Showing posts with label New Windsor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Windsor. Show all posts

Sunday, August 23, 2020

Sheriff Sold New Windsor Land of David Wright in 1836

 Probably He is NOT my Mary's Mr. Right

Jean M. Hoffman

Who was the father of Mary, the second wife of Moses Nichols (1775-1822) of Newark, New Jersey and New Windsor, Orange County, New York? They were married about 1812 and she died in 1827. Follow the Wright label to see earlier articles on her possible father. As previously noted, online trees give her maiden name as Mary Ann Wright with exact dates of birth, marriage and death. None of them lead back to the origin of that data but I do not find other sources for her birth and marriage dates. The exact nature of the data suggests an origin like a family bible. Also the trees give her oldest son Aaron the middle name of Wright. I haven't found his middle name, but the initial is documented as W.i Naming patterns for this family are consistent with his middle name being her maiden name.

For some time I have tried to determine if David Wright of New Windsor was her father. He had a daughter named Mary who was baptized 28 May 1780 while the Mary Ann (Wright) Nichols of the online trees was born 29 January 1780. It seemed a possible relationship. No probate record for David Wright of New Windsor appears in Orange County, New York for the time period. I found no deed with a Wright as the seller transferring ownership of his land that might have shed light on his heirs.

Land Records Can Reveal Relationships

A course in land and property records at GRIPii in July put me on the right track for finding a deed selling David Wright's land. I created a table for the land transactions of the Wrights in New Windsor, focusing not on one person but on one original land purchase in 1774. The table began as filled in below where DB is Deed Book.

 

During the class I asked about land ownership maps for New Windsor. Different sites were suggested and at the Library of Congress website I found a map for Orange County published in 1851.iii The parcels are not drawn but owners' names are arranged on the map (below). Town records associate David and John Wright with the Washington Square and Silver Stream portions of New Windsor. I did an overlay of my plat of the Wright landiv and found only one place, just north of the Washington Square area that it seemed to fit (regardless of the relative scale that I had not taken into account.)

 

An owner in the area of the overlay (red lines) reads: “Heirs of T. Hyatt.” The land table above shows the portion of the land owned by John Wright was sold after his death to Thomas Hyatt in 1840 and resold by Hyatt heirs in 1850, the map still showing the heirs as owners. Below the Hyatt name is “J. Patton” in what could be the land of David Wright. That was now a name to find in the grantee index of Orange County deeds. There are many entries there for a James Patton buying land. One in the 1830s is from the sheriff. The next one is from an Isabella Wright of Newburgh.v A sheriff's deed looked very promising.

The deedvi reveals that Orange County Sheriff, Charles Niven, acted on a writ of fieri facias from the New York Supreme Court of Judicaturevii at the suit of Townsend Wright plaintiff against David Wright, David Wright son of Nathaniel Wright, Henry Wright, Eriston Wright, Robert Wright, and David Vance devisees terre-tenants, and Robert Wright tenant of David Wright, deceased, defendants.viii The deed tells no more about the identities of the parties to the suit. The lands owned by David Wright in 1828 were the object of the writ but the action came in 1836 when the sheriff held a sale in Newburgh at which James Patton had the highest bid. When the parties did not redeem the lands as was apparently possible under the law, the sheriff signed the deed in 1837 though it was not recorded until 1838. The later quit claim deed from Isabella Wright is for the same land of David Wright, but sheds no light on her identity.ix Plats of the land in these deeds are identical to those of the earlier deeds. The blank in the land table now should contain these entries:

 

Who Are these Parties to the Suit?

Nathaniel Wright was a resident of Warwick, another Town of Orange County.x He is purported to be a son of David Wright.xi Plaintiff Townsend Wright was possibly a son of Nathaniel and resident of Warwick.xii Two names stand out among the many defendants.

Eriston Wright is undoubtedly the Aristen Wright of a DAR application for the patriot David Wright through his son Benjamin.xiii Likely this Benjamin Wright was in New Windsor in 1810.xiv He died in Newburgh in Orange County before 14 January 1819 when his widow Jane received letters of administration.xv In 1820 she was head of a household with four children.xvi Aristen was one of them according to the application.

A descendant of Moses Vance and Mary Wright, a New Windsor couple, had by 2018 concluded that this Mary was most likely David Wright's daughter Mary.xvii The couple had a son Benjamin Vance whose death record reportedly names his parents. Only the index is online for the death record so I have not seen it yet.xviii Online trees name the oldest son as David Vance and the mother's death before 1825.xix In possible support of the Vance connection though not quite the same, the DAR application names a daughter of David Wright as Hannah, wife of David Vance. No daughter Mary was named.

What Do the Names Mean?

To learn the nature of the suit and relationships of the parties the court records at the New York State Archives need to be consulted.xx However, it seems likely that defendants “Eriston” Wright and David Vance were both grandsons of David Wright of New Windsor, sons of two of his children who predeceased him. If that is the case, unless he had two daughters named Mary, David Wright of New Windsor is NOT the father of Mary, second wife of Moses Nichols of New Windsor.

Learning more about these New York courts, finding, and understanding the court records or related data is a next step needed along with checking county circuit court records.

Endnotes

Referenced websites were viewed 23 August 2020.

i. For example: Orange County, New York, Letters of Guardianship B: 99, Aaron W. Nichols entry, (1829), Surrogate Court Clerk's Office, Goshen; and 1850 U.S. census, Hillsdale County, Michigan, population schedule, Jefferson Township, page 373 (stamped), 745 (penned), dwelling/family 4, Aaron W. Nichols household; digital image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/8054); from NARA M432, roll 351.

ii. Genealogical Research Institute of Pittsburgh (GRIP), “Get Your Hands Dirty: A Workshop in Land and Property Records,” Kimberly Powell, Coordinator, 2020, https://www.gripitt.org/.

iii. J. C. Sidney, Cartographer, Map of Orange County New York: from actual surveys (Philadelphia: Newell S. Brown, Publisher, 1851); digital image, Library of Congress (https://www.loc.gov/item/2013593254/).

iv. Jean M. Hoffman, “Researching New York at WRHS: The Case of John Wright (ca. 1753–1838) of New Windsor, New York, WRHS Genealogy Bulletin 35, no. 3 (Fall 2016): 1, see plat.

v. "United States, New York Land Records, 1630-1975," FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9WF-PW9P?i=247&cc=2078654&cat=168957), digital film 007157750, image 248, Orange County Grantee Index 1, I-Z, 1703-1869.

vi. "United States, New York Land Records, 1630-1975," FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9WF-Y6Q5?i=111&cc=2078654&cat=16895), digital film 007159915, image 112,Orange County Deeds 62: 164–65, Sheriff Charles Niven to James Patton, 1837 (land of David Wright).

vii. New York State Supreme Court of Judicature (Geneva) Writs of Execution,” New York State Archives (https://iarchives.nysed.gov/xtf/view?docId=ead/findingaids/J0025.xml), for definitions: “Writs of fieri facias command a sheriff to levy the amount of judgment from the judgment debtor.”

viii. Henry Campbell Black, A Dictionary of Law (St. Paul, Minn. : West, 1891), 1164, “terre-tenant” meaning, in a technical sense, one who is seised of the land but not actually occupying it.

ix. "United States, New York Land Records, 1630-1975," FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9WF-YN1T?i=187&cc=2078654&cat=168957), digital film 007159915, images 188-189, Orange County Deeds 62: 317–19, quit claim deed, Isabella Wright to James Patton, 1838.

x. "United States, New York Land Records, 1630-1975," FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9WF-LJNN?i=155&cc=2078654&cat=168957) digital film 007157794, image 156, Orange County Deeds Y: 302, quit claim deed, Nathaniel Wright of Warwick to John Mains of New Windsor, 1823. And, 1855 New York state census, Orange County, population schedule, 3rd election district, town of Warwick, family 432, Nathaniel Wright household; digital image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/7181).

xi. Francis Wright and Maude E. White Cleghorn, “Wrights of Long Island,” 14-page typescript of now unknown origin, photocopy provided to the author by the late Douglas W. Cruger (author A Genealogical Dictionary of Wright Families in the Lower Hudson Valley to 1800 (Bowie, Md: Heritage Press, 1987)) in 2015. And, membership application, Mirbell Shirey Pairan, National no. 226286, on David Wright (1745–1833, New York), National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, Library Record Copy Services (https://services.dar.org/public/dar_research/search_member/?Action=full&National_Number=226286).

xii. 1855 New Work state census, Orange County, town of Warwick, family 436, Townsend Wright, same page as note 10.

xiii. Membership application, Mirbell Shirey Pairan, National no. 226286, National Society DAR.

xiv. 1810 U.S. Census, Orange County, New York, town of New Windsor, page 286 (penned), line 27, Benjamin Wright; digital image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/7613); from NARA M252, roll 29.

xv. "New York, Wills and Probate Records, 1659-1999," Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/8800) > Orange > Letters of Administration, Vol E, 1815-1827 > image 132, Orange County Letters of Administration E: 116, Benjamin Wright entry, 1819.

xvi. 1820 U.S. census, Orange County, New York, population schedule, town of Newburgh, page 503 (penned), line 4, Jane Wright; digital image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/7734); from NARA M33, roll 64.

xvii. H. M. Chesi [e-address for private use] to author, e-mail, 4 July 2018, “New Windsor NY Wrights.....;” privately held by the author.

xviii. "New York, Death Index, 1852-1956," Benjamin H. Vance entry, New Windsor, New York (1893); database, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/61535).

xix. Henry Vance, compiler, “Vance Family Tree,” Benjamin Harvey Vance entry with numerous sources and citing a “Per Verified Transcript from Register of Deaths, Town of New Windsor” for birth and death information; Ancestry Trees (https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/25492793/person/26083084629/facts).

xx. For background and resources see: "Duely & Constantly Kept:" A History of the New York Supreme Court, 1691-1847 and An Inventory of Its Records (Albany, Utica, and Geneva Offices), 1797-1847 (Albany, NY: A Joint Publication of the New York State Court of Appeals and The New York State Archives and Records Administration, 1991); On-Line Book (http://www.nycourts.gov/history/legal-history-new-york/documents/History_Supreme-Court-Duely-Constantly-Kept.pdf). Also, John L. Wendell, Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of Judicature, and in the Court for the Trial of Impeachments and the Correction of Errors, of the State of New-York. 26 vols. Albany: 1829-42; digital versions, HathiTrust Digital Library(https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/009722372); search of term "Wright" did not locate related case in the 26 volumes.

Wednesday, August 5, 2020

A Place in the Family: New Windsor, NY

Years ago I wrote how naming patterns led me to find the New York origin of a Kentucky ancestor because he named his first son for his father: Moses Nichols > Charles Nichols > Moses Eckles Nichols. See the article: https://bluegrassandbuckeyeroots.blogspot.com/2013/05/moses-eckles-nichols-naming-patterns-to.html

July 19-24 I took a wonderful (virtual) class at GRIP (Genealogical Research Institute of Pittsburgh) on Land and Property Records. During the class I found at the Library of Congress website an 1851 land owner map of Orange County, New York. It led me to a discovery that I need to update here. Meanwhile I've combined a photo of my great grandfather, Moses Eckles Nichols (1841-1908), with the map. Highlighted is the Town of New Windsor where his father, Charles Nichols was born in 1817.
This scrapbook page was done for a challenge at Oscraps.com.
Designer credits:
map of Orange County, NY, 1851, from Library of Congress: link
-frame & mask: 52 Inspirations No. 33, Framed Clipping Masks 01 by Snickerdoodle Designs
-postcard: 52 Inspirations No. 32, Decorated postcards by After Midnight Design
-brushes: 52 Inspirations No. 31, Summer No. 1 by Anna Aspnes
-transfers: 52 Inspirations No. 29, French market transfers by Vicki Robinson
-dots: 52 Inspirations No. 25, Gesso'd Marks by Viva Artistry
-transfer, brushes: ArtPlay Palette Milieu by Anna Aspnes
-snap, word strip: ArtPlay Palette Archive by Anna Aspnes
-word art: Milieu WordART Mix No. 1 by Anna Aspnes

font on the postcard: Amapola

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

More on David Wright, New Windsor, NY

More David Wright Family of New Windsor, New York
Jean M. Hoffman, CG

The father of Mary, second wife of Moses Nichols of New Windsor, Orange County, New York, could be the David Wright of whom I've written. [1] Looking for evidence of a connection requires examining more of the records from David Wright and his associates.

Two divergent accounts emerge from descendants of different alleged sons.
  1. Three DAR applications claim patriot ancestor David Wright of New Windsor who served in the Second Ulster Regiment. Their descent is through a son Benjamin who allegedly died in 1820 and his wife Jane Gregg. The applications show David died in 1833 in New Windsor. Benjamin was born about 1774, his mother being David's wife #2, Margaret Woodhull. The record copy of the last application refers to family records, but there appear to be no supporting documents filed with any of the applications. [2]
  1. Descendants of a son John wrote up research results. They are reflected in a 1987 compilation. [3] The compiler has provided me with a copy of the 14-page typescript Francis Wright and Maude E. (White) Cleghorn produced. They indicate David Wright of New Windsor was from Hempstead, then Queens County, on Long Island. Census records for David in New Windsor in 1800, 1810, and 1830 were not located somehow, just 1790 and 1820. One conclusion was that David moved after 1823 to live with a son, Nathaniel, in Warwick, another town in Orange County. Conversely, on another page is the suggestion that Nathaniel returned to New Windsor to care for his elderly parent. The latter could be correct, but David Wright, age 80 through 89, has a household of himself and a female not quite as old, age sixty through sixty-nine, and no others in 1830. [4]
An important document referenced in #2 above is a deed from David Wright, carpenter, and his wife Mary of New Windsor in 1783 selling land in Hempstead to Nathaniel and Samuel Wright, yeomen, of Hempstead. One of the witnesses was a Benjamin Wright. Recorded in Queens County on 13 May 1799, the deed was dated 24 June 1783. Three parcels of land were included and sold for £760. Recorded the same day, immediately prior to David and Mary's deed was one dated 5 May 1784 in which Samuel Wright, now noted as being in South Hempstead after the town was divided, sold his interest in those same three parcels to Nathaniel Wright for £380.[5] The 1785 will of this Nathaniel Wright refers to a brother David Wright. [6] It is likely that Samuel was another brother.

Missing in any of this research had been records of purchases of land in New Windsor or distribution of it following David's death. Because New Windsor was transferred to Orange County from Ulster County in 1798, I checked deeds in Ulster County. Two pertinent deeds were recorded there.

In 1774 Benjamin Wright, a house carpenter of Hempstead, Long Island, purchased two parcels in New Windsor from Reuben Weed and his wife Martha. The deed was recorded at the request of Mr. Benjamin Wright in 1787. [7]
In 1791, seventeen years later, David Wright and his wife Mary sold to John Wright, all of New Windsor, one of the parcels and part of the other purchased in 1774 by Benjamin Wright. The deed provides no insight on David's acquisition of title to the land. [8] A common reason for an unrecorded transfer is inheritance. Could David be a son of Benjamin? If so, what relation is John Wright?

Records in Hempstead, especially the eight-volume published town records, show several generations of Wrights in that location. [9] More research here might be worthwhile. I have created a timeline for all Wright surname events I've found connected to New Windsor. One for Hempstead may be needed as well. To correlate individuals I also created a name list for every Wright connected to New Windsor.

Still, this sheds no new light on the disposition of David's land after his death. Orange County deed indexes need to be followed further into the 1800s in hopes of finding a link to his heirs. I'd like to find more tax records, land ownership maps and more local history.

References:

  1. Jean M. Hoffman, Wright blog posts on Bluegrass and Buckeye Roots: “Finding Mr. Wright?” (http://bluegrassandbuckeyeroots.blogspot.com/2011/05/finding-mr-wright.html : 20 May 2011); “Mystery Monday: Still No Mr. Wright (http://bluegrassandbuckeyeroots.blogspot.com/2011/06/mystery-monday-still-no-mr-wright.html : 20 June 2011); and “David Wright may be Mary's 'Mr. Wright'” (http://bluegrassandbuckeyeroots.blogspot.com/2012/07/david-wright-may-be-marys-mr-right.html : 30 July 2012).
  2. Membership application, Mirbell Shirey Pairan, National no. 226286, on David Wright (1745-1883, New York), approved 1926 or after; National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, Office of the Registrar General, Washington, DC; digital images, Daughters of the American Revolution (http://www.dar.org/national-society/genealogy : purchased 28 August 2012).
  3. Douglas Wright Cruger, A Genealogical Dictionary of Wright Families in the Lower Hudson Valley to 1800 (Bowie, Md: Heritage Press, 1987), 25.
  4. Francis Wright and Maude E. White Cleghorn, “Wrights of Long Island,” 14-page typescript of now unknown origin, photocopy provided to the author by Douglas W. Cruger, 2015; citing a deed from David Wright and wife Mary to Nathaniel and Samuel Wright (1783, recorded 1799) presumably in Queens County, NY. Regarding U.S. census records, the 1800 and 1810 are cited in my blog posts (see #1 above) although the 1800 is in error as David and John Wright were enumerated in New Windsor but mis-indexed as Newburgh which ends in the top half of their page. Also, 1830 U.S. census, Orange County, New York, New Windsor, p. 103, line 14 for William Wright and line 18 for David Wright; digital images, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com : accessed 21 May 2010); citing NARA M19, roll 113; imaged from FHL microfilm 0,017,173.
  5. Deeds Liber G: 300-304, deed David Wright and wife Mary to Nathaniel Wright and Samuel Wright (1783, recorded 1799); and 295-99, deed Samuel Wright to Nathaniel Wright (1784, recorded 1799); Queens County Register's Office, NY; FHL microfilm 1,414,480.
  6. Will Record 38: 172-73, Will of Nathaniel Wright (1785); New York County Surrogate's Office, New York, NY, apparently later copy of original Queens County record; digital images, “New York Probate Records, 1629-1971,” FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 5 November 2015); imaged from FHL microfilm 866,989.
  7. Deed Record vol. 9 – II: 509-14, deed Reuben Weed and wife Martha to Benjamin Wright (1774, recorded 1787); Ulster County Clerk's Office, Kingston, NY; digital images, “New York Land Records, 1630-1975,” FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 3 November 2015); imaged from FHL microfilm 944,744. After 1798 land in the Town of New Windsor is in Orange County, New York.
  8. Deed Record vol. 11 – LL: 480-82, deed David Wright and wife Mary to John Wright (1791, recorded 1794); Ulster County Clerk's Office, Kingston, NY; digital images, “New York Land Records, 1630-1975,” FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 3 November 2015); imaged from FHL microfilm 944,749.
  9. Benjamin D. Hicks, editor, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead, Long island, New York [1654-1880], Volumes 1-8 (Jamaica, NY, Long Island Farmer Print, 1896-1904). Also digital images at Internet Archive.


Sunday, November 29, 2015

Census Sunday: 1800 half page "missing" from New Windsor, New York

Jean M. Hoffman, CG

The town of New Windsor in Orange County, New York, was home to my ancestor Moses Nichols from 1798. His brother Samuel Nichols also lived there as did neighbors David Wright and John Wright. The four of them and other neighbors were enumerated on the bottom half of a census page the top of which contains the last names in the town of Newburgh.

Indexes at all five of the online sites* I tried show these men as being in Newburgh. The Ancestry.com browse function does not return the page for New Windsor. I did enter alternate residence data for those four men at Ancestry.com, but they might still appear "missing" to other researchers. Here's the page:
1800 U.S. census, Orange County, New York, New Windsor [mis-indexed as Newburgh], p. 284, line 11286 for John Wright and 11287 for David Wright, line 11296 for Samuel Nichols and line 11297 for Moses Nichols; digital images, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com : accessed 17 August 2009); citing NARA M32, roll 21.

*Sites consulted: Ancestry.com, FamilySearch, MyHeritage, NEHGS American Ancestors, and HeritageQuest (but HQ is now just Ancestry index and images.)

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

More Wright Family of New Windsor, New York

Jean M. Hoffman, CG

The father of Mary, second wife of Moses Nichols of New Windsor, Orange County, New York, could be the David Wright of whom I've written. [1] Looking for evidence of a connection requires examining more of the records from David Wright and his associates.

Two accounts emerge from descendants of different alleged sons.

  1. Three related DAR applications claim patriot ancestor David Wright of New Windsor who served in the Second Ulster Regiment. Their descent is through a son Benjamin who allegedly died in 1820 and his wife Jane Gregg. The applications state that David died in 1833 in New Windsor. Benjamin was born about 1774, his mother wife #2, Margaret Woodhull. The record copy of the last application refers to family records, but there appear to be no supporting documents filed with it. [2]
  2. Descendants of a son John wrote up research results. They are reflected in a 1987 compilation. [3] The compiler has provided me with a copy of the 14-page typescript Francis Wright and Maude E. (White) Cleghorn produced. They indicate David Wright of New Windsor was from Hempstead, then Queens County, on Long Island. Census records for David in New Windsor in 1800, 1810, and 1830 were not located somehow, just 1790 and 1820. One conclusion was that David moved after 1823 to live with a son, Nathaniel, in Warwick, another town in Orange County. Conversely, on another page is the suggestion that Nathaniel returned to New Windsor to care for his elderly parent. The latter could be correct, but David Wright, age 80 through 89, has a household of himself and a female not quite as old, age sixty through sixty-nine, and no others in 1830. [4]

An important document referenced in #2 above is a deed from David Wright, carpenter, and his wife Mary of New Windsor in 1783 selling land in Hempstead to Nathaniel and Samuel Wright of Hempstead. One of the witnesses was a Benjamin Wright. The deed was recorded in 1799. I need to find a copy of this deed! The 1785 will of this Nathaniel Wright refers to a brother David Wright. [5]

Missing in any of this research or my own had been records of purchases of land in New Windsor or distribution of it following David's death. Because New Windsor was transferred to Orange County from Ulster County in 1798, I checked deeds in Ulster County. Two pertinent deeds were recorded there.

In 1774 Benjamin Wright, a house carpenter of Hempstead, Long Island, purchased two parcels in New Windsor from Reuben Weed and his wife Martha. The deed was recorded at the request of Mr. Benjamin Wright in 1787. [6]

In 1791, seventeen years later, David Wright and his wife Mary sold to John Wright, all of New Windsor, one of the parcels and part of the other purchased in 1774 by Benjamin Wright. The deed provides no insight on David's acquisition of title to the land. [7] A common reason for an unrecorded transfer is inheritance. Could David be a son of Benjamin? If so, what relation is John Wright?

Records in Hempstead, especially the eight-volume published town records, show several generations of Wrights in that location. [8] More research here might be worthwhile and David Wright's 1783 deed is needed. I have created a timeline for all Wright surname events I've found connected to New Windsor. One for Hempstead may be needed as well.

Still, this sheds no new light on the disposition of David's land after his death. Orange County deed indexes need to be followed further into the 1800s in hopes of finding a link to his heirs.

References:

  1. Jean M. Hoffman, Wright blog posts on Bluegrass and Buckeye Roots: “Finding Mr. Wright?” (http://bluegrassandbuckeyeroots.blogspot.com/2011/05/finding-mr-wright.html : 20 May 2011); “Mystery Monday: Still No Mr. Wright (http://bluegrassandbuckeyeroots.blogspot.com/2011/06/mystery-monday-still-no-mr-wright.html : 20 June 2011); and “David Wright may be Mary's 'Mr. Wright'” (http://bluegrassandbuckeyeroots.blogspot.com/2012/07/david-wright-may-be-marys-mr-right.html : 30 July 2012).
  2. Membership application, Mirbell Shirey Pairan, National no. 226286, on David Wright (1745-1883, New York), approved 1926 or after; National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, Office of the Registrar General, Washington, DC; digital images, Daughters of the American Revolution (http://www.dar.org/national-society/genealogy : purchased 28 August 2012).
  3. Douglas Wright Cruger, A Genealogical Dictionary of Wright Families in the Lower Hudson Valley to 1800 (Bowie, Md: Heritage Press, 1987), 25.
  4. Francis Wright and Maude E. White Cleghorn, “Wrights of Long Island,” 14-page typescript of now unknown origin, photocopy provided to the author by Douglas W. Cruger, 2015; citing a deed from David Wright and wife Mary to Nathaniel and Samuel Wright (1783, recorded 1799) presumably in Queens County, NY. Regarding U.S. census records, the 1800 and 1810 are cited in my blog posts (see #1 above) although the 1800 is in error as David and John Wright were enumerated in New Windsor but mis-indexed as Newburgh which ends in the top half of their page. Also, 1830 U.S. census, Orange County, New York, New Windsor, p. 103, line 14 for William Wright and line 18 for David Wright; digital images, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com : accessed 21 May 2010); citing NARA M19, roll 113; imaged from FHL microfilm 0,017,173.
  5. Will Record 38: 172-73, Will of Nathaniel Wright (1785); New York County Surrogate's Office, New York, NY, apparently later copy of original Queens County record; digital images, “New York Probate Records, 1629-1971,” FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 5 November 2015); imaged from FHL microfilm 866,989.
  6. Deed Record vol. 9 – II: 509-14, deed Reuben Weed and wife Martha to Benjamin Wright (1774, recorded 1787); Ulster County Clerk's Office, Kingston, NY; digital images, “New York Land Records, 1630-1975,” FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 3 November 2015); imaged from FHL microfilm 944,744. After 1798 land in the Town of New Windsor is in Orange County, New York.
  7. Deed Record vol. 11 – LL: 480-82, deed David Wright and wife Mary to John Wright (1791, recorded 1794); Ulster County Clerk's Office, Kingston, NY; digital images, “New York Land Records, 1630-1975,” FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 3 November 2015); imaged from FHL microfilm 944,749.
  8. Benjamin D. Hicks, editor, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead, Long island, New York [1654-1880], Volumes 1-8 (Jamaica, NY, Long Island Farmer Print, 1896-1904). Also digital images at Internet Archive.


Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Moses Eckles Nichols: Naming Patterns To the Rescue

Jean M. Hoffman, CGSM

Charles Nichols, born in 1817, arrived in Georgetown, Scott County, Kentucky, as a young adult and soon married a daughter of the local wagon maker, Charles Eckles.1 Charles Nichols and Nancy Boyd Eckles were married by H. J. Perry on 12 March 1840.2 They probably were young adults in the 1840 household of her father.3

By 1850 Charles Nichols ran a blacksmith shop and was a Ruling Elder of the Georgetown Presbyterian Church with his father-in-law.4 The only information on his origins was a birthplace of New York in the 1850 and 1860 U.S. censuses.5 Nichols is a common surname and many lived in New York in 1820 when Charles was about three. Finding his birth family seemed a daunting task.

He and Nancy had eight children, six surviving when Charles died 2 November 1862.6 All the children had first and middle names that appear to honor family members. An exception was the youngest child, Daniel Y. Nichols. He was named for their minister, Daniel Young. The oldest son was Moses Eckles Nichols. As his mother’s father was Charles Eckles, his father’s father might be a Moses Nichols. When this finally occurred to me it changed the scope of the problem of the origins of Charles Nichols. Only two New York households in 1820 were headed by men named Moses Nichols. Both lived in New Windsor in Orange County. One had four males under age ten and could include Charles.7

I had not pursued this lead until a fellow club member mentioned an active Yahoo! Group run by the Orange County (New York) Genealogical Society. He also told me of a member who would look up probate records there. I joined the group and contacted Marty Irons, a kind and helpful researcher in New York.

Probate records include the estate of Moses Nichols, the will of his second wife Mary, and guardianship papers for their four orphaned sons, Aaron W., Robert J., Charles, and Moses Higby Nichols. Charles of Kentucky was indeed one of those sons. His guardian was his uncle Samuel Nichols.8 A genealogy focused on Humphrey Nichols of Newark, New Jersey, was published in 1917.9 Humphrey was the grandfather of Moses and Samuel of New Windsor. Charles isn’t named, but his ancestors in the Nichols line are covered. I later found a biography of the second son, Charles Boyd Nichols, in a Kentucky publication.10 He identified his father’s birthplace as Newburgh, a town near New Windsor in Orange County.

There is one problem still: Charles’s mother Mary. There is an unsourced online family tree that claims her maiden name is Mary Ann Wright, born 29 January 1780 in Orange County, New York.11 Her oldest son’s middle initial is W., lending some support to the claim. I’m still working on this puzzle. It is amazing that my friend and I, here in Ohio, each have a brickwall involving members of one church in Little Britain, a portion of the Town of New Windsor, New York.

Endnotes

1. Georgetown Cemetery (Georgetown, Scott County, Kentucky), Nichols marker, photograph by author, 27 August 2008 (years of birth and death, name of wife and a daughter).
2. Marriage Register 1837–1863: item 218 (unpaginated), Scott County Clerk's Office, Georgetown, KY.
3. 1840 U.S. census, Scott County, Kentucky, George Town, p. 93 (stamped), line 12, Charles Eckles household; NARA microfilm M704, roll 123.
4. 1850 U.S. Census, Scott County, Kentucky, population schedule, District No. 2, p. 448, dwelling/family 33, Charles Nichols household; NARA microfilm M432, roll 218. Also William Henry Perrin, History of Bourbon, Scott, Harrison and Nicholas Counties, Kentucky (1882; reprint Easley, S.C.: Southern Historical Press, 1979), 197.
5. 1860 U.S. Census, Scott County, Kentucky, pop. sch., District No. 2, Georgetown, post office Georgetown, page 788, dwelling 48, family 49, Chas. Nichols household; NARA microfilm M653, roll 394.
6. Nichols/Eckles family members’ marriages, births, and deaths; typescript apparently of records in a family Bible but without annotation. It was in the possession of, undoubtedly transcribed by, Elizabeth (McClintock) Nickell. Since her death owned by her grandson (address available).
7. 1820 U.S. census, Orange County, New York, pop. sch., Town of New Windsor, p. 479 (handwritten), p. 194 (stamped), line 18, Moses Nichols; digital image, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com: accessed 17 August 2009); citing NARA microfilm M33, roll 64.
8. Orange County, New York, Letters of Administration, E: 212, Moses Nichols entry, (1822), and Wills, H: 302-04, Mary Nichols will, (1827), and Letters of Guardianship, B: 197, Charles Nichols entry, (1831), Surrogate Court Clerk's Office, Goshen.
9. Frederic C. Torrey The Ancestors and Descendants of Humphrey Nichols of Newark, New Jersey, and of his Brothers and Sisters (Lakehurst, NJ: author, 1917), Google Books digital images (http://www.google.com : accessed 18 August 2009).
10. E. Polk Johnson A History of Kentucky and Kentuckians: The Leaders and Representative Men in Commerce, Industry and Modern Activities, Vol. 3 (Chicago - New York: The Lewis Publishing Company, 1912), Google Books digital images (http://www.google.com : accessed 16 August 2009), 1593.
11. “Soher Iversen Gammon Beal Carson Spalding Bevan,” online family tree, RootsWeb's WorldConnect Project (http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com : accessed 25 August 2009.)



originally published as a supplement to the December 2012 Bits & Bytes, newsletter of CAGG-CA, Volume 19.04-2.

Monday, July 30, 2012

David Wright may be Mary’s Mr. “Right”


I’ve just returned from an exciting, demanding, and stimulating week in the Tom Jones “Advanced Research Methods” course at GRIP (Genealogical Research Institute of Pittsburgh.) With fresh ideas, I looked again for the father of Mary, second wife of Moses Nichols of New Windsor, New York. I wrote about narrowing my search to a very likely David Wright, also of New Windsor and failing to find clues in deeds or probate.

Names other than Wright are associated with Moses and Mary Nichols. Most prominent is Daniel Moores, an administrator, executor and guardian.[1] Samuel B. Moores is a co-executor.[2] Online family trees show Daniel and Samuel B. as sons of James and Sarah (Brewster) Moores. No one matching Mary appears. Also, Mary’s youngest son, Moses Higby Nichols, married one of Daniel’s daughters, Susannah Moores.[3] No 1790 head of household has the name Moores when Mary might be about ten.[4] That is not likely Mary’s maiden name.

Robert Fulton is another co-executor.[5] He is not mentioned in other documents. Two Fulton families lived in New Windsor in 1790, however, so it is still a possibility.

Reviewing the Orange County, New York, estate index for the surname Wright shows the earliest date in 1819. A local volunteer sent digital images of two index pages but I don’t know if there are entries on the previous page. New Windsor was part of Ulster County before it was included in Orange County. The FamilySearch Wiki was strongly recommended last week, so I went to it for information. The date wasn’t in the Orange County entry, so I tried New Windsor. In New York the town is sometimes of primary importance. Even there I didn’t find the date. I did find a link to a database at Ancestry.com.

Digging for Nichols data I searched a book at the WRHS library under the title New Windsor Presbyterian Church Record of Marriages, Orange County, New York. The catalog notes it contains marriages, 1774-1827 and baptisms, 1774-1796. Actually there is one marriage in 1827, but all other records are through 1796, before the Nichols families arrived. I hadn’t checked it since I began searching for Mary’s birth family. Ancestry.com now has digital images of its thirty-three pages with an index. The only background is the database title: “New Windsor Presbyterian Church record.” The Family History Library catalog reveals that it is a typescript at the New York State Library in Albany. The book itself says nothing about the origin of the records.

Mary and Moses Nichols married about 1812 and she was born in New York. It is likely she was a resident of New Windsor. The only woman in the household of Moses Nichols in the 1820 census was age twenty-six and under forty-five, meaning she was born 1794 or earlier.[6] These church records could record her baptism. A search for surname Wright had one match, the Feb. 1779 baptism of Benjamin, son of Benjamin Wright. The preceding record was for a Jan. 1779 baptism of a child of John Right. Another spelling might be what I need, but the 1780 records on the next page were easy to access. That is the year an online family tree claims Mary was born.[7] Following a record for 28 May 1780 is a record for the same day for Mary, daughter of David Right.[8] The family tree claims she was born in January, but this could still be a baptism four months later. At least it is now clear that the David Wright of New Windsor did have a daughter Mary of an age to be the wife of Moses Nichols. That is a big step forward!

The index to this typescript might be the output of OCR. A search for the name “Right” only returns the one in 1779, not the one in 1780. A search for given name “Mary” also does NOT find the 1780 record. A page-by-page review is clearly needed.



[1] Orange County, New York, Letters of Administration E: 212, Moses Nichols entry, (1822), Surrogate Court Clerk's Office, Goshen (Daniel Moores a co-administrator). Also, Orange County, New York, Wills H: 302-04, Mary Nichols will, (1827), Surrogate Court Clerk's Office, Goshen (Daniel a co-executor). And, Orange County, New York, Letters of Guardianship B: 99, Aaron W. Nichols entry, (1829), Surrogate Court Clerk's Office, Goshen (Daniel guardian of the oldest son of Moses and Mary Nichols.)
[2] Orange Co., N.Y., Wills, H: 302-04 (Samuel B. Moores another co-executor of will of Mary Nichols.)
[3] Linda Moores, “MOORES and more . . .” Ancestry World Tree Project, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 28 July 29, 2012).
[4] 1790 U.S. census, search at Ancestry.com in New York, town of New Windsor for all names.
[5] Orange Co., N.Y., Wills H: 302-04.
[6] 1820 U.S. census, Orange County, New York, population schedule, Town of New Windsor, p. 479 (penned), p. 194 (stamped), line 18, Moses Nichols; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 17 August 2009); citing NARA microfilm M33, roll 64.
[7] “Soher Iversen Gammon Beal Carson Spalding Bevan,” WorldConnect Project, RootsWeb (http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com : accessed 25 August 2009).
[8] “New Windsor Presbyterian Church record,” digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 29 July 2012), 24.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Mystery Monday: Still No Mr. Wright

If a Mr. Wright is the father of Mary, wife of Moses Nichols of New Windsor, Orange County, New York, he has yet to step up and be recognized. I wrote about my search for her father recently in Finding Mr. Wright. There I detailed my research to date ending with the possibility that her father could be David Wright of New Windsor listed as a patriot by the DAR. According to the online index to DAR ancestors, David Wright died in New Windsor in 1833. He was one of four David Wrights heading households in Orange County, New York, in the 1830 U.S. census, but no probate records have been located for him in that county. The deed indexes for the county yielded nothing overly promising, but there were a few possibilities.

Two deeds from the 1830s were different. One listed David Wright as a grantor with no wife named (51: 566.) It was the David Wright of Newburgh, a different person. John Wright as executor was grantor of another deed, but he was executor for James McLaughlin late of Wallkill (52: 182.)

The four sons of Moses and Mary Nichols were minors when their parents died. After they reached twenty-one there were at least two deeds each as a grantor. The two deeds for third son, Charles, were both for land previously owned by Moses Nichols (64: 329; 66: 219.) The hope they would be selling land inherited from their maternal grandfather was not fulfilled. Charles Nichols is of New Windsor in his deeds, apparently predating his move with brother Robert J. Nichols to Georgetown, Kentucky.

The transcription of the cemetery where Moses Nichols and his first wife Jane were buried does not include his second wife or David Wright. (Inscriptions on Gravestones in New Windsor Cemetery) New Windsor Town records, transcribed online, include a reference to the demise of Moses Nichols, but have no such information on David Wright. I do not know of a marriage record for Moses and Mary Nichols. While he served in the American Revolution, there is apparently no pension record.

I see no obvious resource at present for information on David Wright. Could he have moved between the 1830 census and his death? Did he not own property? His son Benjamin predeceased him according to the DAR index, but what about his son John? Were there other children? Newspapers and court records could be the next best places to look.