Susan Wilde Parke1

F, #15313, b. 17 August 1863, d. 10 January 1864
     Susan Wilde Parke was born on 17 August 1863 in Honolulu, Hawai.1 She was the daughter of William Cooper Parke and Annie Severance.1 Susan Wilde Parke died on 10 January 1864 in Honolulu1 and is buried in O'ahu Cemetery, Honolulu.2

Citations

  1. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 44 p. 57.
  2. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 118679043."

William Cooper Parke1

M, #15302, b. 7 August 1782, d. 11 November 1857
     William Cooper Parke was born on 7 August 1782 in Boston, Massachusetts.1 He was the son of Captain Matthew Parke and Judith Cooper.1 William Cooper Parke married Susan Wilde on 5 November 1816 in Boston, Massachusetts.1 William Cooper Parke died on 11 November 1857 in Boston, Massachusetts, at the age of 75.1

Children of William Cooper Parke and Susan Wilde

Citations

  1. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 44 p. 56.

William Cooper Parke1

M, #15307, b. 21 September 1821, d. 29 May 1889
     William Cooper Parke was born on 21 September 1821 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.1 He was the son of William Cooper Parke and Susan Wilde.1 William Cooper Parke married Annie Severance on 15 January 1856 in Honolulu, Hawai.1 William Cooper Parke died on 29 May 1889 in Honolulu at the age of 671 and is buried in O'ahu Cemetery, Honolulu.2

WILLIAM COOPER PARKE, Former Marshal of the Kingdom. Marshal of the Kingdom of Hawaii for thirty-four years, during which period he served under five kings, member of the king's privy council under Kamehameha V, and beloved friend and helper of the Hawaiian people, William C. Parke for decades was one of the most notable figures in the islands.
Loved alike by court officials and the public at large, Mr. Parke's forced retirement from the office of marshal in 1884, at the request of the King, who was actuated by political motives, was most sincerely lamented by everyone, and to him was paid the unusual tribute of a public resolution of regret, voiced through a joint meeting of the Supreme Court, members of the Legislature and the bar of Hawaii. He was lauded as the highest type of public official, and, in the words of Chief Justice McCully, was designated as "the chief officer of the executive arm of the judiciary department."
"Marshal Parke was more than honest," Judge McCully said in his eulogy. "He never lived merely for himself. He was always at the service of some one, either officially or in private. He made himself ex-officio a helper of the court and bar, and in serving the government he never forgot his duty to his fellow man."
At the conclusion of the ceremonies of public regret, Mr. Parke was granted a permanent settlement of $1200 a year by the Legislature, and was given a license to practice law.
Born in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, on September 21, 1821, Mr. Parke was the son of William C. and Susan (Wilde) Parke, and a descendant of Captain Matthew Parke, who sailed with John Paul Jones as a captain of marines in the United States Navy, and returned from the cruise in command of the frigate "Alliance." Mr. Parke attended the public schools of Boston, but when nineteen years old ran away from home and stowed away in a sailing ship bound for Honolulu, one of the ships which his father was frequently called upon to outfit at Boston, where he was in business as a commission and shipping merchant. Coming to Honolulu in 1843, Mr. Parke went into the cabinet making business for a short time, and when the gold-rush excitement in California was at its height in 1849 he sailed to San Francisco. He located a claim in the vicinity of General Sutter's mill, near Coloma, became a close friend of General Sutter and bore back with him to Honolulu some of the original gold discovered at the mill. Upon his return to the islands in 1850 he was commissioned as Marshal of the Kingdom on June 1, by Kamehameha III, and this position he held until asked to resign for political reasons by King Kalakaua in 1884. Responsible for the maintenance of public order throughput the Kingdom, Mr. Parke organized a fine police system and administered this arm of the government efficiently. Perhaps his greatest contribution to Hawaii was his work during the great smallpox epidemic of 1853. The entire country was stricken, and one-third of the population died. With his characteristic tireless energy and love for mankind, Mr. Parke threw himself wholeheartedly into the task of aiding the suffering thousands, and organized relief parties who took charge of the entire situation. One exciting incident in the life of the former marshal occurred on the day of the election of King Kalakaua as ruler of the islands. The populace was divided into rival factions, and one group of malcontents descended upon Marshal Parke's office, where he had hidden the late Samuel G. Wilder and the late A. S. Cleghorn, prominent members of the legislature. Marshal Parke defied the intruders, and with the assistant of Sanford B. Dole and his brother, George Dole, his two friends were saved.
He was a true and trusted friend of the native Hawaiians, and scarcely another man of his time had such a large share of the native's affection and confidence. They came to him whenever in trouble or in need of advice, and frequently a line of natives would be at his door in the morning awaiting his counsel.
At one time he managed the business affairs of the Catholic Mission, and at various intervals he headed other religious and philanthropic affairs.
One of the original founders of Lihue plantation, on the island of Kauai, Mr. Parke left large sugar interests upon his death, which are still held by his daughters. He was decorated with the Order of Kamehameha I by King Kalakaua, and he was also a 33 degree Mason, Odd Fellow and a member of the Pacific Club.
In 1856 he married Annie Severance, daughter of Luther Severance, former American Commissioner in Honolulu, and upon his death on May 29, 1889, he was survived by four children, two of whom are now living, Miss Annie Parke and Mrs. Bernice Walbridge. His other two children were Miss Jane Severance Parke, and William Cooper Parke, who practiced law in Honolulu for many years. The Story of Hawaii and its Builders, edited by George F. Nellist. Honolulu, 1925.3

Children of William Cooper Parke and Annie Severance

Citations

  1. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 44 p. 56.
  2. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 118679017."
  3. [S34] Unverified internet information, http://files.usgwarchives.net/hi/statewide/bios/…
  4. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 44 p. 57.

William Cooper Parke1

M, #15314, b. 19 September 1865, d. 1917
     William Cooper Parke was born on 19 September 1865 in Honolulu, Hawai.1 He was the son of William Cooper Parke and Annie Severance.1 William Cooper Parke died in 19172 and is buried in O'ahu Cemetery, Honolulu.2

Citations

  1. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 44 p. 57.
  2. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 118679021."

(unknown) Parker1

M, #17190, d. 1626
     (unknown) Parker married Parnel Coytemore, daughter of Capt. Rowland Coytemore and Katherine Miles.1 (unknown) Parker died in 1626.1

Citations

  1. [S309] William S. Appleton, Early wills, p. 81.

Anne Parker1

F, #7915
     Anne Parker was the daughter of Richard Parker.2 Anne Parker married John Manning before 1647 in Boston.2 Anne Parker married Capt. William Gerrish after June 1677.3,2

Child of Anne Parker and Capt. William Gerrish

Citations

  1. [S4] Sandra MacLean Clunies, Clunies files.
  2. [S123] Clarence Almon Torrey, New England Marriages Prior to 1700.
  3. [S75] Frederick Lewis Weis, Colonial Clergy, p. 91.
  4. [S78] Henry Whittemore, Genealogical guide, p. 207.

Caroline S. Parker1

F, #23924, b. circa May 1858, d. 3 October 1858
     Caroline S. Parker was born circa May 1858.1 She was the daughter of Capt. Lorenzo Parker and Elizabeth Sewall.1 Caroline S. Parker died on 3 October 18581 and is buried in Maple Grove Cemetery, Bath, Maine.1

Citations

  1. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 74300744."

Daniel Pinckney Parker1

M, #9412, b. 1781, d. 1850
     Daniel Pinckney Parker was born in 1781. He died in 1850.

Child of Daniel Pinckney Parker

Citations

  1. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 11 p. 73.

Elizabeth Parker1

F, #7706
     Elizabeth Parker was the daughter of Robert Parker and Dorothy Stephens.1

Citations

  1. [S21] Various editors, Dictionary of National Biography.

Etta Maria Parker1

F, #6798, b. 2 May 1860, d. 18 January 1949
     Etta Maria Parker was born on 2 May 1860 in Westmoreland, New York.2 She married George Mitchell Sewall, son of David Alexander Sewall and Harriet Putnam Coburn, on 28 May 1887 in Minneapolis.2 Etta Maria Parker and George Mitchell Sewall appear on the census of 26 June 1895 at St. Paul, Minnesota, his occupation is given as machinist.3 Etta Maria Parker died on 18 January 1949 in Racine, Wisconsin, at the age of 882 and is buried in Mound Cemetery, Racine, Racine County, Wisconsin.4
SEWALL, MRS. ETTA PARKER
1021 Munroe Ave. Age 88. Passed away Jan. 18 at St. Mary's Hospital. Mrs. Sewall was born in West Moreland, New York, on May 2. 1880, and came to Racine from Minneapolis. Minn, in 1897. On May 28, 1887, in Minneapolis, she was married to George M. Sewall who preceded her in death, Nov. 25, 1939. She was a member of the Order of Eastern Star.
Surviving are one son, Fred A Sewall of Racine, two gran-daughter; three great grand-children. Funeral services will be held Thursday, 2 p.m., in the Wilson Funeral Home, 1139 Blaine Blvd.. Rev. Alexander Simpson officiating. Burial will be in Mound Cemetery.

Children of Etta Maria Parker and George Mitchell Sewall

Citations

  1. [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, Sinnett's Sewall genealogy, p. 52.
  2. [S205] Newspaper, Racine Journal Times, January 19, 1949.
  3. [S232] Ancestry.com, Minnesota Territorial and State Censuses, 1849-1905. 1895. Ramsey. St Paul Ward 2.
  4. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "#173043672."

Grace Denton Parker

F, #24891, b. 3 May 1892, d. 9 February 1929
     Grace Denton Parker was born on 3 May 1892 in Jersey City, New Jersey.1,2 She married Joseph Osgood Sewall, son of George Ward Sewall and Mary Franklin Cottingham, in 1919 in New Jersey.3 Grace Denton Parker died on 9 February 1929 in Ridgefield, Connecticut, at the age of 362 and is buried in Hillside Cemetery, Madison, Morris County, New Jersey.1

Mrs. Grace Denton Parker Sewall. 36. wife of J. Osgood Sewall of Ridgefield, Conn., died in her home Saturday evening after a short illness She was born in Jersey City and had lived in Dunellen until her marriage, about nine years ago, when she moved to Connecticut. She was a graduate of the Plainfield High School, Class of 1910, and later of the Montclair Normal School. She taught for some time in the North Plainfield grade schools.
Mrs. Sewall leaves, besides her husband. four children. Lida, Mary, Joseph and Eva. all at home, and two brothers living in Plainfield. Edward J. Parker of 1011 West Seventh street and Ralph Parker of 615 East Second street.
The funeral will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock from the funeral parlors of E. P. Burroughs & Sons. 106 Main street. Madison, N. J., with services in charge of the Rev. A. H. Robinson, minister of All Souls' Unitarian Church of Plainfield, of which church Mrs Sewall was a member. Interment will be made in Hillside Cemetery, Madison.2

Children of Grace Denton Parker and Joseph Osgood Sewall

Citations

  1. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 226557832, Grace Denton Parker, showing gravestone photograph."
  2. [S205] Newspaper, The Courier-News (Bridgewater, New Jersey), 11 February 1929.
  3. [S232] Ancestry.com, New Jersey, USA.
  4. [S585] 1940 US Census, South Plainfield, Middlesex, New Jersey.

Harlie Parker1

M, #4819, d. 1951
     Harlie Parker married Nellie Blanche Emerson, daughter of Charles Hart Emerson and Melinda Elizabeth Stearns.1 Harlie Parker died in 1951.1

Citations

  1. [S4] Sandra MacLean Clunies, Clunies files.

Jacob Parker

M, #24028, d. 1778
     Jacob Parker married Rebecca Emerson, daughter of Rev. Joseph Emerson and Mary Moody, on 13 February 1777 in Malden, Massachusetts.1 Jacob Parker died in 1778 in Malden, Massachusetts, in the smallpox outbreak.

Citations

  1. [S232] Ancestry.com, Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988.

Jane Standish Parker1

F, #1363, b. 17 January 1814, d. 28 February 1882
     Jane Standish Parker was born on 17 January 1814.1 She married Hon. Harrison Gray Otis Colby, son of Rev. Philip Colby and Harriet Sewall, on 3 January 1832 in New Bedford, Bristol County, Massachusetts.1 Jane Standish Parker married Rev. Thomas Ricker Lambert DD after 1853.1 Jane Standish Parker died on 28 February 1882 at the age of 68.1

Children of Jane Standish Parker and Hon. Harrison Gray Otis Colby

Citations

  1. [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.

John Parker

M, #6656
     John Parker married Experience Cloyes.

Child of John Parker and Experience Cloyes

Capt. Lorenzo Parker

M, #12517, b. circa 1812, d. 30 September 1858
     Capt. Lorenzo Parker was born circa 1812.1 He married Elizabeth Sewall, daughter of General Joseph Sewall and Eliza W. Smith, on 24 October 1851 in Bath, Sagadahoc County, Maine, the marriage being solemnised by the Rev. John W. Ellingwood.2 Capt. Lorenzo Parker died on 30 September 18581 and is buried in Maple Grove Cemetery, Bath, Maine.1

Child of Capt. Lorenzo Parker and Elizabeth Sewall

Citations

  1. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 74300643."
  2. [S89] Family Search, Vital records, 1779-1903 Bath (Maine).
  3. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 74300744."

Lucilla Pinckney Parker1

F, #9411, b. 17 October 1810, d. 6 November 1860
     Lucilla Pinckney Parker was born on 17 October 1810 in Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts.2 She was the daughter of Daniel Pinckney Parker.3 Lucilla Pinckney Parker married Edmund Quincy, son of Hon. Josiah/3 Quincy and Elizabeth Susan Morton, on 14 October 1833.3 Lucilla Pinckney Parker died on 6 November 1860 in Dedham, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, at the age of 502 and is buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.4

Children of Lucilla Pinckney Parker and Edmund Quincy

Citations

  1. [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Massachusetts Vital Records to 1850.
  2. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 96821756 M.I."
  3. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 11 p. 73.
  4. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 96821756, Lucilla Pinckney Parker Quincy, includes gravestone photograph."

Mary Parker1

F, #737, b. 23 December 1738, d. 27 May 1788
     Mary Parker was born on 23 December 1738.2 She was the daughter of Hon. William Parker and Elizabeth Grafton.3,4 Mary Parker married Hon. David Sewall, son of Capt. Samuel Sewall and Sarah Batchelder, on 17 December 1762 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.4 Mary Parker died on 27 May 1788 in York, Maine, at the age of 49 at 2 p.m.5,2 and is buried in Old York Cemetery, York Village, the inscription reads:
Here lies the Remains of Mary, Consort of David Sewall Esq one of the Judges of the S. J. C. of Massachusetts, and Daughter of the Hon'ble William Parker Esq, who, after a virtuous and affectionate life of 25 years and with the husband of her youth, died May the 27th 1788 AE 50.6

Citations

  1. [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
  2. [S374] Maine Historical Society, Maine Historical Society Collections, 2nd series vol. 2 p. 334.
  3. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 5, p. 69.
  4. [S106] Maine Families in 1790, Vol. 2 p. 251.
  5. [S205] Newspaper, New-Hampshire Gazette, and General Advertiser; 5 June 1788.
  6. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 22846441."

Mary Parker1

F, #23306
     Mary Parker married John Drummond.1

Child of Mary Parker and John Drummond

Citations

  1. [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.georgetownhistoricalsociety.org/genealogy/…

Mary A. Parker1

F, #23582
     Mary A. Parker was born in North Carolina.1 She married John Henry Webb on 20 January 1845 in Greene, Alabama.2

Child of Mary A. Parker and John Henry Webb

Citations

  1. [S232] Ancestry.com, Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1963.
  2. [S89] Family Search, Alabama County Marriages, 1809-1950.

Mary Mabel Eleanor Blanchard Parker1

F, #23907, b. 11 August 1920, d. 17 November 1975
     Mary Mabel Eleanor Blanchard Parker was born on 11 August 1920 in Montreal, Quebec.2 She was the daughter of Reginald Lawrence Parker and Mary Alice Blanchard.1 Mary Mabel Eleanor Blanchard Parker married Henry DeQuincy Sewell III, son of Henry Charles de Quincy Sewell and Ida Mary Newdick. Mary Mabel Eleanor Blanchard Parker died on 17 November 1975 in White Rock, British Columbia, at the age of 551 and was buried on 20 November 1975 in Sunnyside Lawn, Surrey, British Columbia.1

Child of Mary Mabel Eleanor Blanchard Parker and Henry DeQuincy Sewell III

Citations

  1. [S89] Family Search, British Columbia Death Registrations, 1872-1986.
  2. [S232] Ancestry.com, Quebec, Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967.

Nathan Parker

M, #6652
     Nathan Parker was the son of Peter Parker and Ruth Eaton. Nathan Parker married Catharine Murdock.

Child of Nathan Parker and Catharine Murdock

Peter Parker1

M, #1353, b. 13 June 1859
     Peter Parker. A private in the Massachusetts Militia in the Revolution. He was born on 13 June 1859 in Washington, District of Columbia. He was the son of Rev. Peter Parker MD and Harriet Colby Webster.1 Peter Parker married Fanny Stuart Wilson, daughter of William van Sycklen Wilson and Marie Cecil Stuart, on 5 June 1890.1

Children of Peter Parker and Fanny Stuart Wilson

Citations

  1. [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
  2. [S231] 1930 US Census, Framingham, Middlesex, Massachusetts.

Peter Parker

M, #6654
     Peter Parker was the son of John Parker and Experience Cloyes. Peter Parker married Ruth Eaton.

Child of Peter Parker and Ruth Eaton

Peter Parker1

M, #20093, b. 15 August 1910
     Peter Parker was born on 15 August 1910 in Framingham, Massachusetts.2 He was the son of Peter Parker and Fanny Stuart Wilson.1

Citations

  1. [S231] 1930 US Census, Framingham, Middlesex, Massachusetts.
  2. [S89] Family Search, "Massachusetts State Vital Records, 1841-1920.

Rev. Peter Parker MD1

M, #1352, b. 18 June 1804, d. 10 January 1888
     Rev. Peter Parker MD was born on 18 June 1804 in Framingham, Middlesex County, Massachusetts. He was the son of Nathan Parker and Catharine Murdock. Rev. Peter Parker MD married Harriet Colby Webster, daughter of John Ordway Webster and Rebecca Guild Sewall, on 29 March 1841.1 Rev. Peter Parker MD died on 10 January 1888 in Washington, District of Columbia, at the age of 831 and is buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Washington, District of ColumbiaCounty, District of Columbia.2

A descendant of Hananiah Parker of Reading, Mass. He was a student at Amherst college, 1827-30, was graduated from Yale, A.B., 1831, M.D., 1834; and attended Yale Divinity school, 1832-34. He was appointed by the A.B.C.F.M., a missionary to China; was ordained May 16, 1834, and embarked for Canton in June, 1834. In October, 1835, he opened an ophthalmic hospital in Canton, which soon became a general hospital, and not only attended over 2,000 sick, but preached to his patients in their own language and trained several in medicine and surgery. He came back to the United States at the outbreak of the opium war between China and England in 1840. He returned to China in 1842, accompanied by his wife, who was the first foreign woman to reside in Canton. Dr. Parker continued the hospital 1842-55. He was appointed secretary and interpreter to the U.S. legation to China in 1844; and in 1845 resigned his connection With the American board to serve as chargé d'affaires in the absence of the U.S. minister. In 1853 he made a brief visit to the United States, where he was appointed U.S. commissioner to China with plenipotentiary powers for the revision of the treaty of 1844, and served as such, 1855-57. In this capacity he was again in China, 1855-57, and then settled in Washington, D.C. He was founder and for several years president of the Medical Missionary Society of China, became a regent of the Smithsonian Institution in 1868, a corporate member of the A.B.C. of F.M. in 1871, and in that year a delegate of the Evangelical Alliance to petition the Emperor of Russia to permit freedom of worship in the Baltic provinces. He was president of the Washington branch of the Evangelical Alliance in 1887. Yale conferred upon him the degree of A.M. in 1858. He is the author of: Journal of an Expedition from Singapore to Japan (1838); A Statement respecting Hospitals in China (1841); Eulogy on Henry Wilson (1880.)

Child of Rev. Peter Parker MD and Harriet Colby Webster

Citations

  1. [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
  2. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 83653135, Peter Parker, showing gravestone photograph."

Rebecca Parker1

F, #1775, b. 29 July 1901, d. 7 May 1902
     Rebecca Parker was born on 29 July 1901.1 She was the daughter of Peter Parker and Fanny Stuart Wilson.1 Rebecca Parker died on 7 May 1902.1

Citations

  1. [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.

Reginald Lawrence Parker1

M, #23908
     Reginald Lawrence Parker married Mary Alice Blanchard.1

Child of Reginald Lawrence Parker and Mary Alice Blanchard

Citations

  1. [S89] Family Search, British Columbia Death Registrations, 1872-1986.

Richard Parker1

M, #11234

Child of Richard Parker

Citations

  1. [S123] Clarence Almon Torrey, New England Marriages Prior to 1700.

Robert Parker1

M, #7703, b. 1564?, d. 1614
     Robert Parker was born in 1564?1 He married Dorothy Stephens.1 Robert Parker died in 1614 in Doesburg, Gelderland.1

Children of Robert Parker and Dorothy Stephens

Citations

  1. [S21] Various editors, Dictionary of National Biography.