| Sources |
- [S1708] Public Member Trees, recovered, My Crazy Family - 66Brownie / John Roberts (63) facts Public Member Trees, a new rotation 20130407 20210215HAv- https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/811223/person/-2044656719/facts?ssrc=.
Record for John Roberts (63) facts Public Member Trees, a new rotation 20130407
20210215HAv- My Crazy Family - 66Brownie / John Roberts
John Roberts 1827-1898
BIRTH 16 MARCH 1827 • Springwater, Livingston, New York, USA
DEATH 29 MARCH 1898 • Potter County, Pennsylvania, USA
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/811223/person/-2044656719/facts?ssrc=
Record for John Roberts (63) facts Public Member Trees, a new rotation 20130407
20210215HAv- My Crazy Family - 66Brownie / John Roberts
John Roberts 1827-1898
BIRTH 16 MARCH 1827 • Springwater, Livingston, New York, USA
DEATH 29 MARCH 1898 • Potter County, Pennsylvania, USA
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/811223/person/-2044656719/facts?ssrc=
- [S394] Ancestry.com, Public Member Trees, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006;), Database online., Skinner/Schinzel-Ahlemeyer/Haines Tree J_Ahlemeyer.
Record for Maurice Clifford Swift Paul Witter letter to Susan Davis transcription, 1853 , Wellsville, NY This story is a Microsoft Word document. stuestesadded this on 6 Jan 2013 While going through my late parents' family papers I found this document. After struggling to read it I found it very interesting. These were my 2nd great grandparents on my mother's side. I am also uploading as clear a copy as I can make of the original letter. _______________________ Willing [illegible] 18th 1853[?] I now attempt to write a few lines to you to congratulate you upon your safe arrival at your parents fireside in whose sosiety [sic] you must necessarily enjoy perfect peace and happiness [?]. But you may be somewhat surprised at my presumption on so short an acquaintance but nevertheless being prompted by pure motives I have the boldness to solicit your further acquaintance hoping thereby to promote or procure that happiness which kindred spirits find in each others society. Should [it be] agreeable to you (and if it would not interfere with any previous engagements) I would like to make you a visit soon, as soon as circumstances will permit. You will allow me to say your presence at your sister's has awakened sensations to which I have hitherto been a stranger and since your absence has only increased. Will you write me an answer to this and addresss it to willing PO Allegany Co as soon as convenient. Please excuse all mistakes as I write in a hurry behind the counter in a Wellsville store by the permission and politeness of a Mr. Abbott after being heavily drenched in a severe rain storm. Yours most affectionately, Paul C. Witter Susan A. Davis
Paul Witter letter to Susan Davis transcription, 1853 , Wellsville, NY
This story is a Microsoft Word document.
stuestesadded this on 6 Jan 2013
While going through my late parents' family papers I found this document. After struggling to read it I found it very interesting. These were my 2nd great grandparents on my mother's side. I am also uploading as clear a copy as I can make of the original letter.
_______________________
Willing [illegible] 18th 1853[?]
I now attempt to write a few lines to you to congratulate you upon your safe arrival at your parents fireside in whose sosiety [sic] you must necessarily enjoy perfect peace and happiness [?]. But you may be somewhat surprised at my presumption on so short an acquaintance but nevertheless being prompted by pure motives I have the boldness to solicit your further acquaintance hoping thereby to promote or procure that happiness which kindred spirits find in each others society. Should [it be] agreeable to you (and if it would not interfere with any previous engagements) I would like to make you a visit soon, as soon as circumstances will permit.
You will allow me to say your presence at your sister's has awakened sensations to which I have hitherto been a stranger and since your absence has only increased. Will you write me an answer to this and addresss it to willing PO Allegany Co as soon as convenient.
Please excuse all mistakes as I write in a hurry behind the counter in a Wellsville store by the permission and politeness of a Mr. Abbott after being heavily drenched in a severe rain storm.
Yours most affectionately,
Paul C. Witter
Susan A. Davis
- [S308] Jonathan Dale Snyder: +1(757)479-1015, geneal11@aol.com, SHAY 15010 Silas.FTW, (Name: Ancestry.com;), GEDCOM 15010.
Date of Import: 26 May 2001
- [S733] Public Member Trees, a new rotation 20130407, Database online.
Record for Elias Hicks
- [S2000] Public Member Tree- HERBSTRITT-SNYDER Family Tree?? LARRY HERBSTRITT?, Database online.
Record for Hoxsie Samuel Roberts
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=pubmembertrees&h=48308821460&indiv=try
 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.
|
- [S1099] Ancestry.com, U.S., Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704-1930, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2014;), Elizabeth Hicks in the U.S., Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704-1930 Why 'Hicks' and not 'Roberts', if that is her married name? -jcw20161127.
Record for Elizabeth Hicks Elizabeth Hicks in the U.S., Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704-1930 Name: Elizabeth Hicks Birth Year: abt 1791 Father: Elias Event: Death Death Date: 5 Jul 1871 Age at Death: 80 Newspaper: New York Evening Post Publication Date: 6 Jul 1871 Publication Place: New York, USA Call Number: 83432 Why 'Hicks' and not 'Roberts', if that is her married name? -jcw20161127
Elizabeth Hicks in the U.S., Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704-1930
Name: Elizabeth Hicks
Birth Year: abt 1791
Father: Elias
Event: Death
Death Date: 5 Jul 1871
Age at Death: 80
Newspaper: New York Evening Post
Publication Date: 6 Jul 1871
Publication Place: New York, USA
Call Number: 83432
Why 'Hicks' and not 'Roberts', if that is her married name? -jcw20161127
Source Information
Ancestry.com. U.S., Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704-1930 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. This collection was indexed by Ancestry World Archives Project contributors.
Original data: Newspapers and Periodicals. American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts.
The Digitized Content is licensed from the American Antiquarian Society ("AAS") and may not be reproduced, transferred, commercially or otherwise exploited, in whole or in part, outside the terms and conditions of this service without the express written consent of AAS. All rights reserved.
___
20180622 Amtrak RVM-NYP, Trenton NJ-
repasted from Source Notes:
Elizabeth Hicks in the U.S., Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704-1930
Name: Elizabeth Hicks
Birth Year: abt 1791
Father: Elias
Event: Death
Death Date: 5 Jul 1871
Age at Death: 80
Newspaper: New York Evening Post
Publication Date: 6 Jul 1871
Publication Place: New York, USA
Call Number: 83432
Why 'Hicks' and not 'Roberts', if that is her married name? -jcw20161127
Source Information
Ancestry.com. U.S., Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704-1930 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. This collection was indexed by Ancestry World Archives Project contributors.
Original data: Newspapers and Periodicals. American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts.
The Digitized Content is licensed from the American Antiquarian Society ("AAS") and may not be reproduced, transferred, commercially or otherwise exploited, in whole or in part, outside the terms and conditions of this service without the express written consent of AAS. All rights reserved.
|
|
U.S., Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704-1930 20180622 Amtrak RVM-NYP, Trenton NJ-
repasted from Source Notes:
Elizabeth Hicks in the U.S., Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704-1930
Name: Elizabeth Hicks
Birth Year: abt 1791
Father: Elias
Event: Death
Death Date: 5 Jul 1871
Age at Death: 80
Newspaper: New York Evening Post
Publication Date: 6 Jul 1871
Publication Place: New York,… |
- [S876] Public Member Trees, 201409, Database online.
Record for Sarah Roberts
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=pubmembertrees&h=-1219721948&indiv=try
- [S165] Jonathan Dale Snyder, GEDCOM: 15010 SHAY, Silas, (Name: Ancestry.com- updated in Genealogy.com 05 May 2001- downloaded 25 May 2001;), Generation No. 4 4. BENJAMINE4 ROBERTS gen 4.4 & 5.6.
(15) facts ... 20200402HAv- consol (16)
Generation No. 4 4. BENJAMINE4 ROBERTS (PETER3 ROBARDS, JOHN2, HUGH1) was born 1767. He married FANNY. Child of BENJAMINE ROBERTS and FANNY is: i. ALMYRIA5 ROBERTS, b. 1811; m. RUFUS ROBERTS, 1837; b. 1815. More About RUFUS ROBERTS and ALMYRIA ROBERTS: Marriage: 1837 5. JOHN4 ROBERTS (PETER3 ROBARDS, JOHN2, HUGH1) was born 1771. He married AMANDA BARNES. Children of JOHN ROBERTS and AMANDA BARNES are: 6.i. SAMUEL5 ROBERTS, b. 1794. ii. RUFUS ROBERTS, b. 1815; m. ALMYRIA ROBERTS, 1837; b. 1811. More About RUFUS ROBERTS and ALMYRIA ROBERTS: Marriage: 1837 Generation No. 5 6. SAMUEL5 ROBERTS (JOHN4, PETER3 ROBARDS, JOHN2, HUGH1) was born 1794. He married ELIZABETH HICKS. More About SAMUEL ROBERTS: Fact 3: Served in the War of 1812 Children of SAMUEL ROBERTS and ELIZABETH HICKS are: 7.i. SARAH6 ROBERTS, b. 10 March 1822; d. 22 January 1892. ii. JOHN ROBERTS, b. 16 March 1827, Springwater, NY; d. 09 May 1898. iii. JACOB ROBERTS, b. 06 January 1832; d. 30 September 1864. iv. JAMES ROBERTS, b. 1843. 8.v. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ROBERTS, b. 1844; d. 16 April 1882.
C:\MySharedDocs\genealogy\GenRep- SHAY 15010 Silas- Descendants of Hugh Robards.rtf: Generation No. 5 6. SAMUEL5 ROBERTS (JOHN4, PETER3 ROBARDS, JOHN2, HUGH1) was born 1794. He married ELIZABETH HICKS. More About SAMUEL ROBERTS: Fact 3: Served in the War of 1812 Children of SAMUEL ROBERTS and ELIZABETH HICKS are: 7. i. SARAH6 ROBERTS, b. 10 March 1822; d. 22 January 1892. ii. JOHN ROBERTS, b. 16 March 1827, Springwater, NY; d. 09 May 1898. iii. JACOB ROBERTS, b. 06 January 1832; d. 30 September 1864. iv. JAMES ROBERTS, b. 1843. 8. v. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ROBERTS, b. 1844; d. 16 April 1882. Generation No. 6 7. SARAH6 ROBERTS (SAMUEL5, JOHN4, PETER3 ROBARDS, JOHN2, HUGH1) was born 10 March 1822, and died 22 January 1892. She married JOHNSON CHASE. Child of SARAH ROBERTS and JOHNSON CHASE is: 9. i. DELILA7 CHASE, b. 02 April 1843, PA; d. 04 June 1920, Sweden Hill, Potter Co., PA.
20200402HAv- consolidating 2 references-
Generation No. 4 4. BENJAMINE4 ROBERTS (PETER3 ROBARDS, JOHN2, HUGH1) was born 1767. He married FANNY. Child of BENJAMINE ROBERTS and FANNY is: i. ALMYRIA5 ROBERTS, b. 1811; m. RUFUS ROBERTS, 1837; b. 1815. More About RUFUS ROBERTS and ALMYRIA ROBERTS: Marriage: 1837 5. JOHN4 ROBERTS (PETER3 ROBARDS, JOHN2, HUGH1) was born 1771. He married AMANDA BARNES. Children of JOHN ROBERTS and AMANDA BARNES are: 6.i. SAMUEL5 ROBERTS, b. 1794. ii. RUFUS ROBERTS, b. 1815; m. ALMYRIA ROBERTS, 1837; b. 1811. More About RUFUS ROBERTS and ALMYRIA ROBERTS: Marriage: 1837 Generation No. 5 6. SAMUEL5 ROBERTS (JOHN4, PETER3 ROBARDS, JOHN2, HUGH1) was born 1794. He married ELIZABETH HICKS. More About SAMUEL ROBERTS: Fact 3: Served in the War of 1812 Children of SAMUEL ROBERTS and ELIZABETH HICKS are: 7.i. SARAH6 ROBERTS, b. 10 March 1822; d. 22 January 1892. ii. JOHN ROBERTS, b. 16 March 1827, Springwater, NY; d. 09 May 1898. iii. JACOB ROBERTS, b. 06 January 1832; d. 30 September 1864. iv. JAMES ROBERTS, b. 1843. 8.v. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ROBERTS, b. 1844; d. 16 April 1882.
C:\MySharedDocs\genealogy\GenRep- SHAY 15010 Silas- Descendants of Hugh Robards.rtf: Generation No. 5 6. SAMUEL5 ROBERTS (JOHN4, PETER3 ROBARDS, JOHN2, HUGH1) was born 1794. He married ELIZABETH HICKS. More About SAMUEL ROBERTS: Fact 3: Served in the War of 1812 Children of SAMUEL ROBERTS and ELIZABETH HICKS are: 7. i. SARAH6 ROBERTS, b. 10 March 1822; d. 22 January 1892. ii. JOHN ROBERTS, b. 16 March 1827, Springwater, NY; d. 09 May 1898. iii. JACOB ROBERTS, b. 06 January 1832; d. 30 September 1864. iv. JAMES ROBERTS, b. 1843. 8. v. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ROBERTS, b. 1844; d. 16 April 1882. Generation No. 6 7. SARAH6 ROBERTS (SAMUEL5, JOHN4, PETER3 ROBARDS, JOHN2, HUGH1) was born 10 March 1822, and died 22 January 1892. She married JOHNSON CHASE. Child of SARAH ROBERTS and JOHNSON CHASE is: 9. i. DELILA7 CHASE, b. 02 April 1843, PA; d. 04 June 1920, Sweden Hill, Potter Co., PA.
- [S308] Jonathan Dale Snyder: +1(757)479-1015, geneal11@aol.com, SHAY 15010 Silas.FTW, (Name: Ancestry.com;), (1,643) consolidated 20191119HAv- (3,108), GEDCOM 15010.
Date of Import: 26 May
2001
20191119HAv- (1,643) facts
(2,141) facts ..... (3,108) .... (3,091) ....
- [S1703] FaceBook- ?Herbstritt-Snyder-Essex-Figg-Davey-Chase-Dunn-Ellison Family Descendants, Larry Herbstritt shared a post.Admin · May 8 2020 ?Caroline Powers? to Adopt A Senior Coudersport May 7 2020 Adopted Travis James Rick Gleason.
20200524HAv-
Herbstritt-Snyder-Essex-Figg-Davey-Chase-Dunn-Ellison Family Descendants
Larry Herbstritt shared a post.
Admin · May 8 2020
?Caroline Powers? to Adopt A Senior Coudersport
May 7 2020 at 1:58 PM
Adopted
Travis James Rick Gleason
20200524HAv-
Herbstritt-Snyder-Essex-Figg-Davey-Chase-Dunn-Ellison Family Descendants
Larry Herbstritt shared a post.
Admin · May 8 2020 at 11:07 PM
Because of the COVID 19 pandemic, the high school graduates of 2020 are experiencing a uniquely disappointing year. One of our relatives, Travis Gleason, is one of these Coudersport High School graduates. In an effort to help to make their final days as students of Coudersport High School, this FaceBook site, that I'm sharing here, was created to shine an Internet spotlight on these unfortunate students who had no prom, no last days in the classrooms with their teachers and classmates, no track and field or baseball events. There are so many "no"s for these students. This is a family tree salute to Travis Gleason, son of
Terry Gleason and Joanne Johnson Gleason, grandson of
James & Evelyn Gross Johnson, great grandson of
Raymond Leroy & Margaret Freeman Gross, great great grandson of
Milo Stanley Freeman & Martha Edna Snyder, great great great grandson of
Stephen D Snyder & Margaret Dunn, great great great great grandson of
David R Snyder & Laura Ann Chase and Michael Dunn & Sarah Ellison, great great great great great grandson of
Johnson Chase & Sarah Roberts
Travis is also the great great great grandson of
Emma Viola Roberts & John E Freeman, great great great great grandson of
John Del Roberts & Mary Ann Hoxsie, great great great great great grandson of
Samuel & Elizabeth Hicks Roberts.
Travis Gleason is also the great great grandson of
Edward Lee Gross & Mae H Neefe, great great great grandson of
Charles A Neefe & Susan Blanche Furman
I add this last branch of Travis's family tree because he shares these ancestors with my son, Matthew Tyson Herbstritt and daughter, Joni Michelle Herbstritt.
Image may contain: 1 person, standing, tree, beard and outdoor
Image may contain: one or more people, sunglasses and outdoor
Image may contain: 1 person, sky, cloud, outdoor and nature
Image may contain: 1 person, outdoor
?Caroline Powers? to Adopt A Senior Coudersport
May 7 2020 at 1:58 PM
Adopted
Travis James Rick Gleason
Parents: Terry and Joanne Gleason
Future Plans: Attend Penn State Mont Alto to major in Forestry and he has also been recruited to their basketball team
Hobbies: Sports of course (football and basketball), snowmobiling, 4-wheeling, hunting, working on the farm, hanging out with his friends
Loves Penn State football and the L.A. Lakers
Image may contain: 1 person, standing, tree, beard and outdoor
Image may contain: one or more people, sunglasses and outdoor
Image may contain: 1 person, sky, cloud, outdoor and nature
Image may contain: 1 person, outdoor
32You, Larry Herbstritt and 30 others
7 Comments
4 Shares
Like
Comments
Sam Delcamp
I’ll adopt Travis!!
1Like · 2w
Caroline Powers
Stephanie Gross-Carpenter adopted Travis as well.
2Like · 2w
April Stuckey I will adopt Travis
1Like · 2w
Nicole Fantaskey Popchak I thoroughly enjoyed watching this natural athlete perform! ????
5Like · 2w
Tammy Setzer I will adopt Travis as well!
1Like · 2w
Larry Herbstritt
I will adopt Travis. I've been impressed by his athletic abilities in spite of the injuries that he's had to overcome. And I'm happy he's interested in Forestry and Penn State! I also feel a deeper connection because, though he probably doesn't know it, we share many common ancestors.
7 Like · 2w · Edited
Andy Kulp
This is so sad to see...I haven't had the honor of watching him play at the sports he loves but I did literally get to see him grow up year after year when I setup at his Mother's yearly Open House...every year the kid grew a foot I think...Congratulations Travis...
6Like · 2w
______________________
16You, Paul Lynn Gardner and 14 others
2 Comments
Seen by 133
Like
Comments
Paul Lynn Gardner
My great uncle, Walter Mosch, was in the first Forestry class of Mont Alto back in about 1916. After he graduated, the US Army recruited him into the Forestry division to timber the Napoleon Bonaparte forest in France.
2Like · Reply · 2w
Diana Spink
My daughter, Jalyn Packer is another 2020 graduate that has missed out too. So sad for our kiddos!????
2Like · Reply · 1w
 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.
|
 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.
|
- [S895] FaceBook- Larry Herbstritt.
Hey John, Here's how my lineage goes on the Snyder side: My mom - Dorothy Snyder My grandfather - Lawrence David Snyder My great grandfather - Ford Snyder; My 2nd great grandfather - David Snyder; he was married to Laura Chase My 3rd great grandfather - Solomon Snyder married to Hannah Stein Laura Chase's parents were Johnson Chase married to Sarah Roberts Sarah Roberts' parents were Samuel Roberts married to Elizabeth Hicks It's the Elizabeth Hicks lineage that leads back to the Billingtons on my family tree. I'll sort this out later today. Do you use genealogy software? I use FAmily Tree Maker by Ancestry.com and did the FTDNA, which I just got for my whole family, literally swabbing last night. Thanks for your lineage, I'll lay mine out for you later. I started with 23andMe and discovered by DNA composition, which was a bit of a surprise, with some Jewish ancestry. That made me very curious, so I got an account with Ancestry.com to see if I could find who the Jews were in my family tree. I'm still trying to solve that puzzle but in the process discovered way more about my ancestors than I ever imagined possible
Hey John,
Here's how my lineage goes on the Snyder side:
My mom - Dorothy Snyder
My grandfather - Lawrence David Snyder
My great grandfather - Ford Snyder;
My 2nd great grandfather - David Snyder; he was married to Laura Chase
My 3rd great grandfather - Solomon Snyder married to Hannah Stein
Laura Chase's parents were Johnson Chase married to Sarah Roberts
Sarah Roberts' parents were Samuel Roberts married to Elizabeth Hicks
It's the Elizabeth Hicks lineage that leads back to the Billingtons on my family tree.
I'll sort this out later today.
Do you use genealogy software?
I use FAmily Tree Maker by Ancestry.com and did the FTDNA, which I just got for my whole family, literally swabbing last night.
Thanks for your lineage, I'll lay mine out for you later.
I started with 23andMe and discovered by DNA composition, which was a bit of a surprise, with some Jewish ancestry.
That made me very curious, so I got an account with Ancestry.com to see if I could find who the Jews were in my family tree.
I'm still trying to solve that puzzle but in the process discovered way more about my ancestors than I ever imagined possible
- [S1781] Facebook, Larry Herbstritt.
Hey John, Here's how my lineage goes on the Snyder side: My mom - Dorothy Snyder My grandfather - Lawrence David Snyder My great grandfather - Ford Snyder; My 2nd great grandfather - David Snyder; he was married to Laura Chase My 3rd great grandfather - Solomon Snyder married to Hannah Stein Laura Chase's parents were Johnson Chase married to Sarah Roberts Sarah Roberts' parents were Samuel Roberts married to Elizabeth Hicks It's the Elizabeth Hicks lineage that leads back to the Billingtons on my family tree. I'll sort this out later today. Do you use genealogy software? I use FAmily Tree Maker by Ancestry.com and did the FTDNA, which I just got for my whole family, literally swabbing last night. Thanks for your lineage, I'll lay mine out for you later. I started with 23andMe and discovered by DNA composition, which was a bit of a surprise, with some Jewish ancestry. That made me very curious, so I got an account with Ancestry.com to see if I could find who the Jews were in my family tree. I'm still trying to solve that puzzle but in the process discovered way more about my ancestors than I ever imagined possible
- [S733] Public Member Trees, a new rotation 20130407, Database online.Hicks- Elias, Isaac, ...
Record for Elias Hicks notes: includes extensive biography. Quaker Minister and Abolitonist <iframe src="http://view.atdmt.com/iaction/ancestrycom_non_secure_universal_v3/v3/atc1.-lib-TinyMce_2_1 _0-blank_htm/" width="1" height="1" frameborder="0" scrolling="No" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" topmargin="0" leftmargin="0"></iframe> Quaker minister. He began preaching when he was twenty-seven-years-old. Disinterested in religion when young, he turned to it as an adult. He spoke on religious subjects as he travelled throughout the United States. As a result of his work, the New York legislature passed a law freeing every slave within its borders on July 4, 1827. He preached "obedience to the light within," as the foundation of authentic Quakerism. His followers, called "Hicksites," minimized the importance of the Bible. A schism occurred in Quakerism as a result of his teaching. Some Quakers rallied around the Bible; other perceived it as a hindrance to reaching the http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=HI&GSfn=e&GSpartial=1&GSbyrel= all&GSdyrel=all&GSst=36&GScntry=4&GSob=n&GSsr=241&GRid=11855407&df=all& Spirit. stuestesadded this on 6 Jan 2013 doctorj2uoriginally submitted this to Harris Family Tree on 6 Jul 2012 _____________________________________________________ Third Floor of the Brooklyn Post Office, 1800's , Brooklyn, Queens, New York, USA A History of the City of Brooklyn. Including The Old Town And Village Of Brooklyn, The Town Of Bushwick, And The Village And City Of Williamsburgh. Vol. III. Cha pter XII. Other Educational Establishments. The Post Office was also located here, and the large room, on the third floor was used as a police court, and frequently for religious and other public meetings. Here, also, Elias Hicks , the celebrated Quaker, often preached when visiting in Brooklyn . stuestesadded this on 6 Jan 2013 ConsiderTheLilies22originally submitted this to A-1 HANDWORK-DeHaven-Kendig/PARKER-Plankinton-Balentine/MELLEN-Hicks-Crooker/TAYLOR-Germain-Paschton Tree on 29 May 2011 The Old Town and Village of Brooklyn Post Office. Elias HICKS would visit here and preach on the third floor.
Elias Hicks Biography
From Wikipedia
Elias Hicks (March 19, 1748 - February 27, 1830) was an itinerant Quaker preacher from Long Island, New York. He promoted doctrines that embroiled him in controversy that led to the first major schism within the Religious Society of Friends. Elias Hicks was the older cousin of the painter Edward Hicks, also known then as a Quaker preacher.
Early life
Elias Hicks was born at Rockaway, Long Island, New York. Hicks's parents were not Friends themselves. He came to the Society at about the age of twenty, after being convinced by its beliefs and practices.
Hicks married Jemima Seaman January 2, 1771. They moved to her family farm, which Hicks eventually took over when his parents-in-law died. The Hickses had eleven children: Martha, David, Elias, Phebe, Abigail, Jonothan, John, Elizabeth, Sarah, and one who died at birth. Only four of his children married.
Ministry
At about the age of twenty-seven, Hicks was recognized as a preacher by the Friends in his meeting. He was regarded as a very gifted speaker, with a strong voice, great poise, and dramatic flair.
Hicks was one of the early abolitionists among the Friends. He spoke about slavery often and worked hard to persuade others to oppose it. His 'Observations on the Slavery of the Africans' (1811), which argued for a boycott of slavery-produced goods, represented one of the earliest social reform boycott efforts in the United States. The state of New York, due in part to Hicks's efforts, abolished slavery within its borders on July 4, 1827.
Hicks's reported views
Hicks considered “obedience to the light within” the primary tenet and the foundational principle of the Religious Society of Friends. He downplayed and reputedly denied the virgin birth of Christ, the complete divinity of Christ and the need for salvation through the death of Christ. He also was reported to have taught that the leading of the Inner light was more authoritative than the text of the Bible. His detractors considered these views heretical because they contradicted the traditional teachings of Christianity. He insisted at times that he believed in Christ's divinity and quoted the Bible from memory in spoken ministry. He may be seen as within the quietist tradition of John Woolman and Job Scott, whereas his followers view the Orthodox Friends as taking on evangelistic notions which were alien to original Quaker faith.
These views were consistent with a Freethought tradition already prevailing in America, particularly among Deists of Quaker heritage such as Thomas Paine. The most original aspect of Hicks's theology was his rejection of Satan as the source of human "passions" or "propensities." Hicks stressed that basic urges, including all sexual passions, were neither implanted by an external Devil nor the product of personal choice, but were aspects of human nature created by God. "He gave us passions-if we may call them passions-in order that we might seek after those things which we need, and which we had a right to experience and know," he claimed in his 1824 sermon, "Let Brotherly Love Continue." Hicks taught that evil and suffering occurred not because human nature harbored these "propensities," but rather resulted from "an excess in the indulgence of propensities."
In 1858, Walt Whitman, one of Hicks's most famous exponents, astutely assessed Hicks as "a wonderful compound of the mystic with the logical reasoner," and explained that Hicks was "destined to make a radical revolution in a numerous and devout Society, and his influence to be largely felt outside of that Society..." The Quaker theology of "God within" (another name for the Inner Light) appeared subsequently in the theory of the Free Love movement, where it was deemed compatible with the religious sociology of Charles Fourier.
Disputes among Friends
Controversy over Hicks's teachings interrupted the normal calm of Religious Society of Friends in Philadelphia. For more than five years, elders of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting had tried to prevent Hicks from propounding his views in the city's meeting houses, producing sharp differences within that yearly meeting; these differences came to a head in April 1827 when there was a division. By 1828 there were two independent groups both claiming to be the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting. Other yearly meetings split along similar lines during subsequent years, including those in New York, Baltimore, Ohio, and Indiana. Those who agreed with Hicks were generally called Hicksites, and his detractors were called Orthodox Friends. Each side considered itself the legitimate heir to the legacy of earlier Friends, such as George Fox, Margaret Fell and Robert Barclay.
The split was not purely doctrinal. It reflected tensions that had been growing between the elders-who were mostly from the cities-and Friends who lived farther away from major communities and Meetings. Hicksite Friends were mostly country Friends who perceived urban Friends as worldly. Many of the Philadelphia Friends were wealthy businessmen, and many of the country Friends kept less peculiar in matters of "plain speech" and "plain dress", which by this point in time had become a sort of jargon and a sort of uniform, respectively.
Many scholars have written about various aspects of these controversies. A good short summary is Larry Kuenning's Quaker Theologies in the 19th Century Separations, but for more depth see H. Larry Ingle, Quakers in Conflict: The Hicksite Reformation (Philadelphia: Pendle Hill, 1998).
Later life
At age 80, Hicks went on his final ministry trip. He covered 2,400 miles and was harassed and shunned by Orthodox Friends along the way. He suffered a stroke that left him partially paralyzed and died soon afterward in his home in Jericho, New York. People say that when he was on his deathbed, someone put a cotton blanket on him. He tried to remove it with his unparalyzed left hand, as it was a product of slavery. When they replaced the cotton blanket with a woolen one, Hicks relaxed and nodded in approval.
Hicks remained a controversial figure long after his death, with his name a pejorative label used by opponents to tarnish his memory. In the final analysis he was one of the last of the 18th century's quietist Quakers, although his combative personality marked him as quite different from most others who bore that title. Despite the fact that he was certainly not a modern "liberal," that title has stuck to him.
stuestesadded this on 6 Jan 2013
JSweit85731originally submitted this to Carswell Family on 26 Feb 2012
_______________________________________________________
Quaker Minister and Abolitonist
Quaker minister. He began preaching when he was twenty-seven-years-old. Disinterested in religion when young, he turned to it as an adult. He spoke on religious subjects as he travelled throughout the United States. As a result of his work, the New York legislature passed a law freeing every slave within its borders on July 4, 1827. He preached "obedience to the light within," as the foundation of authentic Quakerism. His followers, called "Hicksites," minimized the importance of the Bible. A schism occurred in Quakerism as a result of his teaching. Some Quakers rallied around the Bible; other perceived it as a hindrance to reaching the http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=HI&GSfn=e&GSpartial=1&GSbyrel= all&GSdyrel=all&GSst=36&GScntry=4&GSob=n&GSsr=241&GRid=11855407&df=all& Spirit.
stuestesadded this on 6 Jan 2013
doctorj2uoriginally submitted this to Harris Family Tree on 6 Jul 2012
_____________________________________________________
Source Citations For Elias HICKS, Long Island, New York, USA
Name: Elias Hicks
Birth - Death: 1748-1830
Source Citation: Allibone's Critical Dictionary of English Literature. British and American authors living and deceased from the earliest accounts to the latter half of the Nineteenth Century.
Three volumes. By S. Austin Allibone. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott, 1858-1871. (Alli) American Authors and Books. 1640 to the present day. Third revised edition. By W.J. Burke and Will D. Howe. Revised by Irving Weiss and Anne Weiss. New York: Crown Publishers, 1972. (AmAu&B) American Biographies. By Wheeler Preston. New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1940. (AmBi) American National Biography. 24 volumes. Edited by John A. Garraty and Mark C. Carnes. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999. (AmNatBi) American Reformers. Edited by Alden Whitman. New York: H.W. Wilson Co., 1985. (AmRef) Biography contains portrait. American Religious Leaders. By Timothy L. Hall. American Biographies Series. New York: Facts On File, 2003. (AmRelL) Biography contains portrait. American Writers before 1800. A biographical and critical dictionary. Three volumes. Edited by James A. Levernier and Douglas R. Wilmes. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1983. (AmWrBE) Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography. Six volumes. Edited by James Grant Wilson and John Fiske. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1888- 1889. (ApCAB) Benet's Reader's Encyclopedia of American Literature. First edition. Edited by George Perkins, Barbara Perkins, and Phillip Leininger. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 1991. (BenetAL) The Bibliophile Dictionary. A biographical record of the great authors, with bibliographical notices of their principal works from the beginning of history. Originally published as Volumes 29 and 30 of The Bibliophile Library of Literature, Art, and Rare Manuscripts. Compiled and arranged by Nathan Haskell Dole, Forrest Morgan, and Caroline Ticknor. New York: International Bibliophile Society, 1904. (BbD) Biographical Dictionary of American Cult and Sect Leaders. By J. Gordon Melton. New York: Garland Publishing, 1986. (BiDAmCu) Biographical Dictionary and Synopsis of Books Ancient and Modern. Edited by Charles Dudley Warner. Akron, OH: Werner Co., 1902. (BiD&SB) Biography Index. A cumulative index to biographical material in books and magazines. Volume 3: September, 1952-August, 1955. New York: H.W. Wilson Co., 1956. (BioIn 3) Biography Index. A cumulative index to biographical material in books and magazines. Volume 9: September, 1970-August, 1973. New York: H.W. Wilson Co., 1974. (BioIn 9) Biography Index. A cumulative index to biographical material in books and magazines. Volume 15: September, 1986-August, 1988. New York: H.W. Wilson Co., 1988. (BioIn 15) Biography Index. A cumulative index to biographical material in books and magazines. Volume 19: September, 1993-August, 1994. New York: H.W. Wilson Co., 1994. (BioIn 19) The Cambridge Biographical Encyclopedia. Second edition. Edited by David Crystal. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1998. (CamBiEn) Celebrities of the Century. Being a dictionary of men and women of the nineteenth century. Two volumes. Edited by Lloyd C. Sanders. London: Cassell & Co., 1887. (CelCen) Chambers Biographical Dictionary. Sixth edition. Edited by Melanie Parry. New York: Larousse Kingfisher Chambers, 1997. (ChamBiD) A Dictionary of American Authors. Fifth edition, revised and enlarged. By Oscar Fay Adams. New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1904. Biographies are found in the 'Dictionary of American Authors' section which begins on page 1 and in the 'Supplement' which begins on page 441. (DcAmAu) Dictionary of American Biography. Volumes 1-20. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1928-1936. (DcAmB) Dictionary of American Religious Biography. First edition. By Henry Warner Bowden. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1977. (DcAmReB 1) Dictionary of American Religious Biography. Second edition. By Henry Warner Bowden. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1993. (DcAmReB 2) A Dictionary of American Social Reform. By Louis Filler. New York: Philosophical Library, 1963. (DcAmSR) Dictionary of Christian Biography. Edited by Michael Walsh. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2001. (DcChrB) A Dictionary of North American Authors Deceased before 1950. Compiled by W. Stewart Wallace. Toronto: Ryerson Press, 1951. (DcNAA) Drake's Dictionary of American Biography. Including men of the time, containing nearly 10,000 notices of persons of both sexes, of native and foreign birth, who have been remarkable, or prominently connected with the arts, sciences, literature, politics, or history, of the American continent. By Francis S. Drake. Boston: James R. Osgood & Co., 1872. (Drake) Harper's Encyclopaedia of United States History: From 458 A.D. to 1915. New edition entirely revised and enlarged. 10 volumes. By Benson John Lossing. New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1915. (HarEnUS) The Houghton Mifflin Dictionary of Biography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2003. (HouMifDB) The Lincoln Library of Social Studies. Eighth edition. Three volumes. Columbus, OH: Frontier Press Co., 1978. Biographies begin on page 865 of Volume 3. (LinLib S) Lutheran Cyclopedia. Revised edition. Edited by Erwin L. Lueker. St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1975. (LuthC) The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography. Volume 11. New York: James T. White & Co., 1901. Use the Index to locate biographies. (NatCAB 11) The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Fourth edition. By James D. Hart. New York: Oxford University Press, 1965. (OxCAmL 4) The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Fifth edition. By James D. Hart. New York: Oxford University Press, 1983. (OxCAmL 5) The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Sixth edition. By James D. Hart. New York: Oxford University Press, 1995. (OxCAmL 6) The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Third edition revised. Edited by E.A. Livingstone. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. (OxDcChC) The Reader's Encyclopedia of American Literature. By Max J. Herzberg. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co., 1962. (REnAL) The Riverside Dictionary of Biography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2005. (RivDcB) The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans. Brief biographies of authors, administrators, clergymen, commanders, editors, engineers, jurists, merchants, officials, philanthropists, scientists, statesmen, and others who are making American history. 10 volumes. Edited by Rossiter Johnson. Boston: The Biographical Society, 1904. (TwCBDA) Webster's American Biographies. 1974 edition. Edited by Charles Van Doren. Springfield, MA: G. & C. Merriam Co., 1974. (WebAB 1974) Webster's American Biographies. 1979 edition. Edited by Charles Van Doren. Springfield, MA: G. & C. Merriam Co., 1979. (WebAB 1979) Who Was Who in America. A component volume of Who's Who in
stuestesadded this on 6 Jan 2013
ConsiderTheLilies22originally submitted this to A-1 HANDWORK-DeHaven-Kendig/PARKER-Plankinton-Balentine/MELLEN-Hicks-Crooker/TAYLOR-Germain-Paschton Tree on 29 May 2011
___________________________
Third Floor of the Brooklyn Post Office, 1800's , Brooklyn, Queens, New York, USA
A History of the City of Brooklyn. Including The Old Town And Village Of Brooklyn, The Town Of Bushwick, And The Village And City Of Williamsburgh. Vol. III. Cha pter XII. Other Educational Establishments. The Post Office was also located here, and the large room, on the third floor was used as a police court, and frequently for religious and other public meetings. Here, also, Elias Hicks , the celebrated Quaker, often preached when visiting in Brooklyn .
stuestesadded this on 6 Jan 2013
ConsiderTheLilies22originally submitted this to A-1 HANDWORK-DeHaven-Kendig/PARKER-Plankinton-Balentine/MELLEN-Hicks-Crooker/TAYLOR-Germain-Paschton Tree on 29 May 2011
The Old Town and Village of Brooklyn Post Office. Elias HICKS would visit here and preach on the third floor.
____________________________
Isaac HICKS Family Papers, 1798-ca. (bulk 1798-1818)
1867-1820 , New York, USA
Isaac Hicks Family Papers, 1798-ca. 1956 (bulk 1798-1818)
(Approx. 100 items; 1 box)
RG 5/197
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
©Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College
500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081-1399
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table of contents
Abstract
Isaac Hicks (1767-1820) was a New York Quaker merchant. He established a large fleet of international trading vessels and financially helped to support his cousin, Edward Hicks (1780-1849), the Pennsylvania Quaker folk artist. Isaac Hicks traveled extensively with his cousin, Elias Hicks (1748-1830), the New York Quaker minister. The collection contains primarily the correspondence of Isaac Hicks, including letters from Isaac Hicks to his wife describing religious journeys taken with Elias Hicks; some letters concerning the Separation of 1827-28; and business letters. Correspondents include: John Comly (letters about Edward Hicks, the primitive painter), Elias Hicks, John Murray, Jr., Thomas Rotch, William Rotch, Thomas Sturge. The letters provide insight into Quaker family life on Long Island and the travels of a Quaker minister. Also of interest is a letter concerning the disownments of Isaac T. Hopper, James Gibbons, and Charles Marriott, as well as an anecdote conveying the Quaker attitude towards music in the late 19th century.
Background note
Scope and content Arrangement
Administrative information Restrictions
Preferred citation
Provenance
Processing info
Related materials
Bibliography
Added entries
Contact information
Inventory Ser. 1. Correspondence sent by Isaac Hicks, 1802-1818
Ser. 2. Correspondence received by Isaac Hicks, 1798-1819
Ser. 3. Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1806-1854
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Return to Friends Historical Library
Return to Tripod
Background note:
Isaac Hicks was born in 1767, the son of Samuel and Phebe (Seaman) Hicks in a Quaker farming community on Long Island, New York. A birthright member of Westbury Monthly Meeting, he was part of a prominent and extended Quaker family that included distant cousins primitie artist Edward Hicks (1780-1849) and Quaker minister Elias Hicks (1748-1830). In 1789 he went to New York City to start a career in business, and in 1790 he married Sarah Doughty. They had six children: John D., b 1791;, Robert, b. 1793; Benjamin, b. 1798; Isaac, b. 1802; Elizabeth, b. 1805; and Mary, b. 1807. In 1796, Isaac Hicks established a shipping and commission business. Benefiting from his extended Quaker connections in America and England, he soon became a wealthy ship owner. In 1806, he retired from business, returning to Westbury, Long Island, and became increasingly involved in Quaker concerns.
In 1804, his brother Valentine (1782-1850) married Abigail Hicks, the daughter of Elias Hicks, uniting even more closely a family already tied by kinship and Quaker belief. Elias and Isaac Hicks were both descended from Jacob and Hannah (Carpenter) Hicks, and Edward Hicks, the artist, was descended from Jacob's brothers, Isaac and Thomas. Isaac supported Edward Hicks financially as well as accompanied Elias Hicks on a number of his ministerial travels, including the visits to Philadelphia Yearly Meeting in 1813 and Rhode Island Yearly Meeting in 1816. Isaac Hicks died in 1820.
Scope and content
The collection contains primarily the correspondence of Isaac Hicks, including letters from Isaac Hicks to his wife describing religious journeys taken with Elias Hicks; some letters concerning the Separation of 1827-28; and business letters. Correspondents include: John Comly (letters about Edward Hicks, the primitive painter), Elias Hicks, John Murray, Jr., Thomas Rotch, William Rotch, Thomas Sturge. The letters provide insight into Quaker family life on Long Island and the life of a Quaker minister. Also of interest is a letter concerning the disownments of Isaac T. Hopper, James Gibbons, and Charles Marriott, as well as an anecdote conveying the Quaker attitude towards music in the late 19th century.
Arrangement
The collection is divided into three series:
- Correspondence sent
- Correspondence received
- Miscellaneous
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Administrative and Other Descriptive Information
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Restrictions
Collection is open for research.
Copyright has not been assigned to Friends Historical Library All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in to the Director. Permission for publication is given on behalf of Friends Historical Library as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained by reader.
Preferred citation
[Indicate the cited item or series here], RG 5/197, Isaac Hicks Family Papers, Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College
Acquisition Information
Accession information
Donor: Marietta Hicks, 1956
The donor was a descendent of Isaac Hicks. She was the daughter of Edward and Emma (Jarvis) Hicks. Edward was the son of Isaac (1815-1900) and Mary (Willis) Hicks. Isaac Hicks was the grandson of Isaac Hicks (1767-1820) and Sarah Doughty Hicks and the son of John Doughty and Sarah (Rushmore) Hicks.
Processing information
The collection was fully catalogued in the manuscript card catalogue in 1956. In 1961, four photostats of survey maps, given by Bliss Forbush, were added to the collection. They have since been removed. In 2001, the collection was described and catalogued.
Related material
See also:
Elias Hicks Manuscripts
FHL RG5/042, Fisher-Warner Papers
Isaac Hicks Papers at the New York Historical Society.
Bibliography
Davison, Robert A. Isaac Hicks, New York Merchant and Quaker, 1767-1820. Harvard University Press, 1964.
Forbush, Bliss, Elias Hicks, Quaker Liberal. Columbia University Press, 1956.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Added entries
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subjects
Hicks family
Ministers -- Quaker
Music --Quakers
Quaker abolitionists
Quaker businesspeople
Quakers -- New York-- Westbury
Quakers --Music
Quakers --Social Life and customs
Society of Friends -- Doctrines.
Society of Friends -- New York (State) -- Nassau County.
Society of Friends --Ministers
Additional Authors and Contributors
Comly, John, 1773-1850.
Fisher, Miers, 1748-1819
Fisher, Samuel Rowland, 1745-1834
Gibbons, James Sloan.
Hicks, Edward, 1780-1849.
Hicks, Elias, 1748-1830.
Hicks, Isaac, 1767-1820
Hopper, Isaac T. (Isaac Tatem), 1771-1852.
Marriott, Charles, 1811-1858.
Rotch, Thomas, 1767-1823.
Rotch, William, 1734-1828
Contact information
Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College
[http://www.swarthmore.edu/fhl.xml]
500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081-1399
©2001
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Collection inventory
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes
Note to Researchers: To request materials, please note both the location and box numbers shown below:
Ser. 1. Correspondence sent by Isaac Hicks, 1802-1818
to Burling, Mary
1814
(ALS)
Box 1
to daughter Hicks, Mary
1818
(ALS)
Box 1
to Hicks, Sarah
1802-1818
(32 ALsS)
Box 1
includes descriptions of religious visits while traveling
Ser. 2. Correspondence received by Isaac Hicks, 1798-1819
[Anonymous], Draft (?) letter
n.d.
Box 1
concerning conflict in the Society of Friends involving the Separation
from Benson, Robert
1802
(ALS)
Box 1
from Coffin, Mark
1805-1818
(3 ALsS)
Box 1
from Comly, John
1815-1819
(17 ALsS)
Box 1
from Eddy, Thomas
1806
(ALS)
Box 1
from Fisher, Hannah
1813
(ALS)
Box 1
from Fisher, Miers
1798
(ALS)
Box 1
from Fisher, Samuel and Miers
1798-1801
(4 ALsS)
Box 1
from Fisher, Samuel R.
1798-1808
(4 ALsS)
Box 1
from Fisher, Thomas and Joshua
1798
(ALS)
Box 1
from Frank, Arnee
1806
(ALS)
Box 1
from son Hicks, B.[Benjamin] D.
1818
(ALS)
Box 1
from Hicks, Elias
1803
(ALsS)
Box 1
photocopies; originals removed to SAFE
from Hicks, Sarah (8 ALsS)
1810-1813
(8 ALsS)
Box 1
from Hicks, Valentine (brother)
1818
(ALS)
Box 1
from Hussey, Isaiah
1800
(ALS)
Box 1
from Murray, John, Jr.
1806
(ALS)
Box 1
from Parry, Sarah
1818
(ALS)
Box 1
from Price, Philip
1813
(ALS)
Box 1
from Rotch, Thomas
1799-1803
(3 ALsS)
Box 1
from Rotch, William
1801 (?)
(ALS)
Box 1
re: Thomas Sturge
from Rotch, William, Jr.
1802-1803
(3 ALsS)
Box 1
from Rotch, Thomas
1802-1808
(6 ALsS)
Box 1
from Walmby, Benjamin
1819
(ALS)
Box 1
Ser. 3. Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1806-1854
Hicks, Robert to Samuel Griffith
1842
(ALS)
Box 1
concerning disownments of Isaac T. Hopper, James Gibbons, and Charles Marriott
Hicks, Susan to Elizabeth (Hicks) Seaman
1827
(ALS)
Box 1
describing problems relating to ownership of Buckingham Monthly Meeting, Pa.
Rotch, Thomas. Payment of bill
1806
Box 1
New York Yearly Meeting minute
1854 5mo. 29
Box 1
concerning music (copy) with note from Marietta Hicks (donor) relating family story about Rachel Seaman Hicks (1789-1878) and her disapproval of music.
www.swarthmore.edu/library/friends/ead/5197ishi,xml
stuestesadded this on 6 Jan 2013
ConsiderTheLilies22originally submitted this to A-1 HANDWORK-DeHaven-Kendig/PARKER-Plankinton-Balentine/MELLEN-Hicks-Crooker/TAYLOR-Germain-Paschton Tree on 30 Jan 2012
Family Papers of Isaac HICKS ~ New York Merchant and Quaker
 |
Hicks, Elias- Itinerant Quaker Preacher & writer Elias Hicks stuestesadded this on 6 Jan 2013 doctorj2uoriginally submitted this to Harris Family Tree on 6 Jul 2012 |
 |
Elias Hicks headstone, died 27 February 1830, age 82; Jericho Frieds' Burial Ground, Jericho, Nassau County, NY Elias Hicks headstone, died 27 February 1830, age 82; Jericho Frieds' Burial Ground, Jericho, Nassau County, NY 2005 , Jericho, Nassau County, New York stuestesadded this on 6 Jan 2013 doctorj2uoriginally submitted this to Harris Family Tree on 6 Jul 2012 Category Type:Headstone Headstone Details Cemetery name Jericho Frieds' Burial… |
|