The Ingalls Inquirer e-newsletter
Vol. 1-10
March, 1984-November, 1993
Published by Arlene Ingalls Schrader
ISSN 1933-7329


Vol. 5, No. 2 - July, 1988

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It's summertime and vacation time for most families, so if travel is on your list, plan on attending a family reunion and renew old acquaintances and/or make new ones. The following list is in two parts, one is for known reunion dates and locations to be held in 1988, the second section is on last year's schedule (1988 dates not confirmed). Most groups plan to schedule on the same weekend each year. Check with the contact persons listed, or someone in the area, to confirm 1988 dates.

Please share the Ingalls Inquirer with your group! I will maintain a reunion calendar each year so have the secretary send me the information! Also, a brief note about your current meetings, number attending and if you keep minutes, etc., would be of interest to me.

1988 Reunion Schedule

June 24 & 25, Wapato Park, Tacoma, Washington, Ingalls-Dunn-Beckman Reunion. Contact: Pam & Roger Ingalls.

August 6, Silver Lake State Park, Mears, Michigan, Ingalls-Clark Reunion. Contact: Frank & Frances Ingalls.

August 13 at Don Ingalls' home, Unadilla, New York. Descendants of James Parshall Ingalls

1987 Reunion Schedule

June 28, Clear Lake, South Dakota. Contact: Mrs. Mable Stomprud, Mud Butte, South Dakota.

July 17-19, Annual Weekend Reunion. Contact: Dean & Velma Simar, Reno, Nevada.

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1987 Reunion Schedule - continued -

August 2, 1987, Taylor Winery Park, Bath, New York. INGALLS – LANE. Contact: Geraldine Baylor.

August 23, 1987, Descendants of GEORGE AUGUSTUS INGALL. Contact: Ralph Ingalls, Dundee, Michigan

October 10, 1987, 59th annual reunion - JACOB INGALLS descendants, held at Norton Hill, New York. Contact: Ralph Ware, Secretary, Cornwallville, New York.

***

Officers and family members -- please send in a notice of your reunion for next year's calendar! A short report of how many persons answered roll call, out-of-state attendees, and activities of the day would be of interest to the readers! Please send to the editor – AIS

***

Walnut Grove Pageant "Fragments of a Dream" - (Minnesota) - historical pageant based on the life of the Ingalls Family on the banks of Plum Creek, will be presented at Walnut Grove, Minnesota on three weekends in 1988. . .

General admission is $4.00 and reserve admission is $5.00 Various organizations will be serving suppers and other entertainment will be provided. Historical bus tours will be available each afternoon during the pageant.

Information and tickets are available from Wilder Pageant Committee, Sox 313, Walnut Grove, MN 56180.

***

The Little Hotel in the Village - Childhood Home of Laura Ingalls Wilder, Laura Ingalls Wilder Park and Museum, Burr Oak, Iowa 52131.

The Laura Ingalls Wilder Park and Museum is located 12 miles northwest of Decorah, Iowa on Highway 52 in Burr Oak, Iowa. It is only three miles from the Minnesota state line.

Visiting Hours: May 1 - September 30, Sundays 12:00-5:30, weekdays 9:00-5:00. Groups by appointment only - Picnic facilities available in park.

Submitted by Jessie Turbenson,Ostrander, MN - Thank you,Jessie!

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Laura’s Little House

(map of places lived omitted)

1. Mary born January 10, 1865
   Laura born February 7, 1867 “Little House in the Big Woods”

2. Carrie born August 3, 1870 “Little House on the Prairie”

3. Charles Frederick born November 1, 1875 “On the Bank of Plum Creek”

4. Charles Frederick dies August 27, 1876

5. Grace born May 23, 1877

6. Rose Wilder born December 5, 1886

   Baby son born August 1889 – died 12 days later

  “By the Shores of Silver Lake”

  “The Long Winter”

  “Little Town on the Prairie”

  “Those Happy Golden Years”

  “The First four Years”

7. “On the Way Home”

Laura Ingalls Wilder Park & Museum, Burr Oak, Iowa 52131

(Submitted by Jessie Turbenson, MN) - Thanks, Jessie!

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Submitted by Linda Ingalls Wright. 1987 – Part 2 Continued this issue -

(Map omitted)

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PART 2 - Linda's 1987 Journey -(continued from March, 1998)

"This was the first gathering for this family in several years and the turnout was great--between 40-45. Most families can brag about having George Washington's or Ben Franklin's, but they don't hold a candle to the patriarch of this group--Ralph Waldo Emerson Ingalls age 83. It was just great being able to meet so many Ingalls and especially some that I have corresponded with, Irene, Diane, Gene, Carrie, Gertrude.

Sandi and I said our thanks and goodbyes and headed back to Germantown but not before we decided to try and make contact with Leora (Ingalls) Rundell in Greenville, NY. Her father was B4272. There is a reunion in Oct. in Greenville area for the descendants of Jacob (B561), from whom she is descended.

10 Aug After a fantastic time in Germantown, Sandi and I headed back to Saratoga to wind up our visiting.

11 Aug On the road again, heading for Kent, CT. Spent the night with Dorothy Leorn (Ingalls) Camp and husband, Ralph. Dot and my father, Fred Chandler Ingalls, are first cousins. Saw them earlier this summer on a surprise drop-in, but this time I was staying over so we could visit longer and catch up on each others families. On a short ride around the area, Dot navigated me through a covered bridge. There's just something special about New England that keeps me going back.

12 Aug On to East Granby, CT. to the home of James Arthur and Pauline (Hill) Ingalls. You can't imagine the work Jim and Polly have done on their branch since I met them a few years ago. They have put in the hours tracking, calling, and writing cousins in NY., MI, and OH.

Got to meet their son, LeRoy James (Roy) Ingalls and his family: wife, Carol Ann (Glenn), sons, James Glenn and Gerald Duane (Jerry).

13 Aug Off again for an interesting day of meeting some new Swedish cousins. Mildred Virginia (Hasse) Booth and husband, Cornelius "Corey" Booth. Mildred and my mom are second cousins. Besides filling each other in on families and other relatives throughout the day, the biggest thrill was going to visit Mildred's mother, Ida Justina (Johnson) Hasse who is in her early nineties. Ida and my grandmother, Hedvig Ellentina (Johnson) Kinne, were first cousins.

Back at Mildred's house, the rest of the afternoon was spent looking at pictures and just visiting.

After leaving Mildred and Corey, I really wanted to try to meet another cousin of my mother's that has been very elusive. I can't help it that she's never home when I show up unannounced at her front door! One of these days, Anita (Terranova) Dunton, I hope to meet you.

What do you do when it's dark, after nine o'clock, and you are wandering around CT. wondering where you are going to spend the night? Call Jim and Polly! Welcome back, they said.

14 Aug Wilmington, DE here I come. Time to run my dad, Fred Chandler Ingalls, around for awhile! We worked out our plans for the weekend which would include my going to see my brother, Alan Mark Ingalls and family on Saturday: wife, Ann Marie (Mulrooney), and kids, Kristin Elizabeth and David Alan.

Back to Wilmington in time to pick up my dad and head for Verona, NJ to visit with some of my second cousins, Sally Dawn

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PART 2 - Linda's Journey, 1987 - continued -

Ingalls, her brother, Frank William Ingalls and his wife, Anna Maria Caldara and their mother, Sally Elizabeth (Swiderski) Kapinos Ingalls. We were at least an hour late arriving and Frank and Anna had almost given up on us and headed home.

Frank was another cousin to whom I was delivering a pocket watch that belonged to his grandfather. We had a great visit and Sally D., with help from the others, had prepared a scrumptious dinner. You can't imagine how many poses and variations of people were involved in the picture taking. When you find relatives like these, it's hard to squeeze a lifetime of happenings into such a short visit. All the more reason for trying to see them again on future visits.

17 Aug Today I could really feel my heart strings tugging towards home as I headed south. Spent the night with one of my husband's cousins in Mt. Pleasant, SC., Cecil Dale Wright, Sr., and talked about the Wright reunion we would be going to in NC in Sep.

18 Aug HOME SWEET HOME.

Hugs and Kisses and THANKS to all the cousins that put me up or put up with me on this Journey. Hope to meet a bunch more of you during 1988.

***

SUBJECT: Information Linda and I are receiving from INGALLS Cousins for the genealogy supplement, in progress.

Dear Cousins:

Get out your atlases and dictionaries. Why are we having problems?

One of you sends us information that EMI was born in Prineville, OR and another one says EMI was born in Brothers, OR. If they were in the same county it wouldn't be so bad, BUT .... !

What about those who were born in Opal and Faith, SD?

Birth dates are another source of contention. WOW. So start now to keep your records straight. Spelling of names also keeps us hopping. We do the best we can which sometimes means drawing a selection "out of a hat" and going with it. We hope our percentage of selections is higher for correct choices.

An update on the sequel: last summer (1987) I had a computer spit out 90 pages of INGALLS descendants. This summer, just to see how we were progressing, it spit out 430 pages and we're not quite through with the information on hand that you've sent us.

Twelve varying size shoe boxes filled with 3 x 5 cards equals the 430 pages. We're hoping 2 - 4 more shoe boxes will do the trick so we can get this baby to the publisher.

Love, Cousins Arlene and Linda

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OBITUARIES

(The following obits were submitted by Jessie (Henderson) Turberson, MN - daughter of Horace Greeley Henderson/Agnes McDonald -"about a cousin, and members of my family.” Thank you, Jessie, for this info.)

IN MEMORY OF
Mrs. Irene Zebaugh
BORN
November 4, 1892
ENTERED INTO REST
April 17, 1984
FUNERAL SERVICES
Saturday, April 21, 1984; 2:00 PM
Cherry Grove United Methodist Church
CLERGYMAN OFFICIATING
Rev. Naomi Jackson
ORGANIST: Mrs. Stella Brusse
DUET: Rev. & Mrs. Allen Vrieze
FINAL RESTING PLACE
Etna Cemetery
PALLBEARERS
Garry TerMaat
Jimmy Henderson
Louis Rick
Ralph Bonnerud
Lawrence House
Charles Frank


Post-Bulletin, Rochester, Minn., Wednesday, July 30, 1980

Ethel Henderson, 73,

Rochester Resident, Dies

Ethel Henderson, 73, of 4025 18th Ave. N.W., a retired teacher, died Tuesday morning at Maple Manor Nursing Home in Rochester of cancer.

Miss Henderson was born Jan. 11, 1907, in York Township, Fillmore County. A graduate of LaCrosse Normal School and Winona State University, she taught in Wisconsin and Fillmore County until 1954. She then went to Alaska where she taught until 1976. She moved to Rochester in 1977. She was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the Cherry Grove United Methodist Church and its ladies guild.

Survivors include three sisters, Mrs. Irene Zebaugh of Spring Valley, Mrs. Jessie Turbenson of Ostrander and Nina Henderson of Lime Springs, Iowa.

Two brothers and two sisters preceded her in death.

The funeral is 2 p.m. Friday at the Cherry Grove United Methodist Church with the Rev. Kenneth Haack officiating. Burial will be in the Etna cemetery in rural Spring Valley.

Friends may call at the Osland Funeral Home in Spring Valley after 3 p.m. Thursday and until noon Friday, then at the church one hour before the service.

***

St. Paul Pioneer Press Dispatch, Friday, Dec. 4, 1987
Susie L. Nelson

Services for Susie L. Nelson, 81, who owned the Nelson Realty company in St. Paul, will be today.

She died Tuesday of complications from a hip fracture ,at St. John's Hospital in St. Paul.

Nelson was born in Filmore County, Minn., and attended high school in Chippewa Falls, Wis. She moved to St. Paul in 1924 and worked for West Publishing Co.

She joined the Midland Realty company in 1945.

"They were the only ones who would give her a job," said daughter Kay M. Orson of Burnsville. "Women just weren't in the business at that time."

Nelson became the first female member of the St. Paul Board of Realtors, and she founded Nelson Realty in the late 1940s.

"She could sell refrigerators to Eskimos," Orson said. "She was good. But men didn't take her seriously at first. They called and asked to speak with 'one of the men,' and she would reply, 'I am one of the men.'

"The real estate business wasn't as regulated as it is now, and my mother was really flexible with her clients," Orson said. "She often took food as payment, and one time she took a boat. She loved her work, and she never really retired."

In addition to her daughter, survivors include a sister, Dorothy Hutchinson of Jim Falls, Wis.

Services will be at 1 p.m. today at the Listoe-Wold-Johnston-Dampier Funeral Home in St. Paul, with a visitation one hour before the service.

Memorials are suggested to the Central Park United Methodist Church, the American Heart Association or the American Cancer Society.

(From Notes Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial society, Inc. May, 1988, Wisconsin
Ingalls Relative Died Recently

Ida Pribble died at the Red Wing, Minnesota Health Center on April 15. She was 103 years old.

Her first marriage was to Robert Stouff, son of Lydia Ingalls Stouff. Lydia was Charles Ingalls' sister.

Robert Stouff, Laura's cousin, died in 1926 and Ida married John Pribble in 1927.

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ELIZA ANN QUINER wife of PETER R. INGALLS (Submitted by Lou Ellen Ingalls, LA)

STANDARD BEARER OF BIBLE HOLINESS, LOS ANGELES

OBITUARIES

Eliza Ann Quiner was born on April 21, 1842, in what was then wilderness in the territory of Wisccusin, but has since been incorporated into the city of Milwaukee; and died on June 6, 1931, aged 89 years, one month, and fifteen days, at Eagles Rock, a portion of Los Angeles, Calif.; at the home of her oldest daughter, Alice J. Whiting. At the age of nineteen, on June 5, 1861, she was united in marriage to Peter R. Ingalls, at Watertown, Wis. He has been dead for over 31 years. To this marriage were born six children, all of whom are alive at this time.

The most of her life has lived on the frontier of civilization, where schools and churches were scarce and Indians and wild beasts were plentiful. About four years after marriage they moved by ox-team into Pippin county, Wisconsin, and a few years later into Pierce county, into a heavily wooded country where deer and bear abounded. After two or three years enough people and children were gathered to form a school district, and she circulated a petition for its organization. Her own children were fairly educated up to their ages at home before this. As teachers were scarce, Mrs. Ingalls taught the first term in a rough log school house, furnished with rough board benches, in a wilderness of big trees. She furnished … of the pupils, one being a baby one year old. Later she taught another term there.

About thirteen years after her marriage, Mr. Ingalls moved his family to Wabash county, Minnesota, where they lived until all their children but one were married. While here my mother remember the teaching of her own godly mother, and when up in her forties began to seek after God, who she had so long neglected, and whom she later found to the satisfying of her soul. After this my father, mother, and their youngest son moved into Milsteca(?), Minn., again on the frontier, where father died in March, 1900.

After his death, mother went to live with her youngest daughter, Edith in North Dakota, on a prairie where a tree was never seen. After some years she went to the state of Washington, and lived there for some years, enjoying the beautiful flowers that grew among the spruces and hemlocks in her mountain home. When this son migrated south, mother came to California to live with her two daughters here, and divided her time between them. This was over twenty years ago.

While here she met the Holiness people and professed sanctification while on a sick bed, thought to be close to death. Then she was marvelously heard, and never again suffered from heart disease. She lived first with one, then the other of us sisters here. until the writer* went to the south, when she lived altogether with my sister, and united with the Baptist church at Hemet.

Nearly three years ago she came back to live with us, and had scarcely left the house since her coming, even to go out into the yard or on the porch. She suffered much all the later years of her life, and spent most of her time reading or crocheting. She loved her Bible well, and always spent a time each day reading it.

She was laid to rest at Hemet, Calif., about a hundred miles from where she died, not far from my sister’s home, and in the same cemetery where her son-in-law is buried. Rev. C. L. Davenport, who was pastor of the Baptist church at Hemet when she joined, preached her funeral sermon from John, 14th chapter, which she had chosen. Five of her grandsons, and one great grandson bore the casket.

She leaves six children: Alice J. Whiting, of Eagle Rock, Los Angeles, Calif; Ella E. Whiting, of Long Beach, Calif.; Peter F. Ingalls, of Florida, whose address is Geneva, Ala.; Lansford N. Ingalls, of Hammond, Minn; Edith F. Bingham, of Denver, Colo.; and Edmond L. Ingalls of DeRidder, La. Also 25 living grandchildren, and 25 or 30 great grandchildren.

Mother’s mind continued clear up to the last, and we miss her, but we are so glad she is at rest and her suffering are ended--for her sufferings were terrible. She loved flowers and numerous friends brought her many while she Lived, and many to her funeral. "Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord," for they do rest from their labors and their works do follow them.
-Alice J. Whiting.

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The following story was submitted by Margaret (Bowman) Frost. Margaret is a descendant of Aaron Ingalls/Gerusha or Jerusha Franklin. Her Burleigh identifying number is B2821, generation 12. Thanks, Margaret, for sharing your Ingalls stories with others - AIS.

Ingalls-2

Many families with roots in the 1600's-1830's have an Indian story. The Ingalls family is no exception. However, I have been unable to authenticate this one. It may be true, or it may be a story that got told so many times about someone that it DID happen to that it was adopted into family tradition.

This is the story as it was told in a letter from Edith Bowman Parks to Clair Bowman in January of 1930.

The Indian story, Clair, was of Grandma Webb's (Julia Ingalls Webb) father and mother, (Aaron and Gerusha Franklin Ingalls) being taken by the Indians. One Indian took coals from the fireplace and put them on the feather bed, pulling one end of the featherbed on top of the coals so it would smolder and not blaze to attract other white people until they were a long way off. But Grandmother took one of the other children, younger than she, home from their little log school, sick, in time to put out the smoldering fire, and of course, knew what had happened. Great-grandmother was taken by one tribe, and Great- grandfather by another, so they were quite a distance apart. Great-grandmother had a nursing baby with her, who I think was uncle Lew Ingalls who died in Seattle. The food was mostly a soup made from the entrails of wild game. Because she could not bear to eat it, the Indians would spit in it and laugh more. One day, the Indians seemed afraid and finally fled, leaving her behind because she was too weak to walk. She knew that the soldiers were coming so she tied her baby to her back, and between walking and crawling on her hands and knees when she was too tired and weak to walk, she reached the road. A soldier took her and the baby on a horse. She told them of her husband and where she thought he had been taken. They found him left behind as she had been, and took them home. The children managed the garden and the crops ]in the absence of their parents.

Aaron(7) son of John and Hannah ____ INGALLS b Steuben Co NY 30 September 1783, married Gerusha Franklin b 20 September 1792. He was a farmer at So. Dansville, New York and died there. His widow moved to Dover, Illinois and died December 1870.

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INGALLS-WEBB BIBLE RECORD

Submitted by Margaret (Bowman) Frost, WA with a note that a typed copy was sent to Clair Bowman (her father) by Frank Webb who lived in Choateau, Montana in 1932. It is headed “Ingalls Family Bible.”

The original handwriting is copied here. (e-editor: handwritten copy is omitted, following is the record)

Births
Aaron Ingalls – Sept 30, 1783
Jerusha Franklin, Sept. 20, 1790
-----------
Julia Maria Ingalls, March 11, 1808
Simeon Lester Ingalls, May 16, 1812
Jonathan Ingalls, June 14, 1814
Solon Eton Ingalls, Jan. 18, 1818
Isaih Ingalls, Aug. 28, 1819
Charles Currier Ingalls, Sept. 4, 1821
Henry Martyn Ingalls, March 9, 1826
Mary E. A. Ingalls, Aug. 22, 1827
Lewis Weld Ingalls, Nov. 24, 1836
Marriages
Gilbert-Webb, Julia Maria Ingalls, Sept. 8, 1830
Charles C. Ingalls, Gertrude Vanarsdale, Oct. 7, 1853
Isaih Ingalls, Ester ----, Sept. 3, 1843
Henry Martyn Ingalls, Elizabeth Zearing

-continued, this issue -

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INGALLS-WEB Bible Record - continued - (typed to conserve space)

Marriages

Frank Van Liew - Marian F. Webb, November 26, 1874
Robert Kelner - Cornelia Kelner, February 6, 1908
Clarence D. McClelland - Victoria May Van Liew, January 28, 1911
Roy Webb Van Liew - Nora Elizabeth Mann, November 21, 1919

Births
Gilbert Webb
Julia Maria Ingalls
Stephen Marshall Webb
Edward Lester Webb
Adeline Webb
Amba Oscar Webb
Cornelia Maria Webb
Marian Franklin Webb
Roy W. Van Liew
Cornelia Van Liew
Victoria May Van Liew
William Franklin Kelner
Louis Frederick Kelner
Marian E. McClelland
Madeline C. McClelland

Deaths
Adeline Webb
Edward L. Webb
Oscar A. Webb

Cornelia M. Bowman
Gilbert Webb
Julia M. Webb
Frank E. Van Liew
Louis Frederick Kelner

May 17, 1804
March 11, 1908
July 14, 1831
December 20, 1832
December 25, 1834
October 19, 1838
September 11, 1840
November 1, 1845
October 23, 1875
May 16, 1877
December 22, 1878
November 2, 1909
March 17, 1915
July 19, 1912
March 2, 1914


October 4, 1854
October 8, 1854
October 5, 1864 killed in battle at Allatona, GA
August 15, 1883
May 3, 1888
January 19, 1892
July 27, 1902
March 27, 1915

BITS AND PIECES

Jeremiah INGALLS d at Hancock VT 1838 wrote a number of hymns published in "The Christian Harmony", a Methodist hymnal, 1805. Some of them were: Northfield, Kentucky, Fillmore, and New Jerusalem.

Jeremiah(6) listed on page 113, #760 in Charles Burleigh's book.

"A Night to Remember" on the sinking of the Titanic notes ...Ingalls woman was a governess for the Arthur Ryerson family, he was lost, the governess saved one child, and the rest of the family was saved in boat #4..."

Buffalo County Journal, Alma, Wisconsin Jul 23, 1863 - "George Ingalls ransomed by Little Crow's band Sioux Indian Territory. Father, Herbert Ingalls was killed last fall. It is believed his mother lives in Sheboygan, Wisconsin."

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BITS AND PIECES

An exchange of genealogical information between James B. Burdell, Sr. and Charles Burleigh, M.D., courtesy of Charmaine B. Burdell, CA and Marian Hagopian, Magalia, CA. Their letters are copied here.

February 14, 1916.
Dr. Charles Burleigh,
Walden, Mass.
Dear Sir:

In tracing my wife's genealogy and taking up the branch of the family that runs through the Ingalls I secured a book compiled by you of the Ingalls Family but I find that her father's mother Maria Fitch (Ingalls) Sweetser is not mentioned. She was the daughter of David White Ingalls who was the son of Benjamin Ingalls found on page 52 #257. Her sister Sarah (Ingalls) Richardson is still alive and is a resident of West Baldwin, Maine; she is about 92 years of age. Maria. Ingalls was born August 10, 1814 at West Baldwin, Maine, and died May 27 1876 at Novato, California. She was married to Joseph Sweetser who was a descendant of the Sweetsers of Wakefield, Mass. and the Bryants of Stoneham, Mass. David White Ingalls, the father of Sarah and Maria, was married to Sarah Sherburn. She was born August 1, 1779 and died August 10, 1845 at West Baldwin, Me. She was the daughter of Andrew Sherburn, N.H. who was a descendant of John Sherburn one of the earliest residents of Portsmouth, N.H. Besides the above mentioned I am sending you a complete list of the children of David White Ingalls and the dates of their birth. These were found on a paper written by Maria Ingalls Sweetser and placed in the family Bible so the same must be authentic.

Samuel Ingalls, born in Cornish, Me, July 2, 1800 (probably 1801 note inserted).
Andrew Ingalls, born in Baldwin, Me. May 30, 1803.
Mary Warren Ingalls, born in Baldwin, Oct. 31, 1807.
Susan Ingalls, born in Baldwin, Oct. 28, 1809.
Maria Ingalls, born in Baldwin, August 15, 1814.
Jane Sherburn Ingalls, born in Baldwin, June 1, 1816.
David Warren Ingalls, born in Baldwin, Oct. 28, 1819 and died in Baldwin, May 28, 1828.
Sarah Fitch Ingalls, born in Baldwin, May 5, 1824.

Your book states that David White Ingalls died at Standish, Me., would say that he was born there but died at West Baldwin, Me.

It would have been a great pleasure to my wife to have seen her grandmother's name mentioned in this book and I thought if you could write a letter to Mrs. Richardson and also to Mrs. Adelia Clough, 6 Pearl Street, Wakefield, Mass, and then write me a letter verifying my statement under your signature I could place the letter in the book where it should be. I am enclosing a pedigree form which gives you the family tree but some of it I have not had time to work out yet.

Hoping that I may have the pleasure of hearing from you in due time, I beg to remain.

Sincerely yours,

James B. Burdell/s/

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BITS AND PIECES - continued –

(Dr. Burleigh's response to James S. Burdell, Sr., retyped here for clarity)

"Waverley Mass May 4 1916

"My Dear Mr. Burdell:

"Have had envelope backed on my desk to reply to your former letter, I wanted to be able to give you something definite, I received letter from Wakefield confirming your statement that there were eight children, I can get nothing from Hiram, I remember that I received only one letter from there when compiling the book, the most I got was from census reports. I have compiled two other genealogies and worked on several others but I never found so much trouble in getting replies as I did from the Ingalls, And I am led to think that they are peculiar not excepting my own immediate family. I know that my grandfather who lived within 20 miles of a brother never saw him in nearly 25 years.

"This book was started in about 1899 by a Solomon Ingalls who wrote everybody by the name he could hear of, But left no record of his own children which took me several years to find. Next a man at Albion, N.Y. made an attempt to get more but gave it up, then one at Rehoboth took it in hand and after a few years gave it up. Then a man named Atwell at Lynn put several years on the matter coming no nearer to publishing. He gave the notes to me and I made a solemn promise to print what I could get in a reasonable time so that what we had might not get lost. Of course there are several thousand that are not represented in the book and in publication which was delayed 29 years it would be no nearer completion. I am gathering notes all the time and shall put them in shape to leave my work to the New England Historic Genealogical Society where it can be consulted in time to come. I have made note of what you send. Someone may in the future want to revise and they have my sympathy. It is purely a labor of love as you will see when I say that only about 200 copies were sold. I tried to figure out the expense of this book and counting the time, postage, printing, travel and publishing this must have been at least $5000.

"I shall be glad to add to my notes anything that you may see that will be of interest."

Sincerely, (signed) Charles Burleigh, M.D.

The book, of course, is The Genealogy and History of the Ingalls Family in America, compiled by Charles Burleigh, M.D., Malden, MA originally printed in Malden, MA 1903.

I find it particularly interesting that Dr. Burleigh and three others worked for years to compile the 1903 version. We all should be grateful to these people for their willingness to tackle such a task, and passing their notes on to others so that their work could be recorded and preserved for future generations. -AIS-

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Vital Records to 1850, towns of Andover, Lynn, Haverhill, Salem and Taunton, Massachusetts, includes births, marriages and deaths .. (Abstracted by Linda Wright) This issue contains the records of ANDOVER, continued in next issue.

p. 216
INGALLS (see also Engolls, Engols, Ingals, Ingols) 
Aaron, s. David and Priscilla, May 17, 1767.
[Abiah. C. R. 1.], d. James and Mary, Oct. 18, 1731.
Abigail, d. Henry and Abigail, Jan. 15, 1692-3.
Amos, s. David and Prissilla, Mar. 14, 1763.
Ann, d. Moses and Meriah, Nov. 12, 1734.
Anna, d. twin, Daniel and Sarah, June 11, 1760.
Asa, s. Isaac and Rebeccah, June 4, 1764.
Asa, s. Francis and Enice, Jan. 17, 1766.
Benjamin, s. John and Sarah, Nov. 8 [1716].
Benjamin, s. Moses and Meriah, Aug. 1 [1728. C.R.1.].
Benjamin Pearson, s. Benjamin and Rebeckah, June 24, 1763.
Betty, d. Abijah and Elizabeth, Aug. 21, 1775.
Charles Nathan, s. Francis and Elizabeth, July 9, 1820.
Cyrus, s. Francis and Eunice, Dec. 13, 1768.
Daniel, s. Samuel and Sarah, July 30, 1689.
Daniel, s. Samuel and Sarah, Oct. 13, 1696.
David, s. Henry and Hannah, Jan. 3, 1725-6.
Deborah, d. Samuel and Sarah, Apr. 1, 1691.
Deborah, d. Samuel and Sarah, July 21, 1694.
Deborah, d. James and Mary, Apr. 29, 1722.
Deborah, d. John and Deborah, Mar. 24, 1763.
Dolly, d. Ezra and Dolly, Oct. 29, 1802.
Ebenezer, s. Josiah, jr. and Eunice, No[v] 1 [1745. C. R. 1.].
Ebenezer, s. Ebenezer and Sarah, June 11, 1759.
Ebenezer, s. Ebenezer and Sarah, Nov. 11, 1760.
Eleanor, d. Ebenezer and Sarah, Sept. 12, 1771.
Elijah, s. Daniel and Sarah, Apr. 5, 1767.
Elisabeth, d. Joseph and Phebe, Aug. 21, 1739.
Elizabeth, d. Joshua and Elizabeth, Sept. 2, 1762.
Ephraim, s. James and Mary, Nov. 26, 1723.
Ezra, s. Abijah and Elizabeth, Apr. 12, 1773.
Ezra, s. Ezra and Dolly, Jan 7, 1804.
Francis, s. Henry and Abigail, Dec. 20, 1694.

p. 217
INGALLS, 
Francis, s. Francis and Lydea, Aug. 26, 17[21].
Francis, s. Francis and Lidea, Jan. 26, 1730[-1].
Francis, s. Francis and Unice, May 30, 1760.
George F[rancis. P. R. 79.], s. Capt. Francis and Elizabeth, Mar.4, 1818.
[Habijah. C. R. 1.], s. Francies and Lydia, Dec. __, 1737.
Hannah, d. James and Hannah, Jan. 2, 1686-7.
Hannah, d. twin, Henry and Hannah, June 4, 1721.
Hannah, d. [Lt. C. R. 1.] John and Deborah, June 1, 1765.
Harriott, d. Ezra and Dolly [Dorothy. C. R. 2.], Mar. 12, 1814.
Henry, s. Henry and Abigall, Apr. 2, 1689.
Henry, s. Henry, jr. and Sarah, Apr. 20, 1746.
Henry Franklin, s. Francis and Elisabeth B. (Foster), Apr. 19, 1830. P. R. 79.
Henry Putnam, s. Putnam and Fanny, July 21, 1813.
Hiram Augustus, s. Fraancis and Elisabeth B. (Foster), Aug. 10, 1822. P. R. 79.
Hutchinson, /s Abijah and Elizabeth, May 6, 1769.
Ira, s. Jonathan and Sarah, Apr. 21, 1797.
Isaac, s. Henry and Hannah, Sept. 2, 1733.
Isiah, s. Francis and Lydea, June 6, 1723.
Isiah, s. Francis and Lydea, May 27, 1729.
Isiah, s. Francies and Lydea, May 27, 1729.
James, s. James and Hannah, Aug. 9, 1695.
James, s. James and Mary, Aug. 30, 1720.
[James. C. R. 1.], s. James, jr. and Mary, Aug. __, 1747.
James, s. Ebenezer and Sarah, July 1, 1768.
Jedediah, s. [Lt. C. R. 1.] John and Deborah, July 26, 1768.
Jemima, d. Francies and Lydia, July 27, 1740.
Jeremiah, s. Abijah and Elizabeth, Mar. 1, 1764.
John, s. John and Sarah, Mar. 23, 1696-7.
John, s. Henry and Hannah, Apr. 25, 1728.
[John. C. R. 1.], s. Moses and Moriah, July 9, 1739.
John, s. John and Deborah, Sept. 11, 1760.
Jonathan, s. Francis and Eunice, Feb. 25, 1762.
Jonathan, s. Abijah and Elizabeth, Sept. 16, 1765.
Joseph, s. Henry and Mary, Mar. 2, 1674-5.
Joseph, s. Henry and Abigail, Apr. 17, 1697.
Joseph, s. Joseph and Phebe [Jan.] __ [1721-2].
Joseph, s. Joseph and Phebe, Aug. 9 [1723].
Joseph, s. Nathan, bp. Apr. __, 1789. C. R. 1.
Joseph, s. Simeon and Betty, bp. Dec. 20, 1789. C. R. 1.
Joshua, s. Joseph and Phebe, Jan. 30, 1[728-9].
[Joshua. C. R. 1.], s. Joseph and Phebe, Aug. 13, 1732.

p. 218
INGALLS, 
Josiah, s. Henery and Mary, Feb. 28, 1676.
Josiah, s. Josiah and Eunice, Oct. 31, 1747.
Judieth, d. twin, Henry and Hannah, June 4, 1760.
Judith, d. Capt. Henry and Sarah, Mar. 4, 1760.
La deme, d. Stephen and Lydia, Oct. 30, 1789.
Lucy Foster, d. Ezra and Dolly, Sept. 18, 1807.
Lydia, d. James and Hannah, Dec. 18, 1698.
Lydia, d. Francis and Lydia, May 11, 1727.
[Lydia. C. R. 1.], d. Francis and Lydea, Aug. 13, 1732.
Lydia, d. Abijah and Elizabeth, Oct. 7, 1765.
Lydia, d. Stephen and Lydia, Nov. 11, 1787.
Marcy, d. David and Priscilla, Apr. 29, 1761.
Maria C., d. Ezra and Dolly, Apr. 3, 1817.
Mary, d. Henry and Abigail, Feb. 25, 1690-91.
Mary, d. James and Mary, Sept. 7, 1727.
Mary, d. James, jr. and Mary, Dec. 1, 1745.
Mary, d. Ezra and Dolly, Sept. 9, 1819.
Mehetabel, d. Isaac and Rebeckah, Oct. 22, 1762.
Mehitable, d. Jonathan and Sarah, Nov. 3, 1800.
Micajah, s. Benjamin and Rebeccah, Nov. 10, 1764.
Moses, s. Samuell and Sarah, May 30, 1687.
Moses Kimball, s. Hutchinson and Molly, Dec. 7, 1801.
Nathaniel, s. David and Priscilla, May 24, 1765.
Olive, d. Isaac and Rebeckah, Apr. 15, 1760.
Olive, d. twin, Daniel and Sarah, June 11, 1760.
Peter, s. Joseph and Phebe, Oct. 28, 1741.
Peter, s. Joshua and Elizabeth, Jan. 14, 1766.
Peter, s. Simeon and Betty, bp. Nov. 18, 1787. C. R. 1.
Phebe, d. Joseph and Phebe, July 7, 1725.
Phebe, d. Joshua and Elizabeth, Dec. 30, 1768.
Polly, d. Daniel and Mary, bp. Oct. 8, 1786. C. R. 1.
Putnum, s. Capt. Henry and Sarah, Dec. 18, 1763.
Rebeca, d. Henry and Hannah, Jan. 18, 1[730. C. R. 1.].
Robert Fletcher, s. Daniel and Sarah, Sept. 26, 1763.
Ruben, s. Ebenezer and Sarah, Dec. 19, 1769.
Ruth, d. Samuel and Sarah, Feb. 19, 1698-9.
Sally, d. Jonathan and Sarah, Sept. 22, 1795.
[Samuel. C. R. 1.], s. Moses and Meriah, Nov. 11, 1722.
Samuel, s. Daniel and Sarah, Aug. 13, 1747.
Samuel, s. Francis, bp. Nov. 24, 1765. C. R. 1.
Samuel, s. Ebenezer and Sarah, Nov. 29, 1765.
Samuell, s. Samuell and Sarah, May 7, 1683.
Sarah, d. Henery and Mary, Jan. 22, 1679.
Sarah, d. Samuell and Sarah, Mar. 21, 1684-5.

p. 219
INGALLS, Sarah, d. John and Sarah, Nov. 29, 1698.
Sarah, d. Francies and Lydia, Apr. 8, 1736.
Sarah, d. Henry and Hannah, Nov. 23, 1738.
Sarah, d. Henry, jr. and Sarah, Jan. 14 [1744-5. C. R. 1.].
Sarah, d. Daniel and Sarah, Aug. 24, 1745.
Sarah, d. David and Priscilla, June 5, 1771.
Sarah, d. Solomon and Mercy, Nov. 27, 1782.
Sarah Elizabeth, d. Charles N., carpenter, and Hannah A., Nov. 8, 1846.
Sarah Foster, d. Francis and Elisabeth B. (Foster), Mar. 28, 1824. P. R. 79.
Simeon, s. James and Mary, Jan. 12, 1735-6.
Simmeon, s. Joshua and Elizabeth, Sept. 3, 1764.
Solomon, s. Solomon and Mercy, July 5, 1781.
Stephen, s. Joseph and Phebe, Apr. 23, 1737.
Stephe, s. Joshua and Elizabeth, June 17, 1761.
Stephen, s. Stephen and Lydia, bp. July 28, 1793. C. R. 1.
Stephen W[illiam. P. R. 79.], s. Francis and Elizabeth [B. P.R. 79.], Jan. 1, 1834. [1833. P.R. 79.].
Susanna, d. Capt. Henry and Sarah, June 4, 1762.
Susanna, d. William and Susanna, Apr. 27, 1763.
Tabitha, d. Joseph and Phebe, Mar. 23, 1726-7.
Tabitha, d. Joseph and Phebe, Mar. 14, 1734-5.
Theodore, s. Francis and Eunice, Mar. 30, 1764.
Unice, d. Francis and Eunice, Oct. 16, 1770.
William, s. Moses and Meriah, Apr. 7, 1730.
William, s. Moses and Moriah, June 28, 1737.
William, s. Benjamin and Rebecca, Sept. 19, 1768.
Wilson, s. Ezra and Dolly, Mar. 25, 1809.
Zebadiah, s. James and Mary, Nov. 3, 1729.
______, d. James and Hannah, Sept. 11, 1714.
______, d. Henry and Hannah, Sept. 12, 1723.
______, s. Francis and Lydea, Jan. 27, 1724-5.
______, d. Moses and Meriah, Oct. 5, 1725.
______, s. James and Mary, Nov. 6, 1725.
______, d. Joseph and Phebe, Aug. 10, 1730.
______, d. Francis and Lidea, June 27, 1734.


INGALS (see also Ingalls) 
Abigail Carlton, d. Solomon and Mercy, May 28, 1780.
Abigal, d. Ebenezer and Sarah, Oct. 14, 1749.
Abijah, s. Abijah, bp. Apr. 28, 1771. C. R. 2.
Abijah, s. Hutchinson and Molly [Polly. C. R. 1.], Sept. 21, 1798.
Augustus, s. Capt. Francis and Elizabeth, Aug. 10, 1822.

-251-
P. 220
INGALS, Caleb, s. Josiah and Eunice, Feb. 22, 1756.
Daniel, s. Daniel and Sarah, June 9, 1754.
Daniel, s. Capt. Henery and Sarah, Jan. 13, 1758.
Daniel, s. Daniel and Sarah, Feb. 9, 1758.
David, s. David and Prescila, Feb. 19, 1750-51.
Deborah, d. Joseph and Phebe, bp. ___, 1728. C. R. 1.
Deborah, d. James and Mary, May 28, 1753.
Deborah, d. John and Deborah, Jan. 22, 1758.
Dorcis, d. James and Mary, Feb. 18, 1750-51.
Edman, s. David and Presila, July 3, 1757.
Francis, s. Jonathan and Sarah, Aug. 18, 1793.
Hannah, d. James and Mary, Dec. 27, 1748.
Hannah, d. David and Presila, Feb. 20, 1759.
Henery, s. Henery and Sarah, Nov. 22, 1752.
Hipzibah, d/ Isaac and Mary, Dec. 10, 1774.
Isaac, s. Isaac and Rebeca, Nov. 8, 1754.
Isaac, s. Isaac and Mary, May 12, 1770. [bp. May 6, 1770. C. R. 2.].
Isiah, s. Francis, jr. and Eunes, July 13, 1756.
Isarel, s. David and Prisala, Dec. 26, 1754.
Jacob, s. Isaac and Rebeca, Feb. 24, 1757.
Jacob, s. Isaac and Mary, Aug. 27, 1772.
James, s. James and Mary, June 19, 1755.
John E[dward. P. R. 79], s. Capt. Francis and Elizabeth, Apr. 29, 1826.
Jonathan, s. Josiah, jr. and Eunice, Dec. 4, 1753.
Molle, d. Ebenezer and Sarah, Nov. 24, 1751.
Moriah, d. Daniel and Sarah, Dec. 14, 1749.
Moses, s. Daniel and Sarah, Feb. 23, 1756.
Nabby, d. Henry, jr. and Abigail, June 17, 1778.
Nathan, s. Francis, jr. and Eunis, June 12, 1755.
Nathaniel, s. Josiah and Unice, Sept. 19, 1751.
Phebe Abbot, d. Nathan and Lydia, bp. Apr. 15, 1787. C.R. 1.
Phineas, s. Francis, jr. and Unis, Nov. 14, 1758.
Precilla, d. David and Precilla, Feb. 1, 1753.
Rebeca, d. Heneery and Sarah, July 4, 1754.
Rebecca, d. Isaac and Mary, June 16, 1766.
Ruth, d. Daniel and Sarah, July 26, 1752.
Sarah, d. Henery, jr. and Sarah, July 25, 1748.
Sarah, d. Ebenezer and Sarah, Nov. 6, 1753.
Sarah F., d. Capt. Francis and Elizabeth, Mar. 28, 1824.
Sarah Putnam, d. Daniel, bp. Apr. 18, 1790. C. R. 1.
Simeon, s. Josiah, jr. and Eunice, Aug. 24, 1749.
Solomon, s. Henery and Sarah, June 16, 1750.

P. 221
INGALS, Susanna, d. Ebenezer and Sarah, Jan. 26, 1756.
______, ch. [torn] and Hannah, Dec. 18, 1704.
______, s. Ebenezer and Sarah, Apr. 21, 1758.


INGOLS (see also Ingalls) 
Abigail, d. Josiah and Mary, _____, [1709-10.].
Anne, d. Josiah and Esther, June 6 [1717].
Daniel, s. Moses and Moriah, Feb. __ [1713-14].
Elizabeth, d. twin, Sarah, July 24, [1710].
Henery, s. Henery and Hannah, Apr. 13, 1719.
Hephzibah, d. James and Hannah, _____ [1711].
Martha, d. John and Sarah, Feb. 9, 1712-13.
Nathaniell, s. Samuell and Sarah, ______ [1703].
Pheoby, d. Josiah and Mary, _____ [1707?].
Priscilla, d. [torn] [1706].
Rachell, d. Josiah and Mary, Sept. 3, 1713.
[Ruth. C. R. 1.], d. Moses and Moriah, Jan. 1, 1719-20.
Stephen, s. twin, [torn] and Sarah, July 24 [1710].
______, ch. John and Sarah, June 22, 1701.
______, ch. [torn] and Hannah, ___ 13 {torn}.
______, d. John and Sarah, Mar. 27, 1705-6.
______, ch. Josiah and Mary, May 15, 1706.
______, d. James and Hannah, May 31, 1709.
______, ch. [torn] and Mary, May 22, 1712.
______, ch. Moses and Moriah, Dec. 18, 1716.



*INGALLS (see also Engolls, Ingals, Ingolls, Ingols)
Abijah, and Elizabeth Hutchinson, Dec. 8, 1763.*
Benjamin, and [Mrs. C.R.1.] Rebecca Pearson, Aug. 3, 1762.*
Charles N., a. 25 y., carpenter, s. Francis and Elizabeth B., and 
  Hannah J. Abbott, a. 30 y., d. Asa and Judith, Dec. [16. C. R. 2.], 1845.*
Charlotte [E. C. R. 1], and Charles French, Nov. 7, 1843.*
Daniel, and Sarah Flecher of Nottingham, int. Oct. 27, 1744.
Daniel, and Mary Tapley of Merrimac, int. Oct. 17, 1785.
* = Intention also recorded.

Andover Marriages, Vol. II Vital Records, p. 191

-252-

p. 192
Deborah [of Salem. Int.], and Joshua Flint, Oct. 6, 1715. C. R. 1.*
Deborah, and Dean Carlton, Dec. 28, 1786.*
Deborah, and David Lee, int. Mar. 27, 1813.
Dinah, and Timothy Farnum, Jan. 18, 1727-8.*
Dorothy, and Thomas Bragg, Mar. 5, 1745-6.*
Ebenezer, and Mrs. Sarah Curtis [of Boxford. Int.], at Boxford, July 29, 1765.*
Elenor, and James Curtis of New Salem, Oct. 30, 1794.*
Elizabeth, and John Stevens [of Charlestown. Int.], Apr. 22, 1731.*
Eunice, of James Ingalls of Washington, Sept. 4, 1798.*
Ezra, and Dolly Wilson, Dec. 24, 1801.*
Francies, and Lydia Stevens, Jan. 9, 1743-4.*
Francis, and Lydea Ingalls, Nov. 19, 1719.*
Francis, jr., and Anna Esties, Aug. 20, 1785.*
Hannah, and Ammi Ruhamah Faulkner, June 7, 1726.*
Hannah, and Daniel Putnam of Reading, Dec. 13, 1744.*
Harriet, a. 28 y., d. Jeduthan and Eliza, and William W. Fowler, widr., of Dover, N. H., 
  a. 29 y., merchant, s. Samuel, Aug. 5, 1847.*
Henery, sr., and Sarah Abbot, Aug. 1, 1689.
Henry, and Sarah Putnum of Reading, int. July 10, 1742.
Hephzibah, and Samuel Stevens, Aug. 9, 1737.*
Hutchinson, of Bluehill, and Molly Kimball, Nov. 5, 1795.*
James, and Hannah Abbott, Apr. 16, 1695.
James, and Mary Stevens, Nov. 5, 1719.*
James, jr., and Mary Frie, Dec. 6, 1744.*
James, of Washington, and Eunice Ingalls, Sept. 4, 1798.*
Jemima, and Amos Holt, June 29, 1762.*
John, widr., and Sarah Russel, June 10, 1696.
Jonathan, and Sarah Berry, May 26, 1793.*
Joseph, and Phebe Farnum, Dec. 29, 1720.*
Joshua, and Elizabeth Steel, Sept. 9, 1760.*
Josiah, and Esther Frie, July 21, 1715. C. R. 1.*
Josiah, and Eunice Flint of Reading, int. Mar. 19, 1742-3.
Judith, and Capt. Phillip Farrington, Feb. 1, 1810.*
Leonard K., of Denmark, Me., and Dorcas L. Abbott, Oct. 16, 1834.*
Lucy F., and Andoniram Whiting, int. Nov. 3, 1826.
Lydia, and Francis Ingalls, Nov. 19, 1719.*
Lydia, and Abijah Hovey of Lunenburg, Dec. 3, 1761.*
Lydia, and Isaac Brown of Wilton, Jan. 28, 1790.*

p. 193
INGALLS, Mariah, and Simeon Stevens of Billerica, at Billerica, Feb. 7, 1771.*
Martha, and William Barker, Mar. 10, 1729-30.*
Mary, and Joseph Steevens, May 28, 1679.
Mary, and Noah Marble, Jan. 12, 1720-21.*
Mary, and Ephraim Farnaum, Nov. 12, 1728.*
Mary, and Ebenezer Abbott, Dec. 4, 1744.*
Mehetable, and Daniel Kimbal, Dec. 16, 1736.*
Nathan, and Lydia Griffin, Apr. 15, 1778.*
Phebe, and James Parker, Aug. 12, 1731.*
Phebe, and Elijah Bradstreet, June 3, 1790.*
Priscilla, and Ebenezer Farnaum, Feb. 12, 1732-3.*
Putnam, and Fanny Carlton, Mar. 19, 1812.*
Rebecca, and Isaac Shattuck, jr., Jan. 11, 1785.*
Ruth [Mrs. C. R. 1.], and Capt. Daniel Bodwell of Methuen, Apr. 14, 1761.*
Ruth, and Moses Gerrish of Newburyport, Oct. 13, 1774.*
Sally, of Methuen, and John Foster, int. Sept. 15, 1788.
Samuell, and Sarah Hendrick, June 4, 1682.
Sarah, and Daniel Osgood, June 3, 1724.*
Sarah, and Joseph Odel, Apr. 16, 1764. C. R. 1.
Sarah, and Thomas Stevens, jr., Oct. 8, 1772.*
Sarah, and Richard Hall of Methuen, Oct. 22, 1772.*
Sarah, and Peter Carlton, Feb. 11, 1773.*
Sarah F., a. 21 y., d. Francis and Elizabeth B., and Charles F. Johnson, 
  a. 22 y., shoemaker, s. John and Hannah P., Oct. 7, 1845.*
Simeon, and wid. Elizabeth Fish, Jan. 16, 1787.*
Solomon, and Abigail Carlton, Apr. 6, 1775.*
Stephen, and Lydia Kimball, Sept. 21, 1786.*
William, and Susanna Pearson, May 26, 1761.*

INGALS (see also Ingalls)
Abigail, and Benjamin Trask of New Salem [N.H.], Sept. 26, 1774.*
Anne, and Daniel Foster of Suncook, N.H., Feb. 14, 1754.*
Betsy, and Jacob Foster, 3d, Dec. 9, 1802.*
David, and Prescila How, Mar. 29, 1750.*
Dolly, and Nathaniel Edson of Dover, N.H., int. Apr. 21, 1827.
Ebenezer, and Sarah Kimbol, Jan. 26, 1748-9.*
Francis, jr., and Eunes Jennings, Nov. 12, 1754.*
Francis, and Elizabeth B. Foster, Oct. 31, 1815.*
Henry, jr., and Abigail Wingate of Amesbury, int. Aug. 18, 1777.
Isaac, and Rebeca Mooar, Apr. 11, 1754.*
194
Ingals, John, and Deborah Stevens, May 8, 1755.*
Lydia, and Andrew K. Lacy, June 5, 1823.*
Mehitable [H. int.], and Asa A. Abbot, Sept. 17, 1829.*
Moses, and Mary [Moriah. Int.] Hoyte of Amesbury, at Newbury, Feb. 21, 1712.*
Phebe, and Joshua Abbot [of Souhegan West. Int.], Nov. 20, 1749.*
Ruth, and Enoch Foot, resident in Andover, Mar. 8, 1747-8.*
Sarah, and Joshua Swan formerly of Haverhill, mariner, at Woburn, Jan 6, 1701.
Simeon, and Priscilla Berry, int. Jan. 1, 1784.
Solomon, and Mercy Wilson, Apr. 22, 1779.*
Tabitha, and Solomon Kittredge, May 14, 1755.*
Theodore, and Hannah Berry of Middleton, Sept. 11, 1792.

INGOLLS (see also Ingalls)
Henry, and Abigal Emery, June 6, 1688. CT. R.

INGOLS (see also Ingalls)
Henery, and Hannah Martin, July 10, 1718.*
Henry, Capt., and [Mrs. Int.] Sarah Andrews of Danvers, at Danvers, May 18, 1757.*
Josiah, and Mary Holt, Sept. 19, 1705.*
Mary, and Thomas Duston of Haverhill, Dec. 25, 1711.*
Sarah, and Josiah Chandler, Feb. 27, 1706-7.*

*Intention also recorded.

End of Andover Marriages

-253-

Andover Deaths, p. 474
INGALLS (see also Engolls, Ingals, Ingols) 
Abiah, d. James and Hannah, Feb. 10, 1728-9.
Abigail, unm., Aug. 11, 1742, in her 50th y.
Abigail, w. Solomon, May 24, 1776, in her 25th y. [a. 24 y. 4 m. C. R. 2.].
Abijah, s. Hutchinson, Dec. 13, 1838, a. 40 y.
Anne, d. Josiah and Hester, Oct. 25, 1729, in her 13th y.

p. 475
INGALLS, Asa, s. Isaac and Rebeccah, Sept. 26, 1764.
Cyrus, s. Francis and Eunice, May 31, 1832. P. R. 123.
Daniel, s. Samuel and Sarah, Sept. 25, 1700.
Deborah, d. Samuel and Sarah, Dec. 26, 1692.
Deborah, d. Lt. John and Deborah, Nov. 16, 1762, in her 5th y. G. R. 1.
Deborah, w. Lt. John, Feb. 15, 1781, a. 54 y.
Dorothy, d. John and Dorothy, Nov. 16, 1762.
Ebenezer, s. Ebenezer and Sarah, Sept. 12, 1759.
Ephraim, s. James and Mary, Jan. 19, 1724-5.
Eunice, wid. Francis, May 22, 1799.
Ezra, Mar. 6, 1828, a. 55 y.
Francis, s. Henry and Mary, small pox, Dec. 9, 1690.
Francis, s. Francis and Lydia, Apr. 3, 1729.
Francis, Apr. 3, 1795, a. 64 y.
Francis, s. Francis and Eunice, June 25, 1834. P. R. 123.
Francis, Jan. 26, 1759.
Hannah, d. twin, Henry and Hannah, Aug. 4, 1721.
Hannah, wid. Henry, May 31, 1783, in her 94th y. G. R. 1.
Hannah, unm., d. John and Deborah, Apr. 23, 1847, a. 82 y.
Henery, Capt., Mar. 28, 1803, a. 84 y.
Henry, m., s. Henry and Mary, Feb. 8, 1698-9.
Henry, Apr. 19, 1749 (?) in his 81st (?) y. G. R. 1.
Henry F[ranklin. P. R. 125.], s. Frances and Elizabeth B., 
  Sept. 29, 1834, a. 4 y. 5 m. G. R. 6.
Isaac, s. Isaac and Rebeccah, Aug. 18, 1764.
Isiah, s. Francis and Lydiah, Mar. 23, 1728-9.
Isaiah, s. Francies and Lydia, Sept. 8, 1736.
Isiah, s. Francies and Lydia, Mar. 14, 1744-5.
Isaiah, s. Francis and Eunice, June 2, 1831. P. R. 123.
Jacob, s. Isaac and Rebeccah, Aug. 20, 1764.
James, June 27, 1735, in his 66th y.
James, s. James, jr. and Mary, Jan. 28, 1747-8.
Jedediah, m., physician, s. John and Deborah, dropsy, 
  Aug. 1, 1847, a. 78 y. [a. 79 y. G.R. 7.].
John, Lt., Aug. 26, 1810, a. 82 y.
John, Col., Mar. [Apr. C. R. 1.] 28, 1836, a. 75 y.
Jonathan [s. Francis and Eunice. P. R. 123; inflammation. 
  C. R. 1.], July 9, 1837, a. 75 y.
Joseph, s. Henery and Mary, Mar. 19, 1674-5.
Joseph, s. Joseph and Phebe, Feb. 20, 1721-2.
Joshua, s. Joseph and Phebe, Feb. 15, 1728-9.
Judith [Judah, unm. G. R. 1.], Apr. 5, 1807, a. 86 y.
Lydia, d. Francis and Lydia, Apr. 15, 1729.

p. 476
INGALLS, Lydia, w. Francies, Apr. 29, 1743.
Mary, w. Henery, Dec. 16, 1686.
Mehetabel, d. Isaac and Rebeccah, Aug. 17, 1764.
Nathan, s. Francis and Eunice, Jan. 8, 1835. P. R. 123.
Olive, d. Isaac and Rebeccah, Aug. 17, 1764.
Peter, s. Joseph and Phebe, Dec. 10, 1741.
Phebe, d. Joseph and Phebe, Feb. 13, 1728-9.
Phebe, wid. Joseph, Feb. 18, 1760.
Phineas, s. Francis and Eunice, Jan. 5, 1844. P. R. 123.
Putnam [farmer, consumption. C. R. 1.], May 5 [25. G. R. 1.], 1814, a. 50 y.
Rebeccah, w. Isaac, Aug. 11, 1764, a. 29 y.
Samuel, Serg't., Aug. 11, 1733, in his 79th y.
Samuel, s. Ebenezer and Sarah, Feb. 28, 1766.
Sarah, wid. Henry, May 12, 1728, in her 90th y.
Sarah, d. Francies and Lydia, May 31, 1738.
Sarah, d. Henry, jr. and Sarah, Jan. 30, 1744-5.
Sarah, w. Ebenezer, May 1, 1764, a. 38 y.
Sarah [(Putnam), b. Danvers. C. R. 1.], wid. Capt. Henry [cancer. C. R. 1.], Nov. 29, 1813, a. 81 y.
Sarah [B. P.R.123 ; (Frye). C. R. 1.], w. Jonathan, Oct. 24, 1816, a. 53 y.
Susanna, d. Francies, and Lydia, Sept. 3, 1736.
Susanna, d. Capt. Henry and Sarah, Oct. 17, 1762.
Tabitha, d. Joseph and Phebe, Mar. 13, 1728-9.
Theodore, s. Francis and Eunice, Nov. 7, 1817. P. R. 123.
William, s. Moses and Meriah, Mar. 24, 1730-31.
______, s. Josiah, jr. and Eunic, Sept. 18, 1744.
______, ch. Francis, Apr. 26, 1829. P. R. 123.

INGALS (see also Ingalls) 
Abigal, wid. [w. Benjey. G.R.1.], July 12 [6. G.R.1.], 1756, in her 89th y. [in 88th y. G.R.1.].
Abigail, Mrs., Aug. 11, 1772, in her 50th y. G. R. 1.
Abijah, at Ticonderoga, _____, 1776, a. 40 y. C. R. 2.
Daniel, s. Daniel and Sarah, drowned, June 22, 1756.
Elezebith, d. Joseph and Phebe, May 13, 1752, in her 13th y.
Elisabeth, wid., bur. Jan, 27, 1779. C. R. 2.
Esther, wid., Sept. 29, 1757, in her 76th y.
Henery, Serg't., Feb. 8, 1718-19, a. abt. 90 y.
Henery, Aug. 12, 1749, in his 61st. y.
Henery, s. Henery and Sarah, Apr. 27, 1752.
Hiram [Augustus. P. R. 125.], s. Capt. Francis and Elizabeth B. G. R. 6.], Feb. 19, 1824, a. 18 m.
John, "summer of" 1827. C. R. 6.

p. 477
Joseph, Dec. 29, 1757, in his 61st y.
Josiah, Aug. 14, 1755, in his 79th y.
Lydia, wid. Stephen, Dec. 16, 1831. [a. 71 y. G. R. 6.].
Moses, Nov. 23, 1751.
Rebeca, d. Henery and Hannah, Jan. 24, 1748-9, a. 18 y.
Sarah, w. Capt. Henery [and d. Rev. Daniel Putnam. G.R.1.], Apr. 8, 1756, in her 32d y.
Susanna, d. Ebenezer and Sarah, Feb. 10, 1756.
______, s. Ebenezer and Sarah, May 9, 1758.

INGOLS (see also Ingalls) 
Mary, w. Josiah, Feb. 19, 1714-5, a. abt. 34 y.
-End of Andover Records -

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The following articles were submitted by Betty J Patrick. She descends on the Ingalls line through Freelove, daughter of Benjamin. She married James Jennings Freelove, #200, and Benjamin, B76-3. Thanks, Betty, for these informative articles.

FORMER INGALLS-WHEELER-HORTON HOMESTEAD Chestnut Street, Rehoboth

By E. Otis Dyer (1973)

The Ingalls-Wheeler-Horton homestead was built in 1731 by  Benjamin Ingalls. who occupied it wish his wife Mercy Ingalls until his  death about ten years later. Mrs. Ingalls then married Colonel Philip  Wheeler who had been living in North Rehoboth on Anawan Street a little north of Fairview Avenue.

It is interesting to note that both Philip and Mercy had a child by a previous marriage and that these two children. Mary Ingalls and Philip Wheeler, Jr., eventually married and occupied the Ingalls-Wheeler homestead after their parents. They stayed there until Philip Jr.'s tragic

The circumstances of Wheeler's death were unique. He was  captain of the local Rehoboth militia and had "called a training" of the company on November 16, 1774. The day of training was probably held on the fields of the present Gouveia farm near Brook and Wood Street near the Liberty Tree. It is easy to imagine the raw militia in their rough farmer clothes

p. 107 (p. 108 omitted-sketch of Philip Wheeler’s Homestead, 212 Chestnut St. as it appeared (Dec?)ember 21, 1774 when drawn  by Sylvanus Martin, surveyer.) -Abstracted, from "History of Wheeler Family in America

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carrying a variety of arms being marched back and forth through their drill exercises. The colonial militia had the curious custom of saluting an officer, especially the company commander, by firing a blank charge into the ground near his feet. If a soldier caught the captain by surprise, the salute was all the more effective. On this particular morning Captain Wheeler had forbidden the firing of any "salutes" as it wasted valuable gun powder. The men were mostly undisciplined and one William Jenkins, who resided on Hornbine Road and was described as one of "several rude hurricane fellows," took advantage of the drill called "whip the snake" and fired into the ground at the feet of Captain Wheeler as he came marching by. The musket contained no shot, but had a double charge of black powder. Jenkins miscalculated the Captain's marching step and "blowed off ye captains left leg between the anke and calf leaving nothing but ye great heel sinew and some flesh." Captain Wheeler was taken to his home nearby, where Dr. Sterling "made a deadful hand in his amputation." He had only one saw that broke before he had cut through the first bone and the operation had to be finished with a carpenter's joiners saw! Gangrene set in and he died with much suffering four days later. It was thought the gangrene was caused by a too tight bandage that cut off the circulation, but the crudeness of the amputation instruments is probably nearer the truth.

After Captain Wheeler's death, his wife married John Kelton and they moved away from the homestead, leaving the house to be occupied by her son, Shubael Wheeler. Shubael was a soldier of the Revolution and married Chloe Martin, the daughter of Lt. Daniel Martin, another veteran of the Revolution. (The Wheeler family and their in-laws were very active in the military in the eighteenth century and had a knack for acquiring military titles.)

Before Shubael and Chloe had moved in, the homestead was surveyed and sub-divided into large farm lots for Captain Wheeler's numerous children. The surveyor was Sylvanus Martin, who lived at the present Horton farm on County Street in Seekonk. Fortunately, Mr. Martin took time to make a little sketch of the homestead farm and add it to the survey plan, of which a portion is represented here. It shows a typical eighteenth century farm with 2-1/2 story house with an addition to

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a north side. The house was set quite far back from the road to the barn near the present Anzivino house (1973). The sketch also shows the well, orchard, and corn barn in front of her side of the gate and land leading to the house, none of which now remains.

Shubael and Chloe had two daughters: Candace, who married Jeremiah Pearce and lived at the present Joseph Moitozo house on Holmes Street, and Lavinia, who married Simeon Hora and continued to live in the old Chestnut Street homestead. Lavinia was the fourth generation and the last of her family to fall heir to the farm now called the Ingalls-Wheeler-Horton homestead.

The Hortons allowed the house to run down and eventually they moved into a new house nearer the road (present Anzivino house. (1973). When moving they left many of the old antique furnishings to decay in the house. Lavinia became eccentric in her old age (1870's) and did not care for any of the furnishings left behind. Yet when asked for a cracked pitcher that stood on the dusty pantry shelf, her reply was, "that pitcher belonged to my ancestors and I do not like to part with it." However she eventually let it fall into the cellar with the rest of the house.

In the garret were looms, spinning wheels (both wool and flax), cards, etc. that had belonged to the Ingalls and Wheelers since colonial days. Throughout the rest of the house were oil imps, china, glassware, tables, and chairs that were allowed to remain during the final collapse.

The sketch by Sylvanus Martin gives us an idea of how the homestead looked at the time of Wheeler's death, but we are also indebted to Marion P. Carter. a former resident of Attleboro and sixth generation member of the Ingalls-Wheeler-Horton family, for a sketch of the house as it looked after it ad been abandoned for many years. Claudia Wynne of Digh…on has made the accompanying drawing based on the Carter sketch from a view looking over the stone wall at the north end of the house. The ell is in the foreground with sagging rafters, and the main house at the rear is falling into the cellar. The date of the final collapse is not known, but it probably was in the early 1900's.
110

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The Ingalls-Wheeler-Horton Homestead looking south (sketch omitted) just before its final collapse about 1900. Drawn by Claudia Wynne from a sketch by Marion Carter.

A small window that was in the pantry or milk room was saved. It was two feet square with small diamond-shaped glass set in a lead frame. No doubt it was an original window from the early eighteenth century construction. It was on display for many years at Major Horton's museum in Attleboro at least until the early 1930's along with a few other rescued items.

Marion P. Carter visited the site in the 1920's and wrote. "When I last passed where the place where the Ingalls-Wheeler-Horton house stood a garden was growing on the spot.

" 'And the place thereof shall know it no more.'"
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SOME ENGLISH MATERIAL PERTAINING TO SAMUEL AND FRANCIS INGALLS OF LYNN, MASS.

BY JOHN BROOKS THRELFALL

The English origin of Edmund and Francis Ingalls of Lynn, Mass., is fairly well covered in Charles Burleigh's Genealogy and History of the Ingalls family in America (1903) and also in Mary Lovering Holman's Pillsbury Ancestry. Mrs. Holman apparently did no English research but she did note that apparently no one had looked for the Bishop's Transcripts of Skirbeck, Lincolnshire, whence these Ingalls brothers came. The parish registers of Skirbeck start in 1661, so they are of little value for these Puritan settlers. Recently, I obtained Xerox copy of the Bishop's Transcripts through 1665, such as they exist, and from these found a number of Ingalls records, which add somewhat to the meager knowledge of this family. Also, the wills of Robert and Henry Ingalls were obtained, to wit 1561-2, 1565-6, 1575-7, 1585-98, 1600-06, 1608-28, 1630-35 are the years in which the Bishop's Transcripts are extant for Skirbeck):

1590, 1591, 1601 Robert Ingalls was church warden these years
1592 July 29 Edeth Ingolles baptized
1604 July .--se, the daughter of Robert Engall, buried
1611 Oct. 13 Edward, son of Henry Ingolls, baptized
1612 Sep. 25 Edward Engols was buried
1612 Nov. 15 William Ingols was baptized
1614 Jan. 6 Elizabeth, daughter of Henry Ingols, baptized 1613/14
1614 Dec. 10 Thomas Stevens & Rose Ingals, married
1615 Oct. 29 Thomas Stevens buried
1618 Mar. 22 Rob. Iengals buried [1617/18]
1618 June 7 Edmund Inoilgs & Annis Telbe, married
I619 Feb. 28 Elizabeth Inoilgs, daughter of Edmund Inoilgs, baptized [1618/19]
1620 July 13 Robert, son to Edmon Engelles baptized
1622 July 14 Faith lnalgs, daughter of Edmond Inalgs, baptized
1624 May 9 John Inalgs, son of Edmond Inalgs, baptized
1626 July 16 Sara Ingalls, daughter of Edmond Ingalls, baptized
1628 Jan. 20 Samuel Ingalls, son of Edmond Ingalls, baptized [1627/8]
1611 Apr. 22 Widow Ingalls was buried
1632 Apr. 22 Samuel, son of Edmond Engalls, baptized
1634 July 1 Robert Wackinson & Elizabeth Ingalls, married


Boston, Lincolnshire, Parish Registers:
1621 Nov. 21 Francis Ingalls & Bridget Vaughan, married
1623 Dec. 25 Marie, daughter of Francis Ingolds, baptized
1622 Sep. 8 Sarah, daughter of Francis Ingolds, baptized
1624 Sep. 24 " “ “ “ ,buried
1625 Nov. 24 Elizabeth, daughter of Francis Ingolds, baptized
1625 Dec. 7 " " " " , buried
1625 Dec. 20 Bridgett, wife of Francis Ingolds, buried
1607 Nov. 30 Henry Ingoll & Rose Gellibrand, married
1612 May 19 Ambrose Stenytt & Eden Ingols, married
1613 July 11 Robert Ingolls & Alice Snape, married
1617 June 20 Wm Ingolds of Skirbeck & Elizabeth Clayton, married

Lincoln Marriage Licenses give:

1621 Nov. 4 Francis Ingolls of Boston, yeoman, aet. 26 & Bridget Vaughan of same Spr aet. 24,to be married in Boston or Screilsby

1 June 1555 The will of Henry Ingalls of Skirbeck, Lincolnshire ... bequests to wife Johan ... youngest children to each have 10 which was left to them; if any die under age, their share to be divided amongst the rest ... to the high altar 12d ... residue to be divided amongst my six children ... wife Johan to be executrix ... mentions son James and his brother-in-law Thomas Wytton. [This will is given in the Ingalls Genealogy. It does not appear among the Lincoln wills as indexed nor can any clue be found which might suggest where it is filed.]

12 July 1617 I Robert Ingols of Skirbeck Quarter in the parish of Skirbeck, county of Lincoln, yeoman, being sick in body ... unto Elizabeth my wife my house and lands

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THE AMERICAN GENEALOGIST

for her life, after her decease unto Edmond my eldest son…if Edmond die without male issue, then to Robert Ingols my second son, then to Francis my youngest son . .. to my maid servant Anne Cleasbie £5 ... unto all the rest of Henry Cleasbie's children one ewe lamb ... to each of my cousin Henry Ingols' children one ewe lamb ... to my brother Henry Ingols my black fflect cow ... to the poor people of Skirbeck Quarter 10s . . unto Robt Stennytt the son of Ambrose Stennytt one ewe & one lamb ... half remainder to Elizabeth my wife for life, then to Edmond my son who is to have the other half. Wife Elizabeth and Edmond to be executors, William Chinfield and Robt Harrison supervisors; witnesses: Alexander Pates 6 Thomas Rose. Proved 27 Sept. 1618, Probate Court, Lincoln Cathedral.

12 Feb. 1613/14 I Henry Ingals of Skirbeck Quarter in the parish of Skirbeck to the pts of Hollande in the County of Lincoln, husbandman, sick In body ... unto my son William £10 at age 21 ... unto Elizabeth Ingals my daughter £10 at age 21 or day of marriage ... if they both die before, £10 to wife, other £10 to my brethren and sisters ... unto my father Ingals 10s ... to the church of Skirbeck 5s ... remainder to Rose my wife, she to be executrix. John Droster my neighbor and Edward Ingals my cossen to be supervisors . . . Robert Ingels was one of three Witnesses. Debts I owe: to my sister Mary Pickering 50s. Proved 8 May 1614, Probate Court, Lincoln Cathedral.

From this material the following family genealogy can be arranged. HENRY(8) INGALLS married Joan, perhaps the sister of Thomas Wytton. Henry made his will 1 June 1555 and was survived by his wife and six children among whom was James. One of these six children, possibly one named Edmund, was almost certainly the father of Robert who named his eldest son Edmund. It is possible, however, that Henry was the father of Robert, rather than the grandfather, in which case Robert would have been but a small child in 1555 and thus would have been well into his thirties when he married.

ROBERT INGALLS was probably a grandson of Henry and perhaps born about 1560-1565 in or near Skirbeck. He probably married about 1587 Elizabeth ------. Robert made his will 12 July 1617, lived on for eight more months, was buried at Skirbeck 22 March 1617/18. His widow was buried there 22 April 1631. Their children were:

+Edmund, b. probably about 1588

Robert, b. probably about 1590; m. at Boston, 11 July 1613, Alice Snape; living 1617

Edith, probably his daughter, bapt. 29 July 1592; m. at Boston 19 May 1612 Ambrose Stynytt. They had a son Robert and she d. before 1617.

Francis, b. probably 1595, deposed as aged about 60 1n 1662 (an error of transcription?) but his age was recorded as 26 in marriage license of 1621; m. at Boson, England, 27 Nov. 1621, Bridget Vaughan who was bur. 20 Dec. 1625, three children. He m. (2) Mary -----, and he d. about 1672 at Boston, Mass., where he made his will 1 Nov. 1672. In it he mentioned wife Mary, son-in-law Joseph Belknap; balance of estate to Elizabeth Fornum of Andover after wife's decease.

(---)se, daughter of Robert Engall, bur. July 1604. The name was short, left part stained and illegible, perhaps Rose.]

EDMUND1 INGALLS, son of the aforesaid Robert and grandson, or perhaps great-grandson, of Henry, was born probably about 1588 at Skirbeck, Lincolnshire. On 7 June 1618 at the Church of St. Nicholas, Skirbeck, Edmund Ingalls and Annis Telbe were married. Annis is an equivalent form of Ann [also sometimes of Agnes and even Hannah] and Telbe would apparently be a variant of Tealby, the name of a village in Lincolnshire. A search of all Tealby probate records of that period in Lincolnshire reveals no clue to her origins nor are any other Tealbys noted in the Skirbeck records.

Edmund Ingalls was church warden for Skirbeck for 1632. He probably left for New England the next year. Edmund's brother Francis may have left earlier. Alonzo Lewis, History of Lynn, Mass., wrote that the brothers settled in Saugus (Lynn) as early as June 1629, which may be correct for Francis but is certainly not so for Edmund. Edmund is said to have built his home next to a pond, the site being between 33 and 43 Bloomfield Street, Lynn.

On 20 June 1646 Edmund Ingalls was fined "for bringing home sticks in both arms on the Sabath day from toward Mr. Holyokes rails." Witnesses were Joseph, Obadiah and Jane Flood, his neighbors (Essex Quarterly Court Files 1:99).

About March 1648 when crossing the bridge over Saugus River, sup-,

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(John Brooks Threlfall - cont'd)

posedly on horseback, he fell through and was critically injured. On the 23rd the Court of Assistants allowed the Town of Lynn £20 toward repairs. Edmund lingered on with his injuries and then, apparently realizing that he was not going to recover, wrote his will and died a few days later. The will was proved 14 Sept. 1648 and the inventory came to £135/8/10. Soon after his death;

The humble petition of Robert Ingalls, with the rest of his brethren and sisters, being eight in number, humbly showeth that whereas your poor petitioner's father hath been deprived of life by the insufficiency of Lynne bridge, so called, to the great impoverishment of your poor petitioner's mother and themselves and there being a court order that any person so dyeing through such insufficiency of any bridge in the countrye, there should be an hundred pounds forfeit to the next heirs, May it therefore please this honorable Court to take your poore petitioner's case into consideration.

The petition was considered 18 Oct. 1648 and the damages were allowed.
On 27 March 1649 Ann Ingalls sued William Flint and Anthony Needham for taking her hay (ibid. 1:162).

There are no known deeds for Edmund and no further record of his widow.

Children: baptized at Skirbeck, Lincolnshire

i. Elizabeth, bapt. 28 Feb. 1618/19; d. 9 Julie 1676; m. as 1st of three wives, the Rev. Francis Dane who d. 17 Feb. 1696/7; 9 children.

ii. Robert, bapt. 11 July 1620, bur. At Lynn, 1 Jan. 1697/8; m. Sarah Harker, d. 8 April 1696, daughter of William & Elizabeth Harker of Lynn, 9 children.

iii. Faith, bapt. 14 July 1622, living 1682, probably d. by 1692; m. Andrew Allen of Lynn, living 1682, probably d. by 1692. They were among the first settlers of Andover. A daughter was hanged as a witch in 1692, another was killed by Indians, and both sons d. of smallpox in 1690.

iv. John, bapt. 9 May 1624, d. testate at Rehoboth, Mass., 31 Dec. 1721; m. 26 May 1667 Elizabeth Barrett of Salem, d. 5 March 1717/18; 5 children. He was of Ipswich in 1648, of Lynn in 1649 (per deed), then of Andover; later of Tiverton, R.I., and in 1687 to Bristol.

v. Sarah, bapt. 16 July 1626; m. William Bitner; no further record for either.

vi. Samuel, bapt. 20 Jan. 1627/8; probably d. 1628-30 for which period Bishop's Transcripts are lacking.

vii. Henry, probably b. 1629/30; d. at Andover, 8 Feb. 1718/19 aet. 90; m. (1) 6 July 1653, Mary Osgood. d. 16 Dec. 1686, daughter of John A Sarah Osgood. 12 children; (2) 1 Aug. 1689, Sarah (Farnum) Abbott.

viii. Samuel, bapt. 22 April 1632, d. 1716/17; m. 9 Dec. 1656 Ruth Eaton, daughter of John & Anne Eaton; 9 children.

ix. Mary, b. probably about 1634, perhaps at Lynn; living 1646 in her father's will.

x. Joseph, according to a doubtful legend related by Lewis, but if so, he d. before the 1648 will.

ADDITIONAL ENGLISH DATA ON INGALLS

BY ROSALYN DAVENPORT GIBBS

I was impressed by John Brooks Threlfall's Some English Material Pertaining to Edmund and Francis Ingalls of Lynn, Mass. (TAG 52:241-243). May I offer additional research done in England in 1972 and 1973?

 

The Bishop's Transcripts of surrounding towns in the Holland area of Lincolnshire were searched. Robert Ingalls and his wife Elizabeth were discovered, residing within the parish of St. Leodegar's, Wyberton, from at least April or May 1580 until at least 16 June 1586. St. Leodegar's Parish Registers were available at the Castle, Lincoln, on microfilm, including baptisms from 1538-1599; marriages from 1567-1601 and burials from 1575-1591. Bishop's Transcripts for 1563-1575, 1577-1585 and 1627 were missing. Many others were so badly stained and torn that all entries were not legible. Information from the Parish Registers are cited as PR, those from the Bishop's Transcripts as BT.

St. Leodegar's, Wyberton, Lincolnshire

1580 [April or May] 6 [Rose?], daughter of Robert Ingall baptised. Page damaged (PR).

1582 Apr 12 Agnes, daughter of Robert Ingall, baptised (PR)

1582 May 7 Amee, daughter of Robert Ingold, buried (PR)

1584 Mar 7 Margaret, daughter of Robert Ingall, baptised (1581/4)(PR)

1585 Aug 28 Margaret, daughter of Robert Inguld and Elizabeth his wife, buried (PR)

1586 Jun 26 Edward [Edmund, BT], son of Robert Ingolls and Elizabeth his wife, baptized (PR and BT)

1586 Sep 27 John, son of Henry Ingalls and his wife baptised (PR)

1587 Jan 20 John, son of Henry Ingold, buried (1586/7) (PR & BT)

1591 Aug 17 William, son of Henry Ingalls and his wife, baptized (PR)

1594 Apr 20 Jehne (BT), Jo[blur PR], daughter of Henry Ingold and Elizabeth his wife, baptized (PR & BT)

1596 Apr 10 Anne, daughter of Henrie Inggolde and his wife, baptized (BT)

1601 Jan 6 Elizabeth the wife of Henrye Ingoll buried [1600/1] (BT)

1601 Nov 26 Henry Ingall and Jane Clarke of Leake (possibly widow BT) was marryed [l0 Nov 1601 BT] (PR & BT)

1605 Dec 21 The wife of Henry Ingall, buried (BT)

1606 Jan 1 Elizabeth, the daughter of Henrie Ingoll, buried [1600/1)

1613 Nov 29 Agnes Ingold, daughter of Henri Ingold, buried (BT)

1614 Mar 4 Henri Ingold Juni[or?] was buried (1613/14) (BT)

1614 May 13 Christian, the wife of Henry Ingold, buried (BT)

1619 Apr 29 Henry Ingold, buried (BT)

1619 May 27 Robert Hall and Jane Ingould marryed (BT)

1621 Nov 4 Mary, daughter of William Ingold, baptized (BT)

1621 Nov 13 Mary, daughter of William Ingold, buried (BT)

1627 Mar 22 Alice Ingolls Widow, buried (BT)

Sutterton, Lincolnshire, Bishop’s Transcripts

1635 Feb 22 Marie [i.e. Mary] daughter of Edwarde Ingales and Anne his wife, baptised (1634/35)

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THE AMERICAN GENEALOGIST, 110

1635 Oct 28 Richard Boneckle and Elizabeth Ingales was married

ROBERT A INGALLS, probably born about 1555, married Elizabeth ----- about 1579, probably in her own parish. He made his will 12 July 1617 and was buried at Skirbeck, 22 March 1617/18. His inventory amounting to 115 10 shillings, was taken 24 March 1617/18 by William Chinsoile, Robert Harrison, William Clarke and Henry Ingols. It was probably his widow who was buried in Skirbeck, 22 April 1631.

Children:

i. Rose (?) Ingalls, bapt. Wyberton 6 April or May 1580, bur. at Skirbeck, July 1604.

ii. Agnes, bapt. Wyberton, 12 April 1582, probably the "Amee" bur. there, 7 May 1582.

iii. Margaret, bapt. Wyberton, 7 March 1583/4, bur. there 28 Aug. 1585.

iv. Edmund, bapt. Wyberton 26 June 1586.

v. Robert, the second son mentioned in his father's will, probably b. ca. 1589. Presumably he remained in England. Perhaps he was the Robert Ingalls who m. Alice Snape in Boston 11 July 1613. Possibly he was the Robert Angell mentioned in the Skirbeck BT as bur. 10 Oct. 1625. Perhaps it was his wife who was the Alice Ingolls, widow, mentioned in the Wyberton BT, bur. 22 March 1626/7.

vi. Possibly, Edith, bapt. Skirbeck 29 July 1592, m. at Boston 19 May 1612 Ambrose Stynytt. They had a son Robert and she d. before 1617.

vii. Francis [I have wondered if the PR and BT of Boston erred in the sex of the child when the baptismal entry was made: Francisca filia Rob'ti Inganalls (or Ingolde) of Skirbeck 16 Jan. 1595/6], m. in Boston, 4 Nov. 1621 Bridget Vaughan who was bur. in Boston, 20 Dec. 1625. Their daughter Sara was bapt. 8 Sept. 1622, bur. 24 Sept. 1624. Daughter Mary was bapt. 25 Dec. 1623. Another daughter was b. to them, Elizabeth, bapt. 24 Nov. 1625, bur. 7 Dec. 1625. He m. (2) Mary ----- and d. ca. 1672 in Boston, Mass., where he made his will 1 Nov. 1672. It mentions wife Mary, son-in-law Joseph Belknap, and Elizabeth Farnum of Andover. He is known as an original settler of Lynn, Mass.

It would appear that the Henry Ingalls who made his will 12 Feb. 1613/14 was a nephew of Robert Ingalls. Probably he is the Henry Ingalls who was buried in Wyberton 4 March 1613/14. Possibly the Henry Ingalls who was buried in Wyberton 29 April 1619 was the "father Ingalls: mentioned in the younger Henry's will, and the brother of Robert Ingalls.

In addition to Mr. Threlfall's excellent coverage of Edmund's children, we now know that his ninth child, Mary, was baptized at Sutterton, 22 Feb. 1634/35.

 

©1984-2006. Arlene Ingalls Schrader. All rights reserved.