The Sacred Cod - individuals


picture Stephen French

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Est 1605
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Hannah Jacob (23 Feb 1640 - 20 Oct 1720)
       Marriage: Cir 1679
         Status: 


picture
William C French

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Est 1870
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Ethel Dorr (Est 1870 -       )
       Marriage: 
         Status: 
       Children:
                1. Olivia French (1903-1963)
                2. Ruth French (1906-1933)


picture
Martha F Freyer

      Sex: F

Individual Information
          Birth: 31 Aug 1935 - Glassport, Pennsylvania
        Baptism: 
          Death: 16 May 2008 - Wellfleet, Massachusetts
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Leon G Smith (10 Dec 1928 - 20 Jun 1999)
       Marriage: 
         Status: 

Notes
General:
Provincetown Banne robit:
Martha F. Smith, 72

Martha F. “Marty” Smith, 72, of Wellfleet, died Friday, May 16, at Pleasant Bay Nursing Center in Brewster.

Born in 1935 in Glassport, Pa., she was the youngest of five children born to Gertrude and Charles Freyer.

During her feisty youth, she joined the Naval Reserve from 1956-60. In 1960, while living in Pensacola, Fla., and out with friends for an evening of revelry, Marty met Leon G. Smith. After just two dates, Leon proposed. This was the start of a romance that would last for nearly 40 years, until Leon’s untimely death in 1999.

Shortly after their marriage, the pair moved to Wellfleet when Leon was posted to the North Truro Air Force Base. Following his retirement from the Air Force, the couple decided to remain in Wellfleet to raise their family.

In addition to being a devoted mother, Marty wore many hats throughout the years. Her jobs included being a crossing guard for the Wellfleet Elementary School, a snack bar manager at the Wellfleet Drive-In, and for over 30 years she lovingly took care of many families in Wellfleet. For over two decades, she and Leon were involved in Scouting and Marty was a Cub Scout Den Mother and Girl Scout leader. In most recent years she was active with the Red Hat Society and very much enjoyed their outings. Her annual passion of cooking up batches of beach plum jelly was enjoyed by many friends and family members.

Beloved by friends and family, Marty, also know as the “Power Gnome,” made a lasting and indelible impression on all she met.

She is survived by her sister, Emma Crawford of McKeesport, Pa.; her three children, Charles Smith of Sun Valley, Idaho, Robert Smith of Boston and LeeAnn Carstenjen of Harwich; her granddaughter, Liberty Lee Smith; numerous cousins, nieces and nephews, as well as many, many friends.

Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, May 22, at Wellfleet Congregational Church, with a reception immediately following. Committal service is scheduled for 3 p.m. at the Massachusetts National Cemetery in Bourne. Arrangements are by Nickerson Funeral Home, 340 Main St., Wellfleet.

Memorial donations can be made to the Mustard Seed Kitchen, P.O. Box 833, Wellfleet, MA 02667. For online condolences and guest book, please visit www.mem.com.

picture Abigail Frink

      Sex: F

Individual Information
          Birth: Est 1730 - of Barre, Mass.
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Noah Sparhawk (19 Oct 1729 -       )
       Marriage: 29 May 1755 - Barre, Massachusetts 1
         Status: 
       Children:
                1. Stephen Sparhawk (Cir 1756-1756)
                2. George Sparhawk (1757-      )
                3. Priscilla Sparhawk (1760-1761)
                4. Hull Sparhawk (1761-1838)
                5. Cotton Sparhawk (1763-      )
                6. Abigail Sparhawk (1766-      )
                7. Enos Sparhawk (1767-      )
                8. Sparhawk (1770-1770)


picture
Captain Robert W Fritz

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Est 1915 - Long Island, New York
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Helen Louise Freeman (28 Jul 1916 -       ) 2 
       Marriage: May 1943 - West Point, New York 3
         Status: 

Notes
General:
1943 Captain of Coast Artillery at Portsmouth, Va., 1942 graduate of West Point

picture Deliverance Frost

      Sex: F

Individual Information
          Birth: Est 1720
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Captain George W Smith (15 Feb 1724 - 21 Jan 1797)
       Marriage: 1742
         Status: 


picture
George William Frost

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 19 Dec 1851 - Boston, Massachusetts
        Baptism: 
          Death: 4 Mar 1946 - Tewksbury, Massachusetts
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: William Benjamin Simpson Frost (1821-1908) 4
         Mother: Ann Lewis Hamblen (1826-1894) 5


picture
Jack Frost

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 1915
        Baptism: 
          Death: Cir 1996
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Notes
General:
Jack Frost was a prolific illustrator of New England travel guides, including
"A Cape Cod Sketch Book. (A Fancy This Book)" (1939)
"Boston, America's home port; a sketch book" (1955), "Harvard and Cambridge: a sketch book by Jack Frost (1940), "Immortal voyage ... and Pilgrim parallels: problems, protests, patriotism, 1620-1970. Edited by Jack Frost (1970), "Yankee homecoming; official sketch book" (1958), "Church in Worcester, New England; a modern diocese with an ancient name"; [drawings] by Jack Frost (1956)

picture Katherine Frost

      Sex: F

Individual Information
          Birth: 1686 - Kittery, Maine
        Baptism: 
          Death: 22 Aug 1764 - Wellfleet, Massachusetts
         Burial: in Duck Creek Cemetery, Wellfleet
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: Nicholas Frost (1645-1707)
         Mother: Mary Smalley (Abt 1656-Abt 1715) 6

Spouses and Children
1. *Israel Young (1686 - 25 Oct 1760)
       Marriage: 3 Jun 1708 - Eastham, Massachusetts 7
         Status: 
       Children:
                1. Levi Young (1718-      )
                2. Israel Young (Est 1720-Bef 1756)
                3. Lydia Young (Est 1729-      )
                4. Barnabas Young (1730-1802)
                5. Stephen Young (Est 1735-      )

Notes
General:
stone:

Here lies buried
the body of Mrs
Kathran Young who
Dec'd Aug'st ye 22d
1764 in ye 79th year
of her age

"The gravestone displays a life like winged head with curly hair, bulging eyes and a slight smile."
------------------------------------------
Possibly born in Kittery to Nicholas Frost and Mary Small. 8

picture Colonel Nathaniel Frost

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 5 Nov 1769 - Gorham, Maine 9
        Baptism: 
          Death: May 1838 - Gorham, Maine 9
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Rebecca Dyer (18 Oct 1753 - 25 Dec 1820)
       Marriage: 7 Nov 1801 - Gorham, Maine 10
         Status: 

Notes
General:
m1 Polly Berry of Falmouth
m2 Sally Brown of Falmouth
[many details] 9

picture Nicholas Frost

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 30 May 1645 - Bristol, England
        Baptism: 
          Death: 30 May 1707 - Kittery, Maine
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Mary Smalley (Abt 1656 - Abt 1715) 6 
       Marriage: 
         Status: 
       Children:
                1. Katherine Frost (1686-1764)

Notes
Marriage Notes (Mary Smalley)
Children, all in Kittery
Nicholas Frost b: Abt 1672
Mary Frost b: Abt 1674
Bartholomew Frost b: Abt 1677
Eleanor Frost b: 1685
Margaret Frost b: 1687
Katherine Frost b: 1689
Elizabeth Frost b: 1690

picture Sarah Louise Frost

      Sex: F

Individual Information
          Birth: 11 Oct 1884 - Boston, Massachusetts
        Baptism: 
          Death: 30 Jan 1947 - Weymouth, Massachusetts
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Parents
         Father: William Benjamin Simpson Frost (1821-1908) 4
         Mother: Ann Lewis Hamblen (1826-1894) 5


picture
Tamazine Frost

      Sex: F

Individual Information
          Birth: 10 Aug 1600 - Stanstead, Suffolk
        Baptism: 
          Death: 13 Jun 1654 - Sudbury, Massachusetts Bay
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Edmund Rice (Abt 1594 - 3 May 1663) 12 
       Marriage: 15 Oct 1618 - Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk
         Status: 
       Children:
                1. Deacon Edward Rice (1622-1712) 11
                2. Thomas Rice (1626-1681)
                3. Samuel Rice (1634-1685)
                4. Joseph Rice (1637-1711)
                5. Benjamin Rice (1640-1713)

Notes
Marriage Notes (Edmund Rice)
There is conflicting information on the place of Edmund's birth and their marriage place and date, with overlapping lists of children's names.

picture William Benjamin Simpson Frost

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 30 May 1821 - Portsmouth, New Hampshire 4
        Baptism: 
          Death: 16 Aug 1908 - Brookline, Massachusetts 4
         Burial: in Pleasant Hill Cemetery, Wellfleet 4
 Cause of Death: 

Events
• Alt Birth, , Newcastle, New Hampshire in Newcastle, New Hampshire
• Alt Death, , Brookline, Massachusetts in Brookline, Massachusetts


Spouses and Children
1. *Ann Lewis Hamblen (20 Oct 1826 - 8 Feb 1894) 5 
       Marriage: 16 Mar 1848 - Boston, Massachusetts
         Status: 
       Children:
                1. Sarah Louise Frost (1884-1947)
                2. George William Frost (1851-1946)

Notes
Marriage Notes (Ann Lewis Hamblen)
1865 Mass. census, Charlestown
Wm D Frost, 44, carpenter, b Portsmouth NH
Anna S Frost, 38, Wellfleet
Geo. W Frost, 13, Charlestown
Sarah S Frost, 11, Boston
Josephine A Hamblen, 11, Boston
Emma A Hamblen, 4, Charlestown

also in Charlestown
Benj. Hamblen, 35, tailor [Anna's brother, Josephine & Emma's father]
convict in State Prison

picture George Frothingham

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 1836 - South Danvers, Massachusetts
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Maria Louiza Holbrook (16 Nov 1841 -       ) 13 
       Marriage: 15 Nov 1860 - Salem, Massachusetts
         Status: 


picture
Jean Frottier

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: 1943
        Baptism: 
          Death: Nov 2012 - off Race Point
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Notes
General:
Provincetown's tragic losses

By Mary Ann Bragg
mbragg@capecodonline.com
November 24, 2012
PROVINCETOWN \emdash The loss of commercial fishing vessels at sea and the death of crew members continue to touch family members and friends in this outermost Cape town decades later.

The Provincetown fishing fleet has had its share of tragedy in the last half-century. In 1976, seven men died on the Patricia Marie, four died on the Cap'n Bill in 1978 and three on the Victory II in 1984.

On Sunday, the Twin Lights scallop boat sank two miles north of Race Point, and skipper Jean Frottier, 69, of Wellfleet is believed to have lost his life in the accident. Crew member Eric Rego was rescued by a nearby dragger.

"You wake up, and your life is forever changed," said Provincetown resident Joan Cordeiro, whose husband, Ernest, died on the Patricia Marie. "They're gone, and you keep thinking that they're going to find them. It is "> it's heartbreaking."

Before noon on Sunday, the 40-foot Twin Lights capsized during what was believed to be Frottier's attempt to untangle his dredge from fishing lines in an area known for plentiful scallops and lobsters. The vessel was found by sidescan sonar in 198-feet of water Monday. As of Friday, though, Frottier had not been found, according to the Coast Guard. State police divers and the Coast Guard plan in the coming days to use a remotely operated vehicle, or ROV, to inspect the Twin Lights and look for Frottier.

Frottier's family was not ready Friday to speak publicly about the incident, according to a woman who answered the door at the home on Gross Hill Road in Wellfleet.

The Coast Guard opened an investigation as part of a routine inquiry, and the results are not expected for several months.

"I feel for the family tremendously," Cordeiro said.

Many others do, as well, particularly given the tough working conditions at sea.

In Massachusetts, four fishermen lost their lives at work in 2011, which gives the agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting industry the highest occupational fatality rate in the state per 100,000 workers, according to the state Department of Public Health's Occupational Health Surveillance Program. Two of the fishermen fell from piers while trying to board their vessels, and two drowned at sea.

"It's such a tragic loss," said Carol Green of Provincetown, speaking generally about the loss of life and boats in the commercial fishing industry. Green has formed a committee to raise money for a permanent memorial in Provincetown for commercial fishermen who have lost their lives, or their boats or crew members. Green's late father worked on commercial fishing boats and survived the sinking of his own boat off Long Point during a storm.

"They do put their lives on the line, and I do think they should be remembered," Green said. "Everybody knows how tough it is."

Marshfield charter boat captain Kevin Scola, who fished commercially off Provincetown throughout the 1970s, '80s and '90s, said Friday that the dangers of the industry are a combination of self-induced risks and those taken on by fishermen trying to make a living under new government regulations.

"I've had those days," Scola said of rough trips at sea. "I was just lucky to come home."

The years from 1976 to 1985 were particularly tough ones for the Provincetown fleet.

The Patricia Marie was the biggest loss, on Oct. 24, 1976. The bodies of five men were found, and two were not, Cordeiro said. At the time, she and her husband had two kids, and Ernest Cordeiro had told his wife in the days before the sinking that the scallop fishing trips might be his last because the boat wasn't properly equipped for the loads it was carrying.

"He turned around and gave his daughter his skiff and his son his Jeep, and then sure enough ">," Joan Cordeiro said. "They knew the boat wasn't right, that it would roll."

The boat's captain, William King, 46, died, as did Walter Marshall, 55; Morris Joseph, 47, and his 19-year-old son, Alton; Robert Zawalick, 25; and Richard Oldenquist, 35, all of Provincetown. The 64-foot scallop boat disappeared three miles off Nauset Beach in Eastham as it returned from a rich bed of scallops in an area known as Pollock Rip. The boat was found in 135 feet of water in an upright position, and Ernest Cordeiro was found three months later when a dragger caught his body in a net.

In February 1978, Capt. Ralph Andrews, 56, and three crew members, all from Provincetown, died when the dragger Cap'n Bill sank 2.8 miles off Highland Light in North Truro. The crew members were Edward Hoernig, 21; Ernie Tasha, 22; and Robert Sullivan, 30. The 63-foot dragger was reported missing Feb. 12 after failing to return after four days at sea. The sunken vessel was found Feb. 19 when the Provincetown dragger Jimmy Boy snagged the Cap'n Bill wreck in 137 feet of water. Divers sent down to the wreck the next day found no bodies. No trace of the crew was found until February 1980, when a femur netted by the dragger Triumph out of Provincetown proved to belong to Andrews.

On May 3, 1984, the dragger Victory II was found sunken in 30 feet of water off Billingsgate Shoal, when a Wellfleet fishing vessel snagged its nets on the submerged 56-foot boat. It had last been seen May 1, 1984.

The three crew members, all of Provincetown, who died in the incident were Capt. Kenneth Macara II, 28; Ben Fernandez, 33; and John "J.D." Dorff, believed to be 36. The boat's nets, which were being dragged along the side, became entangled in a chain attached to an abandoned concrete sinker on the ocean floor, according to the 1985 Coast Guard report. The crew was hauling in the nets and had pulled up the chain to within about 10 feet of the boat, the report said, but what happened next is unclear, although it is believed the boat rolled on its side and sank. The partial skeletal remains of Macara were caught in the net of a dragger near Billingsgate Shoal in 1985.


Provincetown fatalities

The following are the most recent fatal sinkings of commercial vessels that were based out of Provincetown.

Oct. 24, 1976: The 65-foot scalloper, the Patricia Marie of Provincetown, went down with seven crew members after it disappeared three miles off Nauset Beach in Eastham. The dead included: Capt. William King, 46; Walter Marshall, 55; Morris Joseph, 47, and his 19-year-old son, Alton; Ernest Cordeiro, 45; Robert Zawalick, 25; and Richard Oldenquist, 35, all from Provincetown.
Feb. 13, 1978: The dragger Cap'n Bill of Provincetown sank with four crew members lost. The men were Capt. Ralph Andrews, 56; Edward Hoernig, 21; Ernie Tasha, 22; and Robert Sullivan, 30, all from Provincetown. The boat went down 2˝ miles off Highland Light in Truro.
May 3, 1984: The 56-foot Victory II out of Provincetown was found in 30 feet of water near Billingsgate Shoal. It is believed the boat sank after it snagged an abandoned concrete sinker and chain. Three men were lost: Capt. Kenneth R. Macara II, 28; Ben Fernandez, 33; and John "J.D." Dorff, 36, all of Provincetown.
Nov. 18, 2012: The fishing vessel Twin Lights capsized about two miles off Race Point. Missing and presumed drowned is Capt. Jean Frottier, 69, of Wellfleet. One crewman, Eric Rego, was rescued. The 40-foot Twin Lights was built in 1985.
Source: Cape Cod Times archives

picture Edmund Fruean III

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Cir 1930 - (Yarmouth, Massachusetts)
        Baptism: 
          Death: 22 Sep 2010 - Yarmouthport, Massachusetts
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Notes
General:
Cape Cod Times obit
YARMOUTHPORT \emdash Edmund Fruean III died on September 22nd at his home in Yarmouthport. Mr. Fruean was born at the Cape Cod Hospital, graduated from Yarmouth High School in 1948 and later served in the National Guard and U.S. Army. He owned and operated Fruean Electric and Fruean Utilities for many years and the Cape Cod Coliseum from 1975 to 1980.

In his lifetime Mr. Fruean served as President of the Massachusetts Electrical Contractors, Board member and Chair of the Cape Cod Hospital and the Yarmouth Capital Budget Committee and Board member of the Yarmouth Finance Committee, Cape Cod Symphony, First National Bank of Yarmouth and the Cape Cod Cooperative Bank.

He leaves his wife Joy J. Fruean; his sister Elizabeth F. (Betty) Space and her husband Douglas; six children, Mark S. Fruean and his wife Maria, Jacqueline A. Patton and her husband Peter, Peter C. Fruean, Patricia M. Fruean and her husband Craig, Jay S. Fruean and his wife Jeannie and Christopher M. Fruean and his wife Rachel. Also he leaves two stepchildren; Robert J. (Beau) Lorange and his wife Judy, and Suzanne L. Baxter and her husband Ben.

Additionally, he leaves 13 grandchildren; Katie, Andrew, Chelsey, Meg, Sally, Christina, Laura, Alexander, Audrey, Alexis, Haley, Ben and Zachary and one great-grandchild; Bela.

He takes with him the respect due an honorable man.

Donations may be made to the VNA Hospice and Palliative Care of Cape Cod.

picture George Fry

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Cir 1590 - Combe St. Nicholas, Somerset
        Baptism: 
          Death: 1676 - Weymouth, Massachusetts Bay
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Notes
General:
Boston Globe, 4 Apr 2009
"When Mr. and Mrs. George Fry landed on the shores of Massachusetts not long after the Pilgrims, they carried with them a secret that remained hidden for nearly four centuries.

Their genes harbored a quirk that would travel through 16 generations of Americans, leaving a legacy of colon cancer. Now a Utah scientist, herself a descendant of Mayflower voyagers and Benjamin Franklin, has discovered the Fry family history.

In an example of crack scientific sleuthing, the University of Utah researcher and colleagues mined a trove of cancer records and a sprawling genealogical archive to uncover the source of a genetic mutation responsible for a rare form of colon cancer. Modern-day genetic fingerprinting identified far-flung relatives with this defect, and the team then traced the family tree back in time, past the Revolutionary War, to find their common ancestors.

They finally arrived at Weymouth, when colonists were only beginning to stake their claim to a new land. There, they found the Frys, who had decamped from their home in Somerset, England, sometime between 1624 and 1640, harboring hopes and the seeds of disease.

The search was driven by more than historical curiosity, specialists say. The work shows the power of genetics and genealogy to identify family members who share mutations so that they can be spared from a potentially deadly disease.

Already, the discovery, detailed last week at the national meeting of the American Chemical Society, appears to be saving 21st-century lives. Physicians have tracked down distant relatives of the Frys and offered those who have the mutation testing for early signs of colon cancer and preventive treatment. The result: cases of the kind of colon cancer spawned by the mutation have nearly vanished in Utah.

"The point is, there are hereditary components to diseases and you need to be aware of what your family history is," said Dr. Daniel Chung, clinical director of the Gastrointestinal Cancer Genetics Program at the Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center. "And it's just kind of a cool story that they can trace this mutation back."

The detective story began more than a decade ago, when University of Utah scientists discovered that members of a Utah family battling colon cancer carried a specific mutation in a gene know by the acronym APC.

"Over about the next 10 years," said Deb Neklason, a molecular geneticist at the university's Huntsman Cancer Institute and a Mayflower descendant, "they brought in tons and tons of family members to try to figure out who had the genetic change." Those who did had colonoscopies performed to look for cancer.

At the same time, a doctor in upstate New York was treating patients from a family harboring the same genetic profile.

So the Utah scientists - led by Neklason, who describes herself as "a professional geneticist and an amateur genealogist" - started culling genealogical and medical records. They were hunting for clues that might tell them whether the Utah and New York families were related and, if so, which branches were at risk of developing the form of colon cancer, called attenuated familial adenomatous polyposis.

There is no place better to do that than Utah, headquarters of the Mormon church, which embraces genealogy with unparalleled fervor and keeps detailed family lineages in an online database. That interest has also made the state receptive to maintaining a cancer registry linked to family histories, which it has done since 1966.

Genetic analysis showed the mutation was not occurring randomly, so researchers were sure it was a family affair. The scientists began linking current-day carriers to their forebears in a process akin to climbing a ladder, with the living heirs as the first rung.

For example, if two modern-day first cousins were identified as carriers, that meant there had to be a mutual grandparent who was the source of the genetic trait. In similar fashion, the researchers were able to identify shared ancestors among mutation carriers from earlier generations, even though they have no surviving genetic material available for testing.

The researchers concluded the Utah and New York families were related, both descended from the Frys.

The researchers also sketched a quintessential map of American migration, showing how a couple wed in England in 1615 landed in the wilderness of Massachusetts, with one of their offspring marrying in Weymouth in 1640. Later generations then made a westward trek.

The Utah branch, they discovered, descended from a daughter of the Frys; her heirs embarked on their westward migration in the mid-1800s. The New York branch descended from the Frys' son.

Fifteen US families have been identified with the mutation, with as many as 500 adults carrying the trait. Adults with that genetic signature who don't undergo colonoscopies or removal of precancerous polyps have a 2 in 3 chance of developing colon cancer by the age of 80, substantially higher than the general population. About three dozen descendants nationally have been diagnosed with colon cancer related to the mutation. Other genetic mutations in addition to the one linked to the Frys can also cause this form of colon cancer.

"For these genetic syndromes," said Dr. Jeffrey Meyerhardt, a gastrointestinal oncologist at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, "it's an important piece of scientific work to be able to trace back where things start. We can often understand more about the mutations and the syndromes they cause and learn if things changed over generations. Do people in subsequent generations have more cancer?

"That," he said, "is why history matters."

picture John Fry

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Est 1712
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Rachell Witherell (Cir 1714 -       )
       Marriage: 1 Nov 1732 - Eastham, Massachusetts 14
         Status: 


picture
Osgood Fry

      Sex: M

Individual Information
          Birth: Est 1770
        Baptism: 
          Death: 
         Burial: 
 Cause of Death: 


Spouses and Children
1. *Jnae Rich (Est 1775 -       )
       Marriage: 1797 - Buckstown, Maine
         Status: 

Sources


1. Vital Records of Barre, Massachusetts, to the end of the year 1849 (1903. Worcester, Mass.: Franklin P. Rice (online)), 203.

2. Wellfleet Town Officers, Wellfleet, Massachusetts Annual Reports (Wellfleet MA), 1916.

3. Provincetown Advocate (Provincetown, Mass. [1918-1967 archives online at Provincetown Library]), 13 may 1943 - engagement announcement.

4. Pleasant Hill cemetery, Cornelius Hamblen family.

5. Pleasant Hill cemetery, Cornelius Hamblen family. .... Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 1:106. The children of Cornelius and Sally Hamblen.

6. Rootsweb.com, :2226738 (Lloyd Cunningham).

7. Smith and Smith, Vital Records of the Towns of Eastham and Orleans..., 1980, 1993. Baltimore MD, 19. Col. Leonard H Smith, Jr. and Norma H Smith. Vital Records of the Towns of Eastham and Orleans. An authorized facsimile reproduction of records published serially 1901-1935 in "The Mayflower Descendant." With an added index of persons.
1980, 1993. Baltimore MD: reprinted for Clearfield Co. by Genealogical Pub. Co.

8. Robert Paine Carlson, Cape Cod Gravestones, 2003 ff. Eastham MA. CapeCodGravestones.com. .... Elizabeth Freeman, Wellfleet, Truro, & Cape Cod Cemetery Transcriptions. Section Three. Duck Creek Cemetery, Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet MA: Rich Family Asscociation), 38.

9. Hugh Davis McLellan, Katherine B. Lewis, History of Gorham, Maine (1908. Portland, Maine: Smith & Sale, Printers [online]), 505-08.

10. Hugh Davis McLellan, Katherine B. Lewis, History of Gorham, Maine (1908. Portland, Maine: Smith & Sale, Printers [online]), 571.

11. Rootsweb.com, mdenton (Marc D Anderson).

12. Rootsweb.com, mdenton (Marc D Anderson), brendablack (Brenda Black Watson). .... Andrew Henshaw Ward, A genealogical history of the Rice family: descendants of Deacon Edmund Rice (1858. Boston: C.B. Richardson [reprinted 1959]). A genealogical history of the Rice family: descendants of Deacon Edmund Rice, who came from Berkhamstead, England, and settled at Sudbury, Massachusetts, in 1638 or 9; with an index ...

13. Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 1:177. The children of Joseph Holbrook & Margery his wife.

14. Smith and Smith, Vital Records of the Towns of Eastham and Orleans..., 1980, 1993. Baltimore MD, 95 (MD17:82).

picture

Sources


1 Vital Records of Barre, Massachusetts, to the end of the year 1849 (1903. Worcester, Mass.: Franklin P. Rice (online)), 203.

2 Wellfleet Town Officers, Wellfleet, Massachusetts Annual Reports (Wellfleet MA), 1916.

3 Provincetown Advocate (Provincetown, Mass. [1918-1967 archives online at Provincetown Library]), 13 may 1943 - engagement announcement.

4 Pleasant Hill cemetery, Cornelius Hamblen family.

5 Pleasant Hill cemetery, Cornelius Hamblen family. .... Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 1:106. The children of Cornelius and Sally Hamblen.

6 Rootsweb.com, :2226738 (Lloyd Cunningham).

7 Smith and Smith, Vital Records of the Towns of Eastham and Orleans..., 1980, 1993. Baltimore MD, 19. Col. Leonard H Smith, Jr. and Norma H Smith. Vital Records of the Towns of Eastham and Orleans. An authorized facsimile reproduction of records published serially 1901-1935 in "The Mayflower Descendant." With an added index of persons.
1980, 1993. Baltimore MD: reprinted for Clearfield Co. by Genealogical Pub. Co.

8 Robert Paine Carlson, Cape Cod Gravestones, 2003 ff. Eastham MA. CapeCodGravestones.com. .... Elizabeth Freeman, Wellfleet, Truro, & Cape Cod Cemetery Transcriptions. Section Three. Duck Creek Cemetery, Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet MA: Rich Family Asscociation), 38.

9 Hugh Davis McLellan, Katherine B. Lewis, History of Gorham, Maine (1908. Portland, Maine: Smith & Sale, Printers [online]), 505-08.

10 Hugh Davis McLellan, Katherine B. Lewis, History of Gorham, Maine (1908. Portland, Maine: Smith & Sale, Printers [online]), 571.

11 Rootsweb.com, mdenton (Marc D Anderson).

12 Rootsweb.com, mdenton (Marc D Anderson), brendablack (Brenda Black Watson). .... Andrew Henshaw Ward, A genealogical history of the Rice family: descendants of Deacon Edmund Rice (1858. Boston: C.B. Richardson [reprinted 1959]). A genealogical history of the Rice family: descendants of Deacon Edmund Rice, who came from Berkhamstead, England, and settled at Sudbury, Massachusetts, in 1638 or 9; with an index ...

13 Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 1:177. The children of Joseph Holbrook & Margery his wife.

14 Smith and Smith, Vital Records of the Towns of Eastham and Orleans..., 1980, 1993. Baltimore MD, 95 (MD17:82).


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