Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 8 November 1714, d. 7 January 1758
Samuel Sewall|b. 8 Nov 1714\nd. 7 Jan 1758|p437.htm#i664|Nicholas Sewall|b. 1 Jun 1690\nd. 25 Nov 1735|p433.htm#i55|Mehitable Storer|b. 10 May 1696|p473.htm#i56|John Sewall|b. 10 Oct 1654\nd. 8 Aug 1699|p423.htm#i18|Hannah Fessenden|b. 1649\nd. 4 Apr 1723|p157.htm#i19|Capt. Samuel Storer|d. 1700|p473.htm#i654|Lydia Austin||p23.htm#i663|
Samuel Sewall was born on 8 November 1714 in York, Maine.2,3 He was the son of Nicholas Sewall and Mehitable Storer.1 Samuel Sewall married Hannah Kelly, daughter of Elisha Kelly, on 28 February 1736/37.4 Samuel Sewall died on 7 January 1758 at the age of 43.5
Children of Samuel Sewall and Hannah Kelly
- Nicholas Sewall+1 b. 17 Jan 1737/38, d. 17 Mar 1806
- Hannah Sewall+1 b. 8 Mar 1739, d. 23 Jan 1829
- Mercy Sewall+1 b. 21 Feb 1742, d. 22 Nov 1812
- Susanna Sewall+1 b. 7 Oct 1745, d. 28 Aug 1809
- Samuel Sewall+1 b. 28 Dec 1748, d. 19 Jan 1824
- Storer Sewall+1 b. 13 Mar 1753, d. 7 Feb 1823
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 28 December 1748, d. 19 January 1824
Samuel Sewall|b. 28 Dec 1748\nd. 19 Jan 1824|p437.htm#i766|Samuel Sewall|b. 8 Nov 1714\nd. 7 Jan 1758|p437.htm#i664|Hannah Kelly|b. 10 May 1719|p253.htm#i764|Nicholas Sewall|b. 1 Jun 1690\nd. 25 Nov 1735|p433.htm#i55|Mehitable Storer|b. 10 May 1696|p473.htm#i56|Elisha Kelly||p253.htm#i17023||||
Samuel Sewall was born on 28 December 1748.2 He was the son of Samuel Sewall and Hannah Kelly.1 Samuel Sewall married Hannah Moulton, daughter of Colonel Jeremiah Moulton and Hannah Sayward, on 20 May 1773 in York, Maine.3 Samuel Sewall died on 19 January 1824 in York, Maine, at the age of 75.3
Children of Samuel Sewall and Hannah Moulton
- Nancy Sewall2 b. 4 Mar 1781, d. 15 Mar 1860
- Lucy Sewall2 b. 12 Nov 1784, d. 3 Sep 1802
- Susan Sewall+2 b. 4 Oct 1786
- Joanna Sewall2 b. 10 Jan 1788, d. 29 Jan 1854
- Abigail Moulton Sewall+4 b. 18 Sep 1789, d. 25 Apr 1873
- Ruth Sewall+4 b. 29 Nov 1791, d. 17 Mar 1860
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 12 July 1794, d. 18 May 1847
Samuel Sewall|b. 12 Jul 1794\nd. 18 May 1847|p437.htm#i854|Rev. Samuel Sewall|b. 21 Dec 1765\nd. 16 Mar 1826|p437.htm#i751|Abigail Trask|b. 30 Oct 1762\nd. 14 Nov 1843|p512.htm#i849|Henry Sewall|b. 7 Feb 1740\nd. 24 Jan 1795|p419.htm#i662|Mary Stinson|b. 10 Apr 1744\nd. 22 Jan 1777|p471.htm#i750|Thomas Trask||p512.htm#i6779||||
Samuel Sewall was born on 12 July 1794 in Farmington, Franklin County, Maine.2,3 He was the son of Rev. Samuel Sewall and Abigail Trask.1 Samuel Sewall married firstly Harriet Drummond on 12 July 1821 in Phippsburg, Maine.4 Samuel Sewall married Clara P. Prescott on 26 December 1832.5 Samuel Sewall died on 18 May 1847 at the age of 52.2
Children of Samuel Sewall and Harriet Drummond
- Parker Drummond Sewall5 b. 9 Jul 1822, d. 1850
- Calvin Davenport Sewall6 b. 17 Jun 1825, d. 5 Jun 1829
- Samuel Sewall4 b. 3 Dec 1827
- Harriet Mary Ann Drummond Sewall6 b. 26 Jul 1830, d. 2 Mar 1861
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 66 p. 86.
- [S89] LDS Record, Town and vital records, 1794-1892 Farmington (Maine). Town Clerk.
- [S233] Josiah H. Drummond, The descendants of Alexander Drummond, p. 40.
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p. 50.
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p. 51.
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 26 June 1791, d. 10 April 1812
Samuel Sewall|b. 26 Jun 1791\nd. 10 Apr 1812|p437.htm#i885|Thomas Sewall|b. 24 Sep 1750\nd. 27 May 1833|p441.htm#i89|Priscilla Coney|b. 12 Mar 1748/49\nd. 1 Oct 1836|p93.htm#i90|John Sewall|b. 6 Jul 1716\nd. b 14 Jun 1805|p423.htm#i84|Mary Sayward|b. 23 Apr 1718\nd. 16 Sep 1781|p393.htm#i771|Deacon Samuel Coney|b. 1718\nd. 12 Apr 1803|p93.htm#i876|Rebecca Guild|b. c 1721\nd. 27 Apr 1793|p202.htm#i877|
Samuel Sewall. "Student of Physick".2 He was born on 26 June 1791 in Twenty-five Mile Pond.3 He was the son of Thomas Sewall and Priscilla Coney.1 Samuel Sewall died on 10 April 1812 in Chebacco at the age of 20.2
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 29 November 1819, d. 16 November 1903
Samuel Sewall|b. 29 Nov 1819\nd. 16 Nov 1903|p437.htm#i949|Rev. Samuel Sewall|b. 1 Jun 1785\nd. 18 Feb 1868|p437.htm#i119|Martha Margaret Marrett|b. 2 Nov 1783\nd. 26 Mar 1860|p294.htm#i120|Chief Justice Samuel Sewall LL.D.|b. 11 Dec 1757\nd. 8 Jun 1814|p438.htm#i105|Abigail Devereaux|b. 17 Jun 1766\nd. 22 Feb 1847|p126.htm#i106|Rev. John Marrett|b. 21 Sep 1741\nd. 18 Feb 1813|p294.htm#i948|Martha Jones|d. 11 Sep 1803|p251.htm#i12342|
Samuel Sewall. Farmer.3 He was born on 29 November 1819 in Burlington, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.4 He was the son of Rev. Samuel Sewall and Martha Margaret Marrett.2 Samuel Sewall was baptised on 26 December 1819 at Burlington.1 He married Elizabeth H. Brown, daughter of Samuel Brown and Elizabeth Tuttle, on 21 March 1844 in Burlington, Massachusetts.4,5 Samuel Sewall died on 16 November 1903 in Burlington, Massachusetts, at the age of 83 of senile gangrene.6 He was buried on 19 November 1903 in Burlington, Massachusetts.6
He served as town treasurer from 1856-1892 and 1895-1896; town clerk from 1863-1893 and 1895-1900; church and parish treasurer for 40 years; church and parish treasurer for 35 years; and church deacon for 35 years.7
"He resides on the old Jones, Marrett, and Sewall parsonage, which he has improved by additions and adornments since those of his Grandfather Marrett. With commendable regard for the memory of his ancestors, he has left untouched by the barbarism called modern architecture, that "best room," where Hancock and Adams were disappointed of their "savory breakfast," and where some of these memoranda were written. Its walls are adorned with the painted portraits of Chief Justice Sewall and other worthies, carrying one back to old times when ministers were not ashamed to walk to meeting on Rackets. Those magnificent elm and chestnut trees, four feet in diameter, which adorn the lawn in front of the house, were mere saplings when Rev. John Marrett first visited his "lady love." On one of those occasions, he tied his horse to one of them. Perceiving this, Mr. Jones' colored servant removed it to a more proper place, and, with a native politeness known only to his race, announced: "I'se fetched the gemmans horse and hitched him where folks allers put um, cause he'd eat up the trees me & Massa planted." Faithful and considerate man, he appears to have been the trusted executive of the estate after Mr. Jones' death. Honorable mention is often made of him in Mr. Marrett's Diary. He now reposes in the adjacent cemetery, borne to his grave by the selectmen of Burlington, personally, as a mark of respect for him and the ministerial families he had served so long; and in the Family Bible it is written of him: "Cuff, the faithful Negro Servant of the above Thomas & Abigail [Jones] died April, 1813, having lived in the family about 60 years." " Letter dated 15 March 1847, from Rev. Samuel Sewall of Massachusetts to Rev. Henry Doyle Sewell.1
He served as town treasurer from 1856-1892 and 1895-1896; town clerk from 1863-1893 and 1895-1900; church and parish treasurer for 40 years; church and parish treasurer for 35 years; and church deacon for 35 years.7
"He resides on the old Jones, Marrett, and Sewall parsonage, which he has improved by additions and adornments since those of his Grandfather Marrett. With commendable regard for the memory of his ancestors, he has left untouched by the barbarism called modern architecture, that "best room," where Hancock and Adams were disappointed of their "savory breakfast," and where some of these memoranda were written. Its walls are adorned with the painted portraits of Chief Justice Sewall and other worthies, carrying one back to old times when ministers were not ashamed to walk to meeting on Rackets. Those magnificent elm and chestnut trees, four feet in diameter, which adorn the lawn in front of the house, were mere saplings when Rev. John Marrett first visited his "lady love." On one of those occasions, he tied his horse to one of them. Perceiving this, Mr. Jones' colored servant removed it to a more proper place, and, with a native politeness known only to his race, announced: "I'se fetched the gemmans horse and hitched him where folks allers put um, cause he'd eat up the trees me & Massa planted." Faithful and considerate man, he appears to have been the trusted executive of the estate after Mr. Jones' death. Honorable mention is often made of him in Mr. Marrett's Diary. He now reposes in the adjacent cemetery, borne to his grave by the selectmen of Burlington, personally, as a mark of respect for him and the ministerial families he had served so long; and in the Family Bible it is written of him: "Cuff, the faithful Negro Servant of the above Thomas & Abigail [Jones] died April, 1813, having lived in the family about 60 years." " Letter dated 15 March 1847, from Rev. Samuel Sewall of Massachusetts to Rev. Henry Doyle Sewell.1
Children of Samuel Sewall and Elizabeth H. Brown
- Samuel Brown Sewall+1 b. 17 Aug 1846, d. 5 Jul 1883
- Martha Elizabeth Sewall+1 b. 18 May 1858, d. 27 Apr 1915
Citations
- [S87] Kate Hogenson, Communication from K. Hogenson, Descendants of Charles Chauncy Sewall @ Jan 2005.
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S149] NEHGS Database, , Mass. Vital Records. Vol: 115 ; Page: 93.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Vital Records of Burlington, Massachusetts to the Year 1850.
- [S357] Samuel Dunster, Henry Dunster and His Descendants, p. 98.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Massachusetts Vital Records, 1841-1910.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.burlington.org/clerk/archives/findaid/123/…
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 24 August 1822, d. 3 March 1889
Samuel Sewall|b. 24 Aug 1822\nd. 3 Mar 1889|p437.htm#i1055|Daniel Sewall|b. 12 Nov 1788\nd. 12 May 1880|p408.htm#i884|Martha Tolman|b. c 1787\nd. 9 Feb 1867|p506.htm#i1053|Thomas Sewall|b. 24 Sep 1750\nd. 27 May 1833|p441.htm#i89|Priscilla Coney|b. 12 Mar 1748/49\nd. 1 Oct 1836|p93.htm#i90|||||||
Samuel Sewall. A soldier during the Civil War. Co. E. 24th Maine Regt. otherwise a farmer at Farmington, Maine.2,3 He was born on 24 August 1822 in Maine.4 He was the son of Daniel Sewall and Martha Tolman.1 Samuel Sewall married Susan H. Holland on 29 June 1868 in Farmington, Maine.5 Samuel Sewall died on 3 March 1889 in Farmington, Franklin County, Maine, at the age of 66.6
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p. 60.
- [S209] 1870 US Census.
- [S149] NEHGS Database, , Vital Records of Pittston, Maine, to the Year 1892.
- [S364] Eben Graves, The descendants of Henry Sewall. Vol. II (Unpublished), #200.
- [S128] NEHGS, Cemetery transcriptions.
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 12 December 1926, d. 29 July 1990
Samuel Sewall|b. 12 Dec 1926\nd. 29 Jul 1990|p437.htm#i2095|Samuel L. Sewall|b. 5 Oct 1894\nd. 27 Feb 1945|p438.htm#i1659||||Samuel L. Sewall|b. 27 Jun 1862\nd. 7 Jan 1938|p438.htm#i1202|Jessie D. Newson|b. 20 Jul 1864\nd. 25 Apr 1907|p323.htm#i1658|||||||
Samuel Sewall was born on 12 December 1926 in Minnesota.2,3 He was the son of Samuel L. Sewall.1 Samuel Sewall died on 29 July 1990 in Hennepin County, Minnesota, at the age of 63.3
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 18 November 1707, d. 18 December 1708
Samuel Sewall|b. 18 Nov 1707\nd. 18 Dec 1708|p437.htm#i3679|Samuel Sewall|b. 11 Jun 1678\nd. 27 Feb 1750/51|p436.htm#i36|Rebecca Dudley|b. 16 May 1681\nd. 14 Apr 1761|p135.htm#i37|Chief Justice Samuel E. Sewall|b. 28 Mar 1652\nd. 1 Jan 1729/30|p437.htm#i17|Hannah Hull|b. 14 Feb 1657/58\nd. 19 Oct 1717|p238.htm#i32|Governor Joseph Dudley|b. 23 Sep 1647\nd. 2 Apr 1720|p134.htm#i246|Rebecca Tyng|b. 13 Jul 1651\nd. 21 Sep 1722|p516.htm#i3676|
Samuel Sewall was born on 18 November 1707.2 He was the son of Samuel Sewall and Rebecca Dudley.1 Samuel Sewall died on 18 December 1708 at the age of 1.2
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 24 January 1813, d. 6 October 1850
Samuel Sewall|b. 24 Jan 1813\nd. 6 Oct 1850|p437.htm#i9210|Joseph Sewall|b. 7 Jun 1773\nd. 18 Dec 1859|p424.htm#i733|Abigail H. Gray|b. 11 Nov 1777\nd. 19 Jun 1854|p193.htm#i9208|Capt. Joseph Sewall|b. 3 Sep 1731\nd. 13 Dec 1782|p424.htm#i660|Mercy Sewall|b. 21 Feb 1742\nd. 22 Nov 1812|p432.htm#i769|||||||
Samuel Sewall. Surveyor.2 He is recorded by Sinnett as Daniel Sewall.3 He was born on 24 January 1813 in York, Maine.1 He was the son of Joseph Sewall and Abigail H. Gray.1 Samuel Sewall died on 6 October 1850 in York, Maine, at the age of 37, unmarried. Died of a rupture.1,2,4
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 10 July 1776
Samuel Sewall|b. 10 Jul 1776|p437.htm#i9608|Capt. Moses Sewall|b. 22 Jul 1733\nd. Jun 1816|p433.htm#i661|Miriam Stone|b. 2 Oct 1733\nd. 29 Apr 1806|p472.htm#i9242|Capt. Samuel Sewall|b. 9 Apr 1688\nd. 28 Apr 1769|p437.htm#i51|Sarah Batchelder|b. 21 Dec 1697\nd. 3 Feb 1790|p30.htm#i52|Lt. Benjamin Stone||p472.htm#i9243||||
Samuel Sewall was born on 10 July 1776 in York, Maine.1 He was the son of Capt. Moses Sewall and Miriam Stone.1
Citations
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 112 p. 105 Vital Records of York, Maine.
Samuel Sewall1
M
Samuel Sewall married Mary Wendell, daughter of Hon. Colonel Jacob Wendell and Sarah Oliver, on 12 December 1745 in Boston, Massachusetts, the service being conducted by the Rev. Joseph Sewall D.D.1,2,3
Citations
- [S102] Annie Haven Thwing, Inhabitants of the Town of Boston, 60752.
- [S102] Annie Haven Thwing, Inhabitants of the Town of Boston, 54167.
- [S183] Edward W. McGlenen, Boston Marriages, Boston, MA Marriages 1646 - 1751 from the Record Commissioners Report 9 (1649 - 1699) and from the Record Commissioners Report 150 (1700 - 1751) Published 1898.
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 6 February 1825, d. 17 March 1853
Samuel Sewall|b. 6 Feb 1825\nd. 17 Mar 1853|p437.htm#i12594|John Milton Sewall|b. 30 Jul 1797\nd. 15 Jan 1866|p424.htm#i5796|Dorcas Cushman|b. 31 Dec 1794\nd. 18 Oct 1883|p112.htm#i5797|Rev. Samuel M. Sewall|b. 6 Apr 1772\nd. 15 Mar 1851|p438.htm#i80|Mary Lambard|b. 8 Nov 1774\nd. 27 Nov 1842|p261.htm#i848|Isaiah Cushman Jr.|b. 6 Feb 1757\nd. 8 Jan 1841|p112.htm#i5798|Sarah Ripley|b. 23 Sep 1757\nd. 22 Mar 1844|p379.htm#i5799|
Samuel Sewall. A shoemaker.2 He was born on 6 February 1825 in Sumner, Maine.1,3,2 He was the son of John Milton Sewall and Dorcas Cushman.1 Samuel Sewall married Mary T. Dunbar, daughter of Thomas Dunbar and Hannah (Unknown), on 5 May 1849 in Brockton, Massachusetts.4,2 Samuel Sewall and Mary T. Dunbar appears on the census of 1850 in North Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, where his occupation is given as that of shoemaker.5 Samuel Sewall died on 17 March 1853 in North Bridgewater, Massachusetts, at the age of 28 of consumption.2
Children of Samuel Sewall and Mary T. Dunbar
- Samuel Edgar Sewall1 b. 26 Dec 1849, d. 17 Sep 1851
- Mary Ella Sewall1 b. 24 Jul 1852, d. 10 Jun 1853
Citations
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p. 46.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Massachusetts Vital Records, 1841-1910.
- [S315] Henry Wyles Cushman, Descendants of Rober Cushman, p. 317.
- [S232] Ancestry.com Database, Massachusetts Town Marriage Records.
- [S109] 1850 United States Census.
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 8 January 1800, d. 7 October 1880
Samuel Sewall|b. 8 Jan 1800\nd. 7 Oct 1880|p437.htm#i12609|Rev. Samuel M. Sewall|b. 6 Apr 1772\nd. 15 Mar 1851|p438.htm#i80|Mary Lambard|b. 8 Nov 1774\nd. 27 Nov 1842|p261.htm#i848|Colonel Dummer Sewall|b. 12 Dec 1737\nd. 6 Apr 1832|p410.htm#i79|Mary Dunning|b. 4 Apr 1739\nd. 10 Jul 1823|p140.htm#i739|Joseph Lombard||p281.htm#i14607|Hannah Booker||p41.htm#i14608|
Samuel Sewall was born on 8 January 1800.1 He was the son of Rev. Samuel M. Sewall and Mary Lambard.1 Samuel Sewall married Tryphosa Fuller on 14 May 1835.1 Samuel Sewall and Tryphosa Fuller appear on the census of 1850 at Lowell, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, together with their last five children.2 Samuel Sewall appears on the census of 1880 listed as a machinist and his daughter Mary as a tailoress.3 He died on 7 October 1880 in Lowell, Massachusetts, at the age of 80.4
Children of Samuel Sewall and Tryphosa Fuller
- Jane Dummer Sewall1 b. 15 Jun 1837, d. 4 Aug 1837
- Mary Lambard Sewall1 b. 15 Jun 1837, d. 27 Jun 1837
- Ammi Richamah Sewall+1 b. 22 Sep 1838, d. 20 Jan 1913
- Lyman Beecher Sewall+1 b. 5 Apr 1840, d. 18 Jul 1916
- Amariah Fuller Sewall5 b. 5 Apr 1840, d. 20 Aug 1862
- Samuel Sewall+5 b. 26 May 1847, d. 3 Feb 1900
- Mary Jane Sewall5 b. 6 Nov 1849
Citations
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 26 May 1847, d. 3 February 1900
Samuel Sewall|b. 26 May 1847\nd. 3 Feb 1900|p437.htm#i12628|Samuel Sewall|b. 8 Jan 1800\nd. 7 Oct 1880|p437.htm#i12609|Tryphosa Fuller|b. 28 Nov 1806\nd. 2 May 1882|p172.htm#i12610|Rev. Samuel M. Sewall|b. 6 Apr 1772\nd. 15 Mar 1851|p438.htm#i80|Mary Lambard|b. 8 Nov 1774\nd. 27 Nov 1842|p261.htm#i848|||||||
Samuel Sewall was born on 26 May 1847 in Massachusetts.1 He was the son of Samuel Sewall and Tryphosa Fuller.1 Samuel Sewall married Hannah Catherine Marden, daughter of Benjamin Franklin Marden and Betsey Buss, on 27 November 1873 in Fairmount Street, Lowell, Massachusetts.2 Samuel Sewall died on 3 February 1900 at the age of 52.1
Children of Samuel Sewall and Hannah Catherine Marden
- Harry Buttrick Sewall1 b. 9 Aug 1875, d. 2 Dec 1954
- Gertrude Marden Sewall1 b. 19 Oct 1879
- Freedom Hoyt Sewall1 b. 9 May 1885, d. 30 Aug 1886
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 25 January 1853, d. 21 January 1854
Samuel Sewall|b. 25 Jan 1853\nd. 21 Jan 1854|p437.htm#i13014|Henry Foster Sewall|b. 31 Oct 1816\nd. 30 Apr 1896|p420.htm#i953|Sarah Allyne Rich|b. c 1818\nd. 12 Aug 1883|p376.htm#i13005|Henry D. Sewall|b. 21 Aug 1786\nd. 8 Jun 1846|p420.htm#i121|Mary C. Norton|b. 1789\nd. 30 Dec 1840|p326.htm#i122|||||||
Samuel Sewall was born on 25 January 1853.1 He was the son of Henry Foster Sewall and Sarah Allyne Rich.1 Samuel Sewall died on 21 January 1854.1
Citations
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p.10.
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 3 December 1827
Samuel Sewall|b. 3 Dec 1827|p437.htm#i15870|Samuel Sewall|b. 12 Jul 1794\nd. 18 May 1847|p437.htm#i854|Harriet Drummond|b. 16 Nov 1799\nd. 16 Aug 1831|p133.htm#i1017|Rev. Samuel Sewall|b. 21 Dec 1765\nd. 16 Mar 1826|p437.htm#i751|Abigail Trask|b. 30 Oct 1762\nd. 14 Nov 1843|p512.htm#i849|||||||
Samuel Sewall was born on 3 December 1827 in Phippsburg, Maine.1 He was the son of Samuel Sewall and Harriet Drummond.1
Citations
- [S233] Josiah H. Drummond, The descendants of Alexander Drummond, p. 40.
Samuel Sewall1
M, b. circa 1794, d. 15 January 1871
Samuel Sewall|b. c 1794\nd. 15 Jan 1871|p437.htm#i20421|Thomas Sewall|b. 18 Sep 1749\nd. Jan 1803|p441.htm#i20347|Sarah Weeks|b. c 1755\nd. a 1850|p532.htm#i20408|William Sewall|b. 26 Apr 1723\nd. b 2 Dec 1813|p442.htm#i10838|Martha Tuckerman ?|d. b 1756|p515.htm#i20346|||||||
Samuel Sewall was born circa 1794.1 He was the son of Thomas Sewall and Sarah Weeks.1 Samuel Sewall married Betsey Whitney on 31 December 1818 in Canterbury, New Hampshire.2 Samuel Sewall died on 15 January 1871 in New Hampshire.2
Children of Samuel Sewall and Betsey Whitney
- Daniel Sewall3 b. c 1824
- Horace Porter Sewall+4 b. Jun 1827
- Sarah Ann Sewall5 b. c 1828
- Caroline Sewall5 b. 9 Dec 1832
- Diantha Sewall6 b. c 1836
Citations
- [S365] Eben Graves, The descendants of Henry Sewall. Vol. II (Unpublished), p. 311.
- [S364] Eben Graves, The descendants of Henry Sewall. Vol. II (Unpublished), #214.
- [S364] Eben Graves, The descendants of Henry Sewall. Vol. II (Unpublished), #378.
- [S364] Eben Graves, The descendants of Henry Sewall. Vol. II (Unpublished), #379.
- [S364] Eben Graves, The descendants of Henry Sewall. Vol. II (Unpublished), #380.
- [S364] Eben Graves, The descendants of Henry Sewall. Vol. II (Unpublished), #382.
Capt. Samuel Sewall
M, b. 9 April 1688, d. 28 April 1769
Capt. Samuel Sewall|b. 9 Apr 1688\nd. 28 Apr 1769|p437.htm#i51|John Sewall|b. 10 Oct 1654\nd. 8 Aug 1699|p423.htm#i18|Hannah Fessenden|b. 1649\nd. 4 Apr 1723|p157.htm#i19|Rev. Henry Sewall|b. 1614\nd. 16 May 1700|p420.htm#i10|Jane Dummer|b. c 1627\nd. 13 Jan 1701|p137.htm#i11|John Fessenden|d. 28 Dec 1666|p157.htm#i633||||
Capt. Samuel Sewall was born on 9 April 1688 in Newbury, Massachusetts.1,2,3 He was the son of John Sewall and Hannah Fessenden. In about 1708 he, together with his brother Nicholas, settled in York, Maine, where his sister was then living.2,4 Capt. Samuel Sewall married first Lydia Storer, daughter of Capt. Samuel Storer and Lydia Austin.2 Capt. Samuel Sewall then married Sarah Batchelder, daughter of John Batchelder and Sarah Poore, on 29 November 1723 at Newbury.3 Capt. Samuel Sewall died on 28 April 1769 in York, Maine, at the age of 81 "leaving seven sons and four daughters."5,6 The inscription on a stone in the old burying ground in York reads " In memory of Samuel Sewall, Esq., four generations in a lineal descent from Henry Sewall, Esq. sometime Mayor of Coventry in O. England, whose grandfather Henry first came to N. England, 1634. For penetration, sound judgment, and wisdom, remarkable; given to hospitality; the widow and fatherless he relieved and protected; various offices, civil, military and ecclesiastical, with honor and reputation he sustained; pious, exemplary and devout, on the 28th of April, 1769, aged LXXXI, he died. His seven surviving sons, with the approbation of his four daughters, this stone erected. "Let brotherly love continue."5 "
Children of Capt. Samuel Sewall and Lydia Storer
- John Sewall7 b. 14 Aug 1712, d. 27 Feb 1715
- Dummer Sewall7 b. 12 Feb 1714, d. 13 Aug 1736
- Lydia Sewall+7 b. 24 Jan 1716/17, d. 8 Jun 1770
- Mercy Sewall+7 b. 30 May 1718, d. 16 May 1807
- Mary Sewall+7 b. 29 Feb 1719/20
- Hannah Sewall+7 b. 1 Feb 1722, d. 4 Mar 1809
Children of Capt. Samuel Sewall and Sarah Batchelder
- Major Samuel Sewall b. 14 Sep 1724, d. 23 Jul 1815
- Sarah Sewall7 b. 4 Nov 1726
- Jane Sewall7 b. 4 Nov 1726
- Deacon John Sewall+1 b. 5 May 1729, d. 27 Jun 1808
- Capt. Joseph Sewall+7 b. 3 Sep 1731, d. 13 Dec 1782
- Capt. Moses Sewall+7 b. 22 Jul 1733, d. Jun 1816
- Hon. David Sewall b. 7 Oct 1735, d. 21 Oct 1825
- Colonel Dummer Sewall+ b. 12 Dec 1737, d. 6 Apr 1832
- Henry Sewall+7 b. 7 Feb 1740, d. 24 Jan 1795
Citations
- [S25] Samuel Sewall, Diary of Samuel Sewall (1973 ed.), p. 1079.
- [S62] William Richard Cutter, New England Families.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 113, p. 195.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 9, p. 343.
- [S124] Samuel (Rev.) Sewall, Pedigree of Sewall.
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
Major Samuel Sewall1,2
M, b. 24 November 1689, d. 5 May 1757
Major Samuel Sewall|b. 24 Nov 1689\nd. 5 May 1757|p437.htm#i66|Major Stephen Sewall|b. 19 Aug 1657\nd. 17 Oct 1725|p440.htm#i20|Margaret Mitchell|b. 2 Feb 1663/64\nd. 24 Jan 1735/36|p307.htm#i21|Rev. Henry Sewall|b. 1614\nd. 16 May 1700|p420.htm#i10|Jane Dummer|b. c 1627\nd. 13 Jan 1701|p137.htm#i11|Rev. Jonathan Mitchell|b. 1624\nd. 9 Jul 1668|p306.htm#i638|Margaret Boradaile||p41.htm#i2553|
Major Samuel Sewall was baptised on 24 November 1689 by Mr. Higgins of Boston.3 He was born on 24 November 1689.3 He was the son of Major Stephen Sewall and Margaret Mitchell. He was a a ship-chandler of Boston. 1720 Artillery Company; 1734 Captain, Artillery Company; 1733 Major in the Boston regiment. Active in town affairs and served on important committees.4,5 Major Samuel Sewall married Catherine George, daughter of John George and Lydia Lee, on 1 January 1716/17 the marriage being conducted by Dr. Cotton. The bride's name is spelt How in the record.4 Major Samuel Sewall made a will on 11 January 1753.5 He died on 5 May 1757 in Boston, Massachusetts, at the age of 67 s.n.p. his two step-sons having drowned in 1727/28.4,5 Probate was granted on 6 May 1757 his wife Katherine was executor. Legatees: to my brother and sister, Stephen Sewall, and Mehetable Robie, and to my wife Katherine, all the rest of my estate.5
Major Samuel Sewall
M, b. 14 September 1724, d. 23 July 1815
Major Samuel Sewall|b. 14 Sep 1724\nd. 23 Jul 1815|p437.htm#i78|Capt. Samuel Sewall|b. 9 Apr 1688\nd. 28 Apr 1769|p437.htm#i51|Sarah Batchelder|b. 21 Dec 1697\nd. 3 Feb 1790|p30.htm#i52|John Sewall|b. 10 Oct 1654\nd. 8 Aug 1699|p423.htm#i18|Hannah Fessenden|b. 1649\nd. 4 Apr 1723|p157.htm#i19|John Batchelder|b. 23 Feb 1666|p30.htm#i53|Sarah Poore|d. 17 Apr 1744|p353.htm#i14747|
Major Samuel Sewall was born on 14 September 1724 in York, Maine, or 24 Sep. 1724 (Sinnett gives 24 October 1724).1,2,3,4 He was the son of Capt. Samuel Sewall and Sarah Batchelder. Major Samuel Sewall died on 23 July 1815 in York, Maine, at the age of 90 he was unmarried.1,5 An inscription on a stone in the old burying ground in York, on the west side of York River reads "In memory of Maj. Samuel Sewall, an architect of the first class, from whose fabrications great benefit has resulted to society. He was benevolent, hospitable and generous without ostentation and pious without enthusiasm. He died July 28, 1815, ae. 91."6
Little is known about the enigmatic "jack-of-all trades" Samuel Sewall, who built everything from coffins to cradles in town in the late 1700s, but local history buffs are slowly unraveling the mystery. Locals, historians, and even some of Sewall’s descendants packed into the York Public Library’s meeting room last week to hear Old York Historical Society’s curator Tom Johnson present these findings in a brown bag lecture called "Samuel Sewall: The Man and His Work."
Sewall was born in York in 1724 to a father of the same name and his mother, Sarah Bachellor Titcomb. He died on July 23, 1815, at the age of 91, and was buried in his family’s plot on Southside Road, near the Elizabeth Perkins House, one of the many structures in town to which his craftsmanship has been attributed. The Sewall House, which is thought to be his house, is across the street, facing Seabury Road, on Sewall’s Hill. Other structures he built or furnished between the 1740s and 1780s include the First Parish Church, on York Street; the Moulton-Bennett House, on York Street; the Ramsdell House, on Lindsay Road; and the Grow-Steedman House, on Clark Lane. However, said Johnson, the edifice that was truly the "Rosetta Stone" for the identification of Sewall’s work was the Sayward-Wheeler House, on Route 103, which was named after its owner, the wealthiest merchant in town at the time, Jonathan Sayward.
"The talents of Samuel Sewall were rediscovered by scholarly researchers in 1977, when Myrna Kaye and Brock Jobe, of the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities, identified him as one of the workers on Jonathan Sayward’s house in York Harbor," said Johnson. A Sayward diary entry dated Nov. 10, 1761, notes paying "Samuel Sewell the joiner 45 pounds old tenor toward work on my house," and led to inquiries of molding profiles within the home, which linked Sewall to similar crafts in town. "These molding profiles, in turn, were found to be identical in profile to moldings on a number of furniture pieces in the house," said Johnson. "Thus, for the first time since the 18th century, bridging Sewall with his cabinetwork." Johnson said the most interesting piece found in the Sayward-Wheeler House is a high chest, which has a number of moldings crafted from the same planes in the parlor. To add to the uniqueness of each of Sewall’s projects, he made his own tools and templates, making many of the cuts and curves in local wooden antiques identifiable with his name. "From this first identification has resulted the credible attribution to over 50 known pieces of furniture to Sewall, ranging from sophisticated highboys ... to relatively simple drop leaf tables," added Johnson.
Distinctive corner cupboards, or beaufats, as they were called in the 18th century, are thought to be one of Sewall’s "hallmarks", said Johnson, along with his pilasters with fluting and stop-fluting, pegged drawer bottoms, massive back base brackets, and "horse bone" legs. At a local auction two years ago, Johnson uncovered what may have been his most exciting discovery yet. On the side of the bottom drawer of a Northeast Chest, made of unfigured maple and the familiar top and bracket cut-outs, was a color card of stain finishes used by Sewall. "Every known piece of Sewall furniture, with an original finish I’ve looked at since we found this, have matched one of these colors," he said. These designs are beacons signaling Sewall’s work, but some furniture that has been uncovered reveals only hints of these schemes, leading Johnson and others to believe that they were cut and fashioned by a different hand.
While doing some research on Sewall’s genealogy, Johnson came across an unattributed file stating that his father Samuel Sewall Sr., "had been trained as a furniture maker in Boston." From this, historians now conclude that Sewall learned much of his skill from his father, and that some of the pieces found, which do not exactly match the son’s craftsmanship, may be the work of an older Sewall. "Samuel the younger would have naturally picked up a number of his father’s framing and finishing methods, but with maturation, might have changed some of them to suit his needs and skill," said Johnson. It’s difficult to draw these conclusions, however, because little of Sewall’s physical evidence exists, and few of his personal belongings have been uncovered.
Local private collections include two of his needlework wallets embroidered with his name, pewter plates associated with his ownership and use, and an original survey transit made by him. The tripod to the transit was given to OYHS a year after the Old Gaol Museum first opened in 1900, and the group also has an English gold-cased watch, and a sabre sword which was presented to Sewall by the local militia for his services during the War of 1812, when he was in his late 80s. These artifacts, and others, are currently on display downstairs at the York Public Library.
Of course, Sewall wasn’t known only for his woodworking expertise, he was also celebrated for his engineering work on Sewall’s Bridge, which still spans the York River today. "It was the first pile-driven drawbridge built and engineered in America, in 1761," said Johnson. "This didn’t happen in the leading metropolitan areas of engineering and scientific thinking, such as Boston, New York, or Philadelphia, but it was here in York. In fact, the Boston engineers were so impressed by the design that they brought Sewall to the growing city and had him build a near-duplicate of the structure over the Charles River in 1785-86." Records show that the design influenced similar bridges in New England, and even one in Paris, France. Though the bridge has been reconstructed several times since its creation, five original pieces from the structure are now housed at the OYHS, and many other residents have obtained the relics as well.
Sewall never married, leaving no known descendants that any historian knows of, but as Johnson said, "his brothers and uncles raised large families and the name lives on in town."
by Marci Hait
mhait@seacoastonline.com
The York Weekly, March 3 2004.
Little is known about the enigmatic "jack-of-all trades" Samuel Sewall, who built everything from coffins to cradles in town in the late 1700s, but local history buffs are slowly unraveling the mystery. Locals, historians, and even some of Sewall’s descendants packed into the York Public Library’s meeting room last week to hear Old York Historical Society’s curator Tom Johnson present these findings in a brown bag lecture called "Samuel Sewall: The Man and His Work."
Sewall was born in York in 1724 to a father of the same name and his mother, Sarah Bachellor Titcomb. He died on July 23, 1815, at the age of 91, and was buried in his family’s plot on Southside Road, near the Elizabeth Perkins House, one of the many structures in town to which his craftsmanship has been attributed. The Sewall House, which is thought to be his house, is across the street, facing Seabury Road, on Sewall’s Hill. Other structures he built or furnished between the 1740s and 1780s include the First Parish Church, on York Street; the Moulton-Bennett House, on York Street; the Ramsdell House, on Lindsay Road; and the Grow-Steedman House, on Clark Lane. However, said Johnson, the edifice that was truly the "Rosetta Stone" for the identification of Sewall’s work was the Sayward-Wheeler House, on Route 103, which was named after its owner, the wealthiest merchant in town at the time, Jonathan Sayward.
"The talents of Samuel Sewall were rediscovered by scholarly researchers in 1977, when Myrna Kaye and Brock Jobe, of the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities, identified him as one of the workers on Jonathan Sayward’s house in York Harbor," said Johnson. A Sayward diary entry dated Nov. 10, 1761, notes paying "Samuel Sewell the joiner 45 pounds old tenor toward work on my house," and led to inquiries of molding profiles within the home, which linked Sewall to similar crafts in town. "These molding profiles, in turn, were found to be identical in profile to moldings on a number of furniture pieces in the house," said Johnson. "Thus, for the first time since the 18th century, bridging Sewall with his cabinetwork." Johnson said the most interesting piece found in the Sayward-Wheeler House is a high chest, which has a number of moldings crafted from the same planes in the parlor. To add to the uniqueness of each of Sewall’s projects, he made his own tools and templates, making many of the cuts and curves in local wooden antiques identifiable with his name. "From this first identification has resulted the credible attribution to over 50 known pieces of furniture to Sewall, ranging from sophisticated highboys ... to relatively simple drop leaf tables," added Johnson.
Distinctive corner cupboards, or beaufats, as they were called in the 18th century, are thought to be one of Sewall’s "hallmarks", said Johnson, along with his pilasters with fluting and stop-fluting, pegged drawer bottoms, massive back base brackets, and "horse bone" legs. At a local auction two years ago, Johnson uncovered what may have been his most exciting discovery yet. On the side of the bottom drawer of a Northeast Chest, made of unfigured maple and the familiar top and bracket cut-outs, was a color card of stain finishes used by Sewall. "Every known piece of Sewall furniture, with an original finish I’ve looked at since we found this, have matched one of these colors," he said. These designs are beacons signaling Sewall’s work, but some furniture that has been uncovered reveals only hints of these schemes, leading Johnson and others to believe that they were cut and fashioned by a different hand.
While doing some research on Sewall’s genealogy, Johnson came across an unattributed file stating that his father Samuel Sewall Sr., "had been trained as a furniture maker in Boston." From this, historians now conclude that Sewall learned much of his skill from his father, and that some of the pieces found, which do not exactly match the son’s craftsmanship, may be the work of an older Sewall. "Samuel the younger would have naturally picked up a number of his father’s framing and finishing methods, but with maturation, might have changed some of them to suit his needs and skill," said Johnson. It’s difficult to draw these conclusions, however, because little of Sewall’s physical evidence exists, and few of his personal belongings have been uncovered.
Local private collections include two of his needlework wallets embroidered with his name, pewter plates associated with his ownership and use, and an original survey transit made by him. The tripod to the transit was given to OYHS a year after the Old Gaol Museum first opened in 1900, and the group also has an English gold-cased watch, and a sabre sword which was presented to Sewall by the local militia for his services during the War of 1812, when he was in his late 80s. These artifacts, and others, are currently on display downstairs at the York Public Library.
Of course, Sewall wasn’t known only for his woodworking expertise, he was also celebrated for his engineering work on Sewall’s Bridge, which still spans the York River today. "It was the first pile-driven drawbridge built and engineered in America, in 1761," said Johnson. "This didn’t happen in the leading metropolitan areas of engineering and scientific thinking, such as Boston, New York, or Philadelphia, but it was here in York. In fact, the Boston engineers were so impressed by the design that they brought Sewall to the growing city and had him build a near-duplicate of the structure over the Charles River in 1785-86." Records show that the design influenced similar bridges in New England, and even one in Paris, France. Though the bridge has been reconstructed several times since its creation, five original pieces from the structure are now housed at the OYHS, and many other residents have obtained the relics as well.
Sewall never married, leaving no known descendants that any historian knows of, but as Johnson said, "his brothers and uncles raised large families and the name lives on in town."
by Marci Hait
mhait@seacoastonline.com
The York Weekly, March 3 2004.
Citations
- [S25] Samuel Sewall, Diary of Samuel Sewall (1973 ed.), p. 1079.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 66 p. 86.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 113, p. 196 Vital Records of York, Maine.
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p.15.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 113 p. 196. Vital Records of York, Maine.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 9, p. 343.
Rev. Samuel Sewall
M, b. 1 June 1785, d. 18 February 1868
Rev. Samuel Sewall|b. 1 Jun 1785\nd. 18 Feb 1868|p437.htm#i119|Chief Justice Samuel Sewall LL.D.|b. 11 Dec 1757\nd. 8 Jun 1814|p438.htm#i105|Abigail Devereaux|b. 17 Jun 1766\nd. 22 Feb 1847|p126.htm#i106|Samuel Sewall|b. 2 May 1715\nd. 12 Jan 1771 or 19 Jan 1771|p436.htm#i74|Elizabeth Quincy|b. 15 Oct 1729\nd. 15 Feb 1770|p366.htm#i75|Dr. Humphrey Devereaux|b. 11 Dec 1730\nd. 3 Dec 1773|p126.htm#i833|Anna Henchman|b. 18 May 1742|p216.htm#i9571|

Rev. Samuel Sewall
(1785-1868)
(1785-1868)
It is an interesting fact, that Mr. Sewall lived and died in the parsonage which had been occupied as such by his two predecessors, the Rev. Thomas Jones and the Rev. John Marrett, and the entire ministry of these three men covered a, period of more than 107 years. It is another interesting fact, that Mr. Marrett married the daughter of his predecessor, Mr. Jones, and that Mr. Sewall married the daughter of his predecessor, Mr. Marrett. Another coincidence is that Mr. Marrett died on the same month and the same day of the month as Father Sewall, namely, 18th February 1813. Mr. Sewall was pastor of the church in Burlington for twenty-eight years. He was dismissed from his pastoral charge in 1842. Since that time be supplied the church in North Woburn for a further six years. He preached his last sermon in Carlisle, 11th August 1867, and performed his last public service on 19th December 1867, at the ordination of his successor in Burlington, Rev. Mr. Hudson, when he offered the ordaining prayer.
Father Sewall, as he has for many years been deferentially called, was a gentleman of the old school, of affable and accomplished manners, and was one of the few remaining links which connected the active habits of the present generation with the quiet habits of the past. He was a man of great conscientiousness, and of remarkably consistent deportment. He was distinguished as a scholar, especially in the ecclesiastical history of New-England, and his judgment upon any point in the polity of the Congregational churches was entitled to great respect. He prepared and published in the American Quarterly Register for 1839, 1840, and 1841, several articles relating to the ministers and churches in the county of Middlesex, which indicate great breadth of research and accuracy of statement. But the most elaborate literary work of his life is his History of Woburn, which he lived to complete, but did not live to see published. It will long remain a monument of indefatigable labour, and may be depended on for its correctness. Sewall was one of the earliest members of the New England Historic-Genealogical Society having been elected 12th June 1845.4 Rev. Samuel Sewall married Martha Margaret Marrett, daughter of Rev. John Marrett and Martha Jones, on 1 January 1818 in Burlington, Massachusetts.5 Rev. Samuel Sewall died on 18 February 1868 in Burlington, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, at the age of 82 of old age.6,7,3
Children of Rev. Samuel Sewall and Martha Margaret Marrett
- Sarah Sewall8
- Samuel Sewall+9 b. 29 Nov 1819, d. 16 Nov 1903
- Martha Marrett Sewall9 b. 31 Oct 1823
- Sarah Sewall8 b. b 1830, d. s 1831
- Abigail Devereux Sewall9 b. 7 Sep 1830, d. 28 Feb 1897
Citations
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 23 p. 86 Necrology of New England Colleges.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Vital Records of Burlington, Massachusetts to the Year 1850.
- [S461] Samuel Sewall, The History of Woburn, p. i.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 23 p. 215.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Vital Records of Woburn, MA.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 23 p. 86 Necrology of New England Colleges.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Vol: 212 ; Page: 91.
- [S87] Kate Hogenson, Communication from K. Hogenson, Descendants of Charles Chauncy Sewall @ Jan 2005.
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
Rev. Samuel Sewall1
M, b. 21 December 1765, d. 16 March 1826
Rev. Samuel Sewall|b. 21 Dec 1765\nd. 16 Mar 1826|p437.htm#i751|Henry Sewall|b. 7 Feb 1740\nd. 24 Jan 1795|p419.htm#i662|Mary Stinson|b. 10 Apr 1744\nd. 22 Jan 1777|p471.htm#i750|Capt. Samuel Sewall|b. 9 Apr 1688\nd. 28 Apr 1769|p437.htm#i51|Sarah Batchelder|b. 21 Dec 1697\nd. 3 Feb 1790|p30.htm#i52|John Stinson|b. 1714\nd. 1801|p471.htm#i5677|Jane Huston|b. 1720\nd. 1812|p240.htm#i5678|
Rev. Samuel Sewall was born on 21 December 1765 in Georgetown, Maine.2 He was the son of Henry Sewall and Mary Stinson.1 He was apprenticed to a tanner and followed that trade from the time he was twelve years old until he was eighteen. He then lived in Bath, Maine, until he was twenty. After clearing a farm on Sandy River he married and the couple's home was between Farmington and Chesterville, Maine, in the wilderness. He was a millwright. In 1796 he became interested in the ministry and held meetings in Farmington in 1800. He was licensed to preach in Lincoln, Maine, as a Congregational minister, and in 1805 he moved to Edgemont, being ordained pastor there in 1807. (Edgecomb and a date of 30 September, according to Jotham p. 168 ). He moved to Phippsburg, Maine, in 1814, and in 1824 was the first missionary to the Isle of Shoals.3,4 Rev. Samuel Sewall married Abigail Trask, daughter of Thomas Trask, on 4 January 1787 in Bath, Sagadahoc, Maine.5 Rev. Samuel Sewall died on 16 March 1826 in Rye, New Hampshire, at the age of 60 whence he had gone from the Isle of Shoals where he had been preaching.6,7 He was buried in Rye Center Cemetery.
Children of Rev. Samuel Sewall and Abigail Trask
- Rufus K. Sewall+1 b. 10 Dec 1787, d. 30 Apr 1880
- Stinson Sewall+1 b. c 27 Feb 1789, d. 14 Jun 1869
- Jason Sewall+1 b. 3 Feb 1791, d. 8 Sep 1881
- Lydia Sewall1 b. 9 Jan 1793, d. 5 Nov 1796
- Samuel Sewall+1 b. 12 Jul 1794, d. 18 May 1847
- Abigail Sewall+1 b. 26 Jul 1796, d. 16 Jul 1840
- Philenia Sewall+1 b. 24 Jul 1798, d. 16 Jan 1837
- Levi Sewall+1 b. 24 May 1800, d. 4 Dec 1860
- Esther Sewall+1 b. 9 Feb 1802, d. 17 Oct 1847
- (un-named) Sewall1 b. 1803, d. 1803
- Benjamin Chapman Sewall+1 b. 14 May 1805, d. 9 Apr 1886
- Kiah Bayley Sewall+1 b. 2 Dec 1807, d. 19 Aug 1865
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S205] Newspaper, New Hampshire Gazette, 4 April 1826.
- [S62] William Richard Cutter, New England Families.
- [S22] Rev. Jotham Sewall, A memoir of Rev. Jotham Sewall of Chesterville, Maine., p. 168.
- [S89] LDS Record, Vital records, 1779-1903 Bath (Maine).
- [S22] Rev. Jotham Sewall, A memoir of Rev. Jotham Sewall of Chesterville, Maine., p. 281.
- [S205] Newspaper, New-Hampshire Statesman and Concord Register, (Concord, NH) Saturday, March 25, 1826.
Samuel Bailey Sewall1
M, b. 30 October 1855
Samuel Bailey Sewall|b. 30 Oct 1855|p437.htm#i12749|Kiah Bayley Sewall|b. 2 Dec 1807\nd. 19 Aug 1865|p426.htm#i861|Lucretia Day|b. 21 Feb 1813\nd. 12 Apr 1897|p120.htm#i1021|Rev. Samuel Sewall|b. 21 Dec 1765\nd. 16 Mar 1826|p437.htm#i751|Abigail Trask|b. 30 Oct 1762\nd. 14 Nov 1843|p512.htm#i849|Major Ezekiel Day||p120.htm#i1022||||
Samuel Bailey Sewall was born on 30 October 1855 in Mobile, Alabama.1,2 He was the son of Kiah Bayley Sewall and Lucretia Day.1
Samuel Billington Sewall1
M, b. 7 January 1992, d. 20 August 2000
Samuel Billington Sewall was born on 7 January 1992 in Ramsey County, Minnesota.2 He died on 20 August 2000 in Ramsey County, Minnesota, at the age of 8.3
Samuel Brown Sewall1
M, b. 17 August 1846, d. 5 July 1883
Samuel Brown Sewall|b. 17 Aug 1846\nd. 5 Jul 1883|p437.htm#i12350|Samuel Sewall|b. 29 Nov 1819\nd. 16 Nov 1903|p437.htm#i949|Elizabeth H. Brown|b. 6 Feb 1820\nd. 24 Feb 1909|p53.htm#i12347|Rev. Samuel Sewall|b. 1 Jun 1785\nd. 18 Feb 1868|p437.htm#i119|Martha M. Marrett|b. 2 Nov 1783\nd. 26 Mar 1860|p294.htm#i120|Samuel Brown||p54.htm#i12348|Elizabeth Tuttle||p516.htm#i12349|
Samuel Brown Sewall was born on 17 August 1846 in Burlington, Massachusetts.2,3 He was the son of Samuel Sewall and Elizabeth H. Brown.1 Samuel Brown Sewall married Louisa Elizabeth Farrington, daughter of Thomas F. Farrington and Hannah L. (Unknown), on 11 June 1872 in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts, the marriage was performed by the Rev. Charles C. Sewall.4,5 Samuel Brown Sewall died on 5 July 1883 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, at the age of 36.6
He was first a clerk at Carter & Wiley's, druggists of Washington Street, Boston but then went into business on his own account as a druggist and apothecary on Main Street, corner of Oak, Charlestown, Massachusetts.3
He was first a clerk at Carter & Wiley's, druggists of Washington Street, Boston but then went into business on his own account as a druggist and apothecary on Main Street, corner of Oak, Charlestown, Massachusetts.3
Children of Samuel Brown Sewall and Louisa Elizabeth Farrington
- Nellie Louise Sewall+1 b. 8 Apr 1873
- Samuel Farrington Sewall+1 b. Feb 1875
- John Marrett Sewall+7 b. 2 Sep 1877
- Allen Deveraux Sewall8 b. 23 Jul 1882, d. 20 Jan 1954
Citations
- [S87] Kate Hogenson, Communication from K. Hogenson, Descendants of Charles Chauncy Sewall @ Jan 2005.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Vital Records of Burlington, Massachusetts to the Year 1850.
- [S357] Samuel Dunster, Henry Dunster and His Descendants, p. 98.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Vol: 245 ; Page: 134.
- [S205] Newspaper, Boston Daily Advertiser, (Boston, MA) Wednesday, June 12, 1872.
- [S364] Eben Graves, The descendants of Henry Sewall. Vol. II (Unpublished), #449.
- [S232] Ancestry.com Database, U.S. World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1942.
- [S89] LDS Record, California Death Index, 1940-1997.
Samuel Donnell Sewall1
M, b. 20 January 1900
Samuel Donnell Sewall|b. 20 Jan 1900|p437.htm#i18937|Stephen A. Sewall|b. c 1869|p440.htm#i18935|(unknown) (Unknown)|d. b 1910|p1.htm#i18936|Joseph A. Sewall|b. 30 Apr 1830\nd. 18 Jan 1917|p424.htm#i17808|Ann E. Foss|b. 1839|p164.htm#i18837|||||||
Samuel Donnell Sewall was born on 20 January 1900 in Denver, Colorado.1 He was the son of Stephen A. Sewall and (unknown) (Unknown).2
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://accipiter.state.co.us/archive/publicrecordselect
- [S207] 1910 US Census, Ward 13, Denver, Colorado.
Chief Justice Samuel E. Sewall1
M, b. 28 March 1652, d. 1 January 1729/30
Chief Justice Samuel E. Sewall|b. 28 Mar 1652\nd. 1 Jan 1729/30|p437.htm#i17|Rev. Henry Sewall|b. 1614\nd. 16 May 1700|p420.htm#i10|Jane Dummer|b. c 1627\nd. 13 Jan 1701|p137.htm#i11|Henry Sewall|b. 8 Apr 1576\nd. Mar 1656/57|p419.htm#i5|Anne Hunt|d. 1614/15|p238.htm#i6|Stephen Dummer|b. 1599?|p138.htm#i12|Alice Archer|b. c 1603\nd. b 1661|p19.htm#i235|

Judge Sewall
In 1692 the first of Samuel Sewall's many appointments was that of special commissioner to the Court of Oyer and Terminer presiding over the Salem witchcraft trials. He and the other members of this commission were responsible for convicting and sentencing nineteen people to death. The Court, due to its hysterical tenor, inevitably lost its public support and was dismissed. The Superior Court of Judicature was established soon after the close of the Court of Oyer and Terminer and consisted of several of the judges from that court, including Sewall. He was the only commissioner to admit his error publicly.10 In 1697 in church before the congregation he publicly confessed his error in concurring with the death sentences imposed at the Salem Witch Trials. Between 1718 and 1728 he was Chief Justice of the superior court.
Chief Justice Samuel E. Sewall married secondly Abigail Melyen, daughter of Jacob Melyen and Hannah Hubbard, on 29 October 1719 at Boston, Massachusetts, at which ceremony his son Joseph officiated.11 Chief Justice Samuel E. Sewall married thirdly Mary Shrimpton, daughter of Jonathan Shrimpton and Mary Oliver, on 29 March 1722 at Boston, Massachusetts, the service being conducted by his son-in-law, the Rev. William Cooper who is described as a Presbyterian. (A transcription of the Boston Marriages gives a date of 10 March 1722).12,9,11 Chief Justice Samuel E. Sewall died on 1 January 1729/30 in Boston, Massachusetts, at the age of 77 after an illness lasting about a month.5,13 He was buried in the burying ground of the First Parish Church, Newbury, Massachusetts,, the resting place is marked by an old stone, erected by their eldest son, Samuel Sewell, which bears the following inscription: HENRY SEWELL SENT BY HENRY SEWELL HIS FATHER / IN THE SHIP ELIZABETH AND DORCAS, CAPT. WATT / COMMANDER / ARRIVED AT BOSTON 1634 / WINTERED AT IPSWICH, HELPED BEGIN THIS PLANTATION / 1635, FURNISHING ENGLISH SERVANTS, CATTLE AND PROVISIONS / MARRIED MISTRESS JANE DUMMER, MARCH 26, 1646 / DIED MAY 16. 1700 AETATIS 86. / HIS FRUITFUL VINE BEING THUS DISJOINED / FELL TO THE GROUND JANUARY 13 FOLLOWING, AETATIS 74. / Psalm 27. 10 /.14
Children of Chief Justice Samuel E. Sewall and Hannah Hull
- John Sewall4 b. 2 Apr 1677, d. 11 Sep 1678
- Samuel Sewall+ b. 11 Jun 1678, d. 27 Feb 1750/51
- Hannah Sewall15 b. 3 Feb 1679/80, d. 16 Aug 1724
- Elizabeth Sewall+ b. 29 Dec 1681, d. 10 Jul 1716
- Hull Sewall5 b. 8 Jul 1684, d. 18 Jun 1686
- Henry Sewall5 b. 7 Dec 1685, d. 22 Dec 1685
- Stephen Sewall5 b. 30 Jan 1686/87, d. 26 Jul 1687
- Rev. Dr. Joseph Sewall+ b. 15 Aug 1688, d. 4 Jul 1769
- Judith Sewall5 b. 13 Aug 1690, d. 21 Sep 1690
- Mary Sewall+ b. 28 Oct 1691, d. 17 Nov 1710
- Jane Sewall5 b. 7 Aug 1693, d. 13 Sep 1693
- Sarah Sewall5 b. 21 Nov 1694, d. 23 Dec 1696
- (Still-born) Sewall5 b. 21 May 1696, d. 21 May 1696
- Judith Sewall+ b. 2 Jan 1701/2, d. 23 Dec 1740
Citations
- [S3] Nina Moore Tiffany, Samuel E. Sewell: a memoir.
- [S25] Samuel Sewall, Diary of Samuel Sewall (1973 ed.), p. xxx.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records.
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S25] Samuel Sewall, Diary of Samuel Sewall (1973 ed.), p. 1076.
- [S3] Nina Moore Tiffany, Samuel E. Sewell: a memoir, p.2.
- [S25] Samuel Sewall, Diary of Samuel Sewall (1973 ed.), p. 14.
- [S123] Clarence Almon Torrey, New England Marriages Prior to 1700.
- [S102] Annie Haven Thwing, Inhabitants of the Town of Boston, 54163.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.sjchs-history.org/chiefjus.html#samuelsewall
- [S183] Edward W. McGlenen, Boston Marriages, Boston, MA Marriages 1646 - 1751 from the Record Commissioners Report 9 (1649 - 1699) and from the Record Commissioners Report 150 (1700 - 1751) Published 1898.
- [S25] Samuel Sewall, Diary of Samuel Sewall (1973 ed.), p. 1077.
- [S24] Sarah Elizabeth Titcomb, Early New England People, p.221.
- [S26] Hector Livingston Duff, Sewells in the New World, p.24.
- [S8] John Langdon Sibley, Biographical Sketches, 1659-1677., p.359.
Samuel Earl Sewall1
M, b. 2 October 1900, d. 28 May 1910
Samuel Earl Sewall|b. 2 Oct 1900\nd. 28 May 1910|p437.htm#i17710|Samuel Farrington Sewall|b. Feb 1875|p438.htm#i12356|Luella Frances Clark|b. Nov 1877|p84.htm#i12357|Samuel B. Sewall|b. 17 Aug 1846\nd. 5 Jul 1883|p437.htm#i12350|Louisa E. Farrington|b. Oct 1848\nd. 1917|p156.htm#i12353|Edwin S. Clark||p83.htm#i17707|Helen M. Gilman||p183.htm#i17708|
Samuel Earl Sewall was born on 2 October 1900 in Cambridge, Massachusetts.1 He was the son of Samuel Farrington Sewall and Luella Frances Clark.1 Samuel Earl Sewall died on 28 May 1910 in Burlington, Massachusetts, at the age of 9 of tubercular meningitis.1
Citations
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Massachusetts Vital Records, 1841-1910.
Samuel Edgar Sewall1
M, b. 26 December 1849, d. 17 September 1851
Samuel Edgar Sewall|b. 26 Dec 1849\nd. 17 Sep 1851|p437.htm#i12596|Samuel Sewall|b. 6 Feb 1825\nd. 17 Mar 1853|p437.htm#i12594|Mary T. Dunbar|b. c 1830\nd. Aug 1889|p139.htm#i12595|John M. Sewall|b. 30 Jul 1797\nd. 15 Jan 1866|p424.htm#i5796|Dorcas Cushman|b. 31 Dec 1794\nd. 18 Oct 1883|p112.htm#i5797|Thomas Dunbar||p139.htm#i17623|Hannah (Unknown)||p5.htm#i17624|
Samuel Edgar Sewall was born on 26 December 1849.1 He was the son of Samuel Sewall and Mary T. Dunbar.1 Samuel Edgar Sewall died on 17 September 1851 in North Bridgewater, Massachusetts, at the age of 1 of dysentery.1,2
Samuel Edmund Sewall1
M, b. 9 November 1799, d. 20 December 1888
Samuel Edmund Sewall|b. 9 Nov 1799\nd. 20 Dec 1888|p437.htm#i135|Hon. Joseph Sewall|b. 9 Mar 1762\nd. 5 May 1850|p424.htm#i115|Mary Robie|b. 3 Jun 1764\nd. 23 Jul 1834|p380.htm#i116|Samuel Sewall|b. 2 May 1715\nd. 12 Jan 1771 or 19 Jan 1771|p436.htm#i74|Elizabeth Quincy|b. 15 Oct 1729\nd. 15 Feb 1770|p366.htm#i75|Thomas Robie|b. 26 Apr 1730\nd. 1811|p380.htm#i117|Mary Bradstreet||p46.htm#i227|

Samuel Edmund Sewell
(1799-1888)
(1799-1888)
Children of Samuel Edmund Sewall and Louisa M. Winslow
- Dr. Lucy Ellen Sewall14 b. 9 Apr 1837, d. 13 Feb 1890
- Louisa Winslow Sewall+ b. c 1846
Citations
- [S124] Samuel (Rev.) Sewall, Pedigree of Sewall.
- [S3] Nina Moore Tiffany, Samuel E. Sewell: a memoir, p. 10.
- [S3] Nina Moore Tiffany, Samuel E. Sewell: a memoir, p.12.
- [S3] Nina Moore Tiffany, Samuel E. Sewell: a memoir, p.13.
- [S18] Various editors, Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, Vol. 9, p. 211.
- [S3] Nina Moore Tiffany, Samuel E. Sewell: a memoir, p.17.
- [S3] Nina Moore Tiffany, Samuel E. Sewell: a memoir, p. 32.
- [S89] LDS Record, Vital Records Index North America.
- [S205] Newspaper, Boston Daily Advertiser, (Boston, MA) Tuesday, June 23, 1857.
- [S205] Newspaper, The Congregationalist, (Boston, MA) Friday, June 26, 1857.
- [S24] Sarah Elizabeth Titcomb, Early New England People, p. 223.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Massachusetts Vital Records, 1841-1910.
- [S160] New York Times, 24 Dec 1888 p. 5.
- [S3] Nina Moore Tiffany, Samuel E. Sewell: a memoir, p.83.
Close




