Genealogy Data Page 311 (Notes Pages)

For privacy reasons, Date of Birth and Date of Marriage for persons believed to still be living are not shown.

Allen, Nehemiah (b. 19 SEP 1697, d. ?)

Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Mary (b. 22 OCT 1699, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Daniel (b. 1 NOV 1701, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Hester (b. 26 FEB 1703/04, d. 27 NOV 1706)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book
Death: 27 NOV 1706 Deerfield, MA

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Allen, Lydia (b. 15 MAY 1706, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Hester (b. AFT NOV 1706, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Joseph (b. 14 OCT 1708, d. 1755)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book
Death: 1755

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Allen, Ebenezer (b. 26 APR 1711, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Baker, Mary (b. 1708, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Ethan General (b. 10 JAN 1736/37, d. 12 FEB 1789)
Note: Ethan Allen was born in Litchfield, Connecticut on January 10, 1738. His parents, Joseph and Mary Baker Allen were very religious. He had eight brothers and two sisters. Because of his love of learning, his father sent him to Yale.

Ethan had five children with his first wife Mary Brownson: Loraine, born in 1763, who died in 1783 of consumption; Joseph, born in 1765, who died of smallpox in 1777; Lucy Caroline, born in 1768, who died in 1842; Mary Ann, born in 1772, who died in 1790, the year after her father; and Pamela, who was born in 1779, and who died at the age of thirty.

Ethan's marriage to Mary, who was several years older than he, does not seem to have been particularly happy. Mary was an intrepid frontier wife, though, and according to tradition, illiterate, deeply religious, and shrewish. There is little historic evidence of these qualities, and much more for the fact that Ethan was not an easy man; he was impulsive, a heavy drinker, and frequently absent from home.

Mary died of consumption in 1783, a few months before her eldest daughter, in Sunderland, Vermont.

Ethan met his second wife, Fanny, in 1784, fell in love and married her within a few months. They had three children: Fanny Margaret, born in 1784, who died in 1819; Hannibal, born 18 months later and died in 1813; and Ethan, born in 1787, who died in 1855.

In 1757 he joined the military to fight in the French and Indian War. He spent most of his time defending Fort William Henry against the French. When the war was over, Ethan Allen supported himself by making and selling kettles. He married Mary Brownson and they moved to the New Hampshire Grants in 1769.

The British gave the area of what is today Vermont to both New Hampshire and New York, which meant both colonies were selling the same land. Sometimes two people bought the same piece of land - one person from New Hampshire and one person from New York. In 1770, the New York Supreme Court decided that none of the land grants from New Hampshire were legal. This made a lot of settlers mad, because they would have to buy back the land they had already paid for. New Hampshire's governor had granted over 100 townships.

This is when the vigilante group called the Green Mountain Boys was formed. Ethan Allen was appointed Colonel Commandant. He was declared an outlaw and the New York governor put a price on his head.

Ethan Allen was one of the Patriots who supported independence from Britain even though it might mean war. He took his Green Mountain Boys with him to Fort Ticonderoga. On May 10, 1775, Allen and Colonel Benedict Arnold led a force of 83 men and attacked Fort Ticonderoga. They didn't have much trouble from the sleeping British and and captured the fort and all the weapons there. The cannons and mortars were sent to Boston Harbor and were the one of the causes that made the British decide to leave Boston.

He then went to Canada without the Green Mountain Boys who had decided that Seth Warner should lead them. In Canada he fought with Montgomery's army. On September 25, 1775 when attacking Montreal, Ethan Allen was captured. They knew he was the one who led the successful attack on Fort Ticonderoga. They put him in chains and sent him to England. They decided not to hang him because the British didn't want to stir up any more trouble in the Colonies. He was sent back to New York City and released on parole. His brother supported him until he was sent back to prison for parole violation.

In May 1778, he was exchanged for a British prisoner and sent to Valley Forge as a guest of George Washington. On May 14, 1778 he became a Colonel in the Continental Army.

After the war, Ethan Allen worked hard to make Vermont a state. He died February 12, 1789, just two years before Vermont became the 14th state of the new Union. A statue of Ethan Allen representing Vermont stands today in in Sanctuary Hall in the Capitol in Washington D.C.
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Internet
Data:
Text: http://www.ethanallenhomestead.org/history/ethans_children.htm
Death: 12 FEB 1789

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Allen, Heman Capt. (b. 15 OCT 1740, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Lydia (b. 6 APR 1742, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Heber Major (b. 4 OCT 1743, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Levi (b. 16 JAN 1744/45, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Lucy (b. 2 APR 1747, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Zimri (b. 10 DEC 1748, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Allen, Ira Major Gen. (b. 21 APR 1751, d. ?)
Note: Ira Allen was the founder of the University of Vermont.
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book

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Greenway, Mary (b. 1605, d. 27 SEP 1682)
Source: (Name)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book
Baptism: 5 NOV 1605
Death: 27 SEP 1682

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Chichester, Richard (b. 23 FEB 1423/24, d. 25 DEC 1496)
Note: Richard Chichester was the Sheriff of Devon in 1469 and 1475.
Source: (Name)
Title: Ancestral Roots
Author: F. L. Weis
Media: Book
Source: (Death)
Title: Mary & John Clearinghouse
Media: Book
Page: Vol. 19
Death: 25 DEC 1496 Pilton, Devon, England

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Coit, John (b. , d. BEF 3 OCT 1667)
Source: (Name)
Title: Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Author: Savage
Media: Book
Source: (Death)
Title: History of Gloucester, Mass.
Author: J. J. Babson
Media: Book
Death: BEF 3 OCT 1667

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