Builder of Bartlett-Hawkes Farm
Gender: Male
Birth: between 1702 - 1711
Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts Colony
Death: March 2, 1788
Newton, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Place of ACTUAL Burial: Newton, MA, USA
CUTTER Cemetery
Immediate Family:
Son of Joseph Bartlett, ll and Hannah Bartlett (Hyde)
Husband of Ann Bartlett (Clark) and Anna Bartlett (Ball)
Father of Enoch BARTLETT; Eunice Bartlett; Sarah Bartlett; Mary Bartlett; Enoch Bartlett and 3 others
Brother of Hannah Rice (Bartlett); Thomas Bartlett; Benjamin Bartlett; Elizabeth Bartlett; Joseph Bartlett; Sarah Knapp (Bartlett); Elizabeth Bartlett; Richard Bartlett; Mary Bartlett; Elnathan BARTLETT and Robert BARTLETT
Half brother of Hannah Woodward; Mary Woodward; John Woodward, Ill and Ephraim Woodward
DNA Marker: YR1b1a2
NOTE:
Ebenezer married twice and had children with both first wife Ann CLARK and second wife Anna BALL.
---
Ann CLARK:
b: 12 Jan. 1702
m: 24 June 1736
d. 1 Oct 1742
Ann Clark was daughter of John Clark (1680-1730) and Ann Peirce of Dorchester who died 1748.
Above from CLARK, John. Records of the Descendants of Hugh Clark of Watertown, MA - published Boston 1866.
---
A son of Ebenezer with Ann CLARK is Enoch Bartlett .
Second wife of Ebenezer Bartlett was Anna BALL daughter of John BALL (1697-1756) and Abigail HARRINGTON (1698-1728.)
This Ebenezer Bartlett was a descendant of immigrant Joseph Bartlett of Newton, Massachusetts. See his genealogy in public domain -
http://www.worldcat.org/title/genealogy-of-the-descendants-of-joseph-bartlett-of-newton-mass-for-seven-generations/oclc/1649166/editions?referer=di&editionsView=true
Y Chromosome (Male line) Genetics
==============================
DNA Marker: YR1b1a2
About this Hapologroup: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup_R1b#R1b1a1a2_(R-M269)
===============================
This Ebenezer Bartlett built the 1736 Farmhouse which is on the Historic Register: Text below copied from https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartlett-Hawkes_Farm
Retrieved August 2015.
Bartlett-Hawkes Farm
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Newton, MA
BartlettHawkesFarm photo on this memorial.
Bartlett-Hawkes Farm is located at
15 Winnetaska Road, Waban
Newton, Massachusetts, USA
Coordinates 42°19'41.05?N 71°14'22.47?W
Built 1736
Architect Unknown
Architectural style Federal
Governing body Private
MPS Newton MRA
NRHP Reference #
86001770
[1]
Site added to NRHP September 4, 1986
The Bartlett–Hawkes Farm is a historic house at 15 Winnetaska Road, in the village of Waban, Newton, Massachusetts. It is a 2-1/2 story wood frame structure, eight bays wide, with a side gable roof and clapboard siding. The oldest portion of the house is believed to have been built c. 1736 by Ebenezer Bartlett, making it the oldest building in Waban. It was significantly expanded in the 1820s, c. 1895, and c. 1915, and its exterior styling dates to the late Federal period.[2]
The house was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on September 4, 1986.[1]
References
^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2007-01-23.
^ "NRHP nomination for Bartlett-Hawkes Farm". Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved 2014-04-08.
Builder of Bartlett-Hawkes Farm
Gender: Male
Birth: between 1702 - 1711
Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts Colony
Death: March 2, 1788
Newton, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Place of ACTUAL Burial: Newton, MA, USA
CUTTER Cemetery
Immediate Family:
Son of Joseph Bartlett, ll and Hannah Bartlett (Hyde)
Husband of Ann Bartlett (Clark) and Anna Bartlett (Ball)
Father of Enoch BARTLETT; Eunice Bartlett; Sarah Bartlett; Mary Bartlett; Enoch Bartlett and 3 others
Brother of Hannah Rice (Bartlett); Thomas Bartlett; Benjamin Bartlett; Elizabeth Bartlett; Joseph Bartlett; Sarah Knapp (Bartlett); Elizabeth Bartlett; Richard Bartlett; Mary Bartlett; Elnathan BARTLETT and Robert BARTLETT
Half brother of Hannah Woodward; Mary Woodward; John Woodward, Ill and Ephraim Woodward
DNA Marker: YR1b1a2
NOTE:
Ebenezer married twice and had children with both first wife Ann CLARK and second wife Anna BALL.
---
Ann CLARK:
b: 12 Jan. 1702
m: 24 June 1736
d. 1 Oct 1742
Ann Clark was daughter of John Clark (1680-1730) and Ann Peirce of Dorchester who died 1748.
Above from CLARK, John. Records of the Descendants of Hugh Clark of Watertown, MA - published Boston 1866.
---
A son of Ebenezer with Ann CLARK is Enoch Bartlett .
Second wife of Ebenezer Bartlett was Anna BALL daughter of John BALL (1697-1756) and Abigail HARRINGTON (1698-1728.)
This Ebenezer Bartlett was a descendant of immigrant Joseph Bartlett of Newton, Massachusetts. See his genealogy in public domain -
http://www.worldcat.org/title/genealogy-of-the-descendants-of-joseph-bartlett-of-newton-mass-for-seven-generations/oclc/1649166/editions?referer=di&editionsView=true
Y Chromosome (Male line) Genetics
==============================
DNA Marker: YR1b1a2
About this Hapologroup: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup_R1b#R1b1a1a2_(R-M269)
===============================
This Ebenezer Bartlett built the 1736 Farmhouse which is on the Historic Register: Text below copied from https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartlett-Hawkes_Farm
Retrieved August 2015.
Bartlett-Hawkes Farm
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Newton, MA
BartlettHawkesFarm photo on this memorial.
Bartlett-Hawkes Farm is located at
15 Winnetaska Road, Waban
Newton, Massachusetts, USA
Coordinates 42°19'41.05?N 71°14'22.47?W
Built 1736
Architect Unknown
Architectural style Federal
Governing body Private
MPS Newton MRA
NRHP Reference #
86001770
[1]
Site added to NRHP September 4, 1986
The Bartlett–Hawkes Farm is a historic house at 15 Winnetaska Road, in the village of Waban, Newton, Massachusetts. It is a 2-1/2 story wood frame structure, eight bays wide, with a side gable roof and clapboard siding. The oldest portion of the house is believed to have been built c. 1736 by Ebenezer Bartlett, making it the oldest building in Waban. It was significantly expanded in the 1820s, c. 1895, and c. 1915, and its exterior styling dates to the late Federal period.[2]
The house was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on September 4, 1986.[1]
References
^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2007-01-23.
^ "NRHP nomination for Bartlett-Hawkes Farm". Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved 2014-04-08.
Inscription
Ebenezer Bartlett - Massachusetts Volunteers in the Revolutionary War
Gravesite Details
Per the photo volunteer for Cotter/Cutter cememety, there are only 4 person markers there. Ebenezer is buried in NEWTON, MA. Cutter Cememtery (see photo with name Cutter) is likely just memorial cenotaph, not burial site.