hannah raised six children on a family homestead; and together they built a family whose descendants spread across New England and beyond.

John Underhill (1745–1816)

Birth and Early Life

John Underhill was born on 20 June 1745 in Chester, Rockingham County, New Hampshire Colony — a time when the settlements of New Hampshire were still finding their footing on the edge of the British colonial frontier. He was the third child and second son of John Underhill (1720–1793) and Joanna Healey (1718–1809), who had married in Chester in 1741 and would go on to raise a family of ten children in that close-knit community.

Chester in the mid-eighteenth century was a thriving Scots-Irish Protestant settlement founded in 1719. Its residents were independent-minded farmers and craftsmen who prized self-sufficiency and community loyalty — values that would later lead many of them, including John, to take up arms for American independence.

John grew up in a large and lively household alongside nine siblings, several of whom remained in the Chester area throughout their lives:
  • Betty Underhill (born 13 July 1742, Chester) — married Samuel Buswell in Candia on 12 July 1764; died 30 September 1806 in Candia.
  • William Underhill (born 15 February 1744, Chester) — married Abigail Choate about 1767 in Candia; died 24 November 1780 in Moultonborough.
  • Molly Underhill (born 4 December 1747, Chester) — married James Pierce in Chester in 1765; died 1835.
  • Moses Underhill (born 2 February 1749, Chester) — married three times; died 8 February 1838 in Chester.
  • David Underhill (born 9 September 1751, Chester) — married Jemima Blake in Chester on 20 September 1792; died 28 July 1827 in Chester.
  • Samuel Underhill (born 5 May 1753, Chester) — married Sarah Underhill in Chester on 12 December 1775; died 20 September 1828 in Chester.
  • Jeremiah Underhill (born 6 August 1755, Chester) — married Anna Heath in Hampstead in September 1775; died 16 September 1794 in Chester.
  • Sarah Underhill (born 20 May 1759, Chester) — married Moses Greenough in Chester on 10 December 1789; died 7 September 1838 in Atkinson.
  • Joanna Underhill (born about 1764, Chester) — married Moses Preston in Chester on 30 November 1784.
Hannah Colby (1744/5–1791)

Birth and Early Life

Hannah Colby was born on 14 February 1744/5 in Amesbury, Essex County, Massachusetts Bay Colony — the dual dating reflecting the old-style Julian calendar still in use at the time of her birth. She was the fourth of five children born to Joseph Colby (1707–1768) and Abigail Worthen (1714–date unknown), who had married in Amesbury in 1736.

Amesbury in the 1740s was a prosperous Massachusetts town on the Merrimack River, well known for its mills and craftsmen. Hannah grew up there alongside her siblings before the family made the significant decision to relocate northward to Chester, New Hampshire Colony, sometime before 1760 — likely drawn by the promise of inexpensive land and opportunity on the frontier.

Hannah's parents, Joseph and Abigail (Worthen) Colby, had the following children:
  • Ephraim Colby (born 6 March 1736/7, Amesbury) — died in infancy in 1737.
  • Joseph Colby (born 3 April 1739, Amesbury) — married Molly [surname unknown] before 1776 in Concord, New Hampshire; died 1839 in Concord — a remarkable life spanning over a century.
  • Abigail Colby (born 24 September 1742, Amesbury).
  • Hannah Colby (born 14 February 1744/5, Amesbury) — the subject of this biography.
  • Ephraim Colby (born 24 March 1750, Amesbury).
Marriage and Family Life

The Wedding and the Homestead

John Underhill and Hannah Colby married in about 1767 in Chester, Rockingham County, New Hampshire Colony. Their union brought together two well-established Chester families — the Underhills, long rooted in that community, and the Colbys, relative newcomers from Amesbury who had quickly become part of the local fabric.

The Underhill Genealogy, compiled by Josephine C. Frost, describes their home as being "near the brick school house on the opposite side of the road a little to the southwest" — a vivid detail that places the family at the heart of Chester's community life, adjacent to the very institution where the next generation would be educated.

On 2 March 1774, John and Hannah made a significant financial and emotional investment in their future: they purchased the 60-acre homestead of Hannah's late father, Joseph Colby, from her brother Joseph for £165. The property, known as Lot No. 40, sat along the Long Meadow road near the old brick school house. It was the land on which Hannah had likely grown to womanhood, and it would now become the family's base for decades to come.

Children of John Underhill and Hannah Colby

Between 1770 and 1779, John and Hannah welcomed six children into their Chester home, all born in the town where their story began:
  • Joseph Underhill (born 1770, Chester) — married Mollie Carr about 1798 in Cabot, Washington County, Vermont; they had five children; died 3 September 1843 in Marshfield, Washington County, Vermont.
  • Amos Underhill (born 15 April 1772, Chester) — married Mary Metcalf on 25 March 1801 in Piermont, Grafton County, New Hampshire; they had five children; died 15 October 1865 in Aurora, Erie County, New York — a long life of 93 years.
  • Nancy Underhill (born 1774, Chester), no further record.
  • John Underhill (born 1776, Chester) — married Mary Esther Mitchell in 1798 in Grafton, Grafton County, New Hampshire; they had three children; died 1858 in Grafton.
  • Susan Underhill (born 1778, Chester), no further record.
  • Jonathan Underhill (born 9 August 1779, Chester) — married Sophia Slack on 5 March 1805 in Plainfield, Sullivan County, New Hampshire; they had four children; died 31 October 1875 in Washington, Orange County, Vermont — reaching the remarkable age of 96.
This was a household of considerable energy and responsibility — six children known by name, with the eldest born just as the American colonies were lurching toward revolution. The years of the children's births, 1770 to 1779, span exactly the period of America's founding, meaning the Underhill children grew up in the shadow of the Revolutionary War and the birth of the new republic.

John Underhill and the Revolutionary War

Service at the Battle of Bennington, 1777

John Underhill's most notable contribution to the American cause came in the summer of 1777, one of the most consequential years of the Revolutionary War. On 21 July 1777, John enlisted as a Corporal in Captain Stephen Dearborn's Company, part of Colonel Thomas Stickney's regiment under the command of General John Stark. The company marched west from Chester to join the Northern Continental Army.

The campaign that followed led John directly to the Battle of Bennington, fought on 16 August 1777 in present-day New York near the Vermont border. This pivotal engagement saw General Stark's forces decisively defeat a Hessian detachment sent by British General John Burgoyne to seize supplies at Bennington, Vermont. The victory — a stunning success for the American militia — weakened Burgoyne's army and helped set the stage for the crucial American victory at Saratoga two months later, which brought France into the war as an ally.

It was on this very day, 16 August 1777, that John Underhill was promoted from Corporal to Sergeant — a recognition of his service and leadership during the battle. He was discharged on 28 September 1777, having traveled 192 miles in service to the cause, and was paid £13 14s 8d for his efforts. From that point forward, records consistently refer to him as Sergeant John Underhill.

Service in the Coos Campaign, 1780

John's service did not end at Bennington. When the town of Chester was called upon to raise six men for six months' duty in the remote Coos region of northern New Hampshire, John Underhill was among those who answered. Under the authority of Muster Master John Webster — acting on orders from New Hampshire's Committee of Safety in Exeter — six men were enlisted to serve until the end of December 1780.

The mission required these volunteers to march approximately 100 miles north from Chester to the Haverhill area in the "Cohos" (Coos) region, the frontier edge of New Hampshire that bordered Canada. John was one of the three men entrusted with distributing travel funds to the soldiers — a sign of the trust his community placed in him. The war had long since moved south, but the northern frontier still required vigilant protection.

Later Years and Legacy

Hannah's Death and Its Aftermath

Hannah (Colby) Underhill died on 12 September 1791 in Chester, Rockingham County, New Hampshire, at 46 years of age. Her death must have been deeply felt in the household, which still contained several of the younger children. She had been the heart of the family through the years of the Revolution, through the births of six children, and through the daily labor of running a New Hampshire farm.

After Hannah's death, John continued to live in Chester for a time, spending some period in nearby Candia. The family homestead on Long Meadow road — the 78 acres (expanded from the original 60) — was eventually sold to Mary Brown in 1801 for $600.

The Move to Plainfield

With his Chester homestead sold, John Underhill made a significant move to Plainfield, then in Cheshire County, New Hampshire (later transferred to Sullivan County). On 9 June 1801, he purchased a 57-acre parcel of land in Plainfield from Nathaniel Garland for $700 — a modest but solid investment that would keep him near at least one of his sons.

His son Jonathan also settled in Plainfield, and married Sophia Slack there in March 1805. On 13 March 1806, John formally conveyed the 57-acre Plainfield property to Jonathan for $700, the same price he had paid five years earlier — likely an arrangement that ensured Jonathan and Sophia could maintain the farm while providing John a home in his final years. It is believed that John spent his remaining decade living with his son Jonathan's family.

Death of John Underhill

John Underhill died in 1816 in Plainfield, Sullivan County, New Hampshire, at the age of approximately 70 — a veteran of two stints in the Revolutionary War, a farmer, a father of seven, and a man who had lived through the transformation of his country from British colony to independent republic. According to the History of Old Chester, his death was caused by hypothermia, a stark and sorrowful end for a man who had survived battlefield service and decades of New England winters.

There are no surviving death, burial, or probate records for either John or Hannah in the counties of Rockingham or Sullivan. Their graves, if they still exist, have not been identified in any known cemetery record — a reminder of how easily even remarkable lives can slip from the written record.

The World They Lived In

To appreciate the Underhills fully, it helps to understand the world through which they moved. John was born just five years after King George's War disrupted New England, and spent his youth in the tensions leading to the French and Indian War (1754–1763). By the time he married Hannah in 1767, the Stamp Act had already inflamed colonial opinion against Britain, and the road to revolution was being paved.

When John marched to Bennington in 1777, he was part of a New Hampshire militia tradition of citizen-soldiers — farmers who set down their plows and picked up muskets to defend their communities. General Stark's victory at Bennington remains one of New Hampshire's proudest military achievements; the state motto, "Live Free or Die," derives from Stark's famous toast years after the battle.

The years of Hannah's childrearing, the 1770s and 1780s, coincided precisely with the war and its immediate aftermath — a time of sacrifice, scarcity, and hope. The family's purchase of Joseph Colby's homestead in 1774, just two years before the Declaration of Independence, placed them among those New Englanders who were simultaneously building private futures and a new public nation.

By the time John moved to Plainfield in 1801, Thomas Jefferson had just been elected president, the Louisiana Purchase was two years away, and the United States was still discovering the scale of its own ambitions. John Underhill was a man of the founding generation in every sense — born a colonial subject, transformed into a citizen, and aged into the early republic.

A Family That Spread Across New England

The children of John and Hannah Underhill carried the family outward from Chester in directions that reflect the restless mobility of early American life. Joseph, the eldest, moved to Vermont, settling in the Washington County towns of Cabot and Marshfield. Amos also went west and north — to Piermont in Grafton County, New Hampshire, and eventually to Aurora, New York, where he died in 1865 at the age of 93. John Jr. remained closer to home in Grafton, New Hampshire.

Jonathan, the youngest son, settled in Plainfield alongside his father in his final years, before his own family eventually relocated to Washington, Orange County, Vermont, where Jonathan lived until his death on 31 October 1875 — 96 remarkable years that carried him from the American Revolution to the end of the Civil War. The daughters Nancy and Susan remain less documented in available records, as was sadly common for women of their era.

Together, the children of John and Hannah Underhill produced at least seventeen known grandchildren across Vermont, New Hampshire, and New York — a family that grew with the young nation itself.

A Note on Sources

This biography draws upon several primary and secondary sources, including:
  • New Hampshire Birth Records, 1659–1900 (Ancestry.com and FamilySearch)
  • Josephine C. Frost, Underhill Genealogy, Volume 4 (Myron C. Taylor, 1932)
  • Town of Amesbury, Massachusetts, Vital Records to the End of the Year 1849 (Topsfield Historical Society, 1913)
  • Benjamin Chase, History of Old Chester From 1719 to 1869 (Auburn, N.H., 1869)
  • New Hampshire Revolutionary War Records, 1675–1835 (FamilySearch and Ancestry.com)
  • Cheshire County, New Hampshire Deed Records, 1801–1814 (FamilySearch)
Prepared from genealogical records of the Underhill and Colby families of Chester and Plainfield, New Hampshire.

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4) An Audio Overview (essentially a podcast) created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool) describing and celebrating the lives of the John and Hannah (Colby) Underhill family can be heard here (click on "Audio Overview" and wait for it to load).

5)  The Video Overview discussing the John and Hannah (Colby) Underhill family created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool is:  


6)  The Slide Deck produced by Google NotebookLM was incorporated into a Google Slides file, and the created Google Vids presentation is below:  


7)  I edited the Claude biography text to correct minor inconsistencies and errors. Every large language model (LLM) AI tool writes descriptive text much better than I can write. I was an aerospace engineer in my former life, and my research reports and genealogical sketches reflect "just the facts gleaned from my research." The AI tools are very perceptive, insightful and create readable text in seconds, including local and national historical events and social history detail when requested.

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Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.


Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post.  Share it on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com. Note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

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