Josiah Rice1

TMG ID:39581, (3 May 1663 - )
Relationship:1st cousin 8 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Joseph Rice1 B: 13 Mar 1637, D: 23 Dec 1711
Mother*Mercy King1

Primary Birth & Death

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Caleb Rice1

TMG ID:39582, (19 May 1666 - 5 Jan 1738/39)
Relationship:1st cousin 8 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Joseph Rice1 B: 13 Mar 1637, D: 23 Dec 1711
Mother*Mercy King1

Primary Birth & Death

'Non-primary' Vitals

Children of: Caleb Rice

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Martha Rice1

TMG ID:39583, (3 Jun 1697 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Caleb Rice1 B: 19 May 1666, D: 5 Jan 1738/39

Primary Birth & Death

  • Born: Martha Rice was born on Monday, 3 Jun 1697.1

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Mary Rice1

TMG ID:39584, (30 Apr 1699 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Caleb Rice1 B: 19 May 1666, D: 5 Jan 1738/39

Primary Birth & Death

  • Born: Mary Rice was born on Thursday, 30 Apr 1699.1

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Nathan Rice1

TMG ID:39585, (11 Dec 1704 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Caleb Rice1 B: 19 May 1666, D: 5 Jan 1738/39

Primary Birth & Death

  • Born: Nathan Rice was born on Thursday, 11 Dec 1704.1

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Rebecca Rice1

TMG ID:39586, (10 Dec 1706 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Caleb Rice1 B: 19 May 1666, D: 5 Jan 1738/39

Primary Birth & Death

  • Born: Rebecca Rice was born on Friday, 10 Dec 1706.1

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Sarah Rice1

TMG ID:39587, (13 Mar 1708/9 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Caleb Rice1 B: 19 May 1666, D: 5 Jan 1738/39

Primary Birth & Death

  • Born: Sarah Rice was born on Wednesday, 13 Mar 1708/9.1

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Caleb Rice1

TMG ID:39588, (13 Dec 1712 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Caleb Rice1 B: 19 May 1666, D: 5 Jan 1738/39

Primary Birth & Death

  • Born: Caleb Rice was born on Tuesday, 13 Dec 1712.1

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Hepzibah Rice1

TMG ID:39589, (14 Jul 1715 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Caleb Rice1 B: 19 May 1666, D: 5 Jan 1738/39

Primary Birth & Death

  • Born: Hepzibah Rice was born on Sunday, 14 Jul 1715.1

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Keziah Rice1

TMG ID:39590, (10 Feb 1716/17 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Caleb Rice1 B: 19 May 1666, D: 5 Jan 1738/39

Primary Birth & Death

  • Born: Keziah Rice was born on Wednesday, 10 Feb 1716/17.1

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Josiah Rice1

TMG ID:39591, (30 Dec 1700 - 1792)
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Caleb Rice1 B: 19 May 1666, D: 5 Jan 1738/39

Primary Birth & Death

'Non-primary' Vitals

Union(s)

EventDetails/Notes
MarriageSunday, 9 Jun 1726, Josiah, age 25 years, 5 months and 10 days, and Thankful Rice, age 18 years, 10 months and 5 days, daughter of: Edmund Rice, were married Related: 2nd cousins.1
     

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Thankful Rice1

TMG ID:39592, (4 Aug 1707 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Edmund Rice1 B: 3 May 1663, D: 1726

Primary Birth & Death

'Non-primary' Vitals

Union(s)

EventDetails/Notes
MarriageSunday, 9 Jun 1726, Thankful, age 18 years, 10 months and 5 days, and Josiah Rice, age 25 years, 5 months and 10 days, son of: Caleb Rice, were married Related: 2nd cousins.1
     

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Edmund Rice1

TMG ID:39593, (3 May 1663 - 1726)
Relationship:1st cousin 8 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Samuel Rice1 B: 12 Nov 1634, D: 25 Feb 1684/85
Mother*Elizabeth King2 B: 1635, D: 30 Oct 1667

Primary Birth & Death

'Non-primary' Vitals

Union(s)

EventDetails/Notes
MarriageEdmund and Ruth Parker were married.2
     
MarriageEdmund and Hannah Brown were married.2
     
MarriageSaturday, 15 Nov 1692, Edmund, age 29 years, 6 months and 12 days, and were married at Suffolk, Roxbury County, MassachusettsG.1
     

Children of: Edmund Rice

Memorable Moments & Stories

  • Other: Edmund Rice Thomas Rice and Edmund Rice were cousins, and, with their families, resided in what is now the westerly part of the village of Westboro, and on the road towards Grafton. "On the 8th day of Aug., 1704, as related by Whitney while some people were engaged in spreading flax a short distance from the house of Thomas Rice, sons of both families being with them, seven or more Indians suddenly rushed from the woods, where they had concealed themselves, and killed Nahor, knocking him on the head. At the same time they seized Silas and Timothy, and two others, Ashur and Adonijah, sons of Thomas Rice, and carried them away to Canada."

    We have heard and we have read the thrilling stories of the sufferings and barbarities inflicted by the cruel and ferocious savages upon the defenceless inhabitants of frontiew settlements; how they, treacherously and of a sudden falling upon them, roused them from their midnight slumbers, sometimes in the depths of winter, by the deafening cry of the war whoop, and applied the lighted torch to their dwellings, exulting with fiend-like joy at the shrieks of the inmates; how the fires of their dwellings, making glare the objects around them by dispelling the darkness that had enshrouded them, rendered distinctly visible to each other the relentless savages, and the half-naked groups of women and children, who, helpless and frantic with terror, saw the instruments of death before they felt them; how the bloody tomahawk was brandished over their heads with one hand, and the other extended to tare away the scalp, without regard to age or sex of the victim, at the moment of the fatal blow; how such whose lives were spared, were overwhelmed with grief, and sank down in despair, at the sight of mothers, brothers, and sisters, slain and scalped before their eyes; and themselves, if they then escaped death, about to be carried away from home and from friends, perchance reserved to undergo, at an early day, lingering torments, that would terminate only with the sufferer's death.

    Then impressions made upon our minds by the knowledge of such events, are deeper and more abiding the nearer to us, in point of time and of locality, they occurred. If the sufferers were our relatives, blood, still stronger are the impressions and the interest we feel in relation to their suffering and history. Of the distress and anxiety in the families of Thomas and Edmund Rice, we may venture to imagine, we can do no more; they themselves, and they alone, realized what they were.

    Courtesy of: Roy Hubbard via: http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1679374&id=I02096.1
  • Other: Edmund Rice Notes from ERA site, George King:

    He was buried at Old Burying Ground, Wayland, Middlesex County Massachusetts. The grave is marked by a monument designed by Arthur Wallace Rice of Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts. It was dedicated by the Rice Association on 29 August 1914. A boulder with a bronze tablet was also erected by the Association and it marks Edmund's homestead on the Old Connecticut Path in Wayland. Burial is recorded in Marlborough, Massachusetts vital records as "at Sudbury"

    Edmund Rice arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony about 1638. Our first record of his presence is in Township Book of the Town of Sudbury in the year 1639. Regrettably, no ship's passenger list has survived and we have no record of Edmund Rice and his family before 1639 so we can not be certain when or where he and his family arrived in the New World.

    Knowing the names of Edmund Rice's children at Sudbury, family historians have traced his family back to England using church baptismal records for his children and, eventually, to his marriage to Thomasine Frost on 15 October 1618 at Bury St. Edmunds. However, we have found no record of his baptism or any other record that names his parents.

    As yeomen farmers, Edmund Rice and the other early settlers at Sudbury were well prepared for the tasks of forming and governing a new community. As yeomen, they had assumed with both personal and community responsibilities back in England. As Protestant churchmen, they had been encouraged to read and write so that they could study and understand their Bible. Although not of the noble class, they had shared many community and church responsibilities in their former communities in England.

    Edmund Rice was one of the prominent leaders of his community at both Sudbury and Marlborough. In his Pulitzer Prize winning book, Puritan Village, The formation of a New England Town, Sumner Chilton Powell sums up the high regard that his fellow citizens had for Edmund: "Not only did Rice become the largest individual landholder in Sudbury, but he represented his new town in the Massachusetts legislature for five years and devoted at least eleven of his last fifteen years to serving as selectman and judge of small causes." And "Two generations of Sudbury men selected Edmund Rice repeatedly as one of their leaders, with the full realization that they were ignoring men of far more English government experience who had come with him." If your ancestry goes back to Sudbury, be sure to read Powell's superb account of the development of this New England town in the mid 17th century.

    Although much respected by his fellow townsmen, Edmund seems to have had an independent side to his nature. In 1656, Edmund Rice and others petitioned the Massachusetts General Court for a new town, which became the City of Marlborough. Edmund moved his immediate family and was elected a Selectman at Marlborough in 1657. Later generations of Rice's were founding members of many new communities, first in New England and Nova Scotia, and later across the United States and Canada.

    Like many early New England families, Edmund Rice's family was a very large one. Of his twelve children, ten survived to have children of their own. Edmund Rice's descendants through his great-great grandchildren number nearly 1,450. This pattern of large families seems to have continued well into the 19th century. The result is that many living people can trace their ancestry to Edmund Rice.

    Putting to rest much misinformation about his ancestors!

    Twice in the 20th century, nationally recognized research genealogists have attempted to determine the parents and ancestors of Edmund Rice. Mary Lovering Holman described the negative result of her search for records in the parishes near Stanstead and Sudbury, Suffolk County, England in "English Notes on Edmund Rice ", The American Genealogist, Volume 10 (1933/34), pp. 133 - 137. Mrs. Holman is considered by many to be one of the best research genealogists in the 20th century. In 1997, the Edmund Rice (1638) Association commissioned Dr. Joanna Martin, a nationally recognized research genealogist who lives in England only a few miles from Stanstead and Sudbury to search again for records of Edmund Rice's parents. Dr. Martin reported in 1999 that she found no record that identified Edmund's parents or ancestral line.

    Several authors of published works and computer data sets have claimed names for Edmund Rice's parents. Regrettably, they have not given sources that would assist in definitive genealogical research. For example, the Ancestral File and International Genealogical Index, two popular computer data sets widely distributed by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, offer parent candidates that include: Henry Rice and Margaret Baker, Henry Rice and Elizabeth Frost, Thomas Rice and Catherine Howard, and Thomas Rice and Elizabeth Frost.

    From Mrs. Holman's paper, we have an excellent record of one: Henry Rice's marriage to Elizabeth Frost in November 1605 at Stanstead. Mrs. Holman also documents the baptism of Edmund's first child on 23 August 1619 at Stanstead. If this is the Henry Rice and Elizabeth Frost to which the LDS records refer, the LDS records must be erroneous. Our researchers have not been able to find records that support any Henry Rice and Elizabeth Frost, Henry Rice and Margaret Baker, Thomas Rice and Catherine Howard, or Thomas Rice and Elizabeth Frost as parents of Edmund Rice.

    A scholarly investigation by Donald Lines Jacobus, considered by many as the dean of modern American genealogy, appeared in The American Genealogist, Volume 11, (1936), pp. 14-21. Jacobus traced many of the false accounts to the book by Dr. Charles Elmer Rice entitled "By the Name of Rice ", privately published by Dr. Rice at Alliance, Ohio in 1911.

    Edmund Rice deposed in a court document on 3 April 1656 that he was about 62 years old. Sudbury, England includes three parishes, two of which do not have complete records for the years near 1594, which is Edmund's most likely birth year. Thus, if he were born in Sudbury, England his records have been lost and we may never know his origin.

    In his address to the 1999 annual meeting of the Edmund Rice (1638) Association, Gary Boyd Roberts, Senior Researcher, New England Historic Genealogy Society, reviewed all of the genealogical sleuthing on Edmund's parentage. Mr. Roberts is well known for his research on royal lineage. He concluded that there was no evidence whatsoever that supports the published accounts of Edmund Rice's parents and no evidence that Edmund Rice was from a royal lineage.

    The Edmund Rice (1638) Association is very interested in proving the ancestry of Edmund Rice. The association encourages anyone who can identify a primary source that names Edmund and his parents to identify that source. Records of a baptism, estate probate or land transaction naming Edmund and his parents are the most likely records to contain that proof. Until someone can cite such a record, the association must state emphatically that Edmund Rice's parents and ancestry are not known and that Edmund Rice's descendants cannot claim royal ancestry.



    Six generations have successively lived in the old homestead, known in later days as the Eli Rice, or Otis Russell house. Peter 1st was a prominent man. He was captain of a train hand and one of the committee in 1711 who designated the garrisons of the town, and the families who were to resort to these places of safety in emergency. Benjamin, Peter and Joseph Rice belonged to Ensign Howe's garrison near the present residence of Tileston Brigham where for many years might be seen a cave or underground former place of hiding. What thrilling stories this old hiding place might give to us could the stones speak. How these defenseless inhabitants of our frontier settlements must have suffered. Roused from their midnight slumbers sometimes in the depths of winter, by the deafening war whoop, by cruel and treacherous savages who applied lighted torches to the dwellings and exulted with fiend like joy at the shrieks of the Half naked women and children, helpless and frantic with terror while rushing to the garrison, with the bloody tomahawk brandished before their eyes. Mothers, brothers, sisters and children often slain and scalped or led away to lingering torments. Oh, but the men and women of those days were indeed brave, and they were no cowards who left the white man's persecution in the old land to brave the wilds and the treachery of the red men in the new country.

    Courtesy of: Sandy Nelson via:
    http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=higginscat&id=I6653.3

Witnessed Events & Occasions

ActivityDetails
Anecdote Anecdote: Edmund Rice was present on Friday, 8 Aug 1704, when Silas Rice and Timothy Rice the brothers were taken captive by Indians and taken to Canada. Silas was given the name Tookanowras. Silas had Indian wives, and Indian children in Canada.

Timothy was named Oughtsorangoughton, and became the third of six chiefs of the Cognawaga tribe. In that capacity, Timothy addressed a speech to Col. Burgoyne, employed in an expedition against Canada, in the French war of 1755, or later; afterward Gen. Burgoyne, surrendered himself and his Army to General Gates, at Saratoga, in the Revolutionary War.1
DeathFriday, 8 Aug 1704, Edmund Rice was the informant on the death certtificate for Nahor Rice.1

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
  2. [S157] Nancy Noble, "Nancy Noble," e-Mail message from <e-mail address> (New York) to http://tinyurl.com/h2um27d, 5 Sep 2000. Hereinafter cited as "e-Mail - Nancy Noble."
  3. [S538] RootsWeb.com, online https://tinyurl.com/y9tz8o4r, Sandy Nelson (e-mail address), updated as of 25 Oct 2004.
Last Edited9 Dec 2019

Dinah Rice1

TMG ID:39594, (15 Oct 1693 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Edmund Rice1 B: 3 May 1663, D: 1726

Primary Birth & Death

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Silas Rice1

TMG ID:39595, (10 Apr 1695 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Edmund Rice1 B: 3 May 1663, D: 1726

Primary Birth & Death

'Non-primary' Vitals

Alias(es)

  • Nick-Name: his nickname was "Tookanowras"1

Memorable Moments & Stories

  • Anecdote: on Friday, 8 Aug 1704, Silas Rice (9 years old) and Timothy Rice (6 years old) the brothers were taken captive by Indians and taken to Canada. Silas was given the name Tookanowras. Silas had Indian wives, and Indian children in Canada.

    Timothy was named Oughtsorangoughton, and became the third of six chiefs of the Cognawaga tribe. In that capacity, Timothy addressed a speech to Col. Burgoyne, employed in an expedition against Canada, in the French war of 1755, or later; afterward Gen. Burgoyne, surrendered himself and his Army to General Gates, at Saratoga, in the Revolutionary War.
         Others were: Edmund Rice.1
  • Anecdote: in Sep 1740, at Westborough, Worcester County, MassachusettsG, Timothy Rice and Silas Rice (45 years old) Timothy visited Westboro with an interpreter, himself having lost his mother tongue, and viewed the place where he was captured; of which he had a clear rememberance, together with the circumstances under which he was taken; as he also had known of several persons then living. Nothing said or done could induce him to remain at Westboro. He returned to Canada, where he and his brother Silas were living in the summer of 1790.1

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited16 Aug 2022

Timothy Rice1

TMG ID:39596, (15 Sep 1697 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Edmund Rice1 B: 3 May 1663, D: 1726

Primary Birth & Death

'Non-primary' Vitals

Alias(es)

  • Nick-Name: his nickname was "Oughtsorangoughton"1

Memorable Moments & Stories

  • Anecdote: on Friday, 8 Aug 1704, Silas Rice (9 years old) and Timothy Rice (6 years old) the brothers were taken captive by Indians and taken to Canada. Silas was given the name Tookanowras. Silas had Indian wives, and Indian children in Canada.

    Timothy was named Oughtsorangoughton, and became the third of six chiefs of the Cognawaga tribe. In that capacity, Timothy addressed a speech to Col. Burgoyne, employed in an expedition against Canada, in the French war of 1755, or later; afterward Gen. Burgoyne, surrendered himself and his Army to General Gates, at Saratoga, in the Revolutionary War.
         Others were: Edmund Rice.1
  • Anecdote: in Sep 1740, at Westborough, Worcester County, MassachusettsG, Timothy Rice and Silas Rice (45 years old) Timothy visited Westboro with an interpreter, himself having lost his mother tongue, and viewed the place where he was captured; of which he had a clear rememberance, together with the circumstances under which he was taken; as he also had known of several persons then living. Nothing said or done could induce him to remain at Westboro. He returned to Canada, where he and his brother Silas were living in the summer of 1790.1

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited16 Aug 2022

Nahor Rice1

TMG ID:39597, (21 Aug 1699 - 8 Aug 1704)
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Edmund Rice1 B: 3 May 1663, D: 1726

Primary Birth & Death

  • Born: Nahor Rice was born on Friday, 21 Aug 1699.1
  • Died on Friday, 8 Aug 1704 at Sudbury, Middlesex County, MassachusettsG, at age 4 years, 11 months and 18 days. Details as recorded: Cause of Death: killed by Indians. The informant on the Death Certificate was: Edmund Rice.1

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited3 Sep 2022

Hulda Rice1

TMG ID:39598, (5 Dec 1701 - )
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Edmund Rice1 B: 3 May 1663, D: 1726

Primary Birth & Death

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Moses Rice1

TMG ID:39599, (21 Mar 1702/3 - 4 Oct 1704)
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Edmund Rice1 B: 3 May 1663, D: 1726

Primary Birth & Death

  • Born: Moses Rice was born on Wednesday, 21 Mar 1702/3.1
  • Died on Saturday, 4 Oct 1704 at age 1 year, 6 months and 13 days.1

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013

Ruth Rice1

TMG ID:39600, (17 Nov 1712 - 1 Jul 1752)
Relationship:2nd cousin 7 times removed of Elsie Dora Lewis
Father*Edmund Rice1 B: 3 May 1663, D: 1726

Primary Birth & Death

'Non-primary' Vitals

Citations

  1. [S511] RootsWeb.com, online http://tinyurl.com/hnfue9h, Roy Samuel Hubbard Jr. (e-mail address), updated as of 1 Apr 2004.
Last Edited1 Feb 2013