Dolly Jones1

F, #30661

Family: Daniel Carter b. 21 Nov 1762, d. 29 Jul 1824

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectN
Corresponded with authorN
MarriageSep 22, 1784Berlin, Worcester Co., MA, USA1,2,3,4
Children+14 children

Citations

  1. [S96] NEHGR, 87 [1933]: 201.
  2. [S814] Marshall L. McClanahan, Houghton, John & Beatrix - MLM;, M, p. 45.
  3. [S36] Letter, from Polly Furbush, Nov. 1, 2002: Descendants of John Houghton.
  4. [S281] Berlin MA VRs, p. 145.

Samuel Carter1

M, #30662, b. 1788, d. 1864

Family: Delia Meriam

Biography

Corresponded with authorN
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectN
Birth17881
Marriage1
Death18641

Citations

  1. [S96] NEHGR, 87 [1933]: 201.

Delia Meriam1

F, #30663

Family: Samuel Carter b. 1788, d. 1864

Biography

Corresponded with authorN
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectN
Marriage1

Citations

  1. [S96] NEHGR, 87 [1933]: 201.

Charles Myrick Carter1

M, #30664, b. 3 May 1822

Family: Martha Howard Thurston b. 30 Mar 1824

Biography

Corresponded with authorN
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectN
BirthMay 3, 1822Lancaster, Worcester Co., MA, USA1
MarriageAug 5, 1847Lancaster, Worcester Co., MA, USA1

Citations

  1. [S96] NEHGR, 87 [1933]: 201.

Martha Howard Thurston1

F, #30665, b. 30 March 1824

Family: Charles Myrick Carter b. 3 May 1822

Biography

Corresponded with authorN
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectN
BirthMar 30, 18241
MarriageAug 5, 1847Lancaster, Worcester Co., MA, USA1
Biographydau. of Silas and Parney (Howard) Thurston of Lancaster

Citations

  1. [S96] NEHGR, 87 [1933]: 201.

Nellie Parney Carter1

F, #30666, d. 15 January 1933

Biography

A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectN
Corresponded with authorN
BirthLancaster, Worcester Co., MA, USA1
Gen. Soc.Jun 19, 1923Boston, Suffolk Co., MA, USA, NEGHS1
DeathJan 15, 19331
BiographyShe lived a retired life in Boston, residing at the Hotel Touraine and the Hotel Ritz-Carlton. She paid the largest individual personal income tax in Boston in 1914 and 1916. In memory of her father and mother she built the Carter Memorial Hospital (now a maternity hospital, part of the Clinton, MA. hospital).1

Citations

  1. [S96] NEHGR, 87 [1933]: 201.

Benjamin Houghton1,2

M, #30677, b. circa 1782, d. 24 June 1855

Family 1: Amy Cummings b. c 1789, d. 5 Apr 1850

Family 2: Nancy Manning

Biography

Corresponded with authorN
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectY
Birthcirca 1782VT, USA, Woodward: Pownal Records: 1785; family records give Dec 13 1780; age 64 in 1850 census; Jenks: age 73 at death in18554,5,6
Marriage7
1810 Census1810Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, 1 M 26/45, 1F 0/10, 1F 16/268
DeedApr 5, 1813Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, Stephen Eldred, tax collector of Pownal, for 96 cents paid by Benjamin Houghton of Pownal, for the small house of Samuel Wright in Pownal (Pownal deeds 7:371 FHL film 028,676)9
WarningsJan 11, 1817Bennington, Bennington Co., VT, USA10
1820 Census1820Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, 7 Individuals: 2 male 0-10, 1 male 26-45; 2 female 0-10, 1 female 10-16, 1 female 26-4511,12
1830 Census1830Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, 7 Total: 1 male 5 to 10 (1821-1825), 1 male 40 to 50 (1781-1790)// 2 female under 5 (1826-1830), 2 female 5 to 10 (1821-1825), 1 female 40 to 50 (1781-1790)13
1840 Census1840Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, 5 Total: 1 male 10 to 15 (1825-1830), 1 male 50 to 60 (1780-1789) // 2 female 10 to 15 (1825-1830), 1 female 50 to 60 (1780-1789)14
1850 Census1850Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, Benjamin, age 64, a farmer, property $1400; Rachel, age 23; E. Davis, 20; Celeste ?, 18; and C. H. Cummings, 236,3,15
MarriageFeb 2, 1851Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA16
ResidencePownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA
WillDec 1, 1853Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, Joseph Thompson of Pownel executor; Listed: wife Nancy, Betsy Jepson, Laura Wheeler, Marie Kirk, Rachael Cummins, William T. Houghton17
DeathJun 24, 1855Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, age 734,18,1
BurialJepson Farm/Reuben Jepson Farm Yard, Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA19,4,1
Probate1Aug 25, 1855Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, Listed: wife Nancy, Betsy Jepson, Laura Wheeler, Marie Kirk, Rachael Cummins, William T. Houghton
Duplicate
Duplicate
ContributnMargaret R. Jenks and Jane Woodward contributed most of the genealogy of Benjamin Houghton of Pownal, VT
ResearchThe Cemetery at Reuben Jepson's Farm by Jon Fitch
In the south-easternmost corner of Vermont, there exists a maze of old roads, old homesteads and an old cemetery called the Cemetery at Reuben Jepson's Farm. Many of the old roads, the cemetery, and the histories of the residents of the cemetery are overgrown with the trees and atrophication of almost two centuries of inattention. Consequently, any speculation about the routes that brought these people together can be little more than an interesting story. So take the following for what it is; parts of this are documented, most of it is fairly self-consistent, but, in truth, much of it is circumstantial, and some of it may not even qualify as a good story.
Today, if one drives from Williamstown, almost to the end of what starts out to be White Oaks Road, one meanders past the homestead that once was Reuben Jepson's Farm. At just about the highest point in what remains of the road, off to the south (left), behind an outcropping of granite, one will find a small cemetery that contains the graves of eight people who died between 1834 and 1858.
The road to Reuben Jepson's Farm is what is left of a connector between the old "High Road" (from Williamstown to Bennington) and what was once a labyrinth of roadways interconnecting the small farms south and east of Pownal, Vermont. Today, the road ends just a few hundred yards beyond the cemetery. The remains of the old road, past where today's road ends, are barely distinguishable . . . much like the histories of the residents of the Cemetery at Reuben Jepson's Farm. And like the road, one can, today, only speculate about the original path that brought these eight people to Reuben Jepson's Farm.
It would seem likely that the original road past the cemetery probably ran on the south side of the cemetery, rather than on the north side as it does today. It appears that until fairly recent times, the road followed a more gentle incline than the up-and-down route that it follows now. With the advent of bulldozers and motor powered vehicles, it probably became more popular to run the road between properties, rather than through them.
The harvested fields on Reuben Jepson's Farm have apparently been on the hill on the Massachusetts side of the property for many years. In the nineteenth century, the conventional wisdom for establishing towns on the prairies was to locate the housing on one side of the road or railway, and the businesses on the other; if a severe fire occurred, one might lose his home or his business, but not both. If a similar "wisdom" prevailed at the close of the eighteenth century, then the farmstead at Reuben Jepson's Farm might have been organized with the fields along the south side of the road, and the buildings along the north side. Or, the barnyard may have been along the south side of the road, next to the brook that runs (at least in the springtime) through the northwest comer of the property.
If the road did indeed run along the south side of the promontory upon which the cemetery sits, then the cemetery would have had a commanding view of the hills surrounding the Hoosic River and the convergence of the New York, Massachusetts, and Vermont state lines. To any picnic enthusiast, this and another similar promontory along the old road would have been \ would be lovely places for picnics. Perhaps it was a favorite place for Minerva Seeley to picnic as well.
The people interred at the Cemetery at Reuben Jepson's Farm are:
Minerva Seeley died 22 May 1834 at age 19
Hiram B.Horton died 28 October 183 8 at age 26 years, 28 days
Lyman Houghton died 8 January 1840 at age 22 years, I month, 4 days
Joseph Horton died 26 August 1840 at age 62
Amy Houghton died 5 April 1850 at age 61
Sarah A. Houghton died 8 April 1850 at age 20
Benjamin Houghton died24Junel850\55 at age 73
Harriet Horton died 26 October 1858 at age 69
The Jepson family, starting with David and Priscilla, established themselves in Pownal in the 1760s; the Seeleys (spelled Seelye in the Pownal town records, and likewise for the remainder of this document) seem to have come from the Northampton area at about the time of the Revolution; the Houghtons were an established Lancaster family, and apparently arrived in Pownal as a family in the late 1770s; and the Hortons showed up in the first decade of the 1800s.
According to information in Book III of the Pownal town records, Reuben Jepson was the second of twelve children of David and Priscilla Jepson, and he was born in Pownal on 4 March 1788, and died on 15 January 1824. Pownal records indicate that Reuben had an older brother, but by the early 1800's, Reuben had clearly assumed the role of eldest son. In October of 1808, David Jepson sold one parcel of land to Reuben, and indentured another parcel contingent upon David and Priscilla being allowed to live thereon for the remainder of their lives.
The known families of the people interred in the cemetery are
Joseph Horton and his wife. Harriet
and their children,
Russell born 15 July 1807 died 16 May 1826
Mary born 5 August 1809
Hiram born 21 Sept 1812 died 28 Oct 1838
Harriet born 28 Jan 1815
Louisa born 23 Mar 1817
Elinor born 17 Feb 1822
Malvina born 29 Feb 1824
Aurela born 29 Dee 1826
Joseph Jr. born 27 Tune 1828 died 19 June 1829
Benjamin Houghton and his wife, Amy (perhaps originally Cummings) and their children, Emelia born 23 Jan 1809
Betsey born 3 Nov 1811
William Towner born 7 Dee 1814
Laura born 18 Mar 1816
Lyman born 23 Nov 1818
Maria born 12 Jan 1820
Rachel born 19 June 1826
Sarah A. born 11 April 1830 died 8 April 1850
There does not appear to be any direct marital connections between the families connected to the cemetery; Reuben Jepson's "cousin", Thomas Jepson married Betsey Houghton, the daughter of Benjamin and Amy Houghton, and later, a John Jepson married Joseph and Harriet Horten's daughter, Aurilla. But none of Benjamin Houghton's family married any of the Seelyes, or the Hortons, or any immediate relatives of Reuben Jepson. And none of the other marital combinations seem to have occurred either.
Minerva Seelye is reputed to be the daughter of Barnes and Anna Seelye, but the Pownal town records do not support this; the town records indicate a Barnes Seelye family of
Barnes Seelye and his wife, Bethiana And their children,
Sylvanus Danforth born 7 July 1822
Ephraim, 2nd born 3 Sept 1824
William born 27 Feb 1827
Mason born 1 Apr 1830
Furthermore, the Williamstown Vital Records indicate that Barnes Seeley and Bethana Shaw were married on 3 September 1820. Minerva, born in about 1815, would have been born prior to the marriage of Barnes and Beth[i]ana, and somewhat early to fit nicely into the Barnes Seelye family. It would seem possible that Minerva could have been a daughter of the Reuben Seelye, mentioned as a neighbor of Joseph Houghton in a land transaction in 1799. Both a Barnes and a Reuben Seelye are shown as sons of Ephraim Seelye and wife in the Williamstown Vital Records. Later references to the Ephraim Seelye children refer to his wife as Eleanor.
TheEphraim Seelye family included
Ephraim Seelye and his wife, Eleanor (Eleanor died 19 July 1821)
And their children,
Sarah born 16 Jan 1773
Reuben born 7 Jan 1775
Barn[e]s born 22 Apr 1777
Moses born 8 May 1779
Miranda born 18 Nov 1785
Minerva born 21 Apr 1787
Ephraim born 27 Aug 1789
Damon born 23 Oct 1791
Eleanor born 23 Nov 1793
Electa born 20 July 1799
Regardless of which of Ephraim's sons was Minerva' father, she was apparently the namesake of her aunt.
The Pownal - Houghton census data are shown on the following page, along with lots of relational data that are about as verifiable as the road beyond Reuben Jepson's Farm just after a snow, on a foggy morning!
The 1790 census data show two Joseph Houghtons, and then, in 1800, there is only one Joseph Houghton who was too young to have been either of the 1790 Josephs. So, the 1800 Joseph could have been a son of either of the 1790 Josephs. Assuming that the Joseph Houghton of 1800 is one and the same as the Joseph Houghton of 1810, then this Joseph Houghton would have been born between 1765 and 1774.
According to Bennington County records, a Joseph Houghton died in about 1818, and left four minor children to be placed into the guardianship of Eunice Yates and Sylvanus Danforth. These minor children were Charles born -1802
Eunice born -1804
Joseph born -1807
Betsey born -1810
This matches very nicely with the census data for the Joseph Houghton of 1800 and 1810.
Assuming that the Benjamin Houghtons recorded in the census data from 1810 through 1850 are all the same person, then Benjamin would have been born in either 1785 or 1786, and he would have been about 4 years old in 1790 and about 14 in 1800. So he could have been any one of the three males under 16 years of age listed as members of the combined Joseph Houghton households in 1790.
Information in a journal written by Betsey Houghton would lead one to believe that Benjamin would have been the son of a Joseph (and Martha) Houghton. Since the only possibility for a 14 year old Houghton male in 1800 Pownal would be in the Silas Houghton household (not shown), perhaps Benjamin was living with brother\uncle Silas in 1800, or perhaps he struck out on his own, or perhaps he happened to have returned to the home of his grandparents or other non-Pownal relatives in 1800.
There is a point to all of this rambling about who the ancestors of Benjamin Houghton could or might have been: In trying to assess "how" and\or "why" the residents of the Cemetery at Reuben Jepson's Farm wound up in Pownal, it becomes helpful to know "who" really got there first. And, one Joseph Houghton shows up in the pay records of Captain Seth Pomeroy in July of 1746, and again in August through October of 1747. Particularly significant is that on 7 July 1747, General Dwight directed Captain Pomeroy that "find[ing] myself obliged for the safety & protection of Fort Massachusetts to send recruits there to relieve such as have been long there on hard duty . . . You must immediately repair there with thirty of your men & take the command of that fortress."
Since it would appear that Joseph Houghton enlisted in Captain Pomeroy's regiment explicitly for said purpose, he was most likely at Fort Massachusetts (five miles south of Reuben Jepson's Farm) in the autumn of 1747. Since the protection of Fort Massachusetts eventually proved uneventful, it is quite likely that Joseph Houghton had a fair chance to enjoy an autumn in the hills of northwestern Massachusetts and southwestern Vermont.
It would seem to be a fair possibility that the Joseph Houghton born in 1720 might also be the ' Joseph Houghton with three sons and two daughters in the 1790 census, and might be Captain Pomeroy's Joseph Houghton, and might be the same Joseph Houghton who also later appears, stationed at Fort Number 4 (now Charlestown, N.H.) This repeated involvement with the military and the French and Indian War might make social life for a young man somewhat unstable, and would seem a plausible explanation for why a Joseph Houghton, apparently born in 1720, would wait until 1762 to wed Martha Snow, and start a family.
Joseph and Martha (Snow) Houghton produced three daughters before Martha died in about 1766. Joseph then married Suzanna Brooks, and had five children, whose ages would correlate very nicely with the five children associated with the first Joseph in the 1790 census: In 1790, son, Sanderson would have been about 23; daughter, Anna would have been about 21; daughter, Mercy would have been about 19; son, Joseph would have been about 18; and son, Henry could have been under 16.
Note that this Joseph and Suzanna's eighteen year old son, Joseph, could very easily have been the same Joseph that orphaned four children, above. However, I would happily lead you down the path to believe that Joseph and Suzanna packed up their family shortly after 1790, and moved back to eastern Massachusetts, and that the younger Joseph that pops up in the 1800 and 1810 census was the son of the second 1790-Joseph Houghton and his wife, Martha.
These explanations for one of the 1790-Joseph Houghtons and for the 1800/1810 Joseph leaves the other 1790-Joseph, and Martha, and Benjamin (the object of this line of investigation) still in question. The Joseph born in 1720 had a cousin-once-removed, Joseph, born in 1746 who could satisfy the equations, although at this point there is little information to corroborate such a notion. The Joseph of 1746 seems to have been orphaned at the age of about 17, and may very well have welcomed the opportunity to move to the frontier with his "uncle". The overall picture might be that Joseph married Suzanna in Bolton, Massachusetts, and at the wedding party or some other big family gathering, talked his "cousin" into joining him in the move to Pownal.
Regardless of whether the Joseph Houghton of Pomeroy's regiment was also Suzanna's husband, Pomeroy's regiment was typically mustered in Northampton and Northampton was the home of several Seelye families in the mid 1700's. It seems fairly probable that an expedition of Seelyes and Houghtons left the Northampton area to establish roots in Pownal and Williamstown. Then, a couple of Seelye generations later, Minerva Seelye would be growing up in the same neighborhood as the Houghtons . . . near the Reuben Jepson Farm.
Following the assumption that both of the Joseph Houghton's of the 1790 census had sons that they also named Joseph, that would provide four, mature Joseph Houghtons in the same neighborhood during at least a portion of the 1790s. Certainly this might lead to some confusion, and it could be the justification for one of the young Josephs to change his name to Joseph Horton. There has been some speculation that such a name change occurred, and the age of either of the young Josephs could be coincident with the census data for Joseph Horton. However, the "disappearance" of this Joseph in the 1800 census is puzzling, and there may be reasonable statistical evidence that Joseph Horton is one of the Joseph Hortons in the 1800 New York census. In fact, the earliest emigration routes into the Pownal area were established by the Dutch ' coming into the area from New York. It is much easier to imagine a horse drawn wagon carrying one of the seven New York Joseph Horton families of 1800 through the relatively low hills south and west of Pownal than to imagine pulling the same wagon of Massachusetts' one-and-only Joseph Horton of 1800 through the Berkshires.
Surely, by this point, you have recognized that this random walk through the backroads of Vermont history (and mythology) has brought you no closer to any verifiable answers than when you started reading. Certainly, there are lots more paths remaining to be tested: There have been a couple of Wisconsin people who have claimed (in the early 1990s) family ties to Joseph and Harriet Horton . . . But, they don't live in the same places any more. The link of Joseph Houghton to the Northampton area might afford a trail to the definitive solution of Benjamin Houghton's ancestry. Or, most likely, someone will read this, and when they finish chuckling at all of this speculation, they will respond with clear evidence regarding the routes that truly led these people to Reuben Jepson's Farm.20

Citations

  1. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT: VT Division of Records, Middelesex, VT, F-30270.
  2. [S724] Alden M. Rollins Vermont Warnings Outs II, p. 13.
  3. [S415] E-mail Jane Louise (Karpe) Woodward, 1998.
  4. [S415] E-mail from Margaret R. Jenks, 9/1998.
  5. [S415] E-mail Jane Woodward, Oct. 1999: Card in file of Bennington VT Hist. Soc. Genealogy Library.
  6. [S1226] 1850 U.S. Federal Census , Pownal, Bennington, Vermont; Roll: M432_921; Page: 145; line 7, dwl 158-162.
  7. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Book 1, p. 367: VT Division of Records, Middelesex, VT, F-30270.
  8. [S235] U.S. Census, 1810 US Census, Pownal, Bennington, VT, p. 107.
  9. [S415] E-mail to Charles Vella from Margaret R. Jenks, 9/1998.
  10. [S723] Alden M. Rollins Vermont Warnings Outs I, p. 13.
  11. [S235] U.S. Census, 1820 US Census, Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, p. 119.
  12. [S1223] 1820 U.S. Federal Census , Pownal, Bennington, Vermont; Roll: M33_126; Page: 233.
  13. [S1224] 1830 U.S. Federal Census , Pownal, Bennington, Vermont; Roll: 184; Page: 56.
  14. [S1225] 1840 U.S. Federal Census , Pownal, Bennington, Vermont; Roll: 539; Page: 293.
  15. [S752] VT 1850 Census Index, p. 117.
  16. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Vol. 2, p. 57: VT Division of Records, Middelesex, VT, F-30270.
  17. [S681] Will: copy sent to Charles Vella by Jane Woodward, Jul. 11, 1999.
  18. [S415] E-mail from Jane Woodward, Oct. 14, 1999: gs.
  19. [S415] E-mail Jane Woodward, 1998.
  20. [S415] E-mail from Emily Rogers, Mar. 21, 2002.
  21. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Rutland Co., VT, Book 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  22. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, VT., Vol. 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  23. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Vol. 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  24. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Book 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  25. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Vo. 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  26. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, VT, Vol. 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  27. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, VT, Book 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.

Joseph Houghton1

M, #30678, b. 1733

Family:

Biography

Corresponded with authorN
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectY
Birth17331
1790 Census1790Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, 1790 Pownal VT census shows a Joseph Houghton (3 males +16, 1 male -16 and 3 females) and a Joseph Hougton (3 males +16, 2 -16, and 5 females): could be this Joseph or his son; if Benjamin's brother, then that Joseph did not die in Revol.

CJV: 1st found at Pownal VT in 1790 census under Joseph Houghton, second under Joseph Hougton2
DuplicatePownal VT
ResearchThe Houghtons of Pownal VT were an established Lancaster family, and apparently arrived in Pownal as a family in the late 1770's3
ContributnJane Woodward contributed the genealogy of this Joseph Houghton; family record gives Joseph and Martha (Snow) Houghton as parents; Betsy Houghton and Thomas Jepson were gggrandparents of Jane Woodward; Betsey Hougton told her grandfather that Joseph's sister was Eunice, who married General Starke, famous for the Battle of Bennington.

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail Jane Woodward, 1998.
  2. [S1220] 1790 U.S. Federal Census , Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, p. 19.
  3. [S36] Letter, from Jane Woodward, May 16, 2000: document by Jon Fitch.
  4. [S415] E-mail Jane Louise (Karpe) Woodward, 1998.

Jane Louise Karpe

F, #30679, b. 14 September 1920, d. 15 May 2021

Family: Frederick James Harding Jr. b. 23 Jan 1918, d. b 2020

Biography

Corresponded with authorY
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectY
BirthSep 14, 1920Bakersfield, Kern Co., CA, USA1
MarriageDec 29, 1940Bakersfield, Kern Co., CA, USA
Divorce1967
Address19986562 Boca Del Mar Dr. #324, Boca Raton, Palm Beach Co., FL, USA, jwoodw6761@aol.com
DeathMay 15, 2021Albany, OR, USA
ResearchLee Harding, 2021: Notes by his mother Jane Karpe: Mom made these notes about Joseph Houghton (b. 1733):

Acccording to some notes made in M. M. Johnson's hand-writing at Webster, Mass., May 1, 1897, Ralph, Jonas, and John Houghton, brothers, came to America on account of Cromwell. They were against Cromwell. Ralph was our ancestor of this branch.

Florence Johnson Karpe noted: Research while in Santa Barbara, Calif. in 1944, brought to light these facts which partly corroborate the statement made by Betsey Houghton to her grand-daughter's husband at this time: Ralph Houghton (1623-1705) came to America circa 1636 and was settled at Lancaster, Mass. in 1652. There he was Clk. of Writs 1656-1682, Rep. Gen. Ct. 1673-1689, also Constable collector, town treasurer. He moved to Milton, Mass. and married Jane Stowe (1626-1700). This much was found in 'First Families of America' by Inst. of American Genealogy and the "Handbook of American Genealogy" by the same Inst. The Genealogical Department of the Los Angeles Library has a book also which tells about the Houghtons, stating that Ralph lost his life by drowning during a big storm along the Atlantic coast. I have not found mention made of Jonas, except in the notes from Betsey Houghton. It seems John Houghton had a son John who also came from England. There are numerous descendents of these brothers, many of them have been very prominent in the American scene. Three hundred descendents had an organization at one time and published a paper. Florence Karpe further stated: "Just how Joseph Houghton, our known ancester, is descended from Ralph, I have not been able to trace, so I have not placed him on the Betsey Houghton chart. Dates and places point to the possibility that the line is as follows: Ralph 1623-1701, James 1650-1711, Joseph 1733-1814 Benjamin 1780, Betsey 1809-1897.
James Houghton built the Garrison House at Lancaster 1697. There was a Mary Houghton born at Lancaster 1635, probably a sister of James. Ralph also had a daughter, Sarah (born 1661). James had a daughter, Susanna who married Capt. Joshua Snow"
REPORT TO THE HOUGHTON ASSN., USA by Columbus Smith, Burlington, Vt. 1869 says that when Ralph Houghton came to America from England he brought with him two sons born in England--Ralph and James. Besides those two, he and his wife, Jane, had eight children born in the U. S. These eight are the subject of the genealogy by Francis W. Houghton, which does not include our line. We need more verification before we can tie our line in with the Ralph Houghton who came from England and about whom so much has been written.
Florence Karpe did not feel confident enought to include them in our genealogy, and neither do I.
ObituaryJane Louise (née Karpe; formerly Harding) Woodward, Sept. 14, 1920 – May 15, 2021
Jane Woodward passed away peacefully on May 15. She was born in Bakersfield, California to Elmer Ferdinand Karpe of Bakersfield (1894–1987, born in Faribault, Minn.) and Florence Anna Johnson (1896–1948, born in Washington, D.C.) She married Frederick James Harding Jr. (1922–2006) of Bakersfield (1940, divorced 1967) and E. Lee Woodward of Santa Clara, California (1972). She also lived in Montgomery (Alabama), Pensacola (Florida), Westwood, Susanville, Palo Alto and San Jose, California; Maui, Hawaii Boca Raton, Florida, and Corvallis and Albany, Oregon.
Jane graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Stanford University in 1939. She began working for the Lassen County welfare agency in Susanville in 1962, earned an M.A. in social work at U.C. Berkeley in 1969 (where she saw the Peoples’ Park riots first-hand), and worked for county welfare agencies in California, Hawaii and Florida. A champion of social justice, Jane joined the American Civil Liberties Union just after university, and was president of the Bakersfield chapter. She was active in the League of Women Voters and was a Daughter of the American Revolution. She was involved in a variety of crusades including marching in Corvallis in her 80s against the US involvement in the Iraq war.
Jane carried on her mother’s interest in genealogy. She learned enough Norwegian to translate a book about Norwegian immigrants. She donated collections of genealogical documents to various historical societies. She took her sons to see her maternal grandparents’ farms in Heddal (Nels Johnsson Kaasa: 1818–1882) and Voss (Anna Nilsdatter Selheim: 1812–1883), Norway. Later she took her children to see their ancestors’ graves near Decorah, Iowa, where she was welcomed as a visiting scholar and collections donor. She travelled widely for ancestry research including Salt Lake City, Utah; Aberdeen, Scotland, and Cedynia, Poland, where her paternal grandparents, William Ferdinand Karpe (1852–1932) and “Grandma Auguste” Michel (1860–1941) were born.
In her 80s and 90s, Jane joined a women’s bird-watching club and two SCUBA clubs, travelling throughout the Caribbean and to Honduras, Brazil, Peru, China, Australia (where she dove the Great Barrier Reef) and Africa. A lifelong Contract Bridge player, she travelled with bridge groups to New England, India (where a men-only rule was suspended to let her group in) and other countries.
Jane was predeceased by husbands Frederick James Harding Jr. of Bakersfield and E. Lee Woodward of Santa Clara, California, her brother Leland Elmer Karpe (1923–1944), her sister Margaret (1928–1998), and her sons William “Bill” Frederick Harding (1945–1987) and Thomas Nelson Harding (1951–2011). She is survived by her brother Robert “Bob” Walter Karpe (b. 1930), son Lee Edward Harding of Coquitlam, B.C., Canada, daughter Carol Ann (née Harding) Minor of Salmon Arm, B.C., Canada and son Jeffrey Michael Harding of Lebanon, Oregon, their spouses, 10 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. A celebration of her life for family will be held at a later date.
ContributnJane Woodward contributed the genealogy of this Joseph Houghton; family record gives Joseph and Martha (Snow) Houghton as parents; Betsy Houghton and Thomas Jepson were gggrandparents of Jane Woodward; Betsey Hougton told her grandfather that Joseph's sister was Eunice, who married General Starke, famous for the Battle of Bennington.

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail Jane Louise (Karpe) Woodward, 1998.

Amy Cummings1

F, #30680, b. circa 1789, d. 5 April 1850

Family: Benjamin Houghton b. c 1782, d. 24 Jun 1855

Biography

Corresponded with authorN
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectN
Birthcirca 1789VT, USA, William Tower Houghton's 1880 census gives bp as VT2,3
Marriage4
DeathApr 5, 1850Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, age 615,4
BurialJepson Farm/Reuben Jepson Farm Yard, Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA6
Biographydau. of William Cummings and Ruth Fisher of Putnam, CT; he was at battle of Bunker Hill and lived at Putnam, CT at time of the Revol; he served in War of 1812

Citations

  1. [S415] E-mail Jane Woodward, 1998.
  2. [S415] E-mail Jane Woodward, Oct. 1999: Card in file of Bennington VT Hist. Soc. Genealogy Library.
  3. [S1229] 1880 U.S. Federal Census , Adams, Berkshire, MA, Box 28, Vol. 2, ED 47, Sh 38, Ln 43, del 210-326.
  4. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Book 1, p. 367: VT Division of Records, Middelesex, VT, F-30270.
  5. [S868] Ronald V. Jackson, Vermont 1850 Mortality Schedule, p. 19.
  6. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT: VT Division of Records, Middelesex, VT, F-30270.
  7. [S415] E-mail to Charles Vella from Margaret R. Jenks, 9/1998.
  8. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Rutland Co., VT, Book 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  9. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, VT., Vol. 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  10. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Vol. 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  11. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Book 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  12. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Vo. 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  13. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, VT, Vol. 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.
  14. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, VT, Book 1, p. 367; VT Division of Records, Middlesex, VT, F-30270, VT VRs 1770-1870.

Betsy Houghton1,2

F, #30681, b. 3 November 1811, d. 9 September 1897

Family: Thomas Jepson b. 3 Jan 1807, d. 10 Dec 1896

Biography

Corresponded with authorN
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectN
BirthNov 3, 1811Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA, Dudley MA VR: Dudley, MA; Pownal VT VR: 3 Nov 1811; Betsey stated she was born "South West corner town in Vermont"; Woodward: 3 Nov 18093,4,5,1
MarriageJun 24, 1829Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA3,4,6,2
Photograph1891Webster, MA, USA, Four Generations of Pioneer Women:
Betsy Houghton Jepson (center)
Stella White Johnson (upper left)
Amanda Jepson White Converse (upper rt)
Edith Johnson (lower left)
Nellie Salinda Johnson (lower rt) -- Neva's mother

Webster, MA, 1891
NoteMay 1, 1897Webster, MA, USA, Notes from Betsy Houghton:
"Ralph, Jonas and John Houghton brothers came to America on account of Cromwell. They were against Cromwell. Ralph was ancestor of this branch. Betsy Houghton...Benjamin Houghton...father of Betsy...Joseph Houghton father of Benjamin Houghton married Martha Snow married Martha Snow in Worcester. His oldest son named Joseph married Eunice Stark...sister of General Stark." (taken down by her grandson-in-law, Martin N. Johnson)7
DeathSep 9, 1897Webster, Worcester Co., MA, USA, of heart disease; FamileySearch: Sept. 10, 1897, GS8,9
BurialWebster-Dudley Cemetery, Dudley, Worcester Co., MA, USA, Jepson, Betsy Houghton, wife of Thomas, born Nov. 3, 1809, died Sept. 10, 18979

Citations

  1. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Book 1, p. 367: VT Division of Records, Middelesex, VT, F-30270.
  2. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Book 1, p. 256: VT Division of Records, Middelesex, VT, F-30270.
  3. [S415] E-mail Jane Woodward, 1998.
  4. [S415] E-mail from Margaret R. Jenks, 9/1998.
  5. [S351] Dudley MA VRs,.
  6. [S722] Elmer I. Shepard, Pownal VT Marriages, p. 7.
  7. [S415] E-mail Jane Louise (Karpe) Woodward, 1998.
  8. [S415] E-mail from Jane Woodward, June 25, 1999.
  9. [S1210] Unknown compiler, NEHGS Manuscript Collections Cemet. Transcriptions, NewEnglandAncestors.org: Houghton Surname.

Thomas Jepson1

M, #30682, b. 3 January 1807, d. 10 December 1896

Family: Betsy Houghton b. 3 Nov 1811, d. 9 Sep 1897

Biography

Corresponded with authorN
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectN
BirthJan 3, 1807Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA2
MarriageJun 24, 1829Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, USA2,3,4,1
DeathDec 10, 1896Petersburg, Nelson, ND, USA2
BurialPetersburg, Nelson, ND, USA
ParentsSSamuel Jepson and Bertha Keith

Citations

  1. [S1074] Town Records: Pownal, Bennington Co., VT, Book 1, p. 256: VT Division of Records, Middelesex, VT, F-30270.
  2. [S415] E-mail Jane Woodward, 1998.
  3. [S415] E-mail from Margaret R. Jenks, 9/1998.
  4. [S722] Elmer I. Shepard, Pownal VT Marriages, p. 7.
  5. [S415] E-mail from Jane Woodward, June 25, 1999.

Mary Elizabeth Burnet1

F, #30689

Family: Rev. Francis Horatio Stubbs b. 29 Dec 1847, d. 29 Mar 1906

Biography

Corresponded with authorN
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectN
BirthTiconderoga, NY, USA1
Marriage1
Biographydau. of Jonathan and Augusta (Russell) Burnet

Citations

  1. [S96] NEHGR, 86 [1932]: 103.

Herbert Russell Stubbs1

M, #30690, b. 12 August 1880, d. 8 October 1931

Biography

Corresponded with authorN
A Contributor to Houghton Surname ProjectN
BirthAug 12, 1880Huntington, MD, USA1
OccupationHe owned his own lumber business, under various names: H.R. Stubbs & Co., Colebourne & Co., and The Wood Utilization and Development Co. He was general agent for John L. Roper Lumbar Co. in 1914. In 1924 he became general manager of John M. Nelson, Jr. Inc., which became the Nelson Corp., of which he was vice president until his death.
Gen. Soc.Mar 1, 1927NEGHS1
ResidenceBaltimore, Baltimore Co., MD, USA1
Marriage1
DeathOct 8, 1931Baltimore, Baltimore Co., MD, USA1

Citations

  1. [S96] NEHGR, 86 [1932]: 103.