Richard Small1
M, #14841, b. 29 September 1809, d. before 5 September 1882
Richard Small was born on 29 September 1809 in Limington, York County, Maine.1,2 He was the son of Deacon Benjamin Small and Mary Chase.1 Richard Small married Abigail Ann Jose, daughter of Alexander Jose, in 1834.1 Richard Small died before 5 September 1882 in Guildhall, Essex County, Vermont.3
Children of Richard Small and Abigail Ann Jose
- Moses Small4 b. 24 Feb 1835
- Sally Emery Small5 b. 26 Dec 1836
- Dr. Horatio Nelson Small5 b. 10 Nov 1839, d. 29 Dec 1886
- John Chase Small+1 b. 1841, d. 1923
- Abigail Small5 b. c 1844
Citations
- [S189] Frederick A. Virkus, Abridged Compendium of American Genealogy, Vol. 6 p. 517.
- [S89] Family Search, Maine Births and Christenings, 1739-1900.
- [S89] Family Search, Vermont Probate Files, 1800-1921. Essex County.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, https://www.werelate.org/wiki/BuxtonVR-3-000#T0295
- [S109] 1850 United States Census, Guildhall, Essex, Vermont.
Dr. Richard Dresser Small1
M, #14845, b. 1872
Dr. Richard Dresser Small was born in 1872 in Portland ?, Maine.1 He was the son of John Chase Small and Mary Schuyler Dresser.1 Dr. Richard Dresser Small married Grace Florence Cogswell in 1901.2
Child of Dr. Richard Dresser Small and Grace Florence Cogswell
- Carleton Potter Small2 b. 31 Oct 1902, d. Mar 1972
Dr. Richard M. Small1
M, #18929
Child of Dr. Richard M. Small and Carolyn Mildram
- Ruth Mildram Small+1 b. 25 Apr 1899, d. 6 Nov 1993
Citations
- [S205] Newspaper, Portsmouth Herald, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Saturday, March 22, 1930. Page 49.
Ruth Mildram Small1
F, #12995, b. 25 April 1899, d. 6 November 1993
Ruth Mildram Small was born on 25 April 1899 in Wells, Maine.2 She was the daughter of Dr. Richard M. Small and Carolyn Mildram.3 Ruth Mildram Small graduated in 1921 from University of Maine. She married Howard Howe Sewall, son of Willis Fuller Sewall and Kate Louise Howe, on 9 July 1923 in Auburn.1 Ruth Mildram Small died on 6 November 1993 in Charlotte County, Florida, at the age of 944 and is buried in Gulf Pines Memorial Park, Englewood, Sarasota County, Florida.5
Child of Ruth Mildram Small and Howard Howe Sewall
- Peggy Ann Sewall+ b. 2 Dec 1929, d. 20 Dec 2012
Citations
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, Sinnett's Sewall genealogy, p. 33.
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Maine, Birth Records, 1621-1922.
- [S205] Newspaper, Portsmouth Herald, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Saturday, March 22, 1930. Page 49.
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Florida Death Index, 1877-1998.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 70056666."
Sally Emery Small
F, #26180, b. 26 December 1836
Sally Emery Small was born on 26 December 1836 in Buxton, York County, Maine.1 She was the daughter of Richard Small and Abigail Ann Jose.1
Citations
- [S109] 1850 United States Census, Guildhall, Essex, Vermont.
Sarah Small1
F, #20393, b. circa 1748, d. 30 August 1783
Sarah Small was born circa 1748.2 She married Rev. John Tompson.1 Sarah Small died on 30 August 1783 in South Berwick, York County, Maine.2
Children of Sarah Small and Rev. John Tompson
- Edward Tompson+1 b. 18 Dec 1771, d. 29 Jan 1834
- Capt. John Storer Tompson+1 b. 5 Aug 1783, d. 6 Nov 1863
Citations
- [S365] Eben Graves, The descendants of Henry Sewall. Vol. II (Unpublished), p. 249.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "#90276498."
Sewall Small1
M, #27197, b. 1 April 1812
Sewall Small was born on 1 April 1812 in Limington, York County, Maine.1 He was the son of Deacon Benjamin Small and Mary Chase.1
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, Maine Births and Christenings, 1739-1900.
Virginia M. Smallwood1
F, #24863, b. 1923, d. 2007
Virginia M. Smallwood was born in 1923.1 She married Norman Seymour Allen, son of Evelyn Prestwood Seymour Allen and Winifred Alice Berry.1 Virginia M. Smallwood died in 2007 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.1
Citations
- [S376] Rosemary Haden, "Haden E-Mail," e-mail to John Rees, 2007-2017, Descendants of Francis Seymour Allen.
Sarah Smart1
F, #9314, b. circa 1779, d. 22 February 1821
Sarah Smart was born circa 1779.2 She married Samuel Maverick Quincy, son of Dr. Jacob Quincy and Elizabeth Ann Williams, on 23 November 1797 in Portland, Maine, where her first name is given as Sally.1,3 Sarah Smart died on 22 February 1821 in Maine.2
Children of Sarah Smart and Samuel Maverick Quincy
- Sarah Quincy1
- Elizabeth W. Quincy1 b. 11 Jan 1801
- Caroline M. Quincy1 b. 13 Nov 1802
- Helen M.W. Quincy1 b. 3 Oct 1805, d. 19 Dec 1869
- Nancy Quincy+1 b. 1 Mar 1808, d. 11 Oct 1884
- Samuel M. Quincy4 b. 25 Nov 1809, d. 2 Apr 1810
- Mary A. Quincy1 b. 16 Mar 1811
- Charles C. Quincy4 b. 11 Jul 1814, d. b 19 Jun 1830
- Henry W. Quincy4 b. 24 Aug 1818
- Samuel M. Quincy4 b. 14 Feb 1821, d. 7 Mar 1821
Citations
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 11 p. 158.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 101709121 M.I."
- [S89] Family Search, FHL Number 12011.
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Maine, Birth Records, 1621-1922.
(son) Smith1
M, #25274, b. 8 May 1911, d. 8 May 1911
(son) Smith died on 8 May 1911 in County Street, Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts.1 He was born on 8 May 1911 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts, (stillborn.)1 He was the son of Elmer Chester Smith and Sarah Elisabeth Sewall.1
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, Massachusetts vital records [deaths, births, marriages] 1911-1915.
Abigail Smith1
F, #3887, b. 11 November 1744, d. 28 October 1818
Abigail Smith was born on 11 November 1744 in Weymouth, Massachusetts.2 She was the daughter of Rev. William Smith and Elizabeth Quincy.1 Abigail Smith married President John Adams, 2nd President of the United States, son of John Adams and Susanna Boylston, on 25 October 1764 in Weymouth, Norfolk County, Massachusetts.3,4 Abigail Smith died on 28 October 1818 in Quincy, Massachusetts, at the age of 73.3
Her father was for nearly half a century pastor of the Congregational church of Weymouth. and her mother a direct descendant of Thomas Shepard, the eminent Puritan divine of Cambridge, and a great grand-niece of the Puritan preacher, John Norton, of the Hingham meeting-house, Boston. She had few educational advantages in the way of access to books, as they were kept from her owing to her delicate constitution. To in a measure compensate for this, she was instructed in the duties of the housewife and took great interest in home affairs. She became an adept in domestic economy, and added to it the rudiments of penmanship and arithmetic. As she reached womanhood her strength increased, and she took up French, Latin, and a well-directed course of reading, although this was only cursory before she became a wife. She was married to John Adams Oct. 25, 1764, and passed the next ten years as the frugal wife of a rising Braintree lawyer. To them were born, during this time, one daughter and three sons. The political events of the period marked the next decade of her married life as one of great anxiety. Her husband was absent most of the time, first as a delegate to Congress and afterwards on a diplomatic mission across the seas. The patriots led by her husband were urging the termination of the unhappy relations existing between the colonies and the mother country, by a declaration of independence. His earnest advocacy of heroic measures gained for him the appelation, "Colossus of Independence." No more positive and unyielding advocate of the measure sustained the course of John Adams than his patriotic wife, and while she had in full view the dire consequences of failure, yet her courage never faltered and her voice never uttered an uncertain sound. Alone with her children she passed the period of war, doing what she could for the patriot cause. In 1784 she undertook the long and dangerous voyage to Europe to join her husband in France, and then she accompanied him to London, as the wife of the first American minister at the court of St. James, and where as such she was not accorded decent courtesy. This rudeness greatly wounded her and increased her devotion to the new republic. Upon the accession of Mr. Adams to the presidency, his wife became the first mistress of the White House, and there the charm of housekeeping was not dispelled by the pride of position; She is the only woman in American history who has been the wife of one president and the mother of another. She resided at Braintree, Mass., after leaving Washington, but always retained an interest in public affairs. A memoir of her life, was published by her grandson Charles Francis Adams.3
Her father was for nearly half a century pastor of the Congregational church of Weymouth. and her mother a direct descendant of Thomas Shepard, the eminent Puritan divine of Cambridge, and a great grand-niece of the Puritan preacher, John Norton, of the Hingham meeting-house, Boston. She had few educational advantages in the way of access to books, as they were kept from her owing to her delicate constitution. To in a measure compensate for this, she was instructed in the duties of the housewife and took great interest in home affairs. She became an adept in domestic economy, and added to it the rudiments of penmanship and arithmetic. As she reached womanhood her strength increased, and she took up French, Latin, and a well-directed course of reading, although this was only cursory before she became a wife. She was married to John Adams Oct. 25, 1764, and passed the next ten years as the frugal wife of a rising Braintree lawyer. To them were born, during this time, one daughter and three sons. The political events of the period marked the next decade of her married life as one of great anxiety. Her husband was absent most of the time, first as a delegate to Congress and afterwards on a diplomatic mission across the seas. The patriots led by her husband were urging the termination of the unhappy relations existing between the colonies and the mother country, by a declaration of independence. His earnest advocacy of heroic measures gained for him the appelation, "Colossus of Independence." No more positive and unyielding advocate of the measure sustained the course of John Adams than his patriotic wife, and while she had in full view the dire consequences of failure, yet her courage never faltered and her voice never uttered an uncertain sound. Alone with her children she passed the period of war, doing what she could for the patriot cause. In 1784 she undertook the long and dangerous voyage to Europe to join her husband in France, and then she accompanied him to London, as the wife of the first American minister at the court of St. James, and where as such she was not accorded decent courtesy. This rudeness greatly wounded her and increased her devotion to the new republic. Upon the accession of Mr. Adams to the presidency, his wife became the first mistress of the White House, and there the charm of housekeeping was not dispelled by the pride of position; She is the only woman in American history who has been the wife of one president and the mother of another. She resided at Braintree, Mass., after leaving Washington, but always retained an interest in public affairs. A memoir of her life, was published by her grandson Charles Francis Adams.3
Children of Abigail Smith and President John Adams, 2nd President of the United States
- Abigail Adams+3 b. 14 Jul 1765, d. 15 Aug 1813
- President John Quincy Adams, 6th President of the United States+3 b. 11 Jul 1767, d. 23 Feb 1848
- Susanna Adams5 b. 28 Dec 1768, d. 4 Feb 1770
- Charles Adams+ b. 29 May 1770, d. 30 Nov 1800
- Thomas Boylston Adams+ b. 15 Sep 1772, d. 12 Mar 1832
Citations
- [S25] Samuel Sewall, Diary of Samuel Sewall (1973 ed.), Vol. 2. p. 1092.
- [S229] Various, American National Biography, Adams, Abigail.
- [S18] Various editors, Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, Vol 1. p. 14.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 9, p. 155.
- [S86] Various contributors, The Adams Papers editorial project, ongoing.
Abigail Smith1
F, #25089, b. 21 March 1746
Abigail Smith was born on 21 March 1746 in White Plains, New York.1 She was the daughter of Rev. John Smith and Mehitable Hooker.1
Citations
- [S617] Edward Hooker, Descendants of Thomas Hooker, p. 41.
Abigail H. Smith1
F, #10024, b. circa 1829
Abigail H. Smith was born circa 1829 in Pennsylvania.2 She married Evert Jansen Wendell, son of Isaac Wendell and Ann Austin Whittier, in 1848 in Pennsylvania.1
Children of Abigail H. Smith and Evert Jansen Wendell
- Frances Wendell+1 b. c 1849, d. 12 Oct 1938
- Arthur Wilson Wendell3 b. c 5 Sep 1859, d. 17 Apr 1866
- Evert Leslie Wendell4 b. c Jun 1864, d. 18 Jan 1865
- Margaret Wendell5 b. 23 May 1867
- Anna Evelyn Wendell6 b. 31 Oct 1869, d. 4 Aug 1875
Citations
- [S101] Various editors, Sons and Daughters of the Pilgrims, p. 104.
- [S109] 1850 United States Census, Lower Dublin, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
- [S109] 1850 United States Census, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia City Death Certificates, 1803-1915.
- [S89] Family Search, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia City Death Certificates, 1803-1915.
- [S208] 1900 US Census, Radnor Township, District 1 (north part), Delaware, Pennsylvania.
- [S89] Family Search, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia City Births, 1860-1906.
Alexander Smith1
M, #12668, b. 1842, d. 1885
Alexander Smith was born in 1842 in Scotland.2,1 He married Elizabeth Phoebe Sewall, daughter of Rev. Rufus King Sewall and Anne Elizabeth Whitehurst, on 4 July 1870 in Wiscasset, Lincoln County, Maine.1,3 Alexander Smith and Elizabeth Phoebe Sewall appear on the census of 1880, he is working in an iron foundry. Alexander Smith died in 1885.1
Children of Alexander Smith and Elizabeth Phoebe Sewall
- Madeleine Geddis Smith1 b. 11 Aug 1871, d. 3 Sep 1896
- Velma Morse Smith+1 b. 19 Dec 1872, d. 15 Dec 1969
- Mattie Winans Smith+1 b. 13 Oct 1877, d. 9 Mar 1948
- Maxwell Baldwin Smith+1 b. 9 May 1881, d. 17 Jan 1935
Alexander Adam Gordon Smith1
M, #19540, b. 3 March 1829
Alexander Adam Gordon Smith was born on 3 March 1829.2 He was the son of Francis Goudie Smith and Susan Gordon.1 Alexander Adam Gordon Smith was baptised on 24 April 1829 at St. Cuthbert's, Edinburgh.1
Amy Emerson Smith1
F, #20176, b. 6 February 1839, d. 16 January 1921
Amy Emerson Smith was born on 6 February 1839 in Paris, Bourbon County, Kentucky.2,3 She was the daughter of Dr. John Rockwell Smith and Sarah Jane Warfield.4 Amy Emerson Smith died on 16 January 1921 at the The Manse, Henderson, Henderson County, Kentucky, at the age of 81.5,1
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, Kentucky Death Records, 1911-1965.
- [S208] 1900 US Census, Precinct 7 St. Louis city Ward 28, St. Louis, Missouri.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "#141595150."
- [S154] 1860 US Census, Kelly, Cooper, Missouri.
- [S205] Newspaper, Evansville Courier and Press, (Evansville, IN), 18 January 1921.
Ann Smith1
F, #25082, b. 26 September 1732, d. 2 November 1750
Ann Smith was born on 26 September 1732 in White Plains, New York.1 She was the daughter of Rev. John Smith and Mehitable Hooker.1 Ann Smith died on 2 November 1750 at the age of 18.1
Citations
- [S617] Edward Hooker, Descendants of Thomas Hooker, p. 41.
Ann Wendell Smith1
F, #10108, b. 28 March 1777
Ann Wendell Smith was born on 28 March 1777 10 o'clock Friday morning.1 She was the daughter of Rev. Peter Thacher Smith and Elizabeth Wendell.1
Citations
- [S104] Various contributors, Maine Historical and Genealogical Recorder, Vol. VII. p. 161.
Anna Smith1
F, #17398
Child of Anna Smith and Colonel William Munroe
- Edmund Munroe+1 b. 29 Oct 1780, d. 17 Apr 1865
Citations
- [S321] Edna Warren Mason, Descendants of Capt. Hugh Mason, p. 89.
Anna Maria Smith1
F, #13627
Citations
- [S167] William S. Pelletreau, Wills of the Smith families, p. 128.
Anne Smith1
F, #3233
Anne Smith married Capt. Joseph Titcomb, son of Sgt. William Titcomb and Ann Cottle, on 3 October 1721.1,2
Children of Anne Smith and Capt. Joseph Titcomb
- Sarah Titcomb2
- Mary Titcomb2
- Deacon Benjamin Titcomb+2 d. 15 Oct 1798
- John Titcomb2
- Anna Titcomb2
- Elizabeth Titcomb2
- Eunice Titcomb2
- John Titcomb2
- Abigail Titcomb2
- Capt. Henry Titcomb+2 b. 27 Sep 1723, d. 25 Jul 1785
- Oliver Titcomb+2 b. 27 Jul 1729
- Joseph Titcomb2 b. 30 Dec 1730
Anne Smith1
F, #12428, b. 19 July 1740
Anne Smith1,2
F, #20446
Anne Smith married Rev. William Webber, son of Robert Webber and Mary (Unknown), on 4 November 1758 in Bucknell, Oxford.1,3
Children of Anne Smith and Rev. William Webber
- Charles George Webber4 b. 23 Sep 1760, d. 1 Dec 1760
- Ven. Charles Webber+ b. 17 May 1762, d. 15 Jun 1848
- William George Webber4 b. 24 Jan 1764, d. 1771
- Henry Percher Webber4 b. 29 Mar 1768, d. 1771
- Very Rev. James Webber+1 b. 4 May 1772, d. 3 Sep 1847
Citations
- [S501] Manuscript document, Holdings and records West Sussex Record Office, Deed to lead the uses of a fine Add Mss 20,260 13 March 1764.
- [S422] Chetham Society, Vol. 92. Fishwick, Henry. The history of the parish of Kirkham in the county of Lancaster. p. 85.
- [S89] Family Search, England Marriages, 1538–1973.
- [S89] Family Search, Parish registers for the Deanery of Chichester, 1561-1812.
Anne L. Smith
F, #25868
Anne L. Smith married Elmer McConnell.
Child of Anne L. Smith and Elmer McConnell
- Alice Bernice McConnell b. c 1900, d. b Nov 1920
Arthur Edwards Smith1
M, #14587, b. 18 March 1864
Arthur Edwards Smith married Elizabeth Fiske Dwight, daughter of William R. Dwight and Mary Warren Fiske.1 Arthur Edwards Smith was born on 18 March 1864 in Taunton, Massachusetts.1 His name was legally changed to Arthur Smith Dwight.1
Citations
- [S189] Frederick A. Virkus, Abridged Compendium of American Genealogy, Vol. 1 p. 291.
Bazil Smith
M, #24518
Bazil Smith was the son of John Smith and Dorothy Brooke. Bazil Smith married Ann Wharton, daughter of Henry Wharton and Jane Doyne, before 1748.1
Child of Bazil Smith and Ann Wharton
- Henry Smith1 d. 1818
Citations
- [S593] Raphael Thomas Semmes, Semmes, p. 196.
Benjamin W. Smith1
M, #20177, b. circa 1843
Benjamin W. Smith was born circa 1843 in Kentucky.1 He was the son of Dr. John Rockwell Smith and Sarah Jane Warfield.1
Citations
- [S154] 1860 US Census, Kelly, Cooper, Missouri.
Capt. Bruce Neilson Smith1
M, #21445, b. 31 March 1831, d. 19 January 1866
Capt. Bruce Neilson Smith. Bengal Staff Corps. He was born on 31 March 1831 in Jubbulpore, Bengal, India.2 He married Anna Amelia Bockett, daughter of Daniel Smith Bockett and Theresa Aubrina Symonds, on 1 August 1861 in Christ Church, Hampstead, London.1 Capt. Bruce Neilson Smith died on 19 January 1866 in Peshawar, India, at the age of 34.2
Child of Capt. Bruce Neilson Smith and Anna Amelia Bockett
- Henry Curwen Biscoe Smith3 b. c 1866
Citations
- [S205] Newspaper, The Morning Post, August 03, 1861.
- [S376] Rosemary Haden, "Haden E-Mail," e-mail to John Rees, 2007-2017, Descendants of Daniel Smith Bockett.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~staustell/…
Caroline Amelia Smith1
F, #8968, b. 1795, d. 1852
Caroline Amelia Smith was born in 1795.1 She was the daughter of William Stephens Smith and Abigail Adams.1 Caroline Amelia Smith married John Peter de Windt on 11 September 1814.2 Caroline Amelia Smith died in 1852.1