Showing posts with label Rev war patriot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rev war patriot. Show all posts

Monday, March 2, 2015

Monday Madness ! the tale of Isaiah Burton or Button or???


Well, I have been chasing the Burton lineage since about 1978.... I found my 3x great grandfather Varnum Burton. He was living in Hinsdale, Cattaraugus County, NY where he died in 1902... and in the Historical Gazeteer and Bigraphical Memorial of Cattaraugus County, N. Y. edited by William Adams, pub Syracuse NY 1893, p. 710, it states that he was born in Ulysses NY on July 11, 1808, and that "His father,  Isaiah, a native of Hopkinton , R.I., was a Revolutionary soldier."   It also stated Varnum, his wife, and 3 children had arrived in Hinsdale  Feb. 9, 1841.  So the search for the father and the rest of the family began.  Alfred Burton bought 63.5 acres from the Holland Land company, then sold 11 acres to Sally Luddington.  in 1842. In 1845, Thomas Luddington sells the same 11 acres to Varnum Burton.  Turns out that Alfred and Sally are the siblings to Varnum.

The 1850 US census for Hinsdale shows an 89 year old male, born R.I, living with Alfred and his wife. There is no name, and it is not obvious if the marks on the page are ditto marks to the above name , the child named Horace.   But not to be deterred, I looked for other copies --- Remember the enumerators made more than one copy!!!! There is a county copy of the census still extant on negative microfilm, ( which is why I won't show here) which has name and it could be read as Isaiah or Josiah.....  So far, so good.  On 1855 state census, no old guy still living with any of them, and also Thomas Luddington has died leaving widow with kids... So  he died between 1850 & 1855....

I had luck finding Varnum Burton  ( Farnham on one census!) in Madison County, but no Isaiah.   And I found variations in surname of Barten, Bertin, Burtin.... And in Rhode Island, most of the vital records seemed to be taken from tombstones, so I left the frustrating Burtons alone, revisiting every couple of years, although through Varnum's wife, I was able to trace back to Ides, and found other Revolutionary Patriots, and eventually John Howland , a Mayflower ancestor, so wasn't totally a bust.

I tracked Alfred, who sold his land in Hinsdale and disappeared.  I found they had moved to Lowden, Cedar County Iowa because his second wife had filed a deposition there in support of minor's pension for his son George's widow whose husband had died at Andersonville during the Civil War.   I'm nothing if not thorough in trying to turn over any rock to find this family... did I mention how long I've been looking for them??!

Then this week, I looked again in my Burton notebook, because I'm taking the US Land Records class from the National Institutes of Genealogical Studies, and one of the assignments asks about the first use of deeds..... so I thought I'd try running the Burton names again in Ancestry, etc.... and happened on a guy's tree listing an Isaiah Button / Burton....
hmmmm... so I looked, and he had the kids all listed  Alfred, Varnum and Sally Luddington, along with 2 more I didn't know: Eunice Paine and Clarissa Sanford.... Wow! Varnum named one of his daughters Eunice.   And the tree had attached the Revolutionary war pension of Isaiah Button..... Could hardly contain my excitement!! A pension is a done deal for proving service and a deposition listing all the kids--- Jackpot!!!
Happy dance ---and yet how could I never have tried BUTTON before??? what a rookie mistake!

I immediately contacted the tree owner,  and offered to share all the info I had accumulated on the descendants, and told everybody I might have had  Isaiah finding me just like Geoff  Rasmussen's new book!

I pulled up Fold3.com and looked at the pages of the pension.... sure enough there is a deposition from Cattaraugus, signed by Alfred and Sally stating that their father had died 10 March 1851.... listing the children, but it also said that he had not had a pension, had applied in 1832 but been denied.... hmmm  maybe no happy dance as this is in a pension file.

Looked at the rest of the pages, and was brought down quickly.  Isaiah had been deposed in 1832, and was 99/100  years old, gave birthdate of June 4th 1733! He died Dec 1 1832, and the last payment was made in 1834...
He would have been 118 if he died in 1851, and I'm sure the pension office would have been really aware of that!!

And there is a letter from a Cattaraugus county lawyer, suggesting that if the service the 5 heirs stated was already used, perhaps there were 2 Isaiahs. Added to the fact that the pensioner had stated that he had never left R.I and all the children were born in New York, and my balloon was burst!!! Oh well... but it's not a total loss, as I have a death date for my Isaiah, and the list of the children with the wives' married names,  and a new surname to try.... but why they all changed from Button to Burton???
Oh and now all those trees on ancestry, and the book published in 1970s by Robert Nye that state that Isaiah was born in1732 and died in 1851 that are circulating with WRONG INFO.....  I'm so frustrated and what a maddening family!!!!!
Oh well, tomorrow is another day!

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Treasure Tuesday! Esquire/Squire Ide Letter

Well this is definitely a"Treasure Tuesday" post.  I may not have enough words to describe this. Although it occurred a few months ago, I'm just now getting a chance to report on it! 

I got contacted by a man who is a distant collateral relative  about a letter he had, and offered to sell to me. I have purchased it because it was written by Esquire/Squire Ide, a Revolutionary War patriot, and my fifth great grandfather.

Squire (or Esquire as he signed the letter), was born  30 July 1751 in Rehoboth, Massachusetts Bay Colony to Timothy and Esther Bosworth Ide.  He was the sixth of at least 10 children.  On 3 June 1773, in Rehoboth, he married Mary Bowen, the daughter of Uriel and Elizabeth (Perry) Bowen [Arnold's Rhode Island VR]. They moved to Clarendon, Rutland Co, Vermont, where most of their 8 children were born..... Otis 1774; Ester 1777; Mary, 1780; from hereon born VT  Leafe 1782; Squire 1784; Betsey 1787; Patience? 1791; William Perly 1795 [Clarendon VT Vital Records]



Here is the letter! (I'll transcribe to separate tab page later).

Just having the letter would be a treasure enough, but in addition, the primary information in it helps to answer some of the unknowns in this lineage. 

 Everyone carries "post 1800 census" as the death date for Squire, as he has a son of the same name, and it is difficult to know which of them is the head of household in the 1810 or 1820 census --by 1820 could be either father or son, since both fit in the age group, and only 1 male is there.

The date of the letter is November 1 1806, so Squire was definitely alive then,  but amazingly enough, in the letter, he states "...it was my Son Squier that was dead and not my Da[gh?]ter.."
So the father Squire is the one in both the 1810 and 1820 census!!! 
Since then, another genealogist  William Bart Saxbe, who is writing the third volume of the  Descendants of Richard Bowen located a deed from 28 Sept 1821 by Squire Ide, so we can now state his death as post 28 Sept 1821, the date of the deed in Clarendon VT.   
Really a full treasure Tuesday!!!