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1801 E. Alton Bisbee was listed as a compositor, 201 Columbia Ave., Boston, 1910. E. Alton Bisbee, residence 83 Torrey St., Dorchester, Mass.

Eliab d. "Aged 77 yrs. 11 mos. 12 das." 
Bisbee, Eliab Alton (I6212)
 
1802 E. Arnold Bisbee lived in Wayne, Ill. Bisbee, Edgar Arnold (I7527)
 
1803 E. Wright Bisbee became a widower and was known as "Captain." Massachusetts records of soldiers and sailors in the Civil War shows that: Wright Bisbee was a corporal in the 7th regiment of Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, Company K; his residence, Abington, Mass., shoe cutter, age 26 yeras. Enlisted and mustered 15 June 1861; appoinated a sergeant, date not given; commissioned 2nd lieutenant, 21 July 1862 and 1st lieutenant 20 December 1862; wounded 3 May 1863 at Fredericksburg, Va. He was made captain 11 June 1863; discharged as captain of Company D 13 Feb. 1864.

Wright d. "Aged 83 yrs. 5 mos. 9 das." 
Bisbee, Wright (I4665)
 
1804 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Tinkle, E.W. (I25199)
 
1805 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Bisbee, E.M. (I12980)
 
1806 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Clarence E. Barbour / Dorothy Lorraine Smith (F11207)
 
1807 Early itinerant Methodist preacher in New England. Bates, Dexter (I1518)
 
1808 Early itinerant Methodist preacher in New England. Bates, Lewis (I1519)
 
1809 Early Massachusetts Marriages Prior to 1800
Worchester County
Sutton
page 147 Daniel Bucknam & Abigail Pratt, April 19, 1774 
Pratt, Abigail (I2282)
 
1810 East Otisfield Cemetery. No cemetery by this name has been located. May be reference to Elmwood Cemetery, across the road from the East Otisfield Baptist Church. Bisbee, Mary S. (I9588)
 
1811 East Otisfield Cemetery. No cemetery by this name has been located. May be reference to Elmwood Cemetery, across the road from the East Otisfield Baptist Church. Cleveland, Horace Lowell (I11230)
 
1812 East Stoughtonm, Massachusetts (not located). Holmes, Reua (I5251)
 
1813 Ebenezer Albee Bisbee was a carpenter; his wife Adeline was a dressmaker and musician. Family: Ebenezer Albee Bisbee / Adeline Horney (F3987)
 
1814 Ebenezer Bisbee moved to Plainfield, Mass. with his brother Luther. There are dded records in Hampshire County for the years 1795, 1808 and 1819.

He served in the Revolutionary War and was one of the first settlers of Plainfield, coming there as early as 1779. He lived on the farm now (1891) occupied by William Packard in the S. W. part of town. He was chosen Selectman in 1788 and served for 15 years thereafter.

The 1790 US Census for Massachusetts lists: "Ebenezer Bisbee of Cummington, Hampshire Co. 1 m. 2 fem." which is correct for Ebenezer, Jr. Also, "Ebenezer Jr. of Plainfield, Hampshire Co. 5 m. 2 fem." This record seems to be correct for Ebenezer Sr. Ebenezer Bisbee was a witness to the will of WIlliam Holmes of Halifax, Mass. 20 June 1760.

Revolutionary War records of Massachusetts soldiers and sailors lists: "Ebenezer Bisbee of Bridgewater, Private in Capt. Elisha Mitchell's Co. Col. Simeon Cary's Reg't. Payroll for 5 days service between time of enlistment and time of marching, dated April 2d, 1776." Also "in Capt. Abraham Washburn's Co. Col. John Cushing's Reg't. enlisted 9-20-1776. Service 59 1/2 days, Newport, R. I." Other records, "He drew a pension as a Rev. soldier of $20 per year."

From church records, "Confession of Faith, First Cong. Church, Plainfield, and List of Members." "Ebenezer, Deceased bef. 1892, member in 1797. Mehitable, Deceased bef. 1892, member in 1797. Mary, Moved 1816, Deceased 1851. John, Moved 1816, Deceased 1851. Galen, (Moved) 1827. Eliza, Moved 1827. Jared, Moved 1831. Penelope, Moved 1831. No members listed 1852 to 1892. 
Bisbee, Ebenezer (I906)
 
1815 Ebenezer Bisbee was a shoemaker. He d. "Aged 49 yrs. 9 mos. 23 das." Bisbee, Ebenezer Jr. (I3245)
 
1816 Ebenezer Bisbee, Ira's father, was a laborer in Dracut, Mass. in 1848; was a machinist and "picker maker" at the Gooding Works in Mt. Vernon, Centerville, from 1856 to 1858. Eunice, the children's mother and Ira's widow, lived in Lowell from 1872 to 1885. (????)

Ira d. "Aged 49 yrs. 5 mos. 12 das." 
Bisbee, Ira (I3246)
 
1817 Ebenezer Cushman bequeathes to his son as follows: "I give to my son Silvester a note I hold against him of forty dollars, and forty dollars to his children." Cushman, Sylvester (I1111)
 
1818 Ebenezer Cushman bequeathes to his son as follows: "I give to my two sons, Robert & Harvey Cushman, my homestead farm with the buildings thereon, to them, their heirs, & assigns forever, to be divided as follows[:] beginning at the fence at the Widow Sarah Washburn's land, running by the fence to the orchard thence by the orchard near a white oak tree, thence by the fence to the road by the fence that comes to the bars that next the wood, by the fence & road to the corner of the fence thence to the land the southwest corner of Barnabas Hedge's land thence by his land to the road that goes to Wolf Pond, & by the road to the land of Josiah Holmes and by Josiah Holmes' land to the land of Asa Cook thence by Cook's land to stake & stones in the swamp thence easterly course to stake and stones where the fence goes into the pond by the pond till it comes to crotched maple tree thence easterly to stake & stones standing by the fence straight course to the land of Col. John Thomas. The northerly part I give to my son Robert, to have & to hold to him, his heirs & assigns forever. Also I give to my two sons Robert & Harvey all my notes and money on hand and wearing apparel.

"I give to my son Harvey the southerly part to have & to hold to him & his heirs & assigns forever - each one to have a right to pass & repass through each other's land.

"I give my desk to my son Robert and he must pay Harvey two dollars.

"I give all my other Estate, real or personal, or [word ineligible] of whatever name or nature, & wherever to be found, and not before disposed of, to my two sons Robert & Harvey before mentioned, to them, their heirs & assigns forever and it is the true intent and meaning hereof that my two sons Robert & Harvey pay all the legacies therein given, also to pay all my just debts and funeral charges."

Harvey, July 9, 1828, 37 yrs. 3 mos. 18 dys. (Ancient Kingston Burial Ground) 
Cushman, Harvey (I1751)
 
1819 Ebenezer Sargent was by trade a carpenter. This was the first marriage for Louisa; Sargent was a widower. Sargent, Ebenezer (I4964)
 
1820 Ebenezer was born in Vermont and as a young child immigrated to Canada with his parents to London Township. The family story had been that he went west as a young man and was never heard from again, presumably killed.

Ruth Ann Marr applied to the Bureau of Pensions after her second husband William F Teachout died since he had been in the Army. She had to prove that her first husband Ebenezer Bisbee was dead in order to show she was the legal widow of Teachout. After 15 years her application for pension was denied because she couldn't provide proof. Her pension file from NARA in Washington contains several affidavits and depositions about Ebenezer.

Affidavit of Ruth 1887
"He went to California in 1856. I received a letter from him about 2 years later, in which he stated that he intended to start home at once. I waited a long time for him but he did not come. I then wrote to the Post Master where he received his mail at to his whereabouts and the P.M. informed me that he had been murdered. I know nothing to the contrary and do not know of any evidence I could prove to substantiate his death"

Affidavit of Ruth's sister Almira Cox 1894
"He left Canada and went to the State of California in the United States of America where he died in the year 1859. I know of the death of the said E.A. Bisbee by reading a letter sent from California positively stating the fact of his death"

Deposition of brother Reuben Bisbee at Marvin, County of Phillips state of Kansas May 10,1895
""..went to California sometime in the "fifties" I remember this brother and I was about 14 years old when he left home. I do not remember that my father ever received but one letter from him after he went to California. I do not remember anything that my brother may have written to my father. We could not hear anything from my brother so my father wrote the postmaster at San Juan Cal. I think-- and as I now remember, the postmaster wrote father that my brother and two other men names unknown- were making or had been making about $1000 a day a piece out of a mine, that they had sold out the mine for a large "stake' & had gone farther north. If my memory serves me right my mother and father thought he was drowned in the ocean on a vessel which sailed from San Francisco, Cal., and which was lost at sea....."

Deposition of sister Betsy C. Hewitt of Norton Kansas near Devizes May 6 1 895:
" I remember that he afterwards went to California about 5 years after his marriage. My father corresponded with him and then after a time my father after receiving no answer from him, he wrote to the postmaster and received word that my brother was sick. My father then wrote to my brother 2 or 3 times and the letters were returned uncalled for. My father then wrote to the post master again and the postmaster replied that the party with whom my brother was staying and working with had moved away, he did not know where and that neither he or my brother came there for any more mail. My father then sent the postmaster an advertisement for my brother and had it published in the California paper but we never received any answer from this advertisement. My father believed at the time that my brother E.A. Bisbee the husband of the above claimant was dead, and he never heard any word from him after the postmaster at San Juan Cal wrote us that he was sick. I never heard that my brother was murdered."

Deposition of Charles W. Marr, brother of Ruth Ann, at Geneva, County of Fillimore Nebraska May 28 1895:
" I am a brother of the claimant Ruth A. Teachout She married E. A. Bisbee sometime in the forties I think. I was well acquainted with him up to the time he went to California along about 1856 if I mistake not. My sister got a paper from California stating that Bisbee was dead. I have forgotten the name of the paper. The P.M. sent the paper to her. I read the article which stated that Bisbee was fixing to return home- My understanding was that he got killed.-- My memory is very poor. He lost his life in some way according to the newspaper report but I can not tell how it was. Before that he had written home that he calculated to come home I saw that letter. "

Deposition of Arthur H. Sherman , neighbor of Marr's in Michigan June 13 1895:
"... her maiden name was Marr. When she came here her name was Bisbee. Her father told me that her husband Bisbee got in debt and ran away. It seems as though they said he went to California. It seems as though there was some talk about a boat being lost & that he was supposed to be on it but there was no proof of that. No I do not remember that they claimed to have received any papers or letters stating what had become of him. Her father came back here after they all went out west and lived with me 8 or 9 months and he always told me that said Bisbee got him to endorse notes with him & it seems to me that it turned out that Bisbee had forged and run away. It is my impression that he ran away to escape trial. Mr. Marr told me he was his bondsman & that is why Mr. Marr left Canada."

Deposition of John W. Martin, neighbor of Marrs in Michigan June 12 1895:
"She lived with her father's family before she married Teachout. I didn't know as to what became of her husband Mr. Bisbee. From her brothers and her son I got the idea that he (Bisbee) was a gambler & left her in Canada. He never came here with them......Everything I heard about him led me to think he was a rascal."

Deposition of Ruth Ann Teachout , Battle Creek Madison County, Nebraska April 19 1895:
"I had been married to E.A. Bisbee before I married W.F. Teachout. I married Bisbee in Dec 1852 at New London, Canada, he was raised right there in New London his folks were all living there then his brother James is in New London, Canada, his brother John Henry, Geo and Reuben are in Kansas at Norton or Horton in Southwestern, Kas. I have it right now it was Norton, Norton, Kas., I lived with Bisbee four or five years when he went to California and went to work in the mines He went there about 1856. I used to get letters every little while from him for two years these letters were burned with my other papers, the last letter that I got from stated that he was coming home in Feb., he did not come and I wrote to the P.M at San Juan Cali and he wrote back that my husband had been murdered with two other men. I do not remember the name of the P.M.... .. Chas Marr got a paper with an account of my husband's death in it...." 
Bisbee, Ebenezer Albee (I2397)
 
1821 Ebenezer's will was proved in 1760. Philbrick, Ebenezer (I2807)
 
1822 Edgar Charles graduated from Madelia High School in 1889 and received his B. A. at the University of Minnesota in 1892. His business career was as follows: Manager Dubuque, Ia. Linseed Oil Works, 1894-1897. Sec'y & Mgr., St. Paul, Minn. Linseed Oil Co., 1897-1899. Vice-pres. Midland Linseed Products Co., Minneapolis, 1900-1922. President, Bisbee Linseed Co., Phila., 1922-1946.

Edgar C. Bisbee was in the linseed and vegetable oil business for over 52 yeas. He retired in 1946 due to ill health. 
Bisbee, Edgar Charles (I6270)
 
1823 Edgar L. Gray was a lawyer. Gray, Edgar L. (I5448)
 
1824 Edith d. "Aged 7 yrs. 3 mos. 1 da." Bisbee, Edith Violet (I6608)
 
1825 Edith d. "Aged 71 yrs. 11 mos. 30 das." Thompson, Edith B. (I7429)
 
1826 Edith d. "Aged 83 yrs." Gardiner, Edith H. (I7829)
 
1827 Edith died at the Dallas Nursing Home. Wilson, Edith Alice (I19697)
 
1828 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Kelley, E.M. (I15981)
 
1829 Edith was from Taunton, Mass. Couple had twins, stilborn. Family: Ivory Allen Bisbee / Edith H. Gardiner (F3191)
 
1830 Edmund came to Duxbury in 1635. Weston, Edmund (I1290)
 
1831 Edna d. "Aged 38 yrs. 3 mos. 12 das." Glover, Edna (I8146)
 
1832 Edward B. Morse was a daguereotypist. Morse, Edward B. (I6887)
 
1833 Edward Coffin Bisbee was a shoemaker in Haverhill, Mass. Edward d. "Aged 60 yrs. 8 mos." Bisbee, Edward Coffin (I2060)
 
1834 Edward d. "Aged 4 yrs. 1 mo. 15 das." Bisbee, Edward Randall (I5021)
 
1835 Edward died "Aged 66 yrs. 3 mos. 19 das." Bisbee, Edward Lincoln (I6126)
 
1836 Edward Doty appears to have been somewhat of a troublemaker throughout his life at Plymouth. In June 1621, he engaged in a sword and dagger duel with fellow Hopkins servant Edward Leister; both were wounded before being separated, and were punished by having their head and feet tied together for an hour (it was supposed to have been for a whole day, but they were let go early because of their apparent suffering). Edward Doty made regular appearances in Plymouth Colony Court throughout his life, mostly just being sued for various misdemeanors (failing to pay on a contract; failing to keep his cows fenced; not properly caring for a servant), but occasionally for more serious infractions (twice for assault, once for theft, and once for slander). --Caleb Johnson Doty, Edward (I19923)
 
1837 Edward Doty was from London and a passanger on the Mayflower. Doty, Edward (I19923)
 
1838 Edward enlisted as a private in the military at Hartford, Connecticut, on 20 June 1942. He had a grammar school education, was single without dependents, stood 64" tall and weighed 150 lbs. Smith, Edward Harold (I21034)
 
1839 Edward Gray's burial stone is the oldest at Burial Hill in Plymouth. Gray, Edward (I19700)
 
1840 Edward Gray's burial stone is the oldest at Burial Hill in Plymouth. Gray, Edward (I27847)
 
1841 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Smith, E.H. Jr. (I30024)
 
1842 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Wimble, E. (I12204)
 
1843 Edward P. Skinner was the first postmaster of Shell Rock, Minn. which was later renamed Glenville; also original propietors of city and served as surveyor in 1857 Skinner, Edward Putnam (I21283)
 
1844 Edward W. Bisbee was a business man and is listed at various times in the following manner: Lawyer, Barre, Vt. Retired, Barre, Vt. Treasurer, Barre Hotel Co. Vice-President, Barre Trust Co. Retired, Barre, Vt. Residence, 5 East Street, Barre, Vt. He d. "Aged 86yrs. 9 mos. 25 das." Bisbee, Edward Wyatt (I3759)
 
1845 Edward was from Ireland. Hines, Edward (I7424)
 
1846 Edward was two years old when his father died. Raised by his grandparents, Horace and Hannah Bisbee when Eliza married Aiston. Bulson, Edward H. (I10022)
 
1847 Edward Wyatt Bisbee d. in infancy. Bisbee, Edward Wyatt (I3756)
 
1848 Edwin Cummings was a shoemaker. Cummings, Edwin (I6897)
 
1849 Edwin d. "age 48 yrs, 6 mos." Bisbee, Edwin Lawson (I2422)
 
1850 Edwin J. Bisbee had a farm near Augusta, Me. Bisbee, Edwin Jones (I6286)
 

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