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== Trial Version for Importing of Phoenix Pages ==
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==Put Your Trial Edits Here==
  
Moved to [[Phoenix Test]]
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'''Samuel<sup>1</sup> Whiting''',
 +
son of John<sup>A</sup> and Sarah (-----) Whiting,
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was baptized 20 Nov 1597, St. Botolph’s, Boston, Lincolnshire, and died 11 Dec 1679, Lynn, MA, aged 82 years, per gravestone.
  
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He married, 6 Aug 1629, Boston, Lincolnshire '''Elizabeth St. John''', daughter of Sir Oliver St. John, of Cayshoe, Bedfordshire.  She was baptized 12 Jan 1604, Bletsoe, Bedfordshire, and died 3 Mar 1676/7, Lynn, MA.
  
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Samuel Whiting received BA and MA degrees from Emmanuel College, Cambridge University. He received holy orders as a priest in the Church of England, and served as a family chaplain and as associate pastor in King's Lynn. His Puritan practices led to parishioners raising complaints about his ministry, and he subsequently moved to the Parish of Skirbeck, near Boston, Lincolnshire. Again, parishioners complained of his Puritan practices. He ultimately chose to emigrate with his family to Massachusetts Bay Colony, arriving in (new) Boston on 26 May 1636.
  
==Put Your Trial Edits Here==
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Rev. Whiting became a prominent minister and theologian in the colony, who had treatises and sermons published in both English and Latin. He was a colleague of Rev. John Cotton, a preeminent religious leader in Massachusetts Bay who had previously been Samuel Whiting's parish priest in Boston, Lincolnshire. Rev. Whiting was also a colleague of Rev. Increase Mather and his son Rev. Cotton Mather, who included an elegy of Samuel Whiting in his major work, "Magnalia Christi Americana." In 1654, Rev. Samuel Whiting was appointed as overseer of Harvard College (predecessor of Harvard University).
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Three of Samuel Whiting's sons graduated from Harvard College and also became ministers. Eldest son Samuel Whiting Jr. became the minister of the Congregationalist Church in Billerica, MA. Second son John Whiting chose to emigrate to England and became the Anglican pastor of Butterwick Parish in Lincolnshire. Third son Joseph Whiting succeeded his father as pastor in Lynn, MA. In 1682, Joseph Whiting accepted an invitation to leave Massachusetts and become the pastor in Southampton, Long Island, New York, where he lived the rest of his life.
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Children of Samuel<sup>1</sup> and Elizabeth (St. John) Whiting:
 +
 
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:{|
 +
| align=right valign=top | i.
 +
| '''Dorothy<sup>2</sup> Whiting''', b. ca. 1631, England; d. 31 Jul 1694, Roxbury, MA; m. 4 Jun 1650, Roxbury, MA, Thomas Weld.
 +
|-
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| align=right valign=top | ii.
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| '''Samuel Whiting''', bapt. 25 Mar 1633, Skirbeck, Lincolnshire; d. 28 Feb 1712/3, Billerica, MA; m. 12 Nov 1656, Billerica, MA, Dorcas Chester.
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|-
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| align=right valign=top | iii.
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| '''Joseph Whiting''', b. 6 Apr 1641, Lynn, MA; d. 9 Apr 1723, Southampton, NY; m.(1) Sarah Danforth; m.(2) Rebecca Bishop.
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|-
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| align=right valign=top | iv.
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| '''John Whiting''', b. ca. 1637, Lynn, MA; d. 16 Oct 1689, Leaverton, Lincolnshire; m. ca. 1662, England, Esther Brown.
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|-
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| align=right valign=top | v.
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| '''Elizabeth Whiting''', b. ca. 1638; d. 1633, Hartford, CT; m. 6 Apr 1659, Topsfield, MA, Jeremiah Hobart.
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
== References ==
 +
 
 +
* Ancestral File.
 +
 
 +
* FamilySearch.org Family Tree.
 +
 
 +
----
 +
Copyright &copy; 2021, [[User:Rlward|Robert L. Ward]] and the [[Whitney Research Group]].
  
[p. 11]
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[[Category:Connecticut]]
+
[[Category:Hartford County, Connecticut]]
<table><td>
+
[[Category:Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut]]
<b>Family Group Record</b>
+
[[Category:England]]
<font size=-1>Husband <b>Andrew Clow Whitney</b>
+
[[Category:Lincolnshire, England]]
  Birth    11 Aug 1833      Franklin Co., Vt.
+
[[Category:Boston, Lincolnshire, England]]
  Death    22 Jun 1909      Alden, Iowa
+
[[Category:Leaverton, Lincolnshire, England]]
  Marriage 31 Dec 1858      Alden, Iowa
+
[[Category:Skirbeck, Lincolnshire, England]]
  Father  Solomon Whitney (b 3 Jan 1795)
+
[[Category:Massachusetts]]
  Mother  Besheba Clow (b 1 Sep 1795)
+
[[Category:Essex County, Massachusetts]]
Wife    <b>Mary Gardner Todd</b>
+
[[Category:Lynn, Essex County, Massachusetts]]
  Birth    9 Nov 1836        Killawog, NY
+
[[Category:Middlesex County, Massachusetts]]
  Death    25 Jan 1928      Alden, Iowa
+
[[Category:Billerica, Middlesex County, Massachusetts]]
  Father  John Todd (b 18 May 1817)
+
[[Category:Topsfield, Essex County, Massachusetts]]
  Mother  Lucy B Gardner (b 17 Apr 1818)
+
[[Category:Norfolk County, Massachusetts]]
Children
+
[[Category:Roxbury, Norfolk County, Massachusetts]]
1 M Andrew Melvin Whitney
+
[[Category:New York]]
    Birth    14 Jan 1871      Alden, Iowa
+
[[Category:Suffolk County, New York]]
    Death    11 Oct 1953      Radcliffe, Iowa
+
[[Category:Southamptno, Suffolk County, New York]]
    Spouse  Augusta Vieth (m 22 Mar 1906)
 
2 F Effie Whitney
 
    Birth    12 Oct 1880      Alden, Iowa
 
    Death                      Alden, Iowa
 
3 F Mabel Whitney
 
    Birth    18 Oct 1876
 
    Death
 
4 m Charles Whitney
 
    Birth    4 Dec 1874
 
    Death                      Ft. Dodge
 
5 F Minnie S Whitney
 
    Birth    15 Mar 1868
 
    Death                      Alden, Iowa
 
6 F Leona A Whitney
 
    Birth    6 Aug 1865        Alden, Iowa
 
    Death                      Alden, Iowa
 
7 M Louis H Whitney
 
    Birth    6 Aug 1863        Alden, Iowa
 
    Death    25 Aug 1935      Libertyville, Ill.
 
    Spouse  Grace McPherson
 
8 F Edith F Whitney
 
    Birth    18 May 1861      Alden, Iowa
 
    Death                      Alden, Iowa
 
9 F Ida May Whitney
 
    Birth    31 Mar 1860      Alden, Iowa
 
    Death    13 Feb 1925      Alden, Iowa
 
    Spouse  Lyman Beecher Rogers (m 30 Jun 1886)
 
 
<b>HUSBAND NOTES: Andrew Clow Whitney</b>
 
Andrew began learning the carpenter trade at the age of 16. He
 
became a resident of Iowa in 1855, working as a carpenter in
 
Independence until June 1857, when he, his brother Irving, and
 
others drove through to Alden. He and the few who had preceded him
 
then began construction of the new town. He was soon the owner of
 
a carpenter shop, which developed into a cabinetmakers shop and
 
then into a furniture store. He ws in the furniture business
 
for thirty years. Eleven years before his death the store was
 
destroyed by fire. He was a member of the first town council, and
 
also served on the school board and as treasurer. Funeral
 
services were conducted by Rev. A. G. Axtel of the Congregational
 
Church. He was interred in the Alden Cemetery.
 
 
Andrew built his own home at the corner of Maine and Pearl streets, and
 
made most of the furniture in that home.
 
 
<b>WIFE NOTES: Mary Gardner Todd</b>
 
Attended school in Killawog until aged 11 (1847), when she became
 
a member of the Deacon Rogers family of Marathon, NY, through the
 
second marriage of her mother. In 1856 the family moved to Alden,
 
Iowa. Her paternal grandfather was a soldier in the Revolutionary
 
War. She had two sisters, Mrs Eva Cleveland of Two Harbors, Minn,
 
and Mrs Jennie George of Ashland, Wis. She also had a
 
half-brother, Dr. R R Rogers of Jamestown, NY.
 
Pallbearers were the nephews, M.A. Whitney, M.D. Whitney,
 
I.G. Whitney, and M.L. Webster. Out of town attendees at the
 
funeral were Mr and Mrs A.M. Whitney, Gladys, and Harvey of Garden
 
City, Mr Montie A Whitney of Ft. Dodge, Mr and Mrs Martin D
 
Whitney of Albert Lea, Minn, Mr and Mrs M.L. Webster
 
of Independence, Iowa.</td>
 
<td valign=top>
 
<b><u>LEFT</u>: Andrew Clow Whitney with his wife
 
Mary Gardner Todd, and their children:
 
 
<u>RIGHT</u>: Mary Gardner Todd Whitney's
 
parents, brothers.
 
 
Family Group Record</b><font size=-1>
 
Husband <b>John Todd</b>
 
  Birth    18 May 1817
 
  Death    6 Dec 1844
 
  Father  Henry Todd (b 1799)
 
  Mother  Elizabeth Mills (b 10 Dec 1798)
 
Wife    <b>Lucy B Gardner</b>
 
  Birth    17 Apr 1818
 
  Death    24 Oct 1865
 
Children
 
1 F Mary Gardner Todd
 
    Birth    9 Nov 1836        Killawog, NY
 
    Death    25 Jan 1928      Alden, Iowa
 
    Spouse  Andrew Clow Whitney (m 31 Dec 1858)
 
2 M Henry W Todd
 
    Birth    18 Jan 1841      Killawog, NY
 
    Death    23 Oct 1912      Marshalltown, Iowa
 
    Spouse  Jeannette Bigelow
 
3 M Chauncy D Todd
 
    Birth    17 Jul 1844      Killawog, NY
 
    Death                      New York, NY
 
    Spouse  Ellen Button
 
 
<b>HUSBAND NOTES: John Todd</b>
 
 
<b>WIFE NOTES: Lucy B. Gardner</b>
 
Todd Geneology, CS71 T634 1920 p. 361:
 
Lucy B. Gardner married Jesse Rogers of Alden, Iowa
 
 
<b>CHILD NOTES: Mary Gardner Todd</b>
 
Attended school in Killawog until aged 11 (1847), when she became
 
a member of the Deacon Rogers family of Marathon, NY, through the
 
second marriage of her mother. In 1856 the family moved to Alden,
 
Iowa. Her paternal grandfather was a soldier in the Revolutionary
 
War. She had two sisters, Mrs Eva Cleveland of Two Harbors, Minn,
 
and Mrs Jennie George of Ashland, Wis. She also had a
 
half-brother, Dr. R R Rogers of Jamestown, NY.
 
Pallbearers were the nephews, M.A. Whitney, M.D. Whitney,
 
I.G. Whitney, and M.L. Webster. Out of town attendees at the
 
funeral were Mr and Mrs A.M. Whitney, Gladys, and Harvey of Garden
 
City, Mr Montie A Whitney of Ft. Dodge, Mr and Mrs Martin D
 
Whitney of Albert Lea, Minn, Mr and Mrs M.L. Webster
 
of Independence, Iowa.
 
 
<b>CHILD NOTES: Henry W Todd</b>
 
Enlisted in Company F, 2nd Iowa Cavalry, on August 9, 1861. He
 
was mustered out Sept 19, 1865, at Selma, Alabama. For 25 years
 
after the close of the war he was employed by the Fargo Express
 
Company at Denver. He lived in Los Angeles for ten years, and
 
returned to Iowa in 1911. Among the relatives who attended the
 
funeral were Mrs. A. C. Whitney, George Bigelow, Mr and Mrs L.
 
B. Rogers, and Miss Mabel Whitney. Mr and Mrs O. S. Cleveland of
 
Webster City were also present.
 
 
<b>CHILD NOTES: Chauncy D Todd</b>
 
His boyhood days were spent in Alden, where he was a clerk at the
 
L H Utley store. During the Civil War he was a member of the 32nd
 
Iowa Infantry. He married Ellen Button after the war. They moved
 
to Colorado where he was employed by the Singer sewing machine
 
company as head salesman for many years. He spent his last days
 
at the home of his daughter, Mrs Fred Roe, in New York.  He was
 
buried at Orange City NJ, by the side of his wife. He was the last
 
of the civil war veterans from Alden.
 
 
Prepared 9 Aug 1996 by:
 
James Whitney
 
2410 Prairie Rd
 
Madison, WI 53711
 
608 721 5440</td></tr>
 
</table>
 
                                      (11)
 
<hr>
 

Latest revision as of 15:40, 12 March 2021

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Put Your Trial Edits Here

Samuel1 Whiting, son of JohnA and Sarah (-----) Whiting, was baptized 20 Nov 1597, St. Botolph’s, Boston, Lincolnshire, and died 11 Dec 1679, Lynn, MA, aged 82 years, per gravestone.

He married, 6 Aug 1629, Boston, Lincolnshire Elizabeth St. John, daughter of Sir Oliver St. John, of Cayshoe, Bedfordshire. She was baptized 12 Jan 1604, Bletsoe, Bedfordshire, and died 3 Mar 1676/7, Lynn, MA.

Samuel Whiting received BA and MA degrees from Emmanuel College, Cambridge University. He received holy orders as a priest in the Church of England, and served as a family chaplain and as associate pastor in King's Lynn. His Puritan practices led to parishioners raising complaints about his ministry, and he subsequently moved to the Parish of Skirbeck, near Boston, Lincolnshire. Again, parishioners complained of his Puritan practices. He ultimately chose to emigrate with his family to Massachusetts Bay Colony, arriving in (new) Boston on 26 May 1636.

Rev. Whiting became a prominent minister and theologian in the colony, who had treatises and sermons published in both English and Latin. He was a colleague of Rev. John Cotton, a preeminent religious leader in Massachusetts Bay who had previously been Samuel Whiting's parish priest in Boston, Lincolnshire. Rev. Whiting was also a colleague of Rev. Increase Mather and his son Rev. Cotton Mather, who included an elegy of Samuel Whiting in his major work, "Magnalia Christi Americana." In 1654, Rev. Samuel Whiting was appointed as overseer of Harvard College (predecessor of Harvard University).

Three of Samuel Whiting's sons graduated from Harvard College and also became ministers. Eldest son Samuel Whiting Jr. became the minister of the Congregationalist Church in Billerica, MA. Second son John Whiting chose to emigrate to England and became the Anglican pastor of Butterwick Parish in Lincolnshire. Third son Joseph Whiting succeeded his father as pastor in Lynn, MA. In 1682, Joseph Whiting accepted an invitation to leave Massachusetts and become the pastor in Southampton, Long Island, New York, where he lived the rest of his life.

Children of Samuel1 and Elizabeth (St. John) Whiting:

i. Dorothy2 Whiting, b. ca. 1631, England; d. 31 Jul 1694, Roxbury, MA; m. 4 Jun 1650, Roxbury, MA, Thomas Weld.
ii. Samuel Whiting, bapt. 25 Mar 1633, Skirbeck, Lincolnshire; d. 28 Feb 1712/3, Billerica, MA; m. 12 Nov 1656, Billerica, MA, Dorcas Chester.
iii. Joseph Whiting, b. 6 Apr 1641, Lynn, MA; d. 9 Apr 1723, Southampton, NY; m.(1) Sarah Danforth; m.(2) Rebecca Bishop.
iv. John Whiting, b. ca. 1637, Lynn, MA; d. 16 Oct 1689, Leaverton, Lincolnshire; m. ca. 1662, England, Esther Brown.
v. Elizabeth Whiting, b. ca. 1638; d. 1633, Hartford, CT; m. 6 Apr 1659, Topsfield, MA, Jeremiah Hobart.

References

  • Ancestral File.
  • FamilySearch.org Family Tree.

Copyright © 2021, Robert L. Ward and the Whitney Research Group.