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PURCHASED
K napp
if
FRQ.M
\v~nd
of Sir
William
William of Newbyth.
Created Baronel
in
1809.
Married,
COLLECTION OF DATA
jf.
jX*>
BY
BAIRD WARD
-
PUBLISHERS
NASHVILLE, TENN.
\
?lSj
Copyright, 1918, by
Fermine B. Catchings.
>
*
*
.* .
DEDICATION.
dedicate this compilation to the spirit of freedom,
civil
and
ecclesiastical,
born
in
the
sturdy,
courageous
were keen-
strong
sighted,
which
of church and
tion,
it
tried
in the
and
time
spirit
protested
of
freedom
United States.
in
Many
democracy
autocracy
against
state,
find
to
The
fearless.
distant
that
at
its
Ireland,
and
later
of these
men
as
convic-
found
"younger
years later)
Here
to
this
its
strong
help the
ready
to
great
principle
offspring
Old World
kill,
of
take
liberty
its
today
stands
like
fifty
foundation.
name of
the
Lord God of
Israel,
PREFACE.
I
true:
I
am
have never worshiped ancestors and think the old saying is often
the best part under the ground."
"Ancestry is like the potato
too democratic to wish to tack on to royalty, except royalty of
character.
My
this
research
was
to
find
who my
much regarding
acknowledgment
of their sturdy, fearless standing for their principles and liberty, coming
to such a new and distant land, many of them in sail boats, having lost
by confiscation what money they had had trying to save the cause they
felt was right.
I feel a respect for the man who could use his practical
intelligence in earning an honest living, so the blacksmith, the weaver,
as well as the professor, warrior or missionary, are all recorded with
equal care.
In searching for my own people,
sponded, so the data grew to include
many
many
careful study
lationship.
his best,
not,
may
and
have
My
New
My
first
many
;
Mr. David Baird and Mr. Froman, of New Jersey, and Mr.
George W. Baird (Rear Admiral), of Washington, D. C., and
Mrs. Torrey, of Baird, Miss.
Much historical and geographical information has been gained from
"A Chronicle of the Bards," by G. O. Seilhamer.
To one and all I return thanks.
Fermine B. Catchings.
definiteness.
but,
results
result
of his work,
genealogy
"For example, all the research being put on the ducal line of the Gordons
and fifty years, which 'was identical with the nation's history' and
nothing written of the numerous branches who were content to remain on the
borders; and the more important cadets in the North remained without historians
at all.
"By
the
American
way we
way
of a footnote
genealogists.
Here
scarcely understand;
is
and yet
and antediluvian
as interchangeable
words."
(J.
M.
1917.
Before taking up the record of the past I would like to call attensome of the fruits of the stand our fathers took, in establishing
democracy in this country a hundred years ago, by excerpts from a
tion to
current newspaper:
"Little more than a century ago a British army, acting under one of the
malicious and senseless orders of George III, was burning Washington; this year
Mr. Balfour, the British minister, addressed Congress, and our President, Mr.
Wilson, made a new precedent in the annals of Congress by attending the House
hear him."
In this year [1917] when it was impossible to remain out of the
war, the question whether a volunteer or a regular army should be sent to France
must remind everyone of the fact that, in the crisis of the American Revolution,
two French generals came to the United States the one Lafayette, the head of
to
Rochambeau,
M.
in
command
Jusserand was
present,
of
Rochambeau 's
visit
General
"To
we
such a task
day
has
lives
and our
the pride of
to
is
privileged
spend
principles that gave her birth and happiness,
treasured.
God helping her, she can do no other."
for
the
her
blood
the
peace
He
of
this
Without
States
has passed a
United
bonds,
the proceeds of which are to be used in helping to defray the cost, to itself and to
The
its sister nations, of carrying on a defensive war against military autocracy.
people of the United States do not hesitate a moment when the choice lies between
and
realization
The
to
pay
tribute to
Washington.
in
the
Mayflower
to
Mt. Vernon
10
to
salute
respectfully
the
who have
Mr. Balfour
great
soldier
his
said:
"There can be no spot on earth where any word on the subject of 'liberty'
can have greater meaning than at the tomb of Washington.
Great Britain sent
a bronze wreath, with the inscription, 'Dedicated by the British Mission to the
immortal memory of George Washington soldier, statesman, patriot who would
have rejoiced to have seen the country of which he was by birth a citizen, and
fighting
side
by
side
to
save
of Peary's
"Blocked again at Cape Herschel, I found a way through the mountains into
Baird's Inlet.
Here at Eskind Point the walls of three stone houses and remains
of a boat marked the site of the first encampment of Greely's party.
Before turning
back
searched the cape carefully for records and boat of British expedition of
mail found was legible and in fairly good condition.
Mapped Baird's
The
1876.
on return."
Inlet
"It was Mr. Lloyd George who, in one of his picturesque phrases, described the
There is as a matter of fact somemilitary airmen as the 'Bayards of the clouds.'
thing peculiarly fitting in the name, for the fighting in the air has been carried on
with
less
gas, no submarine,
to adopt towards
past.
They
are,
In the air at
else.
all
events
there
"A
has been no
air
have come
fighters
few miles away, across the uplands, lies Sulgrave Manor, with the
ington stars and stripes carved on the lintel over the doorway."
in
of the
Wash-
"Americans in England accepted from the English the gift of Sulgrave Manor,
Warwickshire, sealing the centennial of Anglo-Saxon peace."
"On December 11, 1917, General Allenby made his state entry into Jerusalem.
very deep impression has been caused throughout Palestine by what the inhabitants of the country regard as the fulfillment of an ancient prophecy.
"The Kaiser made a spectacular entry into Jerusalem in 1898, riding through
At that time the ancient prophecy was unearthed to the
a hole in the city wall.
that the real deliverer would combine the terms 'Alia,' or God, and 'nabi,*
effect
in on foot.
General Allenby 's name is considered
be that combination.
has maintained his own descent from David. If this claim were
true, the real representative of the Davidic line would be the present Prince of
Wales, who on hi3 birth was deliberately christened David."
or prophet,
everywhere
in Palestine to
"The Kaiser
On
States
July
that
8th
its
Roman
CONTENTS.
PAGE
Chapter
I.
Chapter
II.
Chapter
III.
Chapter
IV.
Chapter
V.
Chapter
VI.
Appendix
Ancient History
(not indexed)
15
Colonial Data
39
48
76
156
196
205
ILLUSTRATIONS.
General Sir David Baird
Frontispiece
FACING
PAGE
82
Rev. A.
86
J.
Baird
W.
122
Baird
32
86
PAGE
65
Coat of Arms of
J.
H. Baird
of Griggstown,
N. J
157
205
CHAPTER
I.
ANCIENT HISTORY.
Italian and
French Data.
others.)
Ugone de Bard, Val de Aosta, Italy, ranked next to the Viscount of Aosta,
first lord of the
His home was "Castle Bard." He made allegiance to
Valley.
Ugone the elder gave his youngest son, Guglielmo, the Signoria di Bard.
aroused the jealousy of the other sons.
and
This
the
Anselmo having also incurred the wrath of his sovereign, was likewise deprived
of his badly-governed lands.
Conquered but not tamed, the two brothers departed
from the Valley of Aosta.
It
probable that
is
Ugone
Rainero and
Rossetto, but his two elder sons, Marco and Aymone, refused to join their father
in his revolt.
They received from the Count the Signoria of Sarre and the Castle
Argent. The Count reserved for himself the Castle Bard.
Both brothers took the name of Sarriod, and were known as Sarriod d'Introd
and Sarriod de la Tour.
will of Guglielmo Sarriod, dated 1279, leaves the
Castle Argent to
After the
Bard (according
wife.
Castle Bard,
in
1238, he presented
Rock
Tomasso di Savoya,
Count of Flanders and Heinault, and it then became a state fortress. The fort commands the St. Bernard passes and resisted Napoleon's passage of the Alps in 1800
to
a document dated
1244)
to
his
brother,
Val de Aosta
The
village of
is
in
Bard
a long borough
The
At
at
the
Savoy
foot of
the western
in
Piedmont,
Rock Bard.
end
is
The
Italy.
river
Introd) and
took for coat
of arms:
On silver a blue band, on which were three golden lions
decorated with blue. Aymone adopted the same, with a red and black
tower in the left corner.
16
From
the resemblance of
The
of Lorraine.
of arms
some
historians
that Seignori di
infer
The
Montbard;
town boasts a
this
castle with a
Montbard was:
coat of arms of
On
gold.
in the sixteenth
the
sent to
Aosta
[In "Memorial of the Huguenots," Rev. A. Stapelton gives the names of two
Bairds, Francois and William, who emigrated from Lorraine in 1754 (possibly to
Ireland) and later to America.]
witness
the Lion,
to
1233.
Ugone, who
is
the
to
King William
1194."
"Robert,
It
Hugo de Bard
Siegneur de
was
left
Richard 1228-40."
Aosta
also probable
1
By some it is supposed that Ugone and his brother Anselmo went
and Fergus and others were their descendants.
to
Scotland,
Mrs.
The name
Warwick, N. Y.
found in the celebrated "Landnama Bok," a work of extraIt is without doubt a character
ordinary antiquity, one of the earliest of Iceland.
name and of Norse origin. It was probably carried to Normandy iy some follower
of Rollo, thence to England and Scotland.
Bardd, a singer, is Welsh.
Bard,
Baird or Baard might have been so mighty a singer as to have made that class
assume the name.
The Norse meaning is "hard," that is "brave," "strong,"
is
"indomitable."
The
roll of William the Conqueror's followers is not known with any degree
"Barte" is given in Brompton's and Biard in Leland's (probably
same man).
mullet was the heraldic representation of a knight's spur and is very similar
of accuracy.
the
A
to
a star,
save that
it
is
when properly
represented.
The
this late day we cannot say whether the history of Ugone was unbiased
and true. It would depend upon which side (ecclesiastically and politically) the hisThose who planned St. Bartholomew's Day and carried it
torian happened to be.
out would hardly give a good name to those who resisted that kind of government.
Judging from the Bairds of Scotland, we are inclined to think the narrator was
*At
as
its
spots.
ANCIENT HISTORY
17
idea of the blue field and slats of the American flag was supposed to have been
taken from Washington's coat of arms. (See Appendix, page 205.)
is derived from
William de Hertburn, who came
Wessyngton, Durham, prior to the compilation of Boldon Book.
1183 (Hutchinson, Durham, ii, 489; Surtees, ii, 40).
The family soon after
assumed the name of Washington.
The
family of Washington
into possession of
in the wapentake
of Sadbergs, Durham, was granted by Richard 1
See of Durham, including, amongst others, "the service (or fief) of the son
of Godfrey Baard for two parts of a knight's fee in Moddleton and Hertburn."
(Surtees, iii. 265), and as late as 1364 the Baards or Barts had lands there
Hertburn,
to the
(Ibid,
22).
iii,
2d
ed.,
Collections
Regarding
ihe
Name
of
Baird,
by
W.
Baird,
Esq.,
1870.)
in
1165
the
to
family,
Barberie
ed.
Raroul
Baiart,
Abbey.
(M.
of
S.
1874).
also
Thomas Bard and Rohais, his wife, granted the Church of Burnonville to the
Abbey of Bee (Mon., ii, 983). Jordan Bard lived in Essex and Herts, 1130
From him descended William Bard, who held two fees from the
(Rot. Pip.).
See of London (Lib. Nig.). He was probably ancestor of Bard, Viscount Bellomont, a faithful follower of Charles
in
this
line
I.
in
in
England
in
1224;
as
Bard and
in
England
18
Edmund Baird among others was pardoned by King Edward II. This
Baird, it may be assumed, was the ancestor of the Bairds of North
and
from his attitude toward Elizabeth Baird, widow of Robert, he was
Kelsey,
probably of the same stock as the Bards of Banff and Auchmedden.
In 1317
Edmund
ham
the dower.
Yorkshire.
(Hertford is near Middlesex.) Out of Yorkshire, held by William,
This William
son of Robert, a tenth of a knight's fee was given to the widow.
probably was one who was taken prisoner with Sir William Douglas in 1333 on
This Robert was fighting with Bruce when captured.
the English border.
In
to
levy
men
war
for
against
Scotland.
The lands of Kilperran belonged to John Baird before King James IV, as
appears by a charter by that prince in 1509.
Capt. John Baird was
A
whom
slain
at the battle of
Marston Moor.
The Bards of North Kelsey.- Edmond Bard, of Barforth, had a son, Alexander (m. daughter of John Brigvield; who had a son John (m. daughter of Sir John
Brough, Kt.) ; who had a son Gosling (m. daughter of Thomas Denby) who had a
son Adam (m. daughter and heiress of Dampeur of North Kelsey, Lincolnshire,
which was for many centuries the principal seat of the Bards of North Kelsey. Adam
;
had a son Adam (m. daughter of John Derby) who had a son Thomas (m. daughter
of John Yardborough), who had a son John (m. Elizabeth, daughter of Wm. Dallison) who had a son John (m. daughter of John Henage)
they had son Thomas (m.
Eleanor, daughter of Sir Richard Hansard). Thomas and Eleanor had Ralf (m.
Ellen Mussenden), Alice (m. John Trowsdale), Robert (d. 1537), Thomas (d. 1544.
in Alison of N. Kelsie). Ralf's son William married Ellen Middleton and had a
son Ralf (m. Margaret Gilby) and a daughter Frances (m. William Roches of
Thomas, who died in 1544, had Thomas, Mary, Agnes,
Bresby, Lincolnshire).
This Christopher (d. 1586) was
Christopher, Helen, Margaret, and William.
owner of Tealby Grange. He settled the Priory of Sixhills on his son Richard,
1585. He married Adrian, and had issue: George, Christopher, Simon, Richard, and
Elizabeth (m. Clark).
George, the eldest son of Christopher, was Vicar of
Staines in Middlesex County.
He died 1616. He had married Susan Dudley of
London. Their children were William (an apprentice in 1615), Maximilian (later
of Hammersmith, County Middlesex), George (living in 1615), Henry, Viscount
Bellamount; Margaret, and Elizabeth.
;
In 1627 they
son of Rev.
in
1581.
had two
He
married, in 1621,
and Christo-
sons, Francis
ANCIENT HISTORY
19
fellow and D.C.L., of King's College, Cambridge. During the reign of Charles I
he was a colonel in the royal army; knighted in 1643; created baronet in 1644;
Baron of Drombey and Viscount Bellamont in the peerage of Ireland, 1646.
His lordship, proceeding on an embassy from Charles II, then in exile, to the
court of Persia, was overtaken by a whirlwind and choked by the sand in 1660.
Lord Bellamont had married Anne Gardyner, daughter of Sir William G., Knight, of
Peckham, Surrey. They had one son, Charles Rupert (1647-1665). They had
three daughters, Anne, Frances and Persiana.
Arms
of
Or, three
lions
passant
az.,
within
or
within
a bordure of same.
Arms
of
a bordure engr.
Arms
lions
passant,
az.
of Viscount Bellamont:
ar.,
five
plates.
to
Bard
peerage of Ireland,
down
646.
B. (Francis Baird) on
Antrim,
to
is
Elizabeth
(aged 24),
who came
16),
in
1635.
Beard, of Massachusetts,
When we
member how
who came on
who
died
1717.
in
say the English, Scotch and Irish Bairds, we should renear they are in government as well as miles, and how
owns land in all three places. From the name Chriswe might surmise that Alexander, Robert and James had relawho went to England when they came over here.
often a person
topher
tives
F.supposed
B. C]
is
to
have come
Irish Data.
349, says the name has been changed to MacWard, Ward, Bairdain,
Baird, Bard and Barde (Irish bar; Hebrew baar, a singer).
20
wandered
So
men were
welcomed everywhere.
harper
that these
said
as a harper.
If
it is
Gad
and
(Christian
frey, of
all
Danish camp
to
Science Monitor.)
Scotland, the
Dan
England, seems
to
God-
how much of Gaelic the French claim, it might not be far afield to
If
the Bard, and the Bards cf France and Italy were his descendants.
of arms of Owen, Ugone and his brothers are compared with those of
Godfrey, of Middlesex, England, there is possibly more than an accidental coincidence.
F. B. C]
[Considering
say
Owen was
the
coats
and may
indi-
Unada Dearg,
Ughaine,
GlLLDE,
his son.
his son.
his son.
Eachtighearna, his
Derwood, his son.
Ughra, his son.
Murios,
son.
his son.
GlLLDE.
Melachlin.
Ughra.
Murios.
Gillde.
Melachlin.
Ughra.
Gillcorndhe.
Derwood.
Maccraith.
Conor.
Shane.
Owen Mac-an-Bhaird,
9
of Monycassan.
gu.,
or.
PLANTATION OF ULSTER.
"During the reign of Queen Elizabeth the disaffected and turbulent Province
of Ulster in Ireland suffered the ravages of civil war.
Quieted by the sword for
a time, insurrection burst forth in the second year of James I and repeated rewere crushed. In 1605 almost all the six counties fell by forfeiture into
London company colonized this unhappy district with
hands of the king.
Their descendants are called Scotchsettlers, partly English but principally Scotch.
bellions
the
ANCIENT HISTORY
settled
in
Blue Ridge,
Virginia,
he."'-
{Old
'Quo
21
their
constant
Virginia History.)
"The Scotch, invited by the king to inhabit confiscated Irish lands, were in
But during the
almost every village, as their Presbyterian chapels bore witness.
century of their occupation of Ulster their thrift and energy had battled with but
moderate success against the ravages of war and the burden of hostile laws. The
This class was largely English,
third element in the population was the ruling class.
supplemented by Scotch and Irish landowners, nearly all of whom, through selfinterest or conviction, upheld the Established Church, and by virtue of this allegiance
had access
to the
1642.
10,
settled
Ireland.
in
In
first
Limavady.
at Dervock, in Antrim,
twenty or
and Killen's History of the Presby-
settled
(Reid
[Tradition says Francis was son of John and came from Antrim.
ancestors of John Baird of Plalsmouth came from Antrim.]
Thomas
Chigonois
in
James D. Baird,
He
their
eldest
An
first
follows:
There was
Alex
also
Donegal, 1715.
in
1793,
John Baird
in
son,
Rebecca,
(Miller's
was
He
says the
married
ried
son,
It also
at
the
siege
of
Londonderry.
Presbytery of Ireland.
ruling
elder
early
in
the
eighteenth
century
late
of
Boom
who married, 1848, Charles Maturen, Esq., and died 1851, leaving
Daniel Baird Maturin, born 1851
Boom Hall, Londonderry; residence, The
Charlotte Jane,
issue,
BAIRD
22
Seilhamer says:
by a number of Johns
were several heads of
in
to
Ireland
Among
them
families.
From
gleaned:
the
documents
at
b*nd of his widow, Ellinor, was signed by David Beard and James Wilson.
In 1722
This David was probably a son and the Presbyterian elder of 1724.
a David Beard died in the parish at Donegore in the barony of Upper Antrim.
and
Robert
sureties
were
William
Her
Jane, his widow, was his administratrix.
William died in the parish of Ballyeastore, near BallyBeard, probably her sons.
Robert died in Donegore parish in 1746. Martha
clare, County Antrim, in 1743.
Beard was his administratrix. That they were brothers is indicated by the fact
that Robert was William's administrator; that they were of the Glenarm family
is suggested by the coincidence that the administration bonds of both John Beard
John
of Glenarm and David of Donegore were witnessed by William Carroll.
tration
John
Baird, of Dromore parish, County Down, made a will proved in 1720.
Baird, of Skeogtownland, Dromore parish, County Down, left a will which was
both
bonds
to
the
administration
Henry Marmion was witness
proved in 1734.
of William Beard of Ballyeaston, and James of Creagnogan, County Antrim, who
died in 1750, leaving a son, John Beard.
That William, Robert,
probable, but not proved.
and
perhaps
James
were brothers
of
Archibald
is
James Baird, the grandson of Elder David Beard, lived at Glenarm until
when he died at a very advanced age. He thought Archibald Beard had
town in the center of Tyrone coal field,
probably married at Coal Island, a post
on the road from Dungannon to Ballinderry, and from Lurgan to Stewartstown.
Heath Money
It is not improbable that the father of William Beard of Glenarm
In the so-called "Depositions of
Roll of 1669 was David Bard of Island Magee.
of
number
of
a
examination
of
the
including
abstracts
are
persons,
there
1641"
Kathrine Bard, wife of David, concerning the murder of Phelemy McGee and
left
had
been
"After
McGee
his family in Island Magee in one of which it said,
for dead he was sheltered by David Beard, but that he was killed next day."
There is a David Baird who kept a public house at Ballywee. Ballywee is in
1905,
"New
in
Ballywee.
John
for he
Andrew
to Craighall,
to
the Foyle.
The Bairds
of
New
Mills
Grange Tyrone
23
ANCIENT HISTORY
The
fact that
to Middlesex,
DATA FROM
REV. W.
J.
BAIRD, B.A,
BROOKVALE
An uncle
New York.
of
his,
John, came
to
WOODLAND HOUSE,
AVE., BELFAST.
America
the village of
in
1830;
Ardstraw
the
in
townland of Killen,
in
born
Moses and (Caldwell) Baird had issue: Andrew, who died unmarried;
Robert, who went to California; Moses, who went to Australia, had three daughters; John, who went to America in 1830; James, who died in 1814, aged 42,
unmarried; Joseph, who married Sarah Patrick, and died in 1896, aged 81
Mary, unmarried; Jane, who married Jas. Knox; Ellen, who died young.
;
Joseph and Sarah (Patrick) Baird had issue: Ellen, 1862-1889; Moses,
who went to Australia; Rebecca, unmarried; Wm. John, who married Agnes
Maggumn (who wrote the letter to the minister of Agus St. Presbyterian Church,
Belfast); Andrew, who went to Australia: Joseph, who died in 1888; Mary
Jane, who married Manly Free; Sarah, who died in 1887; Robert, who came to
America and died in 1910; Caldwell, who died in 1888; Matilda, who died in
1896; James, who lived on a farm at home; Margaret, born in 1885, unmarried.
The Ardstraw
(in
James, of Raphoe,
these names.
FROM
IRISH LETTERS.
at
the
time of the
Planta-
If
James S.
came from
James
is
right, the
Maybole
Baird, who was the only child and heiress of Walter Baird, of Ordinlewas,
went to Ireland as adventurers in the beginning of the reign of King James I.
24
He
The Barde
Beard family of Ireland goes back to the time of Queen Elizaor Bairds of Queens County spring from William
Barde or
in Ireland under Sir Henry Sidney, Lord Deputy,
and must have borne an important part in the advance of the English army from
the Pale in 1557.
As early as 1568 he was granted a messuage in Maryborough
comprising seven cottages, besides sixty acres arable and forty pasture, wood and
underwood in Colte; sixteen acres in Ballycorballe, all in Queen's County.
He
or
The Beards
Beard, who was
beth or earlier.
Elizabeth
in
Maryborough
the
granted
inhabitants
Butler.
Thomas Beard
died
in
1640.
Thomas
also
ppr.
1630.
William Barde
lived
at
wife,
Catherine,
Fermanagh.
The following are data of William Baird of Grange in County Tyrone, barony
The town of Dunamanagh was founded by
of Strabane, Parish of Donagheady.
Sir John Drummond.
Grange derived its name from the ancient church now
Near the ruins ^is an old
in ruins, which belonged to the abbey of Derry.
The Presbyterian church to which William probably
graveyard of the Bairds.
belonged was known as Donagheady. John Hamilton was minister, 1658-1688.
From the tombstones it appears William Baird had among others a son John
By his second wife,
John is said to have been married twice.
(1664-1748).
This
a son William (1715-1778).
Jean. (1684-1770) he had, among others,
William owned a large estate at Thorney Hill, County Tyrone, and was buried
His wife was Martha (1728-1798) and they had six sons and three
to America; Alexander, twin brother of John, inherited
Thorny Hill, but died unmarried; William (born 1757); Margaret, married
James Pollock; James; Archibald (born 1762), an apprentice in Londonderry at
his father's death: Andrew, a surgeon in the Royal Navy; Cathrine, and Mary.
at
Grange.
daughters.
John went
was one of
J
the
owners,
with
his
brother
John,
of
in
the
1757;
estate
died
near
in
1844.
He
Dunamanagh
25
ANCIENT HISTORY
William sold it to his brother,
called Aughtermoy.
lived fifteen years longer.
then an old man
He
was
John Baird, the ancestor of the family of Strabane, County Tyrone, and
grandfather of John Baird of Christiana Hundred, evidently settled at or near
Strabaneton with James Hamilton, Earl of Abercorn, at the Plantation of Ulster.
He was probably related to William of Grange, as he had a son Andrew also.
Seilhamer says:
An
and
answer
heir
dated
made
in
to
be
claiming
1676
to
an
executor of
admits that
1675,
Baird, but denies that he
January 26,
is
Andrew Baird
of John Baird, who is in possession of the tenement named in the Bill. Thus we
lcnow that John Baird of Strabane had issue, among others, two sons, Andrew and
This James had John (who came to America), William, James, Sydney,
James.
Rebecca, and Jane, who married Winkham.
"Beyond the legal proceedings in which he became involved, and the fact
that he paid heath money in Strabane in 1666, we have no knowledge of Andrew
Beard.
James Beard, who inheiited the forge of his father at Strabane, by his
wife Elizabeth had a daughter Elizabeth,
[This uncle of John's
to
America
Carrol."
also.]
[Archibald Beard and others purchased a tract of 5,000 acres of land from
Daniel Carroll of Duddington Manor, in Prince George's County, Maryland.
Carroll
had obtained the grant of land from Lord Baltimore.
They named this tract CarWilliam Carroll was witness to administration bonds of David Beard
roll's Delight.
of Donegore and John Beard of Glenarns, Ireland.]
DICKSON.
Given by
to a
One
of
(in the
The
first
few chapters).
Issuing
from a tower a
lion's
head ppr.
Dickson, Samuel Auchumty, Esq., J.P.D.L., of Cloudebarde, County Limand of Beenham House, Berks. Coat of arms: Out of battlements a
naked arm embowered, holding a sword in bend sinister, all ppr.
Motto: Fortes
erick,
fortuna jurat.
Dickson, son of Dick or Richard. The family are descended from Richard
Keith, a son of Hervey de Keith (Earl Marshal of Scotland), by his wife Margaret,
This Richard Keith bore for his
daughter of William, third Lord Duglas.
arms: Azure, three mullets argent [being the arms of Duglas], a chief or three
the
arms
of
His son,
pallats gules [being
Keith] (Sims, Scotch Sur Names).
26
BAIRD
in
William was twice married and had eight children. Thomas married, first,
Mary Kent: issue, John, Hugh, Jane, Rachel, and Elizabeth.
The Irish Dixons came from Scotland in a clan in the reign of Henry VIII.
The oldest spelling in Ireland is Dykeson.
Robert Dixon was killed
in
front of
Quebec
1775.
in
in
Thomas
born
They had
(born in 1741) married Hester Lowry.
1784, who was in the army and died abroad in 1807.
in
is
Lowry Baird;
also
1718;
Harvey.
married
Thomas
Issue:
son,
F.
B.
of
Thomas,
C]
According
to
in
1805.
Motto: Fide
et
Constantia.
McDonald Baird, his family concomes through James, the son of James and
Dr. Thompson
He
had a son James, who had a son William who went to Ireland about
married and had two sons, Robert and John.
John married Elizabeth
He
1690.
Dickson,
daughter of
Thomas Dickson,
Arms:
in Scotland.
to
America
in
Gent., in
1796.
1769.
and
hilt
gold
Jr.,
as
REEVES
went
of
to Ireland,
Sir
and
Charles
I,
(with
family are descended), a son
William
daughter
of
Robert Reeves, Esq., who married Mary Bodley, daughter of Bodley, then
of Kilkenny, a near relative of Sir Thomas Bodley. who founded the library at
Oxford.
ANCIENT HISTORY
late.
(From
Genealogical and
27
Burke,
Esq.,
and
II.)
"The Tyrone coal field has special advantage for working, lying to the north
of the flourishing town of Dungannon, and the Ulster canal places the district of
Coal Island in connection with Lough Neagh. Ulster is rich in undeveloped coal,
for in addition to the Tyrone coal field and several other mineral areas, it contains a coal area of singular richness not only in coal but in iron ore and mineral
This
oil.
known
is
as
Castle
Bally
stone'
in
large
and
Fair
The
Head.
band
'black
iron
quantities
the
Donegal and Tyrone are drained by the Fern and the Mourne, two
which unite at Strabane to form the Foyle.
The Foyle flows
northward across Londonderry to the sea. From Lough Neagh on the
rivers
eastern border of
rating
first
of the
William
the
that
name mentioned
in
Conqueror.
And, from
lieve
originally of the
the reign of Louis
is
the time
some of
that
when the first appears in Scotland, there is reason to bename came here with King William the Lion, when he
74, as
it
is
agreed by
all
our his-
torians,
years
in
the south
1066.
mandy's followers
1178.
the
Lion
in
the conquest of
as one of
England.
Henry
to the
to
King William
during his going and coming and stay in England, are ordered for him,
Bard is one of the subscribing witnesses.
Huco
DE
There
is
he was alarmed
^This was three years after Ugone left Val d' Aosta.
2
It is probable that Hugo de Bard was this person and the ancestor of the AuchBairds.
medden
28
Richard lived
in
upon lands
charter
of
Mathow
Baird
George Baird,
in
1573 was
sheriff
who had
lands in 1240.
Auchmedden.
Wallace.
(Murray),
that
in habits of great
received
from him a
disposition,
in
It
is
said
in
Name
of
Baird,"
I.
1902,
in
all
to
the
sixteenth century."
recent
years
the
most entire of
all
the
The
He
Christine Lindsay.
He
died in 1577.
These may have belonged to the Bairds of North Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England, but it is likely they were of Auchmedden, Scotland.
[It may be they all descended from Hugo de Barde, the witness of safe conduct
of King William the Lion in 1194. Seilhamer.]
"During the civil wars among the competitors for the Scottish crown and those
under Wallace and Bruce for the independence of Scotland, General Stewart
says that eighteen Highland chiefs fought under Robert Bruce at Bannockburn.
Highland prowess lent its powerful aid to obtain that memorable victory which
secured Scotland from the dominion of a foreign yoke."
(Scottish Highlanders, by
Kiltie.)
to
Tomaso
who made
allegiance
29
ANCIENT HISTORY
Adam
Baird was
Coivdam.
This
in
Cowdam
Symington,
small property
or
Coodam
1734.
the
named BaIRD.
century by a family
William Baird's wife was Margaret Aird. His daughter Helen had sasine in
rents, lands of Crossflall,
1700; William had several houses, Kilmarnock,
1704; William, a son, lands in Barwillan, 1706; John, his third son, Adam, another
son; Adam, eldest son of William of Cowden, 1712.
life
Jane Isabella and Charlotte Marion, twin daughters and co-heiresses of DougBaird of Closeborn; the eldest married Mr. Villiers, son of the Bishop of
Durham. The youngest married Viscount Cole." (Burke's History of Landed
las
Gentry.)
the
Saughton
Hall."
BaIRD, Esq., of
from
Auchmedden now
tions
filled
who
for
MS
of
WlLLIAM
last
male representative of a family which for several generaand Sheriff, Principal of the County of Banff,
many
particularly
the
London, 1860.)
brary, Edinburgh.
"William Baird,
the Families of
(Reprinted
years
exercised
morials.)
Mr. Baird was the eldest son of William Baird of Auchmedden and of
Mary, daughter of Robert Gordon. He was born at Auchmedden about 1701.
From some manuscripts of his which still remain, particularly a translation from the
Greek of Thucydides, he appears* to have had a taste for literary as well as
genealogical and antiquarian pursuits, and to have been a gentleman of considerable
He married Anne Duff, eldest daughter of William Duff of
accomplishments.
Dipple, and sister of William, first Earl of Fife.
Mr. Baird, true to the traditions of his family, joined the rebellion in 1745
on the Stuart side and was an officer of the prince's body guard at the battle of
Culloden.
He continued in hiding for several years after that unfortunate affair,
but at length found an asylum at Edit House, Aberdeenshire, then the property
of his relative the Earl of Fife, till his death, v/hich took place in 1777.
His
property appears to have escaped confiscation, but it is said that in consequence
of the large sums of money he had borrowed to aid the Stuart cause he was
necessitated to alienate the family estate to Lord Haddo in 1 750.
30
BAIRD
when
attested
In the presence of these facts the people in the neighborhood, when the estate
in 1854 by Mr. Robert Baird, became curious to see whether the
was acquired
eagles would
return, and in particular the then minister of the parish was on the
lookout and expecting their return.
Strange to say, they did return to their
old aerie and continued there till scared away by the soldiers of the coast guard
station shooting at them.
well
of the family so
not proprietors of
On the death of Robert
they have their extensive iron works there.
1856, Auchmedden became the property of his brother, James M.P.
that estate,
Baird,
Barde" (1464).
was an old
the
sheet
descendant
Andrew Baird
1542.
Where
Jannet Annan,
his
was a
favorite of
arms December
3,
whom
or from
in
said he
in
his spouse.
ANDREW BAIRD
to
the Laird
and daughters.
left
to
Norway.
He
married
Mr. Andrew's
as
living
to
Bordeaux.
Patrick
is
mentioned
in
letter
of
in
the
north of
Scotland.
He
bought
ANCIENT HISTORY
lands
latter
is
31
of Corskil.
He married and had two sons, George and Andrew. The
married and had a son James, who had a son William.
Nothing further
known
of them.
Gilbert
hivers.
'
in
1681.
John Baird, late minister of Innerwick, was called to preach and exercise other
In 1670 John Baird was summoned
functions of this ministry at Paisley in 1669.
attend a conference at Edinburgh and protested against the following:
"By
to
the
of
act
is
Parliament
now
Christ, but
declared
to
that
act
of
is
to
In 1683 William Baird of Drips, which lies in Carmonnock but pays teind
was remitted to sheriff of Lanark and fined an
hundred pounds because he refused to be an elder in the parish of Cathcart."
(History of the Church in Scotland, rWoodrow.)
Sir Robert Baird of Saughton Hall, younger son of James Baird, had, among
James (his successor), created baronet of Nova Scotia in 1695-6;
and William B., a merchant and one of the bailies of Edinburgh, who was father
of William B., Esq., heir to his son, Sir John, Baronet, of Newbyth.
(Burke's
other issue:
Landed Gentry.)
James Baird, lieutenant-colonel, married in 1781 Henrietta Johnson of
Their son, William Baird, was an army officer. He married in 1809 Lucy,
daughter of Thomas Dickson. This Sir James was a son of William Baird and
Sir
Hillton.
Frances Gardner.
[John
Dickson came
F.
from Scotland
B.
to
Ireland.
It
is
said
C]
lost
his
life
in
an engagement
in
India in
1895.
32
The Family
of Baird.
By Rammage.
"This family, like many others, have been the architects of their own forand have raised themselves to importance by their great wealth, which hasbeen acquired not more by their indefatigable energy than by pursuing the high
principles of honor of our old Scottish merchants.
They are known as the Bairds
of Gartsherrie, though they are not proprietors of that estate, but have only their
extensive iron works there.
They have been settled for many centuries in Lanarkshire, and it is believed they descended from Bairds of Cambusnathan.
tune,
"It
is
name came from the south of France. In the patriotic exerJordan Baird his constant companion; and that Bruce
believed the
Wallace we
tions of
recognized
favor of
their
find
is
patriotism
upper ward
of Clydesdale,
"The family
of
it
is
in
the
not the
first
that
this
we are
between Edward
In
1328,
told
that
Barde of Florence).
He sends them to Scotland to
David Bruce, their king. In a letter written two days
David's special protection. He
of Bairds."
Not only
later
Edward recommends
the
all
to
calls
Company
in
"In Scotland
many
of the
"The
the
He
He
had
Falkirk
"John, born
He
in
in
1798.
from
1841-46;
succeeded
to
born
1796, 'died
in
in
1864.
Alexander
in
1870.
"Alexander, born
"Ury, no
sons
eight
distinguished.
in
1799; died
in
1862.
issue.
"James, M.P., Falkirk, 1851-57; born in 1802. He bought the estate Knydart,
County Inverness (on the banks of the Doon), and Cumbusdoon Muirkerk and
others, in Ayrshire, and on the death of his brother Robert became proprietor or
Auchmedden. In 1874 he presented to the Church of Scotland for the spread of
in
Chas. Forbes.
He
who
in
died
1857.
In
1859
33
ANCIENT HISTORY
"Douclas Baird, born
James Stewart Menlule
in
One
1808.
Acquired
He
1852.
He
born
"David,
in
1816;
died
1860,
in
without
He
issue.
bought
the
estate
of Stitchell.
"The
"The
present
member
of
Lockwood
By
Mr. Jackson, by
whom
for
first,
had family.
husband.
first
estates
SIR
DAVID BAIRD.
The First
"David Baird was one of the Captains of the First Battalion.
Battalion under Lord Macleod embarked for the East Indies in January, 1779,
in
1780.
Roads
and arrived in Madras
"This young and untried regiment had scarcely arrived in India when Hyder
burst like
forcing his way through the Ghauts, at the head of 100,000 men,
He had interposed his vast army between
a mountain torrent into the Carnatic.
smaller
force
under
and
a
that of the British commanded by Sir Hector Mouro
Ali,
endeavor to aid Colonel Baillie with such reinforcements as would enable him
The detachment selected for this enterto push forward in defiance of the enemy.
and its main force
prise consisted of about 1,000 men under Colonel Fletcher,
was composed of the grenadier and infantry companies of Lord Macleod, and a
Baird.
Ali,
Captain
commanded
having gained intelligence
Hyder
regiment
by
of this movement, sent a strong body to cut them off on their way, but by adopting
a long, circuitous route
junction with Colonel
and marching by
Baillie.
night,
they
at
length
safely
effected
With
the
determining
early
34
BAIRD
sudden, whilst in a narrow defile, a battery of twelve guns opened upon them and v
loaded with grapeshot, poured in upon their right flank.
The British faced about.
Another battery opened immediately upon their rear. They had no choice, thereOther batteries met them here, likewise, and in less than
fore, but to advance.
half an hour fifty-seven pieces of cannon, brought to bear on them at all points,
penetrated into every part of the British line.
By seven in the morning the enemy
Captain Baird and his grenadiers fought
poured down upon them in thousands.
with the greatest heroism. Surrounded and attacked on all sides by 25,000 cavalry,
by thirty regiments of Sepoy infantry, besides Hyder's European corps and a numerous artillery playing upon them, yet did this gallant column stand firm and
The French
undaunted, alternately facing their enemies on every side of attack.
officers in Hyder's camp beheld with astonishment the British grenadiers under
Captain Baird's command performing their evolutions in the midst of all the
tumult and extreme peril with as much precision, coolness and steadiness as if
upon a parade ground.
"The
army
little
of the day.
"By some
in the center of
Carnatic horse, into the broken square, which had not time to recover its form and
This aUack, seconded by the French corps and first line of infantry, deterorder.
After successive prodigies of valor the
the fate of the unfortunate army.
brave Sepoys were almost to a man cut to pieces. Colonels Baillie and Fletcher,
one
more desperate effort.
assisted by Captain Baird, made
They rallied the
mined
Europeans and, under the fire of the whole immense artillery, formed themselves into
In this form did this intrepid band, without ammunition, fighting
a new squa:e.
with swords, repulse the inroads of the enemy in thirteen attacks, until they were
trampled upon.
"Colonel Baillie, in order io save the lives of the few brave men who survived,
No sooner, however,
displayed his handkerchief on his sword as a flag of truce.
had they laid down their arms than they were attacked with savage fury. By the
finally
humane
interference
of
the
French
officers
in
lives
were
slain.
ANCIENT HISTORY
whom Baird was
mother
of
May
35
On
said,
all
When
he was
put the irons on
the
10th
This indignity
were about to
This touched the Myar, who sent to the Kellidar (commander of the fort) to open
the book of fate.
He did so, and when the messenger returned he said the book
had been opened and Captain Baird's fate was good. Could they have really
looked into the volume of futurity Baird would undoubtedly have been the last
man to be spared. Captain Lucas died in prison. Captain Baird lived to revenge
the sufferings which he and his fellow prisoners endured, by the glorious conquest
of Seringapatam on the 4th of May, 1799.
"In 1805 the Seventy-second, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Grant, embarked
with the secret expedition under Maj. Gen. Sir David Baird, which sailed in
August for Cape of Good Hope, then possessed by the Dutch." {Scottish Highlanders, edited by John S. Kiltie, Vol. IV, page 497.)
"When Sir David arrived at the Cape of Good
On
appointed brigadier-general.
In
returned to the staff in India.
of two regiments of foot together
on February 1 joined the army
the
first
European brigade.
On
Hope
in
1797
he
was
to
command
May General
the 4th of
was among
the slain.
He was
it
commanded
to
deliver
the keys
in the
who was
ton."
{Life
of Sir
in
two vol-
umes.)
The
a boar pass.,
First
Crest:
scimitar,
David
Perthshire,
all
or;
A
ppr.
as follows:
in
Baird, Bart.
chief within
badge of
sword erect
on a canton ewe.
is
Gu.
the
(Fernton,
an increscent, an
Ottoman Order) in
pommel and hilt
ppr.,
base,
gold.
grenadier in the uniform of the 50th regiment of foot ppr.; sinister, the royal tiger
of Tippoo Sultann guard, vert, striped or; from the neck,
pendent by a ribbon, an
escutcheon
on a
scroll
gr.
36
BAIRD CRESTS.
Of Auchmedden,
Baird.
1.
Dominus
Baronet of Yardleybury,
BaiRD,
2.
ppr.
Scotch.
griffin's
head,
erased,
ppr.
Motto:
fecit.
(I)
4.
Baird.
5.
Baird.
Scotch.
6.
Baird.
Of
Motto: Vi
Hertfordshire;
mameluke on horseback,
Motto: Vi et
virtule.
An
head,
eagle's
Motto:
boar's head
Viriute el honore.
erased,
or
(gold).
et viriute.
7.
Baird.
Scotch, Newbyth.
8.
Baird.
Scotch.
9.
Baird.
Of
Same
crest
and motto.
Frankfield,
Scotland.
An
eagle's
head,
ppr.
Motto:
Vi
et
virtule.
10.
Deus
Baird.
An
Baird.
Of
eagle's
Motto: Dominus
fecit.
Craigton, Scotland.
ship in full sail, ppr.
non demovebor "God with me, I shall not be removed."
11.
12.
Griffin's
Motto: Adsil
13.
Baird.
Boar's head erased between
Maturin, Newton Stewart, Tyrone.
two branches of shamrock vert (for Baird). Motto: Vi el viriute.
(Burl(e and Fairbanks.)
communicated her religious prejudices to her sons, for the struggles of the Culdees
against the supremacy of Rome date from the reign of King Malcolm.
By the middle of the twelfth century the Roman Catholic Church appears to
have gained the upper hand completely.
Coincidentally with this supremacy we
find the English archbishops endeavoring to assert their supremacy over the Scottish
III
in
bull
addressed to King William the Lion,
a
Clement
1188
In
Pope
clergy.
declared the Church of Scotland to be the daughter of Rome by special grace,
and immediately subject to her." From that time the Culdee star paled before the
rising sun of
Rome.
The
ANCIENT HISTORY
These
saints,
it
is
37
worthy of remark, were holy men, not of the Church of Rome but
Church of St. Columba and his Culdees. {Clans and Septs, by
Adams.)
[The plaid which the clergy used was supposed to have been used by the Druids
and Culdees. These may have been followers of Abraham from Ur of the Chaldees. ]
THE CLAN.
I have tried to find data of the Clan Baird.
George, living in
1588, was spoken of as its chief, and in another reference they are
'The
There is still a tartan.
spoken of as the "fighting BAIRDS."
Baird Clan, though small in Scotland, were from Perth, Aberdeen
and Banffshire."
The following is a surmise of my own and may have no ground
The tradition given me by
in truth at all
simply a speculation.
my father is that John Gregor, in order to hold the property given
him, changed his name to "Bard."
The location, as near as we can find, was Argyleshire and PerthThe coat of arms was a boar's head. On the coat of arms arc
shire.
little figures like a tree (they may be spear heads).
Comparing these
points with the following history, I believe they were formerly of the
See the following
MacGregors, or Alpin, consequently suppressed.
data regarding those two clans and their coat of arms:
"It has been claimed for the Royal Clan Alpin that it is the most ancient
The Mac Alpins, according to some records, are descendclan in the Highlands.
ants of those venerable sons of antiquity whose successors became kings of Scotland
Of
the
in
sept
their misfortunes
Mac
is
Alpins is a boar's
to have been at
said
Argyleshire."
of
and
as a clan.
of
Their name was supcould remedy save cutting off the tribe root and branch.
pressed and at baptism no clergyman could give the name of Gregor under deprivation and banishment.
Prior to these days of the seventeenth century they
In the thirteenth century in the
appear to have possessed lands in Glenarchy.
their genealogy
to have ended
an heiress who married a younger son of the house of Argyle. Rob Roy MacGregor's house was at the head of Glensburg, some nine miles from Inverary,
Scotland.
By the 30th Act of the First Parliament of Charles I it was enacted
in
38
BAIRD
everyone of the name of MacGregor on attaining the age of sixteen should yearly
In
repair to the Privy Council, there to find caution for their good behavior.
spite of such conduct, in the reign of Charles I and James II (James VII of
could
count
on
the
of
the
the
clan.
at
met
and
king
Scotland),
loyalty
They
night
their gathering song was:
'
And
"The arms
name
that
is
nameless by day.'
the
MacGregor
CHAPTER
COLONIAL DATA.
II.
(Indexed.)
it
In
Natham
later a
1655 the
governor of
with vessels
time
In
1686 Patrick Robinson, 1765 Stephen Porter, 1767 James Wilson, 1781
Polls, 1787 James A. Bayard, mentioned in record of Upper Octorara
Church, Chester.
Pittsburg, Pa.,
"Manor
of
Masks"
burg township.
Fayette County, Pa.,
Dixon"
line
Oak
was
in
run.
vania.
Forbes
in
1757
with
troops
from
Pequea, Lancaster County, Pa., was about thirteen miles northeast of Christiana.
Britain
Little
(where
Moses took
the
oath
of
allegiance
in
1777)
is
below
Christiana.
"Taken up by John Beard in Pequay, a black mare and colt; the mare branded
a few white spots on her forehead.
The
owner describing the marks and paying the charges may have them again." (From
The Pennsylvania Cazelie, issue of December 28 to January 4, 1738-9. Number
525.
Newspaper
in
collection
of
the
Historical Society of
Pennsylvania, Phila.)
"The
first
road from
four
Indian name.
in
Tennessee.
40
"On
the
States her
first
right
hers partly by
day of May,
and title to
right
the
778.
Colonel George Rogers Clark in
At
Morgan, General Mcintosh, John Finley and Capt.
Colonel Morgan was the Indian agent.
of conquest by
"So
great
was
the
scarcity
and value of
salt
for the
ten
to the
colony, receiving
first
title
"In 1796 there was formed a company of fifty men for salt making. Shares
were one dollar and a half. They purchased a furnace and twenty-four kettles
at Pittsburg and transported them by water to Duncan's Falls, then on pack horses
seven miles to Salt Lick.
They dug a well fifteen feet deep to the rock which
formed the bed of the stream.
They then put the trunk of a hollow sycamore
tree into the well and bedded it in the rock so as to exclude the fresh water.
The furnace held twelve kettles. From 800 gallons of water they would get
fifty
pounds of
salt."
(Ohio's
of
Early
Ohio General
Settlers.)
are
mentioned.
take
the
"It was indeed no small service," he goes on, "that Boone and Robertson, Bean
and Sevier, and the Shelbys lent the struggling colonies and later the infant republic,
by pressing backward the long-time frontiers until those frontiers practically van-
"Such service was the cost that civilization pays for new conquests, but it was
paid not by the salaried emissaries of an organized government nor by the subsidized forces of great trading companies, but by individuals who went always at
their own charges and sometimes at the cost of all things; more often than not
hindered rather than encouraged by the unappreciative governments they had left
behind them."
"Fiske, in his 'Old Virginia and Her Neighbors,' tells of a great service ren'In a oertain sense the
dered by the Scotch-Irish of the Appalachians. He says:
Shenandoah Valley and adjacent Appalachian region may be called the cradle
In that rude frontier society life assumed many new
of modern democracy.
social equality acaspects, old customs were forgotten, old distinctions abolished,
This phase
quired even more importance than unchecked individualism.
.
of democracy which
is
destined
to
continue
as
long
as
frontier
life
retains
any
service that the Southern mountaineers have rendered in national matcontinues Dr. Wilson, "can hardly be overestimated.
They were possessed
fierce
love cf liberty, and so the birthplace of American liberty was very
a
by
In Abingdon, Va., at the junction of the valleys
appropriately in the mountains.
of the Blue Ridge and East Tennessee, as early as January 20, 1775, a council
met that, as Bancroft says, 'was mostly composed of Presbyterians of ScotchIrish descent.' 'This spirit of freedom swept through their minds as naturally
as the wind sighs through the fir trees of the Black Mountain.'
"The
ters,"
COLONIAL DATA
the
"This was four months before the Scotch and Scotch-Irish Presbyterians of
lowland hills of North Carolina issued the 'immortal Mecklenburg Declaration,"
in its turn, antedated by more than a year the Declaration of Independence
which,
by
41
(Christian
Science Monitor.)
[Some
historians
List of Freeholders.
#
Amboy, Middlesex, N.
J.,
1752.
James Wilson.
Patrick Vance.
Robert Brown.
William, Daniel and James Morgan.
John and William Burnett.
WOODBRIDGE.
PlSCATAWAY.
William and Joseph French.
Charles and John Wilson.
Dr. Samuel Baird, Salt Works.
1775 Council of Safety, New Jersey.
Land Surveyed
in
Indices of
Land
Office, Harrisburg,
Pa.
Robert, 1767.
John, 1738.
Wills.
CARLISLE, PA.
Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, 785, menJAMES BaIRD,
tions his mother Rebecca Sterret, and brothers ROBERT and JOHN;
also mentions Samuel Robinson.
(This was possibly a son of JOHN
and REBECCA, of Christiana Hundred.)
The will of Samuel Baird, of Armagh township, Cumberland
788, mentions his wife, Martha, and his children, John,
County,
of
42
BAIRD
James,
a grandson,
County, mentions his wife, Rachel, but does not mention a family.
Witnessed by Thomas Williamson and John Glen.
CUMBERLAND COUNTY.
At
22
the Petition of
"Upon
ford
Township,
late
to
of Guilthe
court,
Thomas
that
his
father,
the
said
the
Petitioner,
Samuel,
Thomas Baird
said
at
William,
time
The Court
&c.
to
Summon
Inquest and
make
Make
the
par-
whole
At an Orphans' Court held 20th February, 1776, the Sheriff made return
of the Inquisition and the land was awarded to John under conditions of payment
prescribed by the Court.
"At an Orphans' Court held 20th August, 1779, &c, came into Court John
Baird Administrator of Thomas Baird dec'd and produced an Account of his
Administration showing balance of 387 pounds,
Shillings and half penny
1
for distribution,
as
follows:
"To Mary the widow 129 pounds; 5 Shillings & 1-2 penny; to James, the
Oldest son, 47 pounds & 2-1 1 of a penny; To Hugh Gibb husband of Elizabeth
dec'd 23 pounds 10 Shillings and 1-11 penny; To Mary 23 pounds, 10 shillings
&
penny; To Thomas 23 pounds 10 Shillings and 1-11 penny; to John 23
pounds 10 Shillings & 1-11 penny; to William 23 pounds 10 Shillings 1-11 penny;
to Samuel 23 pounds 10 shillings and 1-11 penny; to Robert 23 pounds 10 shillings
& 1-11 penny; to Joseph 23 pounds 10 shillings and 1-11 penny; to Martha
23 pounds lO Shillings & 1-11 penny." (Orphans' Court Docket 2, page 265,
1
Carlisle,
Pa.)
Thomas
Baird's goods in
will.]
"May 19, 1778. Hugh Gibbs was appointed guardian over Robert Baird, a
minor son of Thomas Baird, above the age of 14 years."
(Docket 2, page 221.)
"March
of John
(Docket
7,
Baird
2,
1783.
Robert son of
of Falling Spring to
for
the
and
he
was appointed."
be
his
guardian
appointment
page 321.)
"January 21, 1784. Samuel Beard of Derry Township, Yeoman, was appointed
(Docket 2, page 335.)
guardian of his son James a minor 13 years old."
COLONIAL DATA
William
Leaves
all
Beard
estate
of
to
and
dated
May
24,
1762.
778.
Mentions wife Margaret, daughters,
Will dated June 3,
Hannah and Margavet; son John; sons-in-law, David Moore
and
two
grandchildren, Elizabeth and Margaret Moore.
Dunning,
John Baird.
Hester,
43
Elizabeth,
James
(Book C,
110.)
David Beard.
his "coulter
James Walker.
Mifflin township.
Executors: John
May
his
Mentions
sons,
(F. 109.)
24,
Pen
1762.
Gives
tacklings."
Walker and
LANCASTER COUNTY.
Hanover Township, Lancaster
(Book
B, Vol.
1,
p.
242.)
James Baird and wife Sarah; brothers, Wm. and John; sisters, Margaret and
Gennett.
His trusty
James, Andrew and William, sons of his brother John.
friend James and William Wilson, Ex.
Joseph and
Adam
Wilson, witnesses.
will
witness.
Baird.
1750-54, p. 6.)
"William Wilson and Robert Wallace Executors of the Last will and Testament of James Baird deceased Appeared in Court and Produced an Account of
Administration on the Estate of the said deceased Whereby there Appeared
have been a Balance in their Hands of $252
duly Passed before the
Deputy Register tc be distributed Agreeable to the said Will which the Court
Allows and approves of; And it Appearing to the Court that Sarah the now
Wife of Abraham McClintock and Late Widow of the said deceased received
the whole of the Personal Estate of the deceased into her Possession Agreeable
to the Will of the said Testator except the Wearing Apparel of the deceased
devised to James Baird, Andrew Baird and William Baird which the said lames.
Andrew & William received the Court directs ihat the said Abraham McClintock
and Sarah his wife, Together with the said James Baird, Andrew Baird and
William Baird, do refund to the said Administrators the sum of 6 12 6 the
Sums disbursed by the Executors of their Proper Monies including Commission
rateably in Proportion to their Several Legacies, Together with Twelve Shillings
their
to
the
Expences of
this
Court."
MARYLAND CALENDAR OF
(Baldwin, Vol.
5,
1769.)
WILLS.
I.)
Robert Baird, St. Mary County, 1685, mentions grandsons William and Robert
Meakin; daughters Margaret (married Wm. Meakin), and Elizabeth Meakin,
and a son of brother Christopher. (P. 162.)
44
(P. 205.)
John Wheeler's
Beard.
(Testator,
Richard Beard,
mentions
1684,
will,
Richard Beard.)
Jr.,
(P.
161.)
(P.
177.)
Deeds.
"Robt. Baird to Moses Baird. To All Christian People to whom these presents
come Robert Baird of the County of Westmoreland in the Commonwealth of
Whereas there is a certain Tract of Land
Pennsylvania Yeoman Sends Greeting:
in the township of Manallin in the County aforesaid containing 320 acres which
Robert Gilmore did improve and Occupy and Settle for a number of years and
which the said Robert Gilmore on March 27, 779, did convey to the said Robert
Baird, Now Know Ye that I the said Robert Baird in consideration of One
Hundred pounds paid by Moses Baird yeoman, do grant unto the said Moses
Baird, all that part of the aforesaid tract of Land which lies North of a Line
drawn cross the said Tract from a post on the middle of that Line which divide*
the said Land from William Cases etc., containing 160 acres.
Signed and Delivered in presence of John Baird and Thomas Scott."
(Book A., of Deeds, page
324.
Greensburg, Westmoreland County, Pa.)
shall
"Jas. Baird to John Miller. This Indenture made the Seventeenth day of December in the \ear of our Lord One thousand Seven hundred & Seventy nine Between
County, Pa.)
of
1764,
This
Robert
to
in
1779
County,
in
to
to
her
William Baird.
Pa., p. 324.)
James
The
tract
45
COLONIAL DATA
James Beard taxed
County; also two tracts
Moses
for
in
for
in
same township.
Bedford
List,
1772.)
William
In 1636 many emigrants came from near Belfast.
John Livingstone and Rev. James Hamilton were the leaders.
War
Wallace,
of
Rev.
Records.
PENNSYLVANIA.
Thomas Bard
vania.
18.
Com.
Fifth Regiment Pennsylvania:
James Wilson, Captain at Fort Washington,
Robert
1
776.
John
Magan;
Lieut.
Richardson;
Oath
of
Lancaster
(Pa. Arch.,
of Allegiance, 1777.
J.
10,
254.)
Moses Baird.
Vol.
Oath
of
allegiance,
Lancaster,
1777.
13, p. 461.)
Wayne
in
794.
After-
wards located
James Baird was a soldier of the Revolution under Timothy Green, in Westmoreland County, Pa.
Capt. J. Rogers' Company of Associators were destined
for the camp in the Jerseys June 6,
776.
I
[Note.
Timothy
p.
322.
Green was
Samuel Bard, a native of Ireland (born in 1734) enlisted in Capt. John Wright's
Company in 1750 and served in the French and Indian War.
John Bard was a private
Regiment of Foot in 1777.
in
46
in active service
1777.
in
NEW
From New Jersey
in
1778.
He was
living
1779.
in
JERSEY.
Monmouth.
John Baird.
Joseph Baird.
Cum-
1777.
in
New
J.
Jersey.
Obediah Baird.
Somerset, N.
Robert Baird.
J.
J.
John Baird.
John Baird.
David Baird.
Morris,
Monmouth, N. J.
troops, wounded
State
New
Fort
at
Lee,
Bergin
CONNECTICUT.
4, p. 68.)
Beard.
John Bayard in 1776 was Chairman of the Committee of Safety for Philadelphia. He was Colonel of Second Battalion of Philadelphia at Battle of Trenton.
Captain in Col. Asher Holmes' First Monmouth, 1778.
Second Georgia Battalion, 1780.
Capt. John Bard.
Valentine Beard. Cornet Second Company, Light Horse, Martin Bfifer, Captain.
David Baird.
in
(Savage,
[Note.
Captain David Baird of Monmouth was a contemporary of Gen.
David of Scotland.F. B. C]
Sir
of
killed
Towns
not mentioned
(page 452).
1778.
Beard,
James Heron's
Hampshire.
Capt.
New
Andrew
Company,
Colonel
Hozen's
F.
B. C.J
Regiment:
Robert
47
COLONIAL DATA
1775.
Capt.
Beard, 23 years,
Gordon
New
William
John Beard
1780.
Capt. James Aikins, New Hampshire Regiment Militia, Colonel Thorn:
Simon Beard, Bartlet, Conn.
1754.
Simon Beard, Jr., Marymack River. Impressed for his May service.
George Beard. Chosen collector by Great Hill Society, 1782. Seymour, Conn.
NEW
YORK.
in
Schuyler's Regiment.
in
Westfall Company.
in
Tearse Company.
GEORGIA.
John Bard, Captain of Second Georgia Infantry, November, 1776, was taken
prisoner at Savannah in 1778, paroled 1779-80; did not rejoin the army; removed
to New York.
VIRGINIA.
David, Thomas, Robert, William and John Baird were militiamen in Augusta
County from October, 1777, to March 15, 1782, under Captain John Givens.
(Wm.
born
probably
F. B. C\]
Robert
[Possibly David of Monmouth, N. J.
1756, or Robert of Somerset, N. J., born in 1741.
in
Lancaster,
Pa.,
CHAPTER
III.
Pennsylvania.
CUMBERLAND COUNTY.
Collectors. Thomas Baird, 1770-74; Thomas Baird,
2d Ser., Vol. IX, page 788. Edition of 1880.)
Jr..
1775-76.
(Pa. Arch.,
WESTMORELAND COUNTY.
Councillor.John Beard, November
Censors.
George
Baird,
III.,
Hannah Baird
and
November
John
1786.
18,
20,
784.
(Edition of 1890.)
(born
settled in Carlisle.
Pa.,
of
to
James
who came
the exile,
William, who
married Kathrine.
settled
in
They had
N.
J.
He
to
New
Jersey
Mansfield County,
in
New
684
Jersey,
died in
1690.
He
O'Hara
in
N.
J.
He
James
N.
J.
In
married
his
Children of
will
Elizabeth.
William, born
in
1752; died
in
1794.
49
Green),
James
GRANTED
LICENSES
IN
Franklin
Pa.
County,
PENNSYLVANIA.
MARRIAGES
IN
widow
McDowell).
Mathew
the
who
at
He
Philadelphia.
died in 1877.
had a
brother,
John B.,
Ireland. F.
B. C]
[This may have been a grandson of Moses of
Thomas Robert Bard, Senator from California in 1890. Born at ChambersBefore comgraduated from the common schools in 1858.
burg, Pa., in 1841
He went
pleting the study of law he engaged in railroading in Hagerstown, Md.
;
to
71;
fill
the unexpired
in
1864.
1880-97;
elector,
term of Stephen
elected
M. White,
John Baird, an early settler in the Cumberland Valley, Pa., died in 1778.
His wife was Margaret. Issue: Hester, John, Hannah, Margaret, and Elizabeth.
Sons-in-law were David Moore and James Dunning.
Maclay,
his
1877.
He
in
married
Mount
at
Mt. Pleasant,
at
Cavricks
Furnace,
Dunn, 1837.
wife. They had
D. C,
1898.
Wesley, born
Thomas
at
Dalton, Ga.
at
Chambersburg, Pa.,
1869.
Lived
Dalton, Ga.,
at
at
1870.
Chambersburg, 1872.
Philadelphia,
1878;
died
at
Philadelphia,
1880.
Dunn.F.
B.
C]
50
John
and
the
for
An
heir,
Thus we
learn that
John
issue,
among
others,
Andrew
and James.
son of
John
his
John
after
his
Del.
the
in the Manor of
Holy Well, near Strabanetown and Kirriduffe townland,
The deeds were executed by Rebecca and Robert Baird for themselves
Hastings.
and
had
for
mother
issue,
to
America.
in
51
the above deeds were executed, John Baird was evidently alone
Christiana Hundred, his wife and son Robert being in Ireland.
It
is
was a
New
taxable in
John Beard
money
was an
in
Strabane
elder
in
in
the
1666.
He
Presbyterian
Church
John
his
He
Jane.
The
probably moved
descendants of
to
Robert Baird,
son of
not been
traced.
the Clugston
and
later the
A
He
of
1
tract
767.
of land in what is
This land was after-
Essick farms.
is
Constitution,
John
father
of
ratified
the
He
Pa.
settled in Lancaster,
The
the
may have been their son, or he may have been the son
The ancestor of Rev. Robert Baird may have been
of Chester County.
one of the sons of John and
of
in
Lancaster
in
having occurred not far from the home of his early years. This seems to indicate
that he was born in what is now Dauphin County, near Derry Church, where
there was a Baird family at a very early period.
In those early days the name
of Lancaster was often made to embrace a very wide region, and it may be that
Thomas,
Thomas
Christiana.
of
a son
was
of
related.
of
He was
[The following record possibly belongs to John Baird. the son of John and
Agnes, as the names of Kilgore and Esther seem to occur among the nieces of that
He lived in East Pennsborough township, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania;
John.
died, 1778.
By his wife, Margaret, he had five children Esther, John, Hannah,
52
1792,
David Kilgore)
and Elizabeth.
F. B. C.I
cf
Honour
or
Martin Bard and his wife Sevilla emigrated to Philadelphia, Pa., on the Betsy,
He died 1758. In "Thirty Thousand Names" (Rupps), it is
landing in 1739.
He settled in Germany
spelled Barlh, but his children wrote it Bardi and Bard.
in
now
Adams, County, Pennsylvania. His will was proved in 756.
York,
township
They had issue: Peter Philip (a taxable in 1790); Martin (possibly identical with
1
Martin of
Cathrine;
wainer
in
Christine.
Daniel Bard, son of Barnhart (Barnet) and Cathrine Bard, of Littleston, Adams
County, Pa., had issue: Joseph, born at Williamsburg, Pa., 1826 (a soldier in the
Civil War); Isaac (born near Mansfield, Ohio, 1835), died in Chicago, 111., 1898,
leaving a widow, Jennie.
Stephen, a son of Martin and Sevilla Bard, died 1782. His wife was Cathrine.
He was a soldier of the Revolution with Captain Bartholomew von Heer as a provest guard for General Washington's army.
Francis Bard, son of Martin and Sevilla, died in 1788. He owned a homestead
He had two sons, John and
in Germany township, York (now Adams) County.
Francis.
John died before his father, leaving a daughter Cathrine and a son John.
to Frederick County, Maryland.
came
son
of
"Nicklaus"
Bard,
Beard,
John
He owned
farm of eighteen
acres,
called
"Wagon Wheel."
Hannah,
Christian, Elisha
Ezekiel
moved
to
and
Jesse.
and Frank P.
Elisha lived in
a son, Mark. He
Jesse was born
died in 1895. His
So
is known the first white settlers in the valley of the Cumberland, the
"The Endless" were three brothers by the name of Chambers from
Ireland, sturdy men who had chosen the arduous life of a pioneer
Antrim,
County
in the new Province of Pennsylvania.
They first erected mills on Fishing Creek,
far as
Killolchiny
53
built a log
Three times' Mr. Chambers petiChambersburg, which was far from any of the forts
Then he took matters into his own hands as the virtual
some protection
for
records
show
was obeyed.
The Finleys and McKnights were associated with the Beards at Lower Marsh
Creek Presbyterian Church in 1783. I think they must have been neighbors and
in
possibly relatives of the Robert Baird line, intermarriages causing confusion
separating the lines. This Archibald is said to have had: Richard (born in 1736),
who lived in Peters township, Franklin County; William (born in 1738); David
who is supposed to have married Miss Potter in
(1744-1815); Rev.
,
Ireland.
Los Angeles and Humboldt Counties. At that time there were not more than a
dozen Americans in the entire region.
[In 1779 Thomas Scott, who had married a sister of Robert Baird's wife, came
54
He may
C]
The
Scott's
Petroleum
California
Company was
organized
to
develop
the
oil
on
holdings.
Mr. Bard lived in Ventura County, which was part of Santa Barbara. He
was elected United States Senator in 1900-1905, and was chairman of the
Senate Committee on Irrigation.
His home in Hueneme is called Berrybrook.
He married Mary Beatrice Gerberding.
William Baird, son of Archibald, died at Bardstown in 1802. He was reared
Hamiltonban township, York (now Adams) County, Pa. He owned property
Carroll's Delight and sold it.
Tradition says he visited Kentucky first in
1768. Salt was scarce, and he, with three men
Brown, Evans and Doe went
at
in
down
Bairdstown)
now
stands.
The documents on
record
at
He
William was a surveyor and drew the first map of Louisville in 1779.
married Mary Kincaid Braxdale, daughter of Joseph Kincaid and widow of
Bardstown
1825.
in
and
died
at
in
in
1755,
Virginia
John Braxdale. She was born
She was sister of Capt. Joseph Kincaid, who was killed at the battle of Blue Lick.
They had:
Served with a troop of horse raised in
James, born in 1782 at Bardstown.
Nelson County, Kentucky, in the War of 1812. Buried in the family graveyard. He married Martha Adams.
David, born
at
Waters of
He married
in 1785; died in 1818.
County, Kentucky; second, Margaret.
Bardstown
Bullitt
Ebenezer, born
at
William, born
at
Bardstown
Bardstown
in
in
1787.
Married Nancy
1790;
died
at
first
Elizabeth
Osceola,
Ark.
He
married
Margaret Beeler.
Graduate
born at Bardstown in 1797; died at Greenville, Ky., 1878.
Entered Theological Seminary
of Union College, New York, in 1821.
He lived near Greenville, Muhlenburg County, Ky.
of Princeton in 1817.
Isaac,
I have only
[This line is fully traced by Mr. Seilhamer in his "Chronicle."
taken out of it the parts that will assist in tracing the lines in this book which he
has not traced in his "Chronicle." F. B. C]
Richard Bard's second son (born after Mrs. Bard's captivity) was named Isaac.
of his sons Isaac for this
younger brother. Judge Archibald Bard, named one
elder brother. William of Bardstown also gave the name Isaac to his youngest son.
At the same time that Archibald Beard, the emigrant ancestor, owned and
conducted a mill in Hamiltonban township, York (now Adams) County, Pa., Isaac
This may
Baird was a miller in Broadisland Parish, County Antrim, Ireland.
55
On
this
brief
the
son
William and David Beard appear in juxtaposition only in the northCounty Antrim. Their names appear in conjunction in 1669 in
roll of Glenarn in Carncastle parish, County Antrim, for one heath
This parish is situated on the shores of the North Channel, which forms
each.
and upon the road from Larne to Glenarm and the royal
its eastern boundaiy,
military road from Belfast to the Giant's Causeway. It is only three miles northwest by north from Larne and within easy reach of the parish of Broadisland, in
It
is
a reasonable possibility that
which Isaac was living half a century later.
William Beard of the Heath money roll was the father of David and that David
was the father of Archibald of Carroll's Delight.
William."
eastern parishes of
a heath money
In
the
1730
first
as a chirurgeon he rented
Philadelphia Town House.
He
was given a vote of thanks for "diligence and exactness in the discharge of
His name is in the
duty" by the Provincial Council in 1742, when he resigned.
First Philadelphia Dancing Assembly.
His wife, Elizabeth, was buried at Christ
Church,
750.
As early as 1599, PATRICK Baird, writer, was a servant of Walter BAIRD, of Ordinhaus. He was one of the BaIRDS of Auchmedden.
Still earlier,' Patrick, son of John, and Patrick, son of Robert,
were contemporaries
in the
barony of Glasgow.
While
the
MARRIAGE RECORDS.
In Christ
Church Philadelphia:
In the
56
The
First Presbyterian
Church, Philadelphia:
No
in the
byterian Churches.
to
to
1767.
William Richards.
Elizabeth Diamond.
"The Rev. A. Stapleton, in his 'Memorials of the Huguenots,' gives the names
two Bairds, Francois and William, who emigrated from Lorraine in 1754.
Mr.
These are supposed to have gone to Ireland before coming to America.
of
Stapleton, in his
(Seilhamer.)
list
of Lancaster, Pa., credits them, but they have not been traced."
The
heirs of
J.,
1690,
of Masks, were:
William, born
One
of
son Alex),
these
in
brothers
and John
Mary who
Conrad).
[Manor of Masks-Caledonia
tract
surveyed to James of
Adams County.
F.
B.
C]
She made the journey to Conococheague in a wagon. They had James, Adam,
Samuel and Nancy, born in Pennsylvania; William and James died without issue.
Hugh married and moved to western Pennsylvania; Adam to Mifflin County.
Samuel married first Mary Morgan; they had: Joshua, Harrison, George, James,
Thomas, Mrs. Jacob Sellers, Mrs. John Early, Mrs. Henry Gerrier, and Mrs.
Thomas Middleton.
William,
Spring.
He
and David.
James was
for
many
years a teacher.
57
Margaret Orr in 1820. She was a sister of the Orr brothers, founders of the
borough of Orrstown, Franklin County, Pa. James and Margaret had five sons:
Samuel M., William S., John O., Thomas O., and David James, and two daughters.
Jane, married first James Breckenridge, second John Quigley; and Isabella
(died in
1899).
childish recollections
"This eeems to indicate that he was born in what is now Dauphin County,
In
near Derry Church, where there was, a Baird family at a very early period.
those early days the name of Lancaster was often made to embrace a very wide
region.''
The following is from the Derry Church tombstone: "Here lies the body
James Baird, who departed this life in the 65th year of his age, June 12, 1781."
(f/. H. S/ien, Custodian of Public Record of Pennsylvania.)
of
[This may have been the husband of Margaret Brown and father of Robert.
C]
F. B.
"One
of the most gifted and cultured families that the county has given to the
Baird family. This name is recognized and represented in many of
The Bairds of
the higher ranges of culture, especially in history and theology.
New York (Robert and son) have produced the classic historians of the Huguenot
world
is
the
race and achievements so rich in memories and in inspiration, while 'Eloline Revealed' and the 'History of the New School Presbyterian' are the special province
These
of church history and theology of peculiar value and remarkable interest.
last two works were the production of Dr. Samuel J. Baird, a native of Fayette,
and one of the most subtle and acute of American theologians. William Logan
and Thomas Dickson Baird, both of this family, attained fame in scholarship as
educationalists in Baltimore and the South.
They were men of large acquirements
and great mental force, and represented the liberal training and pure culture of
the Presbyterian Church in Western Pennsylvania in those days that have passed
into history or have lingered only in the dim and fading light of expiring tradition."
(Nelson's Biograp.
Historical Reference
Boo\
He
by Alexander,
Jr.,
Son of Alexander,
Sr.,
remembered on his grandmother's [must have been his greatgrandmother] brow a mark or line of grey fur, where, when she was
captured by the Indians, they cut the skin on her forehead and put a
The skin healed up
grey squirrel cap on her head and bound it on.
and kept the mark of fur. She, with her baby, was stolen by the Indians, and one night, while the Indians slept, she crawled into a hollow
Her husband, with the white men from the camp,
log with her child.
surprised the Indians, and in their haste to escape they could not find
Mrs. Baird, so she was rescued by the white men.
[Colonel Sam Morgan, of Nashville, Tenn., had as guests for dinner my father,
Alexander, and my uncle, Charles P. Baird. During the dinner he said, "Our families
have been friends before." During the Revolutionary War Washington once sent two
58
BAIRD
men by
the name of Morgan and a young man named Baird to see how fared the people
in the block-house. They were guided by a trusty Indian. When they reached the place
there was only a pile of ashes, and among those killed were the parents of the two
Morgan boys. The wife of young Baird could not be found, so they, with the Indian
F. B. C]
guide, went in hot pursuit and rescued her after several days.
to
at
hand
in
the fields.
On
He
stood terror-stricken.
Two
murdered by
the
(From an Old
Letter
to
James P. Baird.)
New
York.
WILLIAM BAIRD,
of Ayrshire,
Scotland,
is
Andrew
is
live in
James Baird,
88
America,
1
KENNETH
to
Peabody, Kans.
Topeka, Kans.
Edinburgh, Scotland.
son of
;
Glasgow.
lives at
lives at
Thomas
and
Mary McCall
Baird, came
They have a
Amsterdam, N. Y.
wife, Margaret,
son,
children were:
Married, first Sarah Duy, second Hannah Duy (a sister of Sarah; she
died at Orange, N. Y., 1873). Isaac died at Manayunk, Pa., in 1829.
Isaac.
John.
James.
Robert.
William.
Annie.
Mary.
William and Annie
come
to the
and
who
ISAAC
Middleton, N. Y.
D. Baird had a son, William J., born at German827. He lived with his son in New York City. He was
Thomas
Hannah
59
S.
at
town, Pa., in
a manufacturing chemist.
1
William
York
J.
Baird had
a son,
Wm. Raimond
Baird, of
New
City.
chemist
in
Battle
Isaac Baird was born in Scotland in 771. He came to Amer791, and lived in northwestern New York State. In 1801
he married Olive Southwood at Victor, south of Rochester, N. Y.
His children
Isaac B. had a brother, Barnes, and three sisters.
were
1
ica about
Lived
in
1812.
Married
Ann.
Lived
at
Fairport.
Owned
canal boats.
David.
Mich.,
Lucy Orilla.
Mich.
in
Died
1817.
at
in
Ostrander, of Penfield, N. Y.
Waterloo, N. Y.,
1819.
in
Genessee County,
Six children.
Miranda.
the
Holstein,
1891.
Julia
children.
West.
William C.
Alexander.
Alfred.
Mary.
William, who lived
James W.
George A.
Harriet E.
David H., lived at
at
Canandagua, N. Y.
in
60
Maryland.
Richard Beard, who was in Anne Arundel County before 1654, may have
descended from the Bairds of North Kelsy. He was a member of the Maryland
Assembly, 1662-78. His name occurs frequently in the proceedings of that body.
He died about 1681. His will
For many years he was justice of the peace.
names wife Rachel, sons Richard, John and daughters Ruth, Rebecca, Rachel.
Richard, the son of Richard, was also prominent in public affairs of Anne Arundel
He was also in Maryland
County and was one of the county commissioners.
Assembly. He had sons, Richard and Mathew. Other Beards of Maryland were
Lewis Beard of Somerset and William of Dorcester County.
[Possibly descended from Richard, who came to the precinct of Lurg with Francis
Richard had lands in County Fermanagh, Ireland, in 1659. F. B. C]
Blennerhasset.
[The only Esther I find is of the Francis of Warwick line. She was daughter
Fannie or Frances is also one of their names. F. B. C]
of William E.
Robert Beard died in St. Mary's County, Maryland, about 1685. In his will,
dated 1683, he left a plantation called Beard's Choice, to a son (not named)
of his brother Christopher, "if he come into Maryland within ten years." He may
have been a brother of Christopher Bard, who was a son of Richard Bard of
Tealby Grange. It is also possible that he was a son of Maximilian Bard of
Hammersmith, and that by his brother Christopher was meant that Christopher
Bard, who was matriculated at Wadham College, Oxford, 1658. Robert of MaryThe bulk of his estate, St. Margaret's Field, St. Marland left no male issue.
and Robert Meakin.
garet's Forest and Speedwell, went to his grandsons, William
His will names a daughter Margaret and a son-in-law William Meakin; also a
daughter, Elizabeth Meakin.
John Bard. Supposed to have gone from Borden, Kent County, England,
Wales.
Probably born in 1570.
George came over with Governor Winthrop
living in
in
to
1630.
in St.
[This
in 1630.
F.
B.
C]
Massachusetts.
Andrew Beard.
[Note.
The
He
was
Died January
8,
1717.
Of
John
these,
is
known
61
to
be the son of
Andrew.
SECOND GENERATION.
Children of John and
Hannah Beard:
married Hannah
Aaron, 1717-1797, married Susanna Frost.
Andrew, born in 1719; married Elizabeth Nichols.
Mary, 1721-1738.
David, born in 1723.
725 married Deborah
Jonathan, born in
John, born in 1716;
Nathan, married,
Mary;
first,
second, Sarah
Eames (widow).
Jacob, born in
1741.
Mary, born
1746.
in
Martha, born
Ephraim Black.
1747.
in
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of Aaron and Susanna Frost Beard:
Aaron, born in 1742.
Susanna, 1744-1829; married Samuel Hopkins.
746
married Dorcas Howard.
David, born in
1
Hannah.
Anna, born
Children of
Andrew and
Andrew, born
in
FOURTH GENERATION.
Children of Iathamar and
Hannah E. Beard:
Abner.
Mary Warren,
1812.
62
FIFTH GENERATION.
Children of Ithamar E. and
Mary W. Beard:
Married,
in
1814.
first,
second,
Abbe W. Mansur.
Sarah
born in 1817.
Hannah T., born in 1822.
John Quincy Adams, born
E.,
1824.
in
SIXTH GENERATION.
Children of Ithamar
W.
and
married
Marcy
Foster.
SEVENTH GENERATION.
Children of Ithamar
W.
Mary, born
St.,
New York
City).
1876.
in
Alison.
Margaret.
letter
from John
[He suggests
Ham,
genealogist, follows:
interest.]
1675.
to
One-half of
Edward
his
estate
was given
to
widow should
He
need
it
for
her maintenance.
Thomas Beard,
to his
63
Joseph (1), son of Thomas and Mary, was born in 1655; lived in Dover Neck.
Married as early as 1692 Esthar Philbrick, daughter of James of Hampton. Joseph
and on February 9, 1703, his widow Esther was appointed administratrix of
his estate.
His widow married Sylvanus Nock, 1705.
died,
Joseph
(2),
Waldron March,
There was
also a
find
Mary Beard
in July,
in
1719.
1689.
November,
707.
The Lynn records show John Bard, son of John (born 1668) possibly ancestors
of the Bards of Billerica and Charlestown, Mass., Ferrisburg, Vt. Name is as often
written Beard as Bard.
Thomas Beard, Salem, Mass., 1629. William of Dover,
N. H., 1640.
Thomas
of Ipswich,
1675.
David, of Billerica, Mass., married Hannah Haywood. Their son David marMary Ingersol, of Nelson, N. H.; David and Mary had a son, Simon
Ingersol Bard, who was born at Nelson, N. H., 1797; died at Derby, Vt., 1852.
Simon was a physician at Hillsboro, N. H., and later at Francistown. He subseHe married Lucinda S. Morse, and had three daughters
quently moved to Derby.
and one son, George. George was a graduate of Andover Seminary in 1860. He
married Jerusha Gould Parker, 1861,,
ried
There was
Charleston,
Mass.,
(p.
243)
ensign,
Ford.
80 Reg., 1761.
Scotch-Irish Pioneers
Bolton.
Names
Worcester
Sixth seet,
James
2, p. 28.)
VERMONT.
John
Baird
was born
in
1770.
Married
Harriett
Kilburn
in
1815.
They
64
resided
at
Chittendon,
Vt.
Tyler;
Lester,
married
Thomas
[This
is
these
Thomas
Children of
Thomas
Married Eliza.
Albert (children).
Milon E. Married Fanny L. T.,
New York
City.
Fred (children).
Harland.
Addie. Married Mr. Baird (children), Chittenden, Vt.
Alfred (children), Hariland, Me.
Emery
Jessie.
Vernon
Children of
MlLON
E. and
Fanny
L. T.
BaIRD:
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
Married by Rev. John Pike,
John Hudson
Joseph Beard
to
to
New
Hampshire.
1689.
Mary Beard,
Province of
New
Hampshire.
1754.
His Majesty's service on Merrymack River.
Col. Joseph Blanchard, commander.
Simon Beard.
Adj.
VIRGINIA.
Lord Baltimore engaged the services of his brother, Leonard Calvert, in foundthe colony.
Twenty gentlemen of fortune and two or three hundred persons of
ing
the laboring class, mostly
thence to Maryland.
Roman
Upon
half
French Protestants,
of
million
to
persecution
foreign
In 1690 William III
called
by Louis
Huguenots,
65
XIV,
from
fled
countries.
sent
allotted to
as
the seat of
the Harrisons.
{History
the
of
Assurance
Virginia, Campbell.)
to
Virginia in
1635.
Robert Baird, came with an English family as a servant in 1635, aged 16.
Elizabeth Baird came on the Increase, in 1635, aged 24 years.
This Thomas possibly is the same as mentioned in the will of Charles Harvey,
with Thomas Juxon -"Cousin Thomas Bard and his wife and Thomas Juxon and
his wife"
grandson of William Juxon, Bishop of London.
Among his cousins
was "Willie Juxon, late of Virginia."
England.
Staines, Middlesex,
who
croft,
lived in Virginia.
family.
the son
(William
Bristol. Parish,
First
1720
John
Baird,
1785;
William Baird,
1807.
William Baird.
Mary
ter
Baird.
married Col. B.
M.
One
Their daugh-
Jones.
to the
Anne
Pleasants.
Convention of 1809.
the Intelligence
Committee
at
Blandford
in
1775.
He
Credit, 6-0-6.
Elected vestryman
imported race horses (p. 270).
5
1785.
66
John Bates Bai-d, son of John and Polly Baird, born 1792.
Mary Baird. Married Dr. Thomas Atkinson, son of Rodger Atkinson, of
Cumberland County, England, who came to Virginia in 750 and married Anna
Pleasants.
Home, "Mansfield," Dinwiddie County, Virginia.
1
at
Martins-
He was
in
an
his duel
Samuel Beard (son of Adam and Elizabeth Beard), married Mary Mitchell in
He located in Bedford County, Virginia (now Bedford City). The anhome, built in 1800, is now occupied by his son and granddaughter, Miss
Virginia Belle Thomas.
1778.
cestral
into
after
the
Revolution.
James William.
to
They had
to
be a descendant of
Georgia.
Richard Phelan.
Robert Birchett.
Ephriam Winfield.
Leonardas Floyd.
i haddeus
Montgomery.
Children of
ALEXANDER Peter
(Dr.).
and
REBECCA
B. BAIRD:
Virginia.
Myrtle Florence.
Ora
Susan.
67
George.
Had
settled in
W.
Eleanor, 1801-1863.
Va.
Removed
1806.
to
After his
1889.
He
Married
first,
Rosannah Merchant,
third,
who
1835;
died
second,
1859.
Polly
in
Ruben Merchant (father of Rosanna) (who died in 1859), came from Northfield,
Joseph Chambers (father of
1788; owned the Black Diamond coal mine.
Elizabeth) was a son of James Hamilton Chambers, whose father came from County
Derry, Ireland, 1790; settled in Lancaster, Pa.
England,
Joseph.
(No
record.)
Rosanna M. Baird
(first
wife)
Married Louisa Nicol, 1865. Had one daughter, Mary, who died in
John.
1876.
John spent his life on the f arm. He was interested in fine wool growing.
He introduced the bronze turkey and Italian bees.
POLLY G. BaIRD
(second wife)
ELIZABETH
W.
Va.
Josiah Wallace.
on the Niantic.
sheriff
born
He
68
BAIRD
He was appointed
1852, but resigned the same year.
868. He died in San Francisco in 880.
legislature of
harbor commissioner,
of
a ser-
geant,
in
first,
THOMAS Beard
tucky, in
in
794.
a trustee
in
806
of Jefferson
Academy,
794.
John B.
and being
in
in the
House
JOHN BAIRD,
794.
Lewis,
farm
in
1795.
Whitney Ky.
born
1826
in
Child of
B.
others)
L. C. (possibly Lewis), born 1841, Campbell County, Tennessee. When nineteen years old he went to Williamsburg, Ky., where in August, 1861, he joined the
First Regiment of Tennessee, Federal Infantry, and served until September, 1864.
He was mustered out of service at Nashville. He married Sarah Bowman, 1865.
She was a daughter of Elias Bowman, who was a son of Sherrod Bowman of
Trustee of Campbell County, Tennessee.
Virginia. He was County Court Clerk and
His children
were:
Cynthia
E.,
Winston,
Calloway,
H.
Maynard,
Jennie N.
NORTH CAROLINA.
These were
residents of
Rowen County:
Commons.
Annie
J.,
69
Rowen.
Jr.,
Jr.,
was Senator.
John Baird,
Jr.,
SOUTH CAROLINA.
James Beard was
regiment
in
in Lieut.-Col.
779.
Richard Beard
to
brothers.
William went
New
John,
(Robert
Miscellaneous.
1870 President Grant nominated Samuel Bard or BAIRD to be
Governor of Idaho Territory. In 1872 he nominated Samuel B. to be
89
In January,
Henry
deputy postmaster at Chattanooga, Tenn.
D. Bard was appointed postmaster at Brazil, Ind., by President BenjaIn
min Harrison.
Thomas Mad.
Baird's children
Drowned.
An
in
He wrote in
Louisiana in 1805.
Louisiane"
est Creole de
la
brothers,
Two Huguenot
Families.
Peter Benoist Bard fled to England, 1682. He was born at MontLeft Isles of Rhe, France, after the Revopelier, Languedoc, in 1670.
70
BAIRD
He
1734.
at
New
Castle, Del.,
Mary
M,
Lived
Issue:
1710-1803.
at
at Burlington,
N.
sheriff at
J.;
Hunter-
Philadelphia.
1712-1769. Died at Mount Holly, N. J. Commissary of second batPennsylvania against Fort Duquesne, 1758. Married Maria Normandie.
Buried
at
1735.
John, born 1716, at Burlington, N. J.; died at Hyde Park, N. Y., 1799.
a physician.
Began the practice in Philadelphia, but moved to New York in
First president of
New York
Medical Society.
Was
1
746.
at Christ
Church, Philadelphia.
The
An
arm
coat of
in
Motto: Fidile
virluie.
THE BAYARDS.
brought to New Amsterdam May, 1647, the last of the Dutch
New Netherlands, had also on board Stuyvesant's beautiful wife
and his stately sister, Anna. She was the widow of Samuel Bayard, and was acColonel
companied by her children, Catherine, Petrus, Balthazar and Nicholas.
John was a descendant of Petrus (1738-1807). It is believed the father of Samuel
was a French Protestant divine, Professor Nicholas Bayard, who, with his wife,
Blondna Conde, a lady of rank, fled from Paris to Holland during the religious
He was thought to be a kinsman of Signieur de
troubles of the sixteenth century.
Bayard, Pierre du Terrail, among the most illustrious soldiers of Francis I of France.
The
ship that
governors of the
In
Holland
the
name
is
York documents
as
French chiirch at
Antwerp for several years prior to 596. Lazarre was supposed to be a brother.
He comCol. Martin Bayard, of Ghent, is supposed to have been another brother.
manded Walloon troops. Samuel was born at Breda and baptized in the Walloon
church in 1610. He was educated at Leyden.
Baird,
Biart,
Biard,
Byard.
Four of this family occupied seats in the United States Senate almost continuously for fourscore years.
large painting is preserved in the family of Samuel and Anna Baird and their
four children at their country seat at Alphen, a small town of South Holland, on
the old Rhine, seven miles from Leyden, where Peter was born.
(Bayards, by
to
Philadelphia
in
774.
three
escallops
or.
Crest:
demi-
Though
71
the
name
is
spelled differently, these two lines were posde Bayard, Pierre du Terrail, soldier of
Francis
of France, of
whom
it
was
said, "sans
et
peur
sans reproche."
David came
Allen.
They were
Louis
Beal.
forties.
Chambers.
The
earliest settler at
"The Esopus"
of
whom
there
is
any record
was Thomas Chambers, 1652. This began the actual settlement of Ulster. Thomas
Chambers, Lord of Foxhall Manor, died 8th of April, 1694. He was the second
husband of LaurirUa Killenaar. Abraham Gasbeek Chambers died in 1759. His
wife was Sarah Bayard.
(Inscription in Family Vault of Thomas Chambers,
"Old
Ulsler.")
Widow
[It is
is
supposed to
have descended.
commanded
east of
Mercersburg, Pa.
Cumberland Associators,
the
Colonel Alexander
1
West
Brown
780.
valley,
At Brown's
Enoch Brown,
cred in 1764.
Mill School,
There was
also a
72
was William, one of
near
Red
Lion.
of
Breading,
He came to
descent, born in Ireland.
Lancaster in 1728 with his son James. James had two sons: (1) Judge Nathaniel,
born in 1751, who served under General Washington.
He married Ann, daughter of General Ewing.
He served under
(2) David, born in 1756, in Lancaster.
General Washington.
He married Elizabeth Clark in 1785. Came to Fayette.
Clark B., son of David, Jr., had one brother and three sisters. He married Mary
Craft.
Clark, William.
"On
May
Mary and
Rock a decade
Bay
left
Mary
Strong;
before.
Lieut.
1722
who had
The Mary and John was
in
village of
England with passengers in 1630, under patronCompany, a great ship cf four hundred tons,
Plymouth, England, March, 1630, and landed
Massachusetts
second, Abigail Lord.
new
at
in
1651;
in
1681
in
in
died
England
in
Northampton, Mass.
Worthington, Mass.
He was
in
1609.
1707, married
Married
Selectman
in
796.
He married
Representative at Washington National Congress,
Their son Kenez Clark had a daughter, Martha Pomroy Clark."
Kenuin's and Finney's Family Genealogy, Lawson.)
1
780.
Munn.
1785.
had
Henderson.
Had
Mary
(From
Du
Fayette, Pa.
His son John
to
W.
France
in
1660.
Patterson,
1798.
He
from Ireland
to
Ewinc, Thomas, came from Ireland in 1718. Thomas Ewing, born 1789 in
came to Athens, Ohio. The first academic degree conferred by the UniOhio was given in 1815 to Thomas Ewing. He was afterwards a disHe was self-made, selling coonskins to buy
tinguished United States Senator.
books, working as boatman on Ohio River, and laboring in the Kanawha Salt
Works. (O/ho Valley, by Venable, p. 232.)
Virginia,
versity of
in
Lieutenant
Pritchard,
793,
list of those
William
mentions
who had
73
Beard
and
Assey
720.
16,
came
America
to
in
1635.
Born
FlNLEY, William.
in
He organized first
1760, a native of Maryland.
married four times, his wives being: Jane
He had fourteen
Sarah
Johns.
Marjorie Cunningham,
FlNLEY, EbenezER.
Born
school in
New
Salem.
Violet
Lowrie,
Sunday
in
He was
Kinkaid,
children.
He was son of Rev. James F., who came to Redstone township, Fayette.
James' sons were: William, Michael, Joseph, Ebenezer, Samuel R.
He was
Princeton College.
grandfather of
first
presidents
land
by
F.,
came
to
Mary-
whom
Baird.
FlNLEY,
Finley,
He
married a
Aaron Baird.
with Boone.
in
1833.
in the
in the
House.
in
had a
111.,
acres adjoining
son, John.
in
1777.
74
in
He
Fayette.
Issue:
Cadwalader,
trict
William, was
Porter,
manded
adopted
by
Captain
William
who com-
Woolsey,
township,
doctor.
He was
born
at
Wheeling,
W.
Va.,
1794.
in
of
He
Washington,
married,
Pa.;
first,
second,
Lucinda
Rebecca
On
the east side of Flint Street, Salem, Mass., next to the home of
John Reeves owned four acres of land in 1661. This was the father
of Abner. Abner was born in Southold, Long Island, in 1738; married Hannah
Barnes. It is said he served in "W. Chester Signet Horse." Died at Rastraver,
Pa., in 1828, where he moved after the Revolution. His children were:
Reeves.
Wm.
Flint,
The
Ireland,
and
1802,
whose granddaughter,
Mrs.
Beebe,
Vance, William,
was dated 1713.
will
Baird, Sr.
Sarah Quinby,
of Donegal, located
He left four sons.
at
in
His
Aughavid, Ballydug, Tyrone.
of these, David, came to America
One
One of the
John, the eldest, married and had four sons and three daughters.
daughters married Andrew Jackson of Mahnafelt.
They emigrated to America,
and were the parents of Andrew Jackson, President of the United States.
David, born near Winchester, Va., came
settling on the French Broad River.
to
the
Revolu-
tion,
Vance, Hannah, was the daughter of John, a surveyor, and was born in 1732,
in Valley of Shenandoah, Virginia.
She married William Crawford, a youthful
companion of Washington. He was with the Virginia troops under Forbes as
ensign and under Braddock. He was son of Valentine C, an emigrant from the
north of Ireland.
He was born in Orange County, Va., in 1732.
Wilson, (Rev.) Thomas,
David Brown."
of
Killybegs,
County
Donegal,
1681,
"had
friend
at
Wilson, William.
Boston in 1714.
Wilson, John.
Master
Wilson, William.
Wilson, James.
Wilson,
years old.
in
First
1718.
Lieutenant,
Lancaster County
Militia in
in
1777.
1780.
Came to Fayette
Elizabeth Lowrie.
when twelve
He
lived
at
75
is
Independence.
in
832,
at
sister
of James.
Pennsylvania:
of
CHAPTER
The
is
as follows.
some
IV.
give
for
it,
it
may
as given by A. J. B.,
future genealogist to find
name BA1RD,
assist
some
"John Gregor was a poor weaver, who went from house to house,
and while plying his trade sang the ballads, legends and incidents of the
time so well that it was always a 'gala day' when he came. He was
He was greatly beloved by the people, and when
called The Bard.
one of his wealthy friends wished to leave him some property, in order
for him to hold it, it was given to him as John Gregor Bard."
The
following
is
as
it:
"John,
Jr.,
in Ireland.
on
his portion.
"The second
FIRST GENERATION.
"It
is
New
Thomas, and
Judging by the names of the children of James, the son of John, Jr., the date
of his leaving Ireland, and the names of John's (born 1703, married Mary McCully)
The relationship was
it is probable, though not proven, they were related.
claimed by Robert Baird, of Yonkers, and Thomas Dickson Baird, from these two
children,
lines.
is a question which has not been settled.
following data and some one, some lime, may solve it.
give
Was
it
77
a great-grandson,
and what he
gives
CHAM-
I have had all kinds of documents searched and I give herein all
There seems no grave in Fayette County older than
have found.
those of Robert, Sr., and Elizabeth, yet it is said the grandparents came
"That was the extreme frontier at that time." There
over to Fayette.
is a tradition that one James v/as killed by the Indians and the family
buried him in the read to prevent the Indians finding his body.
This
was not his grandson James, son of Margaret Baird, as he died of
I
cholera.
hardly think two grandsons would make a mistake re-
mistakes
opinion
know,
in
copying a record or
ever afterward
in
copied.
writing one,
My
personal
that
is
remained
made and
in
MARGARET BROWN
brother, in
1762.
Bedford County tax list for 1779. James is taxed for 300
Armstrong township and Moses for 00 unseeded acres. At
that time Moses, the son, was ten years old.
That may account for the
small unseeded grant.
Moses swore oath of allegiance in Lancaster,
1777. The son Moses was then fifteen years old.
In the
acres in
Moses served
in
[Moses, the son. who swore allegiance at fifteen, possibly joined the
he was a little older.]
army when
Moses
is
re-
Note. Margaret Brown and her husband at that time had eight children.
The
It must have been 'Moses, the son,
youngest, Anne, was seventeen years old in 1790.
in 1787 and had a son born in 1788 and daughter Mary born
about 1788.
There
is
a deed of land
(Book
of Deeds, Greenburg, p.
320
acres in
324)
Manallen
78
[Finding absolutely no record of a Moses of that first generation, I am conI also think it probable that some of this first
vinced that Robert Baird was right.
group were sons of Moses, "an elder of the Presbyterian Church at Lifford, opposite
Strabane, Ireland" (who was a delegate to General Synod in Ulster, 1724), and
came with John of Strabane about 1720 or 1729. Or of Robert Beard, who was a
ruling elder early in the eighteenth century at Taughboyne (now St. Johnston County,
He had Thomas, John and Robert. He died about 1714.]
Donegal, near Derry).
The
males under
The
males).
census of Menallen township for 1 790 says James (two feThis could have been the father of Robert, for all of his
Ann.
in
in
Bedford
BAIRD was
Long
in the
Revolution from
Island and
777
to
779.
He
was
in
Germantown.
Robert Bard,
or
John
in
Baird,
1777.
of Christiana
79
tiana
dated
(his will
New
Hundred,
GROUP
The
of our
tradition
came about
720.
settled in Chris-
James or Moses.
and came
of Christiana
1719), and
30,
family says:
father
May
Castle, Del.
to
We
Jr.
with him.
Sterrett
SECOND GENERATION.
Children of
Margaret Brown
Moses, born
beth
in
Adams,
James, born
in
Thomas Frame.
Margarett, born in
Moved
in
to
Ohio.
to
1764.
Elizabeth, married
Anne, born
moved
785, and
in
first,
Pa.;
(Chillicothe),
of cholera.
Settled
Married,
County,
Hannah McClelland.
second, Sarah
1770;
Moved
to
Settled
in
died in 1853.
Ohio.
Fayette
County,
Pennsylvania.
in
1770.
1773.
Ohio
in
Robert Baird,
in
1795.
"Remember,
Man,
1835.
Epitaph:
as
Elizabeth died
in
826.
Robert and Elizabeth Reeves Baird were buried in Dunlap Creek churchyard.
Elizabeth was said to be the daughter of Abner and Hannah Barnes Reeves or
80
"Rastraver," Westmoreland County, Pa. She had brothers, Manassah and Michael
Reeves, who came to Bellevernon, Pa., after Elizabeth's marriage.
{Mrs. Beebe,
Ravenna, Ohio.)
843,
at
telling of
Bellevernon
from
letter
AARON
Manasseh Reeves'
in
illness.
1781.
way
to Fayette.
1777 Robert
search of a home.
(then
He
He
few years he
In a
now
About
built another
787
with him.
his
father
The
whom
He
first
moved
of
to
is
and engaged
He
Mary's Lick.
in
the
built
He
manufacture
salt.
years.
The
letter said
Vance was
later governor.
of
West
Point,
was a
81
He spoke of a
lawyer of Marysville (Marietta), Lewis County, Ky.
trip he took when a young man with Mrs. Moses BAIRD on horseback.
They had to ford the creeks to reach a sick
going to see.
woman
they were
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of
Robert
of Enoch
Alexander, born in 1782. Married, first, Nancy French (descendant
*
In 1801 he built a gristFrench, born in 1791; died in 1834) in 1809.
and sawmill on his father's farm. Married, second, Mary Harford, in 1838.
Hannah, born
Aaron, born
in
in
1784.
1787.
Married,
in
1836.
Levi.
Abner.
Lydia, born in 1790; died in 1854.
died in 1854), in 1816.
Susan.
Moses,
bom
in
1794.
in
in
1784;
1796) in 1820.
Du
Boisson
in
1824.
He
Samuel.
Elizabeth, married Randolf Dearth.
Margarett.
Life of Rev.
Robert Baird,
Henry M.
Baird,
faiher's
6,
1798.
family,
American
26th of December,
756, Robert Baird, Senior, was born. His youth fell
most exciting period of American history. His childish recollections were
with incidents of the French War, some of the most thrilling acts
in the border warfare having occurred not far from the home of his
early years.
find him when barely twenty years of age in the ranks of the patriot army of
the Revolution.
His company was among the forces of Washington at the battle
the
in
the
associated
We
of Long Island.
Before the conclusion of the Revolutionary War he was united in
marriage, on the 20th day of February, 1781, to Elizabeth Reeves, a young lady
of eighteen years, whose parents, of English and Welsh descent, were natives of
Long
Island.
He
with his wife, soon after quiet had been restored to the border, removed to
a region which was then upon the very outskirts of civilization.
He fixed upon what
is now the County of Fayette, which, from the
fertility of the soil and its proximity
to the
82
it
He
the hamlet
now
called
New
Salem.
A survey
proved
was situated in Pennsylvania. Robert., Jr., their son, was born in 1798.
was a student in Washington and Jefferson College, Pennsylvania, and
teacher at Bellefonte.
He
decided
Seminary of
to
the
Jersey.
His was an active, philanthropic nature, never contented with sluggish or selfish
repose while there was anything within his reach that could improve or elevate the
physical condition of his fellowmen.
His excellent scholarship in the Seminary, as well as the representation of a sucled, after two years, to his receiving the offer of a tutorship in the
College of New Jersey, the venerable Nassau Hall, which he held until the end
cessful teacher,
He
until
became principal of
the
academy
at
Princeton,
1822,
which he retained
1828.
evangelist.
For the
ensuing
them
five
years.
Many
articles
his
home
this
time,
for the
among
"View
published
He
in
went
French.
in
the interest of
temperance
to
Copenhagen, Gbttenburg.
At
was received by
of these places he
letters,
lectures, etc.,
the friends of
the
temperance
the
83
Christian Union.
After a
fell
Some Pennsylvania
From
to
Bairds.
17, 1858.
"My Dear
My
Children of
Moses.
JOHN
No
Children of
and
SUSAN
F.
BaIRD:
other record.
1805.
Married,
first,
Cathrine Cox;
second, Jane
Harriet
84
BAIRD
Married,
first,
Margaret Campbell;
second,
Judeth Leggett.
Children of
James and
Mary
R. Baird.
The
latter
died
in
849
in
Ohio:
James, born 1789; died 1846, Blackford County, Indiana.
Robinson, born
1792.
He
died 1838.
111.
in
1827.
was chosen
to edit a series of
He
in
rebellion.
Note. It is said he did not marry, but his family, except one aunt, did not keep
up a correspondence with him on account of his sympathy with the South.
[Eliza and James Anderson were children of Robert Anderson of Williamsiport,
F. B. C]
Pa., cousin of Gen. Robert Anderson of Fort Sumter.
Children of
Margaret.
James.
Susan.
William.
Children of
John, died
Charles Porter:
Ohio.
Lived
in
Indiana.
85
Ohio.
in
Harriet, born
Cochran.
Married
Isabella.
Married Rachel.
Sallie Wilson.
New
at Laurenceville,
Jersey, 1834.
1807.
1877.
Married,
1819,
Married
Eckley.
Alford.
Married
1803.
Poque.
He
James
Moses
to Dakota Indians, St. Petersburg, Minneand wrote a dictionary in that language; also
Missionary
among
the Indians.
died 1827.
FOURTH GENERATION.
Children of
Eliza,
born
ALEXANDER,
1810,
County, West
Sr., and
Nancy
F.
BaIRD:
in
1837.
86
1822.
Mary
Jane, born
1829.
Married
1834.
Rev. A.
Alexander
W.
R. Shook.
Baird.
J.
in
J.
Fayette County, Pennsylvania,
His father, Alexander, was a farmer in moderate
16, 1820.
circumstances.
He was a member of the Presbyterian Church. His
March
When seventeen
uncle, Robert, and two of his brothers were ministers.
Alexander was put to work with Bromfield Craft, a stone- and brickHis early Christian training and skill as a
mason, to learn the trade.
musician saved him during these days from being led astray and drew
him into better society. He spent one year, when he was twenty-one, in
Ohio, where he taught school and music.
His mother, having a family of small children, was frequently
unable to attend church, but used to take her chair and sit under the
cedar tree in the garden and read to him from the Bible. At the close
of the year in Ohio he finally settled the question as to becoming a
The chief difficulty attending the question seems to have been
minister.
whether it was God or his mother calling him.
His education in the colleges was paid for by teaching and in other
small earnings.
During the vacation following his first year in college he, under a
and built the first story of a large merchant mill,
With two music classes he made
on which he cleared about $95.
$30, which took him through the next year. In 847 he went to Cum848 he was licensed to preach.
berland College, Princeton, Ky. in
In 1850 he married Nellie Hibbits, daughter of Maj. William Britton,
In 1851 his father-in-law's health failed, and
near Clarksville, Tenn.
he removed to his home and took charge of the farm and tannery. Major
852. After winding up the affairs of Major Britton,
Britton died in
he returned to his ministerial work in Kentucky, in 1855.
contract, hired hands
In
1860 he
everybody brave;
writes:
texts
"Dark
strained
in
and a sword
rights of this institution (slavery) and if she is now changed in her mind
and determined to free the slave, she should buy him for a fair price and
87
Church of
that city.
He
spent
much
and
prisons, at
time
pris-
He
He
He
visited
years.
He
He
of the Bible."
New
was delegate
to the
to the
HANNAH
died
1841.
(born
1802;
(born
1809;
Mary
died
Children of
AARON
1811.
and
1860.
Married John
McCombs
MARGARET A. BaIRD
(his first
in
wife)
1855.
88
Jane, born 1813.
Mary Anne,
1842.
Alexander,
1830)
in
born
1823;
Married
1901.
Nancy Acklin
(born
1848.
died 1831.
in
1852
Grandfather Baird
Virginia.
Luzeme
in
teachings,
by
in
at
at
Oak
the
third
early
Hill schoolhouse
(the
first
in
He taught school and at the same time pursued his studies. In 849
he united with the Flopewell Central Presbyterian Church, and in 1850
he yielded to the call to preach and was received under the care of
Union Presbytery as a candidate. He was licensed in 1852 and ordained in 858.
1
life
were spent
he
in active pastoral
Be-
work.
people
living in remote regions who did not have the opportunity of hearing it
in
View
of
the
Pleasant
was
congregation
Fayette
pastor
preached. He
County for fourteen years, and of Hewitts, Greene County, for twelve
years, besides several other congregations in Fayette and Greene counties
was for a number of years secretary of the
for a shorter period.
In the month of June,
Fayette County Sunday School Association.
He
the
Note. James
was kindly given
P. Baird began collecting data for the Baird family history, which
into my hands as a start for this book.
F. B. C.
89
Emma
AARON BaIRD
Children of
his
in
Married
second wife:
1860
in Virginia.
Armstrong.
Miller:
in
1842.
Married
Amanda
Keith
in
1852.
Amanda
Amanda
Married
in
1853.
Children of
James Herwig.
John Newton.
Married Eliza
Burnett:
Sarah Elizabeth.
Ezekiel Vance.
Thomas
Jefferson.
Children of
Moses and'RACHEL
B. BaIRD:
Married
Samuel
died
J.
No
children.
C. Whitney.
1901.
Mar-
1902.
Children of
Fermine Ophelia.
Edward Payson.
Anna Fermine.
New York
for
many
years.)
90
BAIRD
William Wilberforce.
William Chester.
Baird.
New
"The
"Dr. Baird was born August 28, 1828 (died 1887); was the son of Rev.
Dr. Robert Baird and Fermine du Boisson, the latter of French Huguenot blood.
He married, 1861, Miss Margaret Eliza Strong, eldest child of Theodosius Strong
and Eliza J. Mitchell.
His wife, a daughter, Eliza Strong, and son, Robert,
survived him.
He
New York
in
1848.
He
was chaplain of the American Chapel in the City of Rome, 1852-54. From
to 1861 he was pastor of a Reformed Dutch Church at Bergen Hill, South
!n May, 1861, he became pastor of the Presbyterian Church at Rye,
Brooklyn.
New York. His names, Charles and Washington, were derived from two maternal uncles.
He was born at Princeton, N. J.
He also lived at PhilaHis father, Dr. Robert, became widely known through his labors to
delphia.
Six years' residence in Paris and two in
convert Roman Catholic countries.
Geneva, with the attendant acquisition of foreign languages, gave young Charles
1859
"Dr. Baird was a member of many historical societies, including those of New
He was one of the two authors chosen to
York, Long Island and Virginia.
His
honorary fellowship by the Huguenot Society of London, founded in 1885.
brother, Henry M., was the other American."
(/Ven> Yorlj; Genealogical and Biographical Record, R. W., 1890.)
Henry Martyn
"The announcement
Baird.
Dr.
Baird's
to Paris by his father, who was one of the best known and most influential men
of his time, and so it came about that his earliest recollections are of that foreign ^
There in Paris he lived for eight years. His father made the spread
capital.
his life work, and his son, during his most impressionatmosphere surcharged with historical reminiscences and
As a child he played in the Tuilleries, heard upon the spot
great enthusiasm.
the story of the great massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, and many a time
looked up at the facade of the Church of St. Germain-l'Auxerrois, from which
To him the rise and fall of the Huguenots was
the signal bell sounded forth.
After six years the family moved
real, as books alone would not have made it.
to Geneva, and on the way, posting somewhat leisurely as they did, they stopped
heard
how the messenger of Charles
Protestant
at Troyes, and from the
pastor
of Protestantism
able
years,
lived
in
Europe
in
an
IX sent to stop the massacre there, kept the dispatch in his pocket until the work
of the butchers had been finished.
"On his return home he entered school and graduated from the University of
He then lived for two years in Italy and
the City of New York in 1850.
Greece, during which time he studied in the University of Athens.
"In
in
Modern
Greece.'
the story
of
to
them
Rise of the
Reformation
IX
(1574).
Thus Henry
and Motley,
better
than
their
"Throughout we are impressed with Dr. Baird's truthfulness. Dr. Baird prefers to put no titles after his name upon his title pages, but he has received
The College of New Jersey
academic honors which cannot be unnoticed here.
gave him the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, 1867; the higher one of Doctor
of
Laws
"He
1882.
in
is
du
l'Histoire
Rutgers College
member
of
the
Protestanisme
in
1877.
Historical
of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes), and in 1892, the fortieth anniversary
of the Societe de l'Histoire du Protestantisme Francais, he was one of the six
historians elected honorary members of the governing committee, with right to act
and vote."
(Samuel
McCauley Jackson,
in
the
1895.)
Children of
George Washington.
Robert Johnston.
Sarah Jane.
Clark Breading.
Children of
ROBERT
and
MARGARET D.
BAIRD.
Oliver Perry.
Malinda.
Edger Morris.
Robert Davis.
Samuel A.
Married Lizzie.
John R.
Children of
1824.
Mitchell.
Married
Sina Angeline, born 1826.
George Washington, born 1827; died 1872. Married Libby Henry,
Moses
1829 (blind).
died 1879.
Mildred Annie (Milly), born 1831
Jefferson,
Harriet Francis.
Lyman
1853.
born
92
Children of
died 1836.
Mary
Married,
1837.
Chil-
111.
Children of
second wife.
his
Joshua, born
1852.
Electa, born
1856.
Children of
Four
sons,
Married 1877.
daughters,
eighteen
grandchildren,
George
B. Ewing, a missionary.
Children of
Two
Children of
record.
J.
the
C. B., Cal.
Dakota
Indians.
Emily.
Newton and
Children of Moses
Mary
Margaret.
Mary
Went to California.
Went to California.
Charles.
Clinton.
James.
Died on way
Martin.
phis,
P. BAIRD.
to California.
Susan.
Married
Mary.
J.
Nancy.
David.
Nelsonville, Ohio.
Children of
Frank.
Ebenezer.
Harvey
Two
B. and
sons,
Mary
Had
son, J.
A. Baird.
Baird C.
Mem-
93
first,
Florence Campbell.
Married John Wood.
Chambers, born I860. Lawyer at Ripley, Ohio.
Margaret A. Campbell,
Children of
Served
James.
Eliza Parks.
Confederate
in
He was
born
in
1820.
in
1813; died
Died
Army.
in
1877.
St.
in
Louis,
Married
Jane.
Mo.
in
the
Union Army.
Six children.
Issue:
Cathrine.
W.
Thomas
Five children.
Issue:
Elizabeth.
Paris,
Mary
in the
Union Army
Children of
Ohio.
in
Kansas.
Removed
to
III.
Jane.
Jane.
Washington.
Margaret.
Children of
Bentonville, Ohio.
William.
Sarah.
RACHEL BaIRD
Children of
Born 1820.
Robert.
hand
Fell
1857.
Issue:
Iowa.
James, 1825.
home
in
Left
from building
in
Indiana.
Chicago.
Five children.
in
1840.
Possibly died in
Washington, 1827.
Married Belle Dougherty.
John, born 1829.
Married Agnes Murman.
Joseph, born 1831.
Wiley, born 1834; died 1863.
Issue:
Illinois.
Eight children.
Iowa.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Children of
rora,
111.
1829;
died
1850.
Lived
at
Sardinia, Ohio.
94
Elizabeth, born
Mary
Two
Issue:
1857.
died
1860.
111.
in
Robert Anderson, born in 1836 at West Union, Ohio; died 1887, Garden City,
Moved to
Married Agnes W. Towne, 1836, at Aurora, 111.
Kans.
Malverne, Iowa.
fantry;
at
Company E, 36th
Children of
111.
Volunteer In-
Fitch.
Hattie.
George.
Warren.
Laura.
Lilly.
Herbert.
Mary BAIRD
Children of
Mary.
Lizzie.
Robert.
William.
Jessie.
Eldridge.
Children of
Anne
Five children.
No
Ohio.
record.
Children of
was
Charles
many
of the
years.
associate
letter
two sons
in
846.
Charles Porter and John Porter, two brothers, married JaNE and
BAIRD, two sisters; they each had sons, John and James.
MARGARET
No
is
a grandson of
record.
Children of
Samuel.
Children of
Moses
No
other
B. Porter.
record.
95
Children of
Jane Howard.
Lived across
river
Children of
Heziah
Eliza B.
S.
Mary
Harriet E.
W.
Martha
James A.
Brown
Russellville,
R. Amanda, 1877.
John Blanchard.
Tonica.
Note. A letter written by Harriett Hibbs, 1884, says Porter's son is married.
Newell adopted three sons of his wife's sister and lives at Indianapolis, Ind.
Samuel PoRTER
Children of
(lived at
Tonica).
Wiley.
(Wife
Children of
James
W.
Married,
first,
Cinthia
Van
Kirk; second,
Mary Van
Kirk.
Samuel.
Isabelle.
Children of
Died
at
or
McCoy.
James H. PoRTER.
N.
Laurenceville,
Children of
No
McKay
J.,
1834.
No
record.
record.
Children of
Two
Two
ROBERT PoRTER.
girls.
Children of
No
died at Tonica,
III.,
1862.
record.
killed,
1824.
James
He
boys.
born
Married,
1851,
Mary E.
Taylor.
He
was
1856.
Went
to
Germany.
96
Married,
first,
Emma
J.
Fuller.
Emma,
No
born 1844.
Rigg*.
FIFTH GENERATION.
Eliza BaIRD and
Children of
Mary
Charles Brown.
Jr.,
in
in
in
1860.
1881.
1867.
Nancy
died
F.,
1851.
of
Charles
Brown,
St.,
was
Children of Samuel
Nancy, born 1838.
1842.
C,
born 1851.
1855.
Children of
Charles B.
Harriet Jackson.
Fannie Louise.
Robert James (Dr.).
C.
Emma
Lizzie
Mary
Burton.
Children of
Rev. William
William H.
Henry Martin.
F. and
97
REV. ALEXANDER
Children of
J.
and
Baird.
Susan.
Children of
1879.
He was
William Morgan.
Edward
Clarence.
Lucy Henry.
Wallace Bryan.
Harry L.
Children of
A.
Harriet
Charles L.
Alexander B.
Robert B.
William Ellsworth.
Annie Louisa.
James M.
Edward
Franklin.
Children of
CHARLES
at
P. and
the
Edward
Susan A. BaIRD.
P.
Children of
Nancy
F.
BaIRD and
W.
R. Shook, of Texas.
Levi.
Ida.
May
Bell.
Baird.
George.
Hassie Ruth.
Alice.
John.
Fermine May.
Children of
in
1840)
in
1866.
98
BAIRD
Children of
Hannah
G., born
1834.
Jane.
William
1838.
Children of Lydia
Married,
first,
Isabella C. Purvis;
Martha.
Sarah Ann.
George.
Alexander.
John.
Thomas.
James.
Henry.
William
J.
Ellie.
Maria.
Mary
Children of
J.
Missionary
to
1841.
Mary
s
,
Children of
Robert
J.
and
Children of
Eli
H.
Finley.
Jane.
Mary M.,
Margery.
1837.
111.
99
William
born 1843.
Elliott,
Anne
Children of
F. Miller*
Alfred
born
Bryant,
1842;
died
1892.
Married
Pierson, 1853,
Estha
Ann
Tarbell,
of
1866.
in
Maryland,
Mary DeFreeze
Children of
1851;
C,
Albert
Children of
born 1854.
James.
William.
Joseph.
Newton.
Martha Jane.
Children of
JAMES P.
and,
first,
died
1842.
George Clark.
Children of
James P.
and, second,
MARGARET PRATT
died 1864.
Sarah Jane.
Mary
Elizabeth.
John William.
Children of
Aaron.
WlLLIAM
Died
in
J.
infancy.
and
Maria W. Baird.
Baird, who
100
1850,
James Delmar.
Died 1851.
Bloomington,
ROBERT A.
Children of
Married
Ann
1873.
NaNCY AckLIN
and
in
111.
BaIRD.
Children of
Edwin.
Margaret.
Adelade.
Agatha.
Jane.
May.
Married Jacob Beasley.
Virginia.
Children of
Emma
1862.
Mary
Percis, born
twins,
born
1868.
1871.
Emma
Grace, 1879.
Not on
Dora.
Children of Eli
all
records.
Hayden and
Mary Margaret
A. Baird.
Gertrude.
Jessie.
Blanch.
W.
Arthur
Charity.
Joseph A.
Mary
Margaret.
Children of
Harriet
Effie,
born 1842;
died 1861.
Married 1859.
Married 1871.
Benton,
Viola Jane,
1855;
1859.
died
1858.
first,
in
1881, Ida
1862.
Children of
C,
Elizabeth
born 1852.
Married 1883.
Children of
Cornelia, born
Jennie, born
B. MlLLER.
1850.
OLIPHANT
Children of
and
AMANDA
K. MlLLER.
Anne
T. MlLLER.
1854.
WASHINGTON
Children of
and
Children of
Children of
Wilson
P. and
born
died
1860;
Amanda
C. MlLLER.
Married 1878.
1862.
Maude M.,
born
1867.
Children of
Mary
Cyrus.
Georgia,
Robert,
101
1873.
1876.
John, 1879.
James, 1880.
twins,
J.
1870.
McCombs
and
Cyrus Porter.
in
1867.
102
Children of
first
wife), mar-
Mary
(his
1840.
ried in
Children of
wife), married
No
SAMUEL M.
Children of
(his
second
1865.
in
and
James Burnett.
MARGARET G.
BaIRD.
Rachel.
Jane.
John.
Anna.
Moses.
Children of
No
record.
Children of
J.
C.
Whitney.
Winona C.
Oliver B.
Lizzie B.
Edward D.
Joseph Henry.
William A.
Children of
Winona
Cathrine, born
1857.
858.
F. Baird.
Unmarried.
Married
Edward
Mary
Lincoln,
1867.
Children of
HENRY M.
Du
Flagg.
Boisson.
to
China.
103
Susan Baldwin.
Henry Martyn,
Jr.
Margaret.
Children of
Intyre.
Elizabeth Jane and
Ewan, 1872.
Mary
Cathrine Arabel,
1845.
Fannie Adaline,
1850.
Ellen, twins,
bom
Married
Hattie, 1859.
Children of
111.
in
1868, in
died in Galveston, Tex.,
1902.
Mary
George W.
T. Baird.
in
Children of
Mary
1843.
and
111.
Ruth M. Dearth.
Aaron Randolph.
John
W.
Lacy
Evans'.
Jonah.
Evans.
Children of
Louella.
Bell,
Ripley, Ohio.
Alonzo Patterson.
Unmarried.
Louisa.
Eugena.
John T.
Anna.
William.
Note.
Note.
list
of children of
I don't
Estelle.
Unmarried.
There
Another
Six children.
know which
correct.
F.
B. C.
Margaret.
Thomas.
John McCoy.
104
Edith.
Helen.
Mary
Children of
S.
PORTER
and
Thomas
King.
Ira.
No
record of Harriet
E. Porter.
Possibly married
Martha W. Porter
Children of
and
Mr. Hibbs.
Mr. Kennedy,
of Ripley,
Ohio.
Frank.
Jennie.
Children of
Russellville,
Ohio.
Ella Florence.
Harry W.
Edwin E.
Charles R.
George F.
Lula Belle.
Children of
Children of
Tonica,
111.
Maud.
Charley.
Guy.
No
No
Porter,
III.
record
Children of
of Wiley,
James
wife (married
son
W.
in
of
and
Samuel
Porter,
Tonica,
111.
hisjirst
1852).
Sarah
E., born
Mary
his
second
M. Cordor.
Children of
William.
No
other record.
MARGARET W. PORTER
and
105
Mr. THOMPSON.
1876.
1881.
1870.
Children of
Louie Bell.
Mary Wilson.
Georgie Venettie.
Children of
Mary
Anne
lone, born
Eliza,
1840.
1841.
William, 1843.
Stephen Riggs,
died
1845;
Harriet
Emma,
1847.
Unmarried.
L. Newton
Battery L, First Ohio Artillery, Civil War)
Children of
Robinson
1844.
Harry Gibbs.
Fred Hutchess.
Children of
Children of
James
William, born
W.
and
Mary
T. RlGGS.
1852.
1854.
Drowned
Lived
at
in
Ohio River.
Portsmouth, Ohio.
1866.
(Captain
106
BAIRD
Martha
Children of
O. V.
Thirty-third
in Civil
STEPHEN
Children of
died
in
1862.
Unmarried.
Emma
E.,
died 1857.
Unmarried.
born 1863.
Children of
RlGGS.
Anna W.,
EvADNE
B. and
E. RlGGS.
Henry
Children of
No
War), who
Allen,
Joseph E. and
Emma
J.
Joseph E. and
Anna
E. Riggs,
Riggs,
record.
Children of
his
second wife.
Kate.
May
Fuller.
Lucy.
Children of
RlGGS.
1870.
Children of
1873.
ALEXANDER
and
CHARLOTTE
R. RlGGS.
born 1874.
Children of
Flora,
May
William
E.,
Corder, Streator,
1860.
6,
1864.
Roy Bascom,
Children of
Florence.
Maud.
Win f red.
Hera.
Lei and.
Bertram.
1880.
111.
LuELLA McCoy
Children of
107
Edwin.
Everett.
William.
John.
Anna McCoy
Children of
in
New
Mexico.
Ray.
Children of
Baird.
S.
Chas. Maurice.
Albert Rollin.
Joseph Shultz.
John Watts.
VanK. Bowers,
Children of Sadie V.
Streator,
111.
bom
Ella M.,
Children of
1883.
Myrta May.
Halsey O., born
married,
Children of
1890.
second,
K., born
first,
He
McW.
Baird.
1880.
Hays Baird.
Schrvener.
Royden
Married,
Lottie
L.
SIXTH GENERATION.
Children of
WILLIAM
H. Baird.
B. and Faith
A.
1895.
1,
J., born July
Unit in our war against Germany. (Left for France, January
Martha, born July 4, 1900.
William
Children of
Benjamin
February
13,
born October
9,
1880.
B. Catchings.
Served
in
born October,
1882.
1918.)
15,
Company K,
First
Alabama
Lawyer of
Issue:
108
Thomas
Baird and
Siias,
twins,
ROBERT
Children of
Frank
De
Freeze
infancy.
B. and
(Rev.),
in
born
1854.
Calif.
land,
Children of
Alfred
Frederick Ami,
1868.
Anna Miller
Children of
Oakland, Calif.
at
EsTHA T. MlLLER.
B. and
and
Elmer Crockett.
1876.
1879.
Children of
1873-1(574.
Marrietta,
1875.
Walter,
Children of
HARRY TOWN
Children of
Children of
William
at
lo92,
and HARRIET
at
Garden
City,
B.,
born
HARRY
and
R. BoYD,
Memphis, Tenn.
M. K. BAIRD.
Kans.
and
WlLLIAM V. Cox.
GROUP 2 David.
to
The
DAVID BAIRD
married
Lydia Glendinning;
Windham
County,
link.
lived
at
Dumfries,
Scotland.
When Mary
Dublin, Ireland.
The
children of
all
born
follows:
in
109
David,
(This
Jr.
to
America.
father.)
Isabella.
Marion.
Janet.
Peter.
who was
Mary
a Catholic.
father
leaving a
The
a
first
was
tradition of
Mary
Corrigan says
Sir
Byrne.
and
adopt young David, Jr., and purchase a commission for him in the army. She remembered shawls and presents which
came from the cousins in Scotland. She spoke of cousins, Lowthes and
Though they were Presbyterians,
Forsythes, who came to America.
much of their estates were lost fighting for the Pretender. She spoke
of going on the ship to say good-bye to her brother James, coming to
America in 1835. It is supposed another brother came later.
having no son, wished
to
GROUP 3 Frances.
Rev. Dr. Samuel John Baird thought that the first Baird to
Rev. John BaIRD, chaplain to the Duke
of Argyle, who, during the re'ign of Charles II, was sent to repress the
Irish rebellion, when 50,000 Protestants were killed.
He settled near
Belfast in 1646.
HENRY BaIRD said all BaIRDS are traceable to
Grey'co, or Bairdstown, between Belfast and Newton Ards, about three
miles from Belfast, County Down.
He also spoke of Elizabeth's
emigrate to Ireland was the
father as
John Dickson.
FRANCIS BAIRD,
Dr.
Scotch,
Thomas Baird says the coat of arms was the same as the
but the motto was, Dominus fecit vi et armis
"The Lord
FIRST GENERATION.
Frances.
BAIRD
SECOND GENERATION.
Married Mary McCully.
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of
John
and
Mary McCully
Baird.
Mary.
Elizabeth.
Margaret.
Agnes.
James.
Rebecca.
FOURTH GENERATION.
Children of
John
John.
1837.
Thompson.
Moses Lamb, died
in
in
Ireland.
to
Baltimore in 1817.
Esther.
Rebecca.
Mary
Elizabeth.
Margaret.
Possibly
married
Mr.
McGowan
and
remained
at
Tulyhinny,
Ireland.
[A
letter
speaks of emigrating to
McGowan. F. B. C]
Children of
Mary BAIRD
John (Capt.).
Children of
Two
sons,
Children of
James, Jr.
Rebecca.
Mary.
Came
to
South Carolina
in
1802.
No
record.
MARGARET BAIRD
AGNES Baird
Children of
No
McGowan.
and Samuel
record.
Children of
John.
Andrew.
Married Mr. Forsythe.
Rebecca.
Mary Anne.
(Settled in Ohio.)
Agnes.
FIFTH GENERATION.
v
Children of
Samuel.
John.
Eliza.
John
Mary Ann
Jane.
and
Scott.
Died
Children of
at sea,
Thomas D.
Children of
and Isabella
His
in infancy.
Thomas
first
D. and Esther
McKay
Baird,
Thompson
in
South Carolina.
Baird,
his
second
1817;
died
1893.
1821;
1873.
died
Unmarried.
Married Anne
1887.
McDonald.
James Hervey, D.D., born 1824; died 1900. Married Addie Torrey.
William Logan (Prof.), bom 1827; died 1881.
Annie Rebecca.
Susan Jane.
Eliza Elenore, born 1830.
Children of
Children of
Henry
and
Mary
in
Some
Pittsburgh, Pa.
F. Baird.
Pittsburg.
Mary Ann,
to
Married H. P.
Esther, 1831.
Thomas Dickson, born 1834;
died
1849.
Children of
One
Willis, Missouri.
No
son.
REBECCA BaIRD
Children of
Lived
in
On-
Ohio.
tario,
John B.
Mary.
record.
Robert.
Married,
Carrie Hunter,
first,
of
in
in
Margaret Hogshed
Nebraska.
in
second,
Eliza.
Rebecca, Ontario.
Children of
New
No
record.
MARGARET
Children of
No
York.
BaIRD.
record.
SIXTH GENERATION.
Samuel
Children of
Howard Lowery
JOHN
Children of
No
Lowery Baird.
and
(Dr.).
record.
Children of
William (Rev.).
Children of
Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia.
One
son.
Daughter, H. B. Huey.
Children of
Thomas
Samuel John
D., born
1842;
and Jane
died
J.
WlLSON BaIRD.
1844.
Elizabeth.
Mary
Samuel John.
Esther Elinor.
Susan
Ann
Rebecca.
Celia Estha.
Married Robert
W.
Pollard.
Anna McDonald.
Mary Lamb.
Julia Henderson.
Florence Campbell.
William Logan.
Children of
James H.
Addie.
William Torrey.
New York
City.
Robert Breckenridge.
George.
Edward P.
Children of
No
John BaIRD,
James BaIRD,
son of Moses.
record.
Children of
Note.
Possibly
Children of
No
record.
Children of
No
of Dayton, Ohio.
P. Willis.
record.
Children of
anon, Pa.
No
record.
NETTIE M. BaIRD.
Ruth Wilson.
Nellie
Mann.
Philip Logan.
Children of
(C. S. A.).
Evelyn Spotswood.
Francis.
Edmund
Carter.
Robert Spotswood.
Jean Baird.
BAIRD
Esther Baird.
Children of
Hot
One
No
son.
Children of
Two
Children of
No
record.
tiansburg,
No
Pollard, D.D.S.,
record.
Anna McDonald
sons.
W.
Ark.
Springs,
Chris-
Va.
record.
James Baird, D.D., of Patterson, said: "Judge Baird, of Pittsburgh, was right when he said we came to Ireland through England.
The great ancestor, Francis, came from Scotland to Sheffield, and tarthere about twenty years,
ried
then,
with
his
family,
removed
to the
north of Ireland."
ter,"
and
it
is
probably married
802.
John, with his wife, Rosanna, emigrated to America about
brought with him his two nephews, John and James, sons of Moses.
They went to Bucks County, Pennsylvania, where Thomas Dickson,
his brother, found him a few weeks later.
~
1
He
John
sailed
on the Edward.
it.
Thomas Dickson, about 1815. Both John and Thomas Dickson were prominent United Irishmen, and were forced to emigrate for
in-law,
that reason.
He
married
in
1816
Esther Thompson.
Herald, Pittsburgh.
Cannonsburg, Pa. he was also director of the Theological Seminary at
Allegheny. He was born near Guilford, County Down, Ireland. Died
Thomas Dickson and Dr.
en route to Wilmington, N. C, 1839.
ROBERT BAIRD, of Yonkers, were intimate friends and claimed relaRosanna was heard to speak of cousins James and Moses
tionship.
Dr. Samuel John, son of Thomas
(father and uncle of Dr. Robert).
"The
Dickson, was author of several well-known theological works
This
Digest," "Elohim Revealed," and "Bible History of Baptism."
was an eminent family of ministers and educators.
;
F. B.
C]
S.
Dode,
Jefferson
College,
representation for the State of Maryland in the InterNelson's "Bioappointed to meet in city of London, 1869.
graphical Historical Reference Booke of Fayette County, Pennsylvania," in speakof
this family and the one from which Dr. Robert Baird, the temperance mising
'One of the most gifted and cultured families
sionary and historian, came, says:
that this country has given to the world is the Baird family.
This name is
recognized and represented in many of the higher ranges of culture, especially
petition
national
to
secure
official
Congress
in history
and theology.'
"The Bairds
New York
in
classic
of
histories
of
the
"William Logan and Thomas Dickson Baird, both of this family, attained
scholarship and as educationists in Baltimore and in the South.
fame
"They were men of large acquirements and great moral force, and represented
the liberal training and pure culture of the Presbyterian Church in West Penn-
sylvania in those days that have passed into history or have lingered only in the
dim and fading light of expiring tradition."
to
give
his
sons
the
close of the war he came south as agent for the American Bible
There he remained, preaching at various places in Virginia and West
the close of his long and laborious life.
Perhaps the greatest work
life was done through his books, among which were 'Baird's Digest' and
the
Virginia, until
of
the
his
1847.
He
ness of intellect."
(Christian
Observer, 1893.)
In
perance movement
in
Baltimore.
He
five sons.
GROUP
Cornelius Baird
Cornelius.
County Derry,
married
line;
May
born
also
Sarah Moore,
near
Coleraine,
Ireland.
SECOND GENERATION.
CORNELIUS and Sarah Moore Baird.
Children of
Married
Second
No
son.
in
Ireland.
No
record.
It
is
thought
record.
about 1760.
Married Elizabeth Warden.
(She was about 14
to be 84 years old.)
Emigrated from Coleraine about 1820 to
Moved to Tipton County, Tennessee, 1836. Died about
Charleston, S. C.
1837.
(Tipton about ten miles south of Covington, Ky.)
John,
born
and
lived
Samuel.
No
record.
Cornelius.
When
he
Ireland,
to
There were
who
Lydia,
Black.
three
married
sisters:
Matthew Gorely;
Cornweil, S.
THIRD GENERATION.
John
Children of
and Elizabeth
W.
Baird.
John, born
in
Ireland.
William, born
in
born
Elizabeth,
in
Ireland.
Ireland;
in
Ireland.
Eliza,
Had
Ireland.
Children of
Robert Barkley.
son,
in
Winnesburg, S.
O,
184
BAIRD
Mary.
Sarah.
FOURTH GENERATION.
Wilson BAIRD
They
(Jeanet Wilson,
lived in Chester, S.
C,
until
Warden
J.
Lived
Robert S.
William C.
Lived
the battle of
in
Covington, Tenn.
in
at
Chickamauga.
Married Miss McCalla.
Had
Tipton, Tenn.
J. S.
Baird, of Wilson,
Ark.
Martha.
J.
Married C. Simonton.
Elizabeth.
Children of
J.
Her
son,
editor of
He
Baird.
died
1878,
Elizabeth.
Mary.
NaNCY McQ.
Unmarried.
Margaret.
John L.
Married,
first,
Illinois.
second, Sally
Betty McQuister;
McQuister.
Hugh A.
William E.
Children of
Forsythe.
They
lived in
Colum-
bia, S.
Joseph.
John.
Three daughters.
Children of
He
died
Married E. M. McDaniel.
.
Sally.
Married
I.
T. Wilson,
Had
two
Idaville,
sons.
Tenn.
863.
They had
five
Children of
Mary BaIRD
Had
ten children.
Phillips.
He was
editor
of
the
M.
Mrs.
Children of
Wilson.
Fifth Generation.
Children of
Samuel Orr
Lived
Wilmer, Ark.
Issue:
at
and
S. P.
Ellis Huey.
Married 1884.
She was
Children of Samuel Barclay and Sarah PHILLIPS BaIRD.
a daughter of John Lawrence Phillips, of Livingston, Ala.
They
Hamburg, Ark.
lived at
R.
W.
Samuel L.
Newton P.
Robert H.
Catherine.
Maggie.
Helen.
Children of
John W.
Simpson Baird.
Lived
Children of
McDaniel
Dr.
J.
at
Covington, Tenn.
S.
.
Five daughters.
Three
Lived
WILLIAM
sons.
Mary
120
GROUP
James Randall.
He
780-85.
C, and
lived in Charleston, S.
died there.
His children
were:
John Botts (Dr.), born in Charleston 1811; died
Mary Louise Bozeman.
in
Atlanta
1871.
Married
Lizzie
Gastrell,
Emiline.
Fanny.
Benjamin.
Died
in
New
York.
Mary.
W.
Married
Eliza Caroline.
L. Wittich,
Pensacola,
Fla.
Laura.
Children of
James B.
born
at
Columbus,
B. Baird.
Ga.,
1849.
Married
Atlanta, Ga.
Children of
at
Washington, D. C, 1897.
Mary
Henry
Louise.
Stewart.
Daughter,
who
W.
Lieut.-Col. Frances
Battalion, 1780.]
GROUP
Isham.
ISHAM may have been this second son. He is said to have come
over with six brothers and settled in Tipton and Maury Counties, TenOne of his sons, James, moved to Arkansas in 1 833.
nessee.
ISHAM BAIRD had James; Nancy who
son who was the father of
Conference.
John
W.
Benjamin
Died
Died
Harrison.
J.
Conway, Ark.
in
in
Thornton, Ark.
Joseph.
Died
in
Valdo, Ark.
Albert.
Died
in
Valdo, Ark.
Died
George.
Sister.
in
Married
Children of
121
Pittsburg, Texas.
A. Stewart.
J.
Nancy Baird
Fannie.
James Benjamin.
Married Harrison Beal,
Elizabeth Jane.
Children of
Little
Rock, Ark.'
Joseph Baird.
Children of B.
W.
BAIRD.
5.
(Wishes
to
locate heirs
GROUP 7 Mathew.
MatHEW
Baird, born
New
York.
York
He
is
About
to
Mathew
Baird, by
Mary Ann,
born
1796.
had
122
Mathew
1803.
Baird, by
his
Pa.,
Cathrine, born
Jane, born
1808.
1816.
1817-1839.
Elizabeth,
Rachel.
Harriet, born
C,
Robert
1822.
born 1824.
Died
at
Baird.
is
in
Baltimore.
Baltimore in 1889.
is
the son of
many
Mathew
scientific inventions.
Among
rest, in
water
the
these
is
machine which
little
first
last
moved.
He
distiller
appliances
From
now
the
for
ships,
use
in
the
in the
evaporator,
He
navy.
is
Mason.
and place in
should say these, too, were related
the time of coming,
GROUP 8 David.
David BAIRD,
1854.
United
born
in
He
brother
1774; died
came to the
ing year).
David Alexander.
John James.
He
Margaret Jane.
Isabella
Margaret.
Not married.
lived
in
England.
Baird, U.
S.
N. (Retired),
123
to
America with
his father in
1825.
Lived
New York,
New York.
in
Mary was
boat that went
had
down
settled in Virginia.
Irish
at
N. Y.
Buffalo,
N. Y.
at Buffalo,
and
New
Isabella,
Cathrine
Mary
Isabella Virginia,
born
Died
Bruce.
York.
at
in
in
Washington.
Washington.
in
Washington.
the age of 14 or 15.
r
Children of
MARY LOUISA
and CYRUS
HATCH.
David A.
Ella.
William C.
W.
James
Louise.
Harry.
Sada
J.
Children of
Addie.
Dora.
James.
Cora.
Robert.
ELVINA
L. BAIRD.
124
David.
Lula May.
Read
Children of JESSE
Anna.
David H.
GROUP 9William.
WlLLIAM BaIRD,
Walker
at the siege of
WlLLIAM BaIRD,
Jr., of Coleraine,
Married
Elizabeth.
William.
Samuel.
in
Came
Came
James.
died 1849.
to
America
with
in
parents
in Ireland;
came
to
America
in
1811.
1809; unmarried.
in
1817;
married
Miss Murry,
Ky.;
Lexington,
John, born in
1818; then
married.
Ann.
849,
his
killed
in
the battle of
Lundy's
William, Jr., had a brother, John, who lived in Ohio, and who
had a son, William. This William had sons, John and William. John
is
Presbyterian
minister
at
Plattsmouth,
Cincinnati.
Neb.
William
lives
in
Jr.,
had a
brother,
Thomas,
of Bards-
The
Married, first,
Childs;
(Dr.).
Bare. Died at Charlestown, Ind., 1880.
Married,
One
WlLLIAM and
son killed
in
Came
William.
Welsh;
second,
third,
Died
1888.
in
Children of
says
were:
first,
It
son.
James
William (Dr.).
in
Martin.
children of
Ann.
125
in
1829.
Ireland.
with
his
grandfather to
this
country in
1817.
He
settled
in
Children of
Mary.
James.
Henry.
Children of
William, born
dianapolis,
in
1817
Ind.,
in
at Philadelphia.
1887.
Died
in
In-
George.
Ann.
James.
age, at Charlestown,
in
Md.
Iowa,
in
Robert.
Secretary.
Martha.
Children of
James BaIRD by
his first
wife (Childs).
Samuel C. Taggart.
Children of
Ann.
James BAIRD by
his
Mary.
Children of
Amanda.
Albert.
William.
John.
James Baird by
his third
wife (Bare).
possibly
Territorial
126
Alice.
James.
Marcus.
Children of
WlLLlAM Baird by
Sarah Faris,
his
first
wife.
John.
Mary.
William.
Children of
Crawford,
his
second wife.
Eliza.
James.
Josiah.
Samuel.
Sarah.
Harry.
Children of
WlLLlAM and
Crouch) Baird.
Sarah.
John.
Ida.
Alice.
Charles.
Children of
Mary.
Presbyterian minister, Linwood, Cincinnati, Ohio.
John F.
Anna.
Died
William.
Children of
at
Charleston
in
Presbyterian minister.
Ann
1890.
Missionary
to
Korea.
Clark.
John.
Almira.
Sarah.
Ida.
Charles.
Robert.
Elizabeth.
Children of
Ada.
Sophia.
Maggie.
Carrie.
Tevelda.
Willie.
James and
Martha
127
Children of
Mattie.
Florence.
Chancellor.
Orville.
Edward.
Children of
Martha Baird
Charles.
Robert.
Of
and
this
there
of James.
County, Ohio,
The
who was
who had
was given by John TAYLOR BaIRD,
married Miss
McCurdy
in
Ireland,
John
professor in
Killed in
Daughter.
Daughter.
Daughter.
as follows:
Ireland.
to
America.
Martha.
William.
Born
in
1792
at
Married Isabella
Fermaquin, Ireland; died 1872.
(One record says Washington, Pa.)
Daughter.
Rachel.
William at the age of 24, his five sisters (one sister had married and
come over before), wife and grandparents came in a sailing vessel. They
visited relatives
settled in Cincinnati,
Ohio,
in
were
in
in
M.
as they
Morrison.
This William
Married,
first,
the son
128
GROUP 10 Henry
Was Given
This Record
Carey.
Henry Baird came from Dublin to America in 1803, having been involved in
what was called the Rebellion, in which Robert Emmet lost his life. Henry, without trial, had been confined at Kilmonbane one year, whither Thomas
James, a
child of seven, accompanied him.
Thomas
Henry's wife was a Miss Burnside.
born
1795.
He and his father came to this country 1803.
James,
Robert, the oldest son of Henry, came before 1803.
Henry's family came
about 1805, and they, the parents, lived with Henry Samuel at Green
Bay, Wis.,
where they both died.
at
served in the
war
ing in 1828.
He
died at Pottsville,
1842.
at
Philadelphia, 1822.
with
whom
capacity
he served,
for
would come
Had
handling troops.
Major General."
out a
War
of
Meade,
1861-2, said:
"I
He
died in 1874.
born
"Who's Who in America," 1903-4, gave an account of Henry
married Elizabeth Davis Peninglon.
Henry Samuel Baird, lawyer; born 1800 in Dublin; died in Green Bay, Wis.,
1875; married Therese Fisher, granddaughter of an Ottawa chief.
Appleton's
Encyclopedia gives his father as Thomas, but he was Henry. It says Thomas was
a United Irishman.
He came to America, 1802, being followed by his family in
1805.
Henry studied law at Pittsburgh, Pa. He lived in Mackinac, Mich. In
1824 he removed to Green Bay.
In 1832 he served as Quartermaster-General
in the Black Hawk War.
In 1836 he was President of the first Legislative Council
of the territory of Wisconsin; the same year he was appointed the first AttorneyGeneral of the same territory. He was secretary of Governor Henry Dodge, U. S.
He
Commissioner, and was the last Whig candidate for Governor of Wisconsin.
was for many years Vice-President of the Historical Society. In 1861-2 he was
Henry Carey
is
September, 1825.
Carey Baird.
He
Therese
Munro
Baird,
born
at
Prairie
du Chien, Wis.,
Scotch
ancestry.
1810;
daughter
of
Henry
Migisan,
Mackinac Island, where she spent a great part of her youth, Henry Samuel
Baird, a young lawyer of Green Bay.
They had a daughter, Eliza Anne (Early
Morn), born 1825.
ried at
129
GROUP 11Thomas.
THOMAS BAIRD AND MARY DOUGLAS.
Ta^en from Mr. Seilhamer's Chronicle.
[This seems to be the same line A. B. Baird, of Kentucky, tells of in his letter.
A. B. Baird also seems to take in the William Baird, of Limavardy, Ireland. Although
he thought they came direct from Ireland and they had lived in Pennsylvania some
F. B. C]
years.
Thomas
Beard,
Pa.
in
This
what
is
the
Franklin
present
(then Lancaster)
of Cham-
limits
Thomas was
1751.
Mary
made Kentucky
a state.
130
Samuel, the fourth son of Thomas and Mary D. Baird, was born at Falling
He was a surveyor and was interested
Spring, 1757; died at Pittsville, Pa., 1820.
He sold hi
in the coal mines on the Schuylkill in 1784 with Col. Thomas Potts.
interest in the mines in 1788.
He married Rebecca Potts, daughter of Col. Thomas
Potts.
The
Married Mr.
Married
Mary.
other sons
Elizabeth.
Married
William.
Macham
or
Mecham.
Erwin.
Hugh
sister
of Joseph Kinkead
in
1776.
Robert.
No
Joseph.
record.
Martha.
After the death of Thomas
Kentucky, 1775.
Sr.,
with
the
children
to
His
One
SECOND GENERATION.
Children of
THOMAS
and
Thomas.
taking office.
Children of
Four
THOMAS Baird
and
Widow
second wife.
Handley,
his
letter
Venango County,
girls.
Children of
(one
says
Pa.).
Agnes.
*
Mary.
Elizabeth.
Margaret.
Martha.
John.
Hugh,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
James.
Thomas.
1902.
Lived in Reading.
Children of SAMUEL and REBECCA P. Baird.
After Samuel's death Rebecca removed to Carlisle, Pa.
Thomas.
William.
131
John.
1815.
Mary Ann.
Deborah.
Harriet.
Rebecca P.
Martha Rutter.
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of
Thomas
Eliza K.
Had
Thomas R.
said he
was a
a son,
first
J.
B., of Louisville,
Robert F.
Ky.
J.
B. said
his grandfather
Joseph C.
Children of
of Clay Vil-
lage.
Robert
Peter.
Born 1801.
Thomas, 1805.
Tyler, 1807.
Esther.
Charles, 1816.
Children of
THOMAS
and
Mary McK.
Clinton,
Mo.
Baird, Iowa.
Evanston,
Cyrus.
all
Wyo.
Calvin
Adams.
Hugh.
Clintonville,
Married Eliza.
Pa.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Children of
SAMUEL
(Prof.), born
Moved
to
1823.
Washington, D.
C,
1850.
Thomas.
Lived
in
Westchester.
Married
Mary
Bill.
Lived
in
Distinguished scientist of
132
Rebecca
Potts.
Lydia Spencer.
Mary Deborah.
Married Henry
Biddle, of Philadelphia.
J.
to
Carlisle,
Pa.
Children of
whom
he married
in
and Mrs.
820.
He
Harriet,
Married,
in
He had
first,
John
Hardson;
second,
in
Dr.
1856.
Kellog,
of
Kansas City.
Cathrine, 1838.
Mary C,
Married
Eight children.
Issue:
Amanda
Kellog.
Had
a son,
Ed-
Had
Lived
at
New
a daughter, Jessie.
Children of William
William.
Samuel.
Robert H.
Mary
L.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Reading, Pa.
Children of PROF.
SPENCER
F.
and
Mary
C. Baird.
Lucy Hunter.
Children of
Jonathan William.
and Henry
Died 1877.
M.
Robinson, Philadelphia.
Christine Williams.
Henry Jonathan.
Children of
THOMAS
William McFunn.
Joseph.
Lydia Spencer.
Henry
J.
Caroline.
and
MARY
B. BAIRD.
J.
Biddle.
Prof. Spencer
Smithsonian
Institution,
F.
Baird,
Washington, D. C.
133
BARTON DE F. (Dr.), and Malinda Baird. PracThree Springs, Pa., and Clay Village, Shelby County, Ky.
Robert Rush,
Mary
Sabra,
Married
J.
Note.
Mr.
1846.
Ga.
Priscilla
Vance,
Louisville,
three
There was a
in
of Representatives, Tennessee,
794.
KY.
1885.
"My grandfather, -James Baird, was born and raised at Newton, not far from
His father's name was Thomas, and he died in
Londonderry, North of Ireland.
The family came from Scotland to Ireland in the latter part
Ireland about 1780.
of the seventeenth century.
They lived in the neighborhood of Glasgow.
"Four of my grandfather's brothers came Eo America a short time before the
Revolution, to wit: Robert, John, Thomas, William, brothers of James.
war and
the
in a
the
it
war they
Bairdstown,
now Bardstown.
"James, on the death of his father, about 1780, came to America; spent one
In
783 he moved over the mountain to Red Stone,
year at Chambersburg, Pa.
now called Brownsville, Fayette County, Pa. There he lived one year. In 1785
he came down the river to the falls of the Ohio, where the city of Louisville is
1
On this trip several of the crew were wounded by Indians, among them
He went to Bairdstown, where he lived till 790. He then moved to
Hartford and lived there until his death, in 1826.
"William, brother of James, unmarried at that time, went to Hartford and
carried on a tanyard till 1794, when 'Mad' Anthony Wayne was appointed commander of the Northwestern Arm}'. As soon as William heard this, having served
under Wayne in the Revolutionary War, he and a companion, William Barnett,
left on foot and went to Fort Washington, now Cincinnati, and joined Wayne.
After the Indians were defeated and the army disbanded, Wm. Baird and Wm.
Barnett settled in Pennsylvania. He married and raised a family.
"One of the sons of Thomas moved to Fort Nash, Nashville, Tenn.
now.
James.
134
"Another of
this
Robert wa
Territorial Secretary."
[The father of John P. Baird (of Terre Haute, Ind.) was a cousin of James (who
was son of James and father of A. B. Baird, the writer of the letter).
James, the son of James who came to America in 1780, was born 1781 in Newton,
A. B. was his youngest son.
Ireland; died 1868.
(These seem to be descendants
of William and John, of Limavady, Ireland.)
This letter proves that Thomas and family were from Ireland, though A. B. was
It was in Pennsylvania.
mistaken about Thomas dying in Ireland.
John Baird, said to have been born about 1725, was very likely Captain John,
brother of Thomas, James, Moses and Robert, possible sons or nephews of John, of
Hundred.
Tradition
he
went
to Kentucky and Tennessee in 1760 and
Christiana
says
met Daniel Boone. He is supposed to have returned for a while to New Jersey.
F. B.
C]
Mr. Seilhamer
says:
dren were William, John, Francis (born 1754), David, Isabella, Agnes and Jane."
John Baird,
had
a son
Francis of
born
Ellis
had a
son, Francis,
born
747.
in
and grandson,
Warwick, N. Y.
GROUP 12 Francis.
Francis Baird, born
died 1800.
Married, 1758,
SECOND GENERATION.
Their children were:
William Eagles, born 1765; died 1814. Married Sarah DeKay.
Married Esther. Sandy Hill, then Saratoga.
John. No descendants.
Samuel, born 1769; died 1806.
Abia
Anna.
Francis.
Died
at
Sandy
Married, 1792,
Hannah Minthorn.
New
Unmarried.
Hill,
York.
Unmarried.
Margaret.
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of
William
E. and
Esther, 1785.
Mary, 1790-1836.
in
Orange County,
New
York.
135
Married,
1823,
1794.
Elizabeth,
1802-1886.
Sarah,
809- 896.
1
Samuel
Children of
Nathaniel
M.
Frances.
No
No
and
Hannah M.
Baird.
descendants.
descendants.
1798.
Esther.
Esther.
Hannah.
Left no descendants.
Margaret.
No
Jane.
No
M.
Nathaniel
descendants.
descendants.
MARGARET Baird
Children of
1786;
died
1861.
Married,
first,
Margaret Perry;
Mary VanCourt.
Moved West.
Mrs.
Joseph.
Sarah.
FOURTH GENERATION.
Abia
Children of
Mary
F.
Lany
F. Baird.
J.
Cathrine.
John F.
Married A.
Sarah.
and
David F.
J.
Saunders.
Thomas B.
Martin V.
Children of
MARY
A. (TYLER) BaIRD.
Thomas.
Anna
Children of
Hannah M. Baird
John Sommers.
Edith.
Elizabeth.
second,
136
Children of
Esther Baird
Samuel.
Thomas
Baird.
Children of
MARGARET BAIRD
New York
in
He
practiced
"The Baird
Centen-
Married,
City.
is
written
up
fully in
V. Samford, Warwick, N. Y.
Francis Baird settled in Warwick, N. Y., in 765.
previously been a merchant in New York City. Shortly after
He
had
his arrival
he purchased a large tract of land, about 220 acres, the greater part of
which he probably bought of Henry Wisner, of Goshen. In 776 he
built the stone house on Main Street, which is now owned by Mr.
William B. Sayer.
1
was
This was the leading inn or tavern in the village from the time
built up to 1830, and the "shows" that came to town were held
it
in
Among
who
stopped at
to
his
this
house were
Newburg head-
C,
for
He
survived the Tyler brothers and finished the contract, passing the
remainder of
his life in
Alexandria, Va.
at
Thomas Baird Lawson of this line was an expert accountNew York. He said the Bairds came from Bally Castle, Ire-
ant in
land,
in the
137
GROUP 13Simon.
The ancestor of this family (supposed to be Simon)
Dublin, Ireland, and settled in North Carolina.
came from
SECOND GENERATION.
Moved
Simon.
to
Missouri,
then
to
Died
in
1857.
John.
Polly.
Nettie.
Peggie.
Children of
SlMON BAIRD
and,
Johnson.
first,
Lou Nice.
Married,
Morrison, died
at
first,
age of 18 years.
Children of
S.
Children of
in Abbeville,
of Hempstead, Ark.
William.
Albert C.
Jane.
Margaret.
Children of
Burt.
(He
died at Browns-
William.
James Monroe.
George.
Mary
Jane.
Maggie.
Mary Ann.
Children of
Harvey.
James.
(died
in
Texas).
BAIRD
138
Children of
County, Texas).
Simon.
Mary.
Jane.
Black.
Sydneyham.
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of
Josie.
and Shaver.
Unmarried.
Austin.
Married Dr.
Children of
Wm.
Covington.
Theresa.
Children of
Had
three girls.
Children of Dixie
Adella Baird
and
Jas. C.
Wilson.
Children of
ALBERT
C. and
PHOEBE A.
Roy.
Atkins.
Louise.
Joseph.
Children of
at
Married Rebecca
He
ed.
Prairie de
the
[From
139
line.F. B.
this
may be
C]
F.
B.
C]
The
following line
this
is
also to the
line
moved
line,
went
to Osceola,
to
GROUP 14Thomas
"Thomas
Bay,
James.
SECOND GENERATION.
Children of
THOMAS
Baird.
John.
Robert.
William.
Stephen James.
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of
JOHN BAIRD.
Stephen.
John
(killed).
Children of
Robert Baird.
John.
James.
Children of
James.
William.
John.
Joseph.
WlLLIAM Baird
in
723).
140
Stephen James
Children of
(went
to
Eastern states).
James.
Robert.
John.
FOURTH GENERATION.
Children of
son of
JOHN BaIRD.
Clerk
at
to
Stephen.
Bessie.
at
Vinland,
Osh-
Ireland.
Anglican Bishop
Married Ann (daughter of John, son of James).
Unmarried.
Samuel.
Nancy.
Buried
Wis.
kosh,
John.
STEPHEN,
1769-1847.
William,
Kellala,
John.
"it
is
said,"
married
William
STEPHEN JAMES.
John.
Robert.
James.
Children of
Robert,
Children of
John,
son of
son of
STEPHEN James
not traced.
STEPHEN JAMES.
John.
Stephen.
Ann.
FIFTH GENERATION.
Children of
George, 1805-1884.
Nancy.
Married Jeanie Chapman, 1845.
Stephen, 1810-1901.
County, Wisconsin, to Osceola, Iowa, in 1870.
Samuel, born 1812.
Married
at
died 1888.
Both buried at Prairie Home Cemetery, Waukesha, Wis.
Cathrine.
Married George Clark, of Oshkosh, Wis.
He
JOHN (who
Bishop)
married
in
Ireland and
was Clerk of
141
the English
not located:
Mary.
William.
Stephen.
Belle.
Ellen.
Jane.
SAMUEL (buried at Oshkosh, Wis., by his brother Wiland son Stephen) and Ann, daughter of John (who died
1906, aged 93 years)
Children of
liam,
'
Lived
and
first
third
They were
cousins.
Eliza.
Ann
at
(called
Jane.
NANCY BaIRD
Children of
Robert.
Had
two
sons,
James.
Samuel.
Jane.
Nellie.
Elizabeth.
Ann.
In 1835, Stephen, of Oshkosh, crossed the ocean with this family
They stopped at Montreal, Canada, and later some of
of Bairds.
them came
to the States.
Children of
JOHN,
son of JAMES.
David.
Henry.
John.
Children of
ROBERT,
son of James.
Mary.
Children of
David.
Henry.
John.
Susan.
John, son
of
John.
142
BAIRD
Betta.
Rebecca.
Maria.
["These were cousins of the Wisconsin John, and came
STEPHEN,
Children of
Alexander.
Laura.
Lived
to
America."]
Had
and
Iowa.
Ann.
to
John.
at
Moved
son of
Buried
at
Ver-
Hannah.
Married Benjamin Bonnett.
Ellen.
SIXTH GENERATION.
Children of
C. BAIRD:
He was a graduate
of Beloit, class 1869; of Chicago Theological Seminary, 1872. Ordained at
Waukesha, 1872. Went same year to Turkey as missionary. Married an
American missionary in Brousa, Turkey.
Returned on furlough from
Samakov, Bulgaria, 1885-97 and 1908.
at
Elizabeth
O,
born 1850.
Children of
sha,
Mary
at
Waukesha, 1874.
Lived
Osceola.
Samuel
Unmarried.
Unmarried.
and
Instructor, Osceola.
Instructor,
MARY A.
Marshalltown, Iowa.
(Carpenter)
Baird, Wauke-
Wis.:
Jane, born
1847.
Children of
Clark:
Elizabeth.
Mary
J.
Lomanda.
Rebecca Ann.
Ellen C.
Children of
STEPHEN
Ann), and
Oshkosh, Wis.:
John A. Married Mary Payne, of
Samuel W. Unmarried.
Cogsell,
N. D.
Ann
BAIRD,
Thomas
143
J.
S. Dennie.
Ellen.
Eliza.
Isabella.
St.
Cloud, Minn.
John
Children of
MARY McC.
at
Children of Ann, daughter of John, son of James (S.). She married Samuel, son of Stephen.
(See Samuel, who was buried at
Oshkosh.)
SEVENTH GENERATION.
John W. and ELLEN R. BaIRD:
Children of
Graduated
Clara
Emma
C,
C,
born
1880.
1894.
1908.
born
1883.
in
"
born 1881.
L.,
Winifred
Constantinople,
1888.
E., 1895.
Children of
Samuel
and
JOANNA
C. BaIRD:
1875.
1877.
Children of
De
Graduate
Willis, 1872.
B. Calvin.
Ida E., 1874.
Frank
B., 1877.
Minnette
J.,
Rush Medical
1879.
Died 1904.
144
Mary
Children of
Clarissa, born
J.
1873.
Jason Baird,
Neb.
catur,
Jessie Sarah,
1882.
MARGARET BaIRD:
886.
1895.
Ellen W.
L. BaIRD, Waukesha,
Wis.:
Robert Leadley. born 1886.
and Ellen Louise.
Twin
daughters,
Children: Janet
J.
1889.
Children of
of Cogsdell,
Hattie.
Charles T.
George.
Frank.
Ray.
James G.
Grace.
Delia.
THOMAS
Children of
Jennie.
Albert
Jessie.
J.
and
ELLEN
J.
Agnes.
Annie.
Mary.
Estella.
Helen
Irene.
Children of
Frank.
William O.
Charles
H.
N. D.:
145
Nettie.
Claude.
Delia.
Mable Orton.
Lomie.
EIGHTH GENERATION.
Children of Clarissa White and Henry A. Busse:
Albert Henry, born 1900.
Fredric Bryan,
1904.
Mary
Baird,
Jessie
White, 1909.
Children of
Paul, born
WHITE
BaIRD:
1905.
Clara, 1908-1909.
Note.
This
GROUP 15John.
John Beard of Ireland married MARY BaIRD of Scotland.
in the Revolution and was killed.
They had one son:
John
served
FIRST GENERATION.
John Beard, who was reared by Mary's people. The name is spelled both
Beard and Baird by the descendants. (One record says John lived at Chambersburg, Pa.)
SECOND GENERATION.
Children of John Beard, Jr.
Agnes. Married Mr. Wilson.
Married Miss Duncan.
John.
Hugh.
1864.
Miss Clemens.
Martha.
Peggy.
died
first,
Elizabeth (Betsy).
Polly.
146
BAIRD
John
part of which
of
Hugh.
Hugh Baird
married three times, and with his three wives is buried on the
old farm near Youngstown.
He had two sons, Utillis of Alleghany, Pa.,
Clemens, and a daughter Mrs. Alexander.
a tract of four hundred acres of land one mile west of where Clintonville, Venango County,
now stands. This land was bought for $500 and is now owned by his
Thomas settled on this land about 1796.
grandsons, John and William.
He was
War of
taken
from
the
harvest
field
and walked
Erie
to
serve in
to
the
He was one
1812, belonging to Captain McManigal's company.
of the pioneer justices of the peace. He married Martha, a sister of Judge
Thomas McKee, who came with Thomas from Westmoreland County.
They packed flour and salt over the mountains from Westmoreland on
horseback.
Thomas and Martha were buried on their farm, but several
years later their remains were removed to the McKee Cemetery, Clintonville,
Pa.
The
member
of the family:
Thomas
Thomas
Children of
Martha McKee
and
Baird:
(Baird), 1815-1903.
Mercer County, Pa.
Hugh
to
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of James and
Martha.
Ann
Mary K. Beard:
Eliza.
Susan.
Married Rev.
J.
M.
Foster.
West
He
Virginia.
died at
SaBdy Lake,
147
Married,
Courtney,
Jennie
first,
second,
Susan
Grove
Smith,
City, Pa.
Children of
Mary.
Belle.
Maitie.
P. BAIRD:
Married V. B. Archer.
Elvira.
Thomas.
William.
Note.
have gone
to
to
Adelina.
Children of
James
M.
Thomas
Jefferson.
Calvin A.
Hugh
Children of
Martha.
Mary.
Married
Married
and
Margaret
J.
BAIRD:
Hugh McCullough.
Emile Thorne.
Matilda.
r
FOURTH GENERATION.
Children of Martha Beard and John Vincent:
Hattie.
Married
William.
Charles,
Gibson.
Nannie Snyder.
Issue:
Mary,
M.
Foster:
Wilder,
Henry (Rev.).
Married Laura
J.
Scott.
Issue:
Ernest,
Wendell,
man, Mary.
James.
John.
Rose,
Porter,
Ernest.
Married Vinie
Vanderliss.
Issue:
Three children
Utillis,
Nor-
BAIRD
148
Eva.
Grace.
Issue:
Fredrick. Robert.
Children of
Mae
Married
James.
Eakin.
Issue:
Porter:
Mary
Elizabeth, Harold.
Arthur.
John.
Fred.
Ada.
Utillis.
Married William
Ella.
Issue:
Ward.
Issue:
Victor.
Helen, Josephine.
Anna.
Children of
Issue:
Herbert, Vivian,
Donald, Ruth,
Issue:
David.
Frank Pierce,
1880.
1908.
Issue:
John,
Laurence,
Frances.
Almeda
Jesse
Florence, 1881.
Almeda; died
at
Hays, 1889.
Married
Clarence.
Issue:
Mary
Atwell,
1909-1915.
Issue:
Robert,
who
died
in
infancy.
Children of
first
or second wife:
Lillian
Francis,
1898.
1901.
William Harold.
Children of
Mary Baird
and
Hammond:
Vida.
Children of
E. S. Jenne:
Forest.
Children of ELVIRA
Zaliema A.
Thomas
J.
Eakin:
149
Issue:
Mary
Elizabeth, Harold.
Sarah.
Martha.
Marshall.
Harold.
Don.
Children of
Stella
Etta.
A.
Frank.
Evaline.
Issue:
William.
THOMAS
Children of
Eva.
Issue: Geraldine.
Roy C.
Edward.
Alfred, George, Blanch, Mary.
Smiley.
Mabel.
John.
Anna
Thomas.
Issue:
Issue:
J.
and
Pauline, Keith.
Issue:
AGNES M. W. BEARD:
Issue:
Halbert B.,
Amy
Elmer.
Mary
Gertrude.
William Homer.
Children of
Mary
Cyrus
and
Married
Olive.
first
Wynn
wife,
NARCISSA
Wallace
Pefiey.
W. BEARD:
Issue:
Wallace B.
Laurena Leon.
Clarence Cleon.
Children of
CYRUS and
second wife,
Children of
FRANCES B. BEARD:
Issue: George.
Children of
Ella.
MARTHA BaIRD
Maggie.
Marshall.
Edward.
Children of
Nora.
Mary BaIRD
Jessie.
Winifrid.
Max
M.,
BAIRD
150
On October 18 (year not given) there was a celebration of the one hundredth
anniversary of the settlement of Thomas Baird at Clintonville, Pa. (this being a
He settled there in 1796. About
part of the original five-hundred-acre tract).
Mr. H. C. Foster, of New Bedford, Pa., was historian.
four hundred assembled.
The following were among those present: J. M. Foster, of Sandy Lake; Porter
Phipps, of Kennerdell; Mrs. Jennie Baird, Clintonville; J. K. Vincent, Harris-
Wm.
ville;
C.
R. Coulter,
Kennerdell;
GROUP 6William.
1
came
SECOND GENERATION.
Children of William and Eleanor Beard:
Alexander, born
William, born
in
in
Ireland.
Ireland.
Mr. Boyle;
John Pierson.
of
second,
Married,
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of Alexander and
John.
Married,
first,
George.
Kittie
Dunbar.
(his cousin).
James.
Eleanor.
Married,
Stephen.
Juda).
(sister
of
James.
Alexander.
William.
Nancy.
Jane.
Nellie.
Unmarried.
Married
McKinley.
County, Kentucky,
who
151
Nelson
settled in
Elizabeth.
William.
Stephen.
Alexander.
Children of
Stephen
Granbury,
1808.
Felix, born
and,
first,
Rebecca
Beard.
P.
806.
George Parke.
in
his cousin
William.
1828.
Caroline.
Died aged
16.
Moved
to Louisville,
Ky.
Stephen
Culbertson.
(widow
of
Married,
Abel Crawford).
first,
One
Issue:
Eliza McDonald.
M.
Sarah
E.
Mannakee
child.
Children of
second,
P.
Beard,
Wright.
his
second wife.
One
Issue:
child.
James.
Mary Woods.
in
Kentucky.
Issue:
One
child.
Joshua.
Fanny.
John Pierson.
One
child.
Married,
first,
Louise Smith;
second, Alice
Issue:
Haywood.
second,
Ann
FOURTH GENERATION.
John
Children of
Mary
and,
first,
(Polly).
Isabel.
Kittie.
Alexander.
James.
Married,
Married,
George.
first,
first,
Heady Beard;
Ky.
John H.
Children of
lorsville,
Unmarried.
John
and, second,
at
Tay-
crossing
Salt River.
William Perry. Married Arzula Z. Buckner. Died at Hutchinson, Kans.
Stephen Thomas. Married Margaret Gillerland, Fishersville, Ky.
BAIRD
152
Charles Wickliff.
Rebecca Ann.
Nancy
Jane.
Andrew T.
in
1865.
Johnson.
Thompson.
Children of
Isabel
GEORGE
and NELLIE
W.
BEARD.
(11a).
Alexander.
Daniel.
James.
Nancy E.
Susan.
John.
Children of
Alexander,
Mary.
BEARD.
Mildred.
Stephen
Jr.
J.
Elizabeth (Betty).
M.
John.
Isabel.
Married,
first,
Thomas King;
James P.
Children of
Married Nelson
Sarah.
Issue:
John.
Rebecca.
Unmarried.
Stephen.
Unmarried.
War.
James.
Died
Parke.
Children of
in Civil
Sloan.
Irene.
Alice.
Bland.
Ella.
Nannie.
Rebecca.
Louis.
Married
Four children.
STEPHEN
Children of
Served
"Hammie."
in
and, second,
U. S. Army.
153
James Stephen.
Children of
Haute, Ind.
Susan
Mary
(Mollie).
Died in infancy.
Chas. Henry.
Died in infancy.
Sallie B.
Died
William C.
Died
Martha B.
infancy.
Nellie B.
One
in
in infancy.
live in California.
They
Issue:
son.
Children of Ludwell
McKay
DEBORA
and
B. Beard,
Irene.
(Changed
name
spelling of
McKay
Children of Ludwell
to
Issue:
and Alice.
Charles
Baird.)
Ann
and
B.
Beard,
his
second wife.
Unmarried.
Evansville, Ind.
John Blount.
Unmarried. Evansville, Ind.
Alice.
Unmarried.
William.
Died
Eliza.
in
Evansville,
Jennie.
Died
in
infancy.
Laura.
Died
in
infancy.
Herbert
McD.
Children of Ludwell
Mary.
Nellie.
Martha.
Anne.
and
Mary
S.
P. BEARD,
Died
Children of
at
age of 10.
Frederick Ripley.
Rose McDonald.
Jessie.
McKay
Walter.
Rose.
Ind.
infancy.
FIFTH GENERATION.
Children of William Perry and
Arzula
P. B.
BEARD.
Issue:
One
Issue:
Two
son.
sons.
154
Lillie
Vian.
Died
Alonzo.
Alonzo Thomas.
Children of Stephen
Issue:
Four children.
age of 2.
at the
Issue:
Three
children.
James Alexander.
Married J. Morry Wakefield, Shelbyville, Ky.
Kittie.
Children of
married at 15.
of each other.
They
lived
till
She was
Reid.
1910, dying within two months
Annie B.
Unmarried.
Aielie Belle.
Lillie.
Willie Wickliff.
Louisville,
Lives in Indiana.
Lucy Jane.
Martye.
Children of
15.
Ky.
and A. L. Buckner.
Alonzo C.
Eleanor.
Children of
Mary W. Unmarried.
Thomas Stone. Married,
Annie Tidings,
Phillip J. (Judge).
children.
Married
Miss Wilson.
Issue:
Six
children.
Second,
Ky.
Miss
Bryant,
Shelbyville,
Ky.
Issue:
Four
Mattie Gregsby.
Emily West.
first,
Louisville,
W. BEARD.
Married George S.
Scearce,
Shelbyville,
Ky.
Issue:
Four
children.
James
W.
Nellie
Unmarried.
Littlejohn.
Church.
Children of
Morrison H.
Laura B.
Charles
First
Baptist
Unmarried.
Julia C.
Mary W.
Lena.
Ruth.
Married R. O. Cochran.
Grace.
Married R. T. Waters.
Married.
Children of Rose
Lives in Brooklyn, N.
McD.
Aimee
B., born
George
McDonald
1879.
Y.
Nisbjet.
Died
in infancy.
55
CHAPTER
The
first
SCOTCH BAIRDS.
V.
appears
in
New
Jersey
was James,
field,
"ALEXANDER BAIRD,
land,
came
to
Pennsylvania,
of
Nova
(An
Sir
old record.)
baronet
Thomas came
over to Virginia,
from England.
The James, of Carlisle, Pa., who married Jane Wilson, may have
been a descendant of one of these.
683, had
Robert, who died in St. Mary County, Maryland, in
a brother, Christopher, to whose son he left "Beard's Choice," if he
1
certain time.
of
in
had a
GROUP
son, Christopher.
I.
Marriages.
(translated).
Young man
gentility.]
157
SCOTCH BAIRDS
WILLS.
Abstract of
Vol.
iVills,
14,
son,
to
[The
ALEXANDER
Magdalena Van
Children
good
birth.]
Van
1704.
12,
in
Property
Somerset, N. J.
Married Elsa
Cleef.
November
Robert, baptized
Mr. Cornel.
3,
1706.
Mary.
N. Y,
Cornelia Beekman.
man
of
New
whom
York, from
of William
Beek-
He
To
this
baird
Scotland,
now
town, N.
J.,
in
the family of J.
H.
Baird, Griggs-
and Amsterdam, N. Y.
COAT OF ARMS
SECOND GENERATION.
Children of
WlLLIAM
Cleef BaIRD.
record says)
(born
(Born
in
704, died
793) and Elsa VanSomerset County, New Jersey, so old
158
Married Elizabeth
1731.
Alexander, born
Ellis,
1746.
Lieutenant-Colonel
1735.
New
Somerset,
Married,
Jersey, militia.
Hoagland, possibly
at
First
first,
Major of Second
Battalion,
Scott; second, Catlina
Hannah
Griggstown.
1749.
Md.,
[Old Kent,
County, 1776.]
She
837.
record says
THIRD GENERATION.
ALEXANDER
Children of
Francis,
747.
Mary, 1749.
Cathrine,
1751.
Alexander, 1753.
Ann, 1754.
Ann, 1756.
Alfred and Arthur,
twins, born
1758.
Elizabeth, 1760.
twins,
born 1764.
Ann, 1766.
Children of
Elsa, born
Abram
111.
Issue:
Issue:
Thomas Abram.
Van
Issue:
Liere, Jerseyville,
Henry C, John
W.
III.
and
John, born 1799; died 1834. Son, S. Dubois Baird, Westerville, 111.
Issue: Mary, who
Married Martha Gay lord.
Isaac, born 1802; died 1873.
married Barzilla Thatcher, lived in Jerseyville, 111.
(One record says his
wife was Martha Cross.)
159
SCOTCH BAIRDS
Children of
his first
Children of
his
second
son, Robert C.
Christopher, born 1777. Issue:
town, New York, is a granddaughter.)
(Mrs.
Water-
J. Sterling Sill,
William,
Sarah,
783.
Elsa, 1785.
Benjamin, 1786.
N. Y.
Abram
1788.
Scott,
17,
Robert, 1793.
All born
in
New
Jersey.
in
FOURTH GENERATION.
ABRAM
Children of
and
John,
Sarah M. BAIRD:
Five children.
Issue:
181-1.
Cathrine Ann,
died ,1890.
1815;
Home
Guards).
Alice, 1818.
Andrew M.,
1820.
1816.
Elizabeth,
Issue:
twice.
Six children.
Issue:
Two
1823.
Mary
S.,
children.
J.
111.
ton,
Abram
Statts,
velt,
Susan
Married
J.
born
1827.
Went
to
Ohio.
son,
Duboise, lives
in
Wester-
Ohio.
1828.
L.,
Children of
Abraham
Married,
first,
Israel Higgins.
Five children.
Cathrine P., born 1832; died 1839.
Issue:
160
Married Alexander
Beekman, born 1834; died 1855.
Ten Mile Run. Moved to Jerseyville, 111.
Cornelia
Hoagland,
1854, of
1836; died 1862. Unmarried. Soldier in Civil War. First Regiment, New Jersey Volunteers. Served in Army of the Potomac.
Isaac, born
Cathrine, born
in
1873.
Issue:
Two
children.
1877.
in
D. No.
Van Cleef
Baird.
William Wilson
(her cousin)
was
a son of
"My
have heard
grandfather,
grandfather was
he had three brothers
on
his
John
My
father speak of
an Alexander and Robert.
a Major in the Revolutionary War.
I have heard
my
officers),
(all
his
commission
death-bed."
Children of
Issue:
Mary,
Ella,
1822.
Dorothy, 1827.
The last of his father's family, who wrote the letter giving
Benjamin, 1838.
this copy of old record and coat of arms.
He married Elizabeth VanHorn,
1857.
FIFTH GENERATION.
Children of
CaTHRINE
Aletha Ann.
Ann
Abram Dubouse.
Titusville,
N.
He
J.
Issue:
died in
Four
1902.
children.
Issue:
Two
daughters.
Jacob
Van
William,
Children of
Arsdale.
1848-1910.
Unmarried.
Belle.
Thomas.
Two
Alice.
Children of
Issue:
in
daughters.
Civil
War.
Christopher:
SCOTCH BAIRDS
Married Rev.
Sarah.
J.
O. Van
Fleet,
161
West Albany, N. Y.
Three
Issue:
children.
Mary.
Married Mr. Beach, Montville, N.
N. Y.
Mattie.
Children of
J.,
a Princeton graduate of
Abram N.
Wilson.
Maggie.
Children of
Mary Baird
at
Ten
J.:
Married Althea
1884.
Virginia, born
Married Roderic
1890.
May
McLean
Gibson.
Vandivert.
James.
Edward.
Emily.
Magdalen.
William.
Allen.
Children of
1863.
B. Franklin, 1872.
Edith,
1879.
Elizabeth, died
All
N.
1902.
live in vicinity
of Amsterdam,
N. Y.
Record of Burials.
Port Jervis Cemetery, Orange County, N. Y.
In one lot:
Jesse
H.
Charles
Baird, 1834-1911.
W.
Baird,
1875-1879.
footstones,
In other lot:
Abraham D.
11
Baird,
Mch.
8,
1819-Sept. 4, 1883.
marked: "Father,
BAIRD
162
David
S. Baird,
18,
1890.
[These names probably belong to this line, though the Frances Bairds of Warwick,
N. Y., might be buried there, or the descendants of Robert of Yonkers. F. B. C.]
GROUP 2James.
James BAIRD, noncommissioned
lived at Carlisle,
where
his children
officer in the
were born.
Revolutionary Army,
with General
He was
Fort
Piquea).
daughters.
daughters.
The
Who
Blazed a
Mexico
these
rests
upon
forgotten.
"Things have changed mightily during the half century everywhere both in
United States and Mexico but in no instance has the transformation been
more remarkable and complete than in the attitude of commercial Mexico toward
Mexico likes the things our manufacturers make, and
commercial United States.
her merchants like to buy them, because, thanks to the tariff, they can get them
But
cheaper than can even the merchant in the country where they are made.
the
SCOTCH BAIRDS
163
trede,
"In
Thomas
States which now lies west of the Mississippi River from the French
mere pittance of $15,000,000, thereby perpetrating the biggest real estate
coup in history, Baird saw his opportunity in this new possession and moved
to St. Louis, then a frontier trading post.
Shortly after his arrival there he met
Lieutenant Pike, who had just returned from an exploring jaunt into that section
now geographically known as Louisiana and Arkansas. From his friend Pike
Baird learned of wonderful opportunities for wealth that lay in trade with Mexico.
the United
for
the
"Just here it should be stated that Mexico was a Spanish province, New Spain
was called, and the mother nation, ambitious to reserve for and to herself
whatever benefits that might arise from trade in her province, placed a stringent
embargo upon trade with the United States. About this time, however, a revolution was in progress in Mexico, with the priest and scholar, Hidalgo, at its head,
one of the results of which, it was anticipated, would be the removal of this
embargo.
Although the revolution failed, for the time being, and the priest,
Hidalgo, was executed, word reached St. Louis that it had been successful, and
in accordance with this information, Baird forthwith organized a trading expedition
to invade Mexico.
With a great train of pack mules laden with merchandise to
the value of at least $100,000, and a band of a dozen assistants, helpers and an
interpreter, Baird left St. Louis late in April, 1812, following the course of the
Missouri River to about where Kansas City now stands, then turning in a southwesterly direction, marked out a route which, in later years, became widely known
as 'The Santa Fe Trail.*
Santa'Fe, the oldest Spanish town in what was then
In due course of time, having mastered the
North Mexico, was the destination.
of
the
thousand-mile
many hardships
pilgrimage, the expedition reached Santa Fe
it
safely.
"Baird and his friends were well acquainted with that condition of things
which, under Spanish rule, would have made their open and uncovered entry into
a Spanish province almost impossible, or a dare-devil play with fate, at least.
They knew that Spanish laws prohibited the entrance of all foreigners, English,
But they were laboring under
French, as well as Americans, on any pretense.
the impression that the revolution had been successful, and that these obstacles had
all been removed.
Therefore their surprise can be imagined when, promptly upon
their arrival at Santa Fe, they were seized as spies, thrown into prison and their
Baird, together with two of his companions, Samuel
cargo confiscated.
Chambers of Pennsylvania and Robert McKnight of New Orleans, were shortly
removed to Chihuahua, Mexico, where they were incarcerated in solitary confinement in an old cathedral, which had been improvised to serve as a prison by the
Peter Baum, of Kentucky, was shot at Sante Fe.
Of the
Spanish oppressors.
others the record is silent, but inasmuch as they were never heard of again, it is
reasonable to suppose that they shared the fate of Baum.
"In due course of time, the ill fortune of Baird's expedition reached the ears
rich
Through
the Federal
164
the captives.
But the
and monarchical, then
mills of
government authority
as now, ground slowly.
"In 1817, John Scott, delegate to Congress from Missouri Territory, submitted
a report of the incident to John Quincy Adams, then Secretary of State, praying
for Federal intervention in behalf of Baird and his followers.
Secretary Adams
The individual last named leisurely communicated with his majesty's government, who, in turn, leisurely referred the question
to the Viceroy of New Spain, the head of government in Mexico.
year went
Baird's friends waxed
by and no action was taken by the Spanish government.
wroth at the delay, and in consequence thereof, in April, 1818, a resolution was
offered and passed in the House of Representatives, asking information of the
authorities on the subject.
This resolution brought forth a special message to
Congress from James Monroe, then President of the United States, in which the
of
the
case
to
that
time was reviewed.
The message contained copies
progress
up
had been unlawfully imprisoned.
the
all
numerous communications
The
it
was
that
report
laid
been executed, Spain called a new junta which passed certain laws unfavorable
to the revolutionists, and made sweeping changes in things that concerned the priesthood. This caused the church to side with the revolutionists. Then came a second
An empire was formed and General
revolution, and the Mexicans were victorious.
Iturbide, a patriot, was made emperor.
"Iturbide doubtless thought it would be to his interest to 'stand in' with that
rapidly-growing nation that bordered his land on the north, and promptly, in response to representations, in 1821 released Baird and his two companions from
the old cathedral at Chihuahua, where they had been rigorously confined for
nine years.
release, Baird's two companions. Chambers and McUnited States.
McKnight was killed by Indians while
Chambers made
crossing the Arkansas River in what is now western Kansas.
reached
St.
Louis.
and
his
finally
escape
good
"Baird, hardy explorer that he was, desired to familiarize himself with conditions in Mexico, and remained there for that purpose several months after liberaHe eventually returned to St. Louis, making the long and dangerous journey
tion.
"Immediately upon
Knight,
set
out
for
their
the
by himself.
"When
The
entire
traders set
and Baird,
SCOTCH BAIRDS
165
rugged frame and indomitable will breaking under the terrible strain, sickened
But he had lived to witness the successful culmination of the first trading
News of his death did not reach
expedition from the United States to Mexico.
his family until two years later.
Band's son and namesake, who did not accompany the family when it returned
to Pittsburgh a', the outbreak of '.he War of 1812, became a member of Stephen F.
his
and died.
Austin's
Bend
which came
colony,
Texas army
War
the
in
soldier
to
for
sheriff
in
the
of Fort
The
Ky.,
ville,
Mexico."
1909,
in
is
by
J.
W.
Baird, of Louis-
this:
(J. W. Baird, who wrote the letter, was a grandson of James the trader.)
"We have always thought that our ancestor was one Alexander Baird, who came
to New Amsterdam in 1695, and whose father was Sir Robert Baird, a merchant in
Edinburgh, Scotland. There are many Bairds in New York who claim the same
ancestor.
in
who was
In
the
action at
a noncommissioned
Fort
Wayne, September,
officer
with
the
the army of
1790, James Baird's father,
Pennsylvania
artillery,
was
killed.
This regiment was said to be composed of old men and boys. The Pennsylvania
Historical Society, the State Adjutant General and the Adjutant General of the
United Stales -all say the rolls of these troops were burned when Ross burned
the capitol at
Washington."
J.
ator
W. Baird
who was
possibly brother
says the youngest daughter married a cousin of SenHe also says Mary Elizabeth, who
married
W.
J.
of Brazoria County.
to
his brother,
of Louisville."
[J. B.
(1909) from J.
of James and Jane W., says:
letter
W.
Sr.
F. B.
BAIRD, of
C]
Louisville, Ky., grandson
BAIRD
166
"My father's eldest brother (in later letter he says James was an adopted son),
James Baird, was one of Stephen Austin's colonists and afterwards a soldier in
the Texan army in the War for Texas Independence.
Subsequently he was sheriff
He was famous as a guide. His allotment
at Fort Bend County for two terms.
of the Austin lands was some 9,000 acres and the allotment for military service
some 3,000 acres. All this land seems lost to his heirs by reason of a fire at
Portsmouth, Ohio, in 1850, which destroyed all the family papers, making proof
So far as we know he was never married.
of relationship almost impossible.
He died at Opelmas [indistinct], La., 1847, and we did not hear of it till after
J have tried to find who administered on this estate, but can find
the Civil War.
no record at Richmond, Texas (Fort Bend County) or at Opelmas, La. His heirs
are in Maine; Corpus Christi, Texas; Los Angeles; Salt Lake; Seattle; Muscatine,
Iowa; Little Rock; St. Louis; Walla Walla; Denver; Colorado Springs;
Some are very
Ohio; Long Island; Sandwich Islands, and five in Louisville.
Some are very poor and it would be a godsend. As I am
rich and don't care.
77 years old, I've done all I can, but would give any information or sign any
contract with anyone who desired to undertake the recovery."
["The James mentioned in the Gulf Coast Magazine
father."J. W. B., 927 Cherokee Road, Louisville, Ky.]
was
article
my
grand-
SECOND GENERATION.
The
Married
Margaret, born 1798 at Erie.
1822; died Louisville, Ky., in 1868.
1800, at Erie.
Nancy Innway,
son, a record of
Thomas
Fulton,
which adoption
Allegheny County,
William, 1802
at
Erie.
Harriet
born
Irwin,
Pittsburg;
1805
at
died at Peoria,
Erie.
111.,
Married
1823
Sylvanus Thompson,
of
1855.
lived at Little
[This James may have been brother of Thomas and Alexander, as he lived in
Both he and Alexander have
Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and his children in Kentucky.
Alexander had a son,
sons Alexander, and Wilson is a middle name in each family.
This may have been the adopted son of James.
James, of Texas (deaf guide).
F. B. C]
Children of
Robert.
Samuel.
One
Children of
in St. Louis.
Lived
Ann Carter
at
Louisville,
Ky.
BaIRD:
167
SCOTCH BAIRDS
Thomas W., born
Julia B.
1836.
Mary.
Married Mr.
Irene,
Nettleton, Seattle,
Mary.
Louise S.
1846.
Price,
Wash.
Louisville.
Mo.
Boonville,
and HARRIET
ALEXANDER
J.
Harry
Louisville.
Henry C, born
Children of
Issue:
letter),
KNOWLES BaIRD:
Louisville.
Alexander.
Children of
Ind.
daughter, Jeffersonville,
B. BaIRD:
Robert.
Samuel.
Children of
Harry
Irene.
Mary.
THOMAS W.
and
MaRIA H. BaIRD:
Little
Rock.
Little
Rock.
GROUP 3John.
r
The
descendants of
this
John BaIRD
born
in
He
John,
served in the
He owned
1 775.
a large mill on Mountain Creek, which was built in 1840 and rebuilt
He also owned a large farm on the Pee Dee River. Tradiin 1873.
tion says there were several brothers, some going to Pennsylvania and
some to Virginia. He had a son, Alexander, who married Elizabeth
Jennings.
Children of
ALEXANDER
and ELIZABETH
Married widow
J.
BaIRD:
Texas
in
letters
from Pennsyl-
168
BAIRD
heirs,
He
which
state
that there
never married.
is
(From an
a large tract of
old letter.)
[James of Carlisle had an adopted son James with the same kind of record.
may be James (who was in Missouri later) was an uncle and adopted this one.
B.
It
F.
C]
Married Sarah
Billingsly,
Wilson County.
David.
Wilson.
Charles.
One
THOMAS
Children of
BAIRD
and
widow
the
Charles.
Daniel Gould.
Had
David.
Charles.
To whom
Benjamin.
old
the
home was
left.
Thomas.
John.
Nancy.
Mary.
Miles, by a second marriage, had
Thomas.
Charles.
BENJAMIN BAIRD by
Children of
Wilson.
Issue:
son, J.
W.,
his first
wife:
of Sommerville, Tenn.
Elizabeth.
Mary
Martha
J.
Nancy.
Sarah.
Ann
Eliza.
(Lived
in
Texas.)
Laura.
Benjamin.
Robert.
Miles.
Rosella.
Minerva.
William.
F. OnB. account
C.
Note.
correct.
of
many
may
not be
169
SCOTCH BAIRDS
Children of
second wife:
his
John.
Thomas.
Charles.
WILLIAM BAIRD,
Children of
He
Tenn.
Two
Lived
sons.
Lived
Miles.
Children of
near Baird's
Maury County.
in Mitchelville,
Mills,
children:
Married Fox
girls.
Wilson County,
Had
one son
in
Texas.
B. BAIRD:
1841,
Wilson
Mr. Tracy.
William Henry
1821.
L.,
Two
Issue:
daughters.
Clem
J. T.,
Mary
Clementine, 1831.
Issue: Sons.
1826.
First Lieutenant
Wounded
at
1864.
Children of
Lamiza Ann.
William T.
Mary E.
Robert H.
first,
Julia Mitchel
1857, Vildo;
second,
Emma H.
the same year John's wife died, and John married Miles' widow.
of Miles' children married two of John's children.
Died
Miles.
Two
Daniel W. Baird,
of Nashville, says he knew Zebulon of Lebaand they were distantly related. Zebulon's widow and his two
Mrs. Laura McAuley and Mrs. Mattie Terry, both widows,
daughters
live at Los Angeles, Cal. Zebulon was a son of Andrew Baird.
non
well,
Ann Jemima.
Amanda M.
Mary
Helen.
Mary A.
BAIRD:
70
Caroline.
Sam Brown.
Married Dr.
Ella T.
Virginia C.
Alice.
Lizzie.
Lucy.
Children of
1857.
in
1875.
James H.
Lumberman,
Died March
Nashville.
1915.
16,
Anne
in
Thomas Henry.
Sherrill.
Tirzah Sarah.
Florence C.
Nashville.
Children of R.EBECCA
William G.
Albert E.
Harriett Brown.
He
had a
son,
GROUP 4John.
Will Book No.
Page
/,
95,
Sr.).
to
daughter
Mary
five shillings;
to
wheel,
sum of
cow and
wheat and
in
three bushels of
Approved, 1792.
There
to
calf;
five
is
J.
Indian corn.
Simpson, Regr.
John BaIRD)
in
"The Bedent
Seal:
or,
Mary (children
They may
787.
affronte
on feese and
SCOTCH BAIRDS
New
Jersey,
JR.'S
WILL.
In the name of God, this 5th day of February, 1747-8, I do ordain this my
will and testament: First and foremost I do bequeath my soul to Almighty
God, and as touching my worldly estates I give and bequeath in the manner and
First and foremost I desire that all my just and lawful debts
form following.
be honestly paid, and the remainder of my estate I leave to my wife, Avis Baird,
so long as she doth continue to be my widow, to bring up my children and family.
Upon and after she doth cease to be my widow I do ordain and appoint that my
estate be equally divided amongst my wife and children which may be living at
that time except 10 I give more to my oldest son William, Baird than the rest,
and this I do ordain and confirm to be my last will. I do appoint for my executors my two brothers, Andrew and Zebulon Baird, my wife Avis, and Peter Bowne.
last
Imprimis
Leaves land to son Barzilla, he paying off bonds due to Peter Bowne's estate,
He gives his son JonaJoseph Bowne, etc. He gives his son Obadiah lands.
He gives his son Samuel 150. He gives his son Ezekiel
than all the remainder.
150.
due
his
sons
Bedent
and
he
from
Money
John
appropriated in paying the
last mentioned legacies.
(Bedent the eldest and John the youngest are left without
to
legacies.)
rogate.
same as
Mary Bedent
(a widow) sailed from Staines, England, to Massachusetts (posCambridge), with her sons: Morgan, born 1654, who never married; Thomas,
born 1654; John; and Mordecai. Thomas married Mary and moved to Fairfield,
Conn.; died 1698. They all came to Hadley, Mass., to claim an estate devised
to them by their mother's brother, John Barnard, who seems to have lived first
at Cambridge, then at Hadley, Mass., where he died.
sibly
at
Port Monmouth, N.
J.,
and Thomas
at
Westchester
in 1698.
Mary
the
three
Records.)
Thomas
administratrix in
72
BAIRD
child
He
Bedent."
was Andrew,
was mistaken,
the will
as
grandfather, John,
proves,
who was
for the
so
father of the
first
his
Bedent
great-
John, Sr.
In this letter Bedent Baird, Jr., says after the battle in which
Tippoo Sahib, the last of the Mogul Emperors, was killed, through the
clemency and urbanity of my cousin, GENERAL SlR DAVID BaIRD,
the royal family was saved alive.
(See Robert Tear's "History of
India and China.")
Through him also the Kohinor diamond, now in
the Tower of London among the jewels of Queen Victoria, was found
among the jewels of the Emperor Tippoo Sahib.
Bedent says Susana Blodget's father was a volunteer under GenWashington (then a Colonel), in the old French War under General Braddock, and was killed at a narrow defile near Fort Duquesne,
where Braddock was mortally wounded and his army totally defeated.
With Braddock's consent Washington sounded the retreat and brought
off the regulars and what few rangers were left.
(Bedent Baird, Sugar
Grove P. O., Lapland, Buncombe County, N. C.)
eral
John Baird, Sr., in 1741, conveyed land to his son John Baird, Jr., which
John had purchased in 1688 from Thomas Warne. John B., Jr., in his
mentions only one son, William, by name, and to him (William) he eviIf William did
dently devised the land he purchased from his father in 1741.
It is
not sell this land prior to his deaih, then it descended to his eldest son John.
believed the other unnamed children of John, Jr., were Mary, John, Alexander
and probably Elizabeth." (A genealogist.)
the elder
will
be-
Near
built
on a
the
BaIRD
lot
and preached
at
Topenemus.
possibly
He
known him
FIRST GENERATION.
John BaIRD,
change, aged
8.
born 1665, came from Scotland, 1683, on ExBuried at Topenemus, Monmouth County, N. J.,
SCOTCH BAIRDS
73
Hall
This
as his
Mary
was
(the elder)
was born
child
first
[Two sons of John, Jr., have sons named Bedent, possibly named for their grandThe name Zebulon was- probably for Zebulon Pike (for whom Pike's
mother's family.
Peak was named). He was a very daring pioneer of those days. F. B. C.\
SECOND GENERATION.
John's
Andrew,
mouth.
estate
John,
In
Sarah,
his
gives eldest
next three sons.
will
among
Jr.,
owned
wife,
son,
tract
large
Bedent,
twenty
of
shillings.
William, 1713-1793.
Buried
at
Topenemus.
WlLLIAM. BAIRD lived in Morris County, New Jersey, but removed to Pennsylvania and settled in Dunstable Township, Northumberland, now Clinton County r (which was a part of Northumberland
County at that time), where he bought 218 acres of wild land in 785,
1
called "Partnership."
It is
in
New
Jersey
previously.
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of
ANDREW
Served
Bedent.
and
Sarah BAIRD:
Supposed to
Barzilla.
Married Miss Mary Bullman.
Obediah. Served in Revolution.
Ger
Flats,
Canada.
who caused
the
Tea
Married
twice.
Riot.
Jonathan.
Samuel.
to
New York
State.
Ezekiel (Dr.).
John.
(May
New
(which
is
Wa-
74
West and
Later he went
in
in
1747.
died.
Monmouth County,
(In
May
have been a
Rachel BAIRD
married David
died
Logan
sister.)
in
J.
in
Morris County
militia in Revolution.
"One
Wellesley was the man promoted over General Sir David just after
Bedent's son may have joined General Sir David.
the war.
Children of
JOHN,
William. Married
Morris County,
Jr.,
New
I,
Died
1758.
in
1794,
in
Jersey.
In
755, one Andrew deeded his property to his brother Zebulon.
The will of John, Jr., mentions wife Avis, oldest son William, brothers
Andrew and Zebulon, and "family." Peter Bowne, Ex.
1
Children of
Jacob, born
1744.
father's.
New
Jersey,
to
a farm of his
Edwards.
David,
Children of
BaIRD:
Married Frances
Edward Baird, of Lock Haven, Pa.
1751-1825.
Benjamin,
William, 1757-1813.
Siggins.
Have
descendant,
Dr.
tionary soldier.
Zebulon,
1762-1848.
Lydia, 1766-1830.
Avis, Pa.
Tabitha.
Joseph.
Phebe.
Anna M. Shaw,
Sarah.
Ann.
Married
No
record.
in will).
Mary.
[One of these Williams secured payment from Quartermaster Joseph Lewis
F. B. C]
J., of nearly $10,000.00 from July to November, 1780.
Morristown, N.
at
SCOTCH BAIRDS
Children of
Zebulon
Anna
and
Baird.
Will mentions
75
these:
Andrew.
Married,
Lydia.
Zebulon.
Debora, died
Sarah.
1772,
1772,
Died
Cleve, 1785.
1848.
Married,
Van
in
to
Ohio.
1835.
Anna.
first,
1806 moved
In
1776-1848.
James Tapscott.
FOURTH GENERATION.
Children of
[Note.
Barzilla,
born in
New
War. His apprentice, Parker by name, "made many tours for his old master," who
was a shoemaker. Mrs. Belshe of Chicago has a certified record of his service.]
Thomas Bullman Baird, of North Carolina. Married Mary Smith soon after
the Declaration of Independence.
She was of Scotch-Irish descent. Thomas
and wife emigrated to Kentucky about the year 1800 and this son, Barzilla
was
born
at
Bourbon
Married
Adams,
Paris,
County, November 4, 1803.
Miss Scanlan.
first,
Children of
Went West.
Blodget.
William.
Children of
1764;
died
1826.
North Carolina).
Bedent, born 1766; died 1839.
born
Phoebe.
Isaac,
W.
J.
1769.
(One
Bryan.)
Married Mary
Married Phoebe
76
BAIRD
born 1774;
Elisha, born
the
into
New
Jersey.
Unmarried.
Mary Jane
Andrew
died 1777,
1776.
Catawba
near
River,
Morgantown
1800-3.
now
Zebulon represented
sons.
for
monument to one
Buncombe County in
stands a
the
House
of
Com-
Tradition says
all
MARGARET O'RiLEY
is
now on one
of the principal
streets.
Children of
David.
Margaret.
Sarah.
Cathrine survived her husband and was administratrix with John Stark, administrator.
Children of
Mary BAIRD
James.
John.
Daniel.
Elias.
Mary B.
David B.
[Dr. A. T. Applegate, Mrs. John
ants of this line.]
J.
REBECCA
Dawes
are descend-
E. BAIRD,
his first
his
second
SCOTCH BAIRDS
Sarah, born
died
1780;
1881.
77
Applegate.
1784.
David,
Jr.,
born
1797.
Married
County, Ind.
Rei B. (General), born 1798.
Amy
EDWARDS Baird,
Went
Hendrickson.
to
his
Hamilton
1800-1895.
1
Illinois.
Lived
at
Millstone Brook,
Illinois.
to Illinois,
Illinois.
to Indianapolis', Ind.
Children of
John.
Harrison.
William,
Mary.
Tabitha.
1793-1865.
Elizabeth,
Children of
Zebulon
1793.
and
Martha BROWN
BaIRD:
BAIRD
78
Mary, born 1795.
Jeanny, born 1797.
Sarah, born 1800.
1804.
Mary
married
Andrew White.
David, son of Zebulon, lived on the west branch of the Susquehanna, and raised the first tobacco cultivated as a business in Clinton
County. He was County Commissioner 1855-58.
"William was probably identical with William Bard, who was
appointed Second Lieutenant of Captain William Works' Company,
Twelfth Regiment, Pennsylvania line, October 16, 1776. Lieutenant
of
Mount
1 ,
1847." (Seilhamer.)
James and DELIVERANCE B. BAIRD:
Children of
(May
Zebulon.
have gone
to
Lebanon.)
David.
Joseph.
Andrew.
in
1811.
at
Franklin,
Mary Ann.
FIFTH GENERATION.
Thomas Bullman and
Children of
Barzilla
MARY
Married,
first,
S.
Wright.
Children of
Bedent
Delila, born
and
1802.
Alexander, born
1804.
Mary H.
BaiRD:
Mary Scanland;
Baird:
second, Elizabeth
SCOTCH BAIRDS
Son D.
F., of
79
Valle Cruces, N. C.
Blodget, born
1812.
1816.
Bedent represented Ashe (Watauga) County in the General Asletter from Watauga County, North Carolina,
sembly about 840.
858, speaks of
his uncle
Bedent.
Baird, born
Jacob.
Mary.
Ann.
Rachel.
Children of
Andrew
and
in
Anna Locke
thew Locke).
He and all
moved to North Mississippi:
his
Baird (daughter
Mat-
of
Coleman,
Matthew, born 1791; died 1829. Burying ground at Granite Falls, Caldwell
County, N. C. Unmarried. Senate, 1826; House of Commons, 1818-20,
Burke County.
Married Max Wilson, of North Carolina.
Died at
Margaret, born 1793.
Holly Springs, Miss.
Mary, born 1795. Married Mr. Connally. Died in Mississippi about 1840.
Elizabeth.
Married Alex Phifer (born 1797), Burke County, North Carolina;
died in Arkansas.
sec-
John Locke, born 1802. Married Miss Perkins, Burke County, North Carolina, near Holly Springs, Miss.
Eveline, born
Carolina.
1804.
Jane L.
sippi,
in
Missis-
1842.
Andrew and
his son,
in
both
Zebulon
and
Hannah
Irwin Baird:
Mississippi.
180
Andrew.
Joseph.
Adolphus E.
Myra
Margaret.
Sarah.
Unmarried.
Adelaide.
Mary
to Alabama.
Joseph returned to French Broad
Supposed to have had three sons. Mrs.
Benjamine and Josephine daughters of one of these.
[Note. There was an Andrew at Lebanon, Tenn., whose son was Zebulon.]
James,
Zebulon,
Sr.,
Adolphus was
Mary was
death.
Carolina,
Children of
BEDENT
born
Israel,
1801.
1825; died
Mary Ann
and
BAIRD:
at Asheville,
1849.
1802.
One
in
Tennessee, in 1822.
John, born 1805.
in
1809;
1878.
died
He
Jane
Eliza,
born
died
1900.
Married
Weaver
in
1830,
Wil-
1811;
Weaversville, N. C.
Children of
Ely:
David B.
Joseph
W.
Harvey.
John.
Isaac.
George A.
Mary.
Sarah.
Lucy.
Phebe.
Elizabeth.
William.
181
SCOTCH BAIRDS
Children of
Applegate:
Anthony.
Lydia.
Abigail.
David B.
Sarah D.
Disbrow.
Thomas.
John.
Children of Lydia
Lydia.
William B.
Mary.
John Conover.
Children of
Phebe BAIRD
Lydia Ann,
1809-1882.
Mary, 1813-1836.
David Clark, born 1816. Married Hannah Matilda Vanderveer, who died 1888.
Alfred, 1818-1879. Married Elizabeth C. Moore.
Rei B., born 1820, died
Deborah
W.
De
in
1822-1893.
Ely,
infancy.
Married,
first,
Richard
Mount;
second,
Mount.
Lafayette," 1824-1829.
1826-1861.
Caroline,
Charles,
1829-1872.
Edwin A.
Stevens,
Married Gilbert
One
Mount.
1832-1881.
Children of
W.
David and
Amy HENDRICKSON
BaiRD:
Sarah
C. BAIRD:
Matilda.
John R.
Jacob.
Died
in infancy.
Jacob.
Mary.
Catherine E.
Children of
Lydia.
David B.
Peter Wycoff:
Gilbert
182
BAIRD
Jacob P.
John B.
Mary Ann.
Gertrude.
Elizabeth.
Peter.
Gertrude A.
Thomas
Children of
and
Elenor Baird:
Emerson P.
Charles A.
Howard.
David,
Jr.
Had
Children of
Ann
Hiram.
Morrison.
Amos.
Lena.
Mariam.
Louisa.
Ellen.
Mary
Mary.
Children of
John B.
in
infancy.
Franzincky R.
Elizabeth.
Mary
Peter.
Children of
F.
Ely Baird
(daughter of Richard
Ely):
John.
Killed in Civil
War.
Mary.
Amy.
Richard.
Rei.
Thomas.
Children of
Mary
Rachel Baird
Elizabeth.
Lewis.
David Baird.
John C.
Married
Emma
Embly.
Married 1892:
SCOTCH BAIRDS
183
Married C. H. Perrine.
Ida L.
Addison H.
Children of
ELENOR Baird
and George
W.
Sutphine:
Matilda.
Elizabeth.
Jane.
Evelina.
Eleanor.
George.
Zebulon
Children of
to Illinois
1854):
in
David.
Mary.
Rei.
Samuel.
Amy.
Evelina.
Rebecca.
"Old Tennent" was the church home of most of these early Bairds. The Baird,
Wycoff and Riggs Association is a very large one. It meets each year at "Old
Tennent," N. J. Mr. C. C. Riggs, Langhorn, Pa., Secretary.
Children of
BaIRD:
S.
Adaline.
Demetrius.
'
William P.
John.
Zebulon.
Byron.
Sarah Ann.
James Harrison.
Has
Cathrine.
Mary
daughter,
Jane.
Benjamin Warren.
Children of
Virginia
O,
born 1840.
Private in
Company,
1865.
Married A. Farewell.
Anna
of Pennsylvania:
J.
Farewell.
184
BAIRD
SIXTH GENERATION.
Barzilla Adams and
Children of
his first
wife:
William Thomas, born 1835;
Married C. Hannah.
1911.
Banker of
Parker.
John T.
Mary
died
Mo.
Kirksville,
Elizabeth.
Nancy Tandy
Children of
wife:
died 1897.
W.
W.
Married
girls.
No
Bascom Baird.
second
record.
sons, lived at Jellico,
Tenn.
Children of
William
his
Killed in action.
Served
in
Confederate army.
to
J.
Killed in action.
Nancy B.
M.
Caroline.
F.
B.
Mary Patton
C]
Baird,
his first
wife
(1832):
Mary Anne,
born 1833.
Married,
first,
Grier, Mississippi.
county
Mary
Jane
his
J.,
E., born
1844.
Died
Children of
Robert
William
second wife:
in infancy.
L.,
his
Wm.
Coleman:
born
1835.
Issue:
185
SCOTCH BAIRDS
Issue:
Sarah (married O.
Married Mary Sloan.
James S. (married Gladys Crawford); Evelyn (marColeman); Thaddeus W. (married Miss Parquard). He was
1837-1895.
Thaddeus,
Henry,
the writer);
Wm.
ried
an eminent
civil
engineer.
Children of
Felix Walker.
Married,
ADOLPHEUS
Children of
first,
He
HANNAH
E. and
Baird) and
J.
in
Mississippi,
1826;
LoRETTA H. BAIRD:
Alexander.
Ten
Issue:
children.
Joseph.
Married
Zebulon.
Married
Hannah.
Congress,
Mary
Myra
Emma
Smith,
Franklin,
N. C.
Six children.
Served
in
War.
Civil
W.
E. Weaver, of Weaversvile, N. C.
E.
Sue.
James A.
Nannie J.
Issue:
Zebulon,
191 7.
Asheville.
Had
Children of
Myra M. Baird
Zebulon Baird.
U.
Twice Governor
S. Senate.
Robert B.
Laura.
Anne.
Noel.
age.
Sally P.
Hannah.
Married E.
The Statue
W.
Herndon, Asheville, N. C.
The General Assembly of 1899 appropriated $5,000 for the purIn the address at the unveiling of this
pose of erecting this monument.
statue by Richard Battle, LL.D., he said: "North Carolina had many
heroes of the Revolution, but she did not honor them separately, but sent
Washington, and as an
him on the walls
of the House of Commons.
When the capitol was burned the statue
crumbled, but patriotic citizens carried the picture on their shoulders
$10,000
to
Canova
out to safety.
They
hung a
portrait of
Washington
in
bronze.
186
BAIRD
"And
constitution,
one of her own sons, nourished at her breast, was, for reasons satisfactory to her, worthy of similar honor, and to be distinguished from her
other great and good sons by like testimonials in his memory.
Today
can see on the wall of the House of Representatives a large portrait
opposite that of Washington and this noble statue at the east front of
we
Why
Z. B. Vance.
The
thus selected?
ma-
whom
jority
life in the
noonday
glare,
"He was made Governor in 1862 and left the capital in 1865, the
day before its occupation by Sherman. His father was David Vance.
It took three generations of heroes and patriotic citizens, Vances and
BaIRDS, Scotch-Irish people, from King's Mountain down, to make a
Zebulon B. Vance.
"Great and attractive as he was as Governor, in public and in
social life, he appeared at his best in his home as husband, father and
host.
"He
his third
in
1878, during
On
him
able
to
make
his
wonderful resistance
It
is
to
General Grant,
who had
said that
Lee
187
SCOTCH BAIRDS
Children of Israel and
(he died
Asheville)
There were seven daughters and three sons, among them
Married Mr. Atkinson. Asheville.
Harriet.
.
James S. T.
Clara
second,
War
in the Civil
William B.
Margaret S.
Maud
1857;
P.
Charles
Sarah L. Abbott,
first,
at
Richmond, Va.
Mary
Married,
(Dr.).
Cottrell, of
1849
in
J.
S.
Mr. Reynolds.
Married
Susana.
Issue:
N. A. Reynolds, Asheville, N. C.
(Samuel was
Hale,
Joseph
born
Died 1865.
Mary
1822.
Evelina, born
L.,
born 1828.
War).
Issue:
Married William
1826.
children, Asheville,
Jane
Lieutenant
First
29th
North Carolina
Regiment.
Unmarried.
M. Weaver,
1847.
Issue:
Nine
N. C.
Married Col. John A. Fagg, 1859 (Colonel
Two
in
Mexican
children.
Lived
Issue:
1855.
'
William
born 1836.
Myra Roxanna,
Married N.
in
died
1862.
died 1867.
J.,
Easterly,
1841.
Married
1865.
ELIZA T. BaIRD:
Mary
W.
War), born
Civil
Hill.
Married Thomas
J.
Lee, Mississippi,
Decem-
Ann
Married John
Cathrine, born 1840.
October, 1859. Issue: Bessie and Kitty.
H.
Richards,
Columbus,
Miss.,
died 1903.
Joseph Bedent
Evans.
Victoria
(planter),
born
in
1845
in
at Asheville,
Inverness,
Miss.
N. C, 1897.
Married Susan
188
George Young, born
May
Thomas Rupert
He
Miss.
Ft. Loring,
Miss.
Children of
I.
N. (Capt.).
William.
Zebulon.
Elisha (Dr).
John.
Mary.
Catherine.
Children of
John.
Monteville Weaver:
Unmarried.
Fulton.
Bascombe (Dr.).
Parker)
Issue:
Annie Laurie.
Issue:
Mary
Blanch.
Married
J.
P. Lisk.
Issue: Helen.
Drusilla.
McM.
Riggs:
C. C.
Lillie F.
Clara.
Lewis Lisbon.
Emma
E. Riggs:
H.
Perrine:
Elizabeth E.
Married F. H. Gordon.
Frank.
Bertha.
Children of Addison
Earl.
Issue:
daughter, Dorothy.
(married Mr.
SCOTCH BAIRDS
189
SEVENTH GENERATION.
Thomas and C.
Children of William
Hannah
Baird,
Kirksville,
Mo.:
Frank.
Alta.
Children of
ROBERT A.
and CORNELIA
girls
(R. F. D.
2,
LOWE BAIRD:
Ada
Mary
Alice,
Issue:
born
Two
Elise,
Children of
Unmarried.
1894,
Sterling,
Colo.
children.
Married
Norma
California.
1877.
born 1884
Felix
W.
at
W.
and
HARRIET BAIRD:
Felix Walker,
1831-1848.
daughter,
1835.
Estelle.
Issue:
Married, first, Sylvian Trichelle in 1854.
Issue: Two
Married, second, F. W. Grant, 1870.
daughters.
Children of
ALFRED H.
James A.
Joseph C.
T.
Married
Alfred F.
Loretta
W.
Issue:
Margaret A.
Mary E.
Hannah M.
Myra
Sue.
Children of
ZEBULON
Carnaro.
Adolphus.
Hannah.
Aileen.
a daughter.
and
Emma
S.
son,
190
BAIRD
Children of
Atkinson:
Children of Dr.
Seven sons and
Charles
James
S.
T. and
three daughters,
Sarah A. BAIRD
(first
wife)
among them:
W.
James R.
Thurman G.
Kenneth B.
Children of
Mary
William.
Gertrude.
Maude.
Lillian.
Dorothy.
Children of
WILLIAM
Lillian.
MARGARET
Children of
S.
Augustus S.
Children of
No
Charles
J.
New
York:
record.
MARGARET BAIRD
Children of
and A.
S.
Merriman:
Margaret, Mary.
Children of
died 1900.
Meredith,
Joseph
S.,
Children of
Thomas B.
Maude, Mary
born 1873.
Mary
J.
Unmarried.
Issue:
Nene, Catherine,
S.
Issue:
J.
Lee:
Joseph L.
Annie V.
Married
Sam
Richardson, Mississippi.
Anna CATHERINE
Charles Richardson.
Elizabeth.
SCOTCH BAIRDS
191
Rupert.
Married Kennedy.
Married Cary Cooke.
William D.
Cathrine.
May.
James C,
1900).
born 1877.
Miss.,
Henry Long.
Children of
Issue:
4,
C,
Lady Mildred.
M. Montgomery,
1917.
Anne E.
Married
Jas.
First
Jr.
Frederick.
Children of
H. Riggs:
J.
P. Lusk:
Helen.
Mary W.
Riggs:
Helen.
Charles Clifford.
Emma.
Children of Elias R. and Etta S. Perrine:
Lacona.
Vivian.
Maud
H. Gordon:
Ethel.
Russell.
Ida Louisa.
Children of
Dr.
Wm. TAZEWELL
and
MARTHA H.
BaIRD:
192
SAMUEL
elected
District
years.
He
was made
Children of
Estelle
husband, 1871
M. Hayden,
and Prof. G.
Trichelle
her
first
he died 1884:
Trichelle.
Estelle
1885, of
New York
H. C.
City:
Annie F.
Henry
Carl, born
1889.
Hannah V.
Perrine:
J.
Mary
Conover, 1863-1873.
The
In
1878 he was
in
Lebanon, Tenn., on a
and gathered
visit,
this
information.
North Carolina.
a native of
Jeremiah, William,
He
had
three broth-
Andrew.
805 or
Josiah and Jeremiah about
Tennessee, twenty miles from Lebanon.
1
the
1810 moved
to
to
Smith County,
Barren County,
Kentucky.
sisters.
One
married
Hunt and
SCOTCH BAIRDS
193
Josiah's son
Jeremiah.
Josiah.
Jesse.
Sarah.
Hannah.
Nancy.
Molly.
Jesse Baird
lived at Lebanon.
W.
told
W.
(He
B. met a Mrs.
Wood
said
at
Baird,
related.
These may have been sons of Zebulon (who died 1804, whose
wife was Anna Smith), though his will mentions only Andrew, David,
James and Joseph. They may have been grandsons of bis by his son
Andrew, who had a sister, Mrs. Hunt. I think this Zebulon, of Lebanon, went to California.
"When
Carolina was divided into North and South Carolina, the first governof
North Carolina was named Salisbury. After he resigned,
governor.
In
the
course
of
time
the
GROUP 5John.
r
of Morris County,
SECOND GENERATION.
Children of
William,
Margaret,
Married
1784-1858.
194
Elizabeth,
bom
1791.
Married E. Hayden.
Married Mr. Gable.
798.
Sarah,
bom
1886.
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of
Jemima, born
1809.
P. BaIRD:
Married Mary
in
1837.
Potts.
Smith.
PETER BaIRD and wife, NANCY, with Charles Breeze and wife,
Phoebe Brockman, made the trip to Ohio in a wagon and visited home
three times; the last trip both couples had three children.
Children of
William.
in
Ohio.
of Avis.
Rhoda.
John.
Charles.
till
the close.
He
WILLS.
3508 N. of
Mary Bockoven
Baird,
widow
of John
Wills.
SCOTCH BAIRDS
195
and
lain, Mary Pruden, Elizabeth Hayden, Hannah Gable, and Sarah Eddy;
sons George and Elisha.
Mentions widow and children of deceased son John. Ex.:
Sons George and Elisha, 1842. Witnesses: John V. Abraham and Henry Stevens.
3881
N. of
Wills.
V. Dalrimple, Aug.
W.
Cutter,
December
21,
CHAPTER
VI.
The
colonists arrived in
Hector.
called
the
ENGLISH BEARDS.
English
1637,
Boston, Mass.,
began
first
make
to
in
New Haven
set-
The
hatchets,
company through
little
republic.
The number
plantation.
200
individuals
and
fifty-four
shire
SECOND GENERATION.
James, died 1642.
Unmarried.
John.
mother
company and
took part in
King
Philip's
War.
Martha.
She died
in
1706.
He
died in 1685.
ENGLISH BEARDS
197
THIRD GENERATION.
Children of
and
John
Anna
Married,
John, born 1654.
He died in 1 708.
first,
H. Beard:
Sarah
Unmarried.
the settler.
!666.
Married, first, Sarah Sanford, of New Haven; second,
Mary Baldwin Smith.
,
born
1669.
Married Sarah Clark, 1696. He was ensign of the Milford
Samuel,
Traine Band, 1715, and lieutenant, 1723.
Moved to Ripton Parish, now
Huntington, in 1726. Died in 1754.
Joseph,
born
No
children.
She died
in
1729.
Camp:
Abigail.
Samuel.
Joseph.
Mary.
John.
Sarah.
FOURTH GENERATION.
Children of John and
first
Children of
H. Beard:
baptized
1697.
198
BAIRD
Children of
1691.
Elizabeth, baptized
(first)
Married Sarah
Piatt.
He
it
was used by
1697.
Married
No children.
Buckingham.
Married Enoch Davis, of Huntingdon.
Sarah
He
died in 1769.
Had
grist
Married Mary
Married Samuel
Married John
first
sermon
in the
Piatt, of
Eells,
in
preached
Milford.
FIFTH GENERATION.
Children of John and Martha B. Beard:
John, baptized 1729.
Children of Joseph
Sarah, born 1738.
Abigail, born 1740.
Justice of Peace.
Milford, Conn.
ENGLISH BEARDS
199
Andrew, born
752.
Sarah.
Mary.
Ann.
David, born 1762.
1814.
No
Married,
children.
He
first,
War.
He
Married Rebekah.
W.
died in 1779.
Beard:
David, born 1725 in Long Hill, Huntingdon, Conn. Known as Deacon David.
Lived in Isinglass, Huntington. Fought in the Revolution. Married Anne.
Died 1812. Wife born 1724; died 1776 in Ripton.
Lived
Mrs Hobart,
No
children.
Lived
in
Known
Conn.
New
Haven.
Deacon Samuel.
Sergeant Beard in Revolution in Captain Birdsey's company, and was also private in Connecticut militia during War of 1812 under William Edwards.
Married Elizabeth, daughter of Moses Wheeler.
in
Long
Hill, Fluntington,
as
Eunice.
730.
Nathan, 1742.
Azariah, married Thankful.
Dolly, married
Married,
first,
Woodward:
Married Wait
Scott,
Nine children.
1753.
Abigail.
Israel,
born 1740.
1747.
Five children.
Curtiss,
1765.
Eight children.
Eight children.
200
BAIRD
Mary Beard:
1750.
Jeremiah, baptized
Charles.
Children of
Went from
in
1788.
Beard
Still,
SIXTH GENERATION.
Children of John and Abigail C. Beard:
John, born 1754, died 1756.
Member
Ann
1760.
He enlisted for King's army in the fort at New Haven.
Married
of White Button Company at time of the Revolution.
Benjamin.
Abraham Baldwin:
Married Sybil.
Issue:
Eleven children.
Abigail.
Sarah.
Children of
Minister.
ENGLISH BEARDS
201
Mariah, born
796.
Unmarried.
Married Mary
Ann
Baldwin.
New
Milford, Conn.
798.
Anne Beard.
Huntington, Conn. Married, first, Polly or Mercy, daughter of Captain Beach and Charity Tomlinson, 1789.
She died 1793. He
married, second, Ruth, daughter of Ruth Holbrook and James Beard, 1795.
In 1834 he moved to Pompey, N. Y., with his son David.
He died there.
Sarah, born
757.
in
759.
Lived
Ebenezer, born
Soldier in Revolution.
1
Married,
at
first,
Isinglass,
David
Conn.
Married
Ann Thompson.
James Black-
1756.
202
1772.
William (Dr.), born 1775. Married, first, Abigail Blaksee; second, Hannah
Farnum, Worcester, Mass. No children.
Lavinia,
Married,
Lemuel Wooster,
Harriet, Tommie.
1790.
Issue:
1763-1807.
Rebecca,
first,
Issue:
Nine children.
second,
Mrs.
second,
Mary Ann
1765-1849.
Joel,
Married,
first,
Abby
Hawley, 1829.
Huntington,
John
Wooster,
Jr.,
1791,
Well's
Hollow,
Conn.
He
died
Is-
Sarah, 1773-1862.
in
Married
1771-1863.
Elizabeth,
Married
Stiles
Curtiss,
1794,
Woodbury, Conn.
1850.
Joanna, 1776-1866.
sue:
Samuel, 1779-1875.
Troy, Pa.
1783-1872.
Polly,
third,
Married,
Elijah Sherman.
first,
Champ;
She died
Hoda, 1777.
Anna, 1782.
Charity, 1784.
He may
Ann
Clark Beard:
One son was
Beard, of
New York
City.
SEVENTH GENERATION.
Children of John and
Ann Benjamin
Nancy.
Married, first,
Polly.
of Milford, Conn.
Abby.
John.
John.
in
son,
Died
Beard:
New
infancy.
George;
Nettleton,
203
ENGLISH BEARDS
Frederick, born 1794, in Edford, 111.;
1818. Issue: John Gustavus Beard.
died
1861.
Sybil
C,
1810.
Samuel, 1812.
David, 1814.
Susan, 1815.
#
Addison, 1815-1895.
Married,
first,
Perkins.
1819-1886.
Married Martha J. Carrington, 1864, Mulford,
(George Newton and Eleazer lived in St. Louis, Mo.)
1821-1880. Married Isabella Orr Shaw, 1850, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Eleazer Judson,
Conn.
Ira,
Andrew, 1824.
Married Mary
(Beard) Smith:
William, 1807-1812.
Beard, 1815-1885.
Married,
first,
Mary Hine,
Susan, 1817-1897.
Abigail, 1821-1870.
Married Allen
Camp
Jr.
Dennis, 1826-1895.
Lucretia,
1828-1870.
in the
Henry,
Mary
1836-1863.
Elizabeth, 1839.
George, 1842.
Illinois.
Chester.
204
BAIRD
1791-1881.
Beach,
1816.
Resided
in
Fayetteville,
N. Y.
Linson, 1793-1804.
Children of
Stiles
Amzi, 1795-1869.
John, 1797-1888.
1804-1885.
Unmarried.
1806-1840.
Charles, 1812-1872.
Married,
Goodwin, 1842.
Henry
Stiles,
1821, of Southbury,
They
1814-1869.
first,
EIGHTH GENERATION.
Children of Beach ancr Frances (Curtis)
Beach
Curtis,
Henry
Linson, 1819-1888.
1817-1891.
Morris, 1821.
Ira,
Beard:
Ann Maria
Callendar, 1846.
1822-1844.
Unmarried.
Huntington, 1826.
Frances, 1828-1862.
NINTH GENERATION.
Children of Randolph and Helen
Gertrude L., 1854.
A. (Knapp) Beard:
She died
in 1881.
APPENDIX.
THE WASHINGTON FAMILY.
For years historians and genealogists were keen on the trail of
the Washington family in England.
They knew that Washington
himself had once stated that his family had come from one of the
northern counties of England, but this information, vague as it
was, threw many off the scent; they did no't take into account
the migrations of the family, and so were perplexed by the persistent claims of the little town of Sulgrave, in North Hants, that
it was the
"cradle of the Washingtons."
Traces of the family
are at Whitfield or Tuwhitfield, Warton Parish, Lancashire, not to mention earlier
footprints of the Washingtons in and near Durham, in the vicinity of which are
Washington Hall and the hamlet or "Town of the Wassings," dating back to the
days of the Conqueror. These were trails enough to confuse searchers, all the way
from Washington Irving down the line. It was a Mr. Waters who at length had
the success of linking the Reverend Lawrence Washington, M.A., of Purleigh, with
the Sulgrave family, and thus with John and Lawrence who left England for Virginia in 1657.
The town records of Northampton, which lies only a few miles distant from
Naseby, or Navesby, traditionally the very center of England, tell us of a Lawrence Washingion, son of John Washington of Warton, Lancashire, who was twice
mayor of the borough; there was a John Washington, father of Lawrence, who
is believed to have come from Whitfield in the same county, though there seems
to be proof, as before alluded to, that this family of good yeomen stock once was
living in Durham, and one genealogist has even traced the family back to Odin,
King of Scandinavia. But it is sufficient for us to go back in the family annals
far as that Lawrence Washington who became Mayor of Northampton 1532.
His mother was Margaret, daughtet of Robert Kitson, of Warton. Through the
Sir Thomas Kitson referred to, a member of the Mercers Company and triply
related to Lawrence Washington, the latter had another powerful friend. He became still more wealthy, and in time he desired to have a country estate of his
own, near to his business in the town. The lands of Sulgrave Manor, for sale
since the dissolution of the monasteries, lay conveniently at hand, and of these
lands Lawrence Washington quickly became possessor. He at once proceeded to
build himself a handsome house at Sulgrave, where he settled down to the comfortable life of one of the proud magnates of the county.
Lawrence Washington had several sons. Of these, Lawrence became a man
of considerable culture, having been at Magdalen College, Oxford, then joining
For
Gray's Inn in 1582, after which he, like his father, became a Bencher.
several years he was a member of Parliament for Maidstone. But it was Robert
Washington who succeeded to the Sulgrave lands, continuing to own them until
1610, when some embarrassment seems to have overtaken the family.
as
When
gone
to live at
we may
of whatever nature.
at
to
have lived
Brington.
house was
found,
close
upon
the
quaint
street
of Little
Brington,
which,
206
BAIRD
though not a proper habitation for the gentry, yet had an air bespeaking its having
been built for people in rank above the peasants of the village.
Together with
its high gabled roof and thatch, it has four mullioned windows, an inscription above
the square-headed doorway and, in the garden, an ancient sundial unmistakably
bearing the Washington arms.
But
us get on to the
let
cf Lawrence Washington
The most
Purleigh,
interesting
in
"malignant
common
frequenter of ale-houses," and as "dayly tippling there and also encouraging others in that beastly vice;" but it is quite certain that his fault was really
that of loyalty to the Royalist cause, a feeling which was shared by practically
the whole of the Washington family. Elsewhere the rector was termed a "moderate
parish
in
the
Lawrence and John, resolved to try their fortunes across the ocean, in accordance
with the well known colonizing instincts of the English, and founded the American
branch of the family, George Washington having been the son of Augustine,
grandson of John Washington of Tring, who went to Virginia in 1657. (Christian
Science Monitor, of July 5, 1918.)
HEIR OF A SOLDIER
entry before June 22, 1874, for some land but for less than a
If so, you may be entitled to a soldier's additional homestead
160 acres?
These claims are assignable. I pay cash for them. I also buy land warrants.
you think you have such a claim, write BEN B. JONES, Land Atty., Denver,
claim.
If
Colo.
INDEX.
BAIRD.
Anne:
Aaron:
A. B.:
77,
Annie:
Abigail D.:
Archibald:
A.
134.
Abner: 81.
Adaline:
137.
Agatha:
100.
144;
134,
Aileen:
Albert:
64,
138;
Ill,
B. 92; C. 137,
189.
T., Dr.:
Austin: J. 141.
Avis: 171, 173, 174, 193;
Barnes: 59.
Barton: DeF. 132, 133.
176,
125;
Amelia:
Amy:
M.
169,
178.
B. F.:
Belle:
183;
182,
A. 149; H.
181.
Andrew:
Angelina:
Ann:
143,
153;
169;
Anna:
124,
158,
125,
174,
126,
177,
140,
141,
142,
182; B.
146, 168; J.
179,
C. 187; E. 135,
N. 103; R. 112; T. 136.
102,
124,
126,
134,
170,
175,
178,
147.
158,
120,
159,
W.
16i,
B.
102;
140.
142.
Blanch:
100.
Blodget:
175,
123.
Bryan:
Byron:
C. A.:
179.
121.
195.
194,
Buncombe:
189.
183.
139.
Calvin: 92,
Camille A.:
147,
189.
Caroline:
132,
183.
126.
159.
149;
A.
68.
131,
147.
123.
Carnarc:
Catlina:
160,
174, 177;
121, 183.
170,
168, 169,
F. 169;
Carrie:
174, 175,
173,
133.
175,
161.
121,
141,
Bruce:
B. W.:
122.
89.
179,
178,
Betta:
189.
A.
175;
171, 172,
180.
170,
Bessie:
A.
184.
Bedent:
Almeda
148.
173,
171,
Benjamin:
Amanda:
S.
143;
184.
Alta:
R.
183.
Bascom:
F.:
149;
A.
129,
Alexander:
Alonzo:
A.
100.
138.
Barzilla:
125;
54,
153.
Atkins:
144; R. 107.
J.
W.
Arzula:
189.
121,
127,
69,
53,
102.
158;
Arvilla:
Agr.es:
130,
44,
41,
118.
Arthur:
154.
Armenia:
183.
153,
194.
Archie:
S. 159.
85,
84,
83,
79,
P.:
133,
78,
N. 93; S. 170.
177;
151,
170;
E.
135;
T.
208
BAIRD
Cathrine:
176,
160; C. 140;
P. 160, 190;
Celia E.:
T. 131.
114.
113,
Chambers:
Chancellor:
C. Hannah:
119,
93,
159,
158,
189.
100.
Charity:
Charles:
130,
129,
126,
93,
131,
133,
A.
168,
69.
Chauncy:
Chester: 69.
Christiana E.: 135.
188.
Christine W.:
59.
Christna
107.
54,
51,
47,
46,
168,
170,
172,
176,
177,
178,
181,
88,
F.
135;
100.
109,
G.
D.
F.:
131,
179.
194,
195.
99,
140,
102,
111,
141,
143,
124,
125,
129,
130,
135,
141,
143,
145,
146,
150,
152,
172,
158,
159,
160,
Ella:
139.
W.
59,
175;
66;
W.
R. 49;
93,
117,
158;
P.
S.
179,
T. 170.
161;
Ellen:
170.
63,
124,
174,
B. 153.
142, 143,
144.
141,
144;
W.
65,
134,
Elvira:
147.
Emeline
C:
175,
Emery
64.
183, 193;
123; E. 148;
59, 124; S.
182,
H.
123;
F.
134;
R. 143;
173,
122,
E.
V. H. 161;
184.
162.
Debora:
126,
193,
99.
110;
131;
122,
113,
109,
141,
A.
96,
Daisy: 127.
Daniel: 152; G. 168, 169;
108.
A.
161,
92,
117,
113,
107;
87,
131.
Cloyce:
Clyde: 149.
Cora: 127.
Cornelia B.: 160; L. 189.
David:
85,
64,
Elizabeth:
92.
Clinton:
92.
100, 170.
Eliphlet H.: 89.
Elisha:
175, 176, 188,
W.
146.
Clementine:
H.
Eli H.:
McD.
143.
Clarice J.:
Clarissa M.: 59.
Clem J.: 169.
Clemens:
Electa:
153;
128, 142;
148; C. 149.
116.
144,
W.
113,
Edna: 154.
Edward: 127, 137, 174; C. 97, 128;
K. 132; L. 102; P. 88, 97, 113.
Edwin: 100; H. 154.
112,
Ill,
161.
Eliza:
M:
Clarance:
107.
93.
Donna:
Emily:
169.
160; C. 87;
Emma C:
143; S.
89,
189.
Emmerson P.:
96,
W.
100;
154.
H. 169; L.
182.
Deliverance B.:
Delila:
178.
178.
138.
Estella:
144.
Esther:
Ethel
C:
143.
209
INDEX
Euclid:
Eva:
Heady:
179.
Helen:
Evalina:
Evaline:
177,
182,
149,
179,
151;
Felix:
150,
111,
114,
124,
128,
141,
147,
194,
195;
C.
139,
158,
167;
D. 69;
L. T. 64.
191;
103;
S.
Henry:
W.
152;
151,
189,
185,
DuB.
86, 89,
89.
83,
97,
90,
107;
Florence:
127; C. 93, 113, 170.
Frances: 109, 135, 148, 149; M. 97.
Francis:
48, 51, 56, 114, 122, 134,
56.
Francois:
Frank: 92,
P. 148.
64.
Fred:
George:
52.
Howard:
42,
146,
147;
115,
121,
152,
156,
122.
Irene:
152,
Isaac:
49,
193,
A.
H. 102;
195;
W.
89,
Grace:
181.
58,
Granbury:
Halbert B.:
Halsey O.:
Hammie:
Hannah:
144,
148,
Ivv
I.'W.:
149.
107.
153.
R. 99.
177.
Harrison:
Harry: 126; E. 143; L. 97; P. 167;
14
91.
160,
174, 179,
181.
126,
127,
129,
130,
133,
134,
139,
140.
141,
143,
146,
150,
151,
152,
156,
162, 163,
175, 176,
185, 193;
164,
177.
165,
166,
167,
178,
179,
180,
154,
185,
A.
59, 92,
G.
R.
120,
190;
83, 92.
187.
148.
46,
182,
Harvey B.:
121, 139.
180,
131.
C:
168,
T. 108.
V. 123; \V.
Harland: 64.
Harlen P.: 97.
108;
160.
James:
189.
Harriet:
158,
188.
B.:
Jacob:
151.
jabez
155.
59,
127;
122,
120,
175,
64.
Jackson:
147,
58,
55,
66,
127.
Gilbert:
145,
152.
Israel:
J.
A.
131,
175.
167,
54,
151,
Isham:
Gertrude: 100;
Gibson: 147.
130,
185.
60,
125,
113,
129,
118.
51,
A.
126; L. 183.
A. 189; M.
151,
128;
L.
102,
119;
182.
Hugh:
Isabella:
52,
51,
131.
Isabel:
Frederick: 132.
Garret V.: 161.
Gennett: 43.
48,
96,
91,
Stevenson
Inman: 191.
162.
Ira H.:
143;
179.
Franklin:
90,
89,
120,
Honour:
Ida:
C.
189;
149,
144,
81,
Homer:
162.
158,
136,
M.
125,
128,
132;
J.
O.
102;
110,
109,
T. 103.
191.
Fermine:
144.
J.
175.
120,
119, 169;
158.
Henrietta:
184.
183,
189.
Everetta: 149.
Ezekiel: 171, 173,
96.
Fannie L.
Fanny:
Hattie:
149.
Etta:
144,
T.
154,
190;
143;
156,
S.
W.
153;
59,
162,
S.
66,
165,
T.
187,
75,
118,
166,
167.
210
50,
51,
84,
88,
92,
111,
117,
141,
150,
122;
L.
W.
83,
79,
100,
102,
135,
137,
A. 135; C.
159;
158,
179;
16.
92,
Jerome
C.
147;
M.
192,
A.
133,
P. 89,
193;
H.
143;
148,
C:
Joanna
Johanna:
67,
84,
190; E. 58.
154.
151,
189.
L.:
142,
120,
E.
64;
184;
F.
69,
77,
76,
78,
110,
109,
102,
79,
83,
L.
C:
Lena:
155.
Leslie E.:
111,
112,
Lester:
144.
64.
114,
117,
120,
121,
122,
124,
126,
127,
129,
130,
131,
133,
48.
Leonard
Leonardus F.: 66.
134,
137,
139,
140,
141,
142,
143,
Levi:
145,
146,
147,
148,
149,
150,
151,
152,
156,
158,
159,
160,
167,
168,
Lewis: 68.
107.
L. H.:
169,
170,
171,
172,
173,
174,
175,
Lilian:
176,
177,
179,
180,
182,
183,
188,
Lillie
100,
142,
Lizzie:
195; A.
88, 99,
N.
92,
118,
179;
107,
158.
143,
142,
119,
121,
170,
174,
193;
A.
71,
92;
130,
132,
175,
177,
100,
Josephine:
184;
139,
140,
180,
185,
B. 187, 191; C.
C. V. 83,
189;
184,
138.
92,
67, 126,
Josiah:
67. 88.
W.
138,
178.
131,
92,
S. 107,
Ann
M.
68.
125,
194,
168;
K. 185;
148; L. 149.
Laurence:
113,
193,
154,
138;
189.
195.
68,
92,
59.
149.
Laura:
W.:
C. 155;
167;
166,
113.
Kenneth B.:
143.
194,
B.
59;
H.
Kittie:
102,
193;
169.
Keith:
73,
02.
68,
Jesse:
132.
J. S.:
135.
Juliana:
Kate B.: 117.
Kathrine: 48, 156.
Jeremiah:
R.:
J.
Julian
195.
194,
48.
Jemima:
Jennett:
R.
93;
93.
F. 102;
45.
Jason :
Jean: 57.
142.
C:
Jeanne
Jeanny: 178, 190.
M.
151;
Joshua:
Judge:
Julia A.:
119.
109,
Janetr
78,
Jane:
192,
193;
M.
123;
81.
V.:
154.
170; B. 96.
Loretta H.: 185; T. 189.
Lou N.: 137, 138.
Louisa
Louise:
84.
138; S. 167.
Lucretia
McC:
Lucy: 170; H.
Ludwell McK.:
A:
102;
Lydia:
81,
174,
175,
89,
M.
59.
124.
117,
177, 181;
131; S. 132.
McF.
Lyman B.:
O.
64.
Luella T.:
Lula
119.
97, 132; J. 64;
151, 153.
132,
170,
G. 108,
176;
131,
91.
Mabel: 149.
Magdalen: 158.
Magdalena V.: 156, 157.
Maggie: 119. 126; M. 106.
Malcolm: 189.
211
INDEX
Malinda: 91; W. 132, 133.
Marcus: 126.
Maria: 87, 92, 98, 142, 152; C. 92;
H.
W.
167;
Marion:
99.
118,
121,
122,
129,
130,
134,
135,
136,
137,
143,
144,
158,
159,
162,
A.
194;
88, 102, 117, 119, 139, 189; B. 77,
79; C. 194; E. 103, 108; D. 91;
G. 102, 154; J. 112, 113, 122, 123,
147, 152; M. 142; McK. 146; O.
175, 176, 180; P. 99; S. 183, 187,
190;
179,
W.
193,
190,
91.
51,
A.
168,
M.
100;
135,
169.
184;
183,
92; V.
Martin:
57,
107,
130,
145,
52,
129,
127,
126,
125,
184.
D.:
b9.
184.
Melissa:
A.:
Miles:
109.
176,
C.:
Mildred
Margaret:
166,
M.
M.
151, 153;
99,
191;
J.
V.
188.
Mary:
167,
Milon E.:
Milton T.:
Minerva:
Miranda:
Mollie:
80,
122,
134;
111;
N.
180, 185;
107.
Nellie:
146,
147,
148,
149,
151,
152,
W.
157,
158,
160,
161,
167,
168,
Nettie:
169,
170,
172,
174,
175,
176,
177,
Newton:
178,
179,
180,
181,
182,
183,
188,
92,
111,
171,
173,
175,
132,
148,
169;
166,
169, 178,
B.
120,
131,
175,
169,
129,
130,
143,
112,
110,
177,
C.
194;
193,
D.
91,
88,
135,
184,
185,
Mc
151,
154,
Mathew:
155,
49,
161.
121,
122,
Ora
189;
Maude
May:
S.:
187.
68.
L.
150,
A.
153;
154;
M.
131,
178,
113;
127.
arker
184.
Patrick:
65.
55,
Paul: 145.
Pauline: 149.
137,
Peggv:
Peter:
66,
195; V.
Phebe:
Polly:
174,
138,
108,
161.
170,
145.
109,
174,
194,
181.
154; L. 113.
J.
69.
175,
66,
Priscilla
Rachel:
100.
Maynard:
143,
T.
147.
Palmer: 179.
Parke: 152.
Phoebe:
154.
141,
118;
66.
S.:
Orville:
Philip:
Philo:
179.
Obediah:
126,
F.
McQ.
137; M. 113.
99; P. 119.
Nicholas D.: 158, 159.
Norman E.: 189.
Oliver P.:
165,
120, 121,
193,
191,
152.
132,
132;
166;
86, 97;
131,
H.
149;
153,
85,
117,
169,
145,
189;
154,
152,
120,
184.
144,
131,
168,
141,
83,
150,
141,
140,
110,
142.
S. 185, 189.
Nancy:
L.
91;
J.
W.
66.
140,
A.
1'02;
Myrtle F.:
134,
184,
A.
83, 92;
Myra M.:
Myrta M.:
133,
121,
193; F. 183.
137; H. 154.
81, 83,
131
193;
59.
92,
130,
112,
180,
100.
168.
Morrison:
Moses:
191.
152,
169.
91,
168,
64.
177,
194;
A.
138.
67.
V.:
122,
127,
212
144.
Ray:
Rebecca:
110,
111,
158,
A.
152,
151,
182;
176,
Redford E.:
Rei:
189.
B. 177, 181.
183;
182,
Reuben: 193.
Rhoda: 194; P. 194.
Richard:
P. 66.
R. M.:
Rob:
B. 184;
Rittenhouse:
R. J.: 184.
179.
74,
85,
86,
53,
133,
157,
91,
102,
112,
114,
125,
127,
128,
130,
131,
132,
134,
139,
140,
141,
148,
156,
158,
159,
160.
162,
165,
167,
90,
89,
178,
100,
113,
112,
Robinson:
Roman ta:
84, 93.
92.
Rosanna:
114,
188.
H. Ill; M.
W.:
S.:
119.
147.
Sabra A.:
Sadie:
123.
S. Dubois:
158.
Saline:
117.
Sallie:
Samuel:
111,
41,
112,
126,
130,
140,
141,
173, 183;
142,
152,
158,
159,
170,
171,
173,
174,
175,
176,
177,
178,
180,
181,
182,
193.
T.
119;
42,
117,
Seldon:
Shirley:
167, 169.
155.
Sidney:
50.
112.
51,
120,
B. 139.
Sophia: 126.
Spencer F.: 131, 132.
Stella
A.:
147,
103;
93;
148;
149.
141, 146,
Stephen:
C.
Thomas:
65.
138,
169,
168.
119,
135,
16S,
Sydney:
122;
153.
Rosella:
118,
126,
Susana:
115,
67.
Rose:
142.
147;
141.
115,
W.
S. C:
169, 189.
S. Dennie: 143.
169.
Robert:
52,
57,
58,
121,
131,
132,
134,
142,
143,
166,
69,
81,
42,
44.
45,
55,
56,
58,
60.
63,
76.
77,
78,
79,
93,
109,
124,
128,
129,
130,
131,
132,
133,
135,
139,
145,
146,
147,
149,
150,
156,
166,
167,
168,
169,
177,
182,
136;
O. 133;
W.
93,
124,
135,
167,
136,
Thompson:
171,
Thurman G.:
Tirzah S.:
127,
134,
132,
113,
147,
114;
122,
123,
152.
190.
170.
138,
166,
167.
213
INDEX
64, 131.
146.
Tyler:
Utilis:
Vernon
Victoria A.:
187.
Virginia:
Wallace B.:
Walter: 55,
Warden
97.
153.
107,
118.
J.:
41, 42,
49,
50,
51,
59,
64,
65,
193,
192,
190,
194,
52,
108,
112,
117,
118,
120,
124,
125,
126,
127,
129,
130,
131,
132,
133,
134,
137,
139,
140,
141,
118,
134;
154;
H.
88, 99,
J. 59,
188.
184,
183,
64.
Willie:
126.
Wilson:
169.
Winifred:
E. 143.
148;
Winona C:
102.
146,
147,
149,
150,
151,
152,
153,
Winston
156,
157,
158,
159,
160,
162,
165,
Zebulon:
166,
167,
168
169,
170,
171,
172,
176,
177,
173,
174,
175,
176,
177,
178,
179,
188,
189,
68.
169,
178,
193.
179,
180,
183,
185,
BEARD.
Aaron:
Abigail:
62,
197,
198,
199,
200,
Clemens:
202.
Abner:
61.
Cleveland:
Adam:
66.
Comfort:
C:
Adelina:
61.
199, 201.
Curtis J.: 202.
147.
Cyrus:
203.
147.
Agnes: 145.
Alexander: 55, 150, 151, 152; A' 154.
Daniel:
152, 201.
David:
Alice: 153.
Alison: 62.
Allen C: 203.
Alonzo: 154; T. 154.
Dolly: 199.
Dorcas: 61.
Ami:
Ann
55.
153, 202; E. 146, 199.
B.:
Andrew:
203; T.
46, 60,
152.
Anna:
Anne:
61,
Annet:
201.
61,
198,
198,
Charity
202.
199,
200,
Ester:
64.
E. E.:
69.
Ebenezar:
60, 197;
154.
H.
197.
Edwin H.:
Eleanor:
J.
203.
154.
150, 151;
64.
Elijah:
Eliza: 153, 201;
Benjamin:
199,
Edna:
Bridget: 63.
147.
Calvin:
Caroline:
151.
H. 154;
146.
Abby:
Addison
196;
60.
Christopher:
197.
C.
H. 154; L.
McD.
150.
151, 153;
W.
62.
Elizabeth:
152,
201.
Ellen:
204.
Ephraim
Eunice:
61, 62,
197, 202;
Emily W.:
Esther:
55,
154.
200.
60, 63.
199.
147, 150,
N. 61.
145,
C. 150;
214
BAIRD
Fannie:
Felix:
60,
151.
151,
152.
Frances:
Kiltie:
60; A. 204.
Frederick: 203.
Francis:
George:
151,
A.
62,
Hoda: 202.
Homer: 201.
Hugh: 145, 146.
Mattie:
153.
Isaac:
55.
Isabel:
152.
M.
E. 62;
61;
W.
62;
61,
41.
146,
150,
42,
45,
151,
49,
152,
63,
196,
69,
120,
197,
199,
Nancy:
Phoebe:
145,
146,
198,
200,
150,
202;
151,
152,
196,
153;
M.
146; P. 151; Q.
A.
Judith:
151.
Julia
56.
C:
155.
154.
61.
145;
197,
Robert:
Sally:
200, 203.
Samuel:
62.
Joshua:
145.
R. H.: 69.
Richard: 44, 60, 69.
202.
152.
202.
197,
W.
152.
Peggie:
Pollv:
204.
Jeremy: 63.
133.
Jesse A.:
199,
L. 154;
202.
150, 153;
Niram C. R.:
Noah: 203.
Parke:
154.
Philip J.:
W.
155.
60.
154.
Joel:
200;
147; G. 154.
Joanna W.:
147,
146,
199,
45.
Nellie:
60, 61.
James:
133,
198,
Moses:
Nathan:
62.
Jacob:
154,
Miss: 75.
Morris: 204.
Morrison H.:
151,
61,
Ithamar:
152.
204.
203, 204.
Irene:
197,
153,
McK.
151,
Mathen:
Huntington:
Ira:
152,
K. 146;
153.
64.
63,
J.
200.
151,
McD.
203;
198,
196,
151,
Mary:
61.
C:
153.
151,
62.
F.:
62.
Herbert
Hester:
204.
153.
Hepsebah:
Lena: 155.
Lewis: 60, 69.
154.
Lillie V.:
Marcy
151.
Hammie:
202, 203.
Lucy: 201.
Ludwell McK.:
Granbury:
B. 154.
153;
Linson
152, 200;
154.
151,
Laura:
Lavinia:
204.
198,
42, 63,
201, 202, 203.
Sarah:
55,
152,
64,
196,
66,
197,
199.
197,
198,
199,
199.
J.
S.
215
INDEX
Seymore: 201.
Simon:
41,
60.
147;
147;
O. 133;
C.
Susan:
200;
R.
146, 147,
62.
152,
201,
W.
C:
203.
203;
J.
Timothv:
62,
63, 145,
S. 154.
146,
152.
Thompson:
Sybil
Thomas:
155.
Shirley:
200.
146.
Utillis:
Valentine:
46.
Walter: 153.
W. D.: 69.
William: 41, 43, 47, 55, 60, 61, 62,
Thankful: 202.
Theodora: 62.
146,
147,
150,
152,
153,
BARD.
Adam:
56.
Alexander
69.
Allen C: 52.
:
Benoist:
54,
45,
G. 76; O. 57.
Jonathan: 52.
Joseph: 52.
Joshua: 56.
Lydia: 50.
55.
70.
52.
52.
John:
70, 76;
Archibald: 53,
Barnet: 52.
Catherine
Jesse:
Christian:
52.
Madalina:
52.
Christine:
52.
Margaret:
David:
Mark:
50.
Christopher:
Daniel: 52.
Martin:
Mary:
David James:
Edward: 63.
Edwin C:
Frank
Hannah
Philip:
Harrison:
Sevilla:
56.
Henry D.:
Hugh: 56.
Jennie:
52.
Jeremiah:
52.
Veronica:
Warren:
H.
49.
57.
52.
46,
52.
Thomas: 45,
O. 57; R.
Isaac:
M.
52.
Stephen:
Susanna:
69.
Jacob: 52.
James: 56, 57, 76;
Jane: 47.
52.
52.
70.
47, 52.
P.:
52.
George:
M.
52.
Ezekiel:
Francis:
178;
Moses
76.
Nannie S.: 49.
Nancy: 56, 63.
53.
Ephraim:
52.
52, 56, 63,
52.
Michael:
52.
Eliza: 52.
Elizabeth: 52.
Elisha: 52.
Emma:
52.
D. 49; H. 52;
52.
63.
Weslev: 49.
William: 45, 46, 49, 52, 53, 56, 63,
76, 178; D. 49, 53, 54, 55; M. 49;
S. 57.
216
BAIRD
INTERMARRIAGES, ETC.
Abbott:
Acklin:
Nancy
Adams:
88,
100.
James H. 92;
163; Margaret
54; Mary 79;
Moses N. 83, 92; Robert 79, 83, 92;
Ball:
Sarah 137.
Baltimore:
J.
Elizabeth 79;
C. 92;
John Q.
Martha
139;
137,
John 51.
Lord 64.
Derwick
Aiken:
Peter 141.
Banklaw
Aikins:
Agnew:
188.
Albright:
M. C.
88,
117,
S. 119;
119,
Susan 71.
Edna
Allison:
Anderson:
107.
Eliza 84;
94;
94; John H.
195; Lizzie 94; Mary 94; Paul 72;
Robert 84, 94; William 94.
Eldridge
Jessie
A. T.
Thomas
70;
71
Samuel
Beach:
181;
181;
Beal:
Harrison
Thom-
199.
Bachman:
Baines:
Ellen 135.
Bessie
148.
Sarah 137.
Cora 190; Henry 100; Mary
179, 184; Seth B. 204; Susan 177.
Bailey:
Baker:
177,
Ross M. 148;
V. B. 147, 148; Zalielma 148.
Atwood: Lucy
E. 170; Harriet B.
170; John 170; William 133; G. 170.
Dis-
74.
Albert
Elvira B. 148;
Archer:
Hanna
Barnes:
Barnett:
Bayard:
Catherine
46,
75.
Allen:
71;
70,
71
Signieur 70.
Janet J.
144;
Louise
Whitmore
Augustin 202;
199.
Beasley:
Beauchamp:
Bedent:
M.
170;
F.
152.
Mary
171, 173,
171.
175;
Beekman:
Benham:
Elizabeth 204.
Benjamin:
Ann
Benstead:
Susan 56.
Bentley: T. F. 138.
Bently. Jennie 187.
Berkley: John F. 112.
217
INDEX
William 51.
Berryhill:
Henry
J.
132; Lydia
Branch:
McF.
Sarah 168.
M.
Elenor
Bilyew:
Ellen 93
131, 132
B. 132
131.
Mary
Bill:
177;
Maria O.
Mercy
Ann
Blount:
Jessie
Brill:
167.
John K. 153.
Nellie
Britton:
Frederick
148;
193;
194.
1
Bowlsby:
Bowman:
105.
92.
Elizabeth 48.
Elias 68;
Mary
Pierce 65.
Alice 160;
Brogden:
B.
183;
John
Bowne: Deliverance 175,
A. 181; Jonathan 171; Joseph 171;
Peter 171, 174.
Anna N.
159;
159;
James 59,
Brown:
nie 96;
98;
177, 178;
174,
Mary F. 96;
Miss 83, 83; Mrs. 168; Nancy 96;
Robert 41, 96, 99; Samuel 75, 170;
Susannah 96; Thomas 71; Wendel
71; William 41, 71, 87, 88, 98, 99;
William F. 96.
Nancy B. 152,
Mary
Bullman:
Bullock:
Burdett:
Margaret B. 108.
Mr. 150.
Bozman: Mary L. 120.
Braddock: General 172.
148;
Paige 108.
Henry
Thomas
178;
Bradley:
160;
Browning:
Boyle:
William,
96,
Thomas D.
97;
Dr.
Mary
Thomas 72.
Boel
Bonnet: Benjamin 142.
Boone: Daniel 76.
Booth: Rebecca 66; Sally 66.
Bowles:
86,
160.
H.
Maj. 86.
Brockman: Phoebe 194.
Brooks:
Nancy
L. B. (Molly) 96.
Belle
Blodget:
148.
Bryan 179.
John 54; Mary K. 54.
Clark 71, 72; David 72;
Breading:
James 72; Judge 80; Nathaniel 72.
Brokaw:
202.
erick
Mary
Braswell:
Braxdale:
Brewer:
Blackman:
Sue
Bragstad:
132;
Bunker:
Burgess:
154.
173.
Samuel 141.
James 62.
Lucricetia 136.
William 44.
Frances B. 147.
Elizabeth 61.
Burkhead:
Burnap:
Burnett:
Ezekiel
Eliza
102;
89; George
102; John
218
41;
John
Mary D.
89;
Thomas
liam H.
J.
89;
Wil-
William 41;
89.
Burton:
Busse:
144;
145;
145; Mary B. 145.
145;
W.
Jessie
Byrne:
Calderwood:
Mary V.
Caldwell:
177.
Ann M.
Calender:
204;
Joel 202.
Champ:
145; Albert
145; Frederick
Clarissa
B.
137;
R.
Agnes
W.
Henry W.
H. 145;
HewMary
Caroline
H.
204.
Calvert: Leonard 64.
Calvin: Alice 143.
Camber Timothy 1 98.
Chapman:
Childs:
Jeanie 140.
Miss 125.
Helen 131.
Clark:
Abigail 198; Agnes 72; Almira 126; Ann B. 126; Catherine
B. 140, 142; Charles 126; David
52, 72; Ellen C. 142; Elizabeth 72,
196.
72;
126,
72;
72;
Camp:
Campbell:
garet 84,
Mar-
Carruth:
Carter:
74;
George 144.
Ben107
107
191
Paige
Mr. 72.
Chalk: Addie 123; Catherine B. 123;
Cora 123; Dora 123; James 123;
John 123; Robert 123.
Catlin:
142;
197;
201;
66.
Clary: Benjamin
Clayton: J. B. 92; Sarah 177.
Clemens: Miss 145.
Coats: Ora 144.
O. 155.
Cochran: 85; Leah P. 94;
Cole: Ella T. 105.
Mrs. 179; Agnes 184; EveB. 184; Evelyn 184, 185; James
Robert L. 184; Sarah 185;
Thabeus 185; Thabeus W. 185; William 184, 185.
Coleman:
George 184.
lina
S.
185;
Feimine
Jane 107;
C. 107.
Mary
107;
Marjorie
197.
Gratton
107;
107;
Marjorie
219
INDEX
Connaly: Mr. 179.
Conner: Jennie 188.
Conover: Elizabeth W. 192.
Conrod: 56.
Cook: Cary 191; Mrs. 83;
Alfred 59.
Cooper:
James
Thomas A.
L.
Mrs.
188;
158;
158.
Ami 55.
Cornel: 157; Mary B.
Corrigan:
Mary B.
Cormont:
157.
109,
122;
Clara 187.
Adelina
147;
147,
150;
Elizabeth
B.
148; C. R.
Mattie 147;
Daiber:
Dalrimple: V. 195.
Darlington: Meredith 83.
Davidson: Sarah 177.
Davis: Addie 191 Alice A. 47; Alicia
203; Andrew 84; Elizabeth 105;
Enoch 198, 199; Margaret 83; Sam;
uel
64,
Michael 109.
Coulter:
Cushing:
195.
Cottrell:
Curtis:
Repella
151.
Coonrod:
Mrs. 83;
199.
Dawes:
Eugene B. 105.
Dearth: Aaron R. 103; Clark B. 72,
91; Evans 103; George 72; W. 91,
103; James 72; John W. 72, 103;
Jonah 103; Lacy E. 103; Randolph
72, 81, 91; Robert J. 91; Ruth M.
Dear:
103; Sarah
J. 91.
Cox
James 83
Mary
William B. 108; V. 103,
Catherine 83
G.
108;
108.
Denton:
Abigail
Coxen:
Denyse:
Mary
Craft:
Dev:
Addie
Crocket:
T.
108; Charles E.
Ethel M. 108;
108; Anna M.
108; Elmer 108;
B. 108;
Frank M. 108.
Esther B. 112; Mr. 112.
148; Martha 158; Wil-
Crory:
Hannah
Cross:
liam 150.
Crouch:
Crouse
:
Crow:
Dickson:
uel 56.
L.
110;
L.
110,
Eliza-
115;
liam 115.
Dillon:
Monteville 64.
Bessie 154.
Draper:
Roland
Sally 187;
Sam-
115;
109,
Estha
Downs:
Cummins:
Diamond:
Dow:
136.
Elias
beth
Donnell
122.
134.
Du
187;
Thomas
Joseph
187.
187;
220
BAIRD
Mary
Douglas:
130.
129,
42,
80.
108.
Dunbar:
Duncan:
Kitty 150;
Miss 145.
Dunn:
Elizabeth
Dunning:
Duy:
Esther 134,
Eagles:
136.
Eakin:
Don
Howard
shall
Mar149;
61.
N.
Easterly:
Eastman:
W.
187.
Albert 59.
Easton:
Eckley:
87.
Elizabeth
195.
174;
Jessie
184;
John 198.
Eldridge:
Ellicot:
Ely:
Endress:
Enock:
Erwin:
Robert 128.
Mr. 132.
Ann
130.
72;
Fleming:
James 55.
Jacob C. 59; Thomas 59.
Fletcher:
Martha
Elizabeth 72;
Genl.
J. 64.
Genl. 39.
Forbes:
Forman:
182.
Lany
Forsythe:
Ewing:
Forshee:
Caroline 135.
Hugh
Mary 146.
Hannah 202.
Farnum:
182.
Emmet:
126.
Farnesworth:
Fitsimmons:
Emma
125.
Mr. 169.
Fareman: Charles L. 154.
Farewell: A. 183; K. J. 183.
Faris: Nancy 126; Sarah 125,
Lilly 94;
Jessie 94.
Anne 55.
Ellis:
Embly:
Nancy
Fisher:
Fairs:
Fakes:
Dunlap:
50,
135.
Andrew
118;
James
118;
John
117,
118;
110,
111;
Sally
William 147.
INDEX
Foulk:
Mattie 98.
Glen:
Fowler:
Fox:
Thomas
French:
Calvin Capt. 94
Isabella 71.
Fresy:
Susan 61
153.
J.
Gardner:
S. 103.
Garlick:
199.
Henry
Garner: 119.
Gaston: Lydia 174, 176.
Gortschoir:
Gerrier:
Mary
Henry
56.
Ghost:
Katy 150.
Gibb:
Elizabeth 42;
Hugh
42;
John
200.
Gilmore:
Giltner:
Givens:
Gleason:
Margaret 151.
189.
John 76.
Gregor:
Mr. 167.
Grey:
Gribble:
A. James
Grier:
Mary
184.
89.
Rebecca 169.
Mr. 185; Sarah E. 204.
Gwyn:
Hale:
Hall:
Mary
Hamilton:
Mary
Vida
B.
148;
Mr.
147,
148.
189.
Caroline E. 103.
130.
129,
Hannah: C. 184.
Harah: Rebecca 85.
Hardson: John 132.
Hardy: James 169; Miss
Hare: Florence 103.
Harford:
Mary
Harmer: Genl.
169, 170.
81.
40, 165.
141.
Robert 44.
Mr. 125.
John Capt. 47.
Mary
Margaret 65.
W.
F.
Handley:
B. 54.
117.
Hand:
Miss 93.
Gerberding:
Mathew
Martha 158.
Gaylord:
Geedon:
117;
148;
Sarah 87.
188,
191;
F.
John,
Hammond:
Lizzie 120.
Gastrell:
Gates:
Lydia B.
Graham:
172,
Galliett:
H.
Maude E.
191;
191;
Frances 161.
Gorle:
Griffin:
Gable:
Gallaher:
Elizabeth
191; Ida L.
Russell 191.
Grant:
Adolf C.
Froelich:
Lydia 108.
Glenny: Sarah P. 203.
Gobel: Caleb 179.
Gorely:
79, 84.
Assey 73;
Frost:
John 42.
Glendenning:
Gordon:
Misses 169.
Frame
221
204.
Harper:
Mary
88.
222
BAIRD
Samuel
Hartzell:
183.
Charles 65.
Hastings: Mollie 66.
Hatch: Cyrus 123; David A. 123;
Ella 123; Harry 123; James W. 123;
Louise 123; Mary Louise 123; Sada
J. 123; William C. 123.
Harvey:
Samuel 56.
Havens: Charles R. 191 W. 188, 191.
Hawley: Anna 196; Samuel 102.
Hatrick:
Landgartha 100,
107;
Estelle
Leonora
105.
Alice 151;
Haywood:
Hannah
63.
Libby 91;
Henry:
tilda
125;
Isabella
185;
Ma-
91.
Ann
Herder:
Herick:
Mr. 159.
188.
Holman:
Mary
M.
167.
138.
96.
84, 93.
83.
112; H. B.
112; Jane B. 117, 118; John M. 118;
118; Sally 118; Samuel O.
118, 119; S. P. 119; William 117,
Mary
Mrs. 52.
111.
110,
Lydia 175.
Hindman: James
Huggins:
Charles 94;
Belle 94;
Law-
son 94.
Herndon: E. W. 185.
Heron: James Capt. 46.
Hervey: James 110; Margaret B. 110;
Mary 110; Rebecca 110; Rosanna
Hinds:
118.
Herbert:
Hill:
John W. 184.
Hogshead: Margaret 112.
Holbrook: Ruth 199, 201.
Holland: Albert 122.
Hoggins:
118.
Hoban:
121.
Hobart:
Mrs. 199.
Irwin:
Mary
63.
Genl. 164.
Iturbide:
Hannah
175,
179.
Thomas
163.
Elizabeth
167;
147;
Forest
Lucinda 74;
Obediah.
Johns:
Sarah 73.
Johnson:
181.
INDEX
M.
B.
Jones:
Mary 150.
Juxon: Thomas 65; William
Keith:
65.
Celesta 99.
172; Alexander
89; Elizabeth 115.
George
Amanda
115;
113.
104.
187, 190;
Margaret B. 190.
Charles
Kilgore:
ther 29,
Killenaar:
Kincaid:
Es-
Claussen 103.
Francis 91; Judith 84, 93.
Leggett:
Lewis:
Elizabeth
148;
Eva B. 148;
Maggie
Mary 146
127.
Kinkead:
124; Mr. 96
Kirker:
George 94.
Kirkpatrick: Mr. 127.
Knapp:
Knight:
Knowles:
Catherine 122.
Helen 204.
Capt. D. 91.
Harriet 166, 167.
Anna
Locke:
Thomas
143;
Willis
142;
66;
Mary
E. 191
Wil-
129.
liam, Capt.
Lord
Abigail 72.
Lorrimer: Susanna 112.
W.
Lovell:
132.
Lowe:
74;
Howard
Kliber:
King:
Alexander 151
Eleanor B.
Elizabeth
Morris 150,
151;
151;
151; Steven 151; William 151.
Littlejohn:
Long: Andrew
150;
148.
143.
Laurinta 71.
Kilpatrick:
Mr. 104.
Lavine:
190.
Leffenwell:
Livingston:
Kidall:
Mr.
62.
Kennedy:
W.
142.
Edward
63;
Edna B. 190;
Genl. 87; James H. 190; Joseph L.
190; Mamie B. 190; Mary J. B.
190; Thomas B. 190; Thomas J.
187,
nie
W.
Ellen
Justice:
Kannel:
Esther B.
Thomas B.
Leathers:
Ambrose 203.
Judy:
Lawson:
Leadly:
Lewis 202.
Judson:
223
73;
Lowthes:
127;
109.
Lusk: J. P.
B. 191.
Lyons:
191;
Helen
191;
Mary
Elleanor 150.
McAuley: Mrs.
169.
McCarmack:
McClelland:
H.
Margaret 98.
John, Capt. 45, 77; Sarah
79, 80.
McCIennan:
Cathrine 65.
BAIRD
224
McCombs:
Elizabeth
McConnell:
John,
188,
Mary
56;
Capt.
142.
McCoy:
Edith
103,
McCrocklin:
152;
140.
McCue:
William 110.
McCullough:
Hugh
149;
Mary
McCully:
76,
110.
McCurdy:
McDaniel:
M.
E.
118;
L.
J.
118;
Mary 119.
McDonald: Anne
Black
113;
111,
138; Jane 138; Mary 138; Mr. 137;
Mrs. 177; Peggie B. 138; Simon
McFali:
Agnes
51, 134;
Mr. 174.
Margaret
McGill:
110,
111,
71.
Samuel
Mann:
Marmion:
Dinah 70.
Agnes 110; Florence S. 186;
Mr. 176; Mrs. 125; Philip
Martyn:
Masters:
Mary
W.
105.
135.
Mathas:
Frances 62.
Mauglin:
Maxwell:
Gertrude A. 177.
Genl. 128.
Meade:
43;
Eliza B.
Mechlin:
146,
150;
McKnight:
127.
113;
George
111,
113.
Alice 149.
Mr.
Hannah B.
Meakin:
McLaughlin:
or
135.
114;
103.
McKissick:
Macham
Jane 56;
Louie B. 105;
Anne E. 100.
Mecham: Mr. 130.
McWilliams:
Martin:
114.
McKee: Martha
Thomas 46.
McQuister:
135.
Mclntyre:
McKay:
150.
Brise 51.
McGowan:
Elizabeth 89;
McLean:
John 137,
138; Newton 137, 138.
McLelland: Thomas 69.
McLemore: Addie 187; Margaret D.
Menlhon:
47.
Merchant:
Merriman:
Bessie
lie
190;
190;
Meyer:
Sterling
Ludwig
190.
145.
225
INDEX
128.
Migisan:
Alfred B. 99,
Alexander 98;
Miller:
Amanda
C.
101;
Andrew 74;
Blanche
99;
Bertha
F.
99;
87,
101;
Benj.
V. 72; Elinor 159; EUie 98;
Eliza 99, 117; Elizabeth C. 101;
FerEmily F. 101; Esther T. 108;
mine O. 99, 108; Franklin 99; Frank
169; Frank B. 101, 108; George 74,
98; George G. 89; Frederick 108;
HenHarriet E. 100; Harry C. 101
178;
ry 98; Hollice 101; Jacob 74,
B.
89,
73, 74, 98; A. 101;
L.
108;
108;
Amanda K.
Anna 101;
101;
Anne
;..
James
99 101; G. 87; Jennie 101; Jessie
B. 101; John 44, 74, 78, 98; A.
89, 100; G. 101; H. 101; N. 101;
Johnston 89, 101;
118; Lydia 101;
A. 100, 101; M. 98; Mable 101;
Martha
98, 100; MargarMaria 98;
et
100; J. 99; Mary DeF. 103;
G. 101; Matilda B. 101;
Johnson A.
Joseph 74;
Mary
Maude M.
101;
Lola
101;
J.
Oliphant 89,
150;
Rebecca 74; M.
99 101, 108; Samuel 44, 74, 81,
89- W. 101; Sarah A. 98; E. 100,
F.
101;
101;
J.
101;
Wash-
101;
89,
98; F. 101; W.
89, 101; Wylie 101.
Elizabeth 72.
Minor: Truman 204.
Mills:
Minthorn:
Mitchel:
169;
Hannah
Eliza
Mary
J.
66.
Elsie
158;
Catherine
158;
V. 158; Ida 158; Johanes
158; Sarah 158; William 158.
Nevin:
Garrett
Lulis de
Estelle
T.
163.
Overman:
190;
Henry
59.
Gertrude
190;
190; Lee S. 187, 190;
190; William 190.
Dorothy
Lillian
Maude
Owens:
Tabitha 179.
Painter:
Enise 199.
Palmer:
Pardue:
Parker:
Harry
Nancy
149.
L. 97.
Turner 94.
175,
188;
Elizabeth 70;
Je-
Robert
17.
Payne: Ellen
Miss 151.
Pearis:
Almon 203;
174, 177.
O'Riley:
Paishall:
134.
15
201;
199,
201;
Benajar
Edward 201 ; HezCharles A. 201
ekiah 201; Joseph 201; Mr. 167;
Seman 201; Thaddeus 202; William 201.
Anna
Mrs. 56.
Middleton:
Pearson:
143;
Nancy 71.
Eva 189.
Mr. 170.
Mary
142,
144;
226
Mary B.
Pefley:
149;
Wynn W.
149;
Wallace
B.
149.
Mrs. 83.
Pentacost:
Perkins:
179.
Perrine:
Ernest 107;
Perry:
Pettit:
Mr. 151.
Martha 197.
Pfifer:
Martin 46.
Mr. 64.
Mary
119.
113,
99;
John 150;
Thom-
W.
196;
198.
Jessie F.
189.
Quigley:
177,
John
57,
177;
Tabitha
B.
178.
Sarah 74.
145.
Lieut. 73.
Peter
Pryor:
W.
Robert
Robert 66;
65.
95;
R. N. 185.
Quinn:
Poque: 85.
Pope: Mary L. 160.
Porter:
Quinby:
65, 66.
Frances 68.
E. 114;
or
129;
Printice:
Pruden or Prudden:
114.
Thomas
Mary
Martin 168.
195;
Celia
Pollythress
Capt.
John 67.
Margaret 88, 98.
Pritchard:
John 202.
Pollock:
John,
147;
203.
Pollard:
129;
Price:
Plumber:
John
Por-
as 41;
Anne
B.
uel
41, 64;
Plumb:
104,
Pratt:
Sarah 150.
Pleasants:
Martha
101,
Powell:
Powers:
83.
Piersol:
Pike:
104;
105;
Pierce:
Piatt:
gie
Potts:
Mary DeF.
J.
Miss 53.
Peterson:
Pierson:
95,
Rayner:
Julia 143.
227
INDEX
Read:
Reed
William 98.
Reid:
or
B.
Ailie
154;
Annie
Reside:
Sarah 55.
Reynolds: John,
et 60; Mr. 187.
Genl.
Margar-
128;
Eliza A. 147.
Ridgeway: Elizabeth
James 148;
Riggles:
88,
B.
100.
Wini-
D.
106.
Riley:
Robbinnet:
Robertson:
ly
113,
James
Elizabeth 48.
Ross:
Rowland:
Catherine
190;
Maude
Mene
190;
190;
S.
Mary
Meredith 190;
190;
Mrs. 170; R. M. 190.
Samuel 65.
Eliza T. 180;
Catherine 87
James R. 187; Sue 190.
Russel: Emmet 170; H. G. 120; James
1
98.
A. J.
Mr. 136.
Saunders:
Sayer:
114;
Bever-
Miss 168.
135.
190.
Nellie
Scales:
178;
Mary
Scanlan:
Scearce:
George S. 154.
Schlagel: Minnie 143.
Schmidt: Sarah 151.
47.
Schuyler:
Dr. 122.
Schwartz:
Scott:
Hannah
John
107.
Lottie
Schrivener:
158,
Laura
163;
Thomas 44,
Wait 199.
159;
147;
Henry
151
Miss 110
83; A. 53
Col.
174;
Phebe B. 170.
Seigler: Nathan 45.
Mrs. Jacob 56.
Sellers:
Sevier:
40.
Mr. 176.
Seward:
56.
Anna McD.
114;
150.
Mrs. 52-
Seachrist:
Robinson:
Romero:
Seelly:
93;
John
93; Joseph 93; Mary 74, 75, 93;
Moses 93; Robert 93; Washington
93; Wiley 93; William 84, 93.
Samuel
George 136.
Susan 199; Susanna 173.
Edwin
Roll:
Salisbury:
148;
fred 148.
E.
Rodney:
Rogers:
Rupert:
Catherine
190;
Elizabeth
190;
190;
187,
190;
Kitty
John H.
or Bessie 187; Mr. 188; May 191;
Sam
liam 44.
Ruffin:
Riddle:
Sexton:
Etta 188.
Shade:
Mary 177.
Edward
Shaffer:
Stella B.
Shannon:
149;
149.
Emma
102.
George
149;
228
BAIRD
Shaver:
Austin 138;
138; Mr. 138.
Shaw:
Isabella
Capt. 46;
Josie
40.
Shelby:
O. 203.
Stark:
Steel:
Elizabeth 118.
M.
169.
M.
'
Sterling:
Shook:
M.
Stout:
Alfred
Anna 149;
149;
Smiley:
Blanche 149; Etta B. 149; George
149; Mary 149; Nathaniel 149.
102;
Bac200;
Celia
203;
107;
187;
James
M. 187; Jane 97, 187; Joel 203;
John 197, 200; Joseph 202; H. 187;
Louisa 68, 151; Lucreria 203; Margaret A. 187; B. 187; Martha M.
203; Mary B. 197, 198, 200; Mehitable 200; Minerva 203; Mr. 202,
Mrs. 52; Myra R. 187; Rebecca
55, 71, 198; Samuel 180, 187, 204;
Sarah 55, 198, Susan 92, 147, 203,
A. 187; B. 200, 203; Tabitha T.
187; Theodore 94; William 201,
203; B. 187.
William 181.
Snowhill:
Snyde
N ar.nie
147.
Bennett 91
Alice
195.
John 179.
R. S. 120.
Smith:
Henry
Stockton:
Sloan:
Stevens:
Stickler:
50, 143.
Frances 174.
Serling 159.
Sitsee:
Mary
203;
Slerret:
177.
Streame:
Margaret 89,
Theodosius 90.
Strong:
90;
Mary
72;
Stuyvesant:
Summers:
Summerson:
Ella 177.
Sumrall:
John 144.
Suthlif: Delia 92.
Elenor B. 183; Elizabeth
Sutphine:
183; Evalina 183; George 183; W.
177; Jane 183; Matilda 183.
Swanson:
Sweeting:
Taggert:
186.
Ann
125,
Elizabeth B.
125;
James 125; John 125; Mr. 125; Robert 125; Samuel 124, 125; .William
125.
Tally:
133.
Tan torn:
182;
Lena
Mary
229
INDEX
Tapscott: James 175; Mrs. 174.
Tarbell: Ann 99; Ephraim 61.
Tate: Mary 180.
Gov. 80; Harriet 59; John
Taylor:
127; Mary E. 95; Rachel 124; Robert
47.
Terrell:
Elrira G. 191.
Ann
Charles
201;
H.
144;
B. 144; Esther
115; Frank 144; James
166; B. 165; Jane 180; Robert W.
105; Sarah E. 105; Virginia B. 66;
William 143, 144; William O. 144.
J.
Elizabeth
105;
111,
110,
Thompson: Mr.
166.
146.
145.
105;
Cinthia 95, 104; Ella J. 105; James
C. 105; John 95; H. 105; Kate 105;
Mary 95, 104, 105; Mr. 105; Sadie
E. 105; Theodore 89, 102; Thomas
Van
H.
105.
Liere:
Magdalena
156, 157.
Col. 44; Emile 147, 149; Jes149; Mary 131, 149, 150; Nora
149; S. 150; Winifred 149.
Thorn:
Vernon:
sie
Villeam:
Tibals or Tibbals:
Thomas
othy 196;
197.
Mary A.
Todd:
62.
Daniel
Tomlinson:
201;
Polly 204.
Lydia 199.
192.
189,
Truby:
Christie 44.
Truett:
Sini 83.
Annie 89;
ine
130,
135;
131;
Thomas
Ami
John
136;
W.
S.
185,
180,
74,
Harriet E. 186; John 74; LauMr. 79, 80; Noel 185; PatPriscella 133; Robert
rick 41, 42;
B. 185; Sally P. 185; William 74;
185;
Zebulon B. 165.
135;
134,
Joseph
Ward: Capt. 194; Ella B. 148; Gaston 185; Geraidine 149; Helen 148;
52.
ra 185;
159;
Peter
Elizabeth 195.
Francis
Walling:
135; Sarah 135.
189.
Vance:
Jane
161;
147;
147;
161;
Maggie
159, 161; Wilson 161.
102;
147;
John
Trobridge:
Abram W.
Lamantha
Vreeland:
Town:
Tritchelle:
Lydia A. 102.
Susanna 70.
Ernest
Charles 147;
Vincent:
Gibson 146, 147; Hattie 147;
146, 147; J. K. 150; Martha B.
Mary 147; Porter 147; Rose
Wilder 147; William 147.
Voories:
Levi
201;
Torry:
Van
Van
135.
Mary
Vinnie 147.
Thomas:
Court:
Vanderliss:
Vaneman:
Tearse:
Van
172.
172.
Cleff:
Elsa 157.
Wayne: Anthony
Cleve:
Jane 175.
Weatherly:
45,
133.
230
Weaver:
Annie
Bascombe
188;
188; Christine 180, 188; Fulton 148;
Wisner:
Henry
Wittich:
W.
Martha V.
Wolcott:
L.
Mary A.
188;
W.
Montville
188;
M.
E. 185; William
Webster:
Mary
Almira
Juda F. 150;
Elizabeth
204;
Newman
150;
150.
Welmot: B. 190.
Welsh: Jane T. 180; Mary A. 175;
Miss 125; William 176, 180.
Wesley
Westfall:
47.
Williamson:
Thomas
Elizabeth
42.
Esther B.
Willis:
Wilson:
A.
Adam
43;
13;
84;
Mary 60;
H. P.
161;
Aletha
12,
13,
A.
Hugh
160;
74, 162, 165; Virginia 161; William 43, 49, 74, 117, 129, 160; B.
160, 161; W. 138.
Winkham:
Winkler:
Gov. 60.
Nathan
199.
Woodworth:
Rebecca E. 91.
William 74.
Articretia 202;
John 202;
Judson
Lemuel 202; Lewis 202; LyElizabeth 68;
Anna 202;
Harriet
202;
202;
McG. 131;
Charles H. 153;
144;
153; Elizabeth 178; Herman 143; Jennie 143; John, Capt.
45; Martha B. 153; Mr. 97; Nellie
B. 153; Sallie B. 153; Samuel M.
151, 153; Susan M. 153; William
Agnes M. 147;
Wright:
M.
Anna
Eliza B.
Wycoff:
181;
John
Yard:
181;
182.
Margaret 150.
Albert N.
199,
202;
John
Andrew
142, 144;
94; Clara B. 145;
145; Edith A. 144,
145; Edward 149; Frederick 149;
Harry A. 149; H. 149; Helen G.
149; Jason B. 144; Jessie S. 144;
Leland C. 149; Max M. 149; Nellie B.
149; Paul C. 149; Stephen
178;
Benj. 84,
Clarissa
144,
M. 49; Susan
Whitenack:
Mr.
71.
159.
50.
Elizabeth
Abigail B.
199; Charles
100;
188.
C. 119, 153.
1
Abram D.
160;
160; Allen
161; Ben 118, 119; Catherine A. B.
Cornelia 161 Dixie
160; Charles 41
A. 138; Edward 161; Eliza 88;
Emily
Mary
Woolsey:
Wooster:
Joshua 75.
Wood: John
Woodrich:
Woodruff:
Arthur 174.
Wellesley:
Wells:
180;
187.
63.
J.
136.
L. 120.
Harriet 201.
175,
179.
Winthrop:
Wise: Daniel 151; Elenor 150.
ald 148;
J. C. 89,
zie
102;
Edward D.
FAMILY RECORD.
MARRIAGES
MARRIAGES
BIRTHS
BIRTHS
BIRTHS
BIRTHS
DEATHS
DEATHS
DEATHS
DEATHS
-M
m
1
^ii