Martha Marsh

F, d. before 6 January 1789
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Last Edited9 Oct 2011
Birth*Martha Marsh was born. 
Marriage*She married Jonathan Wallingford, son of Nicholas Wallingford and Sarah Elithorpe, on 14 January 1741/42 in Bradford, Essex County, MassachusettsG.1 
Death*Martha died before 6 January 1789, when her estate was probated, probably in Haverhill, Essex County, MassachusettsG.2 
Shackford, p.28, states that she died 10 February 1799 aged 82. This is probably an error for Martha, wife of James, who died in Bradford 6 February 1799 aged 82. 

Children of Martha Marsh and Jonathan Wallingford

Citations

  1. Vital Records of Bradford, Massachusetts to the end of the year 1849. (Topsfield, MA: Topsfield Historical Society, 1907), p.286 (from town records).
  2. Essex County, Massachusetts, Probate, File 28813.

David Wallingford

M, b. 25 September 1744, d. 12 March 1791
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherJonathan Wallingford b. 8 May 1715, d. 10 Dec 1748
MotherMartha Marsh d. b 6 Jan 1789
Last Edited26 Nov 2024
Birth*David Wallingford was born on 25 September 1744 in Bradford, Essex County, MassachusettsG.1,2 
Marriage*He married Elizabeth Leeman, daughter of Abraham Leeman and Elizabeth Hastings, 6 or 25 March 1767 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG. Their marriage record states that they were both "of Monson" (the former name for the area around Milford/Hollis), but a separate descriptive paragraph on the two (p.215) states that Elizabeth was of "Hollis". The same paragraph also states that they were married March 25th, contradicting itself in the marriage and family records sections. The History of Milford, p.970, also uses this March 25th date.3 
Death*David died on 12 March 1791 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.4 
His name was often spelled Wallingsford. According to the history of Hollis, N.H. David moved from Bradford to Monson in 1765. A map showing the location of his homestead is available on the web at http://www.milfordnh.com/Monson/monson2.htm and another at http://www.hollis.nh.us/windowsonhollispast/placesToVisit/sites/images/DickermansMonsonMap.jpg. His name was first on the Hollis/Milford tax lists in 1770.5 (Monson is a town that no longer exists, including parts of both Massachusetts and New Hampshire, much of which is now Milford, N.H.)

On 13 May 1765 David Wallenford of Monson, labourer, sued James Ford of Nottingham West, yeoman, for £40 to collect an overdue note of £2 2p dated at Portsmouth 10 January 1765. The court awarded the £40 to David and attached a hat worth 5s. "David Wallingsford" signed the papers.6

On 25 Feb 1766 David Wallingford of Monson purchased land in Wilton, N.H. from Ebenezer Blodgett.7

On 12 Dec 1768 David Wallingford of Monson sold land in Monson to Moses Hadley of Nottingham West.8 His homestead was situated east of "Philip Woods" in Monson/Hollis.9

On 1 Jan 1775 David was taxed as living on the west side of Hollis. The town of Monson ceased to exist in 1770, much of it joining Hollis, so likely this is the same house. His tax was 6s, 6p, which when compared to others in town put him roughly in what today might be called the "upper middle class" of his community.10

On 6 Jan 1789 David of Hollis, yeoman, gave bond with John Savory, gentleman, of Bradford, Mass. and John Edwards, yeoman, of Haverhill, Mass. to become administrator of the estate of Martha Wallingford of Haverhill, widow, deceased intestate.11 This was presumably his mother.

On 23 May 1782 from Amherst, N.H. David Wallingford signed a petition asking the N.H. House of Representatives to restore the old town of Monson.12 Monson was never restored to existence so the petition was apparently denied.

All of his children except the first David were apparently living at the time of the 1790 census of Hollis, as there were two adult males, four males under 16, and 6 females in the household.13 The family isn't listed in the 1800 census of Hollis under the name Wallingford, presumably because the widow remarried to Nehemiah Barker. However Nehemiah Barker isn't listed in the 1800 census of Hollis, or anywhere else in the existing NH schedules so either missed being enumerated, lived with a relative, or moved out of state. There are no Wallingford marriages in the History of Hollis between 1799 and 1830.

The History of Milford, p.970, gives the names of two of their sons as Daniel rather than David as found in the History of Hollis and other sources. This is repeated in the Wallingford Genealogy by Wallingford and Murrow. Also we know that the second of the two children was named David as an adult. This all needs checking in the original records, but we will assume that they were both named David as the Hollis History states. It also stated that all of their children were born in Milford, while the History of Hollis gives their birth records straight from the Hollis records. This may be due to the fact that from 1746 to 1794 Milford was an unincorporated town and the governing town may have been Hollis. The website maps showing David's homesite mentioned above have his house just over the Milford line in Hollis, so for now we will assume his children were born in Hollis. The family also appears in the 1790 census of Hollis. 

Children of David Wallingford and Elizabeth Leeman

Citations

  1. Vital Records of Bradford, Massachusetts to the end of the year 1849. (Topsfield, MA: Topsfield Historical Society, 1907), p.168 (from town records).
  2. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.215.
  3. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.344.
  4. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.215, 389.
  5. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.148, 215.
  6. New Hampshire Provincial Court, Records of, at NH Archives, File 6722.
  7. Province of New Hampshire, NH Deeds, 79:333.
  8. Province of New Hampshire, NH Deeds, 97:120.
  9. Charles S. Spaulding, An Account of Some of the Early Settlers of West Dunstable, Monson and Hollis, N.H. (Nashua, NH: Telegraph Press, 1915), p.46.
  10. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.138.
  11. Essex County, Massachusetts, Probate, File 28813.
  12. New Hampshire Provincial and State Papers, 9:25.
  13. 1790 U.S. Federal census, New Hampshire, Hillsborough Co., Hollis, on www.ancestry.com, image 0211, roll M637_5.

Elizabeth Leeman

F, b. 24 February 1746, d. 4 August 1822
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherAbraham Leeman
MotherElizabeth Hastings d. 1792
Last Edited7 Feb 1999
Birth*Elizabeth Leeman was born on 24 February 1746 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1,2 
Marriage*She married David Wallingford, son of Jonathan Wallingford and Martha Marsh, 6 or 25 March 1767 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG. Their marriage record states that they were both "of Monson" (the former name for the area around Milford/Hollis), but a separate descriptive paragraph on the two (p.215) states that Elizabeth was of "Hollis". The same paragraph also states that they were married March 25th, contradicting itself in the marriage and family records sections. The History of Milford, p.970, also uses this March 25th date.3 
Marriage*She married second Nehemiah Barker, son of Ebenezer Barker and Abigail Morse, on 17 March 1799 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.4,5 
Death*Elizabeth died on 4 August 1822.5 

Children of Elizabeth Leeman and David Wallingford

Citations

  1. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.380.
  2. Winifred A. Wright, The Granite Town: Milford, New Hampshire 1901/1978 (Canaan, N.H.: Phoenix Pub., 1979), p.970.
  3. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.344.
  4. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.350.
  5. Charles S. Spaulding, An Account of Some of the Early Settlers of West Dunstable, Monson and Hollis, N.H. (Nashua, NH: Telegraph Press, 1915), p.46.

Jonathan Wallingford

M, b. 10 September 1770, d. March 1863
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherDavid Wallingford b. 25 Sep 1744, d. 12 Mar 1791
MotherElizabeth Leeman b. 24 Feb 1746, d. 4 Aug 1822
Last Edited3 Feb 2005
Marriage*He married Esther Burgess. (S.A.R. application papers of their grandson Henry Joy Wallingford.) 
Birth*Jonathan Wallingford was born on 10 September 1770 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1 
Death*Jonathan died in March 1863 in WisconsinG.2 
They lived for several years in Marshall, Michigan.
     The son David and daughter Mary Ann listed below may not belong here. They are placed here because their ages and residence in Marshall makes them likely candidates for being in this family. Jonathan and Esther may well have other children than those listed below.
     When the 1860 census was taken Jonathan was living in Darien, Wisconsin with his daughter Esther Blair and family.3

 

Children of Jonathan Wallingford and Esther Burgess

Citations

  1. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.389.
  2. Charles S. Spaulding, An Account of Some of the Early Settlers of West Dunstable, Monson and Hollis, N.H. (Nashua, NH: Telegraph Press, 1915), p.46.
  3. 1860 U.S. Federal census, Wisconsin, Walworth Co., Darien, p.95-96.

Sarah Wallingford

F, b. 5 July 1772
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherDavid Wallingford b. 25 Sep 1744, d. 12 Mar 1791
MotherElizabeth Leeman b. 24 Feb 1746, d. 4 Aug 1822
Last Edited12 Jan 2001
Birth*Sarah Wallingford was born on 5 July 1772 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1 

Citations

  1. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.389.

Martha Wallingford

F, b. 26 March 1774, d. 18 February 1834
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherDavid Wallingford b. 25 Sep 1744, d. 12 Mar 1791
MotherElizabeth Leeman b. 24 Feb 1746, d. 4 Aug 1822
Last Edited15 Jan 2001
Birth*Martha Wallingford was born on 26 March 1774 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1 
Marriage*She married John Sawtelle on 19 April 1797 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG. The 1800 census of Milford, N.H. has a John "Sartel" living with one male under ten, and one female under ten. Both parents are apparently under 26 years of age.2,3 
Death*Martha died on 18 February 1834 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG. She was buried in Hollis.45 
They resided in Milford and Hollis, N.H. (Milford History, p.970) The 1800 census of Milford has the family of John "Sartel" with one boy and one girl under 10 years old, and one male and one female adult aged 16 to 25. This accounts neatly for John, Martha and their two youngest children.6 

Children of Martha Wallingford and John Sawtelle

Citations

  1. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.389.
  2. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.350.
  3. Levi W. Leonard, The History of Dublin, N.H. (Boston: John Wilson, 1855), p.912.
  4. Mrs. Charles Carpenter Goss, Colonial Gravestone Inscriptions in the State of New Hampshire (Dover, NH: Historic Activities Committee of the National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the State of New Hampshire, 1942), p.71.
  5. Levi W. Leonard, The History of Dublin, N.H. (Boston: John Wilson, 1855), p.912, 970.
  6. John Brooks Threlfall, Heads of Families at the Second Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1800, New Hampshire (Chicago: Adams Press, 1973), p.101.

David Wallingford

M, b. 26 November 1776, d. 27 September 1777
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherDavid Wallingford b. 25 Sep 1744, d. 12 Mar 1791
MotherElizabeth Leeman b. 24 Feb 1746, d. 4 Aug 1822
Last Edited12 Jan 2001
Birth*David Wallingford was born on 26 November 1776 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1 
Death*David died, on 27 September 1777.2 

Citations

  1. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.389.
  2. Charles S. Spaulding, An Account of Some of the Early Settlers of West Dunstable, Monson and Hollis, N.H. (Nashua, NH: Telegraph Press, 1915), p.46.

David Wallingford

M, b. 12 October 1778, d. 30 September 1836
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherDavid Wallingford b. 25 Sep 1744, d. 12 Mar 1791
MotherElizabeth Leeman b. 24 Feb 1746, d. 4 Aug 1822
Last Edited31 Jan 2001
Birth*David Wallingford was born on 12 October 1778 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1 
Marriage*He married, Abigail Stocker, on 27 February 1798, in Hopkinton, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG. They were married by the an unknown person . They were both of Hopkinton at the time of their marriage..2 
Death*David died on 30 September 1836 in Conneaut, Ashtabula County, OhioG.3 
Abigail was "of Hopkinton", N.H. according to the History of Milford. The record of her birth doesn't appear in the published Hopkinton vital records, but there are several marriages of other Stockers in town around the same time Abigail married David Wallingford so they all likely came from the same family. Other sources have spelled her name as Stock, Stoker, and Stokes.
     The 1800 census of Hopkinton, N.H. has a Samuel, John and Ebenezer "Storker". Samuel and John both had adults over 45 who could be Abigail's father. Given that this David Wallingford doesn't appear as a head of family in the census it could be that he and Abigail were living with her parents, but none of the three families are an exact match. John Storker's family comes the closest, but David was 22 and that family reports a male aged 26-44. It does have a female 16-25 and two young girls, one of whom could be their young daughter Fanny, but it's impossible to tell for sure.4.

     Shackford says David was a clothier who moved to Stanstead, Quebec in 1806, and was a Deacon in the Freewill Baptist Church.5 They may have lived in the town of Cassville, where their son Estes was buried in 1813. One of the reasons for their move perhaps can be deduced from the following notice in the Farmer's Weekly Museum of Walpole, N.H. for 9 August 1803, p.3a: "Mr. David Wallingford's clothier's shop, Hopkinton, N.H., burned by arsonist."6

     The family moved from Quebec to Conneaut, Ohio at some point before David died in 1836. Some letters from and to their son Calvin have survived the years and are now (2002) in the possession of Sue Brown of Delaware Co., NY. One such letter is dated Conneaut 13 August 1837 and reads, in part: "Mother Wallingfords family are all well she lives in her new house. It is only a few rods from ours. Gilbert is at home. Fanny is teaching school here she has a room in one Chambly Estes is learning a trade and Rosanna with us."7


     Abigail Wallingford appears as the head of a household in the 1840 census of Conneaut, Ohio.8 This index doesn't give details as to number of residents and their ages. 

Children of David Wallingford and Abigail Stocker

Citations

  1. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.389.
  2. Pauline Johnson Oesterlin, Hopkinton, New Hampshrie, Vital Records (Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1998), 1:73 (from town records 2:171).
  3. David C. Young and Robert L. Taylor, Death Notices from Freewill Baptist Publications, 1811-1851 (Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1985), p.350 (from the 23 Nov. 1836 issue of "Morning Star").
  4. John Brooks Threlfall, Heads of Families at the Second Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1800, New Hampshire (Chicago: Adams Press, 1973), p.96.
  5. Samuel B. Shackford, Wallingford Family Records (Typescript at New England Historic Genealogical Society in Boston, 1928), p.81.
  6. Scott Lee Chipman, Genealogical Abstracts from Early New Hampshire Newspapers, v.1 (Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 2000), p.146.
  7. Correspondence from Sue Brown of Delaware Co., NY, email dated 21 Jan 2001.
  8. 1840 U.S. Federal census, Ohio, Ashtabula Co., Conneaut, original image on ancestry.com viewed 7 Dec 2002.

Ebenezer Blodgett Wallingford

M, b. 5 October 1780, d. 18 February 1855
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherDavid Wallingford b. 25 Sep 1744, d. 12 Mar 1791
MotherElizabeth Leeman b. 24 Feb 1746, d. 4 Aug 1822
Last Edited22 Jan 2011
Birth*Ebenezer Blodgett Wallingford was born on 5 October 1780 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1 
Marriage*He married Mary Hildreth on 20 October 1803 in Dublin, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.2 
Death*Ebenezer died on 18 February 1855 in Claremont., Sullivan County, New HampshireG.2 
From the History of Marlborough, NH, p.673: "He was a blacksmith, and resided in Dublin [N.H.] until 1812, when he came to Marlborough, and located first on the Walter Capron place, in what is now Roxbury [N.H.]. After a few years' residence there, he removed to the village, and plied his trade in the old shop that formerly stood on 'Library Square'." On p.222 it states that the family moved to Claremont, N.H. in 1827. The History of Dublin states that he moved to town in 1801, moved to Roxbury, NH in 1812, and resided in Claremont, NH when the book was written in 1855.3 Roxbury was a part of Marlborough until 1812.
     He and his wife Mary were listed in the 1850 census of Claremont, N.H., with Ebenezer's occupation given as blacksmith. (Source: A 22 April 2000 posting to the WALLINGFORD-L email list on Rootsweb.com, Census p.180.) 

Children of Ebenezer Blodgett Wallingford and Mary Hildreth

Citations

  1. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.389.
  2. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.673.
  3. Levi W. Leonard, The History of Dublin, N.H. (Boston: John Wilson, 1855), p.410.

Benjamin Wallingford

M, b. 24 January 1782, d. 9 May 1844
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherDavid Wallingford b. 25 Sep 1744, d. 12 Mar 1791
MotherElizabeth Leeman b. 24 Feb 1746, d. 4 Aug 1822
Last Edited31 Aug 2022
Birth*Benjamin Wallingford was born on 24 January 1782 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1 
Marriage*He married Hannah Needham, daughter of Stearns Needham and Hannah Bailey, on 19 November 1807.2 
Death*Benjamin died on 9 May 1844 in Milford, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG. One earlier source states that he died 9 May 1818.32 
According to the History of Milford, N.H. Benjamin was a farmer. He moved to Dublin, N.H. in 1805, then returned to Milford in 1835. The History of Dublin says that he was a blacksmith, and that he moved to town in 1810 and lived on lot 20, range 9.4

They may have had two more children who lived to adulthood. A death notice of their son Rufus in 1875 mentions that he was survived by three siblings. Two of the three siblings mentioned here prececeased him. 

Children of Benjamin Wallingford and Hannah Needham

Citations

  1. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.389.
  2. Winifred A. Wright, The Granite Town: Milford, New Hampshire 1901/1978 (Canaan, N.H.: Phoenix Pub., 1979), p.971.
  3. Charles S. Spaulding, An Account of Some of the Early Settlers of West Dunstable, Monson and Hollis, N.H. (Nashua, NH: Telegraph Press, 1915), p.46.
  4. Levi W. Leonard, The History of Dublin, N.H. (Boston: John Wilson, 1855), p.410.

Deacon Joel Wallingford

M, b. 22 January 1784, d. 19 July 1841
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherDavid Wallingford b. 25 Sep 1744, d. 12 Mar 1791
MotherElizabeth Leeman b. 24 Feb 1746, d. 4 Aug 1822
Last Edited15 Dec 2007
Birth*Deacon Joel Wallingford was born on 22 January 1784 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1 
Marriage*He married first Sarah Goodridge on 4 March 1813 in Boston, Suffolk County, MassachusettsG.2 
Marriage*He married second Elizabeth Clark Low, daughter of Thomas Low and Jemima (?), on 15 August 1819.3 
Death*Joel died on 19 July 1841 in Claremont., Sullivan County, New HampshireG.4,5,6,3 
His name was spelled Wallingsford in most records.
     Joel was a Baptist church Deacon and had lived in Lexington, Fayette Co., Kentucky for some time, having moved to Claremont, N.H. about ten years before his death. This according to an obituary in a Marshall, Michigan newspaper (where his brother Jonathan lived). The death notice also states that "he represented this town in the Legislature, 1837-1838."7,8

     The 1820 census of Lexington, Kentucky shows Joel Wallingford in a household with only two individuals, a male and a female aged 26-44, who are likely Joel and his wife.9 Where his two daughters were living is unknown at present. While in Lexington he kept a "wagon yard" to accomodate teamsters who were traveling through with their products and mention is made of him in a recent book: "Another well known and much frequented "waggon-yard" was kept by Joel Wallingford on Main Cross Street and his hospitality was known far and wide. His notice read: 'My yard recently improved as a waggon-yard, and is to be paved entire, which will render it one of the most desirable stands for waggoners in town, to which they are respectfully invited to give a call.'"10

     They had moved from Kentucky by 1830, because the census found them in Claremont that year. The family consisted of six individuals: one boy age 10-14, one male in his twenties one male in his forties, one female 10-14, one female 15-19, and one female in her forties.11 The two individuals in their forties are likely Joel and his second wife Elizabeth, and the two girls are likely their daughters Sarah and Elizabeth. Who the two younger males are is unknown at present. Given the fact that there are no children under 10 it appears that Joel and his second wife had no children, or at least none that had lived.
     In 1840 they were still in Claremont with one male in his fifties (Joel), one female in her twenties (daughter Elizabeth) and one female in her fifties (wife Elizabeth).12 By 1850 Joel had died and Elizabeth was 66-years old and living in Claremont in the family of Albert Cowles, 34, and wife Rebecca.13 In 1860 she was in the same family, age 75.14 It is unknown at present whether or not she was related to this Cowles family. In the 1870 census, age 86, Elizabeth was found with the family of Hiram Webb, 52, and wife Betsey. Again, the relationship, if any, is unknown. 

Children of Deacon Joel Wallingford and Sarah Goodridge

Citations

  1. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.389.
  2. New England Historical and Genealogical Register, (Boston: NEHGS, 1846-), October 1971, 125:290, "Marriage Records of the Rev. Thomas Baldwin, Pastor of the Second Baptist Church, Boston, Massachusetts."
  3. Archelaus and Elizabeth C. Godard Family Bible, Holy Bible: Containing the Old and New Testaments, (Philadelphia: Printed and Published by Mathew Carey, 1808); Owned by the New England Historic Genealogical Society, (2004).
  4. Charles S. Spaulding, An Account of Some of the Early Settlers of West Dunstable, Monson and Hollis, N.H. (Nashua, NH: Telegraph Press, 1915), p.46 (year and place only).
  5. Frederick Clifton Pierce, Foster Genealogy, being the record of the posterity of Reginald Foster... (Chicago: Conkey, 1899), p.138 (date only).
  6. Marguerite N. Lambert, Marshall Marriage and Death Newspaper Notices (Detroit, MI: Detroit Society for Genealogical Research, 1997), p.138 (taken from the newspapers Claremont (N.H.) Eagle and the Western Statesmen of Marshall, MI).
  7. Frederick Clifton Pierce, Foster Genealogy, being the record of the posterity of Reginald Foster... (Chicago: Conkey, 1899), p.138.
  8. Marguerite N. Lambert, Marshall Marriage and Death Newspaper Notices (Detroit, MI: Detroit Society for Genealogical Research, 1997), p.138.
  9. 1820 U.S. Federal census, Kentucky, Fayette Co., Lexington, p.62, original record viewed on ancestry.com on 1 Feb 2004.
  10. John Winston Coleman, Stage-Coach Days in the Bluegrass: Being an Account of Stage-Coach Travel and Tavern Days in Lexington and Central Kentucky 1800-1900 (University Press of Kentucky, 1995), p.164 (Taken from a notice in the "Kentucky Reporter" for July 11, 1822).
  11. 1830 U.S. Federal census, N.H., Sullivan Co., Claremont, p.262, original record viewed on ancestry.com on 1 Feb 2004.
  12. 1840 U.S. Federal census, N.H., Sullivan Co., Claremont, p.64, original record viewed on ancestry.com on 1 Feb 2004.
  13. 1850 U.S. Federal census, N.H., Sullivan Co., Claremont, p.184, original record viewed on ancestry.com on 1 Feb 2004.
  14. 1860 U.S. Federal census, N.H., Sullivan Co., Claremont, p.62, original record viewed on HeritageQuest.com on 1 Feb 2004.

Hannah Wallingford

F, b. 29 June 1785, d. 1851
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherDavid Wallingford b. 25 Sep 1744, d. 12 Mar 1791
MotherElizabeth Leeman b. 24 Feb 1746, d. 4 Aug 1822
Last Edited12 Jan 2001
Birth*Hannah Wallingford was born on 29 June 1785 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1,2 
Death*Hannah died in 1851 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.3 

Citations

  1. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.389.
  2. Winifred A. Wright, The Granite Town: Milford, New Hampshire 1901/1978 (Canaan, N.H.: Phoenix Pub., 1979), p.970.
  3. Charles S. Spaulding, An Account of Some of the Early Settlers of West Dunstable, Monson and Hollis, N.H. (Nashua, NH: Telegraph Press, 1915), p.46.

Abigail Wallingford

F, b. 4 January 1790
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherDavid Wallingford b. 25 Sep 1744, d. 12 Mar 1791
MotherElizabeth Leeman b. 24 Feb 1746, d. 4 Aug 1822
Last Edited12 Jan 2001
Birth*Abigail Wallingford was born on 4 January 1790 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1 

Citations

  1. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.389.

Mary Hildreth

F, b. 6 July 1784, d. 21 April 1868
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Last Edited22 Jan 2011
Birth*Mary Hildreth was born on 6 July 1784 in Newbury, Essex County, MassachusettsG. The source only says "Newbury" and mentions no state. It may not be Mass. but probably is, although her birth doesn't appear in the published Newbury vital records. Another source says she was born in Dublin, N.H.12 
Marriage*She married Ebenezer Blodgett Wallingford, son of David Wallingford and Elizabeth Leeman, on 20 October 1803, probably in Dublin, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.2 
Death*Mary died on 21 April 1868.2 
According to the History of Dublin she was the daughter of the wife of Timothy Warren by her first husband, and her sister married Alexander Robbe of Peterborough, N.H.3 

Children of Mary Hildreth and Ebenezer Blodgett Wallingford

Citations

  1. Biographical Review, XXII, Containing Life Sketches of Leading Citizens of Merrimack and Sullivan Counties New Hampshire. (Boston: Biographical Review Pub. Co., 1897), p.393.
  2. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.673.
  3. Levi W. Leonard, The History of Dublin, N.H. (Boston: John Wilson, 1855), p.410.

John Sawtelle

M, b. 15 October 1773, d. 19 June 1828
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Last Edited15 Jan 2001
Birth*John Sawtelle was born on 15 October 1773.1 
Marriage*He married Martha Wallingford, daughter of David Wallingford and Elizabeth Leeman, on 19 April 1797 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG. The 1800 census of Milford, N.H. has a John "Sartel" living with one male under ten, and one female under ten. Both parents are apparently under 26 years of age.2,1 
Death*John died on 19 June 1828 in Hollis, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG. He was buried in Hollis.31 
According to the History of Milford, N.H., p.912, he came to Milford in 1796, was a farmer, and resided on the place owned (in 1901) by Mrs. Kent on the old road to Brookline, N.H. The family moved to Hollis in 1813. 

Children of John Sawtelle and Martha Wallingford

Citations

  1. Levi W. Leonard, The History of Dublin, N.H. (Boston: John Wilson, 1855), p.912.
  2. Samuel T. Worcester, History of the Town of Hollis, New Hampshire, from its first settlement to the year 1879 (Boston: A. Williams, 1879), p.350.
  3. Mrs. Charles Carpenter Goss, Colonial Gravestone Inscriptions in the State of New Hampshire (Dover, NH: Historic Activities Committee of the National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the State of New Hampshire, 1942), p.71.

Elvira Wallingford

F, b. 4 or 24 August 1804, d. 5 October 1884
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherEbenezer Blodgett Wallingford b. 5 Oct 1780, d. 18 Feb 1855
MotherMary Hildreth b. 6 Jul 1784, d. 21 Apr 1868
Last Edited10 Oct 2011
Birth*Elvira Wallingford was born 4 or 24 August 1804 in Dublin, Cheshire County, New HampshireG. History of Dublin gives 4 August while History of Marlborough and Gregory Stone Genealogy give 24 August.1,2,3 
Marriage*She married first Calvin Stone, son of Calvin Stone and Mehitable Dodge, on 25 December 1826, probably in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.4,3 
Marriage*She married second Aaron Brigham, son of Stephen Brigham and Louisa Howe, on 1 May 1867 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.4 
Death*Elvira died on 5 October 1884.5,3 
More on the children of Calvin and Elvira Stone can be found in the history of Marlborough, N.H., p.640-2. 

Children of Elvira Wallingford and Calvin Stone

Citations

  1. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.673.
  2. Levi W. Leonard, The History of Dublin, N.H. (Boston: John Wilson, 1855), p.410.
  3. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.424.
  4. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.640.
  5. Biographical Review, XXII, Containing Life Sketches of Leading Citizens of Merrimack and Sullivan Counties New Hampshire. (Boston: Biographical Review Pub. Co., 1897), p.393.

Calvin Stone

M, b. 10 June 1801, d. 20 January 1864
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherCalvin Stone b. 1761, d. 1820
MotherMehitable Dodge d. 1813
Last Edited10 Oct 2011
Birth*Calvin Stone was born on 10 June 1801 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.1,2 
Marriage*He married first Elvira Wallingford, daughter of Ebenezer Blodgett Wallingford and Mary Hildreth, on 25 December 1826, probably in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.3,2 
Death*Calvin died on 20 January 1864, probably in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.3,2 
They lived on the family farm in Marlborough, N.H. In the autumn of 1861, at the age of 60, he enlisted in Co. F, 6th Regiment N.H. Volunteers, the enlistment papers giving his age as 44. He served until 11 May 1863 when he was discharged for disability. Broken down by the hardships of military service at so advance an age, he died within the year.4,5 

Children of Calvin Stone and Elvira Wallingford

Citations

  1. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.638.
  2. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.424.
  3. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.640.
  4. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.165, 640.
  5. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.247.

Aaron Brigham

M, b. 20 October 1797, d. 16 February 1876
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherStephen Brigham b. 1762
MotherLouisa Howe b. 1768
Last Edited17 Dec 2006
Birth*Aaron Brigham was born on 20 October 1797, probably in Alstead, Cheshire County, New HampshireG. His parents were living in Alstead at the time but it isn't yet certain that he was born there.1 
Marriage*He married first Susan K. Proctor on 25 June 1825, possibly in Alstead. It is not known yet where they were married.1 
Marriage*He married second Elvira Wallingford, daughter of Ebenezer Blodgett Wallingford and Mary Hildreth, on 1 May 1867 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.2 
Death*Aaron died on 16 February 1876 in Marlborough.3 
Aaron Brigham settled in Alstead and raised a family there with his first wife, and only late in life did he move to Marlborough and marry the widow Stone.4 

Citations

  1. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.429.
  2. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.640.
  3. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.429, 640.
  4. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.429.

Stephen Brigham

M, b. 1762
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Last Edited11 Oct 1998
Marriage*He married Louisa Howe
Birth*Stephen Brigham was born in 1762. 

Child of Stephen Brigham and Louisa Howe

Louisa Howe

F, b. 1768
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Last Edited11 Oct 1998
Marriage*She married Stephen Brigham
Birth*Louisa Howe was born in 1768. 

Child of Louisa Howe and Stephen Brigham

Calvin Stone

M, b. 1761, d. 1820
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Last Edited11 Oct 1998
Birth*Calvin Stone was born in 1761. 
Marriage*He married Mehitable Dodge in 1794. 
Death*Calvin died in 1820. 

Child of Calvin Stone and Mehitable Dodge

Mehitable Dodge

F, d. 1813
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Last Edited11 Oct 1998
Birth*Mehitable Dodge was born. 
Marriage*She married Calvin Stone in 1794. 
Death*Mehitable died in 1813. 

Child of Mehitable Dodge and Calvin Stone

Charles A. Stone

M, b. 18 November 1827, d. 14 June 1845
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherCalvin Stone b. 10 Jun 1801, d. 20 Jan 1864
MotherElvira Wallingford b. 4 or 24 August 1804, d. 5 Oct 1884
Last Edited1 Feb 2001
Birth*Charles A. Stone was born on 18 November 1827 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.1 
Death*Charles died unmarried, on 14 June 1845, at age 17.1 

Citations

  1. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.424.

Harriet Elvira Stone

F, b. 31 July 1829, d. 27 December 1914
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherCalvin Stone b. 10 Jun 1801, d. 20 Jan 1864
MotherElvira Wallingford b. 4 or 24 August 1804, d. 5 Oct 1884
Last Edited1 Feb 2001
Birth*Harriet Elvira Stone was born on 31 July 1829 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.1 
Marriage*She married Capt. Henry Curtis Piper, son of Col. Rufus Piper and Anne Gowing, on 6 November 1851 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG. This was Henry Piper's second marriage.1 
Death*Harriet died on 27 December 1914 in Dublin, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.1 
Harriet and Henry resided in Dublin, N.H. where he was a schoolteacher, farmer and housewright, served as selectman for 12 years, on the school committee 30 years, and as a representative to the state Legislature. He attained the rank of captain in the 12th New Hampshire Militia. They had two children born in Dublin.2 She was living in Dublin in October 1894 when she was named in the estate of her aunt Caroline M. Wallingford.3 

Citations

  1. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.424.
  2. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.424.
  3. Rockingham County, New Hampshire, Probate, Docket no.8188, new series.

George Hildreth Stone

M, b. 3 May 1831, d. 25 September 1864
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherCalvin Stone b. 10 Jun 1801, d. 20 Jan 1864
MotherElvira Wallingford b. 4 or 24 August 1804, d. 5 Oct 1884
Last Edited1 Feb 2001
Birth*George Hildreth Stone was born on 3 May 1831 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.1 
Marriage*He married Martha E. Platt, daughter of David Platt, on 12 May 1859 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.2 
Death*George died on 25 September 1864. He was severely wounded at the battle of Opequan (or Winchester), Virginia on the 19th and died from his wounds six days later.3 
During the Civil War he enlisted in Co. C., 14th N.H. Volunteers on 12 August 1862. On 22 September 1862 he was appointed sergeant. On 30 October 1863 he was commissioned second lieutenant of Co. I, and on 27 May 1864 was promoted to first lieutenant. He was killed during the war. They had one child who died in infancy.3 

Citations

  1. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.424.
  2. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.425.
  3. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.425.

Solon W. Stone

M, b. 5 May 1834
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherCalvin Stone b. 10 Jun 1801, d. 20 Jan 1864
MotherElvira Wallingford b. 4 or 24 August 1804, d. 5 Oct 1884
Last Edited17 Jan 2005
Birth*Solon W. Stone was born on 5 May 1834 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.1 
Marriage*He married first Maria S. Clapp, daughter of Franklin Clapp and Roxanna Tenney, on 9 January 1858 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.2 
Marriage*He married second Lauretta P. Richardson, daughter of Benjamin Richardson and Elvira Daniels, on 10 July 1879 in Keene, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.2 
Solon lived in Marlborough until 1875 when he moved to Keene. He was a traveling salesman and had two children by each of his wives. His middle name may have been Wallingford, since one of his grandsons was named Solon Wallingford Stone.3 He was living in Keene in October 1894 when he was named as a legatee in the estate of his aunt Caroline M. Wallingford.4 

Citations

  1. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.425, 620.
  2. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.620.
  3. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.620.
  4. Rockingham County, New Hampshire, Probate, Docket no.8188, new series.

Mary Elizabeth Stone

F, b. 19 June 1840, d. 15 March 1892
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherCalvin Stone b. 10 Jun 1801, d. 20 Jan 1864
MotherElvira Wallingford b. 4 or 24 August 1804, d. 5 Oct 1884
Last Edited17 Jan 2005
Birth*Mary Elizabeth Stone was born on 19 June 1840 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.1 
Marriage*She married David Heald, son of Oliver Heald and Patty Wright, on 22 October 1862 in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.1 
Death*Mary died on 15 March 1892 in Milford, Hillsborough County, New HampshireG.1 
They settled in Milford, N.H. where David manufactured furniture and they had six children.2 David and five of their children were living in Milford in October 1894 when they were named in the estate of her aunt Caroline M. Wallingford.3 

Citations

  1. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.425.
  2. J. Gardner Bartlett, Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917 (Boston: Stone Family Association, 1918), p.425.
  3. Rockingham County, New Hampshire, Probate, Docket no.8188, new series.

Alanson C. Stone

M, b. 8 November 1847
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherCalvin Stone b. 10 Jun 1801, d. 20 Jan 1864
MotherElvira Wallingford b. 4 or 24 August 1804, d. 5 Oct 1884
Last Edited10 Oct 2011
Birth*Alanson C. Stone was born on 8 November 1847, probably in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG

Ida M. Stone

F, b. 24 November 1849
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherCalvin Stone b. 10 Jun 1801, d. 20 Jan 1864
MotherElvira Wallingford b. 4 or 24 August 1804, d. 5 Oct 1884
Last Edited10 Oct 2011
Birth*Ida M. Stone was born on 24 November 1849, probably in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG

Mary Hildreth Wallingford

F, b. 10 August 1806, d. 1 March 1870
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
FatherEbenezer Blodgett Wallingford b. 5 Oct 1780, d. 18 Feb 1855
MotherMary Hildreth b. 6 Jul 1784, d. 21 Apr 1868
Last Edited30 Nov 2024
Birth*Mary Hildreth Wallingford was born on 10 August 1806 in Dublin, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.1,2 
Marriage*She married Charles Parker, son of Josiah Parker and Olive Stone, on 16 May 1830, probably in Marlborough, Cheshire County, New HampshireG.3,1,4 
Death*Mary died on 1 March 1870 in Roxbury, Suffolk County, MassachusettsG.1,2 
The Wallingford Genealogy by Wallingford and Murrow says that she married a Thomas Mason.5 After her death Charles moved in with his daughter Elizabeth and her husband Nathan Robinson and family, which is where the 1870 census found them, living in Boston. 

Children of Mary Hildreth Wallingford and Charles Parker

Citations

  1. Charles A. Bemis, History of the Town of Marlborough, Cheshire County, New Hampshire : a facsimile of the 1881 edition with a new foreword by James Dunn (1881; Marlborough: Frost Free Library, 1974), p.673.
  2. AmericanAncestors, https://www.americanancestors.org, (Society of Colonial Wars in Massachusetts Membership Applications, 1620-1910. (Online database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2018). <https://www.americanancestors.org/DB2755/i/60190/1345-co2/1431169256>).
  3. Times and Dover Enquirer (newspaper), (Dover, N.H.), Marriage notice, 22 Jun 1830, p.3.
  4. Vital Records of Framingham, Massachusetts to the year 1850, compiled by Thomas W. Baldwin. (Boston: Wright & Potter, 1911), p.349.
  5. Charles C. Wallingford and Charles H. Murrow, Three Centuries of the Wallingford and Wallingsford Families in America, 1638 to 1942 (DesMoines, Iowa: Manuscript on LDS Microfilm #1020766, 1942), p.38.