Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Wolcott F. Griffin son of Joel Griffin of Rushford

Wolcott F. Griffin was the son of Joel Griffin and his wife Clarissa Frost. I think it is a safe guess to assume his middle initial stood for his mother’s maiden name, Frost. Wolcott was born in Malone, New York in 1832. His father moved to Rushford, New York around 1836. Wolcott’s father Joel and his uncle, Oramel were merchants in Rushford. Wolcott was to follow in their stead. As the only child of his parents Wolcott was the sole beneficiary in his father’s will. In the 1855 New York Census we find Wolcott living in Rushford with his wife Lucina. The history, Rushford, and Rushford People identifies her as Lucina G. Bush, the daughter of Alexander Bush of Pike, New York. Wolcott and Lucina had a daughter together Ella L. Griffin born in August of 1860. Many family histories incorrectly identify Ella's mother as Walcott's 2nd wife Harriet Robinson who he married in 1867. -------------- The 1855 New York Census shows the home of Joel and Clarissa Griffin in Rushford. As part of the household he find Wolcott, age 23, born in Franklin County and Lucina, age 23, born in Wyoming County. Lucina Grimes Bush Griffin died in 1863. She is buried in the Pike Cemetery, Pike, New York with her parents. Her headstone identifies her as the wife of Wolcott F. Griffin and gives her date of birth, April 4, 1831 and death, May 11, 1863.------------ By the time of the 1870 census taken in Rushford Wolcott has taken a second wife Harriet J. Robinson. There are hints that they married in 1867. Her death records gives her date of birth as April 18, 1839 in Pompey, Onondaga, New York the daughter of Millard and Electa Robinson. Harriet died February 1, 1882 in Traverse City, Mich.--------------- The 1880 census places Wolcott in Traverse City, Michigan. The census records refer to him as a merchant and real estate agent. The Michigan Death Records places his death on May 3, 1892 in Traverse City the son of Joel and Clarissa Griffin. Wolcott is buried in the Oakwood Cemetery along with his wives, Harriet Robinson and Frances Slusser and his daughter Ella and her husband and son Watson.-------------- Ella married John Fowle. Together they had two sons, John Griffin and Watson E. Ella died March 6, 1901. She served as the executor for Walcott’s will signing her name Ella L. Fowle.. Ella and John appear in the 1900 census in Traverse City. The census places her birth in August 1860.------- The Michigan marriage records document a third married for Wolcott. He married Frances E. Slusser (April 14, 1842- December 4, 1909) December 4, 1883.---------- One of the histories written for Traverse City included a biography for Wolcott. It is included with the documents. ---------Wolcott // Joel // Joel // Samuel // Samuel Griffin.

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Joel, son of Dan Griffin of Westford, VT

Joel, the son of Daniel Griffin and Catherine Meriam, was born in Westford, Vermont in about 1805. There is a very faint historical trail for Joel in Vermont. The only record we have is of his marriage to Amelia Hobart, September 18, 1828 in Westford. They were married by ”Simon Parmalee Minister”. Joel as with many young men of that generation saw his future in the west. For the young men in Chittenden County, Vermont the first move was often one hundred or so miles west into upper New York. Many then moved on to other places further west mainly in the upper Midwest. Tracing this generation of young men is to say the least problematic. The new communities they formed or joined did not have the governmental infrastructure needed to record vital records. The search for this generation relies heavily on the census records. A primary source for more detailed information is death records. By the time this generation died there was sufficient government structure in place that detailed death records were kept. The result of this set of circumstances is that researching the lives of these people usually starts with information gleaned from a death record and then moves backward. The key challenge is gathering enough hints to allow you to place them in a location many years and several states away from places like Westford, Vermont. The key hint for tracing Joel came in a letter written by his cousin, Rosetta Griffin Hunt (Samuel) to her brother Albert Griffin in 1870. In the letter she wrote, “The last I knew of cousin Joel he was living in Wentworth, Lake Co. Ill. He is all that is left of that family.”--------- Starting with the 1860 Federal Census we find Joel Griffin, age 55, born in Vermont, living in Warren, Lake, Illinois, Post Office Wentworth. Included in his household is his wife Thyphena. In the several census records her name is present with several phonetic spellings, Trifina, Triphena. ---------- There are a number of historical sources for the life of Joel Griffin in Warren, Ill. The first is a marriage record recorded in Lake County to Tryphena Dunlap dated May 7, 1859. This leads to a conclusion that his first two wives, Amelia Hobart and Johannah must have passed away. The second major discovery is the site of his burial in the Union Cemetery in nearby Waukegan. The cemetery records place his death on January 15, 1877 and that of his wife Thyphena on May 8, 1885. Also buried in the family plot is his son, William, and his wife Phebe.--------- Tryphena Dunlap was born, according to census records, in 1816 in Massachusetts. Her will raises an interesting point. In the will she names two brothers who were then living in Westford, Vermont. Did Joel and Thyphena know each other in Vermont? It is an interesting question. Found in Tryphena’s will is a description of Joel’s estate which includes farming equipment and a flour mill.--------- Joel’s will is found in the Illinois, Wills and Probate Records. In the will he names his wife, Thyphena, his son William and his wife Phebe and his two daughters, Nancy E. Goodspeed and Hattie E. Pike. The information found in the will provides a jumping off point for researching Joel’s children.------------- Searching for a family utilizing the description set down in the will leads to the 1850 census taken in Chateaugay, Franklin, New York. The census records Joel age 44 born in Vermont, Johannah age 45 born NY, Nancy age 20, NY, William 15, NY and Harriet age 6 born in New York. Franklin County represented that first step west for Vermont men. In Franklin County Joel joined his namesake, his father’s half brother Joel, and his son Joel. Many family histories mistakenly trace our Joel to the area of Rushford, Allegany County, NY, which is where his Uncle Joel’s family ended up.---------- The 1850 census provides us with a number of clues. In the census we find in Joel’s household Johannah, born in New York, who is apparently Joel’s second wife. From the ages of the children and place of birth we can deduce that Joel was living in New York by 1830 not long after his first marriage.---------- By 1860 Joel has moved on to Illinois, Johannah is now missing and Joel has taken Thyphena Dunlap as his third wife. By 1860 his three children were then living on their own. Did they follow him to Illinois? Cemetery records indicate that William did but what of the two girls?------------- As it turns out the girls did not follow their father to Illinois. In the same 1850 census in Chateaugay, where we found Joel and a daughter, Nancy E., we find Nancy also listed in the household of her husband, Stephen Goodspeed. In the census records she is always referred by her middle name Eveline or Eveline N. In 1860 the Goodspeed family has moved ten miles east to Ellenburg, Clinton County. The census records all place her birth in about 1830 and indicate that she was born in NY. Nancy and Stephen are buried in the West Hill Cemetery in Ellenburg, Clinton County. The cemetery biography for Nancy lists her as Nancy Eveline Griffin Goodspeed. Her headstone reads, Nancy E.- wife of- Stephen Goodspeed- Died- June 24, 1881- in her 52nd year. Stephen died on December 7, 1908. The extended Goodspeed family is buried in Ellenburg.------------------- William is buried with his parents in Illinois. There is not a trail for him in the census records. His cemetery information places his birth in January 1835 and his death on July 4, 1875. ---------- Harriet/ Hattie E. Griffin returned to the family roots in Vermont settling in Waterbury near Essex close to her uncle Almon’s children. In the 1860 census in Waterbury he find the 17 year old Harriet E. age 17 in the household of Wm. Pike. By 1880 we find a Harriet E. Pike in Waterbury as the head of her own household. The census indicates that she was born in 1844 in NY and both of her parents in VT. The census also lists her as divorced.--------------- We find a definitive document for Harriet dated October 22, 1881 in Waterbury, VT. It is a marriage certificate. The name of the bride is written twice, once as Hattie E. Pike, the second time as Hattie E. Griffin. The groom is Stephen Grover. Her age is give as 37. The marriage certificate lists her place of birth as Ellenburg, NY, which is near Chateaugay. The certificate indicates that it is her second marriage. Her parents are identified as Joel Griffin and Emelia H., which is actually Amelia Hobart.--------------- The remainder of Harriet’s life can be tracked searching for Harriett Grover. In the 1900 census, which is one of the most useful because of the extra data it provided, she is listed as Hattie E. Grover, born Jan 1844 in NY. It notes that she is now a widow and the mother of two children. Harriet and Stephen are buried in the Hope Cemetery in Waterbury. The cemetery records list her as; Grover, Hattie E. Griffin Pike born January 10 1844 in Ellenburg, NY, died August 6, 1914 in Waterbury. Her Vermont Death Record uses the name Hattie Griffin Grover. Her father is listed as Joel Griffin and her mother as Amelia Hobart. It lists her date of death as August 6, 1914 at the age 70 years 6 months and 27 days. Stephen Grover died May 1, 1898.---------------------- Joel // Dan // Samuel // Samuel Griffin of Killingworth, CT

Thursday, March 31, 2016

Rhoda wife of Dan Griffin of Westford, Vermont

Dan Griffin’s first wife Catherine died in 1821. She is buried in the Brookside Cemetery in Westford, VT with her daughter Julia and son Charles. At some point after her death Dan remarried. Starting in the 1850 census his 2nd wife is identified as Rhoda. Census records place Rhoda’s date of birth in about 1782 born in New York. There is not a documentary trail for Rhoda in Westford. She is present in the 1860 census. Dan died in 1863 and there is no trace of her in a 1870 census. There are some intriguing documents that are found in Michigan for a Rhoda Griffin. In the mortality schedule for the 1870 census taken in Marion, Livingston, Michigan there is a death record for a Rhoda Griffin. The document places her death in October of 1869. It indicates that she was a widow born in 1782 in New York. There is a transcription of a Michigan death record for the same person. The transcription misspells her name as Rody. It gives her date of death as October 5, 1869. It indicates that she was 87 years old, a widow, born in 1782 in New York. It also lists her parents, Isaac and Maryette Serbuer.

Friday, March 25, 2016

Solon W Griffin 1836-1902

Solon W Griffin was born, according to information contained in his death record, on October 14, 1836 in Rushford, Allegany, New York. He was the son of Oramel Griffin and Caroline Gray. We have posted a biography for Oramel in another entry on the Blog. Solon’s mother died in 1848 so we see Solon and his brother, Jackson, appearing quite often in the households in the extended family in the census records. Solon was one of a few of his contemporaries to receive a formal education. He and his brother were sent to board at the Alfred Academy in Alfred, Allegany, NY. For most of their lives the brothers were referred to as clerks. In modern terms they would probably be considered to be accountants or MBAs. Solon’s father purchased large tracks of land in Barry County, Michigan. From 1860 onward the two brothers lives seem to revolve around managing their father’s Michigan interests. While spending most of their time in Barry County later in life the brothers moved to Union, Branch County, Michigan, which is were we find Solon in the 1900 Census. The 1900 Census confirms the Oct. 1836 date of birth. Solon’s Michigan Death Record provides his name, Solon W Griffin, his birth and death dates, 14 October 1836 and April 20, 1902 and the identity of his parents Oramel and Caroline although transcriptions of the record misspells his fathers name. Solon’s remains were taken back to Rushford for burial. He is buried in a family plot in the White Cemetery.

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Jackson Andrew Griffin 1840-1893

Jackson Griffin was born in Rushford, Allegany, NY in 1840 the son of Oramel Griffin and Caroline Gray. His father, Oramel Griffin, was one of the most prominent businessmen in the area. Because of his success in business Oramel was able to gather his extended family around him. He started out with a large store and related business in Rushford. Later on he purchased land and constructed a “port” on the newly built Genesse Canal. The location became know as Oramel, NY. Oramel’s next business enterprise was land development in Barry County, Michigan. In Barry County Oramel purchased large tracts of land. Starting in 1860 and lasting until the turn of the century the extended family was found mainly in Michigan. Jackson’s mother died in 1848 as a result he and his brother, Solon, appear in the household of many of their kin in the census records. In 1850 the two young Griffin are found enrolled in Alfred Academy now Alfred University. At the time of the 1850 Census Jackson is living with his Aunt Sophia Hitchcock. In 1860 the brothers are members of their sister Jane Webster’s household in Michigan. Jackson enlisted in the Army in 1861 his place of enlistment, Oramel, NY. His enlistment papers provide us with the only source for his full name, Jackson Andrew Griffin and his date of birth November 30, 1840. He was serving at Fortress Monroe when he took sick. Due to his sickness he was discharged. In the 1880 census he is living in Kalamazoo, Michigan with his wife, Eliza, and two children, Carrie and Oramel.----------- The Michigan death records record his death, 12 September 1893 in Union, Branch Michigan. Both he and his brother Solon were living in Union. His death record lists his parents Oramel and Caroline Griffin. At some point in time Jackson’s body was transported back to Rushford. He is buried in a family plot in the White Cemetery near Rushford and Oramel, NY.--------------- Jackson / Oramel // Joel // Samuel // Samuel Griffin of Killingworth

Sunday, March 20, 2016

Milton Griffin's family--New Hudson, NY

Milton Griffin’s Family; Milton // Joel // Samuel // Samuel Griffin of Killingworth--------- There are several challenges to overcome in writing a history for Milton Griffin and Eleanore/ Elnore Doty’s family. Eleanore is the spelling used in the death records for her children. Those death records also provide us with Eleanore’s maiden name, Doty. Census records indicate that she was born in about 1810 in Canada. Milton came to Franklin County, New York from Swanton, Vermont with his family in about 1804. He met and married Eleanore Doty in Franklin. By the time of the 1830 census they had one child. During his lifetime Milton and his brothers were always on the frontiers of American. In the communities where they lived there was very little emphasis on record keeping. In both Franklin County and Allegany County, NY there are almost no surviving birth or marriage records. As a result we are left with using census data to track Milton’s children. But in the case of Milton the census data is less than idea. For the average family the census records track the growth of a family in ten-year increments. From census to census you can see a family grow, see children being born and children leaving home. Milton’s family is an exception. The pattern from one census to the next is inconsistent. It seems that Milton’s children spent a lot of time living with the extended family. As a result using census data to reconstruct Milton’s family is fraught with problems. In the 1800s the major problem in tracking people via census records is hindered by the fact that women disappeared behind the identity of their husbands. In the absence of marriage records finding Milton’s girls approached the impossible. The census records place Milton and Eleanore in Bangor/Malone in Franklin County until after the 1840 census. The 1840 census indicates that six children were born in Franklin County. The census records hint that in 1843 the family was living in Erie County, NY. By the time Frederick was born in 1845 the family was living in New Hudson, Allegany, NY. His father Joel’s family had gathered around his older brother, Oramel, in nearby Rushford. Milton and Eleanore lived in New Hudson until at least the time of the 1875 census. We do not have any death or burial records for Milton and Eleanore. Eleanore is living with their daughter, Julia, in the 1894 Michigan Census but she is not there in the 1880 census.-------- Milton’s sister Sophia provides us with the key to unlocking the mystery of Milton’s daughters. Sophia , a widow, did not have any surviving children. As a result in her will, probated in 1881 in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Sophia bequeaths her estate to her nieces. In the will she identifies them by their married name and provides their place of residence. The will names Jane A. Webster of Augusta, Michigan, Mary Shean of Ross, Michigan, Julia Willison of Augusta, Michigan and Sophia Winters also living in Michigan. The extended Griffin family had migrated to the neighboring counties of Barry and Kalamazoo, Michigan. Milton’s brother Oramel was a major land speculator in the area. ------------ The search for Milton’s children begins with the 1830 Census taken in Malone, Franklin, New York. The census identifies Milton as the head of the household and records his wife, Eleanore, and a daughter under the age of 5. This daughter, named Jane A. Griffin, had left home by the time of the 1850 Census, which was the first to name each member of a household. As a result her existence was largely unknown until her aunt Sophia’s will.----------- A search for Jane A Webster in Augusta, Michigan eventually turned up a Michigan death record. Jane died November 8, 1898 in Kalamazoo and was buried in nearby Augusta. The record names her parents, Milton Griffin and Eleanore Doty. It records that she was born in Malone, NY and that she was 69 at the time of her death, which calculates to a date of birth in 1829 a match for the 1830 Malone Census. Census records identify Jane’s husband as Alanson/Oland Webster. In the 1855 census, taken in New Hudson, Jane is listed as Jane Ann. In the 1860 Census in Barry, Barry, Mich. we find living in their household Oramel’s boys, Solon and Jackson Griffin, and Jane’s younger sister, Martha Griffin, age 18.---------- There are hints that Milton and Eleanore had another daughter born in Malone in about 1831. Jane was born in 1829 and Sophia in 1834 leaving a five year gap. We have only accounted for three of the four girls recorded in the 1840 census.----------- Sophia is listed in her father’s house in New Hudson in the 1855 census. The census gives her age as 21/ 1834 and indicates that she was born in Franklin County. She is identified by her aunt Sophia as Sophia Winters of Michigan. In the 1860 census in New Hudson we find Sophia age 27/ 1843 and her husband Thomas Winters age 28. We find her death in the Michigan death records. The widow, Sophia Winters, age 65 died April 6, 1898 In Hickory Corners, Barry, Mich. Her parents are listed as Milton Griffin and Eleanore Doty.----------- Julia A Griffin appears in the 1855 and 1860 census records in New Hudson. They indicate that she was born in Franklin County in 1838. Julia is identified by her aunt Sophia as Julia Willison. Julia followed the extended family to Michigan where she married a Michigan boy, Zaphna Willison. The 1900 census records a date of birth as Feb. 1838. Zaphna died in 1886. In the 1894 Michigan State Census we find living with Julia her mother, Eleanore, age 84 born in Canada. Julia and Zaphna are buried in the North Hickory Cemetery in Barry Township. Cemetery records provided us with a birth and death date; February 24, 1838 and September 4, 1919.---------- The only time Joel appears in Milton’s household by name is in the 1860 Census taken in New Hudson, Allegany, NY.. He is listed as age 26 indicating a date of birth in 1834/5. That date is a match for the two young boys recorded in the 1840 census in Malone, Franklin, NY. His Civil war enlistment papers place his date of birth in 1836. There are NY Census records taken in 1870, 1875 and 1880 in Salamanca, Cattaraugus, NY, which records a Joel Griffin born about 1835 in Franklin County and his wife Betsy born in Allegany County. Those dates and places are a match for what you would expect to find for Milton’s son, Joel. The confirmation for his identity is found in his will probated on November 18, 1880. In his will he provides money for Mrs. Milton Griffin, his mother. He also leave money to a nephew, William Shean, son his his sister Mary.----------- Merrit A. Griffin appears in the 1850 census at the age of 9, which suggests a date of birth in 1840/1. He also appears in the 1855 New York census as age 15. Evidence points to the fact the Merrit was born before the 1840 Census, which was taken in June of that year. The 1855 New York Census has been used as evidence for a daughter “Merritte”. A close examination of the original census shows a poorly written Merrit with what looks like an extra “t”. The telling bit of evidence is that the 15 years old child is identified as a “M” ie a male. It is very easy to distinguish between the “F” used to indicate females and the “M” used for males. There are no other confirmable records for Merrit. Some family histories quote a death record for a Merrit in Union, Branch, Mich. who married an Etta Gott. It is an easy to trace documentary trail, which identifies this Merrit as the son of Nelson Griffin. There is a Merrit Griffin in Worchester, Ostego, NY with a date of birth in Sept. 1843 not quite a match. There are also records for a Merrit “A” Griffin in Boxar County Texas born about 1841 in NY. His death certificate dated July 17, 1922 does not list his parents.------------- Most family histories for Milton and Eleanore Griffin’s family include a daughter Merritte. A transcription of the 1855 New York Census has been used as the source for the name. The New York Census records offer several a few valuable insights. One of it unique features is that is records each person’s county of birth. It also clearly indicates if the person listed is male or female. A review of the 1855 New York Census for Milton’s household includes a poorly written version of the name, Merrit, age 15. For our purposes the census clearly indicates that this particular person is a male. It you look at the 1850 Federal census and the 1855 New York Census in combination what you are seeing is the tracking of a son named Merrit. There is in fact no daughter named Merritte.----------- Martha H Griffin appears as a 7-year-old daughter in the 1850 census taken in New Hudson, Allegany, NY. The Burdick family history notes that her name was Martha Helen. In the 1855 New York Census she is listed as age 13 born in Erie, County. In the 1860 census she is part of her sister Jane’s household. Her Michigan death record is dated December 22, 1878 in Ross, Kalamazoo, Michigan. It lists a date of birth in New York in about 1842. The certificate identifies her parents as Milton and Elenor Griffin. Martha married Myron Burdick. They are buried in the East Hickory Corners Cemetery. Her original headstone read Martha H Burdick, b Feb 22, 1843, d. Dec 22, 1878 wf of Myron.----------- A transcription of the 1865 census has been used to identify Mary as Mary “C” Griffin. A closer look at the original show the ‘C” to be and “E’. The Shean family history identifies her as Mary Etta Griffin. Mary’s name is in the census records for her father Milton in 1850, 1855, 1860 and 1865. Mary followed her sisters to Michigan. The 1880 census places her and her husband, John Shean, in Ross, Kalamazoo, Michigan. The 1880 census identifies the birth place of each person listed in the census and their parents. It notes that her father was born in Vermont and her mother in Canada. The 1900 Census places Mary and John Shean in Aurora, Hamilton, Nebraska. That census gives her date of birth as February 1843. It places her birth in New York, her father in Vermont and her mother in Canada. Mary is present in the 1910 Census in Aurora after that the documentary trails for her ends. The Shean family history that identifies Mary’s middle name as Etta provides a date of death for John Shean May 5, 1925 in Aurora who they also note that he was born in Michigan. It notes that some of their children were born in Hickory Groves, Michigan. They admit that they do not have a death date for Mary. The records seem to tell us that Mary and Martha Griffin were twins both were born in Erie County in February 1843.------------ Frederick Griffin appears in the 1850 census as age 5, the 1855 as age 10 and the 1860 as age 15. The New York census indicates that he was born in Allegany County. While conducting a detailed search of the 1865 New York census records we discovered a marriage records for Frederick, "Fredrick Griffin-19-Helen Dunham-18- Dunkirk, NY, January 22, 1865". A search of the 1860 census for Dunkirk turns up a Helen Dunham age 13 along with her mother Jane Dunham. The 1880 census in Denver , Colorado finds a Fred Griffin and his wife Helen as well as his mother-in-law Jane Dunham. Fredrick and Helen are buried in the Riverside Cemetery in Denver. His headstone reads; Fredrick F. Griffin-- 17 January 1845--27 August 1892.------------- There is a single historical note for Lamira. She appears in the 1850 census in New Hudson at the age of 2. Her absence in the 1855 and 1860 census records would seem to argue that she died at a very early age.------------ Samuel Griffin Genealogy Blog // samuelgriffingenealogy.blogspot.com

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Joel Griffin's family 1767-1833

Joel Griffin’s family; Joel // Samuel // Samuel Griffin of Killingworth------------- The 1820 Federal Census taken in Bangor, Franklin County, New York, adds a lot of definition to the family of Joel Griffin and Submit Alvord. The transcription of the original, lists a family of eleven. The list includes two young males under the age of ten. A close examination of the original manuscript uncovers certain clues. The column that lists the two young boys appears to be smudged. If you look at a number of pages that make up the census for Bangor you will see where the census taker made several mistakes. You can see where he blotted out an original number and inserted another number. Such is the case with the two boys. What you are actually seeing is that the census taker wrote down the number “2” and then tried to blot it out. The actual record should have been a blank column. Many researchers, relying on the transcription, have looked for two what are in fact non existent boys. ------------------------- What the 1820 Census shows is a family of 7 children and their parents. The two oldest boys, Oramel age 26 and Milton age 24 have left home. In the household are Aaron and Joel Jr. listed as between the ages of 16 and 25. The census list two older girls, Lois age 23 age Sophia age 17. There are two girls age 10 to 15, Laura and Sophronia. The baby in the family is Nancy age 8 in 1820. ------------------- The 1820 Census did not in fact list the names in the household. We have to wait until the 1850 census before each member of a household is listed by name. It has only been by a curious journey that we have discovered the names of Joel and Submit’s children. ------------------ Joel and his brother, Asahel, left Killingworth, CT as young men. They are listed in the 1790 census in New Haven, Vermont. While Asahel’s presence is easy to trace in New Haven there is no footprint for Joel. We discover Joel in Swanton, Vermont after a detailed search in an index for the 1800 census for the state of Vermont. In the first volume of town records a few of the men in town recorded their children. On a page we find, “Oramel Griffin Son of Joel & Submit Griffin Born in Swanton March 28th, 1794. Milton Griffin Son of Joel & Submit Griffin born in Swanton January 18th 1796. Lois Griffin Daughter of Joel and Submit Griffin born in Swanton October 8th 1797”. ---------------------- There are no town records for the birth of the three additional children, Aaron, Joel Jr. and Sophia born in Swanton. By the time that Laura was born on 1805 the family was living in Malone/Bangor, Franklin County, New York. ------------------ Birth records for Franklin County, New York are nonexistent. As a result early efforts to identify Joel and Submit’s children ended in failure. One of the few records that mention a Griffin is a marriage of Sophronia Griffin to Solon Jackson Nichols in the Malone Palladium. The article notes that Sophronia was from Malone/ Bangor. The date, October 1828, hints that Sophronia could be a member of Joel’s family. The discovery of the identify of Joel and Submit’s children hinged on the fact that Oramel was to gain some notoriety in his life. Early records for men who served in the war of 1812 include a record of Oramel. It included information that in 1821 he had moved to Sparta in Livingston County. A search for him in western New York eventually led to a biography in an early history written for Allegany County, New York. He was considered to be one of the most prominent men to live in the County in its first one hundred years. The history noted that due to his financial success he was able to draw his extended family around him. Based on that knowledge it was easy to find record of Oramel, along with his father and mother and brothers Joel Jr. and Milton, in and around Rushford, Allegany, New York. Their names are prominent in the histories written for Rushford. In reviewing census and other records we also find Solon Jackson and Sophronia Nichols living in nearby New Hudson near Milton. Another hint of family connections is the fact that Oramel named his two boys Solon and Jackson after his brother-in-law. As we expanded our search we found the extended Griffin family buried in a family plot in the White Cemetery in Rushford. The names of Oramel his father and mother and his brother Joel Jr. are etched on a single pillar. ----------------------- In the history, Rushford, and Rushford People, there is a section dedicated to the Griffin’s, Oramel, Milton and Joel. Later on in the volume we find a reference to a Mrs. Hitchcock who the histories notes was a sister to the well-known Joel Griffin. It is an easy search to find the family of Augustus and Sophia Hitchcock living in Caneadea a sister city to Rushford. In the 1880 census we find Sophia Hitchcock, identified as a “sister” as part of the household of Solon and Sophronia Nichols. ---------------- Also discussed in the Rushford history is the Gordon family. The reference notes that Simon Gordon, born May 11, 1811, married Laura Griffin. This poses the question, is Laura a part of Joel’s family? Oramel again provides the answer indirectly. ---------------------- Oramel by his own determined initiative rose up the economics ladder. He apprenticed himself to a successful businessman and worked himself up to a partnership. He would later move to Rushford where he established his own dry goods store and allied businesses. He raised enough capital to buy property along the Genesee Canal, an offshoot to the Erie Canal, were he established a prominent transshipment center. A town, named Oramel, grew up at that location. With his accumulated wealth Oramel became a prominent land developer on the frontier in Michigan. His sons Solon and Jackson managed his affairs in Michigan. Due to the level of success in the Michigan undertaking at some point many members of the extended family gathered around Kalamazoo including Solon and Jackson and Milton’s daughter Mary. We find in the 1880 census, in Michigan, in the household of Solon and Sophronia Nichols , Sophia Hitchcock. In the census records for the extended family it is easy to find family connections as members of the separate families show up in the census records for their kin. ------------------ With a hint that she may have died in Michigan we searched the vital records for Sophia Hitchcock. In the Michigan State Archives we found a will filed under the name Sophia Hitchcock. In the will we find confirmation for a number of family connections. Sophia identifies her sisters, Sophronia Nichols, Laura Gordon, the wife of Simon Gordon from Rushford, and “My sister Nancy F Gordon of Sauk Rapids, Minn”. Later evidence demonstrated that Laura and Nancy had married Gordon cousins from Rushford. --------------------------- In the 1855 New York census for Caneadea we find in the household of Simon and Laura Gordon the recently widowed Sophia Hitchcock. Also in the household is Jackson Griffin, Oramel’s son. ------------------- Following up on the hints about Laura a search in Sauk Rapids led us to the Trinity Lutheran Cemetery. In the cemetery we find headstones for Nancy F Gordon, Sept. 1, 1884 and Samuel Gordon, Dec. 14, 1879. ------------------- The most tenuous family connection is for Aaron. The only record of Aaron is in the 1820 and 1830 census for Malone, New York. In those census records the census taker would work his way through a neighborhood going from one house to the next or down a country lane. In the 1830 census we find Aaron living next door to Joel and a few house down from Milton. Dates in the 1820 and 1830 census records indicate that he was born about 1799. A 1799 date of birth is a match for the time line of Joel’s children. --------------------- Oramel was born March 28, 1794 in Swanton, Vermont. He died in Rushford September 5, 1877. He married Caroline Gary. ----------------------- Milton was born in Swanton on January 18, 1796. Milton married Eleanore Doty. The last record of Milton is the 1875 Census taken in New Hudson, Allegany, New York. Evidence from his son, Joel's, will indicates that by 1880 he has passed away. -------------------- Lois was also born in Swanton October 8, 1797. There is not a documentary trail that traces the life of Lois. There are family records on web sites such as Ancestory.Com that documents the life of Hiram Luther Drake and his wife Lois Griffin. The telling hint for a family connection is the name of her oldest son, Oramel. Lois is buried in the Riverside Cemetery in Gouverneur, New York. The cemetery records note a date of death, June 24, 1874. ----------------------- Aaron Griffin left a very faint documentary trail. The key document is the 1830 Census. The census shows Aaron living next door to Joel and a few doors down from Milton. The census records and the birth order for Joel’s family suggest a date of birth in 1798/9 in Swanton, Vermont. He disappears after the 1840 Census. ------------------------ Joel Griffin Junior was born in Swanton according to census data in about 1801. He and his wife Clarissa are buried in the White Cemetery in Rushford, New York. His headstone gives a date of death of April 22, 1871. ---------------------------- Sophia was the last of the Griffin’s to be born in Swanton. Census records place her birth in Vermont in about 1803. Her will was probated in Kalamazoo, Mich. February 7, 1881. Sophia married Augustus Hitchcock in Caneadea, New York. -------------------------------- Laura Griffin according to census records was born in 1805 in Malone/Bangor, Franklin, New York. She married Simon Gordon in Rushford. In the 1855 NY census in Caneadea in the household of Simon and Laura Gordon we find Sophia Hitchcock and Jackson Griffin, Oramel’s son. In the 1855 and 1865 NY census records the county of her birth is listed as, Franklin. In her will her sister Sophia identified her as Laura Gordon of Moline, Ill.. The last record of her is the 1880 census in Moline, Ill. living with her daughter Helen Wheeler. ------------------------- Sophronia and her husband Solon Nichols followed their son, Rollin, to Topeka, Kansas later in their life. They are buried in the Rochester Cemetery in Topeka. Her headstone records a birth on January 25, 1807 and her death on January 10, 1893. ------------------------------------ Nancy Griffin’s date of birth is found in biographical data collected for her husband. Nancy’s date of birth is noted as 1812 in Franklin County, New York. The 1855 and 1865 NY census records list the county of her birth as, Franklin. Cemetery records for the Trinity Lutheran Cemetery in Sauk Rapids, Minn. lists her death on September 1, 1884. Nancy and her husband, Samuel were later moved to the Rushford Cemetery. In his biography Samuel’s wife is identified as Nancy Griffin. --------------------------- Samuel Griffin Genealogy Blog—samuelgriffingenealogy.blogspot.com ------------------------- Rushford and Rushford People by Helen J White Gilbert, 1910; available online.