|
a.
|
Note: Lydia wsa Solomon Denton's 1st wife. She died and he married her sister Judah. ( NOAH DENTON (SOLOMON 6, SOLOMON5, SAMUEL4, NATHANIEL3, RICHARD2, RICHARD1) was born 1771 in Greenwich, Connecticut, and died Aft. 1840 in Near Pawling, Dutchess County, New York. He married DELILA KELSEY 1813 in New York. His mother was Judith (Jadath) Husted, d/o David Husted and Joanna Brundage.) HISTORY OF NOAH DENTON Solomon Denton and Judith (Judath) Husted's fifth child, Noah Denton, was born in 1771. Noah served in the War-of-1812. After the war, Noah married Delila Kelsey in 1813 and their first child, Mary Tacy Denton, married Jared Newman Worden in 1833. About his grandmother, Delila Kelsey Denton, Joseph Watkins Worden writes: "Delila Kelsey Denton was left an orphan while young. She lived with a family by the name of Albro in the town of Beekman, Dutchess County, until she married. She was a fine singer. Belonged to the Baptist Church. I used to think it a great treat to hear her sing. Grandfather Noah Denton was in the War of 1812 being stationed at New York City where he could see the English ships outside the harbor for months at a time. Grandfather was of medium height, compact build, genial and happy disposition, always looking on the bright side. He was very active. I have heard him say he was never sick a day in his life. As a boy, he would ride down hill on snow, barefooted. His first pair of pants his grandmother knit from flax. It's thought that Noah died in the early 1840's. For Joseph (b. 1834-1912) to have known him, that sounds about right. DELILA KELSEY, 1800-1805 Both her parents died and she was orphaned young. Delila was adopted by the Albro family of Beekman, Dutchess County, New York. Her adoptive father was either Benjamin Albro or Samuel Albro. Delila was a fine singer. She belonged to the Baptist Church. Joseph Watkins Worden (1834-1912) wrote about his grandmother Delila: "I used to think a great treat to hear her sing." Children of NOAH DENTON and DELILA KELSEY are: i. WARREN HUSTED DENTON. ii. EZRA DENTON. iii. MARY TACY DENTON, b. March 16, 1816, Holmes, Near Pawlings, Dutchess County, New York; d. July 12, 1863, Near Garden Grove, Decatur County, Iowa; m. JARED NEWMAN WORDEN, 1833, Dutchess County, New York. Notes for MARY TACY DENTON: Mary is buried in Metier Cemetery, Garden Grove, Decatur County, Iowa. Some know her by Mary Tracy Denton Worden, it was actually Tacy. JARED NEWMAN WORDEN Jared was named for a neighbor, Jared Newman, of his father's. Jared Newman Worden married Delila Kelsey in 1833. They had eleven children, ten of whom were born near the town of Pawlings, Dutchess County, New York. The last child was born in Decatur County, Iowa. From an account written by Meda Worden Langsdorf, as told by her father Joseph Watkins Worden, about the move from New York to Iowa: How the family of Jared Newman Worden came to Iowa. Jared's son Joseph was 21 years old in 1855. That spring, Joseph traveled to Iowa in the company of Lyman Chase and family of Holmes, Dutchess County, New York. They settled northwest of Garden Grove, Iowa, a settlement founded a dozen years earlier by the Mormons. Joseph was so delighted by the country, he returned early the next spring to New York to try and persuade his father to sell his 30-acre farm near Holmes in Dutchess County and move his family to Iowa. Joseph saw the possiblities there were for them--10 children in the family, 6 of them were boys and 4 girls. The mother's health was very poor. Joseph thought that the climate might be beneficial to her health. Joseph thought that with so much wonderful cheap land, the 6 boys would have a great chance to improve their lot. In later years, five of them owned farms all joining. Husted owned a farm in Nebraska. The father was undecided at first about moving. He had lumber and rock on his place and a cellar dug for a new house, as the old one was of log. Finally he said that he would sell for $1800.00. Joseph and Silas got very busy finding a buyer. A man by the name of Joe Holmes offered $1500.00, but Jared wouldn't go down in price. In order to make the deal, Joseph and Silas borrowed $200.00 from a cousin, Silas Abbott, giving the money to Holmes to make the $1800.00. Although Jared did not find out for a long time about his sons' "deal", he was more than pleased with the beauties of the far west. Jared sold his household goods, ox team, cows, chickens and implements. In about a month the family was ready to leave for the Golden West. The morning they were to leave, the relatives and many neighbors all gathered, giving gifts and prayers. Many tears were shed at parting, thinking they would never see them again and that the Indians would kill them. Joseph, their first son, writes of their leaving New York state: "In the spring of 1856 they gathered all their earthly posessions together and left the little rocky farm on the side of the mountains, and with all their children started for the far west. Jared and his wife, with their 10 children, 7 large trunks and many other packages, such as their wagon tent and wagon cover, left Pawlings, New York by train. They then took a boat across to Canada, then a train to Chicago. Silas, who had the family dog to look after, became confused in Chicago when two trains left almost simultaneously, one going East and one going West! His mother soon missed him and nearly went frantic. Finally he was located and the train brought him back. The mother had quite a job taking along food for this large family on the train! They got off the train at Fort Madison, Iowa and there took a boat up to Burlington, From there they bought tickets for the only train in Iowa, which took them about 15 miles out on the open prairies. There was not one thing in sight except a little store building that kept a few supplies. There they unloaded their baggage and Jared and the boys got busy, pitched their tent, and then struck out to buy an oxen team and wagon which they did find. They then out on the wagon cover which they had made in New York and brought along on the journey. After loading their trunks and small children, they started for Garden Grove. All who could walk did. It took four days to get there. From there they went to the Lymon Chase family, northwest of Garden Grove. There was a small log cabin near there where the family moved to until fall when their own house was built and made ready for the family. When they settled on the beautiful praries in Decatur County, Iowa, Jared and his wife thought it almost a paradise. When not otherwise occupied, the farmer would travel over the beautiful, natural meadows. But he was not long to enjoy the scenes in which he so much delighted to spend his idle hours. The summer of 1859 was a very wet year. As it drew to a close, there were many cases of chills and fever. He took congestive chills, passing away in a short time on his Iowa farm, at the age of 51, after only 3 years out west. The mother did not survive long afterwards. She had been an invalid for a number of years. Jared was a life long farmer. Jared is buried in Metier Cemetery, Garden Grove, Decatur County, Iowa. The following is from the memoirs of Jared's son, Joseph Watkins Worden, as preserved by his daughter, Meda Worden Langsdorf (1875-1976). Written in April 23, 1901: "I will write a few lines of my life since I left the eastern hills for the (then) far west. I left the 12th day of May, 1855. I was just past 21 years of age. This part of the west was then really a new country- - -very thinly settled. Was some government land and land was very cheap, some selling as low as one dollar per acre. The first summer I was here I saw the first wild indians- - a part of the Potawatamie Tribe- - 40 in number. They were peaceful, disturbing no one. Deer and wild turkey were plentiful. Two or three days later I was in Nebraska before the government land was surveyed- - the land where Lincoln is a large city. Land in that part of the state is now worth from one to three hundred dollars per acre. At that time there were a good many Buffalo ranging where now are good sized cities. There was not a mile of railroad in this state of Iowa when I came here- - now there are more miles than any other state except Illinois. "The 27th day of May, 1860, I married a worthy young woman, Cinthia M. Davis. We had a farm of 200 acres to put to cultivation, fence, break the prairie sod, build a house and other improvements. She took suddenly sick and wanted to go back to her old home in Pennsylvania. Took her back. She seemed to improve for a few days, but on the fourth of July she passed away. I went back home to assist my mother in taking care of her large family. "In the winter of 1861 and 1862 Mother, my brother Husted, and I talked over the conditions of the government. It was certain the boys were needed at the front. Mother said she hated to see us go, but we owed a duty to our country. We put in the crop the following spring and on the 26th of July 1862, Brother Husted and I enlisted in Co. B 18 Iowa Infantry and started for the front. When I bid my mother goodbye I was certain it was the last time in this world." Jared Worden's wife, Mary Tacy Denton Worden died 1863, July 12, while her two of her older sons were in the Union Army. After Mary died, the task of caring for the younger children fell upon the next older son, Silas. iv. WASHINGTON DENTON. v. AMANDA DENTON. vi. ALBRO DENTON. Notes for ALBRO DENTON: Named after his mother's adoptive parents, the Albros of Beekman, Dutchess County, New York. 5. ABRAHAM DENTON, SR. (SOLOMON6, SOLOMON5, SAMUEL4, NATHANIEL3, RICHARD2, RICHARD1) was born 1779, and died May 04, 1858. He married ALICE REASONER. Children of ABRAHAM DENTON and ALICE REASONER are: i. ALBERT DENTON. ii. ELIZABETH DENTON. iii. NOAH DENTON. Notes for NOAH DENTON: Named after his uncle Noah Denton. iv. MARY DENTON. v. WILLIAM DENTON. vi. MATHILDA DENTON. vii. AARON DENTON. viii. ABRAHAM DENTON, JR.. ix. JANE DENTON. x. EMILY DENTON. HISTORY OF SOLOMON DENTON II Solomon was born in 1722 in Jamaica, Queens County, Long Island, New York. According to the tradition of some of his descendants, via his son Noah Denton, Solomon first took his family and sailed to Nova Scotia, to settle. However, finding the winters to much to bear, he got passage and sailed back down the Atlantic Coast into the mouth of the Hudson River, then up to Fishkill Landing where they left the river, going 20 miles east across the country. Solomon settled on the north part of the land purchased from the indians by Nathaniel Worden the Ist on the headwaters of the Croton River, Connecticut, near Greenwich. Solomon was married three times and had fifteen children. He died there in 1816 in near Greenwich, Fairfield County, Connecticut. In the late 1800's some Solomon Denton descendants still occupied the home place. Later, some descendants of his married some descendants of Nathaniel Worden. Reportedly, there were some Denton cousins of Solomon's in Nova Scotia, as well, by the 1800's. Solomon first married Hannah Squire in about 1747, they had no children. Solomon secondly married Lydia Husted in 1748, they had 7 children. Solomon thirdly married Judith (Judath) Husted in 1764, they had 8 children. The history of Solomon Denton is from Meda Worden Langsdorf's "Excerpts of the Worden Family History" (Published in 1966 at Des Moines, Iowa). Her family history account was mostly based on her father Joseph Watkins Worden's memoirs and covers the branch of the Worden family that moved from Dutchess County, New York (near Pawlings and Holmes) to Decatur County, Iowa in the 1850's. Some Descendants of Solomon Denton II Generation No. 1 1. SOLOMON DENTONII (SOLOMON5, SAMUEL4, NATHANIEL3, RICHARD2, RICHARD1) was born 1722 in Jamaica, Queens County, Long Island, New York, and died 1816 in Greenwich, Fairfield County, Connecticut. He married (1) HANNAH SQUIRE Bef. 1747. He married (2) LYDIA HUSTED 1748 in Greenwich, Fairfeild County, Connecticut. He married (3) JUDITH HUSTED 1764, daughter of DAVID HUSTED and JOHANNA BRUNDAGE. LYDIA HUSTED Almost surely is another daughter of David and Joanna Brundage Husted. Most records indicate LYDIA d/o David as born in 1737. This would make her extremely young to marry, but was not unheard of in those days. SOLOMON DENTON and JUDITH HUSTED Probably married in Greenwich, CT. Children of SOLOMON DENTON and LYDIA HUSTED are: i. ATHELENA DENTON. ii. SAMUEL DENTON. 2. iii. AARON DENTON. iv. PETER DENTON. v. ELIZABETH DENTON. vi. MOSES DENTON. 3. vii. SOLOMON DENTON III, b. August 04, 1754, Greenwich, Connecticut; d. February 11, 1828, Near Beekman and Pawlings, Dutchess County, New York. Children of SOLOMON DENTON and JUDITH HUSTED are: viii. DAVID DENTON, d. Dutchess County, New York. ix. THOMAS DENTON. x. CALEB DENTON, d. Dutchess County, New York. xi. NEHEMIAH DENTON. 4. xii. NOAH DENTON, b. 1771, Greenwich, Connecticut; d. Aft. 1840, Near Pawling, Dutchess County, New York. xiii. AMOS DENTON. xiv. SUSANAH DENTON. 5. xv. ABRAHAM DENTON, SR., b. 1779; d. May 04, 1858. Generation No. 2 2. AARON7 DENTON (SOLOMON6, SOLOMON5, SAMUEL4, NATHANIEL3, RICHARD2, RICHARD1). He married UNKNOWN. Children of AARON DENTON and UNKNOWN are: i. SUSAN DENTON. ii. SAMUEL DENTON. iii. SOLOMON DENTON. 3. SOLOMON7 DENTONIII (SOLOMON6, SOLOMON5, SAMUEL4, NATHANIEL3, RICHARD2, RICHARD1) was born August 04, 1754 in Greenwich, Connecticut, and died February 11, 1828 in Near Beekman and Pawlings, Dutchess County, New York. He married CLARRY ANDERSON March 26, 1786 in Connecticut. SOLOMON DENTON III was a Revolutionary War Soldier, this attested by proven DAR lineages and papers. Children of SOLOMON DENTON and CLARRY ANDERSON are: i. BETSEY DENTON, b. Aft. 1787. ii. MARTHA DENTON, b. Aft. 1787. iii. JOSIAH DENTON, b. Aft. 1787. iv. AARON DENTON, b. Aft. 1787. v. ABRAHAM DENTON, b. Aft. 1787. vi. HUMPHREY DENTON, b. Aft. 1787. vii. AMOS DENTON, b. Aft. 1787. viii. SAMUEL DENTON, b. Aft. 1787. ix. SOLOMON DENTONIV, b. 1787-1811. x. FOWLER DENTON, b. May 04, 1803, Dutchess County, New York; d. March 30, 1874, Beekman, Dutchess County, New York; m. SOPHIA COLWELL.
|