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James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown 12 0 Browse Search
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James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown, Book 1: he keepeth the sheep. (search)
cestor of Hannah, was a native of Wales. He was among the first settlers of Windsor, where he was married in 1650. was the father of John, Frederick, Owen, and Abiel Brown; and the honored grandfather of Captain John Brown, the hero of Kansas and Harper's Ferry. John Brown, the third, at the outbreak of the revolutionary war, wasace, and by a pamphlet, now out of print, entitled, Genealogical History, with Short Sketches and Family Records of the Early Settlers of West Simsbury, &c., by Abiel Brown, an uncle of the liberator. She was a woman of great energy and economy, writes a descendant, Professor C. F. Hudson, a distinguished theological authoraverage age was considerable, that of five of them being seventy years, and I forget how much more. Of the sons of these parents, John — afterwards known as Deacon Brown--lived many years in New Hartford, and died there. Abiel lived and died on the old homestead in Canton, Connecticut, while Frederick and Owen both lie buried
James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown, Chapter 1: the child and his ancestors. (search)
cestor of Hannah, was a native of Wales. He was among the first settlers of Windsor, where he was married in 1650. was the father of John, Frederick, Owen, and Abiel Brown; and the honored grandfather of Captain John Brown, the hero of Kansas and Harper's Ferry. John Brown, the third, at the outbreak of the revolutionary war, wasace, and by a pamphlet, now out of print, entitled, Genealogical History, with Short Sketches and Family Records of the Early Settlers of West Simsbury, &c., by Abiel Brown, an uncle of the liberator. She was a woman of great energy and economy, writes a descendant, Professor C. F. Hudson, a distinguished theological authoraverage age was considerable, that of five of them being seventy years, and I forget how much more. Of the sons of these parents, John — afterwards known as Deacon Brown--lived many years in New Hartford, and died there. Abiel lived and died on the old homestead in Canton, Connecticut, while Frederick and Owen both lie buried