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Sabrina Barnes Haddock

Birth
Herkimer County, New York, USA
Death
13 Feb 1878 (aged 73–74)
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Rockledge, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Children with no links:
John A. Haddock Memorial# 52849637
Rev Dr. George Channing Haddock Memorial# 94792657

Sabrina was the daughter of Rev. Asahel Barnes. The date and place of his death has not been confirmed.

Haddock, John A., History of Jefferson County, New York, from 1793-1894, 1894, p. 280.
(Also known as Haddock’s Centennial History of Jefferson County, N.Y. or The Growth of a Century.)
"Samuel and Sabrina Haddock were born in Herkimer county, N.Y., in 1804, married early, and in 1822 came to Watertown to found a home. Samuel’s father had been sheriff of Herkimer county, and had fair opportunities for education in the public schools of those days. Sabrina was a daughter of Rev. Asahel Barnes, and old-time preacher-without-pay Methodist minister, and it is somewhat singular that for over a hundred years continuously, there has been some one of this family in the Methodist itinerancy. To Samuel and Sabrina were born six children, four boys and two girls. Their father educated them at the Black River Literary and Religious Institute, when his pay as a journeyman blacksmith was only from $1.75 to $2.25 per day. He was Wm. Smith’s blacksmith foreman for nearly twenty years. His youngest son, George Channing, was that Dr. Haddock who was murdered by the whisky and brothel gang in Sioux City in 1886. [ See his biography on page 15 of this History ]. William, the oldest son, was major of an Iowa Cavalry regiment, who served with Sherman on the historic march from Chattanooga to the sea. John A. is the author and publisher of this History. Orison was accidentally drowned from the U. S. frigate Congress, in 1844. One of the daughters was the wife of Dr. W. W. Allport, the distinguished Chicago dentist, and Elizabeth is the wife of Henry Wilkins, of Anamosa, Iowa. This is a family who were early instilled into all the economy and hard work of the era in which they lived, and have made useful members of society. "
Children with no links:
John A. Haddock Memorial# 52849637
Rev Dr. George Channing Haddock Memorial# 94792657

Sabrina was the daughter of Rev. Asahel Barnes. The date and place of his death has not been confirmed.

Haddock, John A., History of Jefferson County, New York, from 1793-1894, 1894, p. 280.
(Also known as Haddock’s Centennial History of Jefferson County, N.Y. or The Growth of a Century.)
"Samuel and Sabrina Haddock were born in Herkimer county, N.Y., in 1804, married early, and in 1822 came to Watertown to found a home. Samuel’s father had been sheriff of Herkimer county, and had fair opportunities for education in the public schools of those days. Sabrina was a daughter of Rev. Asahel Barnes, and old-time preacher-without-pay Methodist minister, and it is somewhat singular that for over a hundred years continuously, there has been some one of this family in the Methodist itinerancy. To Samuel and Sabrina were born six children, four boys and two girls. Their father educated them at the Black River Literary and Religious Institute, when his pay as a journeyman blacksmith was only from $1.75 to $2.25 per day. He was Wm. Smith’s blacksmith foreman for nearly twenty years. His youngest son, George Channing, was that Dr. Haddock who was murdered by the whisky and brothel gang in Sioux City in 1886. [ See his biography on page 15 of this History ]. William, the oldest son, was major of an Iowa Cavalry regiment, who served with Sherman on the historic march from Chattanooga to the sea. John A. is the author and publisher of this History. Orison was accidentally drowned from the U. S. frigate Congress, in 1844. One of the daughters was the wife of Dr. W. W. Allport, the distinguished Chicago dentist, and Elizabeth is the wife of Henry Wilkins, of Anamosa, Iowa. This is a family who were early instilled into all the economy and hard work of the era in which they lived, and have made useful members of society. "


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