Thursday, April 12, 2018

Finding Thomas Graves Land Records in Worcester County, Massachusetts

Thomas Graves (1686-1756) is my 7th great-grandfather.  He was born  in Lynn, Massachusetts, married his first wife, Ruth Collins (1690-1714) in Lynn, had one daughter in 1711 in Lynn, and his wife died in 1714.  He married Ruth Taylor in 1715 in Lynn, had Hannah and Joseph Graves in Lynn, and moved to Reading, Massachusetts in about 1724.

In 1738, Thomas Graves sold his land in Reading, and moved to Southborough, Massachusetts.  In 1747, he sold his land in Southborough to his son, Joseph Graves (1717-1788).  However, he continued to live in Southborough, probably with his son Joseph on the home lot, and died on 21 February 1756.  He wrote a will on 16 February 1756 - see Amanuensis Monday - the Will of Thomas Graves (1686-1756) of Southborough, Mass.

The will mentions "In the first place I give to my Daughter Ruth Buck Six shillings & Eight pence Lawfull money and one Cow to be paid unto her at the end of one year after my decease and these with what she hath already had to be to her in full for her part of portion out of my Estate."

Ruth Buck is the daughter of Thomas and Hannah (Collins) Graves, and is my 6th great-grandmother.

I was curious about "what she hath already had to be to he in full" in the will of Thomas Graves.  Was it land?  And if so, where?  

I knew that Thomas Graves had sold land in Southborough to his son, Joseph Graves, so I wanted to find that deed record.  In 1756, Southborough was in Worcester County.  The process of finding the deed and worknig with it may be of interest to other researchers, so I will describe it below:

1.  On the FamilySearch Historical Record Collection List, I found the Massachusetts Land Records, 1620-1986 collection:



Note that this collection is not indexed or searchable, except by using the Deed Grantee and Grantor Indexes and noting the Volume and Page numbers in the Deed Indexes on digital microfilm.

2)  I clicked on the "Browse through 5,766,135 images" link and then saw the first waypoint - the list of Massachusetts counties:


3)  I want Worcester County, so I clicked on it:


The image above shows the links for all of the Deed index (grantee and grantor) and Deed volumes on digital microfilm.

4)  I want the Grantor Deed Index to find the record of Thomas Graves selling the land to his son Joseph, so I scrolled down to the Deed Index (Grantor) section:

5)  The Graves surname is in the "Deed Index (Grantor) 1731-1839 D-L" volume.

I easily found the index entry because these records are alphabetized by surname and then by given name, and then by year.  The index entry for Thomas Graves was on image 264 of 593:

The entry is for a recording date of 1756, the Grantor is Thomas Graves, the Grantee is Joseph Graves, and it is in Volume 37, page 164 of the Deed books.

6)  Back to the Deed Volume list, and I easily found the book with Volume 37:


It is in the "Deeds, 1756-1758, Vols. 37-38" volume.

7)  I easily found that deed on image 98 of 626:

8)  I downloaded the image to my computer, and renamed it and stored it in my file folder for Thomas Graves on my computer system.  Here is the full deed image (left-hand page):



9)  I abstracted the deed to add to my RootsMagic family tree program as a Deed event:

"On 20 February 1747, Thomas Graves, husbandman of Southborough, sold land in Southborough to Joseph Graves, husbandman of Southborough, for 400 pounds lawful money in hand.  The parcel of land in Southborough was thirty acres of meadow and upland, being one half of his dwelling place with one half of the buildings, fences, trees, and fruit trees.  The witnesses were Ezekiel Collins and Mark Collins. The deed was recorded in the Worcester County land records on 22 March 1756."

10)  The source citation for this deed is:

"Massachusetts, Land Records, 1620-1986," digital images, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : , Volume 37, page 164, Thomas Graves to Joseph Graves, 20 Februaru 1747, recorded 22 March 1756; citing original records in Worcester County courthouse, and Family History Library microfilms.

11)  In his will proved on 23 March 1756, Thomas Graves bequeathed the rest of his lands and property to his son Joseph Graves.

12)  What did my ancestor, Ruth Buck receive from her father?  I did not find a deed selling or giving land to Ruth (Graves) Buck in Worcester or Middlesex Counties.  She may have received a portion of the real or personal property when she married in 1729.  I don't know exactly how much she received, or when she received it, but my educated guess is that she received a portion of the 400 pounds from her father in 1747 after he sold half of his land in Southborough to son Joseph Graves, plus the small amount (6 shillings, 8 pence) bequeathed to Ruth Buck in the 1756 will of Thomas Graves.

13)  This was a fun exercise.  I do something similar almost every week.  I'm familiar enough with how to work in these land records now that I found this deed within five minutes while working in my genealogy cave at home this afternoon.  It took a bit more time to download the images above and write this blog post.

14)  Note that there are land deeds for every county of Massachusetts in this record collection on FamilySearch.  There are deeds for almost every county in the United States on digital microfilm in the FamilySearch Library Catalog which can be accessed from home or at a local FamilySearch Library.  The records are available - are you searching for and finding them?

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Copyright (c) 2018, Randall J. Seaver

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Seavers in the News- Mrs. Marian Seaver Dies in Santa Cruz in 1918

It's time for another edition of "Seavers in the News" - a semi-regular feature from the historical newspapers about persons with the surname Seaver that are interesting, useful, fun, macabre, or add information to my family tree database.

This week's entry is from the Santa Cruz (Calif.) Evening News newspaper dated 24 October 1918:




The transcription of this article is:

"Mrs. Marian Seaver, Pioneer, Passes Away
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"Mrs. Marian Seaver, for half a century a well known resident of Beach hill, passed away last evening at her home on Third street after a sudden, short illness, in which her heart was fatally affected.

"Although the light had long since passed from her eyes, Mrs. Seaver had never lost that light of the heart which led her to give generously and unostentationsly, particularly to the needy.  The faithful daughter, Miss Alice Seaver, with whom Mrs. Seaver lived, has given up years of service upon her afflicted mother and feels keenly the bereavement which leaves her alone in the house.

"Mrs. Seaver was born in England seventy-nine years ago, coming to this country as a young woman.  Her husband passed on about twenty years ago.  She is survived by two daughters, Miss Alice and Mrs. Clara Edwards of New Orleans, and two sons.  John Davis, a nephew residing in San Francisco and a close and faithful friend of the dead woman, is expected in Santa Cruz today.

"The funeral will be held from Wessendorf & Son's funeral parlors tomorrow afternoon, to be followed by open air services at the grave in Odd Fellows cemetery.  Rev. M.L. Laybourn will officiate."

The source citation for this article is:

"Mrs. Marian Seaver, Pioneer, Passes Away," Santa Cruz (Calif.) Evening News, 24 October 1918, page 5, column 5, Marian Seaver obituary; online images, California Digital Newspaper Collection (http://cdnc.ucr.edu : accessed 11 April 2018).

I had Marion M. (--?--) Seaver in my RootsMagic family tree database, but I did not have her death date.  She was married to William Harvey Seaver (1821-1895) (also known as W.H.), and they married about 1858, probably in California.  They had six children:

*  Clara Harriet Seaver (1859-????) who married William Sawyer Everett (1854-????) in 1889.
*  William Seaver (1861-????)
*  Edward Hammond Seaver (1866-1926), who married Ida M. Reed (1876-????) in 1898, 4 children.
*  Marion E. Seaver (1867-????)
*  Charles A. Seaver (1872-????)
*  Alice B. Seaver (1877-1961).

I had hoped that the obituary would provide a clue for Marion's maiden name, but the only clue is the nephew named John Davis.  So Marian may be a Davis.  There is an Ancestry Member Tree that says she was a Watling.  I'll check on that!

I don't know the parents of Marian's husband, William Harvey Seaver, born in about 1821 in Massachusetts, according to his three-line death notice in March 1895.


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Copyright (c) 2018, 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 Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.

Birth Record of Ruth Graves (1711-????) of Lynn, Massachusetts - Post 407 for Treasure Chest Thursday

It's Treasure Chest Thursday - a chance to look in my digital image files to see what treasures I can find for my family history and genealogy musings.

The treasure today is the 1711 birth record of Ruth Graves in the Lynn, Massachusetts vital record book:

The Ruth Graves birth record is:


The transcription of this record is:

"[GRAVES], d. Thomas and Ruth, Jan. 10, 1710-11."

The source citation for this record is:

Vital Records of Lynn, Massachusetts to the end of the Year 1849 (Salem, Mass. : The Essex Institute, 1906), 2 Volumes, Births, page 168, Ruth Graves entry, 1711.

Ruth Graves was the only recorded child of her parents were Thomas Graves (1686-1756) and Ruth Collins (1685-1715) of Lynn, Massachusetts.  Thomas Graves married, secondly, Ruth Taylor (1690-1756) on 22 February 1714/5 in Lynn.
  
Ruth Graves (1711-?????) and Isaac Buck (1706-1780) married on 3 December 1729 in Reading.  They had six children, but only two were recorded in a town or vital record.  

Isaac Buck and Ruth Graves are my 6th great-grandparents.  I am descended from their son Isaac Buck (1732-????) who had a relationship with Mary Richards (1733-????).  

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Copyright (c) 2018, 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 Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

More Searching for Eulalia - Curiouser! FIXED!

I wrote Something's Wrong With Ancestry Pennsylvania Death Certificates Search on Monday.  In that post, I found that some searches for persons in the Pennsylvania Death Certificates collection on Ancestry.com were not found by a search of the specific database.  I don't know how many can't be found, but the one I chose, randomly, couldn't be found, even though it was in the database (I posted an image of the 1955 death certificate for Eulalia Conner.

My friend, Barry, emailed me to say that searching for Eulalia Conner in the normal search box on the Ancestry.com home page or search page.  I tried that:

Here is the search results for first name = "eulalia" (exact) and last name = "conner" (exact):

 \
Down the list is the link for the Pennsylvania Death Certificates collection, and I clicked it to see the Record summary page for the record:


I clicked on the green "View" button to see the image:


Yep, that's her!!  So searching for a person from the general search page works.

I thought "Maybe Ancestry.com fixed it in the last two days."  So I went to the "Pennsylvania Death Certificates, 1906-1966" record collection and searched again for Eulalia Conner dying in 1955 using the exact search criteria:


It found "Mrs. Elizabeth Conner" again like the earlier post.  It still doesn't find the right person when I search in the specific database.

I searched using only the first name "eulalia" and "1955" and it didn't find her.  It did find "Mrs. Elizabeth Conner" again.

It's curious, isn't it?  Strange, too.  How does this happen?

UPDATED 13 April 2018:  My reader also emailed the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commisson (PHMC) on 9 April, and they responded saying that  they were aware of the problem on Ancestry.  Today, the problem with the search and index for this record collection on Ancestry.com was fixed.

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Copyright (c) 2018, Randall J. Seaver

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World War II Virtual Conference and European Travel Experience

I received this press release from Jennifer Holik yesterday:

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FOR RELEASE 10 APRIL 2018
Jennifer Holik
Global Coordinator of the World War II Research & Writing Center, Chicago IL & Amstelveen, Netherlands http://wwiirwc.com info@wwiirwc.com 

The World War II Research and Writing Center is pleased to announce we are collaborating with Lisa Alzo and offering a European Travel Experience in 2019. 


Questions. Stories. Family history. World War II. Remembrance. Transformation. Closure. Answers.

Are you ready for a storybook journey that will transform your research and your life? Do you enjoy research? Do you like to write? Do you like to travel?

Jennifer Holik and Lisa Alzo are creating an experience like none other through which you will find the answers to your research questions and transform your life.

We begin our journey in April 2019 when we will be hosting a full-day virtual conference, open to the public, in which we will discuss stories, writing, genealogy, and military history. Registration and payment details for this event will be available to cruisers and non-cruisers soon. Conference fees are not included in the cost of the cruise.

Then on 3 October 2019, join Jennifer Holik and Lisa Alzo on a 7 Day Rivers and Castles Cruise. We board in Nuremburg, Germany and sail for seven days stopping at: Bamberg, Schweinfurt, Kitzingen, Würzburg, Wertheim, Mainz, Rüdesheim, Rhine Gorge, Koblenz, Cochem, Zell, Trier, and disembark in Remich, Luxembourg where we are offering one final transformative excursion before we part ways.

During the cruise, we will be facilitating two discussions on stories, genealogy, and military research while sailing through picturesque storybook countryside steeped in history. Specially designed travel journals with handouts will be provided to travelers when we board.

In mid-November 2019 we will have a wrap-up webinar for travelers to close the experience.

Register for your cabin SOON ($400/person to reserve) on the Amadante through our travel agent, Terri O'Connell, as space is limited!

Final payment for the cruise is June 21, 2019.

Airfare is not included in the price of your cruise. If you need assistance, Terri can help you.

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Copyright (c) 2018, 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 Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.

San Diego Genealogical Society Program on Saturday, 14 April Features Debby Anderson

The next San Diego Genealogical Society (SDGS) program meeting is this Saturday, 14 April at 10 a.m. at St. Andrew's Lutheran Church (8350 Lake Murray Blvd (south of Jackson Drive) in San Diego.

Debby Warner Anderson will present "The Carrie Letters" in both sessions.


The 9 a.m. classes in the upstairs classrooms are:

*  Class 1: Colin Whitney on"An Introduction to the Genealogy Family Album"

*  Class 2:  Don Martin, Co-Director of the Family Search Library will talk about his organization

There is Limited Seating, RSVP Required (to sdgsclasses@gmail.com)  for a spot if you plan to attend one of these classes.

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Copyright (c) 2018, 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 Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.

Red Tail Hawk in the Back Yard -- Post 511 of (Not So) Wordless Wednesday

I'm posting family photographs from my collection on Wednesdays, but they aren't Wordless Wednesday posts like others do - I simply am incapable of having a wordless post.

In August 2014, I was looking out the back yard sliding door and saw a red tail hawk swoop down and attack a pigeon on the ground.  He feasted on it for a minute, then grasped it in his talons, and flew up to the western wall of our yard.  I slowly opened the door, and walked outside, and eventually got within about ten feet of the hawk standing on the wall.  Here are two photos I took while the hawk was on the wall:




The hawk is beautiful.  I see them all the time soaring over the trees on the west side of our yard.  The wall is on a rise of about 40 feet over the houses below, so there is an updraft there - perfect for the hawks.  The hawks sometimes chase the smaller birds that gather at our bird feeders near the house but they never seem to catch them.  We also have large crows around the neighborhood.  For several years, we had a flock of parrots making noise every morning, but they seem to have died off.

This is part of MY family history!

More photos next week!

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The URL for this post is:  www.geneamusings.com/2018/04/red-tail-hawk-in-back-yard-post-511-of.html

Copyright (c) 2018, 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 Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.


Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Genealogy News Bytes - 10 April 2018


Some of the genealogy news items across my desktop the last three days include:

1)  News Articles:


 
Lives of the First World War project to end 2019

Researchers find evidence of 1755 earthquake — at bottom of Lynn pond
2)  Record Databases:

*  
Added or Updated Ancestry.com Collections - Week of 1 to 7 April 2018

*  Added or Updated Record Collections at FamilySearch.org - Week of 1 to 7 April 2018

 April Update: GenealogyBank Just Added New Content from 58 Titles!

3)  Genealogy Education:

 GeneaWebinars Calendar

 FamilySearch Classes Presented at RootsTech 2018 Now Online


*  Free Family History Library Classes and Webinars for April 2018

*  Upcoming Family Tree Webinar - Wednesday, 11 April, 5 p.m. PDT:  Georgia: Gateway to Westward Expansion, by Rorey Cathcart

*  
Upcoming Family Tree Webinar - Friday, 13 April, 11 a.m. PDT:  Researching Your Oregon Ancestors, by Tessa Keough

*  Archived Family Tree Webinar:  Genealogy for Advanced Users: Grow Your Family Tree Online, by Uri Gonen

Genealogy Gold Podcast:   (#173) Using Local Historical and Genealogical Societies to Further Your Genealogy Research

*  Genealogy Connection Podcast:  #041 - James M. Beidler, Speaker and Writer

*  Extreme Genes Podcast:  Episode 231 – David’s Big Scores / DNA Specialist Paul Woodbury With Tips On Corresponding With DNA Matches

*  Genealogy Journey's Podcast:   #50 - Telegraph and Telegraphy

*  NextGen Genealogy Network YouTube Channel:  Faces of NextGen Live - Renée Schmidt

*  WikiTree YouTube Channel:  2018 WikiTreer Awards

*  Jennifer Holik YouTube Channel:  Let's Talk About Transformation

*  Jennifer Holik YouTube Channel:  An Educational European Cruise to Transform Your Research and Life

*  Family History Fanatics YouTube Channel:  What GeneTech do You Take for Granted?

*  DearMYRTLE YouTube Channel:  One Soldier's Story: SSG Christian Werthwein, US Army, WWII.

4)  Bargains:

*  Genealogy Bargains for Tuesday, April 10,  2018


*  Save 78% on Genetic Genealogy MEGA Collection from Family Tree Magazine

5)  Neat Stuff:

*  
Woman, given up for adoption 57 years ago, meets siblings in Tampa

150 years of Irish history in photos goes online

Did you miss the last Genealogy News Bytes - 6 April 2018?


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Copyright (c) 2018, 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 Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.

Do I Still Need a Desktop Genealogy Software Program?

James Tanner, who writes the Genealogy's Star blog, updated his blog post on this topic in Update of Do you still need a desktop (local) genealogy program?

My short answer is "YES!"  Emphatically.  

My main reason is that no online family tree can perform all of the functions I routinely use in RootsMagic 7, which is my desktop genealogy program of choice.  

With RootsMagic, I can perform these functions that some or all of the online family tree services cannot do:

*  See a Pedigree View, Family View, Descendants View, List of Tree Persons, perform a WebSearch, or see a Timeline with one click.  
*  Navigate to a specific person in the tree with one click and some typing
*  Have two trees open at the same time, and copy/paste persons from one to the other
*  Provide a Source List, a Place List, a Fact Type List, and be able to edit and modify entries
*  Use a Media Gallery that permits one media item to be used for multiple persons and events

*  Create and maintain a Research Log and To-Do List keyed to individuals and/or repositories
*  Have Bookmarks and Named Groups 
*  Find a name or place in any database record 
*  Search and Replace a word or phrase 
*  Create Ancestor or Descendant Reports Using standard genealogy numbering systems

*  Create Wall Charts (ancestor, descendant, bow-tie, hourglass, fan), Timeline Charts and Relationship Charts
*  Create Lists for Ahnentafels, Birthdays/Anniversaries, Descendants, Multimedia, Missing Information, On This Day, Place, Statistics, Surname Statistics, Timeline, Who Was There, etc.
*  Create Research Reports for Correspondence, Repositories, Research Log, Research Notes, Source List, To-Do List, Custom Reports
*  Create a Book for Selected Persons and/or ancestral lines
*  Merge Duplicate Persons 

*  Problem Search List 
*  County Check for Historical Place Names
*  Date Calculator, Relationship Calculator
*  Create a Calendar (Birthdays, Marriages) with Selected Persons
*  Calculate Relationships Between Two Persons

*  Create Files to Generate a Website using HTML
*  Create a MyRootsMagic Website (e.g., http://my.rootsmagic.com/rjseaver/index.html)
*  Share and Sync Information with FamilySearch Family Tree
*  Share and Sync Information with an Ancestry Member Tree (TreeShare)
*  Find Record Hints on Ancestry, FamilySearch, Findmypast and MyHeritage for a person (WebHints)

*  Perform a WebSearch on any number of user-defined websites
*  Craft Evidence Explained style source citations
*  Use standard place names (allowing historical differences) and interface with online Maps

Many other desktop genealogy programs can do many of those tasks.  RootsMagic is unique for some of them.  Other programs may have unique features.

Some of the online family trees can make a standard Pedigree Chart, a standard Family Group Sheet, find a specific person, calculate relationships, but not all of them can do those tasks, and most of them cannot do even some of the Report and Chart tasks.

This may change in the near future.  With the desktop/laptop computer trend to limited hard drive storage, not having a CD/DVD drive, or permitting downloadable software (e.g. Chrome Book), the time is ripe for online family trees based on the desktop genealogy software programs.  We may be able to do all of the functions listed above in an online family tree program with a personal tree.  That may cost a yearly fee, but we wouldn't lose much functionality.

I wrote about my "ideal genealogy software program" in Dear Randy: How Can I Avoid Updating My Tree in 5 Different Places? (posted 19 May 2014), and still have that dream.  In short - a Genea-Web (no slight to other websites or programs intended - the image got way too busy!) - I think this shows my ideal (in 2014):


If "Some Other Program" were able to exchange data seamlessly between itself and the other programs and websites, it would be very valuable.  We have GEDCOM to exchange data between desktop programs, some online trees, but GEDCOM is dated and mangles custom source citations.  Websites use APIs to exchange data with other websites and desktop programs (e.g., RootsMagic TreeShare with an Ancestry Member Tree).  

In the long run, I still think that the FamilySearch Family Tree will be the biggest and most accurate online tree, and will eventually be able to exchange data with all of the other online trees and all of the desktop genealogy software.  It can do that now for some software programs and online trees.  

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Copyright (c) 2018, 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 Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.


Tombstone Tuesday - Jonathan White (1803-1850) in White-Chace Lot in Glocester, Rhode Island

It is spring, so the snow is off the gravestones in the northeast United States (well, mostly!).  I submitted a photograph request some time ago for my 3rd great-grandparents, Jonathan White (1803-1850) and Miranda (Wade) White (1804-1850).

The photo request was fulfilled by Ken Deady on 2 April 2018, and I was notified of the fulfillment by email.  The Find A Grave memorial for Jonathan White is at  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/64214235/jonathan-white.


I contacted Ken and asked if I could use the photographs on my blog and in my online family trees, and he agreed.  Here is the best of the three photographs on the memorial for Jonathan White:


The inscription says:

JONATHAN WHITE
Born 1806
Died Apr. 19 1850

The information on the White-Chace Lot in Glocester, Rhode Island is at  https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2384559/white-chace-lot.  The lot is located at "Location: 100 ft west of SHELDON RD at TEL pole # 77.5" and has 26 burials listed in the Rhode Island Historical Cemetery survey.  

The birth date of 1806 on the gravestone may be wrong.  His death certificate says he was age 47 when he died in April 1850, so he may have been born in 1802/3.  

I added the photograph to my digital file folder for Jonathan White + Miranda Wade, attached the photo to the Jonathan White profile in my RootsMagic family tree database, and wrote this post.  I may add it to my Ancestry Member Tree profile, the Geni.com profile, the WikiTree.com profile, and the FamilySearch Family Tree profile for Jonathan.  

Thank you to Ken Deady for making the effort to obtain this photograph of the gravestone of my third great-grandfather, and for permitting me to display the photograph.


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Copyright (c) 2018, 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 Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.