Elizabeth

____ - ____

Family 1 : Thomas HYLAND
  1.  Thomas II HIGHLAND
  2.  Samuel HIGHLAND
  3.  Deborah HIGHLAND
  4.  Sarah HIGHLAND
  5.  Ruth HIGHLAND
  6. +Mary HIGHLAND

INDEX


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Hannah BARNES

____ - ____

Father: William BARNES
Mother: Rachel LORD

Family 1 : John PROWSE
  1.  Hannah PROWSE
  2.  Abigail PROWSE

                       _____________________
                      |                     
 _William BARNES _____|
|                     |
|                     |_____________________
|                                           
|
|--Hannah BARNES 
|  
|                      _Thomas LORD ________+
|                     |                     
|_Rachel LORD ________|
                      |
                      |_Dorothy BIRD _______+
                                            

INDEX


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Lucia BENNETT

____ - ____

Family 1 : Matthias ELLIS
  1.  Priscilla ELLIS
  2.  Lucy ELLIS
  3.  Gamaliel ELLIS
  4.  Daniel ELLIS
  5.  Elizabeth ELLIS
  6.  Ebenezer ELLIS
  7.  Cornelius ELLIS
  8.  George ELLIS
  9.  Joseph ELLIS
  10.  Mary ELLIS

INDEX


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Hans Paulus BOGER

____ - ____

Father: Johannes Paulus BOGER
Mother: Anna Eva FUCHS


                          _Johannes Paulus "Pauli" BOGER _
                         |                                
 _Johannes Paulus BOGER _|
| (1692 - 1765) m 1710   |
|                        |_Anna Margaretha _______________
|                                                         
|
|--Hans Paulus BOGER 
|  
|                         _Paul FUCHS ____________________
|                        |                                
|_Anna Eva FUCHS ________|
   m 1710                |
                         |________________________________
                                                          

INDEX


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Nathaniel Barnes BRADFORD

____ - ____

Father: Edward Winslow BRADFORD
Mother: Mary DILLARD

Family 1 : Sarah E. BARNES

                            _Joseph BRADFORD ____+
                           |                     
 _Edward Winslow BRADFORD _|
|                          |
|                          |_Nancy BARNES _______+
|                                                
|
|--Nathaniel Barnes BRADFORD 
|  
|                           _Benjamin DILLARD ___
|                          |                     
|_Mary DILLARD ____________|
                           |
                           |_Mercy HOLMES _______
                                                 

INDEX


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Robert GRAY (Capt.)

[93151]

10 May 1755 - 1806

Father: William GRAY
Mother: Elizabeth

Family 1 : Martha Howland ATKINS
  1.  Martha Howland GRAY

                       _Edward II GRAY _____+
                      | (1665 - ....)       
 _William GRAY _______|
|                     |
|                     |_Mary MANCHESTER ____
|                                           
|
|--Robert GRAY 
|  (1755 - 1806)
|                      _____________________
|                     |                     
|_Elizabeth __________|
                      |
                      |_____________________
                                            

INDEX

[93151] mentioned in William Henry Gray's book on history of Oregon.

The house where Robert Gray lived as a boy in Tiverton RI is still standing and wears a plaque donated by the Robert Gray Junior High School of Tacoma, Washington. He served in the Continental Navy during the Revolutionary War, with a commission issued
by George Washington to privateer. He later worked for a Massachusetts trading company. In 1787 a trading company from Massachusetts sent out two ships to trade in sea otter pelts along the Northwest Coast with a cargo of buttons, beads, blue cloth,
and other items. The Columbia was captained by John Kendrick, the Lady Washington by Robert Gray. In storms by Cape Horn the ships got separated. After a voyage of about 10 months, Gray's ship documented this moment:

On the memorable August 2, 1788, during an forenoon watch, the lookout aloft loudly and excitedly reported land ahead. Soon afterwards, when descried from the deck, joyous shouts went up. Awakened by the heartening cries, the watch below joined in the
general thanksgiving. The happy occasion described with some emotion by Second Mate Haswell: "On the second at 10 a.m. to our inexpressible joy we saw the coast of New Albion ranging from NNE to SSE about 7 Leagues we tried for soundings in a hundred
fathems without finding bottom, we sett a pressing rail With the Land." Although the exact location of this historic landfall . . . the first made by a American vessel on the Pacific coast of the New World is not known. It doubtless was a short
distance south of today's California-Oregon boundary. A few days later (August 12, 1788) the first landing by North Americans on the Pacific coast of the New World occurred, and it is worthy of remembrance as a noteworthy incident in the United States
history. The location of this initial landing, though not definitely known, was probably between Cascade Head and Cape Lookout today's Oregon coast.

At last, on the 16th of August, 1788, the sloop reached its destined haven in Nootka Sound. Two English vessels from Macao, under Portuguese colors, were lying there. The commanders, Captains Meares and Douglas, came out in a boat and offered their
assistance to the little stranger. The acquaintance proved to be friendly, although there were evidences, later on, of a disguised jealousy between them.

Three days later the English launched a small schooner, named Northwest America -- the first vessel ever built on the [Pacific Northwest] Coast. It was a gala day, fittingly celebrated by salutes and festivities in which the Americans cordially joined.
The Washington was now hauled up on the ways for graving, and preparations began to be made for collecting furs.

Then, there was the reunion:
One day, just a week after their arrival, they saw a sail in the distance, which by their glasses, they soon recognized as the long lost Columbia. Capt. Gray immediately took the long boat and went out to meet her, and shortly before sunset she
anchored within 40 yards of the sloop.

It was decided to winter in Friendly Cove, Nootka Sound, and a house was built large enough for the entire crew. They shot an abundance of game, prepared charcoal for their smiths and worked their iron into chisels, which were in good demand among the
natives. A large fleet of canoes came in great parade and offered their sea otter skins for one chisel each. Our men readily bought the lot - 200 in number - worth from $6000 to $8000. This was the best bargain they ever made, as they could seldom get
a good skin for less than 6 or 10 chisels. An average price was one skin for a blanket, four for a pistol and six for a musket.

Capt. Kendrick concluded to put the ship's property on board the sloop Washington and take her on a cruise in her himself while Gray should take the Columbia to the Sandwich Islands [Hawaii] and get provisions for the voyage to China and there dispose
of the skins.

And so the two vessels parted company. After a pleasant trip to resupply, Gray landed in China.

After having traded extensively that spring, Gray was made head of the expedition and placed in command of the Columbia. Sailing on to the Orient, they sold pelts and bought tea and possibly silk and spices. It was an unfavorable season for trade and
their thousand sea otter skins had to be sold at a sacrifice. The ship was repaired at great expense and made ready for a cargo of teas. To complete the voyage, he sailed west, arriving in Boston on August 10, 1790, and became the first American to
have circumnavigated the globe during his 35 month voyage.

Gray's most notable achievement came on his second voyage to the Oregon coast in 1792. Although he did not make much profit, being unexperienced in the Chinese trade, the Boston merchants for whom he worked were happy with the markets he had opened.
Only one month later he left for a new voyage to Oregon. Because he had instructions of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson not to enter any Spanish port, and Nootka at the time was being disputed between the English and Spanish, he did not trade in
Nootka itself, but at various points along the coast of present-day British Columbia, Washington and Oregon.

In the winter, spent at Vancouver Island, he built a new ship, the Adventure, and in the next spring (1792), he himself went south, while the Adventure went north. It was on this voyage that he found a river, already seen by Hezeta in 1775, but having
been sought for in vain since. Not being able to enter it, he sailed north, where he met Vancouver, to whom he denied claims that he had circumnavigated Vancouver Island, and entered Grays Harbour, in the present state of Washington. However, he was
still intrigued by the river he had found, went back. He noted a flow of muddy water fanning from the shore and decided to explore his belief that it was the "Great River of the West." In desperate need to find a harbor for fresh water and fresh greens
to treat the crew of scurvy, Captain Gray entered the mouth of the Columbia River. Gray crossed the treacherous sand bar and named the river after his ship, the "Columbia Rediviva" (83 feet long, 212 ton burden, 15 ft draft). After nine days Captain
Gray was fascinated by the river he had found then set sail 25 miles up the river. On May 20th, 1792 Gray logged his discovery and named the river.

At the end of the trading season he left Oregon for China, and returned in Boston the next year (1793). He once again circumnavigated the globe. He spent the remainder of his career commanding merchant vessels along the Atlantic Coast. Gray took a
wife, Martha Howland Atkins, on February 13, 1794 and had four daughters, and possibly a son. The death of Captain Gray remains unknown. They think he might have died of yellow fever during an 1806 voyage and was buried at sea.

Gray's discovery of the Columbia River gave the United States a strong claim to the Oregon Country. This discovery prompted Thomas Jefferson in 1804 to send the exploring team of Lewis and Clark overland to gain more knowledge of the region and to find
out if there was a northwest passage. They found that the passage did not exist, but laid claim to the territory. Their expedition, along with Captain Gray's trip, gave the United States a strong stake in the land. It encouraged other American fur
traders, who used the Columbia River as a winter haven. By the end of the century these traders controlled the sea otter trade and the presence of the United States was firmly established in the Pacific Northwest, a presence on which the United States
would later base its claim to possession.

***********

.The Columbia River first appeared on European maps in the early 17th century as "River of the West," when a Spanish maritime explorer Martin de Auguilar located a major river near the 42nd parallel. Cartographers often labeled the "River of the West"
as an estuary to the mythical Straits of Anian, or the Northwest Passage and located it anywhere from the 42nd to the 50th parallel. In 1765, British Major Robert Rogers called the river "Ouragon" -- later spelled "Oregon" by Jonathan Carver in 1778 --
as a derivative name referring to the "ouisconsink" river in present-day Wisconsin. The first confirmation of its location came in 1775 when Bruno de Hezeta described a river estuary at the Columbia's correct latitude. In May 1792, American trader
Captain Robert Gray sailed across the bar in the first documented Euroamerican visit to the river. British explorer George Vancouver sent Lt. William Broughton up the river more than 100 miles in October 1792, and Broughton produced the first detailed
map of the lower river. Meriwether Lewis and William Clark explored the river in 1805-1806 for the United States. Northwest Company fur trader David Thompson made the first map of the full river in 1811-1812. After the War of 1812, England and the
United States jointly occupied the Columbia River Basin territory.

(Sources: Oregon Blue Book, 1997-1998
| Britannica Encyclopedia
| Dictionary of Oregon History)
(source-Columbia River Gorge History, by Jim Attwell)


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Nettie GREEN

____ - ____

Father: Jeremiah Wesley GREEN
Mother: Margaret EMFIELD

Family 1 : David Blair SMITH

                          _____________________
                         |                     
 _Jeremiah Wesley GREEN _|
|                        |
|                        |_____________________
|                                              
|
|--Nettie GREEN 
|  
|                         _Peter EMFIELD ______+
|                        |                     
|_Margaret EMFIELD ______|
                         |
                         |_Catherine HARTZELL _
                                               

INDEX


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Henry HOWELL

[1602]

ABT 20 Dec 1618 - 29 Aug 1619

Father: Edward HOWELL
Mother: Frances PAXTON


                       _Henry HOWELL _______+
                      | (1552 - 1625) m 1583
 _Edward HOWELL ______|
| (1584 - 1655) m 1616|
|                     |_Margaret HAWTEN ____
|                       (1561 - 1638) m 1583
|
|--Henry HOWELL 
|  (1618 - 1619)
|                      _Francis PAXTON _____
|                     | (1566 - ....)       
|_Frances PAXTON _____|
  (1588 - 1630) m 1616|
                      |_____________________
                                            

INDEX

[1602] [S195] Bassett-Preston Ancestors. Page 149

[1600] [S195] Bassett-Preston Ancestors. Page 149

[1601] [S195] Bassett-Preston Ancestors. Page 149


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Emma Elizabeth MORRIS

[72831]

1 Jun 1880 - 26 Feb 1882

Father: Luke MORRIS
Mother: Mary Ann LYM


                       _____________________
                      |                     
 _Luke MORRIS ________|
| (1843 - 1918) m 1870|
|                     |_____________________
|                                           
|
|--Emma Elizabeth MORRIS 
|  (1880 - 1882)
|                      _Joseph LYM _________+
|                     | (1824 - 1877) m 1846
|_Mary Ann LYM _______|
  (1851 - 1912) m 1870|
                      |_Emma BRONSON _______+
                        (1825 - 1896) m 1846

INDEX

[72831] Ancestral File Number: 3Q41-2H


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Samuel II SPRAGUE

____ - ____

Father: Samuel SPRAGUE
Mother: Sarah CHILLINGWORTH

Family 1 : Bethia THOMAS

                        __
                       |  
 _Samuel SPRAGUE ______|
|                      |
|                      |__
|                         
|
|--Samuel II SPRAGUE 
|  
|                       __
|                      |  
|_Sarah CHILLINGWORTH _|
                       |
                       |__
                          

INDEX


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Benjamin TERRY

____ - ____

Father: Thomas TERRY
Mother: Hannah ROGERS


                       _____________________
                      |                     
 _Thomas TERRY _______|
|                     |
|                     |_____________________
|                                           
|
|--Benjamin TERRY 
|  
|                      _John ROGERS ________+
|                     |                     
|_Hannah ROGERS ______|
                      |
                      |_Anna CHURCHMAN _____
                                            

INDEX


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Thomas WELCH

____ - ____

Family 1 : Elizabeth Caroline HOWELL

INDEX

[126379] [S852] #852


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Joseph WHEELER

[86081] [86082] [86083]

____ - ____

Family 1 : Sarah POTTER

INDEX

[86081] Ancestral File Number: 10LM-MNW

[124841] _UIDB1603A3CE37DD511B01BEC2C58E8143337EA

[86082] [S595] Ancestral File (TM)

[86083] [S597] Ancestral File (TM)


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Norbin WOODS

[47322]

____ - ____

Father: Simeon WOODS
Mother: Elizabeth Jane LUTZ


                        _____________________
                       |                     
 _Simeon WOODS ________|
|                      |
|                      |_____________________
|                                            
|
|--Norbin WOODS 
|  
|                       _John LUTZ __________+
|                      | (1801 - 1852)       
|_Elizabeth Jane LUTZ _|
                       |
                       |_Holly Molly HEAD ___+
                         (1806 - 1854)       

INDEX

[47322] Still Living.


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