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Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Gates Families and Persons of Ridgefield, Fairfield County from the Connecticut State Library, Barbour Collection: Samuel (i) and Sarah



Gates Families and Persons of Ridgefield, Fairfield County from the Connecticut State Library, Barbour Collection: Samuel (i) and Sarah
authored January, 2020


If you are fortunate enough to have ancestors from Colonial Connecticut and post the American Revolution the Barbour Collection1 is a genealogical treasure. As early as the 1640s as areas were settled and politically organized, the Town Clerks were expected to record marriage, birth, and death vital records. Independently the various ecclesiastical societies frequently kept similar records. Land records, probates and wills further supplement sorting things out.

Ridgefield is one such town of interest since my Gates family was in that town by 1732 and probably shortly after 1722. The earliest entry is dated March 26th, 1732 and records the death of Mary2 wife of Samuel Gates. Of the forty-five Gates entries, ten are post 18003.

The Mary Gates that died in 1732 is my sixth great grandmother. The question becomes is her spouse Samuel in Ridgefield and still alive or is she a widow. Usually widows are noted as such. If Samuel died in Ridgefield he most likely would be recorded, of course he could have moved away. One other possibility is that he could remarry, as he was about forty-seven and continue to have children (or not). It seems unlikely that a 'new' Samuel and wife, Sarah would suddenly appear in Ridgefield shortly after Mary's death.

I favor this possibility of remarriage with children and suggest the Ridgefield vital records strongly support the conclusion. There are four direct entries under Samuel Gates : 1) Samuel (ii) marries Rachel4, April 1st, 1734, 2) Samuel (iii) as son of Samuel and Rachel, b. September 3rd, 17365, 3) Samuel (other) as son of Jonathan and Sarah, b. May 2nd, 1783, 4) Samuel (ii) deceased September 30th, 1793, ae 84.6 7

For purposes of keeping all the Samuels straight I have started using roman numerals to identify them. Samuel (i) is Mary's Samuel with Sarah as second wife, Samuel (ii) is Rachel's Samuel, my fifth great-grandmother. Not yet introduced are Samuel (iii) and Ruth Olmsted8, my fourth great-grandparents and Samuel9 (iv) and Hannah Manning, son of Samuel (iii). These four are father, son, grandson and great-grandson.

Now one needs to examine all the entries where Samuel is a secondary entry as father and examine who is his spouse. There are four birth entries all associated with a spouse just identified as Sarah. There is no record of Samuel and Sarah being married in Ridgefield. It appears they have four children born in Ridgefield.

This is when the Ridgefield records become unusual and contain some clues in plain sight, along with a slight irregularity. Samuel (ii) and Rachel are married April 1st, 1734. So the theory is that Samuel (i) remarried to Sarah and the marriage was not recorded or recorded elsewhere.

There is a bit more to the puzzle. The vital records are 'sometimes' kept organized by the various town clerks. It is possible the organization might depend on the clerk and their familiarity with the families of those entries being recorded. In Ridgefield the 'land record volumes' seems to be where the vital records were recorded.

The four children born to Samuel (i) and Sarah: Sarah, (b. September 10, 1733, LR1 218-19), Stephen (b.1737, LR1 233), Phebe (b. 1739, LR1 236) to Samuel Sr. & Sarah and Daniel (b. 1741, LR1 236) to Samuel Sr. & Sarah.

When daughter Sarah is born to Samuel (i) and Sarah there are no other Samuel couples and the 'Senior' designation is not needed. Only the last two children in the land record entries for Samuel (i) and Sarah are recorded on the same page of LR1 236 and the 'Senior' designation is used in both cases. When Stephen is born (1737) after Sarah and before Phebe and Daniel the 'Senior' designation is appropriate but not used. Why? The Stephen entry is made on 'land record' page LR1 233 which is separate from the other three children entries. Perhaps examining the original records (or microfilm) would suggest something. It seems more significant that three out of the four entries support that, the widower, Samuel (i) 'Senior' and Sarah have a growing new family with no other possibility except to distinguish them from Samuel (ii) and Rachel.

Which is to say this all begs the question, 'If there is a Samuel Sr. then who is Samuel Jr.'. To reiterate in terms of families there was no vital record entry for 'Senior' until after Samuel (ii) married Rachel in 1734 and their family; Samuel (i) is logically 'Senior'.

One final question in this exercise. What happened to Samuel (i) and his family and/or where did they go? After 1741 there is no record in Ridgefield 'land records' of subsequent events regarding any of the six. I will save my speculation for a sequel. Similarly a prequel needs to be provided to underline where Samuel (i) and Mary were prior to Ridgefield. The prequel is as much a story about Mary (Richards) Gates as Samuel (i).


Postscript

The day after I published the above entry in the blog I decided to go the Wisconsin State Historical Society and see if I could establish a better record for the prequel and sequel mentioned above. I decided to get a complete copy of the Stephen Gates of Hingham, Lancaster and Cambridge, Massachusetts and some of his descendants by Clarence Almon Torrey, Ph.B. for my personal use. This genealogy was published after the author's death in NEHGR in 1966 and 1967.

I have used parts of it for years but not looked at it in quite awhile. To my surprise Torrey rather directly asserts that Samuel (i) had a second wife Sarah and four children.10 I guess I had forgotten and began to think I had wasted my time.

On second thought, I was reassured and now more confident in my own assertions. Torrey offers no supporting evidence nor references but I am sure it is again the Barbour Collection just as I used it. It will be interesting to know the surname of Sarah.


1[Barbour1994] The Barbour collection of Connecticut town vital records. Editor, Lorraine Cook White. 55 Volumes. Also available at AncestryLibrary.com (Ridgefield, CT records seem to be missing).
2[Barbour1994] Ridgefield Volume. pp178-179. Generally accepted as Mary (Richards) (Fairbanks) (Truesdell) Gates, ten years senior to Samuel.
3The number of unique individuals is probably best estimated by counting the number of births, ~32.
4Generally accepted as Rachel Hayes; she is named in her father's will, as Rachel Gates. (James Hayes, Norwalk - Fairfield Probate District #2799)
5Samuel (iii) b. 1736 died 1816 in Malta, Saratoga County, NY. The Stillwater, Saratoga, Surrogate Court has proceedings, 1820, with Coleman Gates as administrator, handling the sale of Samuel's real estate in order to pay debts of the deceased. Coleman is the brother of, Noah (deceased), and his minor children (hardly minor in 1820?) as grandchildren of Samuel (iii) are named in this proceeding ('Hiram Gates, Ashbell Gates, William Gates, and Angelina Gates'). New York Wills, Saratoga County, 1816-1826 begins about page 239. In person view at Surrogate Court (2008) and also LDS microfilm #555718. As an aside is William really Ashbell William representing a transcription/copy error.
6[Barbour1994] Ridgefield Volume. pp178-179. All.
7Samuel (ii) – Probate Docket #1920 Administrators: Jonathan Gates, of Ridgefield, Samuel Gates of Norwalk, Thomas St. John, Ridgefield– also died in fall of 1793, Ridgefield. Samuel (iii) lost his father (fall) and his son (summer) in 1793.
8Samuel (iii) and Ruth (Olmsted) Gates. (Have the will/distribution from her father James Olmsted ?)– Wilton/Norwalk, Fairfield County, Connecticut. Ruth is buried in Dunning Street Cemetery, Saratoga County, New York. There are numerous land transactions by Samuel (which one is not always clear) in Fairfield, Connecticut and by 1800 Samuel and Ruth appear to along with sons, Moses, Noah, Coleman to have completed a migration to Saratoga County, New York. They are recorded in the 1800 Saratoga, New York Census. 1790 in Greenwich for Census?
9Samuel (iv) died in Norwalk, Fairfield County, Connecticut, July 25th, 1793; Probate #2305. Norwalk is south of Ridgefield with present day Wilton taken from it in 1804 (in between the two). Private communications (email) with Elmer Gates suggest this Samuel was in Saratoga County, New York at the start of the Revolutionary War.
10Stephen Gates of Hingham, Lancaster and Cambridge, Massachusetts and some of his descendants - NEHGR v120, p162

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