
Matching family tree profiles for Thomas Endicott, Sr.
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About Thomas Endicott, Sr.
Biography
Thomas Endicott, Sr. was born on March 27, 1737 in Mount Holly Township, Burlington, New Jersey, British Colonial America. His parents were Joseph Endicott, Jr. and Ann (Gillam) Endecott. He was a Pioneer/Revolutionary War Patriot, Farmer.
Thomas married Sarah (Welsh) Endicott on June 19, 1759 in Burlington, New Jersey, United States.
Together they had the following children:
- Pvt. Moses Endicott;
- Joseph Endicott;
- Aaron Endicott;
- Barzillai Endicott;
- Thomas Endicott, Jr.;
- Samuel Endicott;
- William Endicott;
- John A Endecott;
- Nancy (Endicott) Forrest;
- Sarah Endicott;
- Eunice Endecott;
- Phoebe Endicott;
- Sarah Endecott;
- James Endicott.
Thomas married Susannah (Turner) Endicott on October 4, 1814 in Carlisle, Nicholas, Kentucky, United States. Together they had the following children:
He died on January 22, 1831 in Smith Township, Posey, Indiana, United States and was buried in January 1831 in Poseyville, Posey County, Indiana, United States.
A Patriot of the American Revolution for NORTH CAROLINA. DAR Ancestor # A131155
ENDICOTT, THOMAS Ancestor #: A131155
Service: NORTH CAROLINA Rank(s): PATRIOTIC SERVICE
Birth: 3-27-1737 BURLINGTON CO NEW JERSEY
Death: 1-22-1831 SMITH TWP POSEY CO INDIANA
Service Source: HAUN, NC REV ARMY ACCTS, BOOK A, PART XII, P 249
Service Description: 1) FURNISHED SUNDRIES FOR MILITIA OF NC, VA, SC
Residence: 1) County: SURRY CO - State: NORTH CAROLINA
Spouse, Number Name:
1) SARAH WELSCH
2) SUSANNAH TURNER
Child [Spouse #] Spouse
- JOSEPH [1] X X
- THOMAS [1] MILDRED MILLY GRUBBS
Notes
From http://mcclure.freeservers.com/tomendi.htm
Thomas Endicott was born March 27, 1737, at Northampton, in Burlington County, New Jersey, the son of Joseph Endicott, Jr. and Anne Gillam.
Thomas married Sarah Welsh on June 19, 1759, in New Jersey.
About 1764, Thomas moved his family to Surry County, North Carolina. Another descendant, Mabel McLaughlin, in her research states that research done by Will Clay Endicott indicates the family settled near the North Carolina and Virginia state line. Many of their legal transactions occurred in Virginia. There is an "Endicott Creek" in the Low Gap neighborhood of Surry County, near the Virginia line.
About 1786, the Endicott family moved to Kentucky. Mrs. McLaughlin states: "Will Clay Endicott, of Cynthiana, Kentucky, revealed that a family tradition relates that the Endicott's guide was their friend and neighbor, Daniel Boone. Treasured heirlooms in the hands of descendants in 1932 are a compass and sun-glass. These pieces were given to Abraham Miller by Daniel Boone as a token of Boone's appreciation of the eleven year old boy's presence of mind and marksmanship. Abraham was bringing the cows up at milking time and killed a panther that was about to attack the eleven year old boy and his herd. Abraham Miller became the husband of Elizabeth Endicott, daughter of Moses Endicott and Martha (Hill) Endicott."
Records show Thomas bought 100 acres of land in Woodford County, Kentucky, in April 1789. There a meeting house was established in 1791, which was called the "Endecott Meeting House". Will Clay Endicott in his research in 1932 states: "The Indian Creek Baptist Church, which is still standing in this (Harrison) county was built one year after the Endecotts bought land on Indian Creek. The first records of the Cynthiana Christian Church contain the names of a number of members who took membership from the Endecott Meeting House. It could be none other than the Indian Creek Church which I am told was non-sectarian previous to 1840. The original log structure is beneath the weather-boarding. The pulpit is at the back, opposite the center window. There are two doors, as was the custom in the early days the men entered the left door and the women the right." A cemetery next to the church is the resting place of many of the early Endicotts.
By 1792, all Thomas Endicott's family, except for his son Joseph and his family, had moved to Bourbon County, Kentucky. Thomas is listed as paying taxes on 192 acres of land in Bourbon County in 1793.
In 1796, Governor Isaac Shelby appointed Thomas to be Justice of the Peace in Bourbon County.
Sarah died about 1799, probably in Bourbon County. Sarah and Thomas had nine children.
Thomas married Susanah Young on October 4, 1814, in Carlisle, Kentucky. Thomas and Susanah had one son, who was born when Thomas was about 80 years old.
Thomas signed his will on October 23, 1827. In his will, Thomas left his wife, Susanna, one-third of his estate, the rest to be sold. He left each of his older children fifty cents, as he had already given "to each of them their portions". Land transfers recorded in Harrison County, Kentucky, support that statement. The remainder of his estate he left to be used for his young son, Absolam. If Absolam should have no issue or die before age 21, Nancy Endicott Forrest was to receive his bequest.
Thomas Endicott died January 22, 1831, in Posey County, Indiana. He is buried in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, between Poseyville and Cynthiana, in Posey County. Susanah was buried beside her husband. (An article in The History of Posey County, Indiana, states that in the mid 1920's the tombstones were still in place and legible. My family visited the cemetery in July 1997, and could not find the headstones. They could be any one of a number of stones which have been worn smooth and illegible.)
https://www.familysearch.org/service/records/storage/das-mem/patron...
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/53974784/thomas-endicott
Thomas Endicott, Sr.'s Timeline
1737 |
March 27, 1737
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Mount Holly Township, Burlington, New Jersey, British Colonial America
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1759 |
October 31, 1759
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Mount Holly, Burlington County, New Jersey
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1761 |
1761
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Mount Holly Township, Burlington, New Jersey, United States
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1764 |
August 13, 1764
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Mount Holly Township, Burlington, New Jersey, United States
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1766 |
March 20, 1766
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North Carolina, United States
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1771 |
April 10, 1771
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1771
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Burlington County, NJ, Colonial America
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1775 |
1775
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North Carolina, United States
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1778 |
August 1, 1778
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South Carolina, United States
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