Difference between revisions of "Family:Whitney, Amos (1766-1854)"

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| '''Amos<sup>7</sup> Whitney''', b. 1790; d. unmarried 19 Oct 1873.  Amos Whitney was never married. He was a man of exemplary character, without being particularly enterprising.  In 1854 his father died and left him a large anount of wealth, though his means were ample without his inheritance.  He left a will at his decease, giving $20,000 to relatives, $2,500 to the "Old Ladies' Home" at Lowell, and made Tuft's college the residuary legatee.  His estate was valued at over $50,000.  
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| '''Amos<sup>7</sup> Whitney''', b. 1790; d. 19 Oct 1873, unmarried.  Amos Whitney was never married. He was a man of exemplary character, without being particularly enterprising.  In 1854 his father died and left him a large anount of wealth, though his means were ample without his inheritance.  He left a will at his decease, giving $20,000 to relatives, $2,500 to the "Old Ladies' Home" at Lowell, and made Tuft's college the residuary legatee.  His estate was valued at over $50,000.  
 
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Revision as of 18:12, 26 April 2008

Amos6 Whitney (Levi5, Daniel4, Jonathan3, Jonathan2, John1), son of Levi5 and Rebecca (Clark) Whitney, was born 11 Feb 1766, and died 2 Oct 1854, Chelmsford, MA.

He married, 16 Aug 1789, Concord, MA, Anna Brown.[1] She died 30 or 31 Dec 1818, Chelmsford, MA, aged 54 years, of consumption.[2]

He was in the coopering business at Chelmsford, now Middlesex village, where he lived, and where he acquired a large property in that trade. He resided Chelmsford, MA.

Children of Amos6 Whitney:

i. Amos7 Whitney, b. 1790; d. 19 Oct 1873, unmarried. Amos Whitney was never married. He was a man of exemplary character, without being particularly enterprising. In 1854 his father died and left him a large anount of wealth, though his means were ample without his inheritance. He left a will at his decease, giving $20,000 to relatives, $2,500 to the "Old Ladies' Home" at Lowell, and made Tuft's college the residuary legatee. His estate was valued at over $50,000.
ii. Sewell Whitney, b. ca. 1796; d. 26 Jul 1799, Dracut, MA, aged 3 years; bur. 27 Jul 1799, Chelmsford, MA, aged 2 years.[3]

Census

References

1.^  "Amos [Whitney], and Anna Brown, both of Concord, by Ephraim Wood, Esq., [married] 16 Aug 1789," according to Town of Concord, Concord, Massachusetts. Births, Marriages, and Deaths, 1635-1850 (Boston, MA: Todd, 1895), p. 260.

2.^  "Anna [Whitney], w. Amos, consumption, [died] Dec. 30, 1818, a. 54y. C.R.1 [Dec 31 G.R.6]," according to Vital Records of Chelmsford, Massachusetts, to the End of the Year 1849 (Salem, MA: Essex Institute, 1914). Also, "Anna [Whitney], w. Amos, [died] Dec. 31, 1818, a. 52y. GR-3," according to Vital Records of Lowell, Massachusetts, to the End of the Year 1849 (Salem, MA: Essex Institute, 1930).

3.^  "Sewell [Whitney], s. Amos, bur. July 27, 1799, a. 2y. C.R.1," according to Chelmsford Vital Records. Also, "Suel [Whitney], s. Cornet Amos and Anna, [died] July 26, 1799, a. 3 [G.R. 3]," according to Vital Records of Dracut, Massachusetts, to the Year 1850 (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1907).


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