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The parents of Mary Ann Brown Pulsipher John Brown and Sarah Fairchild Brown
John Brown was born Feb. 27, 1770 in Kent, Litchfield, CT. His father was Joseph Braun and mother was Judith. John married Sarah Fairchild in 1792. They were the parents of 11 children: Judith was born Nov. 2, 1793, John was born Aug 25, 1795, Eunice August 4, 1797, Mary Ann was born March 22, 1798, Thirza came to the family on July 11, 1802, in Kent, Litchfield, CT. Sarah (Sally) was born February 27, 1805, Catherine joined the family on August 13, 1808, she was born in PA. Hyrum and Suzan both came along in 1809 in Susquehanna, Pennsylvania. Loring Grant was born April 17, 1811 and an unidentified child was born in about 1812 in PA. Mary Ann Brown, our grandmother, was the fourth child born to this couple. Does not remember the Brown grandparents as they died when her father was very young. She remembers well the Fairchild grand parents. Her maternal grandparents were Stephen (born between 1723-1726 in CT) and Eunice (born June 28, 1725) (maiden name unknown) Fairchild. Stephen was the son of Samuel (born 1683 in CT) and Dinah Burwell (born Oct. 28, 1694 in CT) Fairchild. This Samuel was the son of Samuel Fairchild (born Aug 31, 1640) and Mary Wheeler (born Sept 13, 1665) Fairchild. Samuel was the son of Thomas (born about 1610 in England) Fairchild and Sarah Seabrook Fairchild. Historical
Background & Fairchild Genealogy Charles the First was the inept king of a war-torn, violent
and bloody England in the 1630s. In 1635, English colonization of Connecticut
began as John Winthrop led his English settlers into Connecticut. The town of
Windsor was founded by religious refugees from Dorcester, Massachusetts. New
Haven was founded in 1638. In that same year, Anne Hutchinson was expelled from
the Puritans' Massachusetts Bay Colony because she was a dissident. Englishman Thomas Fairchild, was about 28 years old when he left Cambridge,
England in 1638 along with his group and their minister, the Reverend Adam
Blakeman. They made it across the Atlantic Ocean and arrived on the coast of the
small Connecticut colony. In 1639, they settled in the wilderness & founded
Stratford, Connecticut. Thomas's first wife was one of three daughters of
Robert Seabrook [who was quite old at his first coming to Connecticut] and of
Alice Goodspeed Seabrook. The three sisters were born in Wingrave,
Buckinghamshire, England. Thomas Fairchild's two sisters-in-law married Thomas Sherwood and
William Preston of Giggleswick, Yorkshire. All were founders of Stratford in
1639. Thomas Fairchild became a Deputy from Stratford to the General Court and served eleven sessions from April 1646 to October 1665. In those days this office was similar to that of an elected Justice of the Peace of today. Thomas' son Samuel Fairchild born in 1640, was probably the first white child born in Stratford. Thomas Jefferson was born in Philadelphia in 1643. These were insanely chaotic and deadly times in Europe.
Life was coarse, short and brutal. In 1642-47, civil war was raging in England.
In 1649, Charles I was tried and beheaded; England was declared a Commonwealth
under Oliver Cromwell. Between 1629 and 1642 over 60,000 Englishmen came to the
New World, about half of them to the Puritan colonies. But immigration was
curtailed by the outbreak of civil war in England, with massive bloodshed,
executions by beheading and marching armies at war. In 1662 Charles II, King of
England married Catherine of Bragança, daughter of King João IV of Portugal. In 1680, nearly a decade after his father's death, Samuel
Fairchild married Mary
Wheeler, daughter of Moses Wheeler. Samuel
and Mary had a son named Samuel Jr., born in 1683. In January 1705, a
year after his father's death in 1704, Samuel married Ruth Beach (daughter of
John Beach and Hannah Staples Beach) . Ruth and Samuel Fairchild Jr. had a son named Benjamin, who was born on March 21, 1721 in Stratford. When he was about 33 years old, Benjamin Fairchild married Melissa Hall, daughter of Joshua Hall of Fairfield, Connecticut. They had seven children: Peter, Ruth, Mary, Benjamin Jr., Joshua, Deborah and Isaac, who was born in 1771 in Stratford. This family lived for many years in Townsend, Norfolk Canada. Allegedly, the reason for Benjamin Fairchild's settling there in the first place was that he was a loyalist (Tory), siding with the English against the American independence. There was an old story about one of his sons, Benjamin Fairchild, Jr. who was taken prisoner by the Mohawk Indians and [many years later] was hired by the British government to interpret for them in doing business with the Indians. As far as I know, he was the only person in my family other than myself to become an interpreter/translator. Benjamin's contemporaries in Canada around 1787 included
respected Indian chieft of the Mohawk tribe, and white men Moses Mound and Caleb
Reynolds. Benjamin Sr. died in Canada in 1795. In 1797, after his father's death, Joshua
married Elizabeth Cooley Olmstead of Greenwich, Hampshire, Massachusetts.
Their son Joshua, Jr. was born in Townsend, Norfolk, Canada. Joshua Fairchild, Jr. claimed that he had fought in the
battle for Queenstown Heights. That was in October 1812, when he would have been
only 15½ years old. Fighting was vigorous and bloody in this area. The
Americans were pushed back and his father's tavern at Niagara was burned. In 1818, Joshua Fairchild
married Mary Skinner, the Baptist daughter of Benjamin Skinner. Presumably his
uncle Peter Fairchild performed the marriage ceremony. After the death of Joshua's first wife in August 1823, her
parents took the three children to live with them in Townsend, Norfolk County,
Canada. Joshua Jr. bought land at Table Grove in Vermont Township, Illinois. He
married again and had a child named Harvey, born in 1824. He lived with this
wife, Harvey's mother only about a year and a half..".... I was then 400 miles from my first children. I went for them
and never saw my wife again." Joshua Fairchild, Jr. married a third time to Prudence
Fenner, a mormon widow with two children. "We
lived together eight or ten years and were blessed with three children."
In 1831, Joshua and Prudence went from Ohio with a group to northwest Missouri.
Two sons were born to them: Alma and Moroni were born in Clay County, Missouri
in 1833 and 1835 respectively. Moroni Fenner Fairchild was born the 19th of September 1835
in Clay County, Missouri, the son of Prudence Fenner and Joshua Fairchild, Jr.
His parents separated about 1837. He was the youngest of three children, having
one sister, Elizabeth and one brother, Alma. These three children were raised by
their mother after their father disappeared. In 1852, the three children went
west with their mother in the Mormon 6th Company, under the command of Captain
David Wood. They were among the Mormons who had been persecuted in Missouri and
were compelled to flee. On the 18th of January 1855, Moroni hooked up with Harriet Lucinda McMurray, who was born July 18, 1840 in Columbiana, Ohio. She was not yet fifteen years of age when they were married.· Harriet's older brother Joseph McMurray married Moroni's sister Betsy Fairchild. Moroni & Harriet had 15 surviving children: Moroni Joshua, Mosiah, Seymour, Adalaid, Isadora, Joseph (died after being dragged by a horse at age 12), John Harvey, Mary Arletta, Emma, Elneva, Rachel, Fanny Lucinda, Alice, Birdie Estella and Harriet Elizabeth. Mosiah Fairchild was my great-great grandfather. I know very little about my great grandfather Mosiah Fairchild. I do know that he was Mormon, and in 1885, he married a Swedish Mormon woman named Augusta Fredricka Nielson. She was born in Mashult, Skaraborg, Sweden and was a daughter of Johannes Nilsson. She was almost 18 years of age when they married in Utah. Mosiah sold his famous Fairchild liniment from a
horse-drawn buggy around Idaho and northern Utah.· Mosiah was only 45 years old
when he was killed by a steam locomotive in a railroad switching yard while
returning home in a snowstorm with horse & buggy from Belleview, Idaho. Was
it a suicide? His young wife was left a widow. * 536–537. Thomas Fairchild was born in England in 1610, and died in Stratford,
Connecticut, on December 14, 1670. His will was dated December 7, 1670. Sarah
Seabrook was born in Wingrave, Buckinghamshire, England, in about 1608, and
died before 1661. Her first name has been given as Faith or Johanna. She is the
daughter of Robert and Alice (Goodspeed) Seabrook. They had seven children:
His second marriage was to Catherine
Craigg. She died in Connecticut in May, 1706. They had three children:
Thomas "ffayrechilde"
was a merchant who came from England to Stratford, Connecticut, about
1638&150;39. He was one of the original settlers of Stratford and a
prominent citizen. He held many official positions: Deputy (Stratford) to Conn.
Legislature 14 times: Apr. 1646, Sept. 1654, May 1655, Oct. 1655, Oct. 1658, May
1659, Oct. 1659, May 1660, May 1664, Oct. 1664, Oct. 1665, May 1666, Oct. 1666,
May 1667; Judge (Stratford town), May 1664; Commissioner for Stratford, 1664 and
1666–1670; war committee for Stratford, Oct. 1654. Land records of 1670 show that
his sons, Thomas and Samuel, received gifts of land from their grandfather,
Robert Seabrook. Later land records show that Zechariah received gifts of land
from his brothers Samuel and Thomas, from Jehiel Preston, and his mother,
Katharine Judson. His will was read January 10,
1670/1 and mentioned his wife, Katharine; son Samuel (who received the
"ferry land"); son Zechariah; daugher Dinah; son Thomas; daughter Emm.
It did not mention the children by Katharine. Sources: ·
· Frost,
Wright W., The Frosts and Related Families
of Bedford County, Tennessee, 1962, p.53 (LDS Lib SLC). ·
· Some
data from United Ancestries Co. database, March 31, 1987. ·
· Jacobus,
Donald Lines, Families of Ancient New
Haven, vol. IV ·
· List
of Officials in Connecticut and New Haven Colonies 1635–1665, p.978. ·
· Jacobus,
Donald Lines, Families of Ancient New
Haven, vol. VI, p. 1479 ·
· Jacobus,
Donald Lines, History and Genealogy of the
Families of Old Fairfield |