Family Tree Welborn » John Baldwin (1665-1757)

Persönliche Daten John Baldwin 

Quelle 1

Familie von John Baldwin

Er ist verheiratet mit Ann Baldwin (Scott).


Marriage
Place: of PA

Sie haben geheiratet am 8. Dezember 1707 in Falls, Bucks, Pennsylvania, United States, er war 42 Jahre alt.


Kind(er):

  1. Joshua Baldwin  1709-1800
  2. Daniel Baldwin  1711-????
  3. Jane Baldwin  1712-1750
  4. Elizabeth Baldwin  1712-1728
  5. Sarah Baldwin  1713-1750
  6. John Baldwin  1715-1794
  7. William Baldwin  1720-1802 


Notizen bei John Baldwin



John Baldwin is your 8th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Emma Corine Welborn (Bombard)
his mother ·Üí Charles Everett Bombard
her father ·Üí Susan Anne Olivia Bombard (Davis)
his mother ·Üí Cynthia Elizabeth Davis (Millican Millikan)
her mother ·Üí Jesse Millican
her father ·Üí William Millican Millikan
his father ·Üí Ann Millikan (Baldwin)
his mother ·Üí William Baldwin
her father ·Üí John Baldwin
his father

https://www.geni.com/people/John-Baldwin/6000000002711754529

John Baldwin
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1665
Bucks,,Pennsylvania,USA
Death:
January 19, 1757 (92)
New Garden,Guilford,North Carolina,USA
Immediate Family:
Son of John Baldwin

Husband of Ann Baldwin

Father of John Baldwin; William Baldwin; Sarah Baldwin; Rebecca Baldwin; Joseph Baldwin; and Rachael Baldwin

============================= also ===============
see also: https://www.geni.com/people/John-Baldwin-II/6000000176033790131
John Baldwin, II
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1670
West Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom
Death:
January 19, 1757 (86-87)
Guilford, Guilford, North Carolina, United States
Place of Burial:
Greensboro, Guilford County, North Carolina, USA
Immediate Family:
Son of John Baldwin, I and Bridget Hartley
Husband of Ann Baldwin (Scott)
Father of John Baldwin, III

[notes on This profile]
GEDCOM Note
Changed from John Baldwin to John Baldwin II because there are three John Baldwins in a row in my line. Also known as John Baldwin Jr.
GEDCOM Note
Please Clear Duplicates Created by GEDCOM Imports
Thank you.
GEDCOM Note
!BIR-MARRIAGE: MANY ROOTS, MANY BRANCHES
!BIR-MARRIAGE: MANY ROOTS, MANY BRANCHES; By Dorsey Woods Terhune; Page 142; md Ann; In the possession of Lucy Miller. !BIR-MAR-DEATH: ENCYCLOPEDIA OF AMERICAN QUAKER GENEALOGY; By William Wade Hinshaw; Vol I; Page 489; md Ann; In the possession of Lucy Miller.
GEDCOM Note
Life Sketch
John Baldwin Jr
John Jr was a Quaker emigrated to America from England. He moved to Guilford Cty NC and settled.
Son of John Baldwin, Sr who was born in England and died February 15, 1718/19 in Wheatley, Pendle Forest, Lancastershire, England.
He married Bridget Unknown.
They had: a. John Baldwin, Jr. b. abt. 1670 b. Mary Baldwin b. October 1, 1675 c. William Baldwin b. abt. 1677 d. Elizabeth Baldwin b. July 1, 1679 e. Mary Baldwin b. April 21, 1687
John Jr married (1st) Jennet Hartley February 12, 1696/97 in England. She was born March 30, 1668 and died bet. 1700-1707.
He married (2nd) Ann Scott February 1707/08 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, daughter of John Scott and Jane Bond. She was born August 25, 1688 in Yorkshire, England, and died January 9, 1741/42 in Guilford County, North Carolina.
They had: a. John Baldwin, 3rd b. May 7, 1716 Bucks Co., PA b. William Baldwin b. April 20, 1720 Bucks Co., PA
Notes: The couple received a certificate to move to America in 1698 and the fact that Jennet was still alive after the trip to America is proven by her presence as a witness to the 1700 marriage in America of Robert Heaton to Jennet's cousin Grace Pearson, who had in turn witnessed the Baldwin-Hartley marriage in England a few years earlier and would also witness John Baldwin's second marriage a few years later.
GEDCOM Note
Beals from Some Quaker Familes by Roger S. Boone
BEALS
Taken in part from:
SOME QUAKER FAMILIES
Collated by - Roger S.Boone
1. William Beals b. 1625 - 30 England.d. Pennsylvania - m. c1650, England- Wife Unknown. had issue: 2.
GEDCOM Note
!John and Ann were married at Falls Mont
!John and Ann were married at Falls Monthly Meeting. By 1743 the family moved to Berkley Co. Va. REF: Quaker Records THEY WERE QUAKERS. "MILLS FAMILY HISTORY" by Paul Mills "GENEALOGY" by Dorsey Terhune
GEDCOM Note
Genealogy notes John Baldwin, son of Francis Baldwin and Cicely Coebourne was born in 1665 in Bucks, Pennsylvania, United States. He died on 19 Jan 1757 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina, United States. He marr
GEDCOM Note
John Baldwin SR. Household
John Baldwin SR.
Birth 1690 in Ireland or England Death 1755 in Ireland or England
Overview Facts and Sources Media Gallery Comments
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BALDWIN
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Timeline
Birth 1690 Ireland or England Kilkerry
Marriage to Ann Scott 8 December 1707 Age: 17?
Death 1755 Age: 65 Ireland or England Kilkenny
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Family Members
Parents
Francis Baldwin 1667 ·Äì 1702
Cissy Coeboerne 1661 ·Äì 1712
Show siblings
Spouse & Childrenᖼ
Ann Scott 1690 ·Äì 1741
John Baldwin 1716
William Baldwin 1720 ·Äì 1805
Children of Unknown Spouse
No Spouse
john Jr. Baldwin- James's Father 1720 ·Äì 1765
GEDCOM Note
!973 D2he, Encyclopedia of American Quak
!973 D2he, Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, V1, p489

===========================================

Source: Stewart Baldwin's site on the Baldwin family, http://sbaldw.home.mindspring.com/baldwin/b1.htm
John and William Baldwin of Bucks county, Pennsylvania
compiled by Stewart Baldwin

The large wave of Quaker immigrants which moved from England to Pennsylvania in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries included two brothers, John Baldwin and William Baldwin, both of whom settled in Bucks county, Pennsylvania, moving there from the Pendle Forest, in Lancashire. During the same period, other Quaker immigrants named Baldwin, probably unrelated, came from other parts of England, with the result that some accounts of the genealogy of John and William Baldwin are confused or incorrect. Although direct proof of the parentage of the two brothers is still not available, their father can be identified with near certainty as John Baldwin of Wheatley in Pendle Forest, an English Quaker who died in 1719. These web pages will set out, with documentation, what is known of the two immigrant brothers and their relatives in England.
Of the two brothers, John Baldwin of Makefield township, Bucks co., PA, made his first known appearance in the records at his first marriage in England, in 1697, to Jennet Hartley. [1] The couple received a certificate to move to America in 1698, and the fact that Jennet (Hartley) Baldwin was still alive after the trip to America is proven by her presence as a witness to the 1700 marriage, in America, of Robert Heaton to Jennet·Äôs cousin Grace Pearson, who had in turn witnessed the Baldwin-Hartley marriage in England a few years earlier (and would also witness John Baldwin·Äôs second marriage a few years later). It would seem that Jennet (Hartley) Baldwin did not survive for long after that, and a few years later, John Baldwin married for a second time to Ann Scott, by whom he was ancestor to a large percentage of Quaker Baldwins in the midwest.

Although he had visited America earlier, William Baldwin did not come to America to stay until 1714. The fact that he had a brother named John is clear from his will, which named his brother John ·ÄúBaldwen·Äù (as the name is often spelled in the early records) as one of his executors. Since John Baldwin of Makefield township came from the same small area of Lancashire as William, and the other known Pennsylvania Quakers named John Baldwin do not make feasible candidates as brothers of William Baldwin, the identity of John Baldwin of Makefield township with William·Äôs brother of the same name is secure.
The parentage of the brothers is more difficult to document, and direct proof of the relationship has not yet been found. However, it is almost certain that they were the sons of John Baldwin of Wheatley, in Pendle Forest, who will be called ·ÄúJohn Baldwin Sr.·Äù, to distinguish him from the immigrant, and whose death on 25 twelfth month [February] [2] 1718/9 was recorded by the Marsden Monthly Meeting. It is probable that their mother·Äôs name was Bridget. The evidence for that is as follows:
The birthdates of the three daughters of John Baldwin Sr. match well with the probable birthdates of the immigrants John and William Baldwin.

John Baldwin Sr. was said to be ·Äúof Gisborn·Äù (i.e., the parish of Gisburn, co. York), and the 1855 biography of the immigrant William which appeared in The Friend (see below) gives his birthplace as ·ÄúGisbourn·Äù.
The same biography of William Baldwin states that he was born ·Äúof parents professing the truth·Äù (i.e., Quakers), thus verifying that his parents were members of the Society of Friends.
The records of the Marsden Monthly Meeting show only three Baldwins in a generation older than the two immigrant brothers, of whom two, Anthony and Margaret, brother and sister, both left wills which suggest that they had no children. This leaves John Baldwin Sr. as the only reasonable candidate for the father who appears in the Marsden records.

The residence of ·ÄúWheatley·Äù given for John Baldwin Jr. at his first marriage is the same as the residence given for John Baldwin Sr. in his death record.
The immigrant William Baldwin and Elizabeth (Baldwin) Topper were prominent signers of each other·Äôs marriage certificates.

The removal certificate of William ·ÄúBalwin·Äù to America refers to his parents as being living (·Äú... his aged parents whom he leaves alone, ...·Äù), and the two most prominent signers of that certificate were John ·ÄúBalwin·Äù and Briget ·ÄúBalwin·Äù. (William·Äôs brother John was already in America, and was therefore certainly not the man of that name who signed the certificate.)

While none of these pieces of evidence gives direct proof of the relationship, together they make an extremely strong case that John Baldwin Sr. was the father of the two immigrant brothers. Indeed, the words ·Äúwhom he leaves alone·Äù in William Baldwin·Äôs removal certificate indicate that his parents lived near him (i.e., in Pendle Forest), and we would then expect them to have been members of the Marsden Monthly Meeting. Thus, the lack of any other reasonable candidates for the parents of John and William Baldwin in the Marsden records has strong weight. The parentage of John Baldwin Sr. remains unknown, and the name is too common to identify him among possible baptisms in the area without additional information. One possible clue is presented by two other Baldwin members of the Marsden Monthly Meeting who have no proven connection to John Baldwin Sr., Anthony and Margaret Baldwin, both of whom left wills. Although the possibility remains that they represent a red herring, they still need to be investigated. For an account of Anthony Baldwin and Margaret Baldwin, and transcripts of their wills.

Falsely claimed parents for John Baldwin of Bucks, county Pennsylvania.
Some unpublished sources, such as the Ancestral File database, have provided John Baldwin (husband of Ann Scott) with incorrect parents, easily proven to be false. These errors have arisen from incorrect identifications with different men named John Baldwin. The two false sets of ·Äúparents·Äù which have been offered for John Baldwin are:
John Baldwin of Bucks co., PA, who md. 19 10mo. [Dec] 1689, Sarah Allen.
Francis Baldwin of Chester co., PA, who md. Cicely Coebourne.
Each of these couples did have a son named John, but in both cases the alleged identification of the son named John with the John Baldwin who married Ann Scott is false. In addition to the fact that the first of these couples is chronologically impossible, we can note that both of these couples were earlier immigrants to America, whose children were born in America, and therefore their sons cannot reasonably be identified with an individual who was married for the first time in England in the 1690·Äôs. In addition to that, both of the John Baldwins who were born to the above two couples can be readily identified with other men. For the correct identification of the John Baldwins who were sons of these two couples, see Frank C. Baldwin, The Baldwins From Virginia Westward (Oak Park, IL, 1985), pp. 4, 56.

BALDWIN
JohnA Baldwin, of Wheatley in Pendle Forest, co. Lancaster, England, of unknown origin, appears for the first known time in the records of the Marsden Monthly Meeting of Friends (Quakers) in the year 1675 [3], when his residence was given as ·ÄúGisborn·Äù (i.e., Gisburn), co. York. At that time, he was a member of the Sawley Meeting of Friends, one of the Preparative Meetings which was under the jurisdiction of the Marsden Monthly Meeting. On 29 July 1684, the constable of Rimington (in the parish of Gisburn) reported John Baldwin and his wife, along with other Quakers in the area, for being absent from church. [4] By 1693, he was said to be living at ·ÄúIng End·Äù, [5] which has not been precisely identified, but was certainly one of the two places called ·ÄúIngs End·Äù and ·ÄúIng Ends·Äù, both of which are small villages not far south of Gisburn. In July of 1700, he was of ·ÄúOld Laund·Äù in Pendle Forest, when his house was certified as a religious meeting place according to the recently passed Act of Toleration. [6] At the time of his death, he was of ·ÄúWheatley,·Äù in Pendle Forest. [7] The name of John Baldwin·Äôs wife is uncertain, but it seems likely that his wife was the same person as the Briget ·ÄúBalwin·Äù who, along with John ·ÄúBalwin·Äù, signed the certificate of removal of William ·ÄúBalwin·Äù from the Marsden Monthly Meeting to Pennsylvania on 7 1mo. [Mar.] 1713/4. [8] John Baldwin of Wheatley in Pendle Forest d. 22 bur. 15 12mo. [Feb.] 1718/9. [9]
Children of John Baldwin (order uncertain): [10]
+1. John1 Baldwin, d. 19 1mo. [Jan.] 1757, md. 1st 11 12mo. [Feb.] 1696/7, Jennet Hartley, md. 2nd 8 12mo. [Feb.] 1707/8, Ann Scott.
2. Mary Baldwin, b. 1 8mo. [Oct.] 1675, bur. 17 7mo. [Sep.] 1677.
+3. William1 Baldwin, b. 1677?, d. 29 or 30 6mo. [Aug.] 1720, md. 28 9mo. [Nov.] 1710, Mary Beakbaine.
4. Elizabeth Baldwin, b. 1 5mo. [July] 1679, d. 24 4mo. [June] 1713, md. at Marsden Height, co. Lancaster, 25 4mo. [June] 1712, James Topper of Little Marsden. The records of the Settle Monthly Meeting in Yorkshire show a marriage of James Topper of Reedley (about a mile from Little Marsden) to Elizabeth Parsons on 5 8mo. [Oct] 1716, [11] and this is possibly a second marriage for the same James Topper.
5. Mary Baldwin, b. 21 2mo. [Apr] 1687, bur. 11 11mo. [Jan.] 1693/4.
John1 Baldwin (JohnA), b. possibly in co. York, [12] England, probably either in the late 1660·Äôs or (more likely) the early 1670·Äôs, [13] died 19th 1mo. [Jan.] 1757. [14] At the time of his first marriage in early 1697, he was living in Wheatley, in Pendle Forest, co. Lancaster, about 7 miles south of Gisburn. He md. 1st, at the house of Roger Hartley of Oldham in Trawden Forest, co. Lancaster, 11 12mo. [Feb] 1696/7, [15] Jennet Hartley, b. 30 1mo. [Mar.] 1668, [16] daughter of Roger and Alice (Veepon) [17] Hartley of Chamber in Little Marsden, co. Lancaster. At a Preparative Meeting held at Marsden Height on 13 9mo. [Nov.] 1698, Henry Mitchel, Robert Brewer, Henry Whalley, and John Baldwen junior obtained leave to put there intentions of removing to Pennsylvania before the next Monthly Meeting. [18] Of these four men, Henry Mitchell [19] and Robert Brewer [20] are known to have come to America aboard the ship Britannia, as did many others who left for America at this time, including John Baldwin·Äôs future second wife Ann Scott and her parents, and Jennet Baldwin·Äôs cousin Grace Pearson (whose mother was a Veepon), a signer of John Baldwin·Äôs marriage certificates for both his first and second marriage. Thus, it is probable that John and Jennet Baldwin were also among the passengers who came to America on the Britannia, but their actual presence on that ship has not been proven. The Britannia sailed from Liverpool, first arriving at Cork, Ireland where they took on provisions and sailed toward America before 20 3mo. [May] 1699. The voyage was a disastrous one, as a plague (probably yellow fever) broke out aboard the ship, and many of the passengers died at sea or soon after arriving in Philadelphia. The Britannia arrived in Philadelphia on 24 Aug 1699 with its sick and weak survivors. In any case, even if John and Jennet Baldwin sailed on some other ship that left at about the same time, they certainly arrived in Pennsylvania before 8 3mo. [May] 1700, on which date Jennet Baldwin signed the marriage certificate of Robert Heaton and Grace Pearson. [21] The date of death of Jennet (Hartley) Baldwin has not been discovered, but it was probably well before 7 11mo. [Jan.] 1707/8, when John Baldwin and Ann Scott first appeared before the Falls Monthly Meeting in Bucks co., PA, to declare their intention of marrying. [22] John Baldwin md. 2nd, at the Falls Meeting House in Bucks co., PA, on 12mo. [Feb.] 1707[/8], [23] Ann Scott, b. 25 6mo. [Aug.] 1688, [24] d. 9 11mo. [Jan.] 1741/2, [25] daughter of John and Jane (Bond) Scott, who had also been passengers aboard the Britannia.[26] The marriage certificate gave John Baldwin·Äôs occupation as weaver, and listed Makefield township, Bucks co., PA as his place of residence. On 3 7mo. [Sep.] 1729, [27] John Baldwin of Makefield requested a certificate of removal to the Buckingham MM, also in Bucks co., PA, which was presented at that meeting on 2 10mo. [Dec.] 1729. [28] When the Wrightstown Monthly Meeting was split off from the Buckingham Meeting in 1734, the Baldwins were apparently among those who formed the new Monthly Meeting. Around this time, our information becomes very slim, and even the state of residence of John and Ann Baldwin during their last few years is not certain. Their son William later moved to Virginia and then North Carolina, but it is not certain whether or not William was joined by his parents. [29] Even though it has sometimes been stated that John and Ann Baldwin died in Virginia or North Carolina, there is no good evidence that they ever left Pennsylvania.
Children of John Baldwin and Ann (Scott) Baldwin: [30]
1. John Baldwin, b. 7 3mo. [May] 1716. On 4 5mo. [July] 1738, [31] a John Baldwin was brought before the Wrightstown Monthly Meeting for fighting, and this was probably the younger John, since such behavior is much more likely for a man in his twenties than one aged about sixty. Because of the common name, his later history is difficult to document. However, it seems likely that he was the same person as the John Baldwin who, on 27 August 1762, bought 660 acres of land in Rowan county, North Carolina from Granville, and then, on 19 October of the same year, with his wife Philis, sold that land to James Mendenhall. [32] On 10 7mo. [July] 1760, his wife had (as ·ÄúPhelis·Äù Baldwin) signed the marriage certificate of William Morgan and Rebeckah Mills, a certificate which had also been signed by William and Elizabeth (Morgan?) Baldwin.
2. William Baldwin, b. 20 2mo. [Apr.] 1720, d. 19 8mo. [Aug.] 1802. [33] On 5 1mo. [Mar] 1744/5, William Baldwin requested a certificate from the Wrightstown Monthly Meeting to the ·ÄúOpecan·Äù (i.e., Hopewell) Monthly Meeting in Virginia, having apparently moved to the area some time before, and this certificate was granted on 17 1mo. [Mar.] 1744/5. [34] He md.1st, Elizabeth, whose maiden name has not been proven, but who appears to have been the daughter of John and Sarah (Lloyd) Morgan of Frederick co., VA. William and Elizabeth Baldwin later became members of the New Garden Monthly Meeting in Guilford county, North Carolina, and Elizabeth d. 19 9mo. [Sep.] 1773. [35] William Baldwin then md. 2nd, New Garden MM, NC, 18 6mo. [June] 1788, [36] Mrs. Ann (Beals) Hunt, widow of Thomas Hunt, and daughter of John and Sarah (Bowater) Beals. Considerable information on the descendants of William and Elizabeth Baldwin can be found in Frank C. Baldwin, The Baldwins From Virginia Westward (Oak Park, IL, 1985), 85-103.
William1 Baldwin (JohnA), b. 1677?, [37] at Gisburn, co. York, England. [38] At the age of twenty, he became a minister of the Gospel, and visited Quaker churches throughout England, Scotland, and Ireland. A member of the Marsden Monthly Meeting, he left to preach in America, arriving in America in May (3mo.) 1709. After a stay of more than nine months, during which he visited Pennsylvania, New England, Maryland, Virginia, and Carolina, he returned to England. There he md., at Yelland, co. Lancaster, England, 28 Nov (9mo.) 1710, Mary Beakbaine, b. 26 Feb (12mo.) 1674/5, Lancaster MM, d. 1754, Chester co., PA, daughter of Thomas Beakbaine and Margaret (Middleton) Beakbaine. [39] Not long afterward, he decided to remove with his family to America, and the Marsden Monthly Meeting, at a meeting held at Trawden, granted him a certificate of removal [40] on 7 1mo. [Mar.] 1713/4, which he presented to the Falls Monthly Meeting, Bucks co., PA on 1 7mo. [Sep.] 1714. [41] He was soon traveling again, visiting Maryland, then Long Island in 1715 and Rhode Island in 1716. In 1720, he fell ill, and two weeks later, on 29 or 30 6mo. [Aug.] 1720, [42] he died. His will, written 21 6mo. [Aug.] 1720, and proved 28 Sep. 1720, mentioned (among others) his wife Mary, his son John, and his brother John. [43] His widow, Mary (Beakbaine) Baldwin md. 2nd 11 Mar (1mo.) 1723/4, Falls MM, Bucks co, PA, Ellis Lewis, of Chester co., PA. [44]
Child of William Baldwin and Mary (Beakbaine) Baldwin:
1. John Baldwin, [45] b. 28 Oct (6mo.) 1712, co. Lancaster, England, d. 1 10mo. [Dec.] 1746, md. Elizabeth Pusey. See C. C. Baldwin, The Baldwin Genealogy (Cleveland, 1881), 761-6, for more information on the descendants of this branch of the family.
Links to transcripts of Supporting Documents
Marriage record of John ·ÄúBaldwen·Äù and Jennet Hartley, 1697.
Certification of John ·ÄúBaldwen·Äù to have religious meetings in his home, 1700.
Marriage record of John ·ÄúBoldwin·Äù and Ann Scott, 1708.
Marriage record of William Baldwin and Mary Beakbaine, 1710.
Marriage record of Elizabeth ·ÄúBaldwen·Äù and James Topper, 1712.
Removal certificate of William ·ÄúBalwin·Äù, 1714.
Will of William ·ÄúBaldwen·Äù, 1720.
Wills of Anthony and Margaret ·ÄúBaldwen·Äù, 1725.
Biographical sketches of William and John Baldwin in The Friend.

Notes
[1] The precise citations to the relevant sources, with links to transcripts of some of the more important documents, will be given in the genealogical account which appears below after this brief discussion of the parentage of the two brothers.
[2] Before 1752, March was the first month in English records (and in the English colonies in America). Quaker records rarely give the name of the month, and usually give the month by its number. For convenience, conversions to the usual names of the months will be supplied in brackets, and month numbers will be given in the form ·Äú12mo.·Äù
[3] In the birth record of his daughter Mary (the first of that name), in the records of the Marsden Monthly Meeting [MM]. These records appear in two different places. One place is in a book of marriages, births, and burials for the Marsden Monthly Meeting, and is on microfilm number 817371 at the Family History Library [FHL]. The same births, marriages, and burials are also recorded in the records of the Lancaster Quarterly Meeting [FHL film number 583995]. These two records will be cited collectively as ·ÄúMarsden MM records·Äù from this point on, and the individual manuscripts will be cited only if there are important differences between the two.
[4] O. Heywood & T. Dickenson, The Nonconformist Register (Brighouse, 1886), 141.
[5] In the burial record of his daughter Mary (second of the name), in Marsden MM records.
[6] Lancashire Quarter Sessions Petitions, QSP 847-14, Midsummer 1700, on FHL film number 1564516. For a complete transcript, click here .
[7] His probable son John Jr. was already ·Äúof Wheatley·Äù at his first marriage in 1697. Modern maps show ·ÄúWheatley Lane·Äù and ·ÄúLaund·Äù as adjacent villages, just west of Nelson in the large parish of Whalley in Lancashire.
[8] Certificate of removal of William Baldwin, on FHL film number 20710. The signatures of John and Briget ·ÄúBalwin·Äù were the two most prominent names on the certificate, and the certificate refers to William Baldwin's ·Äúaged parents whom he leaves alone·Äù. For a transcript of the certificate, click here .
[9] He is ·ÄúJohn Baldwen of Wheatley·Äù in the Marsden MM records on FHL film number 817371, and ·ÄúJohn Baldwen of Pendle·Äù in the records of the Lancaster Quarterly Meeting on FHL film number 583995.
[10] See the above discussion regarding the identification of John and William as sons of John Sr. Unless otherwise stated, all information for the three daughters comes from the Marsden MM records.
[11] Settle MM records, on FHL film number 588425.
[12] Since his brother William was said in his biography to have been born in Gisburn, co. York, and his father was of Gisburn at the birth of his sister Mary (first of the name), a Yorkshire birth is a reasonable likelihood for John also.
[13] This is a reasonable estimate, based on the date of his first marriage, the known birthdate of his first wife, and his survival until 1757.
[14] New Garden MM, NC records. This death, and all other citations given here for ·ÄúNew Garden MM, NC records·Äù, have been checked against the original records on deposit at Guilford College in Greensboro, NC. These records have been abstracted in William Wade Hinshaw, ed., An Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy , (6 vols., Ann Arbor, 1936-50), vol. 1.
[15] Marsden MM records. For transcripts of the marriage record, click here . There were three Roger Hartleys who were members of the Marsden Monthly Meeting at this time, Jennet's father Roger Sr. of Chamber in Little Marsden, her brother Roger Jr., and Roger Hartley of Oldham, who was married to Jennet's sister Ellen Hartley. Thus, the marriage took place at the house of the bride·Äôs brother-in-law.
[16] Marsden MM records.
[17] The maiden name of Roger Hartley·Äôs wife Alice is proven by the will of Jane ·ÄúVipan·Äù of Beardshaw, proved in 1673, which named, among others, her son-in-law Roger Hartley and several grandchildren, including Jennet Hartley [Original will, Consistory Court, Bishop of Chester, on FHL film number 89614]. The name is usually spelled as ·ÄúVeepon·Äù in the records of the Marsden Monthly Meeting.
[18] Journal of the Friends Historical Society 14 (1917), 43.
[19] Henry ·ÄúMichel·Äù is listed as one of the passengers of the Britannia who died during or soon after the voyage in a letter from Nicholas Waln of Pennsylvania to William Ellis of Yorkshire. See Jane W. T. Brey, A Quaker Saga , 110-1, for a transcript of this letter, and for more about the voyage of the Britannia.
[20] Robert Brewer wrote his will on 2 Aug 1699 while aboard the Britannia. The will was proved in Philadelphia on 10 Oct 1699, and was abstracted in Publications of the Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania 3 (1906), 30.
[21] Grace Pearson, b. 31 3mo. [May] 1680 [Marsden MM records] was the daughter of Thomas Pearson and Grace (Veepon) Pearson, both of whom died at sea on the Britannia in 1699. The marriage certificate of Thomas Pearson and Grace Veepon [24 Apr [2mo.] 1679, Marsden MM records] was signed by three members of the Hartley family who were explicitly listed as ·Äúrelatives·Äù (including Jennet's older sister Ellen). Later, on 25 12mo. [Feb.] 1688/9, James Veepon Sr., brother of Grace (Veepon) Pearson, was listed as a relative on the marriage record of Roger Hartley of Oldham and Ellen Hartley [Marsden MM records]. Other than this brief record of his wife, which also indicates his arrival prior to that date, no record of John Baldwin in America has been found prior to his second marriage.
[22] Minutes of the Falls MM, Bucks co., PA [FHL film number 387861]. They declared their intention a second time on 4 12mo. [Feb.] 1707/8.
[23] Falls MM records, on FHL film number 20459. For a transcript of the marriage record, click here .
[24] Lancaster Quarterly Meeting records, on FHL film number 583995.
[25] New Garden MM, NC records.
[26] See Harry Hollingsworth, C.G., ·ÄúJohn Scott of the Hill in Yorkshire·Äù, TAG 54 (1978), 19-24, for a good account of the family and ancestry of Ann (Scott) Baldwin.
[27] Falls MM minutes, on FHL film number 387861.
[28] Minutes of the Buckingham Monthly Meeting of Friends, 1720-1734, transcribed by C. Arthur Smith (Bucks County Historical Society, no date), 37.
[29] The suggestion that John and Ann Baldwin followed their son·Äôs migration has been suggested mainly by the appearance of their deaths in the records of the New Garden Monthly Meeting in Guilford co., NC. However, it is clear from examination of the original record at Guilford College, in Greensboro, NC, that these deaths records were made many years later, at the same time that deaths for some of the other members of William Baldwin·Äôs family were being entered. Thus, these retrospective records cannot be regarded as evidence that John and Ann Baldwin ever lived in Virginia or North Carolina.
[30] Births recorded in the records of the Falls Monthly Meeting, in Bucks co., PA, available on FHL film number 20459.
[31] Minutes of the Wrightstown Monthly Meeting of Friends, volume I, 1734-1790, transcribed by C. Arthur Smith (Bucks County Historical Society, 1934), 20.
[32] Rowan co., NC Deed Book 5, pp. 24, 25, 189, 190, as abstracted in Mrs. Stahle Linn, Jr., Abstracts of the Deeds of Rowan county, North Carolina, 1753-1785 (Salisbury, NC, 1983). Another suggested identification for this John Baldwin appears in Frank C. Baldwin, The Baldwins From Virginia Westward (Oak Park, IL, 1985), 85, but no evidence was offered for the identification beyond having the correct name. Given that Phelis/Philis Baldwin appeared in at least one record together with William and Elizabeth Baldwin, the identification suggested here seems more likely.
[33] New Garden MM, NC records.
[34] Minutes of the Wrightstown Monthly Meeting of Friends, volume I, 1734-1790, transcribed by C. Arthur Smith (Bucks County Historical Society, 1934), 42. The destruction of the early Hopewell records makes his time in Virginia difficult to document.
[35] New Garden MM, NC records.
[36] New Garden MM, NC records.
[37] An unsourced birthdate of 1677 for William Baldwin is given in the article [no author listed] ·ÄúThe Travels of William Baldwin in America, 1709·Äù, The Journal of the Friends Historical Society 15 (1918), 27-30 (at p. 27). Except for a brief introduction, the article is a transcript of William Baldwin·Äôs report on his recent travels to the London Yearly Meeting, from the minutes of that meeting.
[38] Unless otherwise stated, information about William Baldwin given here comes from a biographical sketch of him which appeared in The Friend , 28 (1855), 348. For a complete transcript of that sketch, click here .
[39] Records of the Lancaster Monthly Meeting, on FHL film number 584004. For a complete transcript of the marriage record, click here .
[40] Certificate of removal, from the records of the Falls MM, on FHL film number 20710. For a complete transcript of the certificate, click here .
[41] Falls MM minutes, on FHL film number 387861.
[42] The biography in The Friend says the 29th, and the records of the Falls MM say the 30th.
[43] Bucks co., PA Will Book 1, p. 57, on FHL film number 172899. For a complete transcript of the will, click here .
[44] Falls MM records, on FHL film number 20459.
[45] a transcript of the short biographical sketch of him which appeared in The Friend in 1857.

Links to transcripts of Supporting Documents
Marriage record of John ·ÄúBaldwen·Äù and Jennet Hartley, 1697
Certification of John ·ÄúBaldwen·Äù to have religious meetings in his home, 1700
Marriage record of John ·ÄúBoldwin·Äù and Ann Scott, 1708
Marriage record of William Baldwin and Mary Beakbaine, 1710
Marriage record of Elizabeth ·ÄúBaldwen·Äù and James Topper, 1712
Removal certificate of William ·ÄúBalwin·Äù, 1714
Will of William ·ÄúBaldwen·Äù, 1720
Wills of Anthony and Margaret ·ÄúBaldwen·Äù, 1725
Biographical sketches of William and John Baldwin in The Friend

==

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Vorfahren (und Nachkommen) von John Baldwin

Roger John Hartley
± 1628-± 1727
Alice Hartley (Vipont)
± 1633-± 1701
John I Baldwin
± 1630-± 1719

John Baldwin
1665-1757

1707
Jane Baldwin
1712-1750
Sarah Baldwin
1713-1750
John Baldwin
1715-1794

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Quellen

  1. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=c9d765a0-47b6-4149-aed0-cf4320db1293&tid=108978476&pid=615
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    Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988

Historische Ereignisse

  •  Diese Seite ist nur auf Niederländisch verfügbar.
    Van 1650 tot 1672 kende Nederland (ookwel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden) zijn Eerste Stadhouderloze Tijdperk.
  • Im Jahr 1665: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • 15. Februar » Am Théâtre du Palais Royal in Paris erfolgt die Uraufführung der Komödie Don Juan ou le Festin de pierre von Molière.
    • 4. März » Der englische König KarlII. erklärt der Republik der Sieben Vereinigten Provinzen den Krieg, der als Zweiter Englisch-Niederländischer Seekrieg in die Annalen eingeht.
    • 12. April » Margaret Porteous ist der erste registrierte Pest-Todesfall der Großen Pest von London, die bis zum Großen Brand 1666 in London und Umgebung wüten und rund 100.000 Todesopfer fordern wird.
    • 26. August » Der Leipziger Amateurastronom Johann Abraham Ihle beobachtet als Erster durch sein Fernrohr einen Kugelsternhaufen, den im Sternbild Schütze gelegenen M22.
    • 7. November » Die London Gazette, die älteste noch bestehende englische Tageszeitung und offizielles Verlautbarungsorgan des Vereinigten Königreichs, erscheint.
    • 14. November » In Dänemark unterzeichnet König Friedrich III. das „Königsgesetz“, wonach der Reichsrat abgeschafft wird. Der König muss lutherischer Konfession sein und darf das Reich nicht teilen, schuldet jedoch nur Gott Rechenschaft. Die Erbfolge kann aus der männlichen oder der weiblichen Linie erfolgen.
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    Van 1702 tot 1747 kende Nederland (ookwel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden) zijn Tweede Stadhouderloze Tijdperk.
  • Im Jahr 1707: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • 16. Februar » Das schottische Parlament billigt mit 110:69 Stimmen den Act of Union, die Vereinigung mit England. Eine Reihe von Abgeordneten hat sich zuvor bestechen lassen oder erhofft sich mit dem „Ja“ Entschädigungen für das fehlgeschlagene Darién-Projekt.
    • 13. März » Die militärische Stärke der Truppen Prinz Eugens von Savoyen führt im Spanischen Erbfolgekrieg nach der Schlacht bei Turin zur Generalkapitulation Frankreichs. König LudwigXIV. verzichtet auf alle Besitzansprüche in Italien mit Ausnahme Neapels.
    • 22. August » Schwedens König Karl XII. bricht im Großen Nordischen Krieg zu einem Feldzug gegen Russland auf. Die russische Armee weicht jedoch zunächst geschickt einer Entscheidungsschlacht aus.
    • 27. September » Der französische, in Marburg lehrende Physikprofessor Denis Papin befährt mit einem durch Wasserdampf angetriebenen Ruderradschiff die Fulda zwischen Kassel und Hann. Münden.
    • 22. Oktober » Bei der Strandung von vier Schiffen eines Geschwaders der Royal Navy unter Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell auf den Scilly-Inseln wegen Navigationsfehlern kommen über 1600 Menschen ums Leben, nur 26 überleben.
    • 16. Dezember » Der Vulkan Fuji, Japans höchster Berg, beginnt seine letzte Eruption. Der Ausbruch von etwa zweiwöchiger Dauer lässt einen zweiten Vulkankrater auf halber Höhe des Berges entstehen.
  • Die Temperatur am 19. Januar 1757 war um die 3,0 °C. Es gab 22 mm NiederschlagDer Wind kam überwiegend aus Westen. Charakterisierung des Wetters: regen helder. Quelle: KNMI
  • Erfstadhouder Prins Willem V (Willem Batavus) (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) war von 1751 bis 1795 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden genannt)
  • Regentes Anna (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) war von 1751 bis 1759 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden genannt)
  • Im Jahr 1757: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • 5. Januar » Robert François Damiens begeht mit einem Messer ein Attentat auf Frankreichs König Ludwig XV., der dabei leicht verletzt wird. Der Attentäter wird festgenommen und einige Wochen später, am 28. März, hingerichtet.
    • 17. Januar » Nach Eröffnung des Dritten Schlesischen Kriegs durch Friedrich den Großen beschließt der Reichstag in Regensburg die Reichsexekution gegen Preußen. Österreich versucht Frankreich als Unterstützer eines Offensivkriegs zu gewinnen, was im späteren Vertrag von Versailles gelingt.
    • 23. Juni » In der Schlacht bei Plassey besiegt eine Söldnertruppe der Britischen Ostindien-Kompanie unter Führung von Robert Clive die Truppe von Siraj-ud-Daula, dem letzten unabhängigen Nawab von Bengalen. Die Schlacht wird als der Beginn der britischen Herrschaft in Indien betrachtet.
    • 26. Juli » Im Siebenjährigen Krieg besiegen französische Truppen unter Louis-Charles-César Le Tellier, duc d’Estrées Truppen des mit Großbritannien in Personalunion verbundenen Kurfürstentums Braunschweig-Lüneburg unter dem Befehl von William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland in der Schlacht bei Hastenbeck.
    • 16. Oktober » Mit dem sogenannten Berliner Husarenstreich wird die preußische Hauptstadt im Siebenjährigen Krieg durch den österreichischen Husaren Andreas Hadik von Futak für einen Tag erobert.
    • 22. November » Die Schlacht von Breslau im Siebenjährigen Krieg gewinnt das österreichische Heer mit Prinz Karl Alexander von Lothringen an der Spitze. Drei Tage später kapitulieren die preußischen Einheiten unter Herzog August Wilhelm von Braunschweig-Bevern, bei denen viele zum Militärdienst gepresste Soldaten flüchten.


Gleicher Geburts-/Todestag

Quelle: Wikipedia

Quelle: Wikipedia


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