m. 04 Feb 1747/48
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Born |
09 Mar 1749/50 |
Acton, Middlesex, Massachusetts |
Died |
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Cheshire County, New Hampshire |
Buried |
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Born |
14 Feb 1751/52 |
Groton, Middlesex, Massachusetts |
Died |
22 Jul 1827 |
Westmoreland, Cheshire, New Hampshire U.S.A. |
Buried |
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Pratt Cemetery, Westmoreland, Cheshire, New Hampshire U.S.A. |
Born |
18 Oct 1754 |
Groton, Middlesex, Massachusetts |
Died |
23 Feb 1820 |
Westmoreland, Cheshire, New Hampshire U.S.A. |
Buried |
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Pratt Cemetery, Westmoreland, Cheshire, New Hampshire U.S.A. |
Born |
29 Jun 1757 |
Groton, Middlesex, Massachusetts |
Died |
14 Aug 1839 |
Woodstock, Windsor, Vermont U.S.A. |
Buried |
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Riverstreet Cemetery, Woodstock, Windsor, Vermont U.S.A. |
Born |
08 Jan 1760 |
Groton, Middlesex, Massachusetts U.S.A. |
Died |
20 Jun 1795 |
Mount Holly, Rutland, Vermont U.S.A. |
Buried |
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Spouse |
Sarah Moors | F1800 |
Married |
7 Jan 1785 |
Groton, Middlesex, Massachusetts |
Born |
31 Jul 1762 |
Groton, Middlesex, Massachusetts |
Died |
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Buried |
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Born |
11 Mar 1765 |
Groton, Middlesex, Massachusetts |
Died |
25 Mar 1765 |
Groton, Middlesex, Massachusetts |
Buried |
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Born |
19 Jan 1767 |
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Died |
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Buried |
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Born |
11 Aug 1770 |
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Died |
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Buried |
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Notes |
- Hannah's great grandfather's, Edmund Faulkner and and Francis Dane, who was Abigail Dane's (Hannah's grandmother) father, were among the earliest settlers of Andover, MA which is near Salem. Abigail DANE Faulkner was tried and convicted in the Salem Witch Trial's. She would have been put to death, but was pregnant with Hannah's father, Ammiruhammah, at the time. The Puritans would not put an unborn child to death, so Abigail remained in jail. By the time she had Amniruhamah in Mar. 1693, the witch hysteria had passed. She named him Amniruhamah which is supposed to mean "mercy for my people". Abigail wasn't pardoned until about 7 years later. Amniruhamah married Hannah Ingalls in Andover and Hannah, their first child, was born there. The family moved to Littleton, MA and then to Acton, MA where Amniruhamah had a mill in the south part of the town. Acton is just west of Concord, MA; and was part of Concord until 1735. Hannah's brother, Francis, was a very prominent citizen in Acton and was a Col. in the Revolutionary War. Four of Hannah's & Thomas' sons: Thomas, Ammi, Francis and Asa were Minutemen and marched to the Lexington-Concord area during the first battle with the British on 19 Apr 1775. Francis and Asa also fought in the Battle of Bunker Hill.
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Sources |
- [S04333] Vital Records of Acton Massachusetts to the Year 1850, Henry Edwards Scott, Editor, (New England Historic Genealogical Society; Boston MA; 1923), page 240.
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