Early Friends Families of Upper Bucks is a collection of genealogical and historical information pertaining to the first settlers of the upper part of Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Separate chapters are assigned to each family, and approximately 12,000 persons are named and identified. The genealogies commence with the first of the Bucks County line (usually during the period of the eighteenth century, but also earlier) and proceed, on average, through about eight generations.
Early Friends Families of Upper Bucks County, with Some Account of Their Descendants
For the explicit or implicit use of such a model in Pennsylvania studies, which I think a mistaken strategy, see Lemon, The Best Poor Man's Country; James A. Henretta, "Families and Farms: Mentalité in Pre-Industrial America," William ...
Finding Them in Quaker Records Ellen T. Berry, David A. Berry. Michener, Ezra. A Retrospect of Early Quakerism, Being Extracts from the Records of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting. Philadelphia: T. Ellwood Zell, 1860.
James and Henry Brenton (or Brinton), Indian Traders, also made improvements here prior to the erection of Fort Jackson, as shown by a deed from George Teagarden to Philomen (Felix) Askins, on March 16, 1770, the tract described as ...
[190] There is also no record of the family in the Warrington Friends Meeting Records[191] or in published York County births ... Early Friends Families of Upper Bucks, with some account of their descendants; historical and genealogical ...
Roberts, Clarence V. Early Friends and Families of Upper Bucks, With Some Accounts of Their Descendants . Philadelphia: The Compiler, 1925. Rock, Rosalind Z. “Dying Quijote: Nemesio Salcedo and the Last Years of Spain in the Internal ...
Traces descendants of several Blackledge, Blacklidge, Blackleach, etc. families in America. The main families traced are those of Phillip Blacklidg, William Blackledge and Zachariah Blackledge. Phillip Blacklidg was probably born...