Let op: Leeftijd bij trouwen (23 juni 1805) lag beneden de 16 jaar (14).
(1) Hij is getrouwd met Hannah Varnum.
Zij zijn getrouwd op 23 juni 1805 te Dracut, Middlesex, Massachusetts, USA, hij was toen 14 jaar oud.Bron 1
Kind(eren):
(2) Hij is getrouwd met Eunice Mansur.
Zij zijn getrouwd op 7 oktober 1817 te Dracut, Middlesex, Massachusetts, USA, hij was toen 27 jaar oud.Bron 1
(3) Hij is getrouwd met Nancy R ClantoN.
"Married, on the 7th inst. at the same place [Hazle Green] and by thesame [N.H.Hemiup, Esq], E.H.Colburn to Mrs. Nancy Deck, both of Galena." Galena Daily Advertiser, 11 Sep 1851
Zij zijn getrouwd op 7 september 1851 te Hazel Green, Grant, Wisconsin, USA, hij was toen 60 jaar oud.Bron 4
Het echtpaar is gescheiden 1856 te record 397638.
Parents Saul Coburn b. 1765 Dracut, Mass; Hannah Jones b. 1770 Dracut;kids Thomas 1899, John, 1815 Whiting M, 1849, Asa C 1795, Isaac Warwich 1910, Hamilton 1826.
9 jul 1866 Lowell Daily Citizen & News: E.H.F.Coburn and A.Craig. owned land together in Townsend, Massachusetts.
Inventory of Property destroyed by the Rogue River Indians under the Superintendence of Apt Benjamin Wright Special Govt Agent, Feby 23d 24th & 25th 1856 and amended by Mrsrs Isaac Warwich & Ephraim W. Coburn. [Three pages] $9362.92 total, dated 11 March 1856. At the Mouth of the Rogue River Gold Beach, Country of Coose and Territory of Oregon, Signed.
In the 1850 census, in Plover Twp., Portage County, Wisconsin, (but not in 1860) Ephraim Coburn, age 32, a lumberman born in Canada, was enumerated with wife Raina, 33, born Vermont, and a child, M. L., 1. I think this man may have become Nancys husband. The Ephraim of the Coburn genealogy (Maj. Ephraim Coburn) is written to have died in 1851 in a number of places, so he would not have been around to sign an Indian depredation claim in Oroville in 1856. Ephraim W. Coburn filed cash entries for four sections of public land in Jefferson County, Wisconsin in 1844, 1849 and 1850, all in twp. 5-N, range 15-E (Wisconsin Land Records database at Ancestry). In the final application, he was of Walworth County, not Jefferson. There were no land patents issued to Ephraim or E. Coburn in either Oregon or California, USA. In the 1860 census, a search for any Coburn born in Canada, Maine or Vermont about 1818 turned up no likely Ephraims nor could I find Nancy.
Ephraim W. Coburn bought land in Jefferson Co and Walworth Co, Wisconsin Oct 1844, Aug 1849 (40 acres), Jan 1850, Apr 1850
One of those killed in the Indian uprising on February 22, 1856 was a man named Asa C. Colburn. (Coburn with an L.) (Reference: Requiem For A People, The Rogue Indians and the Frontiersmen, page 119, by Dr. Stephen Dow Beckham 1971.) On February 22, 1856, the settlers and miners were attending a George Washington Birthday Ball in what was then Ellensburg. (Named for the daughter of sea Captain William Tichenor, founder of Port Orford, 27 miles north of Gold Beach
The inventory also notes that the inventory was amended by Warwich and Colburn in March 1856 at the mouth of the Rogue River, Gold Beach, County of Coose, Territory of Oregon. The official name Gold Beach was not applied to this town until 1895, but was often referred to as Gold Beach because of the gold in the black sands on the beach. Curry County was formed from Coos County in 1855. (Coose changed to Coos).
when the discovery of gold and the opening of Indian territory to white settlement brought a surge of miners and settlers, igniting years of bloody conflicts that culminated in 1856 with their forced removal onto reservations at Grand Ronde and Siletz, a removal that included Oregon's own uTrail of Tears.u The final Rogue River War began early on the morning of October 8, 1855, when self-styled volunteers attacked Native people in the Rogue Valley. It ended in June 1856 with the removal of most of the Natives in southwestern Oregon to the Coast Reservation, which later became the Siletz Reservation. From 235 to 267 Indian people are thought to have been killed in the war, together with fifty soldiers, among them thirty-three volunteers and seventeen regular troops. By one account, Indians killed forty-four white civilians.Before colonization, an estimated ninety-five hundred Indian people lived in the region where the Rogue River War was fought, including speakers of Takelman and Shastan languages to the east, in the main Rogue Valley of present-day Josephine and Jackson Counties, and speakers of Athapascan languages to the west and along the coast. Fewer than two thousand Indian survivors of the war were counted on the reservation in 1857. Volunteer companies organized in the summer of 1853 after a series of violent exchanges. Two battalions commanded by Joseph Lane, territorial delegate to Congress, pursued Native people into rough country north of the Table Rocks. After volunteers made an assault, Indian leaders asked for negotiations; and Lane and Indian Service superintendent Joel Palmer made treaties on September 8 ("a treaty of peace") and September 10 (for "cession and relinquishment" of land). Native leaders sold roughly two thousand square miles to the Americans and accepted a reservation of about one hundred square miles north of the Rogue River.
an anti-Indian meeting in Jacksonville on October 7. Most of those present expressed approval of a plan put forward by a newly elected Democratic territorial representative, James A. Lupton, to exterminate Native people living off the reservation. Early the next morning, seven parties of about 115 men set out to attack Indian camps. In those attacks, Lupton and another white man were mortally wounded, and ten more were injured in the initial assault, by one report; forty Indians were killed in the first attack. One witness said half the dead were women and children.
Followers of the principal chief on the Table Rock Reservation, Toquahear (which means wealthy), known as Sam by whites, declined to fight. He and his followers were removed under military escort to the Grand Ronde Reservation in the northwest Willamette Valley in February 1856. Immediately after the October 1855 Lupton massacre, many other Native people fled westward down the Rogue River, killing at least eighteen white people in their path. About fifty miles downriver, at the mouth of Galice Creek, they attacked a fortified mining camp that was blocking their way, burning down most of the minersu shacks and killing four men.
On February 22, 1856, a Native force, perhaps of people involved in fighting upriver, overwhelmed a volunteer camp near the mouth of the Rogue River. The town of Ellensburg (present-day Gold Beach) and all of the dwellings between the Rogue River and Port Orford were burned, and survivors fled to an improvised fort north of the river. In March, however, regular troops moving north from Crescent City, California, USA, encountered little resistance. On October 7, 1855, at least four volunteer militias attacked and massacred over a hundred Indians in an attempt to exterminate all Indians on the Table Rock Reservation.
Town of Dracutt Baptist 1816 Isaac Goburn Town Clerk, Daniel Varnum Ewq, Mr Benjamin Coburn, Saul Cobirn, Ephraim Coburn, Jr., Major Ephraim Coburn, Siimon Coburn, Reuben Coburn, Phineas Coburn, Abraham Coburn, etc.
1810 census in Dracutt; Coburn, Ephm, Tim, Willard, Samul, Moses B, Herzcick, Jabey, Jabey Jr, Moses, Phineas, Gideon. Ephraim, 1 male 26-44, 2 female under 10, 2 females 26-44, 2 members under 16, 3 members over 25, 5 total in household.
1830 census Dracut, total 9 all free white.
1840 8 person total, 1 free colored person,
Will of Ephraim Coburn Dracut 1810; and another ditto in 1851.
Passinger on Columbus from Panama, E.W.Coburn; Mrs Coburn Dec 1851 Daily Alta California, USA.
Lewis F Coburn has land bought 1888 in Del Norte Co 2 miles S of N Calif border 41.9537057044249,-124.09119242145
Ephraim Whiting Wadley Coburn | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(1) 1805 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hannah Varnum | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(2) 1817 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Eunice Mansur | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(3) 1851 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Nancy R ClantoN |
Online publication - Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records,1620-1988 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.Original data - Town and City Clerks of Massachusetts. Massachusetts Vital and Town Records. Provo, UT: Holbrook Research Institute (Jay and Delene Holbrook).
Village Register
Galena Public Library-Historical Collections Room, 601 S. Bench Street,Galena, Illinois-Steve Repp; (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX); 27 December 2008