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Note: the Achievements of Her People in the Making of a Commonwealth and the Founding of a Nation. Volume III: "Lemuel, son of Samuel Tuttle, was born in 1760, died December 8, 1833. He was a revolutionary soldier and a prisoner in Jersey prison ship. About 1790 he removed with his brother Daniel from North Haven to Plymouth, Connecticut. He married, June 12, 1788, Lydia Bassett, who died September 12, 1829, aged sixty-eight. Children: Philenda, born May 31, 1789, married Seth Thomas, founder of the famous clock industry of Thomaston, which was named for him; Lua, March 21, 1791; Lydia, March 19, 1794; Nelson." --------------------- The Descendants of William and Elizabeth Tuttle, Who Came From Old to New England in 1633, and Settled In New Haven in 1639, With Numerous Biographical Notes and Sketches; Also, Some account of the Descendants of John Tuttle of Dover, N.H.; Richard Tuttle of Boston; John Tuttle of Ipswich; and Henry Tuthill of Hingham, Mass; To Which Are Appended Genealogical Notes of Several Alliled Families, By GEORGE FREDERICK TUTTLE, Printed and Published by Tuttle & Co., Official State Printers, Rutland, VT, 1883: p.62 "Lemuel Tuttle, b. 1760; d. Dec. 8, 1833, age 73; a Rev. soldier and a prisoner in Jersey Prison Ship; removed with his brother, Daniel, from North Haven to Plymouth Conn., about 1790; m. June 12, 1788, Lydia Bassett, who d. Sept. 12, 1829, age 68."
Note: Genealogical and Family History of the State of Connecticut: A Record of
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