_Thomas BAXTER ______+
| (1626 - 1696) m 1650
_Thomas BAXTER ______|
| (1654 - 1715) |
| |_Bridget CLARKE _____+
| m 1650
|
|--Miriam BAXTER
| (1696 - ....)
| _John ADAMS _________
| |
|_Rebecca ADAMS ______|
(.... - 1736) |
|_Dorcas WATSON ______
[9354]
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[9353]
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Ancestors of Sara (Sally) Onderdonk
_Robert CLINKENBEARD ____+
| (1826 - 1903)
_Robert CLINKENBEARD ___|
| (1869 - 1947) m 1894 |
| |_Lucinda Darnall BARNES _
|
|
|--Evelyn Loraine CLINKENBEARD
| (1905 - 1972)
| _________________________
| |
|_Laura Matilda COLLINS _|
m 1894 |
|_________________________
[6196]
[S128]
Descendants of Jonathan Clinkenbeard
[6193]
[S128]
Descendants of Jonathan Clinkenbeard
[6194]
[S128]
Descendants of Jonathan Clinkenbeard
[6195]
[S128]
Descendants of Jonathan Clinkenbeard
[12378]
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Descendants of Jonathan Clinkenbeard
_Abraham HOAG _____________+
| (1763 - 1823) m 1789
_Asa HOAG ___________|
| (1788 - 1847) m 1810|
| |_Elizabeth Tabitha WOOLEY _+
| (1764 - ....) m 1789
|
|--David HOAG
| (1816 - 1905)
| _David NORTON _____________
| |
|_Elizabeth NORTON ___|
(1789 - 1824) m 1810|
|_Esther HUNT ______________
[8255]
from Portrait and Biographical Album, 1890, author unknown, pp226-227. Dealing with David Hoag of Jackson County Michigan:
DAVID HOAG. The pioneers of Jackson County are fast passing away, and those who remain to tell the story of their early adventures are looked upon almost as the relics of a bygone time. The history of their toils and sacrifices forms a record which is destined to be preserved in the hearts of their children for many generations. Prominent among those who came to Parma Township when it was but little removed from the wilderness, may be properly mentioned Mr. Hoag, who has just passed the seventy-fourth mile-stone along the highway of life. After years of arduous labor, he is now resting on his oats, and surrounded by friends and the comforts of a good home, can look back upon the past and reasonably feel that he has not lived in vain.
A native of Rensselaer County, N.Y., the subject of this notice was born March 15, 1816, and is the son of Asa and Elizabeth (Norton) Hoag, who were likewise natives of the Empire State. The family is of English origin, and the first representatives crossed the Atlantic sometime during the seventeenth century. Asa Hoag was born in 1788, in Dutchess County, N.Y., and removed thence with his parents to Rensselaer County when about twelve years old. He there developed into manhood and settled on a new farm, from which he built up a good homestead. In Cambridge, Washington County, he spent the remainder of his life, dying in 1847. The wife and mother had preceded her husband to the silent land twenty-four years, her death taking place in 1823, they were the parents of seven children, three of whom are still living.
David Hoag under the instruction of his honored father became a scientific farmer and chose this for his life vocation. The primitvie schools of Rensselaer County furnished him with his education, and at the age of twenty-two years he set about the establishment of a fireside of his own, being married November 8, 1838, to Miss Mary Peckham.
Mrs. Mary (Peckham) Hoag, likewise a native of rensselaer County, N.Y., was born in 1818 to Samuel and Mary Peckham, who were natives of New York, and spent the closing years of their lives in that State, Mr. and Mrs. Hoag in 1888 celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of their wedding amid the congratulations and good wishes of many friends.
Of this congenial union there was born a family of seven children, five of whom are living - Francis H. is a resident of Parma Township; Rutger lives in Springport Township; Isaac P. is a resident of California; John E. lives in Parma Township, this county; Phoebe is the wife of W. H. Trope, of California. Mr. and Mrs. Hoag coon after their marriage settled in Washington County, N.Y., where they resided until 1845. Then with the three children which had been added to their housefhold they set out for this county, and Mr. Hoag purchased eighty acres of his present farm. To this he subsequendtly added from time to time until it now comprises two hundred and twenty acres, all under cultivation and embellished with neat modern buildings. It was a wild uncultivated tract when he took possession, its only improvement a log cabin, and a poor one at that, which had been standing a number of years, and which did service several years longer as the home of Mr. Hoag and his family. The present fine residence was completed in 1861. Mr. Hoag came to this county poor in purse, and endured the usual hardships and privations of life on the frontier. He has been an eyewitness of its gradual growth and development, and has contributed his full quota to its general prosperity.
Mr. Hoag cast his first Presidential vote for W. H. Harrison, and in the early days was a member of the Whig party. Later he joined himself to the Republicans. He has never sought office, simply serving as Town Collector two terms, but has aimed to give his influence in favor of everything calculated to improve the condition of the people, socially, morally and financially. Of genial and whole-souled disposition, he invariably makes friends wherever he goes, and enjoys in a marked degree the respect of all who know him.
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Portrait and Biographical Album
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Portrait and Biographical Album
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____________________________
|
_Andries Adrianse ONDERDONK _|
| m 1683 |
| |____________________________
|
|
|--Adrian ONDERDONK
| (1684 - 1764)
| _Dirck Janse VAN DER VLIET _+
| | (1612 - 1689) m 1652
|_Maria Janse VAN DER VLIET __|
(1663 - ....) m 1683 |
|_Geertien GERRITS __________
(1625 - 1689) m 1652
[8790]
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Ancestors of Sara (Sally) Onderdonk
[8788]
[S145]
Ancestors of Sara (Sally) Onderdonk
[8789]
[S145]
Ancestors of Sara (Sally) Onderdonk