Varney, Josiah (b. 16 APR 1688, d. 27 JAN 1777)
Death: 27 JAN 1777 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Death: 25 SEP 1714 Middletown, CT
Death: 16 NOV 1743 Middletown, CT
Source: (Birth)
Title: Census
Media: CensusPage: 1920-NY, Allegany, Almond pg 8
Death: 1957 Almond, Allegany, NY
Source: (Name)
Title: Soc. Sec. Death Index
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Census
Media: CensusPage: 1920-NY, Allegany, Almond
Death: OCT 1982 Almond, Allegany, NY
Source: (Name)
Title: Census
Media: CensusPage: 1920-NY, Allegany, Almond
Death: 27 NOV 1991 Almond, Allegany, NY
Source: (Name)
Title: Census
Media: CensusPage: 1920-NY, Allegany, Almond
Death: 24 OCT 1944 POW, died in Manilla, Phillipines
Burial: Woodlawn Cemetery, Almond, Allegany, NY
Death: DEC 1968 Milwaukee, WI
Death: AFT 1880 Schuylerville, Saratoga, NY
Note: It's not known if he was a latecomer after the Great Migration; or, if he is possibly a "lost son" of another immigrant.
Residences: Although described in various records as from Watertown, Cambridge, and Newton, it is possible he lived in one place and these differing descriptions reflect changes in boundaries of the towns.
Death: BET 22 MAR 1692/93 AND 26 JUN 1693 Cambridge [Newton], MA
Death: 1693
Death: 1724
Death: 1709
Death: 1767
Note: Moses Robinson, governor of Vermont. He attended Dartmouth college, and removed with his father to Bennington, Vt., in 1761, where he served as town clerk, 1762-71. He was commissioned colonel of militia in 1777, and commanded his regiment at the defeat of Fort Ticonderoga, July 5, 1777; was a member of the council of safety, and as such sent by Vermont to represent the claims of the people before the Continental congress; a member of the governor's council, 1777-85, and chief justice of Vermont, 1778-84 and 1785-89. He was governor of Vermont, 1789-90; was elected by the legislature of Vermont with Stephen R. Bradley, the first U.S. senators, and drew the long term, 1791-97, but resigned in October, 1796, Isaac Tichenor completing his term. While in the senate he opposed the Jay treaty. In 1802 he was a member of the general assembly.
He was married, first, July 25, 1762, to Mary, daughter of Stephen Fay, who died in 1801; and secondly, to Susannah, widow of Maj. Artemas Howe of New Brunswick, and daughter of Gen. Jonathan Wander of Hardwick, Mass.
The honorary degree of A.M. was conferred upon him by Yale in 1789, and by Dartmouth in 1790. He died in Bennington, Vt., May 26, 1813.
The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans: Volume IX page 136
Death: 1813
Note: Senator Jonathan Robinson, was great2–grandson of William and Elizabeth Robinson, a kinsman of the Rev. John Robinson of Leyden and one of the early Cambridge colonists, died in 1693. Samuel the first, a soldier in the French war and in the American Revolution, in which his sons also participated, founded the settlement at Bennington, Vt., in 1761.
Jonathan Robinson was admitted to the bar in 1796, and practised in Bennington, Vt., where he was married to Mary, daughter of John Fassett.
He was town clerk, 1795–1801; a representative in the state legislature, 1789–1802; judge of the probate court of Vermont, 1795–98, 1800–01 and 1815–19; chief justice of the supreme court of Vermont, 1801–07, and was elected to the U.S. senate in 1807 to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Israel Smith (q.v.), completing the term, March 3, 1809, and was re-elected in 1809 for the full term expiring March 3, 1815. While in the senate he was a trusted adviser of President Madison. He was judge of probate four years, and a representative in the state legislature in 1818. The honorary degree of A.B. was conferred on him by Dartmouth in 1790, and that of A.M. by the same institution, 1803.
Source: The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans: Volume IX
Death: 3 NOV 1819 Bennington, VT
Death: 1801
Death: 1938 Oxford, Marquette, WI
Note: The pioneer tavern was kept by Gad Seward, in 1818, at Fairmount Springs. It was a favorite resort for all inclined to mirth, as Gad was always ready with a side-splitting story, and for a mug of hot "flip" he could not be beaten. His larders always supplied with the best game and fish of the season, and the traveler, wearied with stage coaching on the Tioga turnpike, was sure to leave Gad's hostelry refreshes as with new wine.
[History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties]
Source: (Name)
Title: Vital Records of Granville, Massachusetts To The Year 1850
Author: NEHGS
Media: Book
Death: 18 SEP 1855 Fairmount Twp, Luzerne, PA
Source: (Name)
Title: Vital Records of Granville, Massachusetts To The Year 1850
Author: NEHGS
Media: Book
Death: 25 JUL 1804 Huntington, Luzerne, PA
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