Showing posts with label Asenath. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asenath. Show all posts

Friday, March 28, 2014

When the Quiver is Full: A Note on the John Townsend Family of the Black River Region in Jefferson County from Bucks, PA

 Joseph Martinedale, History of Byberry and Mooreland Townships has long been considered authoritative on the genealogies of families from the Bucks County region. From time to time it has inconsistencies, and omissions. As we noted previously, the section on the maiden name of  the wife of John Townsend of Philadelphia Village, who I have called "Old Quaker John" is given as Strickland in the Townsend section but Carver in the Carver section. She is a Carver, there can be no doubt. Her name, Asenath Carver can be found among the women descendants in the family.  Neither family provide a complete listing of the children of John Townsend (p. 350, Evan 8, John 17 below) and Asenath Carver Townsend ( p. 267, John Carver 10, Ascenath 23). Other omissions have included Rachael Townsend Strickland's children. While they were born in Burlington, NJ, other children born out of the Byberry and Mooreland Township are included, and it seems a bit of a snub to exclude them.

Nevertheless, my focus here is to tidy up the Townsend men in Jefferson County to find my own people. In the process, that means sorting through them and assigning them their group. In the process of doing so, I am leaving this record in case it is ever useful to anyone. There are several of us out there with unknown progenitors in Jefferson County, so having part of the work done may be helpful to a future researcher.

For clarity,  I have underlined the couple I am referencing below.

 

If you don't understand how this group relates to Oneida, Jefferson, Lewis, and St. Lawrence Counties, I refer you to the first blog.


Based on Court Documents that recently came to my attention through Pete Townsend, I now realize that I may have understated the size of the household of John and Asenath Townsend. I had  assumed that Asenath's  "quiver was full" as is often stated when a woman is done bearing children and thought the "extra male" was at the top of the family. However, it seems that the extra male is at the bottom.

It seems that Asenath's quiver held more arrows than was previously believed. In my earlier posting, Parsing John Townsend's Sons, I had stopped in 1820 for two reasons: 1) my progenitor James was born 1816, so children born after 1820 were  not of interest and 2) the Byberry and Mooreland narrative stops with Evan.

Well,  it would appear that John and Asenath didn't consult with Byberry and Mooreland continued with Genesis 1:28.


Find a grave website http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=pv&GRid=83793059&PIpi=62018969
There is a minor chance that this son could really be their  son of Ezra, who died in 1835 at the age of 26 (below). I had rather hoped he would have been a brother or cousin to my ancestor, but it turns out not to be the case. Documents presented in court in the case of Burton Townsend's estate clearly state from the words of Old Quaker John that Burton is his son, not his grandson.

nnygenealogy.com



When a Quaker goes to court on a matter, it is a rare event and he says that Burton Townsend is his son. Burton was a school teacher, who was teaching the classical subjects. His teaching was controversial because he was teaching Greek, Latin, and Architecture along with other subjects. He died at the age of 30 under some mysterious circumstances. Now, he had no children, so he hasn't received a lot of attention in the genealogy community, but he should, because it opens up a possibility that had not been previously explored. That possibility is that John Townsend and Asenath had more children, and a lack of completeness of the Byberry and Mooreland records once families leave Pennsylvania is at issue.

Carefully note is that Burton dies at age 30 in 1853. That places his birth at 1823. In the 1820 Census, Asenath reports that she is still under 45, which means that it is not all that unlikely that she had more children. Mahlon Carver was the informant on the Byberry and Mooreland records, and I suppose it is possible he could have fallen out of touch with the family at this point.

We also know there is a variance with the Calendar used by the Quaker families and by the government. The Quaker calendar, as I recall is a numbering system that begins with March. So, suppose the Census takers come in January and a family has a baby in February. February would be recorded for the previous year. So, while the Census taker arrives in 1820, it is still 1819 on the Quaker Calendar. 1820 begins in March.

However, there is a biological possibility that Ezra is Burton's father, but I regard it as unlikely. If the age for Ezra is correct on the headstone, Ezra's birth year would be 1809, the same year I deduced in the Parsing John piece. That would have made Ezra 14 at the time of fatherhood. Now, I suppose it could happen in theory, but I find it doubtful. Even so, John Townsend would have raised him as his own anyway because Ezra dies in 1835. The point here is that Burton is squarely of the John and Asenath line, and not of the Abraham and Alce line or the other Townsend lines (Martin or the  Horace group) in the area.

It is rather disappointing in some respects. Some of us had hoped he was a grandchild of Abraham and Alce, who donated the land to build a school in Jefferson County. The notion that one of their children would carry it forward was a big romantic and rather tantalizing. Sadly, it is not the truth in this case.  His age at the time of his death, and his year of birth would make him the child of a dead couple. Thus, it doesn't seem likely he could be the child of Abraham and Alce. The impression some of us had was that he was a slightly older gent.

In the probate of Burton Townsend's estate, John Townsend "of full age" steps forward to be the administer of the estate. I have underlined in red the section of interest. I don't know why Harriet doesn't just give Old John back the gold watch and the books, but apparently, this becomes a contested estate. It isn't the finest hour in this community and by the end of the probate, Harriet has a new last name.




The estate is rather fascinating. Beyond the gold watch and the 3 pairs of woolen underwear, the library of books looks like my own shelves. It was actually kind of strange for me to read, because I have modern versions of these same books on my shelves. I have Wheelock and Cannon for Latin Grammar and Machen for Greek Grammar, and I can go down the list. However, the list of books in the estate file (link above) provides an insight into the sort of education that Burton had, and the sort of education he was providing.


Whoever has been teaching the families, they had a classical education.

Now, Burton dies without issue, so no direct genealogy hangs on the inclusion or omission of Burton. There are no descendants to stand forward and complain. However, to have the history correct, he should be included in the family genealogy. He was dearly loved by his father and mother, and that alone should be basis enough for his inclusion. Further his contributions to pedagogy and the institutional development of the educational system of the region is noteworthy, so it is historically important.

For my own genealogy, it isn't relevant. Burton is younger than my progenitor by roughly 5 years, but provides an important clue for my ancestor's background and provides an insight on the sort of training he would have had in if he grew up in the Philadelphia settlement.

 Revisiting that 1830 Census record of Old Quaker John now provides an insight. There is one male 15-19 and that must be Burton? That still does not seem right.  The two males between 20 and 29 are Ezra and Evan. There is one male between 40 and 49, and that is the father, Quaker John.   There is 1 female between 5-9, that is Abi from the 1855 Census record (John is living with her). Odd, Burton is younger than her yet she is coded correctly and he is not?  She is born 1821, so that must be her. There is one female 15-19, that is Martha, one female 40-49 and that is the Mother, Asenath Carver Townsend. 












Now, there are differences in the Quaker Calendar and the traditional Calendar being used, so that might still account for some problems in parsing children. I think that was the problem with parsing Robert, the eldest. I have decided for now to assign him that slot that we thought was a "mystery person;" since we now have Ezra's birth year we can be more confident that Robert is the male in that slot. However, there still seems to be something peculiar about Burton's birth year. He is noted in the census as older than Abi, yet we know Abi's age from the Census. Strange. Perhaps the Census taker made an error, or perhaps there is more to Burton that we know. That being said, the people in this family seem accounted for at the moment.

I am still not quite satisfied with the alignment of dates. There still seems to be something a bit out of kilter.
























John Sr. Townsend (b. 1779) and Asenath Carver Townsend
   Of Bucks County, PA moved to the Black River regions with the Friends Settlement in 1806. 
   The purchase was originally part of Oneida County but later became Jefferson County. 
    He arrived with brother Thomas Townsend (married Elizabeth Strickland in 1800). 
    Sister Rachel Townsend Strickland, wife of Robert Strickland Jr arrived the following year
    from Burlington, N.J. The prior generation of the family had been hard hit by the pox 
    epidemic in 1769. Naming patterns appear to fit the relatives lost rather than the traditional
    naming conventions found among Quaker families particularly in the Thomas line.  By 1820,
    the Thomas line gravitates toward Lowville, Lewis County, NY, the John line in Philadelphia 
    Village, Jefferson County, NY.
Mary born between b. 1801, died March 11, 1889 married in 1825 Alfred Coolidge
           Family originally settled in the Philadelphia region.
           In 1853 the family located at 38 Clinton street, 
 Watertown, NY.  
           They had five sons and one daughter, Asenith Carver Coolidge. 
Robert  b. 1805, Bucks County  m Hannah [per census]
          (Ezra, Eliza Ann, and Abi and likely others) [per census] 
          Lives next door to his father during several census periods. 

 John, Jr born 1807 Jeff Co, NY marries Huldah. Family moves to Fowler in St. Lawrence County, NY
            then goes to Farmington, WI [per Haddock and Census]
           (Ezra [marries Katie from the Isle of Wight, daughter Minnie], Lydia, Laura, and likely others)

 Martha born 1812 dies 1890 marries Nathan Coolidge, settles in Antwerp, Jefferson County, NY
          (Clinton, Cassius, Abi, Ella, J. Emmet, and likely others)

 Ezra born 1809-10 dies 1835 descendants unknown, presumed none. 


 Evan born 1815 moves to Waupaca, County, WI [per census],  buys land and starts 
          the Evanwoods Settlement with Evan Coolidge (Two Evans, get it?). Land records 
          signed by President Andrew Jackson at the National Archive, some on this 
          blogDescendants unknown but they are not in Jefferson County. 

 Abi b 1818-1820  m. George Williams
           (Elizabeth, Mary, other sons and daughters?) [Per census]

            Lives in the region through the relevant period of inquiry.
            After John Sr passes, the family moves to Waupaca, WI. 

Burton b 1823 dies 1853 married Harriet. School teacher, founded the first academy in the area.
           Dies at age 30 of unknown natural causes; contested estate,  no children.



_____________________________________

As a last minute addition, I want to include a write up of a descendant of John Jr. It may be those reading this blog from that family might enjoy. It seems that John Jr. had one son, Ezra. Ezra grew up to have a good size family of his own. This write up was put together for the town's anniversary. A branch of the family also went to Minnesota.








From what I can tell on the above, the history of the family in the piece probably came from Haddock. He did not know that Burton was John's son, or was not certain because it is not in the Byberry records. However, anyone who reads that probate file quickly realizes that he really is John Townsend's son and was known as such at the time. 

I am happy to include any additional information that anyone would want to include on the family. We might as well update Byberry and Haddock as long as we are sorting through the main Townsend lines. 


_______________
While it may seem obsessive to button down the family group, it is important in searching for our own progenitor. Recall he first appears in 1840 and 1850 with a sister in the Philadelphia settlement, wife, and a couple of children. They are the first family in the 1850 Census. With YDNA results not matching the Martin Townsend group (Josiah, Johnathan, Timothy, Lyman, etc) and a tie to the Quaker group with a similar YDNA profile seemed logical. While I understand that Townsend men are quite prodigious, there still needs to be some degree of geographic proximity for issue to occur.  The only prospect seems to be to buckle down on Abraham and Alce as grandparent progenitors, and work down to see what can be determined, or expand the ring of origin. We know that at least one descendant of that line is a partial YDNA match and they have recently connected to the Abraham/Absolum Alce family.

While I appreciate the multiple suggestions that Old James married to Fanny Ensign is a likely father, he doesn't have son born between 1810 and 1820. It would seem that the first condition of a potential progenitor is that he has a son born in the relevant time frame.

For our line, it seems that building churches, roads, and bridges and a predilection for classical knowledge came from the Philadelphia Settlement.  I can't imagine why James is there if he isn't born there, but he is there and so we begin again.



Thursday, March 20, 2014

Johns Townsend: Elizabeths, Asenath Confusion: The Byberry & Mooreland Record Correction

I've tried to clarify something in my past three blog posts, but apparently I wasn't very clear from the messages I have received. What I am going to do here is attempt to clarify what I believe to be a minor error in the Byberry and Mooreland Records and help a few folks make the jump to the established genealogies that are otherwise correct.

The problem comes in "Parsing Johns," something for which I have the utmost sympathy.

To understand this posting, you will need two resources at your fingertips. If you don't, it won't make much sense. One is the Joseph Martinedale's History of Byberry and Mooreland Townships. (I use the PDF version). The other resource you will need is the Townsend Genealogy: A record of the Descendants of John Townsend, 1743-1821,  and of his wife Jemima Travis, 1746-1832 (1909).


There are several John Townsends who are contemporaneous and many were prodigious. Two who are often most often confused is John Townsend in Jefferson County and John Townsend in Orleans. Now, they shouldn't be confused, their geography is different. Jefferson County is practically Canada; the Finger-lakes are dead center in the state of New York.  But in a modern age of research by search engine, it is easy for the confusion to occur. People get thrown off the trail and give up forever stuck in 1850.

Byberry and Mooreland Records

The Byberry and Mooreland records of the Townsend family have an error in the surname of a wife of John (17). The wife of John in the Townsend section of the genealogy is Asenath Strickland. For absolute clarity, the family to which I refer are the children of Evan and Abi James. In the Byberry & Moorland records that is page 350, Evan (8), John (17). But the Carver family, in the same book, has it correct. I've put the pages side by side below, so people can see what I am referencing. 
Notice the Carver genealogy (on the left) has the spouse correct, but the birth order of the children wrong, which I regard as a small matter. One child was born in Byberry, Robert, the rest in Jefferson County and that is really outside the scope of the Byberry records. But notice what happens in the Townsend Records. John's wife is listed as Strickland, and Thomas marries Elizabeth Strickland.






















Just to make it more interesting, some genealogies have decided that John is married to Elizabeth. This makes things quite confusing.

The correct spousal record from Jefferson County and from the Carvers is that John Townsend in Jefferson County is married to Asenath Carver. Thomas Townsend is married to Elizabeth Strickland. Rachel Strickland marries John Strickland Jr (in Burlington, NJ). Evan marries a Carver.

Thus, two Townsends marry two Carvers; two Townsends marry to Stricklands. They are the survivors the 1769 pox epidemic.


One last mention on the Townsend record in Byberry is that Rachael Townsend is missing. On page 349 of the Byberry Records Evan and Abi's daughter Racheal is mentioned. Now she should not be confused with her Aunt Racheal who died in the pox epidemic of 1769. This is a Rachel who is a sister of Thomas, John, Elizabeth, and Evan. She marries a John Strickland Jr. in Burlington, NJ and moves to the Black River Region with Thomas and John Townsend. She had 11 children when she arrived there, and perhaps more once she was there. All those children have Townsend blood.  It is a fair omission because the Byberry and Mooreland records are geographic records, not family records as such, but there are Strickland and Townsend researchers who have not caught that tiny detail.

Back to the marriage record error on John Townsend (17) son of Evan and Abi. Now, it is clear in the Jefferson County records that Elizabeth is a Carver. The Townsend page DOES have the birth order of the children correct, whereas the Carvers do not.

You would be surprised at how many genealogies have John Townsend married to Elizabeth Strickland based on the Byberry and Mooreland records.

This is where the confusion begins.

Dutchess County Townsend Group

That error in Byberry and Mooreland is causing a lot of people grief because they look at the Townsend section of Byberry and Mooreland and not the Carver section (understandably). Of course, who would go to the Carver section when one is researching Townsend unless one has a clue to lead one there.

Then consulting the Strickland genealogy they find out Elizabeth married a Townsend without checking the first name.

Then people go in the census and the search engines an look for a John and Elizabeth and end up in the Fingerlakes region with the Dutchess County group. Then they consult the Townsend genealogy and end up with a dead end.


 The John and Elizabeth down in the Finger Lakes region (contemporaneous with John Townsend and Asenath Carver in Jefferson County) are with the Dutchess County group. That is a John Townsend (545, p 85) and Elizabeth Cowen in the Townsend Genealogy.  Now, Thomas and Elizabeth in Lowville (#15 p. 350 son of Evan (8) and Abi James) and John and Elizabeth in the Fingerlakes region BOTH have sons named Jesse, and daughters Mary or Ann. Because half of the counties involved did not exist at the time of their respective unions, there are few records to consult to clarify the matter for the confused descendant
It can lead to a lot of confusion for someone trying to research the family. 

The matter can be set straight by someone noting the correction and the clear and obvious differences in geography and careful attention to the first names of the spouses. 

It certainly has caused the Dutchess County people grief, because some of them do end up in Jefferson County of a different branch of the family. It has also caused some grief for some of the Byberry people. 

I imagine the rest of the planet knows of this error, and I am the only one unaware. However, I suspect there are others equally ignorant, and thus the topic of this blog.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Parsing the Sons of John Townsend



Quaker naming conventions may be something of a by-gone era, but to sort through the period of the American Revolution, it is a very helpful tool. One must keep in mind that the two gentleman of interest that essentially started the Friends Settlement are John Townsend and Thomas Townsend. There is also a Rachel Strickland who is their sister, Rachel Townsend by birth. They have children they brought with them from Bucks County and they have children born in the settlement.

Our goal is to discern the sons of these two Townsend men and figure out where their kids went so they can be ruled out as a progenitor or accepted as a progenitor to my own line. The first census where they household members are delineated for my family is the Philadelphia Village, the "capital" of sorts for the Friends Settlement. Maybe my guy is connected and maybe he is not.  For those who have a copy of the G.W. Jacobs, History of Townships of Byberry and Mooreland in PDF format, this is the John Townsend who appears on page 351, mentioned as John #17.

For my own line, the family appears as the first family in the Philadelphia settlement in the 1850 census record. James  Townsend, born about 1817 m Phebe with children.  I don't know why they are there, but they are. My cousins seem to believe the family is from the area. I have no idea if they are or not, but to find out means getting into the weeds of the Townsend men in the region.

Thus into the weeds of Jefferson-Lewis-County Townsend men we go.  Lewis County was formed from Jefferson County and Oneida Counties. So, many of our early Jefferson County people were "lost" because this writer didn't know this little tidbit. LeRay Jefferson County of 1810 was a much larger nebulous place that previously believed, and when the county of Lewis was formed, it split the brothers.


 I thought I would look at the distance between Lowville and Philadelphia to get a sense of the distances involved and the basic geography. As it turns out, it is less than a one hour drive from Lowville to Philadelphia Village, and by 1800s standards, it might have been a 3 hour horseback ride and certainly for a tall man a one day's hike, and maybe a two day hike for a Lilliputian like myself.

Now with two Townsend brothers in such close proximity with large families, the number of children will proliferate rather quickly. The problem is that we lack knowledge of the names of the children that arrived with the family in the 1810 census. We don't know if any children stayed behind in Bucks County PA or Burlington, NJ but it seems unlikely.  Here is what we do know:

1) We know that some children arrived with Thomas and John and they are in the 1810 census. We know their ages and genders. A few are identified by either later census records or from Haddock.

2)We know that John Strickland and his wife Rachel Townsend Strickland arrived with 11 children and that they had a much larger family. We know this because John Strickland bought one of the Townsend homes and based on  Haddock's book we know that Strickland had to add onto the home because he had a substantially larger family. So, we know that Thomas and John did not have families as large as the Strickland family. Thus we have an upward limit on family size as less than 11 children.


3) We know the names of the parents from the records in Bucks PA and Burlington, NJ. We have genealogies in the History of Byberry and Mooreland, and genealogy tidbits in Haddock gleaned in a prior blog post. 

4) The other tidbit with Thomas and Elizabeth is we know they were married in the 4th month of 1800 in on the Quaker Calendar in Middletown, PA.This means AT MOST they had 3 children before they arrived in 1805. We don't have a marriage date for John and Asenath.



The tidbit known about John and Asenath is from the Carver Family section maintained by Mahon Carver in Byberry Township and contributed in 1867 to the History of the Township on page 267 (above number 23) is what we have. No year is given for their marriage and John Jr is given as the oldest. Now, we know this cannot be correct because the date of John's birth is quite well known and he was the first born in the county and from Haddock that was 1807. They arrived with children, that is clear from the 1810 Census, and yet Robert's age in the subsequent census shows he is one of the 2 boys under 10 in the 1810 Census.

Here is what we left the John family at the last time:

 John b 1779 Bucks County, PA
     married Asenath Carver of Bucks County PA in Bucks County
      Robert  b. 1805, Bucks County  m Hannah [per census]
     (Ezra, Eliza Ann, and Abi and others) [per census]
      Abi b 1818-1820  m. George Williams
      (Elizabeth, Mary, other sons and daughters?) [Per census]
      John, Jr marries and goes to Farmington, WI [per Haddock and Census]
     Two boys born between 1800-1810
     One girl born between 1800-1803
     One girl born between 1804-1820
     Other children?

In parsing out the children, it because apparent that there may be an extra male. Using an old fashioned method of lining up the Census we can assign them slots based on known information.  For our purposes, we are seeking a male born between 1816 and 1819, so any unaccounted for male children with a surname of Townsend that lived to adulthood in the Village of Philadelphia would be of clear interest.  

It is possible that this is the case. If you read the previous blog on Lewis Townsend and the notation on Ezra you will see why I bothered checking on Erza. According to the records on the New York Jefferson County Website, Ezra died in 1835. The proximity of his burial suggests that he is their child. We know Ezra died, and we know he was born before we could observe him in the census.

The only information we have on Ezra is that he died in 1835 and he is buried in Philadelphia. We need to find his birth year to parse him out and decide if there is an extra Townsend male. If he ends up being one of the 2 males in the 1820 census, then we can exclude John as a progenitor for our line, but it still means that the family records for the couple need revision, because there would be an extra male child.

In the chart below, the green information comes from the Bucks County Records. the blue information comes from Haddock and the Census. If Ezra is the older child, then there is a chance that one of the lost lines could come from this family. If Ezra is the younger child, then there is still the mystery of the extra male. 

























That is why the year of birth of  John and Asenath's son Ezra is of such intense interest.

Now, maybe Ezra is the younger son with Evan in the 1820 Census, and maybe Ezra is the older son in the 1810 census, but he cannot be both. Maybe it is some unrelated male with John Townsend in the 1810 census, like a brother? Yet we know know that only on brother is mentioned by Haddock that came up to the region, and he has his own household listed. A sister, Rachael Townsend Strickland, wife of John Strickland Jr arrived a year after everyone else. If there was another brother who arrived, surely he would be mentioned by Haddock? He gives a very complete list of those present.

 What we do know is that Ezra dies in 1835, so the 1830 census should shed some light.










There is one male 15-19, two male between 20 and 29, one male between 40 and 49
There is 1 female between 5-9, one female 15-19, one female 40-49.

Robert is his own household.  John Jr. would be 23 years old and could be one of the two males between 20 and 29. Evan was born between 1810 and 1820.  Even if we find him in the 1840 Census, we still won't know his age. He has to be found in the 1850 Census.

Now, there is an E. Townsend in the Agricultural Census for the newly formed town of Teresa. Prior entries would show as simply LeRay or Philadelphia. But he is in the Non-population portion of the census, which means he may own the land but not live there. If someone was buying the land from him on a "Contract for Deed basis," or it might be rented out, and  it might show as an E Townsend by the person living there. There could be a family member there in Teresa, and one would have to look at the quit claim deed of the lot to be certain.



So, no help there. There are other Evans in the settlement, but the age is all wrong and they present at best grandchildren or unrelated individuals. Maybe Evan went to Wisconsin with his brother John, Jr? If John and Thomas went together, one might expect their sons to go in "twos" as well.

The Evan that is in Wisconsin seems to be living in a Hotel, or a Boarding House. He is the County Treasurer and is living next door to the Sheriff. He isn't farming. He seems like a good match and makes sense. There is probably a local historian who has more information on him in the region, it seems that this is him.  He presents with a birth date in 1815, and born in New York. In 1870, he is still living with a Coolidge family. He reports Pennsylvania, but it is pretty clear that is where his father was born, not him.
























Just to get a reading on this guy, I took a look at the map to see how far he would be from John Jr. The distance between the two reminded me of the distance between Thomas and John. It looks like a full day hike, about 3 hours on horseback, and about an hour and a half drive by today's travel.















One can't help but think about the distance between Evan and John Jr and reflect on the distance between their father John and Uncle Thomas in the map at the beginning of the blog.


It appears this man had quite a life. There are several land records at the National Archives; it seems he bought a lot of land from the Federal Government during the Reconstruction Era. Most of the land records are signed by President Andrew Johnson. The government would have been selling land to pay off War Debts, so those who had a bit of coin could buy land. There are several like the deed above. He bought the land, named the place Evanwood, and became his own postmaster. 































He appears to have died in 1905 and his burial data list 1814 as his year of birth. Given the differences between the Quaker Calendar and the regular calender, this is close enough to be him.

Now that we have Evan's birth of 1815, we can parse things out with slightly more detail. Going back to the 1830 census, we know that the youngest male is Evan. We know that one male in the 20-29 category is John Jr born in 1807. That leaves a male who is born between the two men. The missing male is between 1807 and 1815. He is old enough to be 20-29 in 1830 placing a minimum birth date at 1810 and a maximum birth year of 1801. He has to be older than Evan because Evan is the youngest male and we know know he is 15 in the 1830 Census and 5 in the 1820 Census.  Robert is on his own and reports in the 20-29 age group. So, three of the boys report born between 1800-1810.

Can Ezra have a birth year before John Jr? Perhaps...but then where is he in the 1820 Census? He doesn't report as his own household, and he dies in 1835, so there is no use finding him in the later census.

Perhaps the family has additional information, or perhaps a historical book has additional insight, but it seems there is an extra male. There is a male child between John Jr and Evan. That male child seems to be born about 1808-09. He lives long enough to present in the 1820 and 1830 census. My suspicion is that this is Ezra.

Here is how I tentatively see the family group based on parsing out the males. There is 15-21 years between the unknown male in the 1810 Census and John Sr. This male could be Ezra, and then the younger male would be the unknown. I have tentatively placed Ezra as the unknown youngest child because he never appears as his own household. The reality is there is a male who has not been accounted for in the genealogy.

John Sr. Townsend (b. 1779) and Asenath Carver Townsend
Unknown Male in the 1810 Census born  between 1794-1800
*Mary born between 1800-1810 married Alfred Coolidge
 Robert  b. 1805, Bucks County  m Hannah [per census]
          (Ezra, Eliza Ann, and Abi and others) [per census] 
 John, Jr born 1807 Jeff Co, NY marries and goes to Farmington, WI [per Haddock and Census]
 Martha born between 1810-1820
 Ezra born 1809-10 dies 1835 descendants unknown
 Evan born 1815 moves to Waupaca, WI [per census]
 Abi b 1818-1820  m. George Williams
           (Elizabeth, Mary, other sons and daughters?) [Per census]

Who is the extra male?

It seems that the genealogy doesn't hold any clues. John #17 in the Byberry and Mooreland history is who we have been parsing, and there isn't a good clue here. Thomas #15 is his own household in Lowville, Lewis county, although in 1810 it presents as LeRay, Jefferson County because there is no Lewis County, just the LeRay purchase. It was all LeRay.

The other option is an older Evan? That Evan did marry Asenath's sister but he doesn't appear to have gone to Jefferson County to live during the 1810 Census; at least it is not mentioned in Byberry or in Haddock. Further, if he is the extra male living with the family, wouldn't his wife and children also be present in the 1810 census? Wouldn't Haddock mention him being at one of the town meetings? He mentions everyone else, even details about Strickland's financial dealings, minor payments to other members for various and sundry items,  so certainly the Carver family living with John Asenath the first winter would have been mentioned. Yet, there is nothing written to provide any solid clues.



To double check, I even looked at the prior generation to see if anyone turned up that went to the Black River region. It is interesting that Rachael #8 below is mentioned by Haddock as being the spouse of John Strickland Jr, (not to be confused with Rachel #5 who died in the pox epidemic of 1769) but is not mentioned in the above in Byberry and Mooreland. Yet she has more Townsend children than anyone, 11 before moving to the Black River Region and perhaps more after that. They would all be Strickland by surname, but Townsend by blood. If all the Gangon and Smiths are listed, all the Strickland children should be too. Yet, they are not listed.

Strange that Mahlon Carver, the source of the Jefferson County group for the Byberry and Middleton history knew these kids, but not the Strickland kids.



Looking at the brothers and sister of Thomas and John's father Evan is revealing. The older Aunt to Thomas and John, Rachael (#5), age 27, who was married to Joseph Knight, (the Aunt of the Rachel who married John Strickland Jr).  Thomas who was age 13, and Jesse age 11 all died in 1769. While Thomas and John's father was 21 and likely had his own household, he would have had many years as a young teen having fun with his little brothers. One can be certain that he told the sons of the experience. 

Historical notes for Bucks County for 1769 show that in that year, there was a very bad snow storm that and an intense outbreak of small pox. (A mention of the out break is in Elizabeth Fenn, 

Pox Americana: The Great Smallpox Epidemic of 1775-82  p 299 has an brief bibliography of the 1769 plague from Dr. Benjamin Rush for those interest). Thus, it would seem that the the pox outbreak only increased the interest in spreading the population out beyond the mountains, something precluded by the Treaty of 1763.

My suspicion is that toll of this pox outbreak is what prompted the families to consider moving away from the Bucks settlement and into remote areas. That is why the Knights were helping organize the settlements. He lost his first wife in the pox epidemic. Putting distance between the families reduced the prospect of an epidemic imposing such a toll again. 



Thus there is an extra male in the John and Asenath Carver household to figure out, but it seems the males born between 1810 and 1820 may be parsed out. It could be that one of the males is really one the younger one and not the older one, but time will tell.

As a final note, I will leave mention of the old Uncle Ezra for whom the Ezra we were searching above is named. He stays in Bucks County. He doesn't settle in Michigan. He doesn't settle in Jefferson County. This is quite certain. While the Byberry and Mooreland History may confuse those who left, it is fairly solid on those who stayed. People have used his information to put him on all sort of places on the map. He stayed. He isn't in Jefferson and he isn't in Michigan. He lived in PA and died there and is buried there and is well remembered.

As for the family group's connection to my ancestors, they seem like nice people that anyone might care to have as an ancestor, but it does not appear that there is a connection to my line. There are plenty of Johns, Thomas, Evans and Ezras, and even a Uranus or two, but there are no James, no Henrys, and no connections that work out between 1810-1820 time frame in the Philadelphia .

Onto another family group. My advise to these guys... find your missing male in the 1810 census. For me, the work here is done.

Headstone of Asenath Carver Townsend
Courtesy of the NNYGenealogy.com 

Headstone of Asenath Carver Townsend
Courtesy of the NNYGenealogy.com


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*Mary is noted under http://jefferson.nygenweb.net/childwac.htm
Alfred Coolidge was born in Nelson, Madison County, March 7, 1800. February 27. 1819, he removed to Philadelphia, and for two years worked upon a farm. In the fall of 1820 he bought his time of his father, for which he paid $100, and took up 50 acres of wilderness land, upon which he cut the first tree, and made a clearing the same year, and the next year built a log house in which he lived alone for three years, during that time working out among the farmers clearing land. He bought a farm of Joseph Bonaparte, and drove to Bordentown, N. J., with a pair of horses, which he sold to obtain money to pay for the farm. He owned at one time 500 acres of choice land. He served as assessor and overseer of the poor in Philadelphia, and in 1853 located in Watertown, where he now resides, at 38 Clinton street. His sons, Thomas J. and Charles E., carry on the old farm. In 1825 he married Mary, daughter of John Townsend, a Quaker, and they had five sons and one daughter. His wife died March 11, 1889. His daughter, Asenith Carver Coolidge, resides with her father. She has written interesting articles for the newspapers, and in 1888, while in California, contributed to the Pacific Rural Press and other periodicals.