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Wednesday, June 05, 2024

Death Lamb GGGGGGG grannie

  

 " The name has been spelled Daeth, D'Aeth,      D'Eath,.        Death,  

        Darth,  

Dath and others" 

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 It's Helter skelter composition genealogy, but tracing back from APC leads to ancestors named Death and Lamb. And I thought I had a weird last name. I'll sort out the details later; thus was ad hoc browsing copy n paste. 

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https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/53473143/alice-champlin

Alice Pickard Champlin

BIRTH

18 Aug 1845

Pennsylvania, USA

DEATH

17 Apr 1914 (aged 68)

McPherson, McPherson County, Kansas, USA 

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Maria Lamb Pickard

BIRTH

30 Oct 1795

Wilbraham, Hampden County, Massachusetts, USA 


Maria Lamb was born October 30, 1795, in Wilbraham, Hampden County, Massachusetts, the daughter of Gad and Jerusha (Ripley) Lamb. 

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Gad Lamb VETERAN

BIRTH

20 Nov 1744

"Wilbraham, Hampden County, Massachusetts, USA -----Jerusha's bloodline decends from 

 Gov. William Bradford, one of the pilgrims to come over on the Mayflower 

She, along with her husband Gad, founded Lambs Creek in 1797. Jerusha also started the first Sunday school in these parts in her home in Lambs Creek. " 




Jerusha Ripley Lamb

BIRTH

28 May 1756

Windham, Windham County, Connecticut, USA

DEATH

9 May 1838 (aged 81)

Lambs Creek, Tioga County, Pennsylvania, USA ----- 


Ebenezer Ripley

BIRTH

27 Jun 1729

Windham, Windham County, Connecticut, USA-----Mehitable Burbank Ripley

BIRTH

28 Jul 1729

Suffield, Hartford County, Connecticut, USA------Capt Abraham Burbank

BIRTH

8 Sep 1703

DEATH

 

(Dea. Thomas Bingham, s. of Thomas Bingham and Anne Fenton, was bapt. June 5, 1642 at the Cathedral of St. Peter and Paul at Sheffield in Yorkshire, England. He d. at Windham, Conn. on Jan. 16, 1729/30, Æ 88.


Thomas' father was a master cutler and was buried at Sheffield on Feb. 12, 1648/9 and his youngest sister Mary was buried at Sheffield on June 16, 1651. 

 At what time his mother remarried to William Backus (called Backhouse at Sheffield), also a master cutler at Sheffield, is not of record 


Capt. Samuel Bingham, b. Mar. 28, 1685, d. Mar. 1, 1760 at Windham, Conn., Æ 75; m. 1) Jan. 5, 1707/8 at Windham, Faith Ripley, dau. of Joshua Ripley, Esq. and 

 Hannah Bradford, and gr.granddau. of Gov. William Bradford of the Mayflower and Plymouth Colony, b. Sept. 20, 1686 at Hingham, MMass. She d. Feb 11, 1720/1 at Windham, Conn., Æ 35. Five children of the family) 

Master Cutler of Sheffield  


https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/141768395/mary-rudd


"Yes, the Rudd name is often found in early records of Ireland, Scotland, Wales, and England. The surname Rudd comes from the Old English word rud, which means "red". It may have been a nickname for someone with red hair or a ruddy complexion" 


20 Nov 1767 (aged 64)-----John Burbank III

BIRTH

Aug 1670

Massachusetts, USA. He was elected surveyor, tithingman, constable, gauger, sealer of caches, town treasurer and served repeatedly as selectman. 

John Burbank Jr.

BIRTH

1640

Rowley, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA


John Burbank

BIRTH

1611

England

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Jonathan Lamb

BIRTH

26 Feb 1715

Framingham, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA 



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Jonathan Lamb

BIRTH

11 Nov 1682

Roxbury, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA 


Lydia Death Lamb

BIRTH

26 Mar 1682

Sherborn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA

DEATH

7 Aug 1754 (aged 72)

Topsfield, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA 


Lydia Death was the daughter of John (II) Death and Mary (Peabody) Death-Eames (Mary married Samuel Eames as her 2nd husband) ----- 


John (II-Ens) Death

BIRTH

1651

Framingham, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA

DEATH

5 Jun 1725 (aged 73–74)

Sherborn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA ------ "John (II-Ensign) Death's date of death was AFTER 30 Mar 1722 when he deeded "all of his estate in Framingham and also in Sherborn both real and personal, .to my well-beloved son-in-law Samuel How, Jr and his wife Ruth (John & Mary's daughter) during their natural lives of the said John Death and his wife Mary and their son Samuel, provide a good honourable and sufficient mantainanance, by nursing in time of infirmity, old age, any sickness and also provide for them respectively a decent burial at their decease... and shall pay equal proportions at one years' end after the decease of the said John Death and his wife Mary unto his children hereafter named VIZ:

unto John Death, Jr.,"

*"

Mary Peabody Death

BIRTH

22 May 1656

Topsfield, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA

DEATH

1723 (aged 66–67)

Essex, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA------ 


Lieut Francis Pabody VETERAN

BIRTH

1614

England

DEATH

19 Feb 1697 (aged 82–83)

Topsfield, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA----


CPT John Paybody

BIRTH

7 Sep 1590

St Albans, St Albans District, Hertfordshire, England

DEATH

27 Apr 1667 (aged 76)

Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, USA 


Isabel Harper Peabody

BIRTH

1592

St Albans District, Hertfordshire, England

DEATH

1664 (aged 71–72)

Plymouth, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, USA




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LT Abiel Lamb I VVETERAN

BIRTH

15 Aug 1646

Roxbury, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA -----Elizabeth Clark Lamb

BIRTH

31 Jan 1647

Watertown, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA -----


Hugh Clark

BIRTH

1613

England

DEATH

20 Jul 1693 (aged 79–80)

Roxbury, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA ----- Mrs Elizabeth Baldwin Clarke

BIRTH

1620

England







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Thomas “The Immigrant” Lamb

BIRTH

1596

England 


Dorothy Harbottle Lamb Hawley

BIRTH

1619

England 







,"Dear Friend, I send you greetings on my 93rd birthday, March 21, 1890 and March 21, 1893, are the outposts. 

To few is it granted to stand on either end of a century.


I have seen our country grow from five and a half to fifty million and arts, science and inventions expand into magnificent proportions, marking the progress of nations.  

All the presidents except George Washington and John Adams have been my contemporaries. 

Our national flag has added twenty-nine of her forty six stars to her groundwork of blue within my memory.


Though years and mountains do separate and ears and eyes have grown dull, the picture in memory's walls are still warm and bright, and years hangs among them. Somewhere - sometime we shall say "good morning." 

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/28308117/andrew_b-pickard 


"The gentleman who wrote the above is very well known in this section. He was a professor in the seminary at Mt. Morris for many years and in an early day was a Methodist preacher.


Andrew died before May 9, 1894, (date of obituary) in Canon City, Fremont County, Colorado. His obituary was published in the May 9, 1894 edition of The Freeport Daily Journal, Freeport:


Andrew B. Pickard, a former well known citizen of Stephenson county, expired a few days ago at Canon City, Colorado, aged 94 years. He was born March 21, 1800, in Camillers, Onondaga county, N.Y., and is the last one summoned of a family of twelve children. 

His wife, Maria Lamb Pickard, was laid to reset April 24, 1873, in Pueblo.  

His later years have been spent with his son and daughter in Denver and Canon City. Mr. Pickard came to this county in 1846 and after a long residence near this city he removed to Mt. Morris, Ogle county. He will be kindly remembered by many of our older citizens." 


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Nicholas Pickard Veteran

BIRTH

3 May 1752

Ovid, Seneca County, New York, USA


Nicholas served during the American Revolutionary War as a private in Wincoop's Regiment, New York. DAR #A205809.


Mary died August 19, 1841, probably in Onondaga County, New York. According to Rural Elbridge Cemetery Records, Nicholas died in 1827. According to a Pickard family Bible he died March 19, 1825, near Camillus Village, Onondaga County, New York.


Onondaga's Centennial: Gleanings of a Century Vol. 1. Chapter XV, The Revolution page 163:


Nicholas Pickard - Enlisted in April, 1776, in Colonel Van Schaick's regiment, New York troops, and served six months. In the fall of 1777 he enlisted in a New Jersey regiment for three years. 

In 1778 he was sent to Jersey to make shoes for the army. 

He was sixty-seven years old in 1820, and had twenty-five acres of land in Camillus worth $200, but thought he was going to lose it. He was living with his wife." 


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Conrad Pickard VETERAN

BIRTH

14 Feb 1728

Montgomery County, New York, USA

Conrad Pickard was born either born on February 14, 1728/28 or March 5, 1727 at Palatine, across the Mohawk River from Canojohary, Tryon (now Montgomery) County, New York. 

He was the son of Nicholas and Anna Barbara (Weiser) Pickard. 

 His mother was the sister of the famous Conrad Weiser who was an Indian interpreter for the Mohawk nation.

Conrad married Anna Mary Margaret Walrath on June 30, 1751, in St. Paul's Lutheran Church in Stone Arabia, Tryon (now Montgomery) County, New York. Anna was born about 1730 in Cayuga County, New York, the daughter of Johann Adolph and Anna Barbara (Ridder or Ritter) Walrath.

Conrad's name first appeared in Tryon County as early as 1750 in the records of the Lutheran Church of Stone Arabia. He was a member of the Committee of Vigilance for the town of Springfield in 1779. Conrad served in the Tryon County Militia in Colonel Samuel Campbell's First Regiment of the Revolutionary War.

Following is a transcription form several pages of The History of Springfield New York by Kate M. Gray. Note the error in his birth year and location of birth:

Conrad Pickard was born in Germany in 1740 (date on tombstone) and owned the farm known as the Menzo Edick farm, later owned by Geo. B. Flint and now by Ralph Lunhdolm. Back of the barn there is a large spring of excellent water, unfailing and clear as crystal.
Doubtless that was the reason Conrad Pickard built his little log cabin nearby.

On the Pickard farm, in a hillside field there is at present time, a small plot of ground containing a few graves. It is all that remains of the first cemetery in Springfield where many of the early settlers were buried. An old deed given by Conrad Pickard soon after 1800, reserves 12 acres of land on the farm mentioned as belonging to the town for a burying ground. As years passed the markers crumbled and those of wood decayed, and the plot decreased in size. A few years ago it was discovered that the burying ground belonged to the town, and the local D.A.R. Chapter succeeded in getting it cleared and reset the remaining markers.

that time, the D.A.R. also erected a new headstone for Conrad which I took a photo of in 2006.

Anna died about 1776 in Springfield, Otsego County, New York. According to page 307 of The Schempp Family History by George Christian Schempp, there's a story about Conrad that says he plowed a field on his 100th birthday. Conrad died August 5, 1827 at the home of his great-grandson, Abram in Owasco, Cayuga County, New York. Following is a transcription of an obituary for him:

From Cayuga Republican
In Owasco, on the 5th inst. Mr. Conrad Pickard aged 100 years and 5 months. He was born on the Mohawk River, in the town of Palatine, Montgomery CO., N.Y. was one of the first settlers in the county of Otsego and lived to see four American Wars. that time, the D.A.R. also erected a new headstone for Conrad which I took a photo of in 2006.

Anna died about 1776 in Springfield, Otsego County, New York. According to page 307 of The Schempp Family History by George Christian Schempp, there's a story about Conrad that says he plowed a field on his 100th birthday. Conrad died August 5, 1827 at the home of his great-grandson, Abram in Owasco, Cayuga County, New York. Following is a transcription of an obituary for him:

From Cayuga Republican
In Owasco, on the 5th inst. Mr. Conrad Pickard aged 100 years and 5 months. He was born on the Mohawk River, in the town of Palatine, Montgomery CO., N.Y. was one of the first settlers in the county of Otsego and lived to see four American Wars.   



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Nicholas Pickard 

BIRTH
23 Feb 1701
Schenectady, Schenectady County, New York, USA 

Nicholas Pickard was born in 1701 in Schenectady, New York, a son of Bartholomew and Eechje (Classez) Pickard. He was baptized on February 23, 1701 at the Dutch Reformed Church in Schenectady. Johannes Wemp and Geertse Slyk were witnesses at his baptism. He grew up on the family farm at Verrebergh on the King’s Highway, six miles west of Albany. Nicholas married Anna Barbara Weiser about 1722 in Schenectady. 

They soon moved to the Mohawk Valley where they raised their family. There were very few white people in the area and due to Anna Barbara being the sister of Conrad Weiser, they felt safe. They had a total of seven children, John, William, Bartholomew, Conrad, Leah, Jacobus, and Rachel.

On April 6, 1742, Nicholas inherited his father’s interest in the Stone Arabia Patent of 4 lots, each with 50 acres. He sold his land to John Jost Snell. Conrad Weiser kept a journal in which he mentioned Nicholas and Anna Barbara in 1750:

“Sept. 2. About 10 o’clock, I left Colonel Johnson’s and came to Cana Johary to Barthol Pickert, 25 miles. My horse got lame this day. Sept 2. Came to Nicholas Pickert, about 5 miles, my horse very lame, was obliged to leave him and hire another, and a man to guide us to the road to Onondaga.”

“Sept 19. Came to Buret’s Field in rainy weather on the 20th to upper Castle of the Mohawks called “Canawadagy” I recommended John Pickert, my sister’s son, to then to learn the Mohawk tongue perfectly among them, to serve as interpreter for Penn., etc. after I am grown old and no more able to travel. They promised to do what they could, the young man speaks their language tolerably will now, and can write and read English, Dutch and Indian. His father lives about a mile from Canawadagy, and has the best opportunity to learn the Indian language perfectly.”

Nicholas Pickard was one of the original members of a company of 19 men, later expanded to 22 men, that received a tract of 45,000 acres of land known as the Schuler Patent, now known as the Otsego Grant, located in what is now Otsego County, New York. Nicholas and the Schulers acted as go betweens for themselves and other investors in New York City, in negotiating with the Mohawks and the colonial government of New York. The negotiations and purchase of this land began on June 27, 1753, when they petitioned Governor George Clinton for a license to purchase a tract of vacant land on the west side of Canadarago Lake. Allocation of the Patent was by drawing lots. Nicholas Pickard drew Tracts #78, #46, #25 and #18. Because of his knowledge of the Mohawk language, Nicholas was often called on 
to negotiate with the Indians. In 1754, he and Jacob Christmann signed the Indian deed for the Snell-Zimmerman Patent. One of the Indian signers was Mohawk Head Satchem, King Hendrick Peters. He signed with the totem of his clan, the wolf. Nicholas signed with his initials, "NP."

In July of 1776, Nicholas was named as executor of the will of Frederick Condernman of Canajohary. Nicholas probably died in Fort Plain, but when he died and where he is buried is unknown.   



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Bartholomew Pickard
BIRTH
18 Sep 1676
Leicestershire, England 


Bartholomew Pickard
BIRTH
25 Aug 1648
Leicestershire, England 


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John De la Bere (or Delabere) was a 15th-century Bishop of St David's in Wales. 

 He was also the King's Almoner under Henry VI.  

The Keeper of the Privy Purse and Treasurer to the King/Queen (or Financial Secretary to the King/Queen) is responsible for the financial management of the Royal Household of the Sovereign of the United Kingdom. The officeholder is assisted by the Deputy Treasurer to the King/Queen for the management of the Sovereign Grant, 

In modern Hebrew and Yiddish, goy (/ɡɔɪ/; גוי‎, pl.: goyim /ˈɡɔɪ.ɪm/, גוים‎ or גויים‎) is a term for a gentile, a non-Jew.[2] Through Yiddish,[3] the word has been adopted into English (pl.: goyim or goys) also to mean "gentile", sometimes in a pejorative sense.[4][5][6] As a word principally used by Jews to describe non-Jews,[5] it is a term for the ethnic out-group. 

English (Suffolk): variant of Moy . French: variant of Moyer 'sharecropper'. Alternatively, perhaps in same cases, a habitational  

According to the Kannada glossary, goye (ಗೋಯೆ) is a noun that means a protector or guardian, or someone who guards, protects, or takes care of another person or property.  





Sir Richard Thomas II Winterbourne
Birthdate: 1527 

Birthplace: Wantage, Oxfordshire, England, United Kingdom 


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Parents

Joshua Ripley
1658–1739


Hannah Bradford Ripley
1662–1738 


Hannah was the daughter of Major William and Alice Richards Bradford. A Mayflower Pilgrim descendant. She was a noble and useful woman, remarkable for her skill in the art of healing, she was the first, and for a long time the only physician in the settlement, and it is said that the first male physician, Dr. Richard Huntington, received much of his medical knowledge from her." 

MAJ William Bradford VVETERAN
BIRTH 

17 Jun 1624  

William Bradford 
BIRTH 

19 Mar 1590 


he was able to claim his family inheritance and his living conditions improved. He bought his own house and established a workshop as a fustian weaver, earning a reputable living. In 1617 the congregation made plans to relocate to America and establish their own colony in Virginia and in July 1620 and with Bradford's assistance they secured financial backing in London to embark on their first journey to America with about 50 people, including Bradford and his wife, on the ship "Speedwell, 
 
Parents

William Bradford I
1533–1595

Margaret Fox Bradford
1538–1578 

Daughter of William Fox (Fawkes) 

Wife of William Bradford I
 


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" name has been spelled Daeth, D'Aeth, D'Eath, Death, Darth, Dath and others" 


The Death family originally lived in the town of Ath in Belgium. 

 There it would have been rendered D'Ath, or  

De Ath, meaning from Ath.  

It was also occasionally an occupational name for a gatherer or seller of kindling.  

In this case, the name is derived from the Old English word dethe, which in turn is derived from the Old English word dyth, which means  

fuel or tinder  "  






The surname Death was first found in Kent at Knowlton and North Cray, where the family held lands since ancient times.  

However, earlier records of the family were found scattered through Britain including:  

Robert Deth who was listed in the Pipe Rolls of Bedfordshire in 1196; Roger Deth, who was listed in Cheshire in 1221; and Gilbert Deth who was listed in the Assize Rolls of Somerset in 1272. " 


Properly D'Aeth, still an English name, and said to be from Aeth, in Flanders. This may refer to Ath, a fortified town of Belgium, prov. Hainault. The name D'ath is found in the U.S. 

 There is a surgeon and also an undertaker named Death. 

 "At the Liverpool Police-court, on Friday, the witnesses and solicitor in two cases bore the ominous names of Death, Debt, and Daggers"  

(Morning Star). One family of the name of H. E. Death, having an objection to the name, changed it to Edeath. The U.S. names Date and Datt and the English name Dates may be derived from Death, D'Aeth, or D'Ath.".


 

Recorded as Dart, Darte, Darthe, Death, Dearth and possibly others, this is an English surname of two possible origins. The most likely is French as shown below, but recent research has also strongly indicated an English source which may have been "overlooked" in the past possibly because of its rather mordid conclusions. We believe that for many name holders it is of early medieval English origin, and one of a sizeable group of modern surnames that were created from a theatrical nickname. 

 In this case it was for a person who played the part of a figurative representation of "Death" in the popular medieval mystery plays." 


Other such names that survive today are Angel and Life.  

The source is the Middle English word "deeth", meaning death. A second origin is French and locational from the place called "Ath", with the fused preposition "de", in Flanders. The surname from this source has a variety of forms not just in England including D'Eath, D'Eathe, De Ath, D'Aeth, De Att and De Atta. "  





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"The words “dreamt up” are telling too, for The Hexagonal Hive – which premieres at Sheffield DocFest this week –" 



 

D'arty kids.

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