_____________________
|
_Taber BENTLEY _________|
| (1752 - 1826) m 1785 |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Hallet BENTLEY
| (1792 - ....)
| _James VANDERBURGH __+
| | (1729 - 1794) m 1753
|_Elizabeth VANDERBURGH _|
(1754 - 1837) m 1785 |
|_Margaret NOXON _____+
(1734 - 1766) m 1753
[3263]
[S77]
History of the Vanderburgh Family
[3262]
[S95]
The Noxon Family in North America
[12000]
[S77]
History of the Vanderburgh Family
_John C. CLINKENBEARD _+
| (1755 - 1837) m 1779
_John T. CLINKENBEARD _|
| (1790 - 1865) m 1808 |
| |_Mary LUCAS ___________+
| (1763 - 1829) m 1779
|
|--Jackson CLINKENBEARD
| (1830 - ....)
| _Henry CARTER _________
| |
|_Mary CARTER __________|
m 1808 |
|_______________________
[10776]
[S173]
Jack Stockman to David Warren Robison 5 May 1997
[10775]
[S173]
Jack Stockman to David Warren Robison 5 May 1997
[12829]
[S173]
Jack Stockman to David Warren Robison 5 May 1997
[4865]
[S80]
Clinkenbeard Family Census Abstract prior to 1850
[4863]
[S125]
Lucas Family Group Records, starting with Lucas of Wiltshire
[4864]
[S125]
Lucas Family Group Records, starting with Lucas of Wiltshire
[12240]
[S125]
Lucas Family Group Records, starting with Lucas of Wiltshire
_Johann Georg FRIEDERICH _
| (.... - 1771) m 1713
_Hans Noah FREDERICK _|
| (.... - 1756) m 1751 |
| |_Margaretha BOSCH ________+
| (1689 - 1729) m 1713
|
|--Thomas FREDERICK
| (1751 - 1808)
| __________________________
| |
|_Margaretha BECKER ___|
m 1751 |
|__________________________
[3657]
Shoemaker and farmer by trade.
From People in History to 1980 - Gallia County, Ohio.
Frederick Family
Johan Georg Friedrich (Frederick), native of Bavaria, landed at Philadelphia September 25, 1732, on the ship Loyal Judith, out of Rotterdam, and settled in Lancaster County, Pn., near Hamlin. He married twice and three children and several stepchildren. On son, Noah, married Margaretha Becker and libed near Walmer's Church in Lancaster County. We know of four children: Thomas, veronica, Christiana, and John George.
Noah Frederick was killed October 12, 1756, by Indians. He was tomahawked as he drank from a spring. His seven year old son, Thomas, was carried off, but Noah's wife and daughters were unharmed. Not much is known of his life with the Indians except he was given the name Kee-Saw-So-So. It is said that he cried when he left his Indian foster mother at the close of the French and Indian Wars, when prisoners were exchanged for bounty. He was taken to Fort Duquesne but no one claimed him. Finally, all unclaimed children were taken to Lancaster and their descriptions advertised. He was then taken to Philadelphia and apprenticed to Benjamin Stone, a Quaker shoemaker. He took the name Stone and became a traveling shoemaker.
Everywhere Thomas went, he told of childhood memories hoping someone would know him. Finally, he met a former neighbor of his parents who took him to his mother, now married and living in Maryland. She recognized him by a scar on his neck where his father had once lanced a boil. Thus he regained his own name and identity.
Thomas Frederick married Ann Margaret Tebbins in 1774. During the Revolutionary War, he served in the Hanover Rifle Battalion which was captured at Fort Washington in 1776. The men were parolled and sent home. He later patrolled the area near Sudbury.
After the war he settled near present Laurelton, Pennsylvania. There were no roads so he used the streams to float flatboats of produce to market. He also had a still and converted some crops to whiskey. He built a large house and barn in 1799, but sold his holdings in 1804 and moved to Columbiana County, Ohio, where he bought twelve sections of land, one for each of his twelve children. He died in 1808.
One son, George Frederick, and his son, Henry, moved their families to Gallia County in 1834.
Ohio Daughters of the Revolution Rosters, Volume I Page 148 and Volume II page 145, as well as the A. R. Patriot Index, Thomas Frederick was born February 1751, Lancaster County, PA. Died May 3, 1808, the son of Noah Frederick and Margaretta Becker. He was married in 1774 at Hamlin, PA, to Ann Margaret Tibbins, born March 17, 1754 died February 28, 1826. Had issue 12 children. Thomas Frederick served as a Private in the Rangers of Northumberland County, PA during the Revolution. Frederick Cemetery Location: Center Township, Columbiana County, Ohio, Section 12. State Route 164 east side .5 mile from road, which is directly across from Adams Road.
[3658]
[S106]
People in History to 1980 - Gallia County, Ohio
[3652]
[S37]
Allen R. Frederick to David Warren Robison
[3653]
[S37]
Allen R. Frederick to David Warren Robison
[3654]
[S105]
Frederick Family Group Sheets from Sanda Faye Elf Wamsley, a Frederick cousin and researcher
[3655]
[S37]
Allen R. Frederick to David Warren Robison
[3656]
[S37]
Allen R. Frederick to David Warren Robison
[12109]
[S37]
Allen R. Frederick to David Warren Robison
[12110]
[S106]
People in History to 1980 - Gallia County, Ohio
[8619]
[S145]
Ancestors of Sara (Sally) Onderdonk
[12593]
[S145]
Ancestors of Sara (Sally) Onderdonk
_John James STEELE __
| (1864 - ....)
_Raymond Emery STEELE _|
| |
| |_Celeste Jane WREN __+
|
|
|--James Eddy STEELE
| (1915 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_Ferol Erma EDDY ______|
|
|_____________________
[2770]
[S98]
Conversation with Betty Vanderburgh
[2769]
[S98]
Conversation with Betty Vanderburgh
_William Emra THORNTON _+
| (1840 - 1895) m 1866
_Frank Walter THORNTON _|
| (1869 - 1912) m 1908 |
| |_Calista May GIFFORD ___+
| (1845 - 1926) m 1866
|
|--William Emra THORNTON
| (1910 - ....)
| ________________________
| |
|_Laura DRAINGENBURG ____|
m 1908 |
|________________________
[2200]
[S65]
William Emra Thornton, III, son of Frank Walter Thornton
[2199]
[S65]
William Emra Thornton, III, son of Frank Walter Thornton
[10456]
[S122]
Brigette to David Warren Robison
[6901] Name may be Wilcox.
[6902]
[S18]
Thomas Cooke of Rhode Island