_Abu Farisi _________
|
_Na'im AL-LAKHMI ____|
| |
| |_Zohra ______________+
|
_Itaf Ibn Na'im _____|
| (0804 - ....) |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Amr Ibn Itaf
| (0834 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
| _____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|_____________________
[4494] per e-mail fo 6-Jan 99 from Jon Speller (morstar@escape.com): full name, b
_Frodi ______________+
|
_Vermund "the Wise" _|
| |
| |_____________________
|
_Olaf "The Humble" __|
| |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Dan "The Proud"
|
| _____________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
| _____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|_____________________
[3998] "The Illustrious Lineage of the Royal House of Britain", House of Skiold
_Borrel II __________+
| (.... - 0992)
_Ermengaude I _______|
| (.... - 1010) |
| |_Luitgarde __________+
|
_Ermengaude II ______|
| |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_Gerberge ___________|
| |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Ermengaude III
| (1033 - 1065)
| _____________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_Constance __________|
|
| _____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|_____________________
[3254] WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Washington Ahnentafel) # 69746016 = 17492320
_Eberhard in the Bonngau _+
|
_Ehrenfeld or Ezzo BONNGAU _|
| (.... - 0963) |
| |__________________________
|
_Hermann "the Small BONNGAU _|
| (0929 - 0996) |
| | __________________________
| | |
| |_Richwara __________________|
| (.... - 0963) |
| |__________________________
|
|
|--Ezzo of Lorraine
| (0955 - 1034)
| __________________________
| |
| ____________________________|
| | |
| | |__________________________
| |
|_Heylwig VON DILLINGEN ______|
(0931 - ....) |
| __________________________
| |
|____________________________|
|
|__________________________
[4968]
Ezzo, Count Palatine of Lorraine
Stuart p. 154: NAME Ezzo (Erenfried of the Rheinphalz); Count Palatine of Lorraine, Pfalzgrave of Lorraine, Lord of Duisburg and Kaiserwerth. DD, D PL, MAR DATE and BUR PL.
_Thomas BINGHAM _____+
| (1642 - 1729) m 1666
_Thomas BINGHAM _____|
| (1667 - 1710) m 1691|
| |_Mary (Mabel) RUDD __+
| (1649 - 1726) m 1666
_Joseph BINGHAM _____|
| (1709 - 1787) m 1731|
| | _William III BACKUS _+
| | | (1638 - 1721) m 1660
| |_Hannah BACKUS ______|
| (1676 - 1752) m 1691|
| |_Elizabeth PRATT ____+
| (1641 - 1726) m 1660
|
|--Jeremiah Sr. BINGHAM
| (1748 - 1842)
| _John POST __________+
| | (1629 - 1711) m 1652
| _Samuel POST ________|
| | (1668 - 1735) m 1697|
| | |_Hester HYDE ________+
| | (1631 - 1703) m 1652
|_Ruth POST __________|
(1711 - 1796) m 1731|
| _John LATHROP _______+
| | (1646 - 1688) m 1669
|_Ruth LATHROP _______|
(1671 - 1750) m 1697|
|_Ruth ROYCE _________+
(1645 - ....) m 1669
[3]
!BIRTH: "Genealogy of the Bingham Family in the United States Especially of the State of Connecticut" by Theodore A. Bingham, 1898; #170, pages 23 & 50. Also, 1988 IGI, State of Connecticut, page 1746, entries 38 & 39. DAR NN 311020 gives birth datre as "6-28-1748".
!DEATH: DAR NN 717598 gives death date as 24 JAN 1842 rather than 1841. DAR NN 311020 gives death date as "1-24-1842" and states he died at age 94.
!MARRIAGE: DAR NN 717598.
!DEATH: LDS Ancestral File record No. B17M-OQ gives death date of 24 JAN 1842. !MILITARY: per DAR NN 717598 - Private and Sergeant, Quartermasters dept. at Ticonderoga; Battle of Bennington Aug. 16, 177? under General Stark. Pension S12213. Also Bingham genealogy P. 347; DAR NN 11328, 52341, 69256, 311020. Extract from a payroll of Capt. Samuel Robinson's Company of Militia, in Col. Samuel Herrick's Regiment, for service done the State of Vermont in the alarm which commenced the eleventh (11th) day of October 1780, it appears that Jeremiah serviced as a private for three days.
Also from a payroll of Capt. Joseph Safford's Co. of Militia, in Col. Eben Walbridges Regiment, in an alarm commencing Aug. 2, 1781 and ending Aug. 8th, we find that Jeremiah Bingham served as a Sergeant. And under some command served from Oct. 14th to Oct. 31, 1781.
From a payroll at Bennington it appears that Jeremiah Bingham was in Capt. Robinson's Co. Aug. 16, 1777 at the battle of Bennington.
He was connected with the quartermasters department of the garrison of Ticonderoga previous to Burgoyne's surrender, as well as at the battle of Bennington.
Per the Bingham family history: " He settled first at Bennington, Vt., and in 1784 removed to Cornwall, Vt., where he was one of the first settlers. He was in the battle of Aug. 16, 1777, under Gen. Stark.
"He was a great-grandson of John Post and Hester Hyde, of the second generation.
"He was also one of the first Congregational deacons of Cornwall.
"Rev. Joel T. Bingham, the popular preacher of Westerfield, Mass., was probably a grandson of his."
"He was Moderator of the first Town Meeting of Cornwall and the records of the town show him to have been a prominent and trusted citizen. He was one of the original members of the Congregational church and its first moderator and registrar. He was also deacon."
"He has an indomitable, iron will, great energy and perseverance, and inflexible moral courage, with a high sense of honor and religious principle. He spent much time writing out his thoughts, especially on religious subjects. He was also a poet of some pretensions. Few men did more surveying when the country was new."
"He wrote in 1840 to (12347) that he had had 50 gr. children, two of whom had died in infancy."
__
|
_George LENNARD _____|
| (1427 - ....) |
| |__
|
_John LENNARD _______|
| (1459 - 1530) |
| | __
| | |
| |_Matilda --- ________|
| (1443 - ....) |
| |__
|
|
|--John LENNARD
| (1479 - 1554)
| __
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |__
| |
|_Anne BIRD __________|
(1458 - ....) |
| __
| |
|_____________________|
|
|__
[5354] Cape Cod Genealogy, WebCards
__
|
_Nathaniel TRIPP ____|
| (1549 - ....) |
| |__
|
_John TRIPP _________|
| (1575 - ....) m 1608|
| | __
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| |__
|
|
|--John TRIPP
| (1610 - 1678)
| __
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |__
| |
|_Isabel MOSES _______|
(1580 - ....) m 1608|
| __
| |
|_____________________|
|
|__
[2659]
TRIPP4.TXT file:
"Of Providence and Portsmouth. He was one of the Court Commissioners for 1654, '55,'61,'63. Assistant 1648, '70, '71, '73, '74, '75. Deputy to General Assembly 1664, '66, '67, '68, '69, '70, '72." --- (ESN, p. 147)
Randall read a paper that appears to be a copy of John Tripp's own statement: "I, John Tripp, born Northumberland, son of John and Isabel (Moses)of Lincolnshire, born 1610, was apprenticed to the house of carpentry trade and with his Master Randall Holden came to Newport and Portsmouth, 1630." (Randall: James Tripp).
"... left land in Dartmouth, Portsmouth, Narraganset & Westerly to children & grandchildren of which he had 11 children and 79 grandchildren -- was a Quaker... after completing his time" [as apprentice (DEB)] "he married Mary Paine dau. of Anthony ... ch. b Portsmouth, RI." --- (Randall: Joseph Tripp).
"He had served an apprenticeship as a carpenter in his native land and came to America as a shaft carpenter. He was among the first settlers of Rhode Island, where he is listed in a catalogue of persons admittted to the Island of Awueedneck on 24d 11m 1683.
"The author has read that the family name was bestowed upon the fifth son of Lord Howard by Henry V -- England's warrior king -- when the former replied to Henry's questions regarding the method used to take a certain town and a castle that he had "tripp'd up the wall." Henry, in appreciation of his valor, proclaimes, "Tripp shall be thy name and no longer Howard" and honored him with a scaling ladder for his coat of arms. (Holmes, New England Families, p. ccxlii)
"There on the Island of Aquidneck, he and twenty-eight others, on 30 April 1630, signed a compact for the establishment of a government, stating, 'We. whose names are underwritten, do acknowledge ourselves the legal subjects of his Majesty King Charles, and in his name do bind ourselves into a civic body politic, unto his laws according to matters of justice.'
"On 1 Mar 1643 John Tripp was granted a three-acre parcel of land in Portsmith, joining either side of Thomas Gorton. Then, on 30 Nov 1657, he recieved a grant of land on Hog Island for a term of seven years. His name appears on a roll of freemen in the Colony of Rhode Island in the year 1655. This status must have been accorded many years previously, since he had already served the government in several responsible capacities.
"As a civic-minded citizen, he shared in the responsibility of guiding the town of Portsmouth and the colonial government of Rhode Island through the early years of growth and development. He served on the Town council of Portsmouth for many years and in other local offices as well. He was chosen a member of the General Court of Elections from Portsmouth on 16 May 1648. and thereafter served as a comissioner from Portsmouth on the Court of Commissions in the years 1654, -55, -56, -58 ,-62, -63, -63, -64, -66, -67, -68 ,-69, -72. He was Deputy at the General Assembly in March, 1663/64; September, 1666, and May 1669; and was chosen Assistant at the General Assembly in May, 1670; May, 1673; May, 1674; and May, 1675.
"As his sons reached maturity, he deeded a part of his lands to sons Peleg and Joseph, so they could establish farms for themselves, Abstracts of these deeds are as follows:
"John Tripp to Peleg Tripp Peleg Tripp a fourth part of the share Lott.. .lyinge ...at the place ...called Acassett within the towne of Dartmouth, in the jurisdiction of new Plymouth ...together with all ...uplands, meadowes, woods, timbers, watters ...to be houlden of his Majestie of England... as of his manner of East Greenwich, in the County of Kent ...not in Capitt nor Knights service by the rents ... thereby due and of Right accustomed ...only it is to provide that ...Peleg Tripp shall herafter ...sell the ...part ...of Land it is to be sould unto me ...or my heirs ...Eight day of Septr...1665, John Tripp. Witness John Sanford, Samuel Sanford. "John Tripp to Joseph Tripp John Tripp of Colony of Plymouth..one quarter share of Land lying ...within Dartmouth that is purchassor it being the one halfe of that part of land which.
.. John Tripp bought of John Alden of ...Duxberry.. to be the holder of as of his Majestie his manner of East Greenwich ...third day of May ...1671 John Tripp witness William Hall, Junr., William Hall Senr.
"John Tripp, stating his age at that time as about forty-nine, made a deposition in court on 6 February 1660 that he had heard his uncle, Robert Potter, say that he had sold a certain house and land to John Anthony. This statement serves to identify the year of his birth as about 1610. Since Potter was not a brother of Tripp's father or mother, I assume that the term designated an uncle of his wife, Mary." [The term "uncle" was not as cut and dried as it is today and could denote various relationships, not necessarily of blood --- DEB.]
"The court of Commissions, on 8 Dec 1666, confirmed the sale, some twenty-five years previously, of a three-acre parcel of land by Richard Searle of Portsmouth to Mary Tripp, wife of John Tripp, for a pint of wine..she being unmarried at the time. Searle had removed shortly afterward without leaving the deed to Mary. John Tripp died in Portsmouth in 1678, His will was written on 6 December 1677 and was proved on 28 October 1678. His wife Mary was named executrix, and he left her all of his estate, which was to be hers for the remainder of her natural life ..lands, goods and chattels, movable and immovable..`only my house excepted, of north end of my building which I have given to my son John Tripp formerly.' His son, John, was given a house and lot and 10 acres in the Clay Pit field, meadows at Hog Island, and all fencing, orchards, &co., :excepting my new house or south end of my building, last mentioned, with the adjoining lot and other land. Son Peleg was given five pounds, son Joseph was given 10 pounds. Son James was given one-eighth of a share of land at Dartmouth, and rights at Narragansett and Westerly. Daughter Martha was given twenty pounds, probably because she was still unmarried at that time; the other daughters recieved nothing. Granddaughter Elizabeth Wodell was given ten pounds. Almost four years later, on 4 April 1682, Mary took Benjamin Engell for her second husband. On 23 July 1679,subsequent to the death of her first husband, she had been granted a license to sell food and drink to travelers by the town of Portsmouth. The following year, on July 7, the town voted that it owed widow Mary Tripp 24 shillings, and ordered it paid.
"Stephen and Elizabeth (Wodell) Manchester, on 15 January 1685, gave receipt for the 10 pound legacy (from the will of John Tripp) to her uncle Peleg Tripp, and to Benjamin and Mary Engell. Mary, as executrix of the will of John Tripp, and her husband, Benjamin, had delivered the 10 pounds to Peleg to give to Elizabeth."
--- Prepared by: Jeanne Marie Beauvais from "Woods of County Antrim, Ireland" John Tripp.
HALL.GED confirms dates
http://205.160.0.97/users/cfa1996/new_eng/D0014/G0000004.html#I8378 b ABT 1610, or near,Canterbury,Kent,England