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I found the following info on the www.ancestry.com database for the DAR.
It is the first indication I've seen that Samuel Chase had a grandson,
but the piece is lacking useful things like dates, places, siblings,
etc.
Does anyone have any info on this Simon Chase, son of Samuel Chase, or
of his son, Dr. John D. Chase? I would hope that the DAR has this info,
but suspect that they wouldn't be willing to give it out to just
anybody, like me.
Thanks for any help.
John Chadwick jchadwick(a)writeme.com
----- Excerpt from DAR records ---------
The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution
Volume 10 page 184
Mrs. Katharine Hyde Kemme Jones.
DAR ID Number: 9514
Born in Georgia.
Wife of Harry Lee Jones.
Descendant of Judge Samuel Chase, of Maryland.
Daughter of Dr. H. B. Kemme and Hattie Chase, his wife.
Granddaughter of Dr. John D. Chase and Katharine R. Ward, his wife.
Gr.-granddaughter of Simon Chase and Sarah Wingate, his wife.
Gr.-gr.-granddaughter of Samuel Chase and Ann Baldwin, his wife.
Samuel Chase was a prominent member of the Sons of Liberty of
Annapolis when they opened the public offices and destroyed the
stamps. He served several sessions in the Continental Congress
and was a signer of the Declaration of Independence. He died in
1811, at the age of seventy.
Also Nos. 67, 312, 5639, 6082.
----- End of excerpt -------------------------
Good Afternoon,
I received the following email describing a new website. I checked it out
and the site really does have the potential for being of assistance in
finding those lost Chase ancestors.
You may want to consider visiting it from time to time.
The email reads:
>>>I have created a Website of Volunteers who will do various types of Look
Ups such as Census, Cemetery, Marriage, and much more. I even have a message
board for people to post messages looking for family information. I am
also looking for new volunteers to help out to do look ups. Please tell
everyone you know who is doing genealogy. The more people who visit the
website and use it, the longer it will stay online.
Mike
Genealogy Look Up Forum: http://www.expage.com/page/genealogylookup<<<
Rex Chase
Note from the third annual reunion book - Sept. 1902
"The third annual reunion of the Chase-Chace Family Association was held in
the North Church at Salem, Mass., Thursday September 4, 1902."
The following are excerpts from the address by the president, John C, Chase.
"Members of the Chase-Chace Family Association, Kinsman and Friends:
For the third time I have the honor and privilege of welcoming you in annual
reunion. I assure you it is a great pleasure to see the growing interest in
the association as evidenced by the increased attendance at successive
meetings.
Like Newburyport, the place of our first reunion, this ancient city is of
interest to those bearing the Chase name, for it was here that William
chase, the progenitor of a large branch of the family, first set foot on the
Western continent in 1630. Unlike Aquila, who, with his descendants, helped
make the history of the locality where he first appeared, William does not
seem to have been identified to any extent with this immediate section. A
few years later the church records locate him at Roxbury, and then he
settled at Yarmouth, from whence his descendants have spread until they can
probably be found in every state in the union.
While it is naturally expected that the president of an association will be
in evidence at its annual gatherings, it is I believe, a well settled
principle that he is a law unto himself, in regard to the amount of time he
may appropriate. Having already put myself on record as believing that these
reunions should be largely of a social nature, I am not intending to do
anything today that will convey the idea that I do not, in a moderate way,
practice what I preach.
Visiting the churchyard of old St. Michaels' in Charleston, S.C., some years
ago, I discovered a tablet erected against the rear of the church, which
contained the following inscription:
SACRED TO THE MEMORY
OF
THE REV. PHILANDER CHASE JUNIOR,
WHO DEPARTED THIS LIFE IN THIS CITY OF CHARLESTON, S.C.
ON THE FIRST DAY OF MARCH A.D. 1824 AE 24
THE SERMON AT HIS FUNERAL, PREACHED BY HIS FRIEND
THE REV. EDWARD RUTLEDGE,
WAS REPRINTED IN ENGLAND AND INSTRUMENTAL
IN TURNING MANY TO RIGHTEOUSNESS:
"SOME GLORIFY GOD BY THEIR LIVES
HE BY HIS DEATH."
HIS FATHER, ONCE OF OHIO,
NOW THE BISHOP OF ILLINOIS,
VISITING THIS CITY IN FEB. 1840
CAUSED THIS STONE TO BE ERECTED
IN TESTIMONY OF HIS NEVER DYING LOVE
TO HIS DECEASED SON,
AND OF HIS GRATITUDE TO ALL WHO
BY THEIR CHRISTIAN HOSPITALITY
AND KINDNESS
ALLEVIATED HIS SUFFERINGS AND BY
THEIR SYMPATHY AND PRAYERS
SMOOTHED HIS DYING PILLOW.
Correspondence with inquiring members of the family and others interested
has been quite extensive the past year, indicating extending knowledge of
the association and its aims. I am pleased to report that there appears to
be a dying interest in the "Chase Fortune" so called. Possibly my immunity
from inquiry may be on account of my well known non-belief in any legitimate
foundation for the chimera.
Information is frequently sought in relation to the true coat of arms of one
of the other Chase lines. To such queries I am obliged to reply that,
excepting the Maryland branch of the family, I doubt if any of the name in
this country are entitled to the use of such device basing such opinion on
the broad ground that, so far as I am aware, the English connection of
William Chase and the brothers Thomas and Aquila has not been proven. I am
aware that there are in print numerous personal biographies giving a
connected line in detail three generations prior to the first appearance of
Chases in Massachusetts, but it lacks the endorsement of genealogists of
standing who have given much attention to the subject.
George Bigelow chase, of the line of Aquila, son of Aquila, was born in
Boston October 1, 1835, and graduated from Harvard College in 1856. He
became interested in genealogical research at an early age, and a memoir
from his pen, published in the Heraldic Journal and later reprinted in the
** pamphlet form, is a valuable contribution to the family history. He spent
several seasons in England, and was probably better posted than anyone else
in regard to our English progenitors. He acquired a large amount of
genealogical material relating to the family, by collection and purchase,
and expected to publish the result of his labors, but impaired health and
means compelled the relinquishment of his purpose and his large collection
was deposited with the New England Historic Genealogical Society, of which
he was a life member, and has become its property through decease of the
donor. He also compiled and published a genealogy of the Lowndes' family of
South Carolina. He married Miss Anne Lowndes of South Carolina in 1860, who,
with a son and daughter, mourn his decease, at Dedham, Mass., June 2, 1902."
** Later, John Carroll Chase was upset about the misinformation contained
in this pamphlet, concerning the parentage of Aquila and Thomas Chase. He
said that most everything published after 1869, concerning the Aquila and
Thomas Chase genealogy, contained the same misinformation. In a chronicles
article he said, "The writer wishes to voice a protest against the printing
of so much genealogical misinformation relating to the early Chases."
______________________
Dennis Chase of Wisconsin has kindly sent me a copy of the above mentioned
pamphlet entitled,
"Genealogical memoir of the Chase Family of Chesham, Bucks, in England and
of Hampton and Newbury in New England, With Notices of Some of Their
Descendants" by George B. Chase, 1869, reprinted from the Heraldic Journal.
These are excerpts from that publication:
"In 1861, Mr. Theodore Chase's voluminous collection of papers were
submitted to Mr. Somerby for classification and to enable him to take full
notes for investigations to be pursued by him on his return to England in
the Spring of that year. Mr. Somerby's investigations, which were very
diligent and thorough, and which led him among the records of every county
in England, continued at intervals for some years, until he had noted the
names and dates of birth of all of the name of Chase during the latter half
of the sixteenth century and early part of the seventeenth century. From
them we extract the following pedigrees, and the fact relating to them.
In the Herald's Visitation of Buckinghamshire in 1634, the coat engraved at
the head of this article is found, with the note , "This coate is testified
by a letter from Mr. Robert Calvert, dated at Whitehall, July 18, 1634,"
together with a pedigree entered by Matthew Chase, which we copy, as
follows: -
1. Thomas Chase of Chesham
2. John Chase of Chesham
3. Mathew Chase of Chesham, oldest son, now living./Elizabeth, daughter of
Richard Bould - brother - Ralph Chase of Great Marlow
4. Richard Chase / Mary, dau. of ----- Roberts of Welsden in Middlesex -
brothers - Francis, John, Mathew, Thomas, Ralph, William, - sister - Bridget
5. Richard
As Aquila Chase was supposed to have come from Cornwall, no importance had
ever been attached to this pedigree by the American genealogist, and Mr.
Somerby, influenced by the traditions that Aquila and Thomas Chase were
mariners, had searched in vain for some months the records of Cornwall,
Hampshire, Kent, and other sea-coast counties, for traces or indications of
the emigrant's family.
Cornwall, especially, had been most diligently searched, as Mr. Coffin, in
his "History of Newbury" had stated that Aquila Chase was from that county.
Although Mr. Coffin had, upon inquiry, stated to Mr. Somerby, as he had also
done to the writer, that this statement rested merely upon tradition, it led
at the outset to the most thorough investigation of that county's registers.
Turning at last to the interior, and referring to the above pedigree, Mr.
Somerby visited Chesham to examine its parish register, which from the time
of 1538 he found complete to the present day, with the exception of baptisms
in the reign of Queen Mary.
The discovery of the unique name of Aquila, found no where else in England,
before or since, in any records of families bearing the name of Chase, was
deemed conclusive proof by Mr. Somerby, as it has been since by other
distinguished antiquarians, of the identity of the American with English
families."
In the pamphlet, the false family of the Chesham Aquila Chase born in 1580,
and who spent his life in London, is given simply as:
"Aquila Chase married --------, and had
Thomas
Aquila, b. 1618"
Lonnie Chase
chase1858(a)bwn.net
What are we supposed to do with this?
Regards
Herb Phelps
herb(a)sccoast.net
----- Original Message -----
From: <CHASE-D-request(a)rootsweb.com>
To: <CHASE-D(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Friday, July 28, 2000 4:00 AM
Subject: CHASE-D Digest V00 #241
A note from the Chase Chronicles - Jan. 1931
A TRIBUTE
"On Thursday, March fifth, Col. Harry G. Chase, Mrs. Chase, John C. Chase
and the writer were enroute, in Col. Chase's automobile, to attend the
funeral service for our beloved president, Samuel M. Chase, in Hopkinton,
N.H.
We had stopped on Diamond Hill, so called, to have the chains put on and
were proceeding towards Hopkinton, when Col. Chase suddenly fell back into
his wife's arms and was gone before we could realize what had happened. What
a beautiful passing! A shock to those left behind, it is true, but no
suffering for him. Just a sudden journey into the great beyond while he was
on his way to pay a last tribute to our president.
While Col. Chase was still in his prime, he had accomplished the work of a
life time. He was greatly beloved by his friends and associates and as
president of the Chase Family Association he had been untiring in his
efforts. After his retirement from the presidency his interest continued and
he was ever ready to help in any way possible. The pleasure of this work
with him will long be a cherished memory.
Samuel Myron Chase, who succeeded Col. Chase as president of the
association, also endeared himself to the officers and to any members with
whom he came in contact. His quiet, genial manner, his financial generosity,
which he so modestly withheld from general knowledge, and his deep interest
in everything pertaining to the association, were fully appreciated. During
his last illness of several months, he appeared to center his interest in
the association and took pleasure in making plans for the Mid-year luncheon
in February, which we were only too glad to carry out. To have been
associated with so fine a man was indeed a privilege.
To those of us who are left to "carry on" the present is full of sadness but
the future is not without hope. Our hope is in the younger members to whom
we look as our successors to keep vigorously alive this fine family
association and to emulate such men as Samuel Myron Chase and Lt. Col. Harry
Gray Chase."
M. Josephine King,
Secretary-Treasurer
"These, our brethren, have passed from
our life and their fellow members mourn,
but not as those without hope.
Their call has come in ripened manhood,
The noonday call of heart and mind,
While I, who dreamed of their remaining
To mourn me, linger still behind.
O friends! if thought and sense avail not
To know thee henceforth as thou art,
That all is well with thee forever,
We trust the instincts of our hearts.
Thou com'st not from the hush and shadows
to meet us, but to thee we come;
With thee we never can be strangers
And where thou art will still be home."
John Carroll Chase
Same issue
SAMUEL MYRON CHASE
"Elected president at the June meeting in 1928 and re-elected in 1929 and
1930, was born in
Chicago, Ill., 14 July 1862 and died at the ancestral home in Hopkinton,
N.H., 2 march 1931, after an illness extending over several months.
He was from the ninth generation from Aquila through Thomas, and the son of
Horace Gair and Ellen Marion (Sherman) Chase. His grandfather, Judge Horace
Chase, who graduated at Dartmouth College in 1814, read law and practiced in
Hopkinton, served as town clerk, State Representative and assistant Clerk of
the House, and Judge of Probate of Merrimack Co., 1843-1855. He was a knight
Templar and the author of a History of Masonry, 1789 to 1856. Two earlier
ancestors served in the Revolutionary War, One being a captain at the battle
of Bennington, and also serving in the French War.
He was educated at public schools and academies in Chicago, and Connecticut
and graduated at the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University 27 June
1883, with the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, and in 1885 received a
diploma from the Yale Business College.
After graduation he entered the employ of an abstract firm in Chicago, which
later was merged with other firms, into what is now the Chicago Title and
Trust Co. About twenty years ago he moved to the old Chase home in
Hopkinton, which has been in the family for more than a century, and where
the funeral was held on Thursday, March 5th, a tragic circumstance connected
with it being the sudden death of Lt. Col. Harry Gray Chase in his
automobile about a mile from the house on his way to the service. The
funeral services was conducted by the Rev. Alfred W. Griffin, Rector of St.
Andrew's P.E. Church, with interment in family lot in the Old Village
Cemetery.
In addition to the Chase-Chace Family Association he held membership in the
New England Historic Genealogical Society, the Chicago Historical Society,
The New Hampshire Historical Society, the New Hampshire Antiquarian Society,
of which he was the secretary, the Audubon Society and the Yale Engineering
Society.
He took an active interest in the welfare of the village and in town affairs
and was a member of the school board and a trustee of the Free Public
Library. He was a member and vestryman of St. Andrew's Protestant Episcopal
Church.
He married (1) 12 June 1889, Bertha Delia Ford, daughter of Samuel Revido
and Adelia Ballou (Wilkinson) Ford, who died 12 August 1893, and (2) 2
October 1901, Etta Elizabeth Ford, sister of his first wife, who survives
him, also two sisters, Mrs. Bessie Louise Grant and Mrs. Edward M. Devereux.
There were no children. His wives were descendants of John Sayles who
married the oldest child of Roger Williams. He was greatly interested in
this association and its work, and ever ready with financial aid, for which
he always modestly avoided recognition."
Same issue
LT. COL. HARRY GRAY CHASE
"Of the eighth generation from Aquila, through Ens. Moses and the ninth
through Thomas, was born in West Newbury, 10 Sept. 1871, the oldest child of
Otis Gray and Sarah Abby (Fallansbee)Chase, and died suddenly in his
automobile in Hopkinton, N.H., while on his way to the funeral of Samuel
Myron Chase, president of this association.
Col. Chase was educated in the public schools of his native town and Dean
Academy at Franklin, and graduated at Tufts College in 1883 with the degree
of Bachelor of Science. Two years later he became a member of the faculty of
the college, where he taught physics and was secretary of the faculty for
many years.
He was fascinated by military life and in 1904 he enlisted in troop A, 1st
battalion, Massachusetts cavalry. After a period in the 2nd brigade
non-commissioned staff he enlisted in the signal corps and eventually
commanded the 101st signal battalion on the Mexican border and in the 26th
division in France, where, later he served with the 4th French army and the
2nd British corps and commanded two signal corps schools. He came home a
colonel in that corps and afterward was signal officer and inspector general
in the Massachusetts state guard during the police strike. His military
education included three courses at the Ft. Leavenworth schools and the G-4
course at the Army War College. He was a member of the academic board of the
Massachusetts National Guard Training School, and had been for several years
the state Quartermaster and ranking officer of the state staff.
On learning of the death of Col. Chase, Brig. Gen. John H. Agnew, Adjutant
General, ordered that all flags on the armories in the state be displayed at
half-mast and paid the following tribute to his memory:
"He was practically the pioneer signal officer of the National Guard. He was
a prime mover in organizing our old signal company. In 1915 and 1916 he made
a field signal battalion out of two companies and when the war came he added
another, an outpost company, and took it overseas, commanding the battalion,
but he was so good in signal work that they took him away from the battalion
and put him in charge of the signal school at Chatillon-Sur-Seine. He was
well read and keen minded, the alert type of officer, forward looking and
exceptionally eager for the good of the Massachusetts National Guard."
He married 23 Nov. 1897, Mary Franklin, daughter of Col. Benjamin Franklin
and Eveline Tuck (Leach) Cook of Gloucester, who survives, with three
children, Lt. Harry Gray Otis Chase, of Brookline, with whom they made their
home, Evelyn Abby, widow of Lt. Vaughan John Weatherby, who lost his life in
an airplane accident a few years ago, and Benjamin Otis Chase. Lt. Chase and
Mrs. Weatherby have each a young daughter.
He was elected president of the Chase-Chace Family Association in 1925 and
served in that position for three years. He was an active, energetic, genial
man with a host of friends, and his services in arranging for the winter
meetings of our association were of great value and will not soon be
forgotten, nor will it be an easy matter to find a successor.
Funeral services, conducted the Rev. Dudley Hays Ferrell, Past Grand Master
of Masons of Massachusetts, were held at the second church of Boston, Sunday
P.M., March 8th, with a large attendance from the various branches of the
military and executive departments of the state and a deputation from John
T. Carr Post of the American Legion of Newburyport, of which Col. Chase was
a member. Burial will be in the family lot in West Newbury in the early
spring."
Lonnie Chase
chase1858(a)bwn.net
Thought this might be of interest to one of my fellow
Chase. Betty
o In an old trunk in the attic many photographs from
the late
1870s through 1920s were found. I believe the truck
belonged to
Rogene Chase HERRICK, who lived in West Milton,
Chittenden
County, Vermont. However, most of the photos are of
the family
of her sister, Rocelia Chase PALMER family, who lived
in
Seattle, Washington. Only a few of the photos are
identified. I
have a family Christmas photo which has the names of
the seven
children (five boys and two girls). There is a
wonderful
portrait of father reading paper, daughter (?) gazing
adoringly
at him, mother watching both, and an old woman busy
with her
handwork -- this portrait is signed "Belle JOHNSON."
In other
photos the aged woman is identified as "Mother
VAUGHN." One by
the La Roche Studio, Seattle, Washington, is a usual
portrait.
Another one by an unidentified photographer is of
Mother VAUGHN
sewing beautiful lace work. In a "Kodak print" taken
outside the
PALMER's Seattle house, Mother VAUGHN is seated in a
rocker and
half sisters Effie (Hattie Effigene Chase READ) and
Celia
(Rocelia Chase PALMER) are standing beside her. Who is
"Mother
Vaughn"? The answer to this question and some dates
for the
PALMERs will bring you copies of these wonderful
photographs.
Also, one of the PALMER daughters married an OLSON and
I have a
few identified photos of mother and baby. I would like
to
exchange photos for information. Finally, I have
letters written
to Rogene and Rocelia CHASE by their father Royal
Ballard CHASE,
beginning with the death of their mother in the 1850s
and ending
with his death in Iowa in the 1860s. I am hoping that
a PALMER
relative has correspondence from Rocelia Chase
HERRICK, as she
saved all her sister's letters. From the photos I
have,
evidently Rocelia was active in DAR and Eastern Star
in Seattle.
Sandi Lee Craig
ewfarm(a)willex.com
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Get Yahoo! Mail � Free email you can access from anywhere!
http://mail.yahoo.com/
http://www.partridgenest.com/hatch/
Dennis Partridge has fixed the pages of Jesse Hatch's (Norwich, VT)
letters,
so interested folks can read them all now.
Harriet Chase
I am new to the Chase List and am looking for the parents and Chase relatives
of my gg grandmother Lydia Chase, b. abt. 1815 in Coeymans, New York.
Her husband was John Townsend, b. 1812; d. 1885. They raised their children
in Bennington, VT where all of them were born except the oldest who was born
in Massachusetts.
I would be most appreciative of any information or references. Thank you.
Greetings!
I am 'very' new to this CHASE mailing list and am placing a query about my CHASE ancestor
with the hope of connecting with someone.
I have _one_ CHASE ancestor in my database with very scant information, but here goes.
>From my Grandmother's notes: Ellen Sojronia CHASE (dates unknown) married Samuel RAYDURE.
They had six children, the youngest being my GGGGrandfather; John Stafford RAYDURE, born
22 Mar 1809 in Randolph, Orange Co., VT.
>From the History of Crawford Co., 1885, it states the parents of John Stafford RAYDURE
were Samuel RAYDURE and _Lucy_ CHASE.
My _guesstimate_ for a birth year for Ellen Sorjonia CHASE would be c1784
Can anyone make a connection with the little bit of information I have provided or give me
some direction?
Regards,
Denise
tfred(a)voyager.net
Petoskey, Emmet Co., MI
There are Chases in each of the addresses below and 3 or 4 Chaces.
MASSACHUSETTS, DUKES COUNTY (MARTHA'S VINEYARD) BIRTH RECORDS
4,960 records; Chris Baer
http://userdb.rootsweb.com/births/
MASSACHUSETTS, DUKES COUNTY (MARTHA'S VINEYARD) MARRIAGE RECORDS
(1838-1989); 1,415 records; Chris Baer
http://userdb.rootsweb.com/marriages/
MASSACHUSETTS, DUKES COUNTY (MARTHA'S VINEYARD) DEATH RECORDS
(1843-1997); 5,266 records; Chris Baer
http://userdb.rootsweb.com/deaths/
Lonnie Chase
chase1858(a)bwn.net
THIS INFORMATION CONTRIBUTED BY DEREK CHASE
Hello all
For some reason, I cannot copy the page of the catalog from the New England
Historical and Genealogical Society , so had to copy the source page...
These are the genealogies, regarding Chase, currently in NEHGS library, if
anyone is going nearby for a visit..Boston MA
<p>CHASE see also TOWNLEY, 1888 </p>
<p>CHASE Chase, George B. A Genealogical Memoir of the Chase Family
of
Chesham, Bucks in
England and of Hampton and Newbury in New England, with Notices of
Some of Their
Descendants. (Reprint from The Heraldic Journal). (1869).
CS/71/C487/1869 </p>
<p>CHASE Genealogy of the Ancestors and Descendants of Joseph Chase,
Who Died in
Swanzey;His Will Proved March, 1725. (1874). CS/71/C487/1874 </p>
<p>CHASE Washburn, Mrs. Julia C. and William B. Lapham. Record of
the
Descendants of
Reverend Nathaniel Chase of Buckfield, Maine with a Brief Account of
His Ancestors. Also
Records of Some of the Descendants of Edmund Chase of Minot, Maine.
(1878).
CS/71/C487/1878 </p>
<p>CHASE Genealogy of a Portion of the Descendants of William Chase,
Who Came to America in 1630 and Died in Yarmouth, Massachusetts, May, 1659.
(1886). CS/71/C487/1886 </p>
<p>CHASE Chase, William M. Reminiscences of the Family of Moody
Chase
of Shirley, Massachusetts. Also a Brief Account of His Ancestry. (1888).
CS/71/C487/1888 </p>
<p>CHASE Genealogy of Champion Spalding Chase and Mary Sophronia
Butterfield, His Wife.
(1894). CS/71/C487/1894 </p>
<p>CHASE First Reunion of the Chase-Chace Family Association,
Thursday, August 30, 1900 at
Newburyport, Massachusetts. (1901). CS/71/C487/1901/v.1 </p>
<p>CHASE Second and Third Reunions of the Chase-Chace Family
Association at Providence, Rhode Island, Thursday, September 5, 1901 and
Salem, Massachusetts, Thursday, September 4, 1902. (1903).
CS/71/C487/1901/v.2-3 </p>
<p>CHASE The Chase Chronicle. Vols.1-24 (1910-1934). Bound Together
In
One Volume.
CS/71/C487/1910/v.1-24 </p>
<p>CHASE Chase, John C. and George W. Chamberlain. Seven Generations
of the Descendants of Aquila and Thomas Chase. (1928). CS/71/C487/1928 </p>
<p>CHASE Chamberlain, George Walter. Some descendants of William
Chase
of Roxbury and Yarmouth, Mass. Some individual histories included. (1983).
CS/71/C487/1983 </p>
<p>CHASE Chamberlain, George Walter. An Every Name Index of Some of
the Descendants of
William Chase of Roxbury and Yarmouth, Massachusetts. (1986).
CS/71/C487/1983/Index </p>
<p>CHASE Chase, Irving H. A New England Family. The American
Ancestors
and Descendants of
Richard Volney Chase and Mary Esther Cheney. (1987). CS/71/C487/1987
</p>
<p>CHASE Chase, Barbara Stone. Chase-Wigglesworth genealogy..The
ancestors and descendants
of Philip Putnam Chase and his wife Anna Cornelia Wigglesworth.
(1990). CS/71/C487/1990 </p>
<p>CHASE-SEELEY see SEELEY, 1963/v.2 </p>
Lonnie Chase
chase1858(a)bwn.net
THE FOLLOWING LIST OF BOOKS CONTRIBUTED BY REX CHASE.
I checked the online library for the Sutro Library, San Francisco which is
part of the California State Library System. In case, you do not know the
Sutro, it is a very, very large genealogy library.
Anyway, I downloaded their books relating to the Chase Family. Some of
the books I am not familiar with and have placed them in a Possible Chase
Book
List???. These books have some relationship to the Chase Family but I do
not
know the nature of the "keyword" that flung them into the list. I threw out
a
good number because I could tell why the "keyword" included them.
Good Luck.
Rex Chase
CHASE BOOKS AND MANUSCRIPTS
The Chase chronicle. [microform]. Genealogy & local history; GS115.
Haverhill, Mass.: Printed by the Chase Press, 1910.
Chase-Chace family association. The Chase chronicle. Haverhill, Mass.,
Printed by the Chase press, 1910.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS71 C487 1910 -- 13-21 -- Period NC -- Lost
Chase-Chace Family Association. Reunion of the Chase-Chace Family
Association. [microform]. Genealogy & local history; GS114. Haverhill,
Mass.: Chase Press, 1901-1903.
The Chase chronicle. Cambridge, Mass.: Chase-Chace Family Association,
Executive Committee.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS71 .C487 1910 -- 22-37 -- Book NC -- Available
Chase, Mary Henrietta. Chase-Seely family. [microform]. Genealogy & local
history; G5655. [Dallas?: s.n.], 1963.
Chase, Mary Henrietta. The saga of the Seeleys from southern New Jersey to
Illinois and Texas. [microform]. Genealogy & local history; G1856. [Dallas,
Tex.: s.n., 1961].
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G1856\ -- Book -- Available
Knight, Robert Whiting. Knight, Chase and allied families. [Mt. Clemens,
Mich.: R.W. Knight, 1988].
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS69 .K58 1988 -- Book -- Available
CALL NUMBER: CS69 .K58 1988 -- Book -- Available
Chase, William Moody. Reminiscences of the family of Moody Chase, of
Shirley, Massachusetts also, A brief account of his ancestry. [microform].
Baltimore: J.H. Shane, 1888.
Conover, Charlotte Reeve. A history of the Beck family together with a
geneological [sic] record of the Alleynes and the Chases from whom they are
descended. [microform]. Genealogy & local history; G2981. Dayton: Priv.
print., 1907.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G2981\ -- Book -- Available
Thompson, John H. (John Henry), 1853. Genealogy, Thompson-Spafford 1630 to
1930, Chase-Gordon, 1788 to 1930 Osborn-Gadsby, Gadsby-Woodcock.
[microform]. Genealogy & local history; G2847. Thorold, Ont., Canada: [s.n.,
1930?].
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G2847\ -- Book -- Available
Giddings, C. Bland (Crandall Bland), 1915. Giddings ancestry. includes
Giddings, Hadlock, Harris, Garner, Cornwall, Wixom, Wright, Wicker, Smith,
Atwater, Chase & Daggett : six Mayflower families. 1991 supplement. Mesa,
AZ: C.B. Giddings, 1991.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS71.G453 1991 -- Book -- Available
Goding, Frederic Webster, 1858. Ancestry of Lydia Mehitable Chandler (with
plates). [microform]. Genealogy & local history; G2744. Newcastle, N.S.W.:
Davies & Cannington, Federal Printing Works, 1904.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G2744\ -- Book -- Available
Chase and allied familes genealogical and historical. [microform].
Genealogy & local history; G2735. New York: The Society, 1930.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G2735\ -- Book -- Available
Loftin, Amy Chase. More descendants of William Chase of Yarmouth being the
progeny of William Chase (1787-1843) of Wyoming County, New York and
Livingston County, Michigan. [Baltimore? 1968?].
[microform]. Genealogy & local history; G1404. [S.l.: Loftin], 1968.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G1404\ -- Book -- Available
CALL NUMBER: CS71.C487 1968 -- Book -- Available
CALL NUMBER: CS71.C487 1968 -- SFPL -- Available
Walsh, Ruth Thompson. Ancestors and descendants of Benjamin Franklin Chase
and Mary Fay Robinson / compiled by Ruth Thompson Walsh. [S.l.: s.n., 1966].
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS71 .C487 1966 -- SFPL -- Available
Crapo, Henry Howland, 1862-. Certain comeoverers. New Bedford, Mass.: E.
Anthony & Sons, 1912.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS71.C893 1912 -- 1 -- SFPL -- Available
CALL NUMBER: CS71.C893 1912 -- 2 -- SFPL -- Available
Hill, Frank Alden. The mystery solved. Facts relating to the
"Lawrence-Townley," "Chase-Townley," marriage and estate question. With
genealogical information concerning the families of Townley, Chase,
Lawrence, Stephens, Stevens, and other families of America. Boston, Rand
Avery company, 1888.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS71.T746 1888 -- Book -- Available
CALL NUMBER: CS71.T746 1888 -- SFPL -- Available
Chase, Champion Spalding, 1820. Genealogy of Champion Spalding Chase and
Mary Sophronia Butterfield, his wife. [Albany, J. Munsell's sons] 1894.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS71 C487 1894 -- Book -- Available
Genealogy of a portion of the descendants of William Chase, who came to
America in 1630, and died in Yarmouth, Massachusetts, May, 1659. Washington,
1886.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS71 C487 1886 -- Book NC -- Available
Dow, Euphemia C. The Pennsylvania branch of the William Chase family of
Roxbury, Mass, and allied families. [n. p.] 1956.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS71 C487 1956 -- Book -- Available
Chase, Guy Bayard, 1915. Descendants of Samuel Chase of New Brunswick. St.
Paul: Chase, 1976.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS 71 C487 1976b -- Book -- Available
CALL NUMBER: CS 71 C487 1976b -- SFPL -- Available
Hill, Ferne Davidson, 1897. The ancestors and descendants of Fletcher de la
Seaman and wife Phoebe Matilda Chase. Glendale, Calif.: Hill, c1975.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS 71 S438 1975 -- Book -- Available
Crocker, Henry G. (Henry Graham), 1868-1930. Nathaniel Crocker, 1758-1855
the descendants and ancestors of the names of Allen, Blood, Bragg, Brewster,
Bursley, Chase, Davis, Fairbanks, Gates, George, Gordon, Harding, Howland,
Jennison, Kendall, Lewis, Lincoln, Lothrop, Morton, Parks, Prence, Rice,
Rockwell, Rogers, Seavey, Smith, Snow, Taylor, Thacher, Thorndike, Winslow
and others, together with genealogies of many of their connections : a
contribution to the Mayflower genealogy. [microform]. Genealogy & local
history; G2486. Concord, N.H.: Rumford Press, 1923.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G2486\ -- Book -- Available
Crosby, Charles Chase, 1839-1898. The letters of Charles Chase Crosby,
1863-1870. Sacramento, Calif.: [J.C. Chenu], 1981.
Holdings:
Calif. History Room (CS)
CALL NUMBER: CS71 .C95 1981a -- Book NC -- Available
Dow, Euphemia C. The Pennsylvania branch of the William Chase family of
Roxbury, Mass, and allied families. [n. p.] 1956.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CS71 C487 1956 -- Book -- Available
POSSIBLE CHASE BOOKS!!!!!!!!!???????????
Barlow, George, b. 1832. Family genealogy comprising the ancestry and
descendants of Jonathan Barlow and Plain Rogers, of Delaware County, N.Y.
[microform]. Genealogy & local history; G5960. [Brooklyn, N.Y.?: s.n.,
1891].
Bonfield, Lynn A., 1939. Roxana's children: the biography of a
nineteenth-century Vermont family. Amherst: University of Massachusetts
Press, c1995.
Holdings:
Calif. History Room (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CT274.W375 B66 1995 -- Book -- Available
Calif. History Room (CS)
CALL NUMBER: CT274.W375 B66 1995 -- Book NC -- Available
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: CT274.W375 B66 1995 -- Book -- Available
Chase, George B. (George Bigelow), 1835-1902. Lowndes of South Carolina an
historical and genealogical memoir. [microform]. Boston: A. Williams, 1876.
Toler, Grace Cabot Blood, 1874. Genealogical record of the descendants of
Richard Blood-Baptist Hicks and allied families 1470-1933. [microform].
Genealogy & local history; G3073. [Mounds, Ill.: The Independent Press,
Toler and Toler, 1933].
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G3073\ -- Book -- Available
Henderson, Gertrude Brown, 1883-1954. History of the Parrott, Bateman,
Brown families in America. [microform]. Genealogy & local history: G2193.
Sioux City, Iowa: Goldie Pub. Co., 1933.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G2193\ -- Book -- Available
CALL NUMBER: CS71 P264 1933 -- Book -- Available
McClaughry, Charles C. (Charles Chase), b. 1863. Genealogy of the Mac
Claughry family a Scoto-Irish family originally from Galloway, Scotland,
appearing in Ireland about 1600, and emigrants to New York in 1765.
[microform]. Genealogy & local history; G2139. [Anamosa, Iowa?: s.n.,
1913?].
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G2139\ -- Book -- Available
Sanders, Charles W. (Charles Walton), b. 1847. Genealogy of the Cortland
County, N.Y., branch of the Sanders family. [microform]. Genealogy & local
history; G1824. New York: Meyer Bros., 1908.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G1824\ -- Book -- Available
Lord, C. C. (Charles Chase), 1841-1911. A history of the descendants of
Nathan Lord of ancient Kittery, Me. [microform]. Genealogy & local history;
G226. Concord, N.H.: Rumford Press, 1912.
Holdings:
Sutro Library (RR)
CALL NUMBER: \MICRO-\FICHE\G3\G226\ -- Book -- Available
Wood, Auril Theodora Baker, 1904. Biography of Sanford Chase Baker.
[Magalia, Calif., 1971].
Holdings:
Calif. History Room (CS)
CALL NUMBER: CT275 B32 W6 -- Book NC -- Available
Barney, Mary (Chase). A biographical memoir of the late Commodore Joshua
Barney; from autographical notes and journals in possession of his family,
and other authentic sources. Boston, Gray and Bowen, 1832.
Holdings:
Circulation Room (S)
CALL NUMBER: B B2618b -- Book -- Available
Lonnie Chase
chase1858(a)bwn.net
BOOK TITLES FOR CHASE RESEARCH.
"CHASE DESCENDANTS OF ROXBURY AND YARMOUTH, MA". Page copies from Vol. 87 of
the New England Historical & Genealogical Register.
"CHASE FAMILY. EXTRACT FROM THE LARGE GENEALOGY" by Dr. John B. Chace
"DESCENDANTS OF SAMUEL CHASE OF NEW BRUNSWICK" by Guy B. Chase, St. Paul,
MN. Printed by Ledger Publications, Inc., Balsam Lake, WI.
"DESCENDANTS OF WILLIAM CHASE, WHO CAME TO AMERICA IN 1630, AND DIED IN
YARMOUTH, MASSACHUSETTS, MAY, 1659".
"EARLY LOYALIST SAINT JOHN" by D.G. Bell
"EARLY NEW BRUNSWICK MARRIAGES" by Bertha Wood-Holt
"GENEALOGY OF A PORTION OF THE DESCENDANTS OF WILLIAM CHASE WHO CAME TO
AMERICA IN 1630, AND DIED IN YARMOUTH MA., MAY 1659"
"GENEALOGY OF THE ANCESTORS AND DESCENDANTS OF JOSEPH CHASE WHO DIED IN
SWANSEA". His will proved March, 1725 Fall River. Printed by Wm. S.
Robertson, 1874
"HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF CORNISH, NEW HAMPSHIRE WITH GENEALOGICAL RECORD
1763 - 1910. VOL. II" by Wm. H. Child. Rumford Press, Concord, N.H.
"LITTLE COMPTON FAMILIES" "by Benjamin Franklin Wilbour, Vol. 1 & 2
"RECORDS OF THE DESCENDANTS OF REV. NATHANIEL CHASE OF BUCKFIELD, ME. WITH A
BRIEF ACCOUNT OF HIS ANCESTORS." R. F. Murphy's Printing Office. Augusta,
ME. 1878.
"SEVEN GENERATIONS OF THE DESCENDANTS OF AQUILA AND THOMAS CHASE"
by John Carroll Chase and George Walter Chamberlain.
"SOME OF THE DESCENDANTS OF WILLIAM CHASE OF ROXBURY AND YARMOUTH, MASS".
Compiled by George Walter Chamberlain for John Carroll Chase. Publisher:
Hazen P. Chase. Holyoke Mass. 1983
"THE CHASE FAMILY OF YARMOUTH"
"THE DESCENDANTS OF AQUILA AND ANN CHASE" by Lisa R. Cleversey
"THE DESCENDANTS OF PHILANDER CHASE" by Richard D. Flinn.
"THE LOYALISTS OF NEW BRUNSWICK" by E. C. Wright
"THE NEW WORLD OF CHASES" Published by Halbert's Family Heritage
"THE OLD UNITED EMPIRE LOYALIST LIST" first published by the Rose
publishing Co., Toronto 1885
"THE WINTHROP FLEET OF 1630" by Charles Edward Banks.
"VITAL RECORDS OF DARTMOUTH MASSACHUSETTS TO THE YEAR 1850; VOLUME 1 -
BIRTHS, VOLUME II - MARRIAGES" Published by the New England Historical
Genealogy Society. Boston, Mass. 1929 and 1930.
"WILLIAM CHASE 1595-1659 YARMOUTH, BARNSTABLE COUNTY, MASS. AND SOME OF HIS
DESCENDANTS" by Gladys Marie Chase.
WILLIAM CHASE OF YARMOUTH - More Desc.: Amy Chase Loftin - L829/1967 -
Herkimer County Historical Society, New York, has a copy.
Lonnie Chase
chase1858(a)bwn.net
People who will help you with your genealogy and the sources they use to do
so.
``````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
Alice Leonard - Source: "The Descendants of Philander Chase"
jewels4u(a)nvbell.net
Ann Chase - Source: "History of the Town of Cornish, New Hampshire with
Genealogical Record 1763 - 1910 Vol. II". annchase(a)webtv.net
Derek Chase - Sources: "Early Loyalist Saint John"; "Early New Brunswick
Marriages"; "The Old United Empire Loyalist List"; "The Loyalists of New
Brunswick". chasede(a)nbnet.nb.ca
Joan Carnahan Carlin - Sources: "Seven Generations of the Descendants of
Aquila and Thomas Chase". "Records of the Descendants of Rev. Nathaniel
Chase of Buckfield, ME. with a Brief Account of His Ancestors".
jcarlin(a)syix.com
Joyce Chase Jarvis - Source: "Seven Generations of the Descendants of Aquila
and Thomas Chase". JCHASJ(a)aol.com
Lisa R. Cleversey - Source: "Seven Generations of the Descendants of Aquila
and Thomas Chase". "The Descendants of Aquila and Ann Chase"
lclevers(a)bellsouth.net
Lonnie Chase - Source: "Seven Generations of the Descendants of Aquila and
Thomas Chase". chase1858(a)bwn.net
Robert Fillerup - Source: "Descendants of Samuel Chase of New Brunswick".
rcf(a)code-co.com
Lynn Chase - Sources: "Genealogy of a Portion of the Descendants of
William Chase, Who came to America in 1630, and died in Yarmouth
Massachusetts, May, 1659." - "The Winthrop Fleet of 1630" (A little about
William Chase) - "Seven Generations of the Descendants of Aquila and Thomas
Chase". JLynn112(a)aol.com
Lonnie Chase
chase1858(a)bwn.net
Savage is probably best classified as "interesting" Here is the CHASE entry.
(Cable modem makes downloads painless):
Dick Chase
CHASE, AQUILA, Hampton 1640, a mariner from Cornwall, Eng. m.
Ann, d. of John Wheeler, had Sarah, and rem. a. 1646, to Newbury,
here had Ann, b. 6 July 1647; Priscilla, 14 Mar. 1649; Mary, 3 Feb.
1651; Aquila, 26 Sept. 1652; Thomas, 25 July 1654; John, 2 Nov.
1655; Elizabeth 13 Sept. 1657; Ruth, 18 Mar. 1660; Daniel, 9 Dec. 1661;
and Moses, 24 Dec. 1663; and d. 29 Aug. 1670, aged 52. His wid. m.
14 June 1672, Daniel Mussiloway, and d. 21 Apr. 1687; Sarah m. 15
May 1666, Charles Annis; Ann m. 27 Apr. 1671, Thomas Barber;
Priscilla m. 10 Feb. 1671, Abel Merrill; Mary m. 9 Mar. 1670, John
Stevens; Elizabeth m. 27 June 1678, at Andover, Zechariah Ayers; and
Ruth d. unm. at 17 yrs. AQUILA, Newbury, eldest s. of the preced. m.
Esther, d. of John Bond of the same, had Esther, b. 18 Nov. 1674;
Joseph, 25 Mar. 1677; Priscilla, 15 Oct. 1681; Jemima; Rebecca;
Ann; Hannah; and Abigail. BARTHOLOMEW, Providence 1645. BENJAMIN,
Fretown, youngest s. of William the first, had a fam. but details
are want. DANIEL, Newbury, s. of the first Aquila, m. 25 Aug. 1683,
Martha Kimball, had Martha, b. 18 Aug. 1684; Sarah, 18 July 1686;
[[365]]
Dorothy, 24 Jan. 1689; Isaac, 19 Jan. 1691; Lydia, 19 Jan. 1693;
Mehitable, 19 Jan. 1695; Judith, 19 Feb. 1697; Abner, 15 Oct. 1699;
Daniel, 15 Oct. 1702; and Enoch; and d. 8 Feb. 1707. ISAAC, Hampton,
s. of Thomas of the same, m. Mary Perkins of H. rem. to Edgartown,
and had Thomas, b. 9 Nov. 1677; Rachel, 25 Oct. 1679; Isaac,
21 Jan. 1682; Abraham, 10 Jan. 1684; James, 15 Jan. 1686; Joseph,
26 Feb. 1690; Jonathan, 28 Dec. 1691; Hannah, 25 Nov. 1693;
Sarah, 15 Oct. 1695; Priscilla, 12 Nov. 1697; and Elizabeth 9 Sept. 1703;
and he d. 9 May 1727. Descend. of gr. num. are wide. diffus. JOHN,
Newbury, s. of the first Aquila, m. 23 May 1677, Elizabeth d. prob. of
William
Bingley, had William, b. 3 Jan. 1679; Philip, 23 Sept. 1688;
Charles, 12 Jan. 1690; beside Jacob, Abraham, Phebe, Mary, Lydia,
Elizabeth and John, of uncert. dates; and by sec. w. Lydia had David, 20
Oct. 1710. JOSEPH, Hampton, br. of Isaac, m. 31 Jan. 1672, Rachel,
d. of William Partridge of Salisbury, had Hannah, b. 5 June foll.; Elizabeth
11 Mar. 1674, d. next yr.; Jonathan, 14 Mar. 1676; Ann, 11 Jan.
1678; Elizabeth again, 14 Feb. 1685; and Rachel, 27 Apr. 1687. He was
tak. by the Ind. at Dover, in their assault upon Waldron's ho. 27 June
1689. MOSES, Newbury, youngest s. of the first Aquila, m. 10 Nov.
1684, Ann Follansbee, perhaps d. of the first Thomas, had Moses, and
Daniel, tw. b. 20 Sept. foll. of nh. the first d. soon; Moses, again, 20
Jan. 1688; Samuel, 13 May 1690; Elizabeth 25 Sept. 1693; Stephen, 29
Aug. 1696; Hannah, 13 Sept. 1699; Joseph, 9 Sept. 1703; and
Benoni, 5 Apr. 1708. For sec. w. he m. 1713, Sarah Jacobs of Ipswich.
THOMAS, Hampton, perhaps elder br. of the first Aquila, m.
Elizabeth d. of Thomas Philbrick, had Thomas, b. 1643; Joseph, 1615;
Isaac, 1647; James, 1649; and Abraham, 1651; and d. 1652. His
wid. m. 26 Oct. 1654, John Garland, and, next, 19 Feb. 1674, Henry
Roby, and d. 11 Feb. 1677. Thomas, the eldest s. d. unm. 23 Oct.
1714; and Abraham was k. in Philip's war, 1676, unm. THOMAS,
Newbury, sec. s. of the first Aquila, m. 22 Nov. 1677, Rebecca, prob. d.
of the first Thomas Follansbee, had Thomas, b. 15 Sept. 1680; Jonathan,
13 Jan. 1683; James, 15 Sept. 1685; Aquila, 15 July 1688;
Ruth, 28 Feb. 1691; Mary, 15 Jan. 1695; Josiah, 15 July 1697; Rebecca,
17 Apr. 1700; Nathan, 1702; beside Judith, and Elizabeth of unkn.
dates. For sec. w. he m. 2 Aug. 1713, Elizabeth Mooers. WILLIAM, Roxbury,
came in the fleet with Winthrop desir. to be freem. 19 Oct. 1630, and
was sw. 14 May 1634. He brot. w. Mary, and s. William, had Mary,
b. May 1637, wh. d. at 15 yrs. rem. to Scituate, thence to Yarmouth,
where he was appoint. constable 1 Mar. 1639, and had Benjamin, b. a.
1640, bapt. 18 Apr. 1652; d. May 1659, and his wid. d. Oct. foll. WILLIAM,
Yarmouth, s. of the preced. b. in Eng. had William, John, Elizabeth all
[[366]]
b. bef. 1656, and Abraham; and d. 27 Feb. 1685. All the descend. now
on Cape Cod, it is thot. are deriv. from sec. s. John. Seventeen of this
name had been gr. at Dart. in 1834, as Farmer found, eight at Harv.
four at Yale, and four at other N. E. coll.
I have looked at SAVAGE and am not terribbly impressed. It is in most
genealogy libraries, and has several volumes. Would be a very large
download. Jeanne
-----Original Message-----
From: Leslie Quist <mamakitty(a)ewa.net>
To: CHASE-L(a)rootsweb.com <CHASE-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Date: Thursday, July 20, 2000 7:04 PM
Subject: [CHASE-L] Savage dictionary
>Has anyone had access to this book? Is it any good? It is available to
>be downloaded at the following address.
>http://genweb.net/~books/savage/savage.htm
>
>A GENEALOGICAL DICTIONARY
>of THE FIRST SETTLERS OF NEW ENGLAND,
>SHOWING THREE GENERATIONS
>OF THOSE WHO CAME BEFORE MAY, 1692,
>ON THE BASIS OF FARMER'S REGISTER.
>BY JAMES SAVAGE, originally pub. 1860
>
>Leslie Quist
>--
> I don't repeat gossip, so listen carefully.
>
Has anyone had access to this book? Is it any good? It is available to
be downloaded at the following address.
http://genweb.net/~books/savage/savage.htm
A GENEALOGICAL DICTIONARY
of THE FIRST SETTLERS OF NEW ENGLAND,
SHOWING THREE GENERATIONS
OF THOSE WHO CAME BEFORE MAY, 1692,
ON THE BASIS OF FARMER'S REGISTER.
BY JAMES SAVAGE, originally pub. 1860
Leslie Quist
--
I don't repeat gossip, so listen carefully.
Hello,
I am looking for a half brother born in 1963 in Chicago that I have never
met. His mother was/is Lydia Chase b. abt. 1940......
The birth father (also my father) is Robert Wilder. He was in Chicago the
fall of 1962, met Lydia and fathered a baby boy. He did not see the child
and only recently shared this with me.
I have the Wilder genealogy back to 1460 and other lines even further back.
I am a genealogy junkie!! The knowledge that I have a living brother out
there somewhere is driving me to use all avenues available to find him.
If anyone on the list is researching the CHASE name perhaps you can take a
moment to see if there is a Lydia Chase born around this time who has a
son....
Best Regards,
Roberta Wilder
Washington State
Ancestry Daily News--Special Edition
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