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William
Boyd Family
Derry
Twp; Lancaster Co; PA
I. WILLIAM
BOYD, 1 a native of county Antrim, Province of Ulster, Ireland,
emigrated to Pennsylvania prior to 1730, settling in Derry township. He
had a large family of children, of whom we have the following:
i. Robert, b. 1705, who took up several tracts of land in Derry
township; m. and had Elizabeth, Catharine, and Mary.
ii. Alexander, b. 1707; m.
and had Alexander, Robert,
William, and Margaret.
iii. Jennett, b. 1710; d. October
17, 1757; m. John McCosh;
d. November, 1754. At his death he left considerable
of an estate, which his widow disposed of as follows: To
her brothers, William, John, Alexander, and Robert
Boyd; her niece, Margaret, daughter of John Boyd; to
Alexander, Robert, William, and Margaret, children of
Alexander Boyd; to Benjamin, Joseph, and William,
children of William Boyd; niece Catharine Boyd, who,
we presume, was a daughter of William Boyd; to her
sister-in-law, Jean Boyd; to her nieces, Elizabeth,
Catharine, and Mary, daughters, we suppose, of Robert
Boyd; to Rev. John Roan; and "the sum of twenty
shillings to Derry congregation."
2. iv. William, b. 1712; m. and left issue.
v. John, b. 1715; m.
and had Margaret.
II. WILLIAM
BOYD,2 (William,1) b. 1712, in county Antrim, Ireland, d. prior to 1760,
in Derry township, Lancaster county, Pa.; m. and had among others the
following issue:
3. i. William, b. 1733; m. Jennett Brisben.
4. ii. Benjamin, b. 1738; m. Jennett Elliott.
5. iii. Joseph, b. 1740; m. Elizabeth Wallace.
iv. Catharine, b. 1743.
III. WILLIAM
BOYD, 3 (William,2 William,1) b. about 1733 in Derry township, then
Lancaster county, Pennsylvania. He was brought up as a farmer, became
quite prominent in Provincial days, and was an officer during the French
and Indian war, and the struggle for independence. He belonged to the
Paxtang Boys, whose zeal in defense of their firesides compelled them to
destroy the murdering savages of Conestoga. During the latter part of
his life, he served in the commission of a justice of the peace. He was
one of the charter members of Lodge 21, at Paxtang, and its second
Master. In his will, he left a legacy to the lodge's charity fund. Mr.
Boyd died May 17, 1808, and is buried in Derry church graveyard. He m.
JENNETT BRISBEN. They had issue:
i. James, b. 1759.
6. ii. John, b. 1761; m. Mary Williams.
iii. Jennett, b. 1763; m. (???)
Moore.
iv. Mary, b. 1765; m. (???)
Strawbridge.
v. Margaret, b. 1767;
m. William Williams.
vi. William, b. 1769; d.
December, 1807; m. and left issue.
IV. BENJAMIN
BOYD,3 (William,2 William,1) b. 1738; d. May 8, 1803; m.
December 31, 1761, by Reverend John Roan, JENNETT ELLIOTT, b. 1737; d.
November 21, 1820; and, with her husband, lie buried in old Derry church
graveyard. They had among other issue:
i. William, b. 1768; d. September 19, 1803; leaving a wife,
Mary, and a daughter, Rachel, b. June, 1803.
V. JOSEPH
BOYD,3 (William,2 William,1) b. 1740; d. September 20, 1781, in
Londonderry township, Dauphin county, Pennsylvania; m. in 1766, by
Reverend
John Elder, ELIZABETH WALLACE, daughter of Robert Wallace, b. 1746; d.
April
13, 1802, in Londonderry township, Dauphin county, Pennsylvania; both
buried
in old Derry church graveyard. They had issue:
7. i. Mary, b. 1768; m. William Baird.
ii. Margaret, b. 1770; m.
William McDonald, of Dickinson
township, Cumberland county, Pennsylvania.
iii. Elizabeth, b. 1772; d. October
15, 1805.
iv. Ann, b. 1774.
8. v. William, b. 1776; m. Martha Cowden.
vi. Jean, b. 1778.
vii. Isabel, b. 1780; d. December
1, 1789.
VI. JOHN
BOYD,4 (William,3 William,2 William,1) b. about 1761, in Derry
township, Lancaster county, Pa.; d. April 6, 1799, at Harrisburg, Pa. He
was one
of the first settlers in the new town, locating there in 1785--the year
it was laid out
--and became quite prominent and influential. He m., the year previous,
MARY
WILLIAMS, dau. of George Williams, b. 1761, in Paxtang township; d.
September 25, 1844, at Harrisburg, and there buried. They had issue:
i. Mary, b. July 21, 1785; d. s. p.
ii. William, b. November 12,
1786; d. s. p.
iii. George, b. July 17, 1788.
iv. Elizabeth, (twin,) b. July 17,
1788.
9. v. James-Rutherford, b. October 13, 1790; m.,
first, Margaret
Emerson;
second, Eliza Keller; third, Eliza Sloan Baird.
vii. John-Brisben, b. June 27,
1793; d. s. p.
10. viii. George-Williams, b. November 12, 1796; m. Elizabeth S.
Mish.
After the
death of John Boyd, his widow m. STACY POTTS, concerning whom, as he was
a man of mark, we have this information: Thomas Potts, the ancestor
of Stacy Potts, was a Quaker, who emigrated from England with his wife
and
children, in company with Mahlon Stacy and his family, in the ship
"Shield,"
and landed at Burlington, N. J., in the winter of 1678, she being the
first ship that went so far up the Delaware. Stacy was a leading man in
the Society of Friends and in the government of West Jersey. At Trenton,
1731, Stacy Potts was born. He received a good education, and learned
the trade of a tanner, a business which he successfully carried on at
least up to the time of the Revolution. Mr. Potts seems to have been a
very enterprising and public-spirited citizen. In 1776, besides owning a
tannery, he built the steel-works on Front street, Trenton, and after
the close of the Revolution was largely interested in the erection of a
paper-mill in the same locality. This was prior to the publication of
Collins' Bible. In December, 1788, it was advertised by its proprietors,
Stacy Potts and John Reynolds, as "now nearly completed."
About this period Stacy Potts removed to Harrisburg, Pa. It is difficult
to divine what were his motives in leaving his native town, where he was
very popular, and with his ample competency, to settle in the
then new town on the Susquehanna. His second marriage may, perchance,
have
had somewhat to do with his removal from Trenton. Going to Harrisburg,
he made
large purchases of land, and whether it was due to this fact, or his
agreeable manner, Stacy Potts became quite prominent; was chosen to the
Legislature in 1791 and in 1792. During the mill-dam troubles of
1794-95, Mr. Potts was quite active, and was one of the committee of
citizens who were willing to take upon themselves all responsibility
accruing by the destruction of the obnoxious dam. He served as burgess
of the borough, and was a member of the Town Council. From 1799 to 1803
he again represented Dauphin county in the State Legislature. About the
year 1805, he returned to Trenton; subsequently became mayor of that
city, an office he held for several years. He died in that city April
28, 1816, in his eighty-fifth year. Mr. Potts was thrice married. We
have no knowledge as to his first wife. He married, secondly, Miss
Gardiner, of Philadelphia, a Presbyterian
lady of superior intelligence. She died at Harrisburg in 1799. His third
wife was Mrs. Mary Boyd. Upon the death of Mr. Potts, his widow removed
to Harrisburg, where she resided with her son, George W. Boyd, until her
death in 1844.
VII. MARY
BOYD,4 (Joseph,3 William,2 William,1) b. 1768, in Derry township,
Lancaster county, Pa.; d. 1866, in West Hanover township, Dauphin
county,
Pa.; m. WILLIAM BAIRD. They had issue, (surname Baird:)
i. James, b. 1794.
11. ii. Joseph-Boyd, b. October, 1796; m. Mary Todd.
iii. William, b. 1798; m. (???)
McNair.
iv. Elizabeth, b. 1800.
v. John, b. 1802.
vi. Wallace, b. 1804; d. September 2,
1858; m. Martha Todd,
(see Todd record.)
VIII.
WILLIAM BOYD,4 (Joseph,3 William,2 William,1) b. 1776; removed to, and
died in, Cumberland county, Pa.; m. June 4, 1807, MARTHA COWDEN,
daughter of James and Mary Cowden. They had issue:
i. Elizabeth, m. (???) Dallas.
ii. James, m. (???) McMurray.
iii. Joseph.
iv. Matthew.
v. William.
vi. Edward.
vii. Martha.
viii. Mary.
IX. JAMES
RUTHERFORD BOYD,5 (John,4 William,3 William,2 William,1) b.
October 13, 1790, at Harrisburg, Pa.; d. December 29, 1865. He learned
the
trade of cabinet-making, at Trenton, New Jersey, and for many years
successfully carried on that business. He served as third sergeant in
Captain Richard M. Crain's company, the Harrisburg Artillerists, in the
war of 1814, and for a long time was a member of the borough council.
Mr. Boyd was thrice married; m., first, MARGARET EMERSON; d. May 24,
1824. They had issue:
i. Mary, d. (???); m. Dr. William S. Cresap, d. (???); had
Mary, Boyd,
Nade, and William.
ii. John-R., b. December 26,
1815; d. March 26, 1862; m. Caroline
E.
Truman, and had Annie, Truman, Margaret,
Albert, Peter, and Caroline, d. s. p.
iii. Sarah-Ann, b. May 29, 1818; d.
October 8, 1854; m. John
B.
Bratton, and had Laura and Edward.
Mr. Boyd m.,
secondly, ELIZA KELLER; b. June 12, 1803; d. February 27, 1828;
daughter of John Peter Keller and Catharine Shaeffer, (see Keller
record.)
They had issue:
iv. Peter-Keller, b. 1826; m. Caroline E. Barnitz; resides at
Harrisburg, Pa.
Mr. Boyd m.,
thirdly, February 3, 1831, by Rev. William R. DeWitt, ELIZA
SLOAN BAIRD; b. 1800; daughter of Richard Sloan and Sarah McCormick;
resides at Harrisburg, Pa. They had issue:
v. Robert-Sloan, d. 1884.
vi. Isabella-McCormick, b.
October 4, 1833; d. February 10, 1850.
vii. George-William, m. Nettie
Hershey.
viii. Eliza-Potts, m. James Murphy;
reside in Philadelphia.
ix. Maria; resides at Harrisburg,
Pa.
x. James-Alexander, m. Dessie Spahr;
b. September 28, 1847;
d. February 13, 1870.
X. GEORGE
WILLIAMS BOYD,5 (John,4 William,3 William,2 William,1) b. November 12,
1796, in Harrisburg, Pa.; d. August 31, 1863. He was a chair maker, and
carried on the business many years at Harri??. Was also a member of the
council of that ?? and a man of ?? in the community. He m., October 31,
1822, by Rev. William R. DeWitt. D. D., ELIZARETH S. MISH, b. November
23, 1802; d. March 26, 1849, in Harrisburg, Pa., and, with her husband,
there buried. They had issue:
12.
i. John-Bris??, m. Elizabeth J. Carson.
ii. Jacob-Mish. m.
iii. Elizabeth, m. William S.
Rowson, civil engineer; reside
at Perth Amboy. New Jersey, and had Mary and William.
iv. Mary-Ellen, m. John B.
Bratton, of Carlisle. Pa., and
had Mary, Bessir, John-Bris??n, and G??.
v. Catharine-Mish.
vi. Caroline-Virginig, m.
John H. Tennent, of Alabama;
reside in New York city.
vii. George-Williams, b. December
21, 1836; d. January 6,
1867; served in the quartermaster's department during
the Rebellion.
XI. JOSEPH
BOYD BAIRD,5 (Mary,4 Joseph,3 William,2 William,1) b. October
1796: removed to Franklin county, Pa., where he died; m., October 7,
1834.
MARY TODD, b. November 1, 1805, in Hanover township. Dauphin county, Pa.
In
1880, was residing in Franklin, Warren county, Ohio. They had issue
(surname
Baird):
i. Martha-Ann, b. February 3, 1836; m., October 12, 1854,
John Smith; reside in Taylorsville, Christian county,
Illinois.
ii. Harriet-Jemima, b. May
12, 1838.
iii. Caroline-Todd, b. May 14,
1841; m., January 11, 1866,
Manlius T. Leachman; reside in Christian county, Illinois.
iv. Francina, b. March 12,
1841.
XII. JOHN
BRISBEN BOYD,6 (George-Williams,5 John,4 William,3 William,2
William,1) b. September 4, 1824, in Harrisburg, Pa., where he resides;
m.,
in 1849, ELIZABETH J. CARSON; b. in Harrisburg, Pa.; daughter of William
M.
Carson and Sarah Kunkel. They had issue:
i. Emma-Louise, m. William H. Henderson, and had Anna.
ii. Elizabeth-Carson.
Source: PENNSYLVANIA
GENEALOGIES; BY WILLIAM HENRY EGLE, 1886
NOTE:
Use this data as a finding tool, just as you would any other secondary
source. When you find the name of an ancestor listed, confirm the facts
in original sources.
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