 1772 - 1854 (81 years)
-
| Name |
Ann Mabee |
| Birth |
25 May 1772 |
Westchester County, New York |
| Gender |
Female |
| No Name |
1792 [1] |
- The Mabee party, it is said, started for Upper Canada in the
fall of 1792, but they wintered in Quebec and did not reach
Turkey Point until some time in 1793. They drove twelve cows,
rode horses, and employed an Indian guide to pilot the way
through the wilderness
Some members of the family claim that the settlement was made
as early as 1791, while others say it was not made before 1794;
but Mrs. Mabee and her family were living there in a
comfortable log-house at the time of Governor Simcoe's visit in
1795. The grave of Frederick Mabee was there also, and a piece
of ground known as the "Indian fields" had been cleared of its
light growth of timber and cropped; all of which makes it
appear quite reasonable that the family may have settled there,
at least as early as 1793.
The Mabee party consisted of Frederick Mabee and wife; Oliver
Mabee, their eldest son, aged about nineteen; Simeon, the
second son, aged about seventeen; Pellum, the youngest son,
aged about twelve - at least, these were the ages of the sons
at the time of the Governor's visit; two single daughters -
Polly and Sally; and two married daughters - Nancy and Lydia,
with their respective husbands - John Stone and Peter Teeple.
It is said that Peter Secord, also, came with the Mabee family
|
| No Name |
1793 |
Turkey Point, Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada [2] |
- Ann Mabee immigrated with Frederick Mabee and Lavinia Pelham
1793 Turkey Point, Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada
|
| Name |
Nancy |
| Name |
Stone |
| Death |
20 Apr 1854 [3] |
| Notes |
- From the Maybee Society files. Not all data is verified. Say dates are estimates and are probably within 20 years. The Maybee Society keeps its data on The Master Genealogist�, and has been modified by Gary Hester?s WIT2NOTE� to form the GedCom file. This information is also available in a TMG file.
|
| Person ID |
I38729 |
Glenn Cook Family |
| Last Modified |
30 Nov 2006 |
| Father |
Frederick Mabee, b. 1734/1735, Yorktown, Westchester County, New York d. 1794, Turkey Point, Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada (Age 59 years) |
| Mother |
Lavinia Pelham, b. 1740, New Rochelle, Westchester County, New York, USA d. Aft 1823 (Age 84 years) |
| Marriage |
1765 [3] |
| Census |
10 Jul 1784 |
Belle Hill in Beaver Harbour, , Ontario, Canada [4] |
- Roll of Loyalists Settled at Belle Hill in Beaver Harbour has
an entry: Frederick Maybee, wife Levina, children above 10:
Lydia, Elizabeth, Oliver, children under 10: Mary, Sarah,
Simon, Frederick.
|
| Anecdote |
1792 [1] |
- The Mabee party, it is said, started for Upper Canada in the
fall of 1792, but they wintered in Quebec and did not reach
Turkey Point until some time in 1793. They drove twelve cows,
rode horses, and employed an Indian guide to pilot the way
through the wilderness
Some members of the family claim that the settlement was made
as early as 1791, while others say it was not made before 1794;
but Mrs. Mabee and her family were living there in a
comfortable log-house at the time of Governor Simcoe's visit in
1795. The grave of Frederick Mabee was there also, and a piece
of ground known as the "Indian fields" had been cleared of its
light growth of timber and cropped; all of which makes it
appear quite reasonable that the family may have settled there,
at least as early as 1793.
The Mabee party consisted of Frederick Mabee and wife; Oliver
Mabee, their eldest son, aged about nineteen; Simeon, the
second son, aged about seventeen; Pellum, the youngest son,
aged about twelve - at least, these were the ages of the sons
at the time of the Governor's visit; two single daughters -
Polly and Sally; and two married daughters - Nancy and Lydia,
with their respective husbands - John Stone and Peter Teeple.
It is said that Peter Secord, also, came with the Mabee family
|
| Family ID |
F551604063 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
| Family |
John Stone, II, b. 1767 d. Yes, date unknown |
| Marriage |
Abt 1792 |
Prince William, , New Brunswick, Canada [5] |
| Anecdote |
Turkey Point, Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada |
- John was possibly born in Massachusetts in 1769. After the
American Revolutionary war ended, John and his father left the
American States and boarded ship for New Brunswick Canada,
Settling in Prince William. Soon after marrying Nancy Mabee ca
1792, they joined her parents in their move to Upper Canada and
were the first white settlers at Turkey Point, Norfolk Co. in
1793. He received a grant of land as a United Empire Loyalist,
that being Lot 18 Con. I (Broken Front), Charlotteville Twp. on
the North Shore of Lake Erie.
|
| Children |
|
| Family ID |
F551604362 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
| Last Modified |
30 Nov 2006 |
-
| Sources |
- [S1269] E. A. Owen, Book - Pioneer Sketches LongPo, (William Briggs, Toronto, 1986, Original Date, 1898
from Helen Bingleman, bingleman@sympatico.ca), SKETCH 5 (Reliability: 3).
- [S1233] Barbara Miller, Barbara Millar, A SKETCH BY W.B. WATERBURY, PUBLISHED IN THE SOUTHERN COUNTIES JOURNAL, ST. THOMAS, IN 1899, (Reliability: 3).
- [S1248] Royal A. Mabee
Royal's information was principally based on interviews with
descendants. There is a significant chance for error in his
dates for early generations
The original of Royal's notebook is at the New York
Genealogical and Biographical Soc, Royal A Mabee's notebook.
- [S1268] Steve Mabie, Chronology of Ontario Canada, "ROLL OF LOYALISTS SETTLED AT BELLE HILL IN BEAVER HARBOUR - 10TH JULY, 1784" (Reliability: 3).
- [S1268] Steve Mabie, Chronology of Ontario Canada, ACCORDING TO WILLIAM D. REID IN LOYALISTS IN ONTARIO (Reliability: 3).
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