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Timothy P Babcock

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Timothy P Babcock

Birth
Death
1828
Fabius, Onondaga County, New York, USA
Burial
Fabius, Onondaga County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Timothy P. Babcock was born about 1756. He was a veteran of the Revolutionary War. He married Anna Stewart and they had at least ten children, which included Nehemiah, John S. and Benjamin T. Family tradition states that Timothy P. and Anna came to New York state from Connecticut, prior to 1782. Toward the end of his life, he lived near Utica, New York, but because of the prevalence of fever and ague on the low lands, he exchanged his home for a few hundred acres on a hill, where he died. He had moved to Onondaga County sometime between 1800 and 1810. Timothy died February 26, 1828 at his home and was buried in the Babcock Family Cemetery in Fabius, Onondaga County, New York. Timothy's probable lineage: son of Job Babcock III and Sarah Porter, son of Job Babcock Jr. and Elizabeth Hull, son of Job Babcock and Deborah Reynolds, son of John Babcock and Mary Lawton, son of James Badcock who came to America about 1635.

Bio by John E. Sherman

Timothy P. Babcock was born about 1756. He was a veteran of the Revolutionary War. He married Anna Stewart and they had at least ten children, which included Nehemiah, John S. and Benjamin T. Family tradition states that Timothy P. and Anna came to New York state from Connecticut, prior to 1782. Toward the end of his life, he lived near Utica, New York, but because of the prevalence of fever and ague on the low lands, he exchanged his home for a few hundred acres on a hill, where he died. He had moved to Onondaga County sometime between 1800 and 1810. Timothy died February 26, 1828 at his home and was buried in the Babcock Family Cemetery in Fabius, Onondaga County, New York. Timothy's probable lineage: son of Job Babcock III and Sarah Porter, son of Job Babcock Jr. and Elizabeth Hull, son of Job Babcock and Deborah Reynolds, son of John Babcock and Mary Lawton, son of James Badcock who came to America about 1635.

Bio by John E. Sherman


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