Sarah Wendell

The New Netherland Ancestors of

SARAH WENDELL,

the second wife of ABIEL HOLMES



- for Abiel Holmes

Author





		      __Evert Janszen Wendell2,6
		     |
		 __Johannes Wendell2,6
		|    |
		|    |     __Philippe Du Trieux6
		|    |    |
		|    |__Susanna Du Trieux2,6
		|         |
		|         |__Susanna du Chesne6
		|
	    __Jacob Wendell2,6
	   |    |
	   |    |     __Abraham Staats6,7,8
	   |    |    |
	   |    |__Elizabeth Staats2,6
	   |         |
	   |         |     __Jochem Wesselszen8
	   |         |    |
	   |         |__Tryntje Jochemse6,7,8
	   |              |
	   |              |__Geertruy Hieronimus8
	   |
       __Oliver Wendell2
      |    |
      |    |__Sarah Oliver2,6
      |
SARAH WENDELL1
the second wife of ABIEL HOLMES
      |
      |     __Edward Jackson3
      |    |
      |__Mary Jackson2
	   |
	   |     __Edmund Quincy4
	   |    |
	   |__Dorothy Quincy3
		|
		|     __Josiah Flynt5
		|    |
		|__Dorothy Flynt4
		     |
		     |     __Thomas Willett5
		     |    |
		     |__Esther Willett5
			  |
			  |__Mary Brown5


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Biography of ABIEL HOLMES

 
HOLMES, Abiel, clergyman, born in Woodstock, Connecticut, 24 December 1763; died in Cambridge, Massachusetts, 4 June 1837. Abiel was graduated at Yale in 1783, became a tutor there, and at the same time studied theology. In 1785 he was settled as a pastor in Midway, Georgia, but six years later he resigned, and in 1792 he was settled over the first parish in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he was pastor till September, 1832. In 1817 he delivered a course of lectures on ecclesiastical history, with special reference to New England. He had married for his first wife, in 1790, a daughter of Ezra Stiles, president of Yale college, became his literary executor, and published his life (Boston, 1798). His second wife was a daughter of Oliver Wendell. The examination of Dr. Stiles's manuscripts drew his attention to the subject of early American history, and he wrote "Annals of America" (2 vols., Cambridge, 1805; new ed., brought down to 1820,1829), which became a standard authority. He was a frequent contributor to the collections of the Massachusetts historical society, the 27th volume of which contains a list of his writings. His home was in Cambridge.

The works of Abiel Holmes:

American Annals, or, a Chronological History of America [1492-1806] (1805)
The Counsel of Washington (1800)
An Historical Sketch of the English Translations of the Bible (1815)
The History of Cambridge (1801)
The Life of Ezra Stiles (1798)
A Memoir of the French Protestants (1826)
A Note on an Ancient Manuscript (1816) [Part of Governor Winthrop's Journal]
A Sermon, on the Freedom and Happiness of America (1795)
 


 


Notes and Sources


   1.  Flint, Edward F., S.M., and Gwendolyn S. Flint, Flint Family History of
       The Adventuresome Seven, Volume II.  Baltimore:  Gateway Press, Inc.,
       1984.  724.
   2.  Ibid., p. 655-656.  See also p. 606.
   3.  Ibid., p. 607-608.
   4.  Ibid., p. 578=579.
   5.  Ibid., p. 569-570.
   6.  Randolph, Howard, S.R., "The House of Truax," The New York Genealogical
       and Biographical Record, 57 (1926):  208-219, 336-344; 58 (1927):  76-81,
       111-116, 267-272, 326-331; 59 (1928):  17-26, 182-190, 289-293, 386-395.
   7.  Riker, David M., Genealogical and Biographical Directory to Persons
       in New Netherland from 1613 to 1674.  CD-ROM. Cambridge: The
       Learning Company, 1999.  1329.
   8.  Ibid., p. 1762.


 

First uploaded 29 April 2002

Last Modified  Saturday, 08-Sep-2018 18:03:15 MDT

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