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Thomas Lindsey Jr.

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Thomas Lindsey Jr.

Birth
Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
28 Dec 1802 (aged 44)
Leeds, Androscoggin County, Maine, USA
Burial
Leeds, Androscoggin County, Maine, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Thomas was the son of Thomas and Elizabeth (Turner) Lindsey.

The date of death on Thomas's gravestone is incorrect. In addition, the death record one views online is also incorrect, as its source is the gravestone. The coroner's report, written the day after Thomas's death, indicates that he died on December 28, 1802. The court appointed administrators for his estate in January 1803.

The Leeds town history has a brief account of Thomas's death. It says that that when "returning on the ice from Wayne village on horseback, when nearing the home shore on the south end of Androscoggin Lake, both he and his horse broke through and drowned."

The coroner's report, which is six handwritten pages, provided more detail. On the 29th, Kennebec County coroner Elijah Wood, asked constable Othneil Pratt to summon sixteen Leeds men to act as a jury to determine how Thomas died. And that evening they assembled at the house of James Lindsey, where Thomas's body lay. They heard the testimony of a young Samuel Burgess, who stated that the prior evening, between light and dark, he heard Rogers Stinchfield make a noise of distress and heard Thomas Lindsey answer him. He heard Thomas's horse run on the ice and then suddenly cease. Other men testified that on the morning of the 29th, they went out onto the lake, and by grappling, they brought up the body, and took it to James Lindsay's house. The sixteen men of the jury signed in agreement that Thomas had died by drowning.
Thomas was the son of Thomas and Elizabeth (Turner) Lindsey.

The date of death on Thomas's gravestone is incorrect. In addition, the death record one views online is also incorrect, as its source is the gravestone. The coroner's report, written the day after Thomas's death, indicates that he died on December 28, 1802. The court appointed administrators for his estate in January 1803.

The Leeds town history has a brief account of Thomas's death. It says that that when "returning on the ice from Wayne village on horseback, when nearing the home shore on the south end of Androscoggin Lake, both he and his horse broke through and drowned."

The coroner's report, which is six handwritten pages, provided more detail. On the 29th, Kennebec County coroner Elijah Wood, asked constable Othneil Pratt to summon sixteen Leeds men to act as a jury to determine how Thomas died. And that evening they assembled at the house of James Lindsey, where Thomas's body lay. They heard the testimony of a young Samuel Burgess, who stated that the prior evening, between light and dark, he heard Rogers Stinchfield make a noise of distress and heard Thomas Lindsey answer him. He heard Thomas's horse run on the ice and then suddenly cease. Other men testified that on the morning of the 29th, they went out onto the lake, and by grappling, they brought up the body, and took it to James Lindsay's house. The sixteen men of the jury signed in agreement that Thomas had died by drowning.

Inscription

THOMAS LINDSEY
DIED
Dec. 25, 1803;
AEt. 46 yrs.
THANKFUL B.
His Wife
DIED
Sept. 4, 1847;
AEt. 82 yrs. 7 mos.

At Rest



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