Rebecca B Chase
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: Est 1850 - Yarmouth, Massachusetts Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Rev Enoch E Chase (1804-1886) Mother:Rhoda Chase
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Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: 14 Sep 1779 - Tisbury, Massachusetts Baptism: Death: 21 Sep 1850 - Tisbury, Massachusetts Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Freeman Daggett (Nov 1772 - 7 Nov 1809) Marriage: Status:
Notes
General:
Father: Joseph Chase
Mother: Martha Hillman
Rhoda A Chase
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: Est 1850 - South Yarmouth, Massachusetts Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *George L Rogers (23 Oct 1847 - 17 Jun 1923) 1 Marriage: Status: Children: 1. Charles W Rogers (1868-1934) 2 2. George Everett Rogers (1876-1919) 3Rev Richard Chase
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Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: 3 Mar 1714 - Yarmouth, Massachusetts Baptism: Death: 14 Jan 1794 - Dennis, Massachusetts 4 Burial: in North Harwich Cemetery Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Thomas Chase (1679-1767) Mother: Sarah Gowell (1682-1726)
Spouses and Children
1. *Thankfull Berry (8 Jan 1716 - 15 Mar 1807) Marriage: 21 Jan 1735 - Yarmouth, Massachusetts Status: Children: 1. John Chase (1736-1776) 2. Archelus Chase (1740-Bef 1772) 3. Berry Chase (1742-1820) 4. Abigail Chase (1759-1818)
Notes
Marriage Notes (Thankfull Berry)
Children
John Chase b: 2 FEB 1735/36 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, MA
Samuel Chase b: 11 FEB 1737/38 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, MA
Archelus Chase b: 17 MAY 1740 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, MA
Berry Chase b: 23 JUL 1742 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, MA
Richard Chase b: 21 JUL 1745 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, MA
Rebecca Chase b: 21 JUL 1747 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, MA
Thankful Chase b: 8 MAR 1750/51 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, MA
Huldah Chase b: 21 FEB 1757 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, MA
Abigail Chase b: 1 MAY 1759 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, MA
Phebe Chase b: 3 JUN 1760 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, MA
Robert Frances Chase
Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: 28 Dec 1942 - Wellfleet, Massachusetts 5 Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Francis Leon Chase (Est 1920- ) Mother: Marie A Lussier (1915- )Russell H Chase
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Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: 1932 - Orleans, Massachusetts Baptism: Death: 29 Aug 2005 - East Orleans, Massachusetts Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Earle Chase (Est 1900- ) Mother:
Spouses and Children
1. *Donna J Nickerson (Est 1932 - ) Marriage: Status:
Notes
General:
Russell H. Chase
Friday, September 2, 2005
ORLEANS - Russell H. Chase, 73, died of cancer Aug. 29 at his home. He was the husband of the late Donna J. (Nickerson) Chase. Survivors include his children Richard R. Chase of Orleans, Alan W. Chase of San Rafael, CA, Candace A. Chase and Barbara L. Livingstone of Winslow, ME and Jean L. Erdel of Seminole, FL.; a brother Earle ''Buddy'' Chase, Jr. of
Worcester; five grandchildren and many nieces and nephews.
Mr. Chase was born and raised in Orleans. After attending Orleans High School he enlisted in the Navy and spent four years on aircraft carriers including...
Ruth Chase
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: Est 1785 - (Yarmouth, Massachusetts) Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Joshua Studley (Est 1780 - ) Marriage: Status: Children: 1. Joshua Studley (1819-1861)Sally Chase
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Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: Est 1772 - Harwich, Massachusetts Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Anthony Arey (Est 1768 - ) Marriage: 9 Apr 1797 - Harwich, Massachusetts 6 Status: Children: 1. Archelaus Arey (1797- ) 2. Sally Arey (1801- ) 3. Nabba Arey (1802- ) 4. Thankfull Arey (1808- )Sally Goodspeed Chase
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Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: 29 Aug 1804 - Wellfleet, Massachusetts 7 Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Nathan Chase (Est 1780- ) Mother: Betsey Watts (1785- ) 8Chief Justice Salmon P Chase
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Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: 13 Jan 1808 - Cornish, New Hampshire Baptism: Death: 7 May 1873 - New York City, New York Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Ithamar Chase (1762- ) Mother:
Spouses and Children
Notes
General:
Salmon P. Chase, Lawyer, United States Senator from Ohio, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, and eighteenth governor elected by the people of Ohio. He was born at Cornish, New Hampshire, January l3th, 1808, and died in New York City, May 7th, 1873. In 1815 his father removed his family to Keene, New Hampshire, where his son subsequently enjoyed the advantages of a good common school education, and being by his uncle, Bishop Chase, invited to do so went to Worthington, Ohio, there pursued his studies and was, under his uncle's direction, prepared to enter college. He then returned to New England, and entered the junior class of Dartmouth College, from which he graduated in 1826. Having also an uncle in the United States Senate, he then went to Washington City, and there opened a private classical school. Mr. Chase exerted himself anew, and obtained the patronage of Henry Clay, Samuel L. Southard, and William Wirt, whose sons were entrusted to his tuition, and during the time not thus occupied he, under the direction of the latter gentleman, engaged in the study of law. In 1829 having, as he believed, completed his law studies, he was examined and admitted to practice, upon informing the presiding judge that he had arranged to engage in practice in Cincinnati. In 1834 he became solicitor in Cincinnati for the Bank of the United States, and shortly afterward obtained the same position for one of the city banks, also. In 1837 he distinguished himself by his defense of a colored woman who was brought by her master into the State, and escaped from his possession. His defense of this case gave Mr. Chase some prominence as an abolitionist, and this character was confirmed by his subsequent defense in the supreme court of Ohio of James G. Birney, who had been indicted for harboring a fugitive slave. Mr. Chase in such defense took the same ground he did in the previous action, viz: that slavery was local and dependent upon State laws for its existence, and the master of a slave having brought such slave into a free state voluntarily, thereby made such slave, ipso facto, free. In 1846, associated with the Hon. W. H. Seward, Mr. Chase defended Van Zandt before the Supreme Court of the United States, and in doing so much more boldly and effectively emphasized his opinion that under the act of 1797 no fugitive from service could be reclaimed in Ohio unless such slave had escaped from one of the original thirteen States whose representatives in Congress had enacted that organic law; that it was the clear understanding of the framers of that document that slavery should be left exclusively to the disposal of the several States, and in view of which understanding seven of those thirteen States had forever removed slavery from, and no slave could then be found in them; and, finally, that the clause in the Constitution relating to persons held to service was one that conferred no power upon Congress, and was never understood to confer any. On the 22d February 1849, Mr. Chase, by a combination of the democratic members of the Ohio legislature who favored him and the free soilers, was elected United States Senator. At the Baltimore democratic convention in 1852, by approving the compromise acts, including the fugitive slave law of 1850, and denouncing the further discussion of the slavery question. It was upon this platform Mr. Pierce was elected, and the democrats of Ohio having, we say, joined in its adoption, Mr. Chase withdrew from their ranks, advocated the organization of an independent democratic party, and drafted a declaration of principles for such party, which was substantially the same year adopted by the Pittsburgh convention of independent democrats. During the remainder of his term in the Senate he aimed to divorce effectively the Federal government from its patronage of and all connection with slavery, and guarantee freedom and the enjoyment of human rights to all conditions of the inhabitants of the free States. He also urged government aid for the construction of the trans- continental railway, and the safer navigation of the great lakes. By such advocacy and his consistent course he increased his constituents, and in 1855 he was nominated and elected governor of Ohio by the opponents of the Pierce administration. In 1856, at his request, his name was not put in nomination for the Presidency, and in l857 he was re-elected governor of Ohio by the largest vote ever polled in the State. Called by President Lincoln to his cabinet in March 1861, he was made Secretary of the Treasury, and performed the duties of the office with much ability during the following years until July 1864, when, having tendered his resignation, he withdrew to private life. Four months afterward, the death of Chief Justice Taney made vacant the first position on the supreme bench of the United States court, and the name of Mr. Chase being sent by the President to the Senate, he was confirmed and invested with the office of Chief Justice. He confined himself until his death to the duties of his office as Chief Justice. The most distinguished and beneficent feature of his term of office as Secretary of the Treasury was, in his capacity of lawyer, originating, drafting, and recommending the passage of the bill that in 1863 became a law for the conversion of State and all other forms of chartered banks of issue into National banks, and under which the government of the United States became responsible for their circulation by the deposit as security of United States bonds to cover the total amount of such circulation, plus ten per cent. Although earnestly opposed by bankers at the time of its discussion, the advantage of this change in the character of their security as banks of issue was subsequently freely acknowledged; and, long before his death,Chief Justice Chase had the satisfaction of knowing that the advantages of this law to the people of the United States were unparalleled by any monetary measure ever enacted, as by it the money or its representative bank bills, constituting about one-half of the currency of the nation, was made uniform and of exactly the same face value in every part of the United States.
1 Wellfleet Town Officers, Wellfleet, Massachusetts Annual Reports (Wellfleet MA), 1923.
2 Wellfleet Town Officers, Wellfleet, Massachusetts Annual Reports (Wellfleet MA), 1888, p 27.
3 Wellfleet Town Officers, Wellfleet, Massachusetts Annual Reports (Wellfleet MA), 1901 marriages.
4 Robert Paine Carlson, Cape Cod Gravestones, 2003. Eastham MA. CapeCodGravestones.com.
5 Wellfleet Town Officers, Wellfleet, Massachusetts Annual Reports (Wellfleet MA), 1942.
6
Harwich Massachusetts vital records (http://plymouthcolony.net/barnstable/vitalrecords/harwich/harlinktable.html
pages numbers refer to "Vital records, town of Harwich, Massachusetts, 1694-1850" 1982. Harwich Historical Society), 489. Please note: Harwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts is 100 miles from Hardwick, Worcester, Massachusetts. There is no 'Harwick.'
7 Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 1:92 Nathan & Betsey Chase family.
8
Town records of Wellfleet, Massachusetts (Wellfleet, Massachusetts.), 1:64.
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