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Note: BIOGRAPHY: A Hallock Genealogy, William, Charles, and Lucius Hallock, revised in 1860, 1906, and 1928, respectively, Pg 410: "The controlling influence in this interesting incident (five daughters marrying four Willets brothers) seems to have been that they were all good, honest Quakers. John Hallock and his wife, Abigail, were active members of the Society of Friends, much to the displeasure of his father, William, who gave vent to this displeasure in his will. They settled in Setauket, Long Island, in Brookhaven Town. Their graves are marked by small stones, rising little above the ground in the Friends corner. Of the ten daughters of John and Abigail we have the name of only one. Four Willets brothers, sons of Thomas and Dinah-Willets, of Syosset, Long Island, married five of these sisters, as follows, but we do not know the names of four of them: Richard Willets married, first, a daughter, and second, the widow of John Powell, who was another daughter. Amos Willets married daughter Mary about 1717. He married again, Rebecca Whitson. Thomas Willets married a daughter. Isaac Willets married a daughter." ___________ 1675 Rate Lists of Long Island 1675, 1676, 1683 Southhould's Estimate the 16th of Sept 1675, p 27 John Hallok 1 heade 2 oxen 2 cows >> 22 2 yrllngs >> 03 2 horses 1 2 yr >> 29 6 swine >> 06 total >>82 _____________ Note: Long Island Genealogies has genealogies of Hallock, Willetts, Powell and other allied families and answers some of the above riddles. ___________________ http://www.parsonstech.com/genealogy/trees/jwhite/d148.htm#P1542 John Hallock(1043) (6) was born in 1658. He died on 25 May 1737 in Westbury, MA. (6) The Westbury meeting of Friends records his death and that of his wife Abigail at Setauket in Brookhaven in 1737. Deeds at Riverhead name only four sons John Peter Benjamin and William who all settled near their father. The neat buildings of John Hallock and his son John Jr., still remain; and in them for more than a century were held the friends committee meetings and their monthly meetings, but later discontinued. Tradition says that Peter Hallock came with other heads of families to New Haven, Conn., in 1640. The same year they crossed to Long Island Sound at Southold, Peter being the first to step on shore at a spot called "Hallock's Neck." Parents: William Peter Hallock and Margaret Howell. He was married to Abigail Swasey in 1679.(1044) Children were: Sarah Hallock, Mary Hallock, Peter Hallock, Benjamin Hallock, Catherine Hallock, Clemence Hallock, Abagail Hallock, John Hallock, Margaret Hallock. ___________________ The Cox Family in America Pg 7 "There were Quakers at Southold, notably Humphrey Norton who was haled to the court at New Haven for traducing the Rev. John Youngs, and was, for spreading sundry heretical opinions fined 20, whipped and banished from the jurisdiction. There were then and later, sympathetic with Friends, the Sylvesters, the Booths, John Hallock, who, marrying a Quaker damsel, was disinherited by his father, John Budd Sr. who was fined for entertaining Friends, and several sons of Thomas Mapes, of whom Joseph was an outspoken Member of Friends and in 1700 "desired a meeting to be appointed once a year at Southold". Some of the Friends were Merchant-adventurers as indicated by the following from the Southold records. Certain young men without the love of their neighbors as themselves in their hearts, went down to Oysterpond Neck ostensibly to hunt for wild turkeys, but coming across some of their neighbors' swine, which had been turned on the Neck to forage for themselves and to increase and multiply, they the said hunters killed and dressed several of the swine and carrying the meat down to the ships, "traded it with the Quakers for cloathes", one of the men getting for his barrel of Pork "a cloake, a read suite and a Silk Neck Cloath". Southold with Setauket, Huntington and Oysterbay had a very considerable trade with the West India Islands, sending thither salted meats and pipe-staves with which to construct barrels, hogsheads and pipes to contain the sugar, molasses, rum and sack for the return cargo, which then being transhipped to smaller vessels, was delivered in New Amsterdam without payment of customs duty to the Dutch." ________________ New England Families Genealogical and Memorial: Volume IV Pg 1607 (III) John, son of William Hallock, married Abigail Swazey. He removed to Setauket in Brookhaven, and died there in 1737. His wife died in the same year January 23, "both very ancient and in unity with Friends." Deeds in Riverhead, Long Island, mention four of his sons, John, Peter, Benjamin, mentioned below, and William, who settled near him, as did also his son Jonathan. His dwelling house in Setauket, covered with cedar, is still standing. ________________ Whitaker's Southold Pg 96: John Hallock purchased the western half (8 acres) of John Budd's homelot in Southold in 1679. _____________ To: <nmt1@ix.netcom.com> Subject: Palatine Orphan List: John Philip Leeper From: "Dr. Debra H. Phillips" <anm@columbus.rr.com> Date: Tue, 1 Jul 2003 08:33:14 -0400 Palatine Orphan List Orphaned Palatine Children Palatine Children Apprenticed By Gov. Hunter 1710-1714 DATE NAME OF CHILD AGE PARENTS BOUND TO OF 31 AUG 1710 JOHN PHILIP LEEPER 12 ORPHAN JOHN HALLOCK BROOKHAVEN 14 SEP 1710 JUSTINA MONA 13 ORPHAN H. VANDERHULL NEW YORK
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