He was a nephew of John Budd, whether by blood or by marriage (Families of Ancient New Haven by Donald Lines Jacobus, v. 5, p. 1090).
His wife was Alice ______, who died after 1 February 1688/89. While it has been claimed that her maiden name is Budd, direct evidence is lacking (despite Clarence Almon Torrey's suppositional entry in New England Marriages Prior to 1700).
Ralph Lines died on 7 September 1689 in New Haven (in the area that later became Woodbridge), New Haven County, Connecticut.
He was a nephew of John Budd, whether by blood or by marriage (Families of Ancient New Haven by Donald Lines Jacobus, v. 5, p. 1090).
His wife was Alice ______, who died after 1 February 1688/89. While it has been claimed that her maiden name is Budd, direct evidence is lacking (despite Clarence Almon Torrey's suppositional entry in New England Marriages Prior to 1700).
Ralph Lines died on 7 September 1689 in New Haven (in the area that later became Woodbridge), New Haven County, Connecticut.
Gravesite Details
No marker. The alternative burial location would have been the East Side Burying Ground in Woodbridge, but that cemetery was probably established after the death of Ralph Lines.
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