Category Archives: Coffin Family

Caleb Coffin & Deborah Alden, Nantucket & Orange County, NY, 1700s: 12 for ’22

Blog posts definitely work as “cousin bait,” although the person who contacted me wasn’t exactly a cousin.

She had found my post about my 5X great grandparents, Joseph Coleman and Eunice Coffin, both born in Nantucket, Massachusetts and who moved to Orange County, New York at the start of the American Revolution.

When I wrote about the Colemans, part of their story is that I proved that Joseph Coleman didn’t die on 17 April 1775 in spite of the Nantucket Vital Records (part of the Massachusetts series known as the ‘tan books’) say so. His ‘death date’ was actually the day he and Eunice sold their land in Nantucket before leaving for New York.

Caleb Coffin was Eunice’s older brother and they were the 4th and 5th children born to Cromwell Coffin and Ruth Coffin, who were distant cousins.

Caleb Coffin was baptized on 22 July 1739 in Nantucket. I was aware that he married Deborah Alden, born 7 August 1748 in Duxbury, Plymouth, Massachusetts, the daughter of Briggs Alden and Mercy Wadsworth, on 12 February 1767 in Duxbury.

Yes, it is that Alden family. Deborah was the 2X great granddaughter of John Alden and Priscilla Mullins.

Her interest was piqued because Caleb and Deborah Coffin also left Nantucket, not long before Joseph and Eunice Coleman, but also settled in Newburgh, Orange, New York.

She was hoping that I might be able to fill in some details about Caleb’s and Deborah’s life and perhaps why they left Massachusetts for New York.

It turns out that was easier said than done, but I need to start at the beginning.

Caleb and Deborah were the parents of four known children, with at least the three daughters born in Nantucket:

1. Salome, born 15 April 1768
2. Hannah, 4 February 1770
3. Caleb, born between 1772-1778
4. Fanny, 20 December 1773

As you can see, birth records are found for the three girls, but none has been found for Caleb Jr.  and no sources that give his age seem to have been found. It is possible that he was born between 1775, when the family left New York, and 1778, when his father died.

However, being one of the most famous Mayflower families means Alden descendants have been well documented.

The goal of this post is to focus on any new facts that might be learned about Caleb Coffin’s life.

First, he was called “captain,” and he was undoubtedly a mariner. Whether he died at sea or in the colonies is unknown. It’s also not known whether he died of illness or an act of war during the American Revolution.

What is known is that Caleb signed a pledge, likely in the spring of 1775 and definitely before 14 July 1775, to support the patriot cause if and when war erupted:

Furthermore, his widow, Deborah, married (2) Isaac Belknap, also a mariner and a patriot, on 10 September 1778.

Why did the Coffins feel the need to leave Massachusetts, where both the Coffin and Alden families had lived for a century and a half?

Historians have written that Nantucket residents felt extremely vulnerable when faced with the prospect of war with England. As with any location in that time period, there were those who supported England and those who supported independence.

Regardless of political leanings, residents felt that defending themselves on an island would be a dangerous proposition. Newburgh, New York is right on the Hudson River and a number of Nantucket families chose to make a new home in Newburgh, where their seafaring jobs could continue.

My own 5X great grandfather, Joseph Coleman, saw the winds of war approaching. I don’t think it was any coincidence that his deed of sale was dated 17 April 1775 – just two days before the ‘shot heard ’round the world’ at the Battle of Lexington and Concord.

Safety for family was obviously a primary concern.

What happened to Caleb in the intervening three years?

First, there are no land or probate records to be found in Nantucket mentioning Caleb Coffin. If he owned any real estate, he may have casually sold his property to a close family member before he removed from Nantucket.

Being a mariner, Caleb would have been on the ocean for extended periods of time. He may even have returned to Nantucket and transacted business there. However, Nantucket court records have a gap during the Revolutionary War years. It’s possible that court sessions were held, but the records taken to a clerk’s home for safekeeping and then lost to time.

As for Orange County, New York records, there is the same problem  with missing records. The courthouse burned in 1774 and no extant records are found there until 1787.

A page by page search from 1787 into the 1790s (no indexes have been found) revealed no mention of Caleb Coffin or Deborah (Alden) (Coffin) Belknap.

One interesting item was found – not in Nantucket or Newburgh, but in the Supreme Court of the County of New York, which is Manhattan.

On 17 June 1790, Josiah Barker, who was a respected and well-to-do merchant in Nantucket, sued the Estate of Caleb Coffin, deceased, with executrix Deborah Belknap and Isaac Belknap as representing the estate.

Further searching in court minutes found, confirming that it was the estate of the correct Caleb Coffin:

A call to the New York State Archives confirmed that the papers pertaining to this lawsuit still exist.

It turns out that Caleb Coffin contracted several large debts in his lifetime, which his executrix either chose not to pay after his death or, possibly, his estate didn’t have enough money to settle with Josiah Barker.

The transcription of the two pages in the file is lengthy and somewhat repetitive:

Plea [torn]

of New York, at New York, of the Term of january in the Year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and ninety
Witness Richard Morris Esquire
Chief Justice  McKesson

Columbia SS, Josiah Barker puts in his Pl [torn]
against Isaac Belknap and Debor [torn]

Testament of Caleb Coffin deceased in [torn]

Columbia ss. Be it remembered that heretofore that is to say, in the Term of October last part, before the People of the State of New York, at Albany the Court of the said People then there, his certain bill against Isaac Belknap and Deborah his Wife Executrix of the last Will and Testament of Caleb Coffin deceased, being in Custody &c of a Plea of Trespass on the Case, and there are Pledges for the Presentation thereof to wit, John Doe and Josiah Barker complains of Isaac Belknap and Deborah his Wife Executrix of the last Will and Testament of Caleb Coffin deceased in Custody &c for that whereas the said Caleb in his Life Time, to wit, on the twenty seventh Day one thousand seven hundred and seventy four, at Nantucket in the late Province of Massachusetts Bay now Commonwealth of Massachusetts, that is to say, at Claverack in the County of Columbia, was indebted to the same Josiah in the Sum of one hundred and nine Pounds, tin shillings and nine Pence one Farthing lawful Money of the and one Farthing Lawful Money [sic] of the State of New York for divers Goods to the said Caleb in his Life Time at his special Instance and Request, and being so indebted the said Caleb in Consideration thereof afterwards, to wit, the same Day and year above said, at Nantucket aforesaid, that is to say, at Claverrack aforesaid in the County of Columbia aforesaid, assumed upon himself and then and there faithfully promised to said Josiah that he the said Caleb wants will and truly pay to him the said Josiah the said Sum of Money above mentioned when he should be afterwards thereunto required and whereas also the said Caleb in his Life Time, afterwards, to wit, and same Day and Year abovesaid, at Nantucket aforesaid, that is to say at Claverack aforesaid in the County aforesaid, and a certain Note in Writing, with his own proper Hand thereunto subscribed bearing Date the same Day and year abovesaid, and then and there delivered the said Note to the said Josiah Barker, Richard Mitchell Junior and Jonathan Burnell by which said Note the said Caleb in his Life Time promised to pay to the said Josiah Barker, Richard Mitchel Junior and Jonathan Burnell by the Name of Josiah Barker &c or Order on Demand seventy five Pounds four Shillings and nine Pence three Farthings lawful Money of the Province of Massachusetts Bay aforesaid, of the Value of one hundred Pounds six Shillings and five Pence lawful Money of the State of New York, with Interest, there on ’till paid for Value recorded and the Said Richard Mitchel Junior and Jonathan Burnell afterwards and before the Payment of the said Note Sum of Money mentioned in the said Note, or any Part thereof, to wit, on the first Day of November in the year last abovesaid, at Nantucket aforesaid, that is to say, at Claverack aforesaid, in the County aforesaid, by a certain Indorsement in Writing, then and there made with the said Note, and then and there Subscribed with the proper Hands of the said Richard Mitchel Junior and Jonathan Burnell assigned their Property in the aforesaid Note to the said Josiah Barker, and by the said Indorsement ordered and appointed the aforesaid Caleb Coffin to pay the said Josiah Barker the Contents of the said Notes for Value received awarding it the Form and E[ffect????] of the said Note, whereof the said Caleb in his Life time, afterwards, to wit, the same Day and Year last abovesaid, at Nantucket aforesaid, that is to say, at Claverack foresaid in the County of Columbia aforesaid Notis by Reason where of and also by Force of the Act in such Care made and provided, the said Caleb Coffin in his Life Time afterwards became chargeable and liable to pay the aforesaid Josiah Barker the said Sum of Money in the said Note mentioned, awarding to the Form and Effect of the said Note and Indorsement and the said Caleb Coffin in his Life Time being so liable, in Consideration thereof, afterwards, to wit, the same Day and Year last abovesaid, at Nantucket aforesaid, that is to say, at Claverack aforesaid in the County of Columbia aforesaid, understood and then and there faithfully promised the said Josiah Barker that he the said Caleb Coffin would will and truly pay and content to the said Josiah the said sum of Money in the said Note mentioned and awarding to the Tenor and Effect of the said Note and Indorsement And whereas also the said Caleb Coffin in his Life Time, afterwards to wit, on the first Day of January in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and seventy six at Nantucket aforesaid, that is to say; at Claverack aforesaid, in the County of Columbia aforesaid, was indebted to the said Josiah in the Sum of two hundred & sixty Pounds lawful Money of the Province of Massachusetts Bay aforesaid of the Value of three hundred and forty six pounds thirteen Shillings and [???] Pence Lawful Money of the State of New York aforesaid [??????????????] Money before that Time by the said Josiah to the said Caleb in his Life Time, at his like special Instance and Registered [????????????????????] being so indebted the said Caleb in his Life Time in Consideration thereof afterwards to wit, the same Day and Year last mentioned at Nantucket aforesaid That is to say, at Claverack aforesaid and the County aforesaid understood and then and there faithfully promised the said Josiah [????] last mentioned Sum of Money [?????] required Nevertheless the said Caleb in his Life Time and the said Isaac Belknap

Page 2

and Deborah his Wife, since the Death of the said Caleb not regarding the Promises and Undertakings of the said Caleb in his Life Time made as aforesaid, the aforesaid [???] sum of Money or any Part thereof to the said Josiah[??????] not hath either of them paid not hith{stained] for the same [???] to do the same [stained] Time was afterwards often thereunto required and the said Isaac and Deborah since the Death of the said Caleb [stained] thereunto required both the same to [stained] the said Caleb in his Life Time, and the said Isaac and Deborah since his Death have utterly refused to pay, and the said Isaac and Deborah still do refuse, to the Damage of the said[stained] Pounds and thereof he bring Suit [stained] And now at this Day to wit on the third Tues day in January in this [???] Term to which Day the said Isaac and Deborah had [???] to impart to the said Bill and then to answer &c [???] the People of the State of New York at New York comes the said Josiah by his attorney aforesaid and the said Isaac and Deborah, altho’ at the same Day solemnly demanded come not, nor do they say anything in [Bar/] or Preclusion of the said action of the said Josiah by which the said Josiah remains thereof undefended against them 7c Wherefore the said Josiah ought to recover against the said Isaac and Deborah his Damages by [???] of the [?????????] of the Promises and Undertakings aforesaid, but because it is unknown to the Court of the said People now here what Damages the said Josiah hath sustained by the [Aversion?] aforesaid, therefore the Sheriff is commanded that by the Oath of the twelve good and lawful Men of his Bailiwic he diligently inquire what Damages the said Josiah hath received as well by Occasion of the nonperformance of the several Promises and Undertakings aforesaid as far his Costs and Charges by him about his Suit in that he hath expended – and that he send the Inquisition which [???] thereupon take to the said People at New York, on the third Tuesday in April next under his Seal and the Seals of those by whose Oath he hath take the said Inquisition together with the Writ of the people to him thereupon directed – The same Day is given to the said Josiah at the same Place. At which Day before the said people at New York came the said Josiah by his attorney aforesaid, and the Sheriff, to wit, Cornelius [Hageboom?] Esquire Sheriff of the said County of Columbia returned a certain Inquisition taken before him at the House of Joseph Gordon Inn keeper in the City of Hudson in the said County of Columbia on the nineteenth Day of April in the Year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and ninety: by the Oath of twelve good and lawful Men of his Bailiwic, by which it is found that the said Josiah hath sustained Damages by Occasion of the Nonperformance of the several promises and Undertakings aforesaid over and above his Costs and Charges by him about his Suit in that behalf expended to one hundred and fifty nine Pounds four Shillings and one Penny, and for those Costs that the said Josiah do recover against, the said Isaac and Deborah his Damages aforesaid, by the Inquisition aforesaid in Form aforesaid found, and also seventeen pounds one Shilling and three pence for his Costs and Charges now here, with his Assent of Increase adjudged, which said Damages in the whole amount to one hundred seventy nine pounds five shillings and ten pence to be levied of the Goods and Chattels which belonged to the said Caleb Coffin at the Time of his Death, being in the Hands of the said Isaac and Deborah to be administered and if they have not so much in their Hands then the said seventeen pounds [??] shillings & nine pence for his Costs and Charles aforesaid to be levied of the proper Goods and Chattels of them the said Isaac and Deborah – and that the said Isaac and Deborah in Mercy. &c.

Identification information about the case written down the left side of the paper. The right side of the paper has some tears, but no writing appears to have existed there.

Unfortunately, the items or services purchased by Caleb were not mentioned. He was a mariner, a sea captain. Perhaps they were supplies for a whaling voyage. In any case, the debt was significant and, for whatever reason, widow Deborah, as his executrix, chose not to honor the debt.

Further, Isaac and Deborah Belknap didn’t even bother to show up in court or send an attorney after they were duly given notice by the sheriff.

The outcome? Isaac and Deborah Belknap were ordered to satisfy the debt and were also ordered to pay Josiah Barker’s expenses out of their own pocket if Caleb’s estate was unable to supply the funds.

How I wish the probate records for Orange County, New York has survived the Revolutionary War!

Although Caleb and Deborah Coffin are not my direct line – Caleb was the brother of my ancestress, Eunice Coffin, who married Joseph Coleman, this was a fun BSO to follow.

 

 

 

Ebenezer Coffin & Eleanor Barnard, Nantucket, 1700s

It took me many years to find a family for my 4X great grandfather, Joseph Coleman, but when I did, it filled in a huge branch of Nantucket, Massachusetts ancestors. I’ve written about most of them.

Today, the family sketch of Ebenezer Coffin and Eleanor Barnard completes the stories of most of my Nantucket ancestors.

Ebenezer Coffin was born on 30 March 1678, on Nantucket Island, the child of James Coffin and Mary Severance. Eleanor Barnard, fifteen months younger than her husband, was born 19 June 1679, also in Nantucket, to Nathaniel Barnard and his wife, Mary Barnard (subjects of yesterday’s post). They lived their entire lives on the island. Ebenezer died on 17 October 1730. Eleanor survived Ebenezer by many years, passing away at the age of 90 years, five months and six days, on 25 November 1769.

Ebenezer and Eleanor married on 12 December 1700, in Nantucket, and raised a large family of ten children, although two died in childhood.

Ebenezer and Eleanor also strayed from the common given names found so often in colonial Massachusetts. Yes, they had Hannah, Joseph and Benjamin, but they also named children Oliver, Prince, Love, Cromwell, Alexander, Valentine and Kimbal, which were much less common in Massachusetts in the early 18th century.

Children, all vitals in Nantucket, unless noted:

1. Oliver, born 30 August 1701; no further record
2. Prince, born 19 June 1703; died 10 October 1729, Chilmark, Dukes, Massachusetts; married Mercy Skiff, 10 September 1727.
3. Love, born 17 January 1705; died 25 May 1782; married Elias Coffin, 15 January 1728/29
4. Hannah, born 20 July 1707; died 2 October 1708
5. Cromwell, born 1 September 1709; died about 5 April 1783, Newport, Rhode Island; married Ruth Coffin, 25 November 1731
6. Alexander, born 20 December 1713; died 4 November 1741, West Indies; married Judith Bunker, 12 January 1737
7. Valentine, born 21 December 1716; died 1782, at sea; unmarried
8. Joseph, born 19 November 1719; died 1805; married Judith Coffin, 1740
9. Kimbal, born c1722; died 1782, Virginia; unmarried
10. Benjamin, born 27 January 1725/26

This family was a bit unusual in a couple of other ways. Three of their children – Love, Cromwell and Joseph – all married Coffin cousins. Intermarriage was widely accepted on Nantucket Island, given the many marriage records I’ve reviewed. I guess when there are only X number of people living on a relatively small island (Nantucket is just under 48 square miles), the marriage pool is quite small after a couple of generations.

Next, although life at sea was a major occupation for island dwellers, mariners still married and came home to families. Valentine and Kimbal both died far from home and left no descendants.

My Coffin line of descent:

Peter Coffin = Joan Kember
Tristram Coffin = Dionis Stevens
James Coffin = Mary Severance
Ebenezer Coffin = Eleanor Barnard & James Coffin = Ruth Gardner
Cromwell Coffin = Ruth Coffin
Joseph Coleman = Eunice Coffin
Joseph Coleman = Ruth Spurr
Thomas Coleman = Mary Elizabeth Astle
William Coleman = Sarah Moriah Crouse
Hartwell Thomas Coleman = Anna Elisabeth Jensen
Hazel Ethel Coleman = Vernon Tarbox Adams
Doris Priscilla Adams = George Michael Sabo
Linda Anne Sabo Stufflebean – me!

 

Joseph Coleman: When Is a Death Record Not a Death Record? When It’s Not!

I feel like I’ve been tossed and turned on the sea. It’s an appropriate analogy, I believe, because Joseph Coleman was a mariner. If you’ve been following my Coffin and Coleman family posts, you’ll remember that I discovered some land deeds that appear to disprove the Nantucket vital record stating that Joseph Coleman died at sea of yellow fever off the coast of Guinea on 17 April 1775.


Death of Joseph Coleman?

On the surface, this looks pretty definite, doesn’t it? It’s in the collection of official Nantucket vital records. Note the P.R. 38 and P.R. 63. Those abbreviations are the sources of this information and mean that this came from private notes and manuscripts. One is the Isaac Coffin collection and the other is the William Folger collection.

I’ve spent months working on Joseph Coleman’s family because Nantucket records are incomplete. Many births aren’t recorded and deaths are missing. Early Nantucket genealogists compiled data to fill in some of these gaps. However, they were human and sometimes made mistakes.

The Massachusetts Vital Records to 1850 series for Nantucket contains this caveat for P.R. 38:


P.R. 38

I had always had lingering questions about this family. Eunice never remarried, but supposedly had several small children. How did she survive? It didn’t seem likely that her cousin Benjamin Coffin supported them out of the goodness of his heart. I also wondered about Joseph Coleman’s 1791 probate. Why had so many years passed between 1775 and then with no probate being administered? I could understand it being delayed until the war ended in 1783, but not until 1791. I theorized that perhaps Joseph owned land and son Joseph Jr. came of age, as he married in 1793. Some of my questions have now been answered with the discovery of several new primary documents.

Timelines can be invaluable when there are a number of events and dates. Here is one for the lives of Joseph and Eunice (Coffin) Coleman and it demands a complete retelling of the story of this family’s life.

1739.Sep30 – Joseph Coleman born in Nantucket, son of Joseph & Rachel (Norton) Coleman
1742.Jul18 – Eunice Coffin born in Nantucket, daughter of Cromwell & Ruth (Cromwell) Coffin
1760.Jan24 – Joseph Coleman & Eunice Coffin married in Nantucket
1760-1773 – Tamar, Jennet & Elizabeth born to Joseph and Eunice. The three girls were baptized on 19 December 1773, Nantucket.
1768-1772 – Joseph born to Joseph and Eunice. Age range based on gravestone age and age in 1850 census.
1774.Oct20 – Joseph Coleman of Nantucket purchases land from Morris Flewelling in Ulster County, New York
1775.Apr17 – Death of Joseph Coleman entered in Nantucket vital records, having died of yellow fever off the coast of Guinea.
1775.Apr17 – Joseph, mariner, and Eunice Coleman appeared in person to register a deed of sale to Francis Chase. Deed registered 24 April 1775.
1775 – Mary Ann, estimated birth year, born to Joseph and Eunice
1781.Feb7 – Tamar Coleman married Daniel Birdsall, New Windsor, Orange, New York
1786.Jan31 – Elizabeth Coleman married Isaac Belknap, New Windsor, Orange, New York
1788.June5 – Joseph and Eunice Coleman with Timothy and Mary Coleman, all of Nantucket, sold their share of their deceased father’s estate to Ebenezer Coleman.
1790 – Census shows Henry Watts, male over 16 and one female in a household next door to Benjamin Coffin, Orange County, New York. Henry Watts married Jennet Coleman, c1790.
1790.Jan5 – Joseph Coleman bought land from Thomas Palmer of Ulster County, New York
1791.Apr5 – Probate filed for estate of Joseph Coleman, Eunice Coleman administratrix. Papers filed both in Ulster County, New York and Nantucket, Massachusetts. Probate inventory shows continued contacts in both New York and Nantucket.
1793.Aug24 – Joseph Coleman Jr. married Ruth Spurr of Dorchester, Massachusetts
1795.Feb9 – Mary Ann Coleman married Chauncey Griswold, New Windsor, Orange, New York.
1796.May5 – Birdsall, Watts, Belknap and Griswold heirs + Joseph Coleman sell their shares of estate of Joseph Coleman, deceased.
1796.May5 – before 1799.Mar9 – Tamar (Coleman) Birdsall died.
1799.Mar9 – Benjamin Coffin wrote his will. Bequests given = 1/3 to children of sister Love Coffin, 1/3 to children of sister Jean Ramsdal, 1/3 to widowed cousins Abigail Gardner, Eunice Coleman and Mary Fosdick, sisters and daughters of Cromwell and Ruth (Coffin) Coffin.
1800.May22 – Will of Henry Watts proved. Widow Jennet. Sons Hiram and Harvey, Orange County, New York
1800 – Census shows Jannet Watts, head of household, with 1 F 45+, 1 F 26-44, 1 F 16-25, 2 M -10. Female over 45 may be Eunice. Coleman. No further record found for Jennet (Coleman) Watts or sons Hiram and Harvey Watts.
1802.Apr19 – Will of Benjamin Coffin proved. Eunice Coleman apparently still living.
1806-1810 – Mary Ann (Coleman) Griswold died, probably Orange County, New York
1852.Apr15 – Joseph Coleman Jr. died, Bowdoinham, Lincoln (today Sagadahoc), Maine

Joseph Coleman was robbed of about 16 years of his life by the data in the William C. Folger collection. His children would have grown up without a father and his widow most likely would have had to have remarried to survive.

Instead, this timeline makes it evident that Joseph planned his move to New York in 1774. Was it because of the chance of impending war with England or did he want a change of pace?

Since his occupation was mariner, did he continue that life after removing to New York? How often did he move back and forth between New York and New England?

Being a mariner, did he sail down the Hudson River to New York to access the ocean, or did he travel by land to perhaps Bridgeport or New Haven and sail from there to Nantucket?

By following all my Coffin family leads, I literally stumbled into all these new records for the Coleman family. I’d also searched some of these records in the past, but many more are digitally available now from home.

It’s turned out to be quite a story, as I’ve filled in so many details about the lives of Joseph, Eunice and their children. It looks like Joseph Jr., my ancestor, had the longest lifespan, by far.

This is a perfect example of how following collateral lines and extending the search to include more than vital records can be just the ammunition to crack open a brick wall.