Difference between revisions of "John Stoughton"

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(research notes re. lack of burial site; research by Butler Library staff)
m (Research Notes: name correction to John Stoughton)
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*John Stoughton names as executors in his will of 1833 his '''son''' [[Jacob Stoughton]] and William Stoughton (Junior/Senior?). William's name is followed by what appears to be either "Junior", or "Senior" (written out, not abbreviated). John's father [[William Stoughton|William]] was already dead in 1833.  John's brother [[William Stoughton Jr.|William]] seems the likely candidate, although Jeanne Eichelberger believes he may have either died or married and remained in NJ as no further evidence of him has been found.  In that era, the terms senior and junior were used to indicate an older and younger set of relatives, not necessarily a father/son relationship. John's son [[William G. Stoughton]], although he has no son named William, could be addressed as William Sr. because his brother, [[John Bernard Stoughton]], has a son [[William Stoughton (????)|William]].  However, it seems logical that in writing the will, the wording in that case would have been "my '''sons''' [[Jacob Stoughton]] and William Stoughton. Or, William G. Stoughton may have been referred to as William Stoughton, Jr., being the grandson of John's father.  If the son of John Bernard Stoughton were known as William Stoughton Jr., he would not be the person named as executor as he would be at most about 5 years old at that date.  No other William Stoughton candidates are known at present, so one is led to believe that the executor is either William G. Stoughton, or that John Stoughton's brother William was indeed alive and residing in Butler County in 1822. It is possible that the word following William Stoughton in the will is neither junior or senior but something other.
 
*John Stoughton names as executors in his will of 1833 his '''son''' [[Jacob Stoughton]] and William Stoughton (Junior/Senior?). William's name is followed by what appears to be either "Junior", or "Senior" (written out, not abbreviated). John's father [[William Stoughton|William]] was already dead in 1833.  John's brother [[William Stoughton Jr.|William]] seems the likely candidate, although Jeanne Eichelberger believes he may have either died or married and remained in NJ as no further evidence of him has been found.  In that era, the terms senior and junior were used to indicate an older and younger set of relatives, not necessarily a father/son relationship. John's son [[William G. Stoughton]], although he has no son named William, could be addressed as William Sr. because his brother, [[John Bernard Stoughton]], has a son [[William Stoughton (????)|William]].  However, it seems logical that in writing the will, the wording in that case would have been "my '''sons''' [[Jacob Stoughton]] and William Stoughton. Or, William G. Stoughton may have been referred to as William Stoughton, Jr., being the grandson of John's father.  If the son of John Bernard Stoughton were known as William Stoughton Jr., he would not be the person named as executor as he would be at most about 5 years old at that date.  No other William Stoughton candidates are known at present, so one is led to believe that the executor is either William G. Stoughton, or that John Stoughton's brother William was indeed alive and residing in Butler County in 1822. It is possible that the word following William Stoughton in the will is neither junior or senior but something other.
 
=Research Notes=
 
=Research Notes=
* Research re. burial site of Andrew Stoughton, with negative results: No gravestones found at various Butler County cemeteries visited in 2006-2007 by E. Wilson Williams (Mt. Zion Baptist Cemetery, Wolf Creek Cemetery, Muddy Creek Cemetery, Prospect's Emanuel Lutheran Cemetery, Prospect Presbyterian Cemetery or West Liberty Cemetery).  No record found in the entire 5 volume set of the Cemetery Inventory of Butler County, searched by research staff of the Butler Area Public Library, Oct. 2007.  <br>This suggests burial without gravestones, or that their stones deteriorated beyond legibility by the time of the Inventory; or burial at a small private cemetery not included in the Inventory.
+
* Research re. burial site of John Stoughton, with negative results: No gravestones found at various Butler County cemeteries visited in 2006-2007 by E. Wilson Williams (Mt. Zion Baptist Cemetery, Wolf Creek Cemetery, Muddy Creek Cemetery, Prospect's Emanuel Lutheran Cemetery, Prospect Presbyterian Cemetery or West Liberty Cemetery).  No record found in the entire 5 volume set of the Cemetery Inventory of Butler County, searched by research staff of the Butler Area Public Library, Oct. 2007.  <br>This suggests burial without gravestones, or that their stones deteriorated beyond legibility by the time of the Inventory; or burial at a small private cemetery not included in the Inventory.
 +
 
 
=Conjecture=
 
=Conjecture=
 
=Research Wishlist=
 
=Research Wishlist=

Revision as of 07:37, 1 November 2007

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John Stoughton was born about 1773 in New Jersey, the second of nine children of Williams Stoughton and his wife, born a Voorhees. John grew up in New Jersey in a community of English and Dutch families, and married Catherine Covert there in about 1795. John was about 22 years old, and Catherine was 18 when they married. By the following year Catherine's father, Lucas Covert, had migrated west to the wilds of Butler County, PA. John and Catherine had 2 sons born in New Jersey, the first being born in 1797, when Catherine was 20. At some point John and Catherine along with John's parents and siblings (with the possible exception of his oldest brother William) moved west as far as Lewisburg, PA, in what was then Northampton County. By 1802 they settled in Butler County, PA, and their third son was born in Butler County in 1802. John and Cathering build a home and cleared a farm. John appears on the 1804 tax list with 100 acres, 2 cows and 2 horses. John and Catherine had a total of 5 sons and 4 daughters. They were members of Muddy Creek Baptist Church. Their children married into the families of Wick, Glenn, Boyle, Logan, and Patterson. John Stoughton died in 1833, with a will. Catherine outlived him, and is listed as 72 years old in the 1850 census. Their burial site has not been located.

Date Location Notes Sources
Birth ~1773 NJ [7]
Marriage ~1795 NJ To Catherine Covert [7][8]
Death 8 May 1833 Muddy Creek Township, Butler County, PA Will signed on 8 Apr 1833, filed on 11 May 1833 [6][7]
Burial 1833 site unknown were members of Muddy Creek Baptist church
See Research Notes
[7]

Ancestry chart segment

 Generation 6           Generation 7         Generation 8
 
                                         +-- William Stoughton
                                         |   (1742-????)
                    +-- John Stoughton --+
                    |   (1773-1833)      |
 Andrew Stoughton --+                    +-- [unknown] Vorhees
 (1802-1867)        |                        (????-????)
                    +-- Catherine Covert
                        (1778->1850)

Sources: [7]

Children

(all children with Catherine Covert)

Name Gender Date of Birth Birthplace Spouse Notes Sources
William G. Stoughton M 1797 NJ Mary Elizabeth Wick [6]
Jacob Stoughton M ~1800 NJ -never married- [6]
Andrew Stoughton M 1802 Butler County, PA Mary Glenn Direct line [6]
John Bernard Stoughton M 1805 Nancy Boyle possibly 2 sons,
John & Bernard;
See source notes
[6]
Luke Stoughton M 1807 Margaret Wick [6]
Euphamia Stoughton F 1810 Samuel Logan [6]
Hannah M. Stoughton F 26 Oct 1815 John Patterson [6]
Jane Stoughton F 6 Dec 1821 Thomas Boyle [6]
Mary Stoughton F "Polly", not in will; [7]

Places of Residence

Location Dates Notes Sources
NJ 1773- after 1795 married in NJ [7]
Lewisburg
Northampton Co, PA
after 1795
until ~1802
[7]
Middlesex Twp
Butler Co, PA
by 1803 from tax records;
may not indicate residence
[3]
Center Twp
Butler Co, PA
by 1810-after 1820 [1][2]
Muddy Creek Twp
Butler Co, PA
by 1833-death [6]

Sources

Ref. Num. Description Image of original
1 1810 United States Federal Census, Center Twp, Butler Co, PA Page 2. Census is not dated. Lists family headed by J. Stoughton: 3 males <10, 2 male 10-15, 1 male 26-44, 1 female <10, 1 female 26-44. Family headed by W. Stoughton also on page.
This appears to correspond to sons Luke, John & William under age 10, Jaocb & William G. age 10-15, daughter Eupahme under 10; William age 37 & Catherine age 32.
1810 census pa butler center pg 2.jpg
2 1820 United States Federal Census, Center Twp, Butler Co, PA Page 4. Census is not dated. Lists family headed by J. Stoughton: 2 males <10, 1 male 10-15, 2 males 16-25 1 male >45,, 1 female <10, 1 female 10-15, 1 female >45.
1820 census pa butler center pg 4.jpg
3 1803 Tax List Middlesex Twp., Butler Co. PA: John Stoughton, 100 Acres, 2 cows, 2 horses or oxen, Valuation 144, Tax 0.43
1895 History Butler Co., p. 58
4 Deed Transfer from John Stoughton to William Stoughton, dated 10 Feb. 1820. Witnesses George (P___), and John Timblin. Recorded 14 Feb 1820,Butler County, John Timblin, Esq.
1820 Deed John Stoughton.jpg

(Transcript)
5 Deed Transfer from John Stoughton to William Stoughton, dated 7 Apr. 1824. Centre Twp., Butler Co., PA, Deed E-222. 50 Acres for $75.00.
1824 Deed John Stoughton.jpg

(Transcript)
6 Will of John Stoughton, Estate File # S-40,Muddy Creek Twp., Butler Co. PA. Signed 8 Apr. 1833. (Microfilm, Butler Public Library, Vol. A, p. 264, 1833)
Lists wife Catherine; sons William, Luke, Andrew, John, Jacob, Bernard; daughters Eufame Logan, Hannah Stoughton, Jane Stoughton; executors: son Jacob Stoughton, & William Stoughton(Sr.?); witnesses: Samuel Stoughton & Robert Hemphill.
Will of John Stoughton 1833 p1.jpg

Will of John Stoughton 1833p2.jpg

Will of John Stoughton 1833 p.3.jpg

(Transcript)
7 Jeanne Bortmes Eichelberger, correspondence, 2006
8 Covert Family of New York by Robert Thorton Covert. Notes that John Stoughton married Catherine Covert; lists her parents as Lucas Covert and Cornelia Van Zandt, who were cousins; lists the children of Lucas And Cornelia Van Zandt Covert. (This source noted by Jeanne Bortmes Eichelberger; not seen by this researcher.)
9 Personal correspondence from Elizabeth Wilson Williams, granddaughter of Bert Winfred Wilson.
N/A

Source notes

  • 1790, 1800, 1830 census not found.
  • 1800 Northampton Co. PA index of 5374 names (ancestry.com index) scanned for John or William Stoughton (Stoton, etc.) with no result.
  • In his will, John Stoughton leaves 4 of his sons (William, Luke, Andrew, & John) each one dollar, an indication that each had probably already received his inheritance or portion of land, possibly at marriage. To son Bernard, he leaves $120 plus another $125 to be delivered to him by his brother Jacob when Bernard reaches age 21. This argues that sons John and Bernard were two different individuals. Jeanne Eichelberger lists a son John Bernard Stoughton, combining these two names; her source is not given.
  • John Stoughton names as executors in his will of 1833 his son Jacob Stoughton and William Stoughton (Junior/Senior?). William's name is followed by what appears to be either "Junior", or "Senior" (written out, not abbreviated). John's father William was already dead in 1833. John's brother William seems the likely candidate, although Jeanne Eichelberger believes he may have either died or married and remained in NJ as no further evidence of him has been found. In that era, the terms senior and junior were used to indicate an older and younger set of relatives, not necessarily a father/son relationship. John's son William G. Stoughton, although he has no son named William, could be addressed as William Sr. because his brother, John Bernard Stoughton, has a son William. However, it seems logical that in writing the will, the wording in that case would have been "my sons Jacob Stoughton and William Stoughton. Or, William G. Stoughton may have been referred to as William Stoughton, Jr., being the grandson of John's father. If the son of John Bernard Stoughton were known as William Stoughton Jr., he would not be the person named as executor as he would be at most about 5 years old at that date. No other William Stoughton candidates are known at present, so one is led to believe that the executor is either William G. Stoughton, or that John Stoughton's brother William was indeed alive and residing in Butler County in 1822. It is possible that the word following William Stoughton in the will is neither junior or senior but something other.

Research Notes

  • Research re. burial site of John Stoughton, with negative results: No gravestones found at various Butler County cemeteries visited in 2006-2007 by E. Wilson Williams (Mt. Zion Baptist Cemetery, Wolf Creek Cemetery, Muddy Creek Cemetery, Prospect's Emanuel Lutheran Cemetery, Prospect Presbyterian Cemetery or West Liberty Cemetery). No record found in the entire 5 volume set of the Cemetery Inventory of Butler County, searched by research staff of the Butler Area Public Library, Oct. 2007.
    This suggests burial without gravestones, or that their stones deteriorated beyond legibility by the time of the Inventory; or burial at a small private cemetery not included in the Inventory.

Conjecture

Research Wishlist

  • Will abstracts of Andrew, William, John Bernard, Jacob, and Luke
  • Will of John Stoughton Sr.
  • 1803 Tax Rolls Middlesex Twp. Butler Co. PA
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