Advertisement

Benjamin Bean

Advertisement

Benjamin Bean

Birth
New Hampshire, USA
Death
16 Mar 1858 (aged 64)
Burial
North Hatley, Estrie Region, Quebec, Canada Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of Samuel Bean 1748 – 1819 and Dorothy Wells 1750 – 1825. Husband of Abigail Hoyt, married 1814. Father of:
* Jacob Wells Bean 1815 – 1899
* Ruth Bean 1817 – 1905
* Benjamin Bean 1819 – 1897
* Sophronia Bean 1824 – 1899
* Curtis Phillip Bean 1826 – 1919
* Levi Pearsons Bean 1828 – 1863
* Reuben Bean 1832 – 1878

As a boy Benjamin went to Glover, VT to be with his older brother Samuel and then returned to Sutton, NH where he was married in 1814. He removed from Sutton, NH to West Glover, VT in 1818. Benjamin's brother-in-law, Samuel Hoyt and his wife Sally also came to Glover and are buried in the West Glover Cemetery.

The Beans moved on to Ascot, QC in 1846 after their children were grown. Four of their sons accompanied them. Abigail (Hoyt) Bean was bed-ridden, and had to be carried on a litter by her four sons. At the time of her death, she was been bed-ridden for twenty years (R. G. Conner, The Vine and the Branches. History of Minton, Quebec, 1989, pp.188-190).
Son of Samuel Bean 1748 – 1819 and Dorothy Wells 1750 – 1825. Husband of Abigail Hoyt, married 1814. Father of:
* Jacob Wells Bean 1815 – 1899
* Ruth Bean 1817 – 1905
* Benjamin Bean 1819 – 1897
* Sophronia Bean 1824 – 1899
* Curtis Phillip Bean 1826 – 1919
* Levi Pearsons Bean 1828 – 1863
* Reuben Bean 1832 – 1878

As a boy Benjamin went to Glover, VT to be with his older brother Samuel and then returned to Sutton, NH where he was married in 1814. He removed from Sutton, NH to West Glover, VT in 1818. Benjamin's brother-in-law, Samuel Hoyt and his wife Sally also came to Glover and are buried in the West Glover Cemetery.

The Beans moved on to Ascot, QC in 1846 after their children were grown. Four of their sons accompanied them. Abigail (Hoyt) Bean was bed-ridden, and had to be carried on a litter by her four sons. At the time of her death, she was been bed-ridden for twenty years (R. G. Conner, The Vine and the Branches. History of Minton, Quebec, 1989, pp.188-190).


Advertisement