Almira, 1808-1826
Sophronia, 1810-1870
Jeremy Dickinson, 1813-1901
Jonathan Coleman, 1815-1822
Lucretia, 1817-1838
Elijah Coleman, 1820-1838
Sarah Ann, 1824-1824
Almira Augusta, 1828-1829
Of their eight children, only two, Jeremy and Sophronia, lived long enough to marry, and only Jeremy had children who had children, grandchildren and probably Gr. Gr. Gr. Gr. Gr. Grandchildren by now.
Both Achsah and her husband Jonathan Coleman Warner were descended from the original settlers of Hadley Massachusetts. The founders of the settlement emigrated from England as part of the Great Migration of Protestants seeking religious freedom. They orignally settled in Hartford, Connecticut but a difference in religious interpretation caused a schism in their Church and part of the congregation removed to Western Massachusetts in 1659 and founded Hadley.
Sometime after the death of her husband in 1850, Azubah moved to Wisconsin, probably to be close to her son, Jeremy Dickinson Warner who lived in Waukesha, although by the late 1850s or early 1860s he and his family had moved to Lewis County, Missouri, evidently without his Mother.
Almira, 1808-1826
Sophronia, 1810-1870
Jeremy Dickinson, 1813-1901
Jonathan Coleman, 1815-1822
Lucretia, 1817-1838
Elijah Coleman, 1820-1838
Sarah Ann, 1824-1824
Almira Augusta, 1828-1829
Of their eight children, only two, Jeremy and Sophronia, lived long enough to marry, and only Jeremy had children who had children, grandchildren and probably Gr. Gr. Gr. Gr. Gr. Grandchildren by now.
Both Achsah and her husband Jonathan Coleman Warner were descended from the original settlers of Hadley Massachusetts. The founders of the settlement emigrated from England as part of the Great Migration of Protestants seeking religious freedom. They orignally settled in Hartford, Connecticut but a difference in religious interpretation caused a schism in their Church and part of the congregation removed to Western Massachusetts in 1659 and founded Hadley.
Sometime after the death of her husband in 1850, Azubah moved to Wisconsin, probably to be close to her son, Jeremy Dickinson Warner who lived in Waukesha, although by the late 1850s or early 1860s he and his family had moved to Lewis County, Missouri, evidently without his Mother.
Gravesite Details
Date of Burial: 2/25/1870, Military: none, Race: White,, Mrs. J. C.), Father:, Mother:, Death Place:, Birth Place:, Cause:, Occupation: Ref: Cemetery Records
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