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Subject:
Samuel Chipman BASSETT (4G Grf)
Birth:
23 Sep 1779 Woodstock, Windsor Co., Vermont.
Residence:
__ ___ ____ Moved to Benson, Rutland, VT right after born.
Religion:
__ ___ 1796 Benson, Rutland Co., Vermont; member of 1st Baptist
Church.
2nd
Marriage: 09 Apr 1809 Anna HARMON (B64.wb) (1783-1849); Rutland
Co., Vermont.
Death:
__ ___ 1816 Drowned, Tuscarawas River, Coshocton Co., Ohio.
Burial:
__ ___ ____ Coshocton Cemetery, Coshocton, Coshoscton Co., Ohio;
(no tombstone) Wilma Hunt 819 Concord Place Coshocton OH 43812 614-622-4583
is a local gen expert if we ever want to do more there, though I
think I've exhausted the sources there.
Story:
__ ___ ____ The story behind my finding Samuel's movements, including
his drowing, is found at the bottom of this family group. It also
tells how I made the connection of Samuel Chipman Bassett to his
son Samuel C Bassett.
Father:
Rufus BASSETT(5G Grf) (1757-1796)
Mother:
Jedidah HANDY (5G Grm)
________________________________________________________________________
Marriage:
17 Jan 1802 Rutland Co., Vermont.
________________________________________________________________________
Spouse:
Temperence LOVELAND (4G Grm)
Birth:
__ ___ 1777
Death:
1808-1809 Rutland Co., Vermont.
Burial:
__ ___ ____
Father:
Robert LOVELAND (1732-1795) (5G Grf)
Mother:
Ruth Or Elizabeth GAINES (5G Grm)
________________________________________________________________________
F Lydia
BASSETT (B64.1)
Birth:
__ ___ 1803 Vermont.
Marriage:
15 Apr 1821 Simon PROUTY (B64.1h); Licking Co., Ohio.
Census1860:
__ ___ 1860 Burlington, Licking Co., Ohio; Lucinda Prouty
age 54 born VT with George Prouty age 22 born OH.
Death:
__ ___ ____
Burial:
__ ___ ____
________________________________________________________________________
F Olive
BASSETT (B64.2)
Birth:
__ ___ ____
Marriage?
__ ___ ____
Death:
__ ___ ____
Burial:
__ ___ ____
________________________________________________________________________
M Samuel
C BASSETT (3G Grf)
Birth:
08 May 1806 Rutland Co., Vermont
(see his
family group sheet)
________________________________________________________________________
M Robert
Loren BASSETT (B64.4)
Birth:
29 Aug 1808 Rutland Co., Vermont.
Residence:
__ ___ 1815 Lived in Geauga & Licking Counties and moved to
Athens Co at age 7 per Pat Madson. Need to track down Pat Madson
who is source of residence info to see how she got that info. Even
though where he was raised makes sense, how did he got to Athens
county at so young an age?
Marriage:
02 Mar 1834 Mary Elizabeth MC FARLAN (B64.4w) (1816-1866); Athens
Co., Ohio.
Death:
__ Apr 1876 Kirksville, Adair Co., Missouri.
Burial:
__ ___ ____
2nd
Marriage: 09 Apr 1809 Rutland Co., Vermont.
________________________________________________________________________
Spouse:
Anna HARMON (B64.wb)
Birth:
26 Mar 1783 Rutland Co., Vermont.
2nd
Marriage: 28 Jan 1817 Aaron DANIELS (B64.wbhb) ( -1838); Concord,
Lake Co., Ohio.
Note:
__ ___ ____ Lake County split from Geauga County in 1840.
Death:
22 Mar 1849 Mentor, Lake Co., Ohio.
Census1850:
__ ___ 1850 Lake Co., Ohio; She's on 1850 mortality schedule
(last entry for county) age 65 died of cancer.
Burial:
__ ___ ____
Father:
Oliver HARMON
Mother:
Mary PLUM
________________________________________________________________________
M Oliver
Harmon BASSETT (B64.5)
Birth:
cir __ ___ 1809 Source: 11 Oct 1824 Geauga Co., Ohio; Herman
Bassett age 15 orphaned chose Sebastian Adams as guardian - SLC
film 20250 probate record vol A pg 573.
Marriage:
__ ___ ____ Lucy Celesta STANTON (B64.5w) (1816-1878); Note that
I'm not entirely positive that Oliver Harmon Bassett who married
Lucy Celesta Stanton is the same person as Herman Bassett who chose
a guardian.
AFN:
__ ___ ____ Ancestral File Number 3PGL-GV submitter J Leroy Caldwell
PO Box 232 Vernal UT 84078 (Jun 95 not there anymore) says he was
born NYC which can't be right.
Death:
__ ___ 1853
Burial:
__ ___ ____
________________________________________________________________________
? (__________)
BASSETT (B64.6); possibly named Stephen
Birth:
__ ___ ____
Note:
__ ___ 1834 In 1834 Geuaga there was a Stephen Bassett who sold
land (21-537-9-8 Chester). Could he be this child as an adult? How
did he get this land? Residences for this Stephen:
1830 Chester, Geauga pg 275
1840 Chester, Geauga pg 122 (& John E Bassett on pg 129)
1850 Chester, Geauga pg 314 (& J.L. Bassett pg 140 & Jonas
Bassett pg 143 both in Troy, & Minerva Bassett in Willoough,
Lake pg 149).
Marriage?
__ ___ ____
Death:
__ ___ ____
Burial:
__ ___ ____
Research
Story
I
had researched my husband's Bassett line back to Samuel C Bassett
and Esther Bodwell. They were married in 1827 in Athens County Ohio.
According to the census, Samuel C was born in 1806 in Vermont. Also
in Athens County in the same township was a Robert L Bassett born
in 1808 in Vermont. I have no definitive proof of their being brothers
but since they are the only Bassetts in the entire county, and born
2 years apart in the same far away state, it is reasonable to assume
that they are indeed brothers.
David's
family tradition has been that they are descended from William Bassett
who came on the Fortune in 1621, but they only had names back to
2nd great grandfather Oliver C Bassett. When I found Samuel C Bassett
to be Oliver's father, I looked to see if the printed genealogies
on William's descendants included him. They didn't, but there were
a couple of lines who had the name Samuel. One of these branches
ended up in Vermont. Rufus Bassett had a son Samuel Chipman Bassett.
Hmm, thought I, Samuel C could be Samuel Chipman. Of course that's
not enough even for circumstantial evidence, but worth a further
look. The Chipman part, by the way, is not his mother's maiden name
but a Chipman did marry one of his ancestors siblings.
I
decided to see what I could find out about Samuel Chipman Bassett,
and that research eventually led me to a Loveland genealogy. Samuel
Chipman had married Temperance Loveland. According to the Loveland
Genealogy, which unfortunately was not documented, Samuel and Temperance
had the following children - Lydia, Olive, Chipman, and Robert.
No dates or other information on this family. Robert is not a common
name in the early Bassett families so now we're getting somewhere.
Look
again at Samuel C's children. His first two children are Lydia and
Olive just like his potential aunts. In addition to his own middle
initial of C, his son Oliver has the middle initial of C. In addition
to all of these 'coincidences', I pretty well eliminated the other
Vermont Bassetts as being the parents of Samuel C or Robert - as
individuals or as brothers. So for all these reasons I am sure that
Samuel Chipman Bassett is the father of Samuel C Bassett, called
Chipman in the Loveland Genealogy.
All
of this background is to let you know why I am so interested in
finding out all I can on Samuel Chipman Bassett. Of course my first
priority was to try to find where he died to see if there was a
will or probate mentioning his children. His father had moved to
the town of Jay in Essex County New York and some of his siblings
were there but not Samuel Chipman. Temperance had died in 1808 -
my guess is that she died in childbirth with Robert. Anyway, Samuel
Chipman needed a mother for his young children and married the following
year Anna Harmon. I had found three different references saying
that Samuel Chipman died by drowning. The dates were 1814, 1815,
& 1816, but the places were a little more scattered. One said
he drowned 'in the Ohio River', one said 'the Miami, a tributary
to the Ohio River', and the third said he drowned 'in the Tuscarawas
River'. Well now, the Ohio River is pretty general but part of the
Athens county boundary is the Ohio River so that seemed the most
logical. The Miami, a tributary to the Ohio, seemed a little less
likely because it's clear over in Hamilton County, but still goes
along with the Ohio River possibility of the other source. The least
likely seemed to be the Tuscarawas River because it is towards the
center of the state - not near Athens, and not near the Ohio River.
At least all three sources agreed that he drowned, and that it was
in the mid teens.
Early
in my research I had gotten information from someone researching
Robert's family that Robert had been 'raised in Licking and Geauga'
counties. This had not made sense to me because those two counties
aren't close to each other, nor to Athens County where he was by
age 22. But remembering that you never discard any clue until you
have proved it right or wrong, I kept that clue in the back of my
head.
By
the time I was planning my genealogy trip in 1991, I had exhausted
the various microfilm and book possibilities of finding where Samuel
Chipman had died. Because of that clue of Robert (regarding Licking
and Geauga), I had looked for Bassetts in Licking and Geauga counties
with no success in finding Samuel Chipman but I did find an Anna
Bassett who married an Aaron Daniels in Lake County in 1817. Lake
was part of Geauga County until 1840. Keeping in mind that one should
always search collateral names when stuck, I decided to follow through
on this lady. I was planning to visit my great aunt in Akron Ohio
on this trip and decided to put in a visit to Lake and Geauga counties
because they were relatively close. I looked at all the usual things
that one looks at when visiting a courthouse, then went to the local
library as I had found out that they had a genealogy room.
They
had a nice size genealogy room and in it was a file cabinet with
manilla folders of correspondence and other tidbits filed by family
name. This sort of collection is generally called a vertical file.
No Bassett folder, but what's this? A Harmon file with just one
thing in it. A copy of the June 1989 issue of the Lake County Historical
Quarterly. The feature article was an extract of the Autobiography
of Reuben Plum Harmon of Kirtland, Lake County, Ohio. Well, that
name wasn't familiar but I decided to skim it anyway. In the first
paragraph, Reuben says he was born in Licking County. Hey! Robert
was supposedly raised in Licking and Geauga and here's a Harmon
in the same two counties. Let me read further. Aha, his father's
family moved to Licking County from Rutland County Vermont. Anna
Harmon and Samuel Chipman Bassett were married in Rutland County
Vermont, so I know this is the same family. He goes on to say, "that
section of country being so far in the interior of the state without
any outlet for farm products [they] concluded to move into the northern
part of the state." Well, that explains how Robert would be
in both Licking and Geauga counties if they were all together.
Eureka,
the next couple sentences are what I have been looking for! "Accordingly
they started on their journey in a few days. In crossing the Tuscarawas
River, Bassett, the husband of Aunt Anna, my grandfather's oldest
daughter, was drowned, his body was found about 4 miles below in
the flood wood, was disfigured by the buzzards and somewhat decayed.
The body was interred in the cemetery of the village of Coshocton."
The personal memory of the drowning found in Samuel's second wife's
nephew's autobiography. This account also confirms the source that
I had first considered the least likely of the three places for
Samuel Chipman to have died. That particular account didn't say
anything about why he was there, just that after the family had
crossed the river in a rented boat, Samuel had returned the boat
and was in the process of swimming back across when he drowned.
Then
and there I decided to take a side trip to Licking and Coshocton.
I did look at the cemetery which is well kept and was 'read' in
the 1960's but there is no tombstone for Samuel. Most likely there
never was one, since they were just passing through. I found no
probate or guardianship records in either county which was disappointing.
In Licking County I found that Oliver Harmon bought from Eliphas
Thrall Lot #26 Sec 4 Twn 2 Range 14 on 18 Aug 1815 (deed book E
page 452). On page 272 of the same book it says that Oliver Harmon
(of Granville) bought the same description of land from Samuel Thrall
on 28 Nov 1814. My guess is that the two Thralls owned the land
jointly and that negotiations took longer with Samuel Thrall. But
for whatever reason, it does show that the Harmon family arrived
in 1814, not 1816 that Reuben states in his autobiography. My guess
is that 1816 is the year they left and Samuel drowned. That would
have made for a two year try at making a living before moving north.
Interestingly enough, Oliver did not sell the land until 1825 from
Geauga (wife Lucy).
I
also found the marriage of Lydia Bassett to Simon Prouty in 1821.
This threw me for a loop. How come she's still in, or back in, Licking
after the move in the mid teens? Since Robert was 'raised in Licking
and Geauga' it's logical that they all were. At the Licking County
Ohio Genealogical Society Library I found something interesting
when looking up Bassett. In the 1875 History of Licking County was
a Sylvester Hayes, born in Essex County New York who married Fanny
Bassett who was born in Brattleboro Vermont in 1790. This is Samuel
Chipman Bassett's sister. Did they move to Licking County at the
same time as the Harmons and Samuel? Now to add the name Hayes to
the list. I found one more item as a result. In An Historical Story
of The Elihu Phelps Hayes Ashery was an entry that Sylvester and
Fanny came to Licking County from Jay, Essex County, New York in
1818.
The
exact sequence of all this will probably never be proved, but here
is my conclusion. I think that 1816 is the date of the move north
when Samuel drowned. That all the kids went north with stepmother
Anna. With 6 mouths to feed, (4 stepchildren and two that she had
with Samuel), Anna needs a husband so marries Aaron Daniels in Jan
1817. When Sylvester and Fanny moved to Licking they probably picked
up her nieces and nephews and took them with them to Licking. This
conclusion would tie in Robert's being raised in Licking and Geauga
with Lydia's subsequent marriage back down in Licking. I've not
been able to track Olive - maybe she died? And I haven't been able
to find out the names of the two children Samuel had by Anna, just
a reference along the way that they did have two kids.
Even
though I can't prove some of the conclusions, I never would have
had any conclusions to reach if I hadn't checked the rather far
afield collateral names of Harmon and Hayes.
I useThe Master Genealogist for
Windows and printed this on 28 May 2000. |