Winder Wonderland DNA Project

Researching the genealogy of the Winder/Winders/Wynder/etc families.

Notes


Matches 701 to 750 of 3,317

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701 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Alice A. Winder, born 22 June 1856 in Illinois, who was living with her parents in 1870 and attending school. Shawnee County marriage records list the marriage of Alice Winder to Augustus White on 16 June 1885. 
WINDER, Alice Amity (I1403)
 
702 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Amanda Winder, born 20 October 1834 in Pennsylvania, who was living with her sister and brother-in-law, Alexander and Mary A. McQuiston in Waveland, Kansas at census time in 1870. Amanda married James C. Leebhart in Shawnee County, Kansas on 17 March 1873, according to county marriage records there. 
WINDER, Amanda (I1390)
 
703 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Amy Cook, formerly Winders, was disowned 24 January 1824 for marrying contrary to discipline by the Fairfield Monthly Meeting of Friends, in Ohio. The IGI of April 1988 lists a marriage on 16 December 1823 of Amey Winder and James Cook in Ross County, Ohio. The Elkhart County Atlas, published in 1874, gives the date of this marriage as 16 Dec 1822. The same publication states that James Cook moved to Goshen, Indiana in September of 1832. Amy Winder Cook died 20 July 1840, in Goshen, Indiana. In 1835 James Cook had opened a "commodious hotel opposite the Court House Square on the site of the Julian House" [in Goshen, Indiana]. His business prospered. The Elkhart County Atlas states that "the management of the inn was, however, left mainly to the landlady", as he ran the store which was adjacent to the inn. 
WINDER, Amey (I409)
 
704 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Ann Kirk, the second wife of James Winder, was the daughter of Joseph Kirk (1747-1807) and Judith Knight (1747-1820), who moved from Chester County, PA to Fayette County, PA about 1788, and then later moved northward into Crawford County, PA, where they both died. Ann Kirk's immigrant ancestor Kirk was Roger Kirk (1686-1761), who was born in Lurgan, County Armagh, Ireland and who died in Chester County, PA. He was among the early Irish Quakers who came to Pennsylvania. This Kirk family's genealogy has been quite thoroughly covered by Charles Stubbs' work previously mentioned. An extension covering descendants of Deborah Kirk, a sister to Ann Kirk Winder, is to be found in Herschel B. Rochelle's Farrington and Kirk Family, published in Hillsborough, NC in 1983. 
KIRK, Ann (I1385)
 
705 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Benjamin S. Winder, born 20 September 1840 in Pennsylvania, who lived with his parents and was a school teacher in Waveland, Kansas in 1870. The index to Civil War soldiers in the National Archives shows that Benjamin S. Winder served in the 134th Illinois Volunteer Infantry, which was apparently a "100-day" regiment. Benjamin made application for pension (Application #991249) from Colorado and received a pension on certificate #900620. His widow, Mary A. Winder, made application for widow's pension from Florida in 1914 (Application #1022034) and received a pension under certificate #777851. Benjamin enlisted at Camp Fry in Chicago, Illinois on 10 May 1864 and was discharged 15 October 1864 at Camp Fry. At enlistment he gave his occupation as student, and was described as 5 feet 6 inches tall, with dark complexion, brown eyes, and dark hair. From affidavits in his pension file his wife is established as Mary A. Ogilvie, whose first husband had been John H, Carlisle, from whom she had been divorced prior to her marriage to Benjamin S. Winder in Hartland, Kansas on 14 December 1885. The marriage certificate is in the pension file. Mary A. Ogilvie stated that she was born 17 July 1839 in Chesterville, Ohio. The pension file also shows that Benjamin lived in Kansas, Illinois, Tennessee, Colorado, Arkansas and Missouri before moving to Californa. In 1912 he and Mary moved to Lynn Haven, Florida, in what is now Bay County, where they remained until Benjamin's death on 20 January 1914, with the cause of death given as "uremic coma". J. A. Winder, Benjamin's younger brother, was the informant for the death certificate, which listed Benjamin's occupation as a carpenter, his birthplace as Pennsylvania, his father's birthplace as Maryland [which is almost certainly in error], his mother as Polly Sweney born in New York. Burial was reported as made in Lynn Haven Cemetery on 21 January 1914 by James Gard, undertaker. The widow, Mary A. Winder, continued to live in Lynn Haven, except for a short time when she lived in Hawthorne, Los Angeles County, California with a niece, Katherine Ford Dorce. Mary A. Winder died in Lynn Haven, Florida on 6 August 1921, with the cause of death given on her death certificate as "chronic dilatation of Heart". The death certificate stated that Mary's father was born in Scotland, while her mother, maiden name unknown, had been born in "W Va". [West Virginia was not yet in existence at the time of Mary's birth.] No children are known to have been born to Mary and Benjamin. 
WINDER, Benjamin Swena (I1393)
 
706 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Caleb Winder, the oldest child of James Winder of Bloomfield Township, Crawford County, PA, was born in 1796, according to the best estimates that can now be made from census records and his grave marker. This date indicates that he was born in Fayette County, PA prior to his father's move north to Crawford County, PA. It is supposed that Caleb's mother was living when the family moved to Crawford County, but no record of her has been found except as a number in the census of 1790 and 1800. Our first public record of Caleb, other than the cryptic count of the 1810 census, is the record of his service in the Pennsylvania Militia during the War of 1812. The Pennsylvania Archives and the Military Service files of the National Archives both show that Caleb served from 14 October 1812 to 31 October 1812, and was paid $3.00 at the end of his service. This service was done in the Company of Captain Nathaniel Price, attached to the 135th Regiment of the 16th Division of Pennsylvania Militia, Lt. Col. Andrew Christy Commanding. Caleb was a private in this company, while James Winder, presumably his father, served as First Sergeant, as did a Samuel Winder who has not been further identified.

Caleb probably returned to the Brownsville area in Fayette County, PA, as his oldest son, Lewis B. Winder told the story in the subscription History of Elkhart County, Indiana. Caleb learned the hatter's trade as an apprentice in Brownsville, and then at some time, apparently before 1816, he took a position as a "keelboater", and floated down the Monongahela, Ohio, and Mississippi Rivers, presumably to New Orleans. Brownsville was the site of the building and launching of many keelboats, so it would not be unusual that Caleb would venture to go on one of them down the river, as he was single and seeking his fortune, which no doubt appeared quite limited as a hat maker in Brownsville. After Caleb completed the raft journey, he stayed for some time in Natchez, Mississippi, and related that there he was stricken by yellow fever, and was shipped to St. Louis with several other victims of this outbreak of "yellow jack". The history of Natchez does in fact record that in 1816 several yellow fever victims were shipped to St. Louis for treatment, as no hospital had been established in Natchez by then. This outbreak supposedly provided the impetus to have the first hospital built in Natchez. As the story related, Caleb was fortunate enough to recover from the yellow fever, and then spent "fourteen years wandering in the wilderness" of the west. This seems a bit apocryphal, but the next record of Caleb is found in the tax list of 1826 for Bloomfield Township, Crawford County, taxed for 25 cents for one house valued at $25. In 1827 he was listed as Caleb G. Winder and was assessed at $1.13 for 88 acres of land, 1 horse, 1 ox and 1 cow. He appeared on the tax rolls in Bloomfield Township through 1831, when he is listed with no land taxable. 1831 is the approximate date of his removal to Ohio. According to his son, Elihu, Caleb was a native of Pennsylvania. In the 1830 census, Caleb Winder is shown as a head of household in Bloomfield Township, Crawford County, PA, but by the 1840 census he is listed in Randolph Township, Portage County, Ohio, as the head of a household. That household, in 1840, contained Caleb, his wife Margaret Bloomfield Winder, and seven children. The date of marriage of Caleb Winder and Margaret Bloomfield is given as 7 July 1825 according to the record in Lewis B. Winder's family Bible. The marriage is presumed to have taken place in Bloomfield Township, Carwford County, PA. No deed records were found in Crawford County, PA showing that Caleb Winder ever bought or sold land there.
...
About 1830 Lewis Bloomfield and several of his children moved to Stark County, Ohio. Caleb , Margaret, and their children soon followed him to that area. Stark County deed records show that Caleb G. Winder purchased, for $500, from Henry Botman [Boatman] and Elizabeth, his wife, about 80 acres (the West ½ of the SE ¼ of Section 26, in township 20, range 7), received by Henry Botman on patent from the U. S. Land Office at Steubenville, Ohio. This was part of the "Seven Ranges" first opened up for sale in Ohio. This description places Caleb's land about 2 miles directly south of Marlboro Village, and about 4 miles south and 1 mile east of the land bought by his father-in-law east of New Baltimore, Ohio. On 8 April 1836 Caleb and his wife Margaret sold this land in section 26 for $800 to John Baptist Menegot and his wife Mary. Only eleven days after that, on 19 April 1836, Caleb purchased 80 acres in Randolph Township, in Portage County, Ohio, and moved to that location, where he resided until his death on 13 July 1840. The land in Randolph Township was described as "part of Lot 11 in Township 1 and Range 8". Caleb's grave is in the New Baltimore Cemetery, ½ mile east of New Baltimore, in Marlboro Township, on land that his father-in-law, Lewis Bloomfield, once owned. The grave marker was extant in October 1982 and bore the inscription "CALEB WINDER, Died 13 July 1840, aged 44 years". Beside the grave was a metal marker indicating his military service in the War of 1812.

The 1840 Census shows Caleb Winder as the head of a household in Randolph Township, Portage County, Ohio, and that household consisted of 2 males 5-9 years old, 2 males 10-14 years old, 1 male 40-49 years old, 3 females under 5 years, and 1 female, 30-39 years of age. Caleb's occupation was shown as a farmer. Again, according to Caleb's oldest son, Lewis B. Winder, there were supposed to have been 8 children born to Caleb and Margaret, but if so, one of them must have died young, or completely lost contact with the rest of the family. Caleb died leaving no will - at least there is no record of probate of a will in Portage County, Ohio. His widow, Margaret, is believed to have gone to live with her parents in Marlboro Township, Stark County, and she was reported to have died there in 1842 . The family Bible record section of Lewis B. Winder's Bible states that Margaret Winder died 13 December 1842. She is believed to be buried in the New Baltimore Cemetery, but there was no marker there in 1982 for her, nor was one present when the undated "cemetery census" of Stark County, as found in the Canton Library, was taken. This cemetery census also listed a Melissa Winder as buried there. Melissa was a grandchild of Caleb and Margaret Winder, the daughter of Lewis B. Winder and his first wife, Sarah Ann Walker. No headstone was found for Melissa Winder in 1982. In 1845 Lewis M. Bloomfield, Caleb's brother-in-law, rather belatedly took out letters of administration on Caleb's estate, but there is no record of an accounting of this administration on file in Portage County. The last papers in the file indicate only that Lewis M. Bloomfield was issued a summons to show cause for his failure to file an accounting on the estate in 1846. Probably Lewis M. Bloomfield took out the administration papers because Margaret had died, leaving no adult legally responsible to look after Caleb's estate and his children.

After Caleb's death, and before 1850, it appears that the children were living with relatives or friends, perhaps some in Randolph Township, Portage County, and some in Marlboro Township, Stark County. Elihu Winder, age 18, farm laborer, born Pennsylvania, was in 1850 living with his uncle, Lewis M. Bloomfield, in Randolph Township; Amy Winder, age 10, attending school, was living with her grandparents, Lewis and Susanna Bloomfield, in Marlboro Township in the 1850 census. The other children, except for James, who was married and living in Randolph Township, have not been found in the 1850 census.
...
The children of Caleb and Margaret Bloomfield Winder who have been positively identified as such are only six in number. A seventh is believed to have been Warren Winder, who is included in the listings below. Of these children, the three oldest were born in Crawford County, Pennsylvania, and the remaining four children were born in Ohio, most likely in Randolph Township, Portage County. 
WINDER, Caleb G. (I24139)
 
707 According to Robert L. Winder (sep 2000):
Chelnessa Winder, born 17 January 1813, probably in Harrison County, Ohio. She married John Gandy on 5 October 1835 in Guernsey County, Ohio, and they remained in Freeport Ohio, in western Harrison County. The Gandy's managed a hotel in Freeport for many years. Their children are reported to have been James, Elizabeth, Caroline, Sarah J., Alonzo, Clayton, Daniel, and Franklin Gandy, The 1850 census lists the family of John Gandy as follows, in Freeport, Harrison County:
John Gandy, 48, MW, Potter, born Maryland
Chilnissa Gandy, 36, FW, born Ohio
James Gandy, 13, MW, born Ohio
Mary E, Gandy, 12, FW, born Ohio
Caroline Gandy, 10, FW, born Ohio
Sarah L. Gandy, 7, FW, born Ohio
Alonzo M. Gandy, 3, MW, born Ohio
Clayton Gandy, 3, MW, born Ohio
John and Chelnessa Winder Gandy were both members of the Methodist Episcopal Church. John Gandy bought lot #104 in Freeport on 27 October 1829, and sold that same lot to David Winder on 7 December 1844. John Gandy died on 7 November 1862, while Chelnessa was living at the age of 77, according to a local history of Harrison County, and at that age all her children except Franklin had died. Franklin Gandy, born 5 November 1854 in Freeport, Ohio, continued to live there, becoming a dealer in groceries and provisions in 1881. He married Minnie Williams of Freeport on 11 September 1884, but there are no known children by this marriage. 
WINDER, Chelnessa (I1372)
 
708 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Clarence M. Winder grew up in Portage County, bought land there, and was a farmer there all his life. Clarence died at age 77 from a heart attack which occurred while he was watching a baseball game at Sunset Park, near Marlboro, OH, in Stark County, in May of 1931. His obituary sensationally attributed his death to the excitement caused by a "terrific line drive that narrowly missed pitcher Leonard Taylor". The obituary stated that Clarence was survived by his wife, Mary Ellen, and two sons, Claude and Lewis, both of Bremerton, WA. Clarence M. Winder was born 28 January, 1854. His first marriage, according to his grandson, Eldon James Winder, was to May Minchal, who was the mother of Claude and Lewis. This first marriage ended in divorce, and Clarence later married Mary Ellen Yarian, daughter of Simon Yarian and Fatherine Floor, born in Smith Township, Portage County, OH on 6 October 1864, according to her death certificate. Mary Ellen died 23 January 1933 of a cerebral hemorrhage in Atwater Township, Portage County, OH. 
WINDER, Clarence Mandeville (I15994)
 
709 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
David Winder, born 4 April 1820, died 21 June 1881. Hannah's Historical Collections of Harrison County states that Anne Holliday, daughter of Robert Holliday and Elizabeth White, married David Winder in 1846, but this marriage was not found in the Harrison County, Ohio marriage records. David and Anne Holliday Winder moved to Louisa County, Iowa before 1850, where they resided the rest of their lives.

Daniel Winder's father, James Winder of Redstone Township, Fayette County, PA had purchased through the Steubensville, Ohio Land Office, on 27 January 1806, by Certificate #2111, the NW ¼ of Section 12, Township 11, Range 7, which land lies immediately east and north of the center of the present town of Freeport, Ohio. On 20 October 1813, James Winder deeded this entire quarter-section of land to his son, Daniel Winder. Later deed records show sales of parts of this quarter-section by Daniel and his wife Mary. Daniel sold 2.5 acres to the trustees of the Nottingham Friends Meeting, the land now occupied by Greenmont Cemetery (Deed Book B, page 523). It may be that this sale of land to the Quakers was somehow the inspiration for Hanna's claim, in his Historical Collections above-mentioned, that Daniel Winder was a charter member of the Nottingham Meeting. No evidence has been found to support this claim of Hanna's. Daniel Winder's father was not a Quaker, and the only one of his children known to have become a Quaker was Daniel's sister Elizabeth, who was received into the Smithfield Meeting, in Jefferson County, Ohio by request in 1805, under her married name of Elizabeth McGrew. On 6 December 1829 Daniel Winder and his wife Mary sold the remaining part of Section 12, Township 11, Range 7 acquired from his father to W. B. Hubbard, along with part of the SE quarter of the same section which he had acquired from Amasa Lipsey in an exchange to make Stillwater Creek the boundary between them, rather than the arbitrary survey lines. Daniel Winder and his family are recorded in both the 1820 and 1830 censuses for Freeport Township, Harrison County, Ohio, and these census records are on all fours with the listing of children given above and in Sheppard Marshall and Related Families. The latest date on which Daniel Winder has been found in official records of Harrison County is a deed of 10 April 1839 in Harrison County Deed Book I, page 535, whereby he bought lot #102 in the town of Freeport. Daniel has not been found in the 1840 census. From a quitclaim deed for the lot dated in 1852 and recorded in Harrison County Deed Book N, page 685, from Mary Winder, "widow of Daniel Winder, late of Harrison County, deceased", it appears that Daniel Winder died between April 1839 and 1852, but the date and place of his death is not known. It is reasonable to assume that Daniel died intestate. 
WINDER, David (I1377)
 
710 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Dr. Aaron Winder, born 17 October 1821, died 28 December 1882. He married Mary S. Gillam on 21 August 1846, and they had three children: William G. Winder, MD, of Andalusia, Bucks County and Philadelphia; Mary Ely Winder, who married Henry B. Knight of Bucks County; and Lawrence Johnson Winder, who also became a medical doctor 
WINDER, Dr. Aaron A. Jr. (I447)
 
711 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Edith Winder, born between 1821 and 1825 in Harrison County, Ohio. No further information concerning Edith has come to light, beyond the IGI listing that an Edith Winder married Peter Bell on 7 March 1844 in Belmont County, Ohio. 
WINDER, Edith (I1148)
 
712 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Edward Cook, born 21 June 1851, who died suddenly at age 12, "at Notre Dame, while at school, on 11 Mar 1863". 
COOK, Edward (I661)
 
713 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Eliza H. Winder, born 8 September 1849, probably in Bureau County, Illinois. There is a marriage record in Shawnee County, KS of August 1874 showing the marriage of Hannah Elizah Winder to John S. Howey. Lynn Creek Cemetery Records, cited above, show burials there, all in lot 3-8, of:
Baby Howey, born 1885, died 4 August 1885
Eliza Howey, aged 37 years, died 5 August 1885
John S. Howey, age 73, died 21 March 1915 (marker for service in Co F,
150th Indiana Infantry)
The Personal Ancestry File of Robert L. Winder, the compiler, contains 193 descendants of Hannah Eliza Winder and John S. Howey, with the count reaching 269 when spouses are included. 
WINDER, Hannah Eliza (I1400)
 
714 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Eliza Jane Winder, born 17 February 1839 in Logan County, Ohio, who married Mordecai Ellis in Jefferson County, Iowa on 27 August 1858. Mordecai and Eliza Jane Ellis moved westward to Lafayette, Yamhill County, Oregon, where she died 4 December 1917. Mordecai and Eliza Jane Winder Ellis had a son, Edwin Mordecai Ellis, born 1878 in Nebraska, died 1960 in California, who married Myrtle Bell Knight in Washington state in 1902. They had a son, Stanley Edwin Ellis, born in Washington in 1916, who was living in Galion, Ohio in 1982. 
WINDER, Eliza Jane (I314)
 
715 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Eliza Jane Winder, who was born between 1811 and 1818 (probably 1816), married Worden Armstrong, probably in Belmont County, Ohio. Although no marriage record was found in Belmont County, the IGI reports that the marriage took place there on 18 March 1837. A search of the 1850 census records for Belmont County found, in Wheeling Township, a listing (dwelling 1698, Family 1728), for the family of Worden Armstrong, as follows:
Worden Armstrong, age 42, WM, Farmer, born Pa
Eliza J. Armstrong, age 34, WF, born Ohio
David Armstrong, age 12, WM, born Ohio
George Armstrong, age 11, WM, born Ohio
Hannah Armstrong, age 6, WF, born Ohio
Amanda Armstrong, age 4, WF, born Ohio
Mary Armstrong, age 1, WF, born Ohio
The census records of 1860 and 1870 for Belmont County show that two more children were born to Worden and Eliza Jane Winder Armstrong: John, born in 1853, and Margaret E., or Elizabeth, as she was known in the 1870 census, who was born in 1856. Worden Armstrong was the son of George and Mary Armstrong. George Armstrong's will was probated in Belmont County in September 1849 and names as his legatees his wife Mary, son Warden Armstrong, daughters Margaret Ferguson, Nancy H. Armstrong, and Elizabeth J. Armstrong, as well as six grandchildren -
George Crozier, Robert Crozier, George Penrose, George Armstrong, George A. Campbell, and George Brokaw. According to grave markers found in Tombstone Inscriptions and Family Records of Belmont County, Ohio, by Esther Weygandt Powell (1969), several members of this Armstrong family are buried in Crabapple Cemetery, Wheeling Township, as follows:
George Armstrong, died 1849, aet 75 years.
Mary Armstrong, wife of George, died 1868, aet 88 years.
Warden Armstrong, died 1877, aet. 77. (Census records for 1850, 1860, 1870 show Warden's birth year as 1808.)
Eliza Armstrong, died 1885, aet. 69 years (wife of Warden).
George Armstrong, died 1858, aet. 19 years
David Armstrong, 1838-1879
Deed records of Belmont County (Vol. 69, p. 222), contain a deed of 15 October 1877, by which the "heirs of Warden Armstrong, deceased, of Belmont County", named as Eliza J. Armstrong, David Armstrong, Hannah A. Dobbins, Amanda Armstrong, Mary J. Armstrong. M. E. Armstrong, and Samuel H. Dobbins, conveyed 5 tracts of land to John Armstrong, probably the son of Warden and Eliza J. Armstrong. Samuel H. Dobbins, probably the husband of Hannah Armstrong Dobbins, was resident in Boulder County, Colorado at the time his signature on the above document was notarized.

According to Belmont County death records (vol. 1, p. 144) Warden Armstrong died 31 August 1877, aged 70 years, 7 months and 2 days. He was married, born in Pennsylvania, a resident of Wheeling Township, and died of typhoid fever. His son, David Armstrong, died 15 October 1879, aged 41 years and 4 months. He was married, born in Wheeling Township, a resident of Richland Township, a farmer by occupation, and died of typhoid (vol. 1, p. 194, Belmont County, Ohio Death Records).. 
ARMSTRONG, Warden (I1090)
 
716 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Elizabeth Ann Winder, born 30 October 1806, probably in Fayette County, PA. From information received from David V. Addington of Plano, Texas, it appears possible that she is the Elizabeth Winder recorded in the IGI as having married Jesse Chalfant in Ross County, Ohio on 21 September 1826. According to Mr. Addington's data, Jesse Chalfant, Sr., father of the Jesse Chalfant who married Elizabeth Winder, resided in Goshen Township of Belmont County, Ohio in 1820. As Elizabeth's father sold the land he was known to own in Harrison County in 1829, and did not buy any other land in that county until 1839, his whereabouts between 1829 and 1839 are really in doubt. In 1829 a Mary Winder, presumably Elizabeth's mother, bought a lot in Freeport, Ohio, which she owned until 2 April 1847, on which date "Mary Winder, single woman" sold this lot to John Denny.

Robert L. Winder, 1/19/2009:
Daniel Winder, who moved from Fayette Co., PA to Harrison County, Ohio, later to Guernsey Co., and then "disappeared" until 1839, when he sold his land in Guernsey County, had a daughter Elizabeth who was born in 1806.
Jesse Chalfant lived in Belmont Co., Ohio in 1830, I believe it was. I just looked at patents for lands sold by the Steubenville Land Office, and found a patent issued to Jesse Chalfant for 79.11 acres in Guernsey County in 1821. The land was located in section 17 of Township 9 of Range 7. So Jesse Chalfant may have been a "neighbor" of Daniel Winder and his daughter Elizabeth. Her birthday is right, it seems. 
WINDER, Elizabeth Ann (I1364)
 
717 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Elizabeth Winder, born in 1783 in Fayette County, PA, daughter of James Winder and Elizabeth Grable, was married to Nathan McGrew, son of James Blackburn McGrew and Elizabeth McFerran McGrew, prior to 2 July 1802, on which date is found an entry in the minutes of the Redstone Monthly Meeting of the Friends' Society condemning Nathan McGrew for marrying out of unity. Apparently Nathan was returned to the good graces of the Quakers, as on 28 January 1805 he was granted a certificate to move from the Redstone Monthly Meeting to the Short Creek MM in Jefferson County, Ohio. He was received on this certificate at the Short Creek Meeting on 17 August 1805. His wife Elizabeth was later received by the Short Creek Meeting by request on 15 August 1807. The Smithfield Monthly Meeting, also located in Jefferson County, recorded the death of Nathan McGrew as 19 May 1849. This year appears to be in error, as Nathan McGrew's will was probated in May of 1840 in Jefferson County (Will Book 3, page 171). Smithfield Monthly Meeting also recorded the death of Elizabeth McGrew, wife of Nathan, on 3 November 1844, aged 61 years, buried in Smithfield, Ohio. Both the will and the Quaker records show the children of Nathan and Elizabeth Winder McGrew to be:
Jane McGrew, born 9 October 1803, who married John L. Naylor.
Eliza McGrew, born 1 December 1805, whose married name was Clapp in 1838,
disowned by the Friends on 23 April 1827 for marrying contrary to discipline.
James W. McGrew, born 17 June 1808.
David McGrew, born 15 October 1810
Thomas McGrew, born 26 April 1813
Finley McGrew, born 17 December 1815
Deborah McGrew, born 8 June 1818, died 8 August 1819, buried Smithfield, Ohio
Samuel McGrew, born 8 February 1822
Mary Rebecca McGrew, born 17 December 1823
Smithfield Monthly Meeting Records also show the family of John L, Naylor, born 19 March 1800 and Jane McGrew, daughter of Nathan and Elizabeth, who were married 26 February 1823 in Smithfield Meeting House, as follows (John Naylor died 24 April 1863):
Elizabeth Naylor, born 4 January 1824, died 9 February 1826
Eliza Ann Naylor, born 21 July 1826
Rebecca Naylor, born 9 August 1829, 14 February 1835
Nathan M. Naylor, born 8 October 1832
Samuel G. Naylor, born 13 February 1835
William Bates Naylor, born 7 January 1837
Oliver Price Naylor, born 11 June 1843

David McGrew, son of Nathan and Elizabeth Winder McGrew, is probably the David McGrew recorded as buried in New Alexandria Cemetery, Cross Creek Township, Jefferson County, Ohio, who died in 1882 at the age of 72 years. The same cemetery is said to contain markers for "many children of D & R McGrew". Smithfield Monthly Meeting also recorded that on 21 October 1850 a Samuel C. McGrew (perhaps the son of Nathan and Elizabeth), was granted a certificate to Flushing MM, Belmont County, Ohio, to marry Rachel P. Hoge. On 21 April 1851 Rachel P. McGrew was received at Smithfield on certificate from Flushing MM, and then on 21 February 1853 Samuel C. and Rachel McGrew were granted a certificate of removal back to Flushing MM. Flushing MM recorded the death of Samuel C. McGrew on 23 July 1862. Smithfield MM records also list the marriage, on 21 January 1818, of Finley B. McGrew, brother of Nathan McGrew, to Aletta Carr. 
WINDER, Elizabeth (I1379)
 
718 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Elizabeth Winder, born in Pennsylvania, married John Webster on 2 May 1805 in Ross County, Ohio. This marriage is also listed in Ohio Marriages cited above. After the death of her sister Mercy, Elizabeth married Levi Warner, the second marriage for both of them. Elizabeth and Levi had two children, J. (John?) Woodrow Warner, born 23 October 1823 near Chillicothe, and Levi Warner, birth date unknown. Elizabeth Winder Warner died 8 April 1852, aged 57 years, according to a history of Warren County, Ohio published in the 1880's. In 1852 Levi Warner moved to Clark County, Ohio, where he died 9 March 1853 at Selma, Ohio. Before his death Levi Warner married a third time with Mrs. Margaret Smith, nee Wilson. J. Woodrow Warner, son of Levi and Elizabeth Winder Warner, was a farmer and also worked in a general store, probably in Waynesville, Warren County, Ohio. On 22 March 1849 he married Mahala Hadley, who was born 25 February 1827 in Clinton County, Ohio, the daughter of John and Ruth Hale Hadley, natives of North Carolina. It is not known if J. Woodrow Warner had any children. 
WINDER, Elizabeth (I5549)
 
719 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Elizabeth Winder, who married in April 1759 Joseph Linton, a brother of Elizabeth Linton Winder above. Elizabeth Winder Linton was married a second time to David Feaster on 2 April 1795. The will of Mary Linton of Northampton Township (Bucks County Will Book 3, p. 339), written 10 Jan 1765, proved 1 Oct 1783, lists "grandson Nehemiah Linton, son of Joseph", among her legatees. 
WINDER, Elizabeth (I272)
 
720 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Florence Belle Jenney, born 17 September 1878 at Greenwich, Ohio. Florence went to Greenwich High School and began her studies at Oberlin Conservatory in the fall of 1894. After two years of study she taught for several years, and then received her Mus B degree in 1907. She then joined the Oberlin Conservatory faculty. On 28 June 1919 she married James Husst Hall, who came to Oberlin as an undergraduate, receiving his MusB degree in 1914, his AB in 1915, and finally his MA in 1922. Their only child, James Truman Hall, was born 24 June 1920. He attended the public schools in Oberlin, Ohio, graduating from
Oberlin High School in 1938. He was a student at Oberlin College in 1942 when he entered the US Marine Corps, and became a pilot. James T. Hall lost his life in a plane crash in the Pacific theater on 20 October 1943. Florence Jenney Hall taught singing until 1944, and her husband taught history and criticism of music at the Oberlin Conservatory until 1955. James Husst Hall died in 1967, and Florence Jenney Hall died 22 March 1975 at the age of 96. She is buried in Westwood Cemetery, Oberlin, Ohio. 
JENNEY, Florence Belle (I1084)
 
721 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Francina (Fannie) A. Winder, born 9 September 1846 in Illinois. In the 1870 census she was listed as Frances Young, 23 years old, living in the household of her parents. Her presumed husband, George Young, listed in the same household, was a 24-year-old farmer, born in New Hampshire. Shawnee County marriage records show the marriage of Fannie A. Winder and George W. Young on 21 October 1869. F. A. Young gave her address as Overbrook, Osage County, Kansas in an affidavit dated 16 May 189- in her mother's pension file. Fannie A. Young, "aged 68 years, residing near Overbrook, County of Osage, Kansas", and George W. Young, "aged 68 years, residing near Overbrook, County of Osage, Kansas", in an undated affidavit in the pension file of Mary A. Winder, widow of Benjamin S. Winder, stated "That Fannie A. Young is the sister of Benjamin S. Winder and George W. Young her husband, and that they have lived and visited together from time to time all their lives. That they know that Mary A. Winder is the widow of Benjamin S. Winder, and that Benjamin S. Winder was married to her 14 December 1885, she being Mary A. Carlile. That the said Benjamin S. Winder was never married prior to this marriage." 
WINDER, Frances Ann (I1398)
 
722 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
From Martha Daniels Winder's obituary, it seemed that Elizabeth, who may also have been known as Jane or Jessie, probably had two sons and perhaps three daughters, although records have not been found to verify any children of this marriage. 
WINDER, Elizabeth J. (I1304)
 
723 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Hannah Winder, born 23 Oct 1742, according to the IGI, who married Timothy Brooks in 1770. Falls Monthly Meeting of the Friends reported that Hannah Brooks (late Window) was disowned on 6 Jun 1770 for marrying out of unity. Mrs. Carol Divine Briggs, a descendant of Timothy Brooks and Hannah Winder Brooks, reports that Timothy and Hannah had three children: John Brooks, born ca. 1774, who married Sarah Hubbard on 4 Mar 1796 in Somerset County, NJ; Sarah Brooks, birthdate unknown, who died unmarried; and Mercy Brooks, who married Jacob Subers and had nine children by that marriage.. 
WINDER, Hannah (I284)
 
724 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Hannah Winder, born 5 October 1815, married Alfred Green, moved to Money Creek Township, Houston County, Minnesota, where the 1870 census (household number 68/68) listed the family as follows:
Alfred Green, 60, MW, Farmer, born NY
Hannah Green, 55, FW, Keeps House, born PA
Olive Green, 20, FW, born PA
Mary Green, 18, FW, born PA
Mattie Green, 16, FW, born PA
James Green, 14, MW, born Iowa (?)
Emily Green, 12, FW, born Iowa (?)

From: rlwind@tricountyi.net
Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 1:59 PM
[snip]
Just took a four-week trip with stops in Ohio, INdiana, Iowa, No Dak, Minn and Wisconsin to do some genealogical research and otherwise just have fun!
[snip]
On this last trip I found the grave of Hannah Winder, who married Alfred Green and moved from PA to Iowa, up to SE Minn for a while, and then back down to Allamakee County, Iowa, where she died. Allamakee County is quite amaxingly scenic - deep valleys and wooded ridges, and quite rural still.
Also checked on her daughter Hattie Green Barton, who homesteaded up in Rat Roor Township, just SE of International Falls, about 1903, as a widow with four sons! She had courage!
Best wishes, Bob 
WINDER, Hannah (I1415)
 
725 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Isaac Winder, date of birth unknown. He is probably the Isaac Winder listed as head of household in the Washington County census of 1800.

This might be the same Isaac:
From: "Robert Herbert"
Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2001 2:51 PM
Source: MD-FRED-GEN-L@rootsweb.com
[snip]
I am looking for my Schweiger and extended families. My ancestor is John Schweiger and Anna Maria. John Schweiger d. 1810 he married Anna Maria
Children;
Elizabeth b. abt. 1763
John m. Margaretha
Dorothea m. Isaac Winder
Sybilla m. Simon Ward
Catherine
Anna Maria m. Peter Lederman. She was was christened March 10, 1776 at Evangelical Lutheran or Lutheran Congregational of Zion Church, Middletown, Frederick Co., Maryland

My direct line is Elizabeth Schweiger who married Johann Philip Studer son of Philip Studer and Mary Margareta.

Thank you to anyone who can help me. Dena 
WINDERS, Isaac (I638)
 
726 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
James Allen Cook, born 23 July 1849, who for many years was Acting Cashier of the First National Bank of Elkhart. 
COOK, James Allen (I660)
 
727 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
James Alonzo Winder, born 12 December 1851, probably in Illiois. An affidavit in the pension file of Mary A. Winder signed by J. A. Winder and stamped as received by the Pension Office on 31 March 1914 states: "That he is the brother of Benjamin S. Winder who was the husband of the … claimant and as such knows that Benjamin S. Winder's first and only marriage was to Mary Carlile… that he is not married and has either lived with Mary A. Winder and Benjamin S. Winder or has been in correspondence with them ever since their marriage and knows that they were never divorced…The affiant was a member of the household at the time of his brother's death…" 
WINDER, James Alonzo (I1402)
 
728 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
James Winder, born about 1764 in Bucks County, PA. James married Deborah Allen, probably in Washington County, PA., on 27 March 1799, and died in Ross County, Ohio in 1815. James had moved with his family to Chester County, PA and then moved from Kennett Square Meeting in Chester County to Redstone Meeting in company with his sister Hannah in 1795. Redstone Meeting records show his transfer to Westland Monthly Meeting on 1 March 1799. Deborah Allen Winder was the daughter of Joseph Allen and Deborah Hill Allen. The date of James and Deborah's move into the Northwest Territory is not known exactly, but they had moved there by 1802, when James and Deborah sold their share of the lands of Deborah's father, which land had been divided equally among Joseph Allen's children in 1800. R. Winder Johnson's Winders of America states that five children were born to James and Deborah Winder, but guardianship papers for the minors and legal representatives of James Winder, issued to their uncles, William Chandler and Benjamin Kerns on 3 November 1818 list only four children of James and Deborah Winder : John Winder, Jr.; Eamy Winder, Margaret Winder, and James Winder. Apparently all these children were under fourteen years of age at the time of their father's death. Deborah Winder signed over her right to the administration of James' estate to William Chandler and Benjamin Kerns, and they carried out the administration of the estate. An accounting shows payment of $151.50 on 21 August 1815 to the Receiver of Public Monies at Cincinnati, Ohio, which probably indicates payment on land for which James Winder had filed with the U. S. Land Office in Cincinnati. Receipts Register D of the Receiver, Cincinnati Land Office, series 410-1813-17, receipt #29438 to James Winder of Ross County, Ohio for $147.20. This was evidently the final payment, as James Winder of Ross County, Ohio was entered as the purchaser of land on 20 October 1815 in Range 13, Township 9. Deborah Allen Winder remarried in Ross County, Ohio, marrying Thomas Smith on 24 Feb 1818. It appears that the children may have lived with their mother until her remarriage, but then went to live, perhaps, with the families of James' sisters. 
WINDER, James (I222)
 
729 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
James Winder, second child of Caleb and Margaret Bloomfield Winder, was born in 1828 in Bloomfield Township, Crawford County, PA, and moved to Stark County, Ohio with his family in 1832, and then into Portage County, OH in 1836. James' residence from his father's death in 1840 until 1850 is not known, but it is probable that he lived with his mother until her death. The earliest public record found is that of his marriage to Lucy A. Moreland (Morlan) on 9 October 1849 in Stark County, OH. Lucy Ann Morlan was the daughter of Hosea Morlan and Ann Ingledue Morlan, and the sister of Martin Hosea Morlan, who married James' youngest sister, Amy Winder. The Morlans were Quakers, and the Marlboro Monthly Meeting records show that Lucy Winder (formerly Morlan) was disowned on 27 July 1850 for marrying contrary to discipline. The marriage of James Winder and Lucy A. Morleland is recorded in the Stark County Marriage Records, Book B, at page 346.

On 12 October 1850 the census taker recorded James Winder and family in Randolph Township of Portage County, Ohio (as household #569, family #578). James was age 22, a Farmer, with real property valued at $1400, and born in Pennsylvania. His wife, Lucy A., is listed as age 18 and born in Ohio. It appears that James and Lucy moved to Hardin County, Ohio for a short while in the early 1850's. A deed recorded in Portage County under the date of 22 October 1852 , shows that James Winder and Lucy, his wife, "of Hardin County, Ohio", conveyed to Lewis M. Bloomfield (James' uncle) "a part of lot No. 11 in Randolph, 42 3/8 acres (except as much as was heretofore deeded to Lewis M. Bloomfield by Lewis Winder)." This prior sale was recorded as for "the undivided 7th part of a lot of land", which was described identically to the land bought by Valeb G. Winder in Randolph township in 1836, and was not recorded until 1854. This latter deed is evidence of the survival of seven children of Caleb and Margaret Winder. Why had James gone to Hardin County?
Probably because his aunt and uncle, Thomas McCall, and Judith Bloomfield McCall (his mother's sister), had previously moved to Hale Township, Hardin County, OH, and had probably urged their nephews and nieces to join them there. It seems quite likely that James' younger brother, Elihu, accompanied them to Hardin County and simply decided to stay there when James and Lucy returned to Portage County

James did not remain in Hardin County for long, as he bought additional land in Portage County in 1853 and later, and was listed in Randolph township again in the 1860 census (#719/715) as:
James Winder«tab»«tab»32MW, Farmer, $1000 real estate«tab»Born PA
Lucy Ann Winder«tab»29FW, «tab»«tab»«tab»«tab»Born OH
Sebastia K. Winder«tab» 9FW«tab»«tab»«tab»«tab»«tab»Born OH
Clarence M. Winder«tab» 6MW«tab»«tab»«tab»«tab»«tab»Born OH
Sally Moreland«tab»31FW«tab»Tailoress«tab»«tab»«tab»Born OH
According to family sources, "Sebastia K.", listed here as a female, was really Sebastian Cabot Winder, a male, described by the family as a "bachelor artist". This family reputation as an artist may have stemmed partly from a letter of about 1920 to William Clark Winder, Sr., his cousin in Mt. Victory, OH, from Florida, humorously describing, with ink drawings, the conditions in Florida at that time. A death certificate is indexed for Sebastian C. Winder, recorded in Portage County, Ohio, on 24 April 1926. Sally Moreland, Tailoress, is probably the sister of Lucy Ann, although this has not been confirmed. Sebastian and Clarence were the only two children of James and Lucy Morlan Winder. 
WINDER, James (I14847)
 
730 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Jane Winder, who married John Slack. They lived in Lower Makefield Township, Bucks County, PA, where Jane Winder Slack died in March of 1784. Jane and John Slack had seven sons who survived their parents: Cornelius, Phillip, Thomas, Joseph, Timothy, John and Noah Slack, as mentioned in the wills of both their parents. Jane and John Slack's wills are recorded in Bucks County Will Book 4, Jane's at page 326, John's at page 406. 
WINDER, Jane (I417)
 
731 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
John Cook, born 3 December 1825, who married Martha Winder his first cousin) on 19 October 1848 in Elkhart County. For several years John assisted his father in his business, then in 1854 he went into the banking business as a partner in the Salem Bank of Goshen. John acted as Cashier of this bank, which continued under his management until the bank was sold in 1865. In December 1865 John Cook removed to New York, where for a year and a half he was engaged in the commission house of Robertson & Cook. He then returned to Goshen. Soon after his return he became a stockholder and Cashier of the First National Bank of Elkhart and moved to that city, where he still resided in 1874. He also became a partner in the Elkhart Paper Mill. 
COOK, John (I658)
 
732 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
John Winder, born 25 June 1814 in Fayette County, PA, married Martha A. Daniels at an unknown date, and after the settlement of his father's estate moved to Morgan County, Ohio (later Noble County, Ohio by a change of boundaries in 1851). John and Martha apparently spent their entire lives from 1847/48 in what became Olive Township in Noble County. John was a farmer during his entire active life. He died on 22 May 1894 in Olive Township, and was buried there in Sharon Cemetery. He and Martha became charter members of the Caldwell Baptist Church upon its organization in 1861. According to his death certificate, John Winder died of "paralysis". Martha Daniels Winder was born in 1823 in Uniontown, PA, the daughter of Bernard Daniels (Dannels) and Jane Parshall Daniels. She died at Caldwell, Ohio on 31 August 1898, and her death record gave her age as 75 years. At the time of her death she was survived by a brother, Nelson B. Dannels of Menallen Township, Fayette County, PA. A second brother, Henry or Harlan, died in Grand Island, Nebraska about the same time as Martha died.

From: "R L Winder" rlwind1@nmax.net
Sent: Thursday, July 07, 2005 7:37 AM
Subject: John Winder, Guardian of Robert Jackaway Winder
I believe I am now prepared to hypothesize that the guardian of Robert J. was the John Winder [snip]. This John was a grandson of James Winder "of Redstone", and that may strengthen a belief that Robert Jackaway Winder's father, Samuel, may also have been a son of James Winder of Redstone. This John Winder was the only one I found in the 1840 census in Fayette County. His age fits with his birthdate from his grave marker out in Ohio, and the fact that he married his wife, who was from Fayette Co., before he moved to Ohio. Only catch is - Robert was not in his household in 1840 ! Even then I reckon Robert Jackaway Winder was a bit of a wild boy, eh?
No facts, ma'am, just suppositions! 
WINDER, John (I1146)
 
733 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Joseph John G. Winder, born 31 January 1843, who was killed in the battle of Shiloh, Tennessee in 1862 while serving in the Union Army.

SOURCE:
Cemetery Records for Washington County, Maryland -Conococheague Chapter NSDAR. Samuel Webster Piper and Dale W. Morrow.
Volume One
ANTIETAM NATIONAL CEMETERY - JOSEPH WINDER PVT/C/107/INF/PA DIED 19 OCT 1862/SMO 
WINDER, Joseph John (I204)
 
734 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Joseph Winder, born 22 April 1805, who married Amy Taylor, then moved to Ohio, where he died in 1851 in Randolph Township, Portage County. Joseph and Amy Taylor Winder had ten children, two of whom died in infancy. They moved to Harrison County, Ohio shortly after their marriage on 10 June 1828, but soon moved on to Portage County.

7/21/2008 from Robert L. Winder
Amy Taylor, bio #11036, and he husband, Joseph Winder, bio #11035. Both of these entries contain statements that Joseph Winder was born "in Bloomfield, Franklin County, Ohio", giving the source as Marie Malark ...[snip]... and the IGG. If that info IS in the IGG, its a rather gross error on someone's part. This Joseph Winder was a half-brother of my 2ndpgrt-grdfather, Caleb G. Winder. Joseph was born in Bloomfield Township, Crawford County, PA, where his parents lived from about 1805 until their deaths in 1860 and 1861. I surely can't account for this continuing error about this matter. So if this statement in those two biographies could be changed, I would much appreciate it, Ann! 
WINDER, Joseph (I11035)
 
735 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Judith Winder, born 16 April 1812, married David Nash in Ohio, then moved to Elkhart County, Indiana. Judith Winder apparently moved to Portage or Stark County, Ohio, either with her brother Joseph or her half-brother Caleb, prior to 1837. 
WINDER, Judith (I1411)
 
736 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Katherine Winder, born 14 March 1779, married James Laughlin of Fayette County, who was born 11 November 1774, the second of nine children born to Hugh Laughlin (1750-1830) and his wife Mary Ann (Polly) Breading (1753-1830). It is though that Katherine and James Laughlin were married in Fayette County in 1796 and then moved to Erie County, PA, where they were recorded in the 1800 census. They apparently lived most of the time in Girard Township, Erie County. They are both buried in the Girard Cemetery, as are their two youngest children, Hannah and David. The known children of James Laughlin and Katherine Winder are:
1. Elizabeth (Betsy) Laughlin, born 1798, who married ______ Crawford.
2. Mary (Polly), born 1800, married in 1822 to James Porter. Their only
known child was Alexander Laughlin, born about 1824.
3. Nancy Laughlin, born 1802, who married John Hay.
4. Hugh Laughlin, born 1804, who married (1) Mary George in 1828, (2) Mrs.
Mary E. Schwartz Campbell, and (3) Mary E. Broyles. Children by the first
wife, Mary George, were:
A. James H. Laughlin (1829-1902), married Mary Bishop.
B. Martha Laughlin (1831-1916), married Daniel Trout.
C. Margaret Laughlin (1832-1907), married A. Trout.
D. William G. Laughlin (1834-1905), married Margaret Grey.
E. Johnson R. Laughlin (1836-1907), married Elizabeth Smallridge.
F. Mary Elizabeth Laughlin (1838-1907), married Henry Byers.
G. Harriet Jane Laughlin (1841-1922), married Samuel Creek.
H. John H. Laughlin (1843-1861)
I. Stewart C. Laughlin (1845-1915), married Serrilda Schwartz.
5. Margaret Laughlin, born 1806, married Jacob Van Loon.
6. Sarah (Sally) Laughlin, born 1809, married James Rouse in 1835.
7. Adam Andrew Laughlin, born 1811, married Mary Taylor. Their known
children are Mary A., born 1841; Clara L., born 1846: Eugene, born 1849.
8. Katherine Laughlin, born 1813, married Rufus N. Flint.
9. James M. Laughlin, born 1815, married Fanney L. Laughlin. Known children
are Hubert, born ca. 1844; Hugh, born ca. 1846; and Catherine, born ca. 1849.
10. Hannah Laughlin, born 1819, died 1819.
11. David Laughlin, born 1820, died 1830. 
WINDER, Katherine (I1087)
 
737 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Knight Kirk Winder, born 8 May 1819, married first Nancy Ann _____, moved to northeastern Ohio, probably Ashtabula County. He married Ella S. Parker on 28 June 1874 in Ashtabula County, and his only known child, Henry Winder, was born
10 May 1875 in Ashtabula County, Ohio. 
WINDER, Knight Kirk (I1419)
 
738 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Lee Mortimer Jenney, born 27 August 1876 in Greenwich, Ohio. In 1894 he entered Oberlin Academy.In the following year he was classified as a college freshman, and graduated from Oberlin College in 1899 with a Bachelor of Arts degree. He received his MA in 1906. He became a landscape architect and was located at various times in Steubenville, Ohio; Chicago, Illinois; Oberlin, Ohio; Fairhope, Ala.; Roseacres, Miss.; and Dallas, Texas. He married Maude Ethel Fales on 1 November 1905. He died in Dallas, Texas on 7 November 1936 as the result of an automobile accident. He was survived by his wife and two children, Warren Fales Jenney and Frances Elizabeth Jenney. 
JENNEY, Lee Mortimer (I15941)
 
739 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Lewis B. (Bloomfield?) Winder, oldest child of Caleb and Margaret, was born 26 April 1825 in Crawford County, PA, and moved with his family to Stark County, Ohio, and then to Portage County, Ohio. Lewis apparently lived in Portage County until 1865, as his name is found on several deeds prior to that time. Lewis related later in life that he had gone to school only until he was 12 years old, and "even then, being the oldest in his family", he was frequently "compelled to remain at home and perform manual labor with his father, who was a farmer and also a hatter by trade." A deed dated 21 October, 1854, on record in Portage County, Ohio, records the sale by Lewis B. Winder and Sarah Ann, his wife, to Lewis M. Bloomfield, the "undivided 7th part of lot of land in Randolph Township (80 acres)". An earlier deed of 22 October 1852, from James Winder and Lucy Winder, his wife, "of Hardin County, Ohio", conveyed to Lewis M. Bloomfield " a part of Lot. No. 11 in Randolph, 42 3/8 acres (except as much as was heretofore deeded to Lewis M. Bloomfield by Lewis Winder)". It appears that Lewis M. Bloomfield, brother of Margaret Bloomfield Winder, ended up owning the 80 acres that Caleb Winder had acquired in Randolph Township, Portage County.
...
Lewis B. Winder married Sarah Ann Walker, the daughter of Thomas Walker and Hannah Battershell, on 14 October 1848 Lewis and Sarah had two daughters, only one of whom grew to maturity. Their first child, Melissa, was born 25 July 1849, in accordance with an entry in Lewis B. Winder's family Bible, and died on 12 June 1854. Melissa is supposed to be buried in the New Baltimore, Ohio Cemetery, but no marker for her has been found. Their second daughter, Emma Winder, was born on 10 August 1854, as recorded in her father's family Bible. Sarah Ann Walker Winder died on 12 June 1875, and she was buried in South Union Cemetery in Locke Township, Elkhart County, Indiana. Lewis then married Mary Ann Berlin on 14 October 1875. It is thought that Lewis and his family moved to Elkhart County early in 1865. Chapman's History of Elkhart County, published in 1881, mentions on page 1045 that the town of Locke was laid out in 1867 by George W. Eby, M. H. Morlan, and L. B. Winder. The first mail was carried to the town of Locke by Lewis B. Winder in 1869, and the first postmaster of Locke was J. D. Lake. [Could this have been J. H. Lake, Lewis' brother-in-law?] Lewis was a rural mail carrier for several years, and then he became the owner of a hotel in Locke. Later, in 1884, he traded his farm at Locke for "the hotel property", thus becoming the proprietor of a hotel in Nappanee, IN, which was known as the "Napanee House". One account of this name says that it was caused because of a mistake in painting the name on the building, and the decision that there wasn't room enough to redo the sign and put in the second "P" ! Sometime after 1888 Lewis apparently moved back to Locke Township, as he is reported to have died there on 12 Oct 1904, and his grave marker is in South Union Cemetery, in Locke township, Elkhart County, IN. The Napanee House closed as a hotel in March 1908. A news article from the Nappanee News in 1888 mentioned that L. W. Winder of "Mt. Victor" [Mt. Victory], Ohio, was visiting his uncle, Lewis B. Winder, "the genial proprietor". Lewis' only child to reach maturity was Emma A. Winder. Emma married Jacob B. Pippenger on 4 October 1874 in Elkhart County. Both Emma and Jacob are also buried in the South Union Cemetery. Jacob died in 1923 and Emma died in 1939. Jacob and Emma had two children, Bessie, who was twice married, first to Otto Wilt, and secondly to Roy Huffman 
WINDER, Lewis Bloomfield (I1427)
 
740 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Margaret Bloomfield was the daughter of Lewis Bloomfield and his wife, Susannah Kirk, who were married 26 June 1806. Margaret's mother was a sister of Ann Kirk, the second wife of Caleb's father, James Winder. James Winder's first wife remains unknown at this time. Margaret Bloomfield was born 12 December 1807 in Bloomfield Township, Crawford County, Pennsylvania. This township had been named, upon its organization, after Margaret's grandfather, Thomas Bloomfield, who was one of the first settlers of the township. Data concerning this Bloomfield family is based on A Genealogy of the Kirk Family by Chas. H. Stubbs, published in Lancaster, PA in 1872. We have rather conclusive evidence as to James Winder being the father of Caleb Winder in the obituary of the widow of James Winder's oldest son by Ann Kirk (his second wife), which described her as the aunt of L. B. Winder, Amy Morlan, and Rebecca Wisler, all of whom were the children of Caleb Winder and Margaret Bloomfield. In the 1830 census for Bloomfield Township, Crawford County, PA, Caleb is listed as the head of a household that consisted of 2 males 5 years or younger, 1 male 20-29 years of age, 1 female, 15-19 years of age. It seems that the actual ages of Caleb and Margaret were closer to 34 and 23 years, respectively. 
BLOOMFIELD, Margaret (I24150)
 
741 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Margaret Thompson, formerly Winder, was disowned by the Fairfield Monthly Meeting of the Friends 28 September 1824 for marrying contrary to discipline. The April 1988 IGI also lists the marriage of Margaret Winder to George Thompson on 1 April 1824. The Elkhart County Atlas of 1874 states that Margaret was "the widow of George Thompson, who resides in Beardstown, Illinois". 
WINDER, Margaret (I411)
 
742 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Mary A. Winder, born 5 September 1836 in Pennsylvania, who married Alexander McQuiston 11 August 1859. Alexander was born in Pennsylvania 7 February 1834 and is reported to have lived there until 1855, when he moved to Illinois. He is reported to have moved to Kansas from Illinois in July 1858. The 1870 census listed Alexander and Mary in Monmouth Township, Shawnee County, Kansas, and showed two children, Mary, 10 Years old, and Ida, four months old, both born in Kansas. According to Andreas' History of Kansas (page 599) published in 1880, Alexander McQuiston was a farmer who owned 160 acres in "Section 10, P. O. Topeka", with about 60 acres under cultivation and the rest in orchard, native meadow, and pasture, and had five horses, twenty head of cattle and 34 hogs. He is said to have acquired his land by U. S. patent. Both Alexander and his wife were members of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Alexander was in 1880 a Justice of the Peace, having served five terms, and he also served on the local school board. The records of Lynn Creek Cemetery, as published by
the Topeka Genealogical Society, show the burials there, all in lot 3-4, of:
Alexander McQuiston, born 7 February 1834, died 27 June 1917
Eddy McQuiston, died 5 May 1870, betrween 3 and 4 years old
Ida McQuiston, 6 years old, died 20 January 1876
Mary A. McQuiston, age 49, died 7 April 1886 
WINDER, Mary Abba (I1391)
 
743 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Mary Ann Winder, born 25 June 1817, married Azzan Gillett 8 January 1837, and then moved to the west, apparently to Illinois, Minnesota, then Missouri, and died on 14 September 1872 in Edwardsville, Wyandot County, Kansas. Azzan Gillett
was born in New York 5 August 1810, died in Missouri 10 September 1870 or 1878. He was the son of Henry and Eleanor Gillett. 
WINDER, Mary Ann (I1417)
 
744 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Mary Winder, born 18 June 1814. Mary Winder married Lawrence Johnson, had at least nine children, and died 16 Feb 1877. The ninth child of Lawrence and Mary Winder Johnson was Robert Winder Johnson, the author of Winders of America, published in 1902. He was born 7 May 1854 in Philadelphia, PA and in 1879 joined his father's firm of Lawrence Johnson & Co., importers, exporters, and bankers. Besides research on his Winder ancestry, R. Winder Johnson carried out research on his Van Pelt, Van Sandt, and Van Horn ancestry. He married Rosalie Morris, daughter of George Calvert and Elizabeth Kuhn Morris on 10 November 1887. They had four children: Morris Winder Johnson, born 5 July 1889 in Philadelphia; Lawrence Edward Johnson, born 9 July 1892 at Lansdowne, PA; Robert Winder Johnson, Jr., born 19 August 1894 at Lansdowne, PA; and Rosalie Eugenia Johnson, born 12 Oct 1900 in Philadelphia, PA. 
WINDER, Mary (I840)
 
745 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Mary Winder, born about 1776 in Bucks County, Pa., married Isaac Warner at Hockessing Meeting House, Delaware, according to Hinshaw's Index to Quaker Records at Kennett Square, MM. John Warner, born 12 July 1798 at High Bank, Ross County, Ohio, is the only known child of this marriage. Mary Winder Warner died 21 April 1811 in Ross County, Ohio. 
WINDER, Mary (I231)
 
746 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Mary Winder, whose married name was McCowen, according to her father's will. As Mary was not mentioned in her brother Daniel's will of 1795, it is probable that she died between 1785 and 1795. 
WINDER, Mary (I444)
 
747 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Mercy (Marcy, Massie) Winder, born in Pennsylvania, married Levi Warner on 10 April 1805 in Ross County, Ohio, and died prior to 1823. The marriage record is cited in Ohio Marriages, Extracted from the Old Northwest Genealogical Quarterly, editor Marjorie Smith. Levi was born 12 February 1771 in Chester County, Pa., the son of John and Lydia Woodrow Warner.
Levi Warner, although a member of the original Quaker settlement at High Bank, is said to have gone from there to Philadelphia after a short stay. In Philadelphia he worked in the customs house for about three years before returning to Dry Run, where he then married Mercy Winder. Levi had a farm in Ross County, Ohio, where he engaged primarily in stock raising and livestock dealing, and annually drove herds of cattle to the Philadelphia market for many years. Mercy Winder Warner and Levi Warner are said to have had six children, five of whom are known by name only as Annie, Massey, Lydia, Simeon, and Abner. 
WINDER, Mercy (I5548)
 
748 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Mercy Winder, mentioned in her father's will as Mercy Darlling. Mercy was not mentioned in her brother Daniel's will, and the chancery suit of 1804 listed her as deceased. She probably died before 1795. 
WINDER, Mercy (I640)
 
749 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Moses Winder, born 20 December 1823, died in April 1864. Moses married Margaretta Thornton on 25 December 1844, and six children, five of whom reached maturity, were born of the marriage: Sarah, born 1849, who married Walter Richards Johnson of Bensalem, Bucks County; Anna Louisa, born 4 February 1854, who married Isaac Holborrow Robertson on 6 April 1885; John Ely Winder, born 1857 and died 1866 (?); Aaron Augustus Winder, who was born 15 February 1859, married Jane Slugg on 12 October 1880, and died 5 September 1903.
According to Robert L. Winder (Jul 2008)
Moses Winder and his wife, Margaretta Thornton, were in Middletown, Bucks Co, in 1850. Moses was a farmer, owned real estate valued at $7,600. Margaretta is listed as age 23, daughter Sarah, age 1, all born in PA. Anna Thatcher, 25, and Joseph Rush. 10, were living in the household.
By 1860, Moses and Margaretta had moved to Clinton Township, Vinton County, Ohio. Their youngest son, Augustus A., was born in PA in 1859, so their move to Ohio was after that date. The census lists their children as Sarah, 11; Mary, 9;
Anna, 7; John, 3; and Augustus, 1. They were all born in PA. Living in the household are Joseph Rush, 21; Martin Van Horn, 23; and Joseph Barns, 26. All are listed as farm laborers and were born in PA.
Moses bought 449 acres of land in Vinton County, but on July 15, 1862, that land was sold at sheriff's sale (Vinton County Deed Book 8, page 583). The sale was aksed for by Mary W. Johnson "of Philadelphia" (Moses' older sister), and was bought by Mary W. Johnson. No precise information on date of Moses' death, but he apparently died in Vinton County, Ohio, although no death record could be found for him or for any of his children. Mary Winder Johnson later sold the land to another unrelated party before her death.
Margaretta Winder was still living in McArthur, Ohio in the census of 1870, listed as a 43-year-old housekeeper. Only Anna, 16, and Augustus, 11, were living with her and arrending school.
In the previous information concerning Moses' children, it was stated that his daughter «b»Sarah«/b» married Walter R. Johnson "of Bensalem" . However, the 1880 Census for Bensalem, Bucks County, PA has the following listing:
H/F # 148/152
Johnson, Walter R. WM,28 Farmer b. PA-ENG-PA
Johson, «b»Mary«/b» R. WF,27,wife Keeps hse b. PA-PA-PA
Johnson, Winder L. WM, 2. son b. PA-PA-PA
Winder, Margaret WF,53, boarder b. PA-PA-PA
Winder, Annie L. WF,26,boarder b. PA-PA-PA
Plus two laborers and one servant in the household.
My conclusion is that the marriage info as previously stated was incorrect.
As it is, the marriage of Walter Johnson and either Sarah or Mary Winder
would have been a marriage between first cousins, which is not considered
legal under PA law. Other marriage information previously given can not be borne out by census records, and Walter R. Johnson cannot be identified in any census records beyond 1880! 
WINDER, Moses (I675)
 
750 According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000):
Rachel Winder, who was married to John Snebely by 1785, when her father's will was written, and who was a party to the Chancery suit of 1804. From correspondence with Mrs. Betty Jo Gilmore of Sacramento, CA, we know that John Snebely adopted the spelling of Snavely for his surname. The same source gives Rachel Winder's birthdate as 2 Oct 1751 and John Snavely's birthdate as 10 Aug 1759. John and Rachel lived in Washington County, MD for many years, but then moved to Greene County, Ohio, where they both died, John on 17 Dec 1819 and Rachel on 7 Dec 1822. 
WINDER, Rachel (I642)
 

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