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Our Family Genealogy Pages

Russell Minor TROWBRIDGE, [infant]
 1859 - 1861

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Generation: 1
  1. Russell Minor TROWBRIDGE, [infant] b. 22 Aug 1859, Painesville, Lake, Ohio; d. 1 Aug 1861.

    Notes:
    Date of death is questionable. His parents were living in Solon at the time of the 1860 census which was taken in June of that year. Russell does not appear in the census.

Generation: 2
  1. Wesley TROWBRIDGE b. 28 Nov 1834, Newark, Wayne, New York; d. Painesville, Lake Co., Ohio.

  2. Wesley m. Elizabeth Brainard FOSTER 30 Sep 1858, Brooklyn Township, Cuyahoga, Ohio. Elizabeth (daughter of Daniel C. FOSTER, @ and Eunice R. BRAINARD) b. 31 Aug 1838, Brooklyn Township, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 20 Jul 1876, Painesville, Lake, Ohio. [Group Sheet]

  3. Elizabeth Brainard FOSTER b. 31 Aug 1838, Brooklyn Township, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 20 Jul 1876, Painesville, Lake, Ohio.

    Children:
    1. 1. Russell Minor TROWBRIDGE, [infant] b. 22 Aug 1859, Painesville, Lake, Ohio; d. 1 Aug 1861.
    2. Elmer Ellsworth TROWBRIDGE b. 16 Oct 1861, Painesville, Lake, Ohio; d. 19 Jul 1890, Painesville, Lake, Ohio.
    3. George Grant TROWBRIDGE b. 25 Apr 1864, Brooklyn Township, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. Mar 1935, Painesville, Lake, Ohio.
    4. Seymour Daniel TROWBRIDGE b. 12 Apr 1866.
    5. Armina Maria TROWBRIDGE b. 31 Aug 1868.
    6. Alberta Eunice TROWBRIDGE, [child] b. 27 Nov 1871; d. 1 Apr 1886.
    7. Warner Wesley TROWBRIDGE b. 25 Jun 1876.

Generation: 3
  1. Seymour TROWBRIDGE b. 20 May 1813, Newark, New York; d. 8 Jun 1899, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.

  2. Seymour m. Sally Maria JOHNSON 6 Feb 1834, Newark, New York. Sally (daughter of Henry JOHNSON and Sally TAYLOR) b. 12 Feb 1816, Newark, New York; d. 2 Mar 1902, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio. [Group Sheet]

  3. Sally Maria JOHNSON b. 12 Feb 1816, Newark, New York; d. 2 Mar 1902, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.

    Children:
    1. 2. Wesley TROWBRIDGE b. 28 Nov 1834, Newark, Wayne, New York; d. Painesville, Lake Co., Ohio.
    2. Deborah TROWBRIDGE b. 28 Feb 1837, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
  4. Daniel C. FOSTER, @ b. 5 Mar 1812, Groton, New London, Connecticut; d. 3 Jan 1882, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.

    Notes:
    According to the Brainard Genealogy by Lucille Brainerd, he lived in Concord near Painesville, Ohio but I show him as owning and living on a parcel of land on the south side of Denison Ave east of W14th St. He appears in the 1840, 1850, and 1860 census in Brooklyn Township. I am reasonably certain that her enteries in the book for Concord are an error. All of his children would have been born in Brooklyn and not Concord as she states. She also says that Charles W. is adopted. I have no further information on him.

    BURIAL: Foster, D.C. 6/20/1882 age 70 Lot 59 2-S (Denison Cemetery, Garden Ave., Cleveland)

  5. Daniel m. Eunice R. BRAINARD 13 Apr 1837, , Cuyahoga, Ohio. Eunice (daughter of Seth BRAINARD and Delilah BRAINARD) b. 13 Jul 1814, Middle Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 16 Sep 1892, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA. [Group Sheet]

  6. Eunice R. BRAINARD b. 13 Jul 1814, Middle Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 16 Sep 1892, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.

    Notes:
    MARRIAGE: BRAINARD, EUNICE and FOSTER, DANIEL C 0003 0283


    BURIAL: Foster, Eunice R. 9/16/1892 age 78 Lot 59 1-S (Denison Cemetery, Garden Ave., Cleveland)

    Notes:
    Married:
    Eunice R. Brainard and Daniel C. Foster applied for a marriage license on April 13, 1837 not April 15, 1837 as I have a photocopy of this application from Vol. 3, Pg. 283 #159 of the Cuyahoga County Marriage License Applications. It is easy to misread.
    (per Barbara Mitchell)

    Children:
    1. 3. Elizabeth Brainard FOSTER b. 31 Aug 1838, Brooklyn Township, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 20 Jul 1876, Painesville, Lake, Ohio.
    2. Russell (Rupel) B. FOSTER, [child] b. 25 Sep 1840, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA; d. 8 Aug 1851, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    3. Seth M. FOSTER, [child] b. 6 Jan 1843, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA; d. 30 Jul 1851, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    4. Mary M. FOSTER, [infant] b. 14 Jan 1845, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA; d. 19 Jul 1846, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    5. Lucy FOSTER, [infant] b. 8 Aug 1847, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA; d. 6 Aug 1849, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    6. Harriet E. FOSTER, [infant] b. 9 Apr 1853, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA; d. 18 Aug 1853, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    7. Charles FOSTER b. 29 Oct 1855; d. 29 Feb 1880, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.

Generation: 4
  1. Minor TROWBRIDGE b. 29 Jul 1787, Willistion, Vermont; d. 6 Nov 1876, Newark, New York.

  2. Minor m. Deborah SMITH 1808, Tully, New York. Deborah b. 19 Aug 1787, Tully, New York; d. 15 Aug 1826, Newark, New York. [Group Sheet]

  3. Deborah SMITH b. 19 Aug 1787, Tully, New York; d. 15 Aug 1826, Newark, New York.

    Children:
    1. Orrin TROWBRIDGE b. 29 Oct 1809.
    2. Seth TROWBRIDGE b. 28 Jul 1811.
    3. 4. Seymour TROWBRIDGE b. 20 May 1813, Newark, New York; d. 8 Jun 1899, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
    4. Harriet TROWBRIDGE b. 29 Apr 1815.
    5. Lucretia TROWBRIDGE b. 15 Aug 1817.
    6. Deborah TROWBRIDGE b. 1 Sep 1819.
    7. Alpheus TROWBRIDGE b. 4 Sep 1821.
    8. Mercy TROWBRIDGE b. 25 May 1823.
    9. Mary TROWBRIDGE b. 28 Mar 1825.
  4. Henry JOHNSON

  5. Henry m. Sally TAYLOR [Group Sheet]

  6. Sally TAYLOR

    Children:
    1. 5. Sally Maria JOHNSON b. 12 Feb 1816, Newark, New York; d. 2 Mar 1902, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
  7. Michael B. FOSTER, @ b. 1778, Watch Hill,, Rhode Island; d. Aug 1824, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.

    Notes:
    Foster/Forester : In the English Middle Ages, the forests and woods were almost always owned or controlled by the lord of the manor -- but people had no reservations about sneaking in and taking firewood, game, or whatever else they might require. To keep the poaching to a minimum, the lord retained a man to watch the forest -- often called a Forester, and sometimes called a Foster. The name stuck as an English Occupation surname when they became adopted.

    Abigail and Michael had ELEVEN children when they arrived in Brooklyn, Ohio.

    It was the convention of the times to use the mother's maiden name as the middle name for a child. With that in mind, Michael B. Foster was probably named Michael Billings Foster.

    Some info derived from Ancestry WorldTree Project as submitted by Dennis Homan


    BURIAL:
    Denison Cemetery
    Foster , Micheal
    Death Date:
    Interment Date: 8/1824 ; Interment Number: 27 Age: 45
    Remarks: Born 1779 in R. I.
    Died Aug 1824
    Section: ; Lot Number: 62 ; Tier: ; Grave: 4S Marker: yes ; Photo: yes
    --http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohcuyah2/cems/denison/denef.html

    NOTE:
    Brooklyn history, as noted in Abigail Fish Foster's notes, states that the family left Groton for Ohio in 1826. If that is the case, how then could Michael's gravestone show an internment date of 1824? My guess would be that the history is in error.

    SOURCE_OF_NAME:
    "Robert Burrows and Descendants 1630-1974", by R.E. Burrows, 1975, 1816 pgs, Ann Arbor, Michigan [pg 254]

    OBIT:
    Name: Foster, Michael B.
    Date: 1824
    Source: Cemetery record; Cleveland Necrology File, Reel #026.
    Notes: 1779 - 1824. Dennison Cemetery Cleveland, Ohio.

    OCCUPATION:
    Tailor.

  8. Michael m. Abigail FISH Abt 1802, Groton, New London, Connecticut. Abigail (daughter of Ebenezer FISH, Sr. and Lydia FISH) b. 2 Jan 1781, Groton, New London, Connecticut; d. 8 Sep 1849, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA. [Group Sheet]

  9. Abigail FISH b. 2 Jan 1781, Groton, New London, Connecticut; d. 8 Sep 1849, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.

    Notes:
    BURIAL: Foster, Abigail 9/8/1849 age 68 Lot 62 3-S (Denison Cemetery, Garden Ave., Cleveland)

    BURIAL: Denison Cemetery
    Foster , Abigail Death Date: Interment Date: 9/8/1849 ; Interment Number: 69 Color: ; Sex: ; Age: 68 Address: ; Cause of Death: ; Remarks: Same as Int. #69 Should read: "Same as Int. #70"? Section: ; Lot Number: 62 ; Tier: ; Grave: 3S Marker: not known ; Photo: no

    MARRIAGE: FOSTER, ABIGAIL and FULLER, WILLIAM vol.0002 pg.0093 (Cuyahoga County)

    Children:
    1. George FOSTER, @ b. 8 Dec 1805, near Preston City, New London, Connecticut; d. 7 Sep 1829, Strongsville, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
    2. Lydia FOSTER, [infant] b. Abt 1806, near Preston City, New London, Connecticut; d. near Preston City, New London, Connecticut.
    3. Sally FOSTER, @ b. Abt 1807, Groton, New London, Connecticut; d. Aug 1867, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    4. Nathan FOSTER, @ b. 7 Feb 1808, Groton, New London, Connecticut; d. 14 Jan 1899, Berea, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
    5. Ebenezer FOSTER, @ b. 19 Apr 1810, North Stonington,,Connecticut, USA; d. 23 Jul 1897, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    6. 6. Daniel C. FOSTER, @ b. 5 Mar 1812, Groton, New London, Connecticut; d. 3 Jan 1882, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    7. Eunice FOSTER, @ b. Abt 1813, ,, Connecticut; d. 9 Mar 1879, Mentor, Lake, Ohio.
    8. Nancy FOSTER, @ b. Abt 1814, Groton, New London, Connecticut; d. 21 Mar 1857, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    9. Eveline Thankful FOSTER, @ b. 16 Jan 1816, Groton, New London, Connecticut; d. Apr 1895, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
    10. Matilda FOSTER, @ b. 1 Oct 1819, Groton, New London, Connecticut; d. 14 Apr 1843, Brooklyn Township, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    11. Albert FOSTER, @ b. 12 Jul 1822, Stonington, New London, Connecticut, USA; d. 30 Sep 1867, Mt. Vernon, Black Hawk, Iowa, USA.
  10. Seth BRAINARD b. 9 Jan 1792, Haddam Neck, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 13 Sep 1877, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.

    Notes:
    As early as 1814, Seth BRAINARD with his wife Delilah came from Haddam, Ct., and bought a large tract of land, adding to it from time to time, until it numbered 100 acres. A fine inheritance for their children.

    Some of the land that Seth owned was in Mayfield Township and was distributed amongst his children after his death.

    BURIAL:
    Tombstone Inscriptions from Broadview Cemetery at Broadview and Spring St., Cuyahoga County, Ohio

    BRAINARD: large monument toward the rear of the cemetery
    South side of stone:
    Deliliah wife of ____ Brainard Jan. 12, 18__, aged 32 years
    Seth Brainard died September 13, 1877 aged 83 years
    Samantha died Mar __ , 189_, aged 73 years

    BRAINARD: monument is very old and worn
    ____ Brainard, (crack in stone) died ____ 182_, aged 32 years
    Benj. Brainard ___ June __ 187__
    ____ce Brainard illegible

    North side of Monument
    Isahea Brainard died _____ age 8__ years
    Matilda Wife of I. Brainard died April 15, 18__ aged 22 years
    Artista Wife of __ Died October 18, 1817
    Electa M. or H. wife of I. Brainard Died May 15, 1859 or 1839
    Philander son of ___ Brainard died Aug. I, 1832 or 1839 aged 9 years
    Nora ___ of ___ Brainard died April 6 or 16, 1838, aged 2 years

    West side of Monument
    J. Nelson Brainard died Feb. 7, 1899 aged 81 years
    Carmelia wife of J. N. Brainard died Aug. 11, 1812
    Betsy D. or B. died September 12, 181__ aged 8 years


    Source of above: http://www.geocities.com/micheledanielle/broadview.html

    Some called it the Brainerd Cemetery, others, Broadview Cemetery. Few knew it's deeded name and many didn't realize there was more?on the corner of Broadview and Spring than a family restaurant next to an empty lot. A plot of land on Seth Brainerd's farm.

    BIOGRAPHY: Seth and Delilah Brainard came to Brooklyn Township in 1815 from Hadden Neck, Connecticut. When Simeon Chester, another early settler, died in 1821, he was buried on the Brainards' farm. In 1852, the land became an official cemetery when Seth and Delilah granted .6 acres to trustees Daniel Fish, Ashel Brainard, George Brainard and successors, to be used as a public burying ground.

    The deed transferring the 100' x 114' parcel to Brooklyn Township, though, is dated October 25, 1860, and since then, the land has been exempt from property taxes. A Provision in the deed states that if the land ceases to be used as a cemetery, it is to revert back to Brainard or his heirs. When they died, Seth and Delilah were buried in the cemetery, too.

    Full article:

    Brooklyn Union Burying Ground

    William Cullen Bryant, as you know, is the name of one of our neighborhood elementary schools. Bryant was a 19th century American poet, and his most famous work is the poem "Thanatopsis ". In it he wrote,
    "All that tread the globe are but a handful to the tribes that slumber in its bosom."

    How true! First the Indians, and then almost two hundred years of Brooklyn Township residents have been laid to rest in and around our neighborhood.

    At different times in its history, the cemetery we come to rededicate today has been known as the Brainard (Brainerd) Burial Ground, Brooklyn Union Burial Ground, and Broadview Cemetery. It is one of the earliest burial places in the area of Brooklyn south of the Big Creek Valley and was originally part of a farm because in former times, people were often buried on private property.

    Set and Delilah Brainard came to Brooklyn Township in 1815 from Hadden Neck, Connecticut. When Simeon Chester, another early settler, died in 1821, he was buried on the Brainards' farm. In 1852, the land became an official cemetery when Seth and Delilah granted .6 acres to trustees Daniel Fish, Ashel Brainard, George Brainard and successors, to be used as a public burying ground.

    The deed transferring the 100' x 114' parcel to Brooklyn Township, though, is dated October 25, 1860, and since then, the land has been exempt from property taxes. A Provision in the deed states that if the land ceases to be used as a cemetery, it is to revert back to Brainard or his heirs. When they died, Seth and Delilah were buried in the cemetery, too.

    Crosses or boards listing the name of the deceased and the date of death were typical grave markers in the early days. They have, of course, long since deteriorated.

    Limestone from the Lake Erie Islands was another popular material for old headstones. A Limestone marker which lists Simeon, Matilda, Betsy and Abby remains at the Chester plot. (We believe that others have sunk into the ground.) The inscriptions are barely legible, the result of weather acting on the stones.

    Numerous headstones at the cemetery are made from sandstone, which was most probably locally quarried. More recently headstones have been made from granite, a durable rock shipped here from out-of-state. About two years ago, a new granite headstone was placed at the previously unmarked graves of the Kluender family.

    For a time it was fashionable for markers to have epitaphs -- short compositions in prose or verse written in tribute to the dead person -- inscribed on them, but none of the headstones still standing in this cemetery have epitaphs.
    adstone in Broadview Cemetery -- Bunn, Hester, Dawson, McDiarmid, Reeve, Schwartz, Spinney, Stadler, Thorn and Voelker.

    We have been told that more Brainards, Glovers, Roethkes, Stumpfs, Wengers, plus Flecks, Herrmanns and Pupikofers (and, of course, Kluenders) were also buried there. One of the Flecks, interred in 1923, is thought to be the last person laid to rest in this cemetery.

    In 1940, the WPA compiled a huge book of plat maps showing where war veterans are buried in Cleveland cemeteries. It lists two such individuals in this cemetery -- Daniel Fish, a veteran of the War of 1812, and Charles H. Kohlmann, a veteran of the Civil War. And indeed two of the remaining family markers bear the names Fish and Kohlmann. Note that Fish and Kohlmann were not killed in the wars, but had served in them.

    The surnames on the other old markers on plots in the cemetery are Reeve (on Chester's marker), McDiarmid, Spinney and Stadler. A broken-off marker bears the name Bunn.

    When larger, more prestigious cemeteries were organized, it became common for families to move the remains of their loved ones. Bodies disinterred from Broadview Cemetery were generally transferred to: Brookmere (est. 1836), at the end of short Broadview; Riverside (est. 1876) on Pearl Road (then Pearl Street), north of the Brooklyn-Brighton Bridge; and Brooklyn Heights (est. 1902), at Broadview and Schaaf Roads, extending to State Road (then West 35th Street).

    Disinterment was not an easy task in the days when there were no concrete vaults to protect the wooden caskets. Clay near the surface of the soil caused rainwater to collect around the casket, and eventually the water so deteriorated the casket that removing it in one piece was impossible. The sight of fragments of wood on the ground was a sure sign that someone had been exhumed recently.
    The gravel driveway along the north side of the cemetery was the entrance funeral processions used. It was lined with sugar maple trees, some of which are still standing. Other maple trees also once grew along the front of the cemetery along Broadview Road. Every March, the cemetery's neighbors tapped the trees and hung buckets beneath the taps, to have their own source of the sweet syrup.

    In the southwest corner of the cemetery, where Barb's Restaurant is today, there was a place for the people who were visiting the cemetery to park their horses and buggies. Although many people were concerned in 1962 when The Red Barn purchased that section of the property, the more common belief is that there were never any burials in that area. In fact, we have also been told that an icehouse was once located at the corner of Broadview and Spring Roads.

    In the past, families decorated graves differently from the way people do today. Instead of bringing artificial or cut flowers, each spring they planted annuals on the graves.

    Wildflowers -- violets and lilies-of-the-valley -- grew in the cemetery, too. A huge lilac bush stood in the center of it; an "old-timer" told us that it was as big as two garages, and had paths cut through it.
    The cemetery also served as a playground for neighborhood youngsters. The girls played with their dolls, the boys played baseball and football (balls frequently got lost in that big lilac bush) and both sexes played tag. That is a far cry from the sign, which now mandates that children not accompanied by parents are to keep out.

    Over the years, tales have circulated about a mass burial reputed to have occurred in this cemetery. In Kathryn Wilmer's seco?d book about Old Brooklyn, the grave was supposed to have held the remains of the victims of a flood in the Cuyahoga Valley in the 1890s. (Actually, the famed flood occurred in 1913).

    Another story was that at the turn of the century, a boat from Conneaut or thereabouts sank in Lake Erie near the East Ninth Street pier, and that those who drowned were buried here. Searches through books about boating tragedies on Lake Erie fail to confirm that such an accident occurred, or that the victims were buried out here in the country.

    In 1913, Broadview Cemetery was forfeited to the State of Ohio, which asked the City of Cleveland to maintain it. For many years, that was accomplished through the City's Division of Parks, Recreation and Properties (out of Brookmere Cemetery). In approximately 1985, however, the City's Public Service Department took over the responsibility for cutting the grass.

    In 1964 and 1965, The Early Settlers Association of the Western Reserve attempted to have the City fence in the cemetery and erect a sign there, but their efforts were not successful. In fact, Ohio Cemeteries, a 1978 publication of The Ohio Genealogical Society, lists Broadview Cemetery as "abandoned". Although that may have appeared to be the case, it is not reality.

    The Historical Society of Old Brooklyn has been looking after his cemetery for almost ten years. We think it is as special a little plot of land as two other small cemeteries in the vicinity. They are the Foote Family Cemetery in Brooklyn Heights, north of Schaaf Road, a private burial ground where Edwin Foote (one of Moses Cleavelend's surveyors), Mabel Foote (the school teacher murdered in Parma in 1921), and numerous other members of the Foote family are buried; and the Brooklyn Centre Burying Grounds, almost hidden on Garden Avenue, a little street north of Denison Avenue and east of Pearl Road in Brooklyn Centre, once a portion of Ebenezer Fish's farm, and the final resting place of many of the early Fish settlers.

    We would like to acknowledge the people, many of whom are now deceased, who have shared with us their knowledge about old cemeteries in general and this cemetery in particular -- John Bellamy from The Cuyahoga County Library, Mabel Tate Blair, John Busch, Blanche Chester, Paul Clifford of the Mineralogy Department of the Natural History Museum, Delores Kaul Filips, Ruth Ketteringham, Barney Killian, Clarke Martin, Kenneth Rankin, Carl Reed, John Sopka, Addeen Bauers Sweitzer, Norman Waag, and numerous public officials.

    As long as our organization exists, we will continue to weed and water what we have planted here.

    Reprinted with permission by the author.
    If you have any further questions or want to tell us about the preservation of an Ohio cemetery, please contact us at ohcps@aol.com

  11. Seth m. Delilah BRAINARD 27 Aug 1812, East Hampton,, Connecticut. Delilah (daughter of Ozias BRAINARD and Elizabeth YOUNG) b. 4 Dec 1787, Middle Haddam, Middlesex Co., Connecticut; d. 13 Jan 1872, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio. [Group Sheet]

  12. Delilah BRAINARD b. 4 Dec 1787, Middle Haddam, Middlesex Co., Connecticut; d. 13 Jan 1872, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.

    Notes:
    BIRTH:
    Delilah Brainard was born December 4, 1787 according to Chatham Vital Records in Barbour Collection, Vol. 1, Pg. 11
    (per Barbara Mitchell)

    DEATH:
    Year of death is in question. Obtained from monument at Broadview Cemetery that was badly weathered. See Notes in Seth Brainard's record.

    Notes:
    Married:
    Seth Brainard married Delilah Brainard on August 27, 1812 in East Hampton, Connecticut at the Haddam Neck Cong. Church according to Connecticut Vital Records, Volume 3, Page 61 and Vol. 4, Pg. 86
    (per Barbara Mitchell)

    Children:
    1. James Nelson BRAINARD b. 30 Dec 1812, Middle Haddam, Middlesex Co., Connecticut; d. 7 Feb 1899, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
    2. 7. Eunice R. BRAINARD b. 13 Jul 1814, Middle Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut; d. 16 Sep 1892, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    3. Asahel N. BRAINARD b. 16 Jan 1816, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 6 Jan 1899, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    4. Aristarchus BRAINARD, [infant] b. 1817, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 1817, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
    5. Timothy BRAINARD, [infant] b. 1818, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 1818, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
    6. Samantha BRAINARD b. 30 May 1820, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 1890/1899, Brooklyn Village, Cuyahoga, Ohio, USA.
    7. Miriam BRAINARD b. 1 May 1822, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 5 Nov 1895, South Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
    8. Horace BRAINARD b. 6 May 1825, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 5 Dec 1897, South Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio.
    9. Riley BRAINARD b. 16 Dec 1831, Brooklyn, Cuyahoga, Ohio; d. 19 Jan 1908, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio.

  
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