Home | What's New | Photos | Histories | Sources | Reports | Calendar | Cemeteries | Headstones | Statistics | Surnames
Print Bookmark

William Pickens Sherman

Male 1847 - Aft 1850  (3 years)


Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Less detail
Generation: 1

  1. 1.  William Pickens Sherman was born on 16 Feb 1847 in North Collins, Erie Co, New York (son of Jonathan Sherman and Mercy Pickens); died after 1850 in of, Collins, Erie Co, New York.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Jonathan Sherman was born on 27 Sep 1804 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts (son of Job S. Sherman, Sr. and Azubah (Zuba) Crapo); died after 1850 in of, Collins, Erie Co, New York.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1850, Collins, Erie Co, New York

    Notes:

    Census:
    Pickins Roby 72 1778 (female) MA
    Pickens, James 43 1807 MA

    Sherman, Jonathan 45 1805 MA
    Mercy (Perkins) 46 1804 MA
    George 20 1830 NY
    Sarah 19 1831 NY
    Rebecca 10 1840 NY
    John 7 1843 NY
    William 3 1847 NY
    Eunice 1 1849 NY

    (Next door
    Sherman Charles R. 45 1805 MA
    Edith 49 1801 MA
    Davol, Eliza 18 1823 NY
    Davol, William 25 1825 NY
    White, Lydia 29 1821 NY

    Next door:
    Pratt, Benjamin W. 53 1797 Vermont
    Fanny 52 1798 Vermont
    Esther 19 1831 NY
    Jerusha M. 18 1832 NY
    Fanny 12 1838 NY
    Brayton Henry 19 1831 NY
    Hillager, Magaret 14 1836 Germany

    Next door:
    Sherman, Mordecai 43 1807 MA
    Isabella 44 1806 MA
    Mary E 15 1835 MA
    Sarah B. 1837 NY
    Rebecca B. 10 1840 NY
    Sinshere, Ambrose 14 1836 Germany




    Jonathan married Mercy Pickens on 18 Dec 1828 in New York. Mercy was born in 1804 in Massachusetts; died after 1850 in of, Collins, Erie Co, New York. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mercy Pickens was born in 1804 in Massachusetts; died after 1850 in of, Collins, Erie Co, New York.
    Children:
    1. George Lawton Sherman was born on 25 Nov 1829 in New York; died after 1850 in of, Collins, Erie Co, New York.
    2. Sarah Sherman was born on 09 May 1831 in North Collins, Erie Co, New York; died after 1850 in of, Collins, Erie Co, New York.
    3. Rebecca Pickens Sherman was born on 04 Jun 1840 in North Collins, Erie Co, New York; died after 1850 in of, Collins, Erie Co, New York.
    4. John Goodell Sherman was born on 16 Feb 1843 in North Collins, Erie Co, New York; died after 1850 in of, Collins, Erie Co, New York.
    5. 1. William Pickens Sherman was born on 16 Feb 1847 in North Collins, Erie Co, New York; died after 1850 in of, Collins, Erie Co, New York.
    6. Eunice Lawton Sherman was born in 1849 in New York; died after 1850 in of, Collins, Erie Co, New York.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Job S. Sherman, Sr. was born on 08 May 1764 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts (son of Samson (twin) Sherman and Innocent Wodell (or Woodle)); died on 06 Apr 1852 in Lawton Station, North Collins, Erie Co, New York; was buried in North Collins Quaker Cem, Erie Co, New York.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1823, Erie Co, New York
    • Census: 1850, Collins, Erie Co, New York

    Job married Azubah (Zuba) Crapo on 12 Oct 1792 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts. Azubah (daughter of Peter Crapo and Sarah (West?) Waste) was born on 08 Jun 1768 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died on 02 Jul 1860 in Lawton Station, North Collins, Erie Co, New York; was buried in North Collins Quaker Cem, Erie Co, New York. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Azubah (Zuba) Crapo was born on 08 Jun 1768 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts (daughter of Peter Crapo and Sarah (West?) Waste); died on 02 Jul 1860 in Lawton Station, North Collins, Erie Co, New York; was buried in North Collins Quaker Cem, Erie Co, New York.
    Children:
    1. Job Sherman, Jr. was born in 1791 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died on 15 Mar 1866 in North Collins, Erie Co, New York.
    2. Abner Sherman was born on 28 Dec 1795 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died after 1796.
    3. Lydia Sherman was born on 10 Mar 1798 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died after 1800.
    4. Betsey Sherman was born on 25 Apr 1800 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died after 1801.
    5. Charles Crapo Sherman was born on 17 Jul 1802 in Dartmouth or Westport Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died on 18 Apr 1885 in North Collins, Erie Co, New York.
    6. 2. Jonathan Sherman was born on 27 Sep 1804 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died after 1850 in of, Collins, Erie Co, New York.
    7. Jesse Sherman was born on 19 May 1811 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died after 1812.
    8. Joseph Sherman was born on 14 May 1809 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died on 14 Mar 1883 in North Collins, Erie Co, New York.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Samson (twin) Sherman was born on 29 Mar 1723 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts (son of Nathan Sherman and Freelove Wodell); died in 1828 in Westport, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.

    Samson married Innocent Wodell (or Woodle) on 10 Feb 1763 in Tiverton, Newport Co, Rhode Island. Innocent was born on 09 Nov 1736 in Tiverton, Newport Co, Rhode Island; died after 1781 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Innocent Wodell (or Woodle) was born on 09 Nov 1736 in Tiverton, Newport Co, Rhode Island; died after 1781 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.
    Children:
    1. 4. Job S. Sherman, Sr. was born on 08 May 1764 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died on 06 Apr 1852 in Lawton Station, North Collins, Erie Co, New York; was buried in North Collins Quaker Cem, Erie Co, New York.
    2. Abner Sherman was born about 1765 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died on 01 Jan 1842.
    3. Mercy Sherman was born about 1770 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died after 1800 in of, Westport, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.
    4. Susannah Sherman was born about 1772; died after 1800.

  3. 10.  Peter Crapo was born on 04 Dec 1743 in Rochester, Plymouth Co, Massachusetts (son of John Crapo and Sarah Clark); died on 03 Mar 1822 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts.

    Notes:

    From 'Certain Comeoverers' by H. H. Crapo, 1912: 'Peter Crapo, second of the name, son of John, the son of Peter, ... seems to have been a stirring sort of man of strong character, great energy and considerable achievement. There are many stories of his forceful methods and abounding vitality. When fifteen years of age, it would appear that he volunteered from Rochester in the French and Indian War. At all events, there was a Peter Crapo who was one of the company that met at Elijah Clapp's in Middleboro on the morning of 29 May 1758 and at a little after sunrise commenced its march to and participated in the bloody and disastrous battle of Ticonderoga in which their General, Lord Howe, was slain. It certainly seems more probable that the Peter Crapo who went on this expedition was this Peter, the son of John, born in 1743, rather than his uncle, the only other Peter then extant, who was born in 1709 and would consequently have been almost fifty years of age. 'With such an experience in his boyhood, it is not surprising that in the alarm of 19 Apr 1775, (the battle of Lexington of which Paul Revere gave warning on the evening of the eighteenth), Peter Crapo as a private, and his brother Consider as a Sergeant, marched under Captain Levi Rounseville from Freetown to the camp at Cambridge, as is set forth in the muster rolls at the State House in Boston. How long he served at this time I know not.'

    ('Mass. Soldiers and Sailors' says he served three days. MDR) .... 'It is somewhat interesting that in response to this same alarm of 19 Apr 1775, the muster of the Rochester Company of minute men contains these two names in sequence, 'William Crapo, corporal, Caleb Coombs, private.'' (It will be remembered that this Peter's grandfather, Pierre, was raised by a Francis Coombs. William was probably the son of Pierre's oldest son, Francis. Other Crapos listed in 'Mass. Soldiers and Sailors' were Elnathan and John, Jr., in 1777 and 1778. Another source, found in 'NEHGR' vol 20 pg 83, says he was a Lieutenant in July 1781. MDR) 'In the records of Rochester's quotas throughout the war the name Crapo appears many times.'

    Peter again appears on the muster rolls as a private, his brother Consider as a sergeant, and his brother Joshua as a corporal, in Lieutenant Nathaniel Morton's company of militia from Freetown belonging to the regiment commanded by Edward Pope, Esquire, which marched out on the alarm of 8 Dec 1776, 'agreeable to the orders of the Honorable Council thereon.' On this occasion Peter was given twenty days' pay, to wit: 2 pounds, 10 shillings, 8 pence. 'It was, however, as an active man of business that he has left his footsteps on the sands of time. You will remember that the first Peter was something of a lumberman since he bound himself to deliver 'one thousand good merchantable rails at Acushnet landing,' and his grandson Peter's greatest effort in life was as a lumberman, logging the cedar and pine trees of Dartmouth and Freetown and sawing them at his mill at Babbitt's Forge at the head of the Quampanoag River.
    Afterwards his grandson, Henry H. Crapo, became a lumberman and logged the pine forests of Michigan, sawing the lumber at Flint. .....

    'At what date Peter, the second, moved from Rochester to Freetown is not certain. I find a deed of land in Freetown from Bigford Spooner in 1770 to Peter's brother Joshua. This land was in the vicinity of the land which Peter later occupied. Joshua did not remain in Freetown. He is said to have immigrated to Maine. 'Peter and his brother Consider were settled in Freetown in 1773. They were engaged in the lumber business. In 1774 and for nearly twenty years thereafter, Peter and Consider were actively engaged in logging and sawing as appears by the numerous recorded deeds to them. Their sawmill was 'partly in Freetown and partly in Dartmouth' at a place called 'Quampog where a forge formerly stood called Babbitt's Forge.' At one time an Abraham Ashley and a Mereba Hathaway, a widow, were partners in their business. John Crapo, their father, conveyed several tracts of land to them and seems to have been interested with them in their business and may have lived with them for a time. He is always described, however, as 'of Rochester'.' From 'Old Dartmouth Sketches' (FHL 974.485/D1 H2o) No. 41-43, 'Mills of New Bedford and Vicinity before the introduction of steam' by H. B. Worth. pg 12: 'About 2 miles west of Brayley's station on the line between Freetown and Dartmouth is a region called Quanapog. At this point the Noquochocke River crossed the line and in 1774 a large tract was laid out to Nathaniel Babbitt and he established a forge on the town line. Babbitt's forge passed into the hands of the Crapos. Then Peter Crapo and his associates built two other mills a short distance south of the forge. The Quonapog mills at one time were largely controlled by Malachi White and later by the Collins family and in modern times was owned by Gilbert N. Collins. The iron industry was changed to a sawmill soon after the Crapos became owners.' Continuing from 'Certain Comeoverers': 'Some time after 1790, Consider withdrew from the business and moved to Savoy, Mass. The deeds of partition between the brothers are dated in 1797. Both brothers were owners of considerable tracts in Dartmouth, owning salt meadows on Sconticut Neck, and lots in Belleville in New Bedford and in Troy, now Fall River. In 1793 Consider sold his homestead farm to Thomas Cottle of Tisbury, Dukes County, who removed thither. This was in the immediate vicinity of the sawmill since he reserved to his brother, Peter, a right of flowage above his sawmill. Afterwards, Peter Crapo appears to have taken in Richard Collins as a partner in the business. In 1793, the sawmill burned down but it appears to have been rebuilt. Down to the time of his death in 1822, Peter Crapo, as abundantly appears by the land and court records, was actively engaged in business. 'Peter had a large family of children, fourteen in all, and it would seem that his manner of caring for them was distinctly patriarchal. As each child came of age and was about to be married, he summoned all the other children, the married and the unmaried, to undertake some special work whose profit might be devoted to settling the child to be married. In the case of a daughter with a dowry, in the case of a son with a homestead farm. ....... 'Peter kept the title of the various farms acquired for his sons in his own name and, when he died, left them severally by his will, dated 20 Feb 1822, to their occupants, devising his own homestead farm which, as appears by the inventory of his estate, was much the most valuable, to his youngest son Abiel, the baby of the family, on whom he placed the duty of caring for his widow. To his widow he also gave fifty dollars, one cow, and 'the use and improvement of the south front room in my dwelling house with a privilege to pass and repass through the kitchen and porch and to the well to draw water, as well as a privilege in the cellar and the use and improvement of all the household furniture during her life.' (She was his second wife. MDR) 'Considering her somewhat limited domain all the furniture may have been too liberal, but it is to be hoped that Abiel really did do his duty and made his mother comfortable. He gives to his 'seven daughters' three hundred and fifty dollars each and all his household furniture after his widow's death. His estate was inventoried at something over $10,000, which was in those days a considerable estate.' (The will actually says 'unto my seven daughters ... the sum of three hundred and fifty dollars being fifty to each of them'. MDR) 'In 1886 an enterprising reporter of the Boston Globe found an interesting subject for a character sketch. Near Jucketram Furnace in East Freetown, on the shore of Long Pond, he found an old lady ninety-four years old on 25 Sep 1886, named Susanna Howland. According to the reporter she was a most remarkable old lady, being a tireless worker at all manner of farm labor in the fields and woods, and in the farm kitchen, hoeing, digging, chopping, berrying in the swamp, planting the garden and harvesting. In her later years she had, as a pastime, woven three thousand yards of homespun cloth. The neighbors told queer stories about finding this ninety-four year old woman in the woods chopping with an axe, clad in men's attire, trousers, vest and blouse, with stout top boots, working away for dear life with all the grit and abandon of a backwoodsman.' ..... 'This remarkable woman turned out to be the daughter of Peter Crapo, and she bore the name of her great great great great grandmother Susanna White who came over in the Mayflower. The reporter describes her as saying: 'My father's name was Peter Crapo. He owned a great deal of property. The Indians used to say 'Old Peter Crapo's jacket hung in the woods was worth more than all the eel-spearing in Long Pond at sunrise.' When I was a girl on my father's farm I remember how he would go out with the neighbors and search in the old fields for the corn the Indians were always stealing from the settlers. The Redskins would plant it just below the surface of the ground in big pits that would hold bushels and bushels and then they would turn the ground up all around so that no one could tell where the pits were. The white men would go out with their horses and ploughs and plough these fields until the corn pits were found, and sometimes the Indians would be prowling round in the woods and when they saw the corn was found, sometimes there would be a skirmish and somebody killed.' Susanna Howland seems to have inherited all the energy and grit of her father.' Peter died at seventy nine and was buried 'in an old private burial ground, where many of his descendants lie buried, in North Dartmouth, not far from Braley's Station, and near the dwelling house formerly of Malachi White.' Sarah's gravestone 'of grey slate with carved cherubims and a scriptural verse stands on the right side of Peter's stone.' She died in the forty-second year of her age. On his left is the stone of his second wife Content, who died in the 68th year of her age. All three stones were well preserved at the time of writing of 'Certain Comeoverers', 1912.

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=browerdirk&id=I1252

    Peter married Sarah (West?) Waste on 13 Nov 1766 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts. Sarah was born on 04 Sep 1748 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died on 16 May 1789 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Sarah (West?) Waste was born on 04 Sep 1748 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died on 16 May 1789 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts.
    Children:
    1. Richard Crapo was born about 1767 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died on 24 Aug 1848 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.
    2. 5. Azubah (Zuba) Crapo was born on 08 Jun 1768 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died on 02 Jul 1860 in Lawton Station, North Collins, Erie Co, New York; was buried in North Collins Quaker Cem, Erie Co, New York.
    3. Peter Crapo was born about 1771 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died before Jun 1830 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.