John DODGE, farmer; p. O. Crete; was born in Crete
Twp., Will Co., IL, Aug. 11, 1840, and is
the son of Enoch and Susan (ADAMS) DODGE,
who were among the early settlers of Crete
Twp., Will Co., IL; Enoch DODGE, a farmer,
was born in Beverly, N. H., Dec. 8, 1795;
with his parents, moved to Vermont; here
he married in Eden, Vt., Nov. 26, 1818, Miss
Susan ADAMS, born in Rutland, Mass., in 1803;
in 1838, they emigrated West in a two-horse
wagon; started Oct. 4, and arrived in Will
Co., IL, Nov. 26, 1838; they first lived
in a log cabin on the HEWES farm; Mr. DODGE
purchased 160 acres of Government land (the
old homestead); here he made improvements,
and moved his family on the farm, and engaged
in farming throughout life; he died on the
old homestead March 4, 1873, respected and
honored by his fellow-men, leaving a wife
and nine children to mourn his loss. Mr.
John DODGE is engaged in farming on the old
homestead. He married Martha WILDER, daughter
of Almon WILDER, one of the old settlers
of Will Co. Mr. DODGE enlisted in the late
war, in the 9th Minn., Co. F, as Sergeant;
mustered out at close of the war. Enoch enlisted
in the 100th I. V. I.; participated in some
of the prominent battles; mustered out at
close of the war; now farming in Kansas. |
DODGES 1823 - MIDWEST
DODGE, Catharine A m. BAXTER, Wm on 08-OCT-1859
DODGE, Jesse T m. PARHAM, C E Miss on 02-MAR-1865
DODGE, Jessie T m. PUTMAN, Wm C on 15-AUG-1869
DODGE, Stephen C marr. FLECK, Clara C on
10-DEC-1868
DODGE, E L marr. ELLIS, R B on 24-MAR-1840
Census_ Year 1860 Microfilm # M653-351State
KS County, Nemaha
Dodge Elizabeth 26 F Ohio
Dodge Irvine S. 6 M Iowa
Dodge Milton 4 M Iowa
Dodge Ford 1/12 M
Index of "Cowley County Heritage Book".
DODGE Jacquline 250
Jewell County, KS 1883
21,201 Dodge, Zachariah Jewell wd. l. leg
Ottawa County, KS 1883
115, 073 Dodge, Lizzie F Vine Creek widow
Louisville, Pottawatomie County, Kansas 1870
Dodge George E. 36 140 NY
Dodgion John W. 26 47 MO
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT List of voters of the sixth election district of the Territory
of Kansas, according to the census returns
made by Charles Leib, taken during the months
of January and February, 1855.Contributed
by Leon Rogers, January 20, 1997
Dodge David Mo
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second Lieutenant Frederick R. Dodge, promoted
Sept 24, 1898, discharged Aug 1, 1899, Captain
36th U.S. Volunteer Infantry.
First Sergeant Charles I. Dodge;
Dodge, Cleve Lenard 15 Oct 1880 W mom lives
Arlington WA Ketchikan AK
Dodge, Robert Lee 16 Feb 1897 W Philipsburg
MT Seward AK
Dodge, William Henry (Jr.) 21 Jan 1889 W
Chicago IL Sitka AK
Dodge, William Lyman 31 Aug 1876 W mom lives
Priest River ID Fairbanks AK
---------------------------------------------------
Dodge Ablert Gillas Dora G 106 .
Dodge Charles Pisel Sarah J E 202
.Dodge Charles C Walker Rebecca Jane B 124
.Dodge Daniel Ffymier Rachel B 49
.Dodge Elijah S Taylor Letha Ann B 162
.Dodge H p Larue Nora F 289
.Dodge Warren Lewis Lucy Ann E
12 564 564 Dodge Chas. C. 33 M Farmer 700
N. Y.
13 564 564 Dodge Rebecca J. 23 F Ind.
14 564 564 Dodge Francis M. 4 M Iowa
15 564 564 Dodge Olive C 2 F Iowa |
---------------------------------------------------------------
Genealogies of Rhode Island Families,
Vol.
II, N-W,New England; Historical &
Genealogical
Register, Genealogical Pub. Co., Inc.,
Baltimore,1989,
page 334-335 , found at the Rogue Valley
Gen. Soc., Medford, Oregon :
"In 1684, a list of the Freemen
of
new Shoreham was entered on the town
records,
which shows a considerable augmentation
of
the population by the arrival of certain
new comers. This list was printed in
1859
in The Register [vol.XIII, p 37] by
J.D.
Champlin, Jr., Esq., of Stonington.
"
The list while containing numerous
repetitions,
does contain names of several Dodge
members,
namely: John Dodge, Tristram Dodge
Sr., William
Dodge, Tristram Dodge Jr, as well as
others
who intermarried with the DODGE families:
Edward BALL, John Rathbone, Samuel
George,Tormet
Rose, Alexander Enos [misread by Mr
Champlin
as "Alexander Junior" pg
335.]
pg. 343: States that the early settlers
of
Block Island were landsmen, except
for Tristram
Dodge, however over the next 2 generations
developed a race of seamen and fishermen.
pg. 330:
Tristram Dodge, the ancestor of the well-known
Dodge amily of New Shoreham and of the Dodges
of Connecticut, was beyond all doubt from
Devonshire, where the name Tristram Dodge
occurs at a somewhat earlier period. He was
evidently one of the Devon captains who were
engaged in the Newfoundland fisheries, and
in 1647 he was residing at Ferryland in that
Island [cf. Aspinwall, pp. 126, 127] . He
was engaged by the first settlers to come
from Newfoundland to the Island, in order
"to teach them the art of fishing",
the town records state. The Island Dodge
descend from his three sons John, Tristram,
and William. A fourth son, Israel, removed
to New London and was the ancestor of the
Connecticut
Dodges. he may have had also another son,
Thomas, who appears in the New Shoresham
records in 1680. He probably died young,
leaving no issue [cf. Austin, op.cit. and
"The Dodge Genealogly"].
--------------------------------------
DODGE, David Har 9A
DODGE, Edward C. Ric 14
DODGE, Jeremiah Leb 15
DODGE, John Leb 15
DODGE, Josiah Har 10
DODGE, Samuel S. Ash 8A
DODGE, Usebius Leb 15
ERIE and)HURON COUNTY, OHIO, MARRIAGES
through
1838
DODGE, Angeline ....STEVENSON, James
....30
Sep 1835
DODGE, Daniel ....FISH, Migee ....28
Apr
1830
DODGE, Sarah ....WHITEFORD, Dennis
W. ....7
Jan 1838
CUYAHOGA COUNTY OHIO - HISTORY: Newburgh
History says that Samuel Smith BALDWIN, son
of Samuel and Hannah NORTHROP BALDWIN of
Ridgefield, Conn. Came to Newburgh in 1808
and settled upon a farm on Aetna Street.
He brought with him his wife Sarah CAMP BALDWIN,
and several young children. At this time
they had been married about eleven years.
The writer of this sketch had the privilege
of examining a diary and docket written by
Samuel S. BALDWIN and preserved through all
these years by one of his descendants. In
these he tells of much of the daily life
of those early times. He held the offices
of Sheriff and County Surveyor and was an
important man in the community. His daily
life was recorded as attending to acts of
justice, surveying and taking up new tracts
of land upon the Western Reserve, and “logging”
in which neighbors with their oxen assisted
him.
Frequent mention was made of such neighbors
as W.W. WILLIAMS, Joel THORPE and Amos
SPAFFORD.
In this Diary he tells of one of his
surveyors
crossing the ice at Black River on
horseback,
carrying a bag of provisions eagerly
expected
by the women at home. The horse broke
through
the ice and was drowned, its rider
being
obliged to walk back to Newburgh. The
bag
of provisions was later fished out
of the
river. Mr. BALDWIN also tells of the
calamity
that befell the CARTER family by the
drowning
of Harry CARTER, a lad of ten years,
in the
Cuyahoga River and the search for the
little
body.
Mrs. Samuel S. BALDWIN (Sarah CAMP) was a
delicate woman of culture and refinement.
In leaving the comforts of her Eastern home
she had little realization of the hardships
she would encounter as a pioneer in a new
land. She brought with her a fine wardrobe
and accessories, indicating wealth and good
taste, but quite unfitted to pioneer life.
She departed this life in 1818, after the
birth of twins, at the early age of thirty-six
years. Her daughter Lucretia married Reuben
HENRY. Caroline became Mrs. Victor M. CANNON
of Aurora, Portage county, Ohio. Julia married
Thomas NORTH, Sarah, Almeron DODGE, and Emily,
one of the twins, became Mrs. Francis MORAN.
After the death of his first wife, Mr. BALDWIN
married Rhoda BOUGHTON, daughter of Nathan
BOUGHTON of Stockbridge, Mass. And of Revolutionary
War fame. She proved a real mother to his
motherless children, but was herself left
a widow three years later.
GEAUGA COUNTY OHIO - Bainbridge Township
Cemetery Files |
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DODGE |
Sarah |
11/14 |
Jun e 1836 |
59 y |
w/o Seymour |
BA |
Fowler |
Stone old and dark in 1925; missing in 1982
& 1996 |
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HURON COUNTY OHIO - INDEX OF CEMETERY INSCRIPTIONS |
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DODGE |
Amelia Ann |
|
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552 |
DODGE |
Ella |
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580 |
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FULTON COUNTY, OHIO MARRIAGES 1864 - 1927 |
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Dodge, David & Paulsen, Emma; 18 February
1904 |
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PORTAGE COUNTY OHIO - Shalerville - Births,
Marriages; |
|
GOODELL George B: "Warwick, MA",
3/31/1815, son of Jonas & Eleanor Ayer
Goodell, m. 8/21/1840, Julia Dodge daU. of
Winthrop Dodge - They had 10 children |
TRUMBULL COUNTY OHIO - HISTORY: Part
5 (published
1874)
THE FOURTEENTH OHIO BATTERY was organized
August 20, 1861, and was mustered into service
September 20,1861. It was composed of one
hundred and fifty-six men, five officers,
andone hundred and twenty-five horses; the
greater proportion of the men being from
Trumbull County. The officers of this Battery
from Trumbull County were--First Lieutenant,
Homer E. Stull, Warren; Captain, Seth M.
Laird, Mesopotamia; Lieutenant, Geo.Hurlburt,
Warren. Lost thirty men killed and wounded,
and seventy-two horses, at battle of Shiloh,
April 6, 1862. This Battery served in the
Western Army under the following generals:
Generals Grant, Halleck, Sherman, McPherson,
Logan, Oglesby, Dodge, Blair, andThomas.
Was in the Army of the Tennessee up to and
during the Atlanta campaign; after the fall
of Atlanta, was transferred to the Army of
the Cumberland; served through the war, and
was mustered out July, 1865, at Columbus,
Mississippi. It received several complimentary
notices in general orders, from Sherman and
McPherson, for its promptness and bravery
during the Atlanta campaign.
Probate Record, Volume B, 1842-1846
Dodge, Heman estate 387
Toledo Attic Biography website
Henry Dodge was a native of Toledo,
born
on 27 December 1871. His
parents,
Frederick B. and Caroline (Perkins)
Dodge,
came to Toledo in 1861 when
Henry's father became the principal
of the
first Toledo high school.
His
father later moved into the law profession.
Henry's father died in 1893
and
his mother died in 1911.
Henry was one of five children. He
was schooled
at the High School of
Toledo
and graduated in 1889. He then attended
the
University of Michigan
where he
specialized in electrical engineering,
graduating
in 1893. Once he had
finished his education he returned
to Toledo
where he joined the
engineering
department of the Toledo White Lime
Company.
He eventually left this
job to
work in the engineering department
of the
Ohio Electric Car Company,
where
he stayed as general manager until
1915.
In 1915, Henry started his own business.
He was president of the H.p.
Dodge
Engineering Company and the inventor
of a
number of electrical devices
which
he later patented. The Dodge Engineering
Company was an immediate
success in
the manufacture of battery acid and
electric
batteries for cars. Henry
was
involved in the development of some
important
innovations, including
the
"Dodge Process" for hydrating
lime
which helped revolutionize the quick
lime
industry. He also invented a new process
to manufacture storage battery
plates which claimed to improve the
life
of the plate as well as
lowering
the cost.
Henry had a wide variety of business
and
social interests. He was the
director of the Walding, Kinnan and
Marvin
Company of wholesale drugs.
He
was involved in the social clubs of
the city.
He was a member of the
Toledo
Yacht Club, the Toledo Commerce Club,
the
Maumee River Yacht Club, the
Toledo Tennis and Toledo Country Clubs,
as
well as the American
Institute of
Electrical Engineers.
On September 25, 1896, Henry married
Gertrude
Marvin, the daughter of
Henry
Marvin who owned a Toledo druggist
company.
They had two children,
Henry
Marvin Dodge and Charleton M. Dodge
(who
later married a Baumgardner).
Henry
p. Dodge died on June 17, 1943 and
is buried
in Section 148A, Lot 42 at
Woodlawn Cemetery.[John M. Killits,
ed.,
Toledo and Lucas County, Ohio
1823-1923, vol. 3. (S.J. Clarke Publishing
Company: Chicago & Toledo,
1923),
540-41. Killits was the only source
found
for Henry p. Dodge leaving 20
years unaccounted for in his life.]
GEAUGA COUNTY OHIO - Chardon Village/Municipal
Cemetery
DODGE Edward 1886 4 Oct 1918
(s/o) (Joseph & Mariam) Pvt Co
A 26 Inf
Killed in action 4 Oct in
Meuse
Argonne, France.
DODGE Joseph 1859 (29 Sep) 1938 (h/o)
(Mariam
BOSS)
DODGE Mariam 1863 (4 Oct) 1952 (Joseph)
DIMMICK Lillian M. 1884 (17 Dec) 1973
DODGE
( ) (w/o) (Dan)
DIMMICK Alger (1992) (83y) (s/o) (Dan
&
Lillian)( 1st m.to
Arlene)
ashes 31 Aug
1993
DIMMICK Dan 1863 (cr 19May) 1947 (h/o)
(Lillian
(DODGE)
2m.)
DIMMICK Ethel (1990) (85y) MERRILL
(w/o)
(Alger 2m.) (1st m. Nyle
WELLs ashes 31 Aug
1993
DIMMICK Forrest N. 1887 (cr 16Feb)
1891(s/o)
(Dan)
put in vault, brought from Kalamazoo,
MI
DIMMICK Hannah 1851 1894
YOUNG
DIMMICK Orlando Alger, M.D. 28 Jun
1837 6
Jun 1920 (h/o) (HannAH
YOUNG
Claridon Cremated.
(s/o Asa & Mary (ALGER) DIMMICK)
DIMMICK Paul Moseley (30 Nov) 1880
(27 Feb)
1922 (s/o) (Orlando &
Hannah
(YOUNG)
GEAUGA COUNTY OHIO - Munson Township
Cemetery
Files
DODGE Jeremiah 30 Aug 1869 70y 5m
11d
DODGE Lydia, His Wife 26 Sep 1870 66y
2m
11d ORVIS ( )
hw
DODIG Hattie 1896 (cr23 Jun 1973)
(69y)
DODIG Vincent 1923 (6 Mar) 1973 (49y)
CENSUS YR: 1850 STATE or TERRITORY:
OH COUNTY:
Champaign
DIVISION:
Rush twp REEL NO: 665 PAGE NO: 260b
REFERENCE: Enumerated by d. F. Spain
3 Sept.
1850
Dodge Levi 38 M Farmer
NH
Dodge Ruth 41 F
RI
Dodge William 13 M
NH
Dodge Francis 10 M
NH
Dodge Fredrick 5 M
OH
Dodge John 1 M
OH
ERIE COUNTY OHIO - And Then They Went
West
(published 1897)
During the fall of the year 1833, was
erected
a double log house, used
for
a boarding house, which stood upon
the bank
immediately in front of the
site of "Island House' at Kelleys
Island.
Mr.Luther Dodge, with his
family, occupied the boarding house
upon
its completion, he having been
appointed superintendent of the interests
of the Messrs. Kelley, and
having
moved to the island a short time previously.
During the winter of this
year, the present wood dock was commenced,
and enough completed to
afford a
landing for steamboats, which,in the
following
spring, commenced
"wooding" therefrom. During
the
year following, Julius Kelley, son
of
Datus, was in charge, and was succeeded
by
his brother Addison,who,
from
that date until the removal to the
island
of Datus and his family, in
1836, remained in charge of the business
of the firm. A short time
after the building of the south side
wood
dock, was built a stone dock
at the north side, and a few years
subsequently,
by Horace Kelley, the
dock that was owned by Charles Carpenter.
At this date, and up to the
winter of 1837-8, the island constituted
a portion of Danbury, and was
included within the limits of Huron
county.
During the winter of 1837-
8,
was created the county of Erie, and
the island,
as a part of Danbury
township, was set off into that county..
On the 21st of January,1840,
in
accordance with the prayer of a petition
to the legislature to that
effect, it was enacted that all that
tract
of land and territory of
land known as Cunningham's Island,
situated
on the south side of Lake
Erie, within the county of Erie, be
and the
same is, hereby constituted
a township to be known and distinguished
as the township of Kelley's
Island." By section second of
the same
act, the islands, known as the
Bass Islands, were constituted a township
called Van Rensalaer, in the
said county of Erie. On the 6th of
March,
1840, was passed the act
creating the county of Ottawa, which
county
included within its
boundaries the new island townships
of Kelley's
Island and Van
Rensalaer. The first election for organization
as the township of
Kelley's Island, was held on "the
first
Monday in April, " 1840. The
total number of votes polled was 15.
Chester
Stocking, Walter
Beardsley
and Ephraim T. Smith were appointed
judges,
and George C. Huntington
and
Addison Kelley, clerks. Addison Kelley,
Oliver
Emory and Walter
Beardsley were elected trustees; Horace
Kelley,
treasurer: Datus
Kelley,
clerk: John Titus and Hezekiah Bickford,
overseers of the poor: Chester
Stocking,George Wires and Henry Provast,
fence viewers; Joseph Willet,
constable; Henry Harris, supervisor
of Highways.
George C. Huntington
was elected justice of the peace, his
bonds
being filed and accepted
on
the 8th of June following. In May,
1840,
" An election was also held
for
County of Ottawa, and the returns duly
made
to the temporary seat of
Justice at Port Clinton." As the
population
of the island increased,
and
as its business connections, from its
geographical
position, were
entirely wth Sandusky (nothing but
legal,
township, and jury matters
calling the inhabitants to Port Clinton
),
its poitical connection with
Ottawa county became very irksome,
and determination
was formed to
effect a separation therefrom, and
a reinstatement
as a township of
Erie
county. A petition was therefore, presented
to the legislature to that
effect, and in Februrary,1845, was
passed
an act which " set off that
tract, and territory of land known
as Kelley's
Island into the county
of
Erie." Thus , within the space
of some
seven years , the island formed
a component part of two townships and
four
counties, and it is remarked
" that of four children of Addison
Kelley,
born in the same house, no
two were natives of the same township
and
county."
LAWRENCE COUNTY MARRIAGE RECORDS Apr.
1857
- Jan. 1863Steed
Steed Elisha B. Dodge Maria 130
Dodge Thomas Davis Mandana 154
Ohio Post Offices and Post Masters/Mistresses
(1816
Point Harmer, Nathaniel Dodge, jun.,
clerk/assistant,
N. Hampshire
PORTAGE COUNTY OHIO - Center or Disciple
Cemetery, Randolph Township
DODGENellie, d/o George w. & M.
E. Dodge,
died Oct 15, 1869 age 4 yrs.
GEAUGA COUNTY OHIO - Auburn Township
Cemetery
Files
Includes the following cemeteries:
Maple
Shade, Shadyside
DODGE Ella M. 6 Nov 1878 29y w/o J.H.
AU
Shadyside
DODGE Grace ) 7 Jan
1977
DODGE Hannah p. 6 Feb 1888 69y w/o
Joseph
DODGE Henry B. 8 Feb 1863
20y
DODGE Herbert 6 Feb 1931 87y h/o Emma
BARTHOLOMEW
DODGE Joseph 7 Apr 1878
66y
DODGE Orrin A. 1858
Royalton Township, Fulton County, OH
1850
Census
Dodge May 18 f NY Ohio Fulton Royalton
Dodge Warren 47 m farmer NY Ohio Fulton
Royalton
Dodge Permela 41 f
NY
Dodge Rufus 20 m labourer NY
x
Dodge Martha 18 f
NY x
Dodge Sarah 16 f
NY x
Dodge Sabre 13 f
OH x
Dodge Elizabeth 9 f
OH x
Dodge Davis 7 m
OH x
Dodge James 5 m OH
x
SECOND REGIMENT OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY
This Regiment was organized at Camp
Dennison,
Ohio from July 17, 1861
to
September 20, 1861 to serve for three
years.
The original members
(except
veterans) were mustered out October
10, 1864,
by reason of expiration
of
term of service, and the veterans and
recruits
were transferred to the
Eighteenth Veteran Infantry Regiment
on October
31, 1864. The following
is
a list of battles in which the Regiment
bore
an honorable part.
DODGE, William F S Prin. Mus.
DODGE, William Co. D 46 Musican
ALLEN COUNTY OHIO - HARRODS Cemetery
DODGE, JOHN R 1868 - 1957
DODGE, LEONARD C 1861 - 1952
Official List Of Pythians Lodge Members
of
Ohio 1910
COLLINWOOD---J. D. DODGE
--------------------------------
The following article was taken from
the
November 1989 issue of the
Dodge Family Journal.
The Dodge Center retail and office
complex
is located on the Georgetown
waterfront at K Street and Wisconsin
Avenue
in Washington, D.C. Built
for $10,000,000 in late 1975, this
complex
tower above the old Dodge
Warehouse complex. The Dodge Warehouse
is
the result of hard work by
Francis Dodge, Sr. and his brother
Allen.
Frances Dodge, Sr.
(#868 in Dodge Geneology) moved from
Salem,
Mass. in 1798 at the age of
16. Georgetown was later incorporated
into
Washington, D.C.
James H. Dodge, Association member
and Great-Great
Grandson of Francis,
Sr. has kindly supplied the information
for
this article, a portion of
which is derived from "A, Portrait
of
Old George Town" by Grace Dunlop
Ecker.
Until 1893 or 1894, the very interesting
old house where Francis Dodge
and his large family lived for years
remained
as a fine landmark in
Georgetown. This home which was originally
owned by Nicholas Lingan,
the brother of General Lingan, was
purchased
by Francis Dodge in 1810.
Francis had moved to Georgetown in
1798 to
join his brother Allen who
was established in a prosperous coastwide
shipping trade dealing
largely with the West.
One of the first experiences young
Francis
had after his arrival in
1798, was one afternoon when he returned
from a row up the river. As
he was mooring his boat, he noticed
an elderly
gentleman hurrying down
the street and out onto the wharf.
The gentleman
asked if the ferry was
in yet, and when the boy turned to
answer
him and looked into his face,
he saw that it was General Washington.
Francis
replied that the ferry
had gone and, noting the terrible disappointment
of the great man,
offered to row him across the river
in his
own little boat. The General
gladly accepted, and during the crossing
asked the young man his name.
"Francis Dodge, sir," the
boy replied,
at which the General exclaimed,
"By any chance related to Colonel
Robert
Dodge, who served so gallantly
with me during the War"? "Yes,
General, he was my father." "Oh,
indeed!" said he, "I am greatly
pleased to know you, young man. You
must come to Mount Vernon some time
to see
me."
Whether or not Francis Dodge got to
Mount
Vernon before the General's
death the following year, I do not
know,
but for over forty years his
grandson, Colonel Harrison H. Dodge,
was
the honored superintendent
there.
Young Francis was taken into his brother's
counting house, and a few
years later, in 1804, was sent to Portugal
to investigate trade
conditions in Europe.
In 1807 he married Elizabeth Thomson,
a daughter
of William Thomson, of
Scotland. They first resided below
Bridge
(K) Street, west of High
(Wisconsin Avenue),probably in Cherry
Lane,
where lived also, according
to tradition, Philip Barton Key, the
Maffits,
and other families of
distinction.
Mr. and Mrs. Dodge had the usual large
family
of those days, six sons
and five daughters, and all grew to
maturity.
While they were still
small children, however, the British
came
to Washington, causing great
alarm to the citizens of George Town
also.
Mr. Dodge apparently sent
his family out somewhere near Rockville,
for this is a letter he wrote
to his wife at that time. It gives
an interesting
picture of those
exciting days.
Georgetown.
Aug. 26,1814,
12 o'clock A. M.
Dear Wife:
We have positive information that the
British
have left the City on the
Baltimore Road, and passed the toll-gate
last night. Some of their
pickets are still around the city.
We believe they are either going to
their
shipping on Patuxent or
direct to Baltimore; or that they received
information of an intention
to attempt to cut them off. At all
events
I am satisfied you would be
perfectly safe here, and much more
comfortable
than where you are. I
wish yourself, the child, Emily, Frank,
and
Isabella, to come home and
bring, if you can, one bed. Peggy and
Betty
can come if they please.
Not one Englishman has been in this
town
or within sight of Ft.
Warburton below. They have burnt all
public
property in the city. It
was a dreadful sight. The rope-walks
in the
city are destroyed. The
General Post Office and Jail stand.
I hope
they will not return here
again and can't think they will, they
behaved
well.
The town was very quiet last night
and I
got a good sleep for the first
time. I hope you are well.
Yours affectionately,
F. Dodge.
...............
Aug. 27, 7 o'
After preparing yesterday to send this,
William
came and advised to
postpone till today. You ran all come
now
in the stage, bringing all
the books and what else you can.
We have no news today but expect the
British
are near their shipping.
We have escaped wonderfully.
---------------------------------
the USGenWeb Project Archives on July 2nd,
1998.File updated
October 27, 1998Copyright 1998 by Diana
Hansen.
************************************************************************USGENWEB
NOTICE: These electronic pages may
NOT be
reproduced inany format for profit
or presentation
by any
other organization orpersons. Persons
or
organizations desiring to use this
material,must
obtain the written
consent of the contributor, or the
legalrepresentative
of the submitter, and contact the listed
USGenWebarchivist with proof of this
consent.
Dodge Ablert Gillas Dora G 106 .
Dodge Charles Pisel Sarah J E 202
.Dodge Charles C Walker Rebecca Jane
B 124
.Dodge Daniel Ffymier Rachel B 49
.Dodge Elijah S Taylor Letha Ann B
162
.Dodge H p Larue Nora F 289
.Dodge Warren Lewis Lucy Ann E
12 564 564 Dodge Chas. C. 33 M Farmer
700
N. Y.
13 564 564 Dodge Rebecca J. 23 F Ind.
14 564 564 Dodge Francis M. 4 M Iowa
15 564 564 Dodge Olive C 2 F Iowa
----------------------------------------------------------------
We were able to find out how Israel
fit in
to the Dodge Family. Those of you who
have
the RLD
genealogy book can see this on page
139,
493j-9.
ISRAEL DODGE (Solomon, Thomas, John,
John,
John, William) was born September 26,
1808
in
Oxford, Chenago Co. New York, and died
September
22, 1880 in Harrison Valley, Pa. Potter
Co..
He
married SALLY WHITE who was born May
13,
1807 in Oxford, Chenago Co. New York,
and
died May
02, 1869 in Harrison Valley, Pa. Potter
Co.
Please contact us for more information.
Generation No. 1
1. ISRAEL1 DODGE was born September
26, 1808
in Oxford, Chenago Co.
New York, and died September 22, 1880
in
Harrison Valley, Pa. Potter Co..
He married SALLY WHITE. She was born
May
13, 1807 in Oxford, Chenago Co.
NewYork, and died May 02, 1869 in Harrison
Valley, Pa. Potter Co..
Children of ISRAEL DODGE and SALLY
WHITE
are:
i. EUGENE2 DODGE.
2. ii. ANGELINE DODGE, b. January 25,
1825,
Harrison Valley, Pa. Potter Co. d.
September
26, 1889,
Potter Co. Pa..
iii. MARTIN DODGE, b. January 30, 1831;
d.
May 26, 1906, Westfield Twp.Pa. Tioga
Co.;
m. JANE
HORTON; b. 1848, New York State; d.
1929.
Notes for MARTIN DODGE:
Served in the Civil War.
1860 census Harrison Valley, Pa. Potter
Co.
Martin age 28 living with his brother
Franklin.
More About MARTIN DODGE:
Burial Location: Pioneer Cemetery,
Potterbrook,
Pa. Tioga Co.
More About JANE HORTON:
Burial Location: Potter Brook Cemetery,
Tioga
Co. Pa.
3. iv. ELIZABETH DODGE, b. August 24,
1834,
Addison, New York Steuben Co.; d. 1902,
Potterbrook,
Pa. Tioga Co..
4. v. FRANKLIN DODGE, b. 1835, New
York State.
vi. JAMES E DODGE, b. September 26,
1836,
Steuben County, New York; d. April
1905,
Westfield Pa.
Tioga Co.; m. ALPHA ADELINE CHAMPLIN,
October
28, 1860, Tioga Co. Pa; b. February
05, 1842,
Westfield Twp. Pa. Tioga Co.; d. November
12, 1890, Westfield, Pa. Tioga Co..
More About JAMES E DODGE:
Burial Location: Mt. Pleasant Cemetery,
Westfield,
Pa.
Notes for ALPHA ADELINE CHAMPLIN:
1850 census Westfield Twp. Adeline
age 8
born Pa.
More About ALPHA ADELINE CHAMPLIN:
Burial Location: Mt. Pleasant Cemetery,
Westfield
Pa.
vii. JANE DODGE, b. 1840, New York
State.
viii. VINCENT DODGE, b. December 18,
1840,
Addison, New York; d. April 26,
1925, Harrison Valley, Pa. Potter Co.;
m.
HANNAH F THOMAS, August 11, 1862, Harrison
Valley, Pa.
Potter Co.; b. May 17, 1844, Belfast,
New
York; d. February 03, 1927, Harrison
Valley,
Pa. Potter Co..
More About VINCENT DODGE:
Burial Location: Potter Brook Cemetery,
Tioga
Co. Pa.
More About HANNAH F THOMAS:
Burial Location: Potter Brook Cemetery,
Tioga
Co. Pa.
5. ix. CLARISSA DODGE, b. July 09,
1842,
New York State.
6. x. ANNIS DODGE, b. 1849, Harrison
Valley,
Pa. Potter County; d. 1914, Renova,
Pennsylvania
Clinton
Co..
Generation No. 2
2. ANGELINE2 DODGE (ISRAEL1) was born
January
25, 1825 in Harrison Valley, Pa. Potter
Co.,
and
died September 26, 1889 in Potter Co.
Pa..
She married HENRY CUMMINGS Abt. 1846,
son
of ABEL
CUMMINGS and LYDIA. He was born 1820
in New
York State, and died April 14, 1865
in Potter
Co. Pa..
Notes for ANGELINE DODGE:
Source: Westfield Free Press.
Obit. of Mrs. Angeline Cummings, aged
61,
hag lived in Harrison Valley nearly
all her
life, was married to
Henry Cummings, when abt. 21 years
of age.
When war broke out he was one of the
first
recruited, was
killed at Atlanta, Ga. Since then she
has
lived with her sons, brothers &
sister
More About ANGELINE DODGE:
Burial Location: Potterbrook Cemetery,
Tioga
Co. Pa.
Notes for HENRY CUMMINGS:
He was in the Civil War serving three
years
in Company G, Forty-sixth, Pa. Regiment,
& was killed at
Peach Tree Creek, near Atlanta, Ga.
April
14, 1865. 1850 census Harrison Valley,
Pa.
Potter Co. Henry age
30 born NY.
Children of ANGELINE DODGE and HENRY
CUMMINGS
are:
i. ALBERT3 CUMMINGS, b. 1850, Harrison
Valley,
Pa. Potter Co..
7. ii. RAY CUMMINGS, b. June 1852,
Harrison
Valley, Pa. Potter Co.;
d. 1932, Harrison Valley, Pa..
3. ELIZABETH2 DODGE (ISRAEL1) was born
August
24, 1834 in Addison, New York Steuben
Co.,
and
died 1902 in Potterbrook, Pa. Tioga
Co..
She married (1) HORATIO N ALDRICH,
son of
HALSEY
ALDRICH and MATLIDA WORKS. He was born
October
1832 in Tioga Co. Pa., and died June
25,
1876
in Potterbrook, Pa. Tioga Co.. She
married
(2) JAMES H METCALF June 29, 1878 in
Harrison
Valley Pa.
Potter Co., son of CHARLES METCALF
and SARAH
POTTER. He was born August 24, 1838
in
Harrison Township, Potter County, and
died
April 1911 in Potterbrook, Pa. Tioga
Co..
More About ELIZABETH DODGE:
Burial Location: Potter Brook Pioneer
Cemetery.
Notes for HORATIO N ALDRICH:
Died age 44 yrs. 7 mons.
More About HORATIO N ALDRICH:
Burial Location: Potterbrook Cemetery,
Tioga
Co. Pa.
Notes for JAMES H METCALF:
On August 13, 1862, enlisted in Company
D
One Hundred and Thirty-sixth
Pa. volunteers, and was honorably discharged
May 29, 1863. He re
-enlisted
February 29, 1864 and finally was discharged
May 29, 1866.
More About JAMES H METCALF:
Burial Location: Potter Brook Cemetery,
Tioga
County, Pa.
Child of ELIZABETH DODGE and HORATIO
ALDRICH
is:
8. i. ANNA M3 ALDRICH, b. 1871, Harrison
Valley, Pa. Potter Co.; d.
1967,
Potter Brook Pa. Tioga County.
4. FRANKLIN2 DODGE (ISRAEL1) was born
1835
in New York State. He
married
LOUISE MOORE. She was born 1838 in
New York
State.
Notes for FRANKLIN DODGE:
1860 census Harrison Valley, Pa. Potter
Co.
Franklin age 25 born NY.
Notes for LOUISE MOORE:
1860 census Harrison Valley, Pa. Louise
age
22 born NY.
Children of FRANKLIN DODGE and LOUISE
MOORE
are:
i. CURTIS3 DODGE, b. 1862, Harrison
Valley,
Pa. Potter Co..
Notes for CURTIS DODGE:
1870 census Harrison Valley. Pa. Potter
Co.
Curtis age 8 born Pa.
ii. HATTIE DODGE, b. 1866, Harrison
Valley,
Pa. Potter Co..
Notes for HATTIE DODGE:
1870 census Harrison Valley, Pa. Potter
Co.
Hattie age 4 born Pa.
5. CLARISSA2 DODGE (ISRAEL1) was born
July
09, 1842 in New York
State. She
married JOHN CHAMPLIN, son of GEORGE
CHAMPLIN
and LONCY WORKS. He was
born
February 1839 in Charleston, Rhode
Island,
and died October 05, 1907
in
Westfield, Pa. Tioga Co..
More About CLARISSA DODGE:
Burial Location: Champlin Cemetery,
Westfield,
Pa.
Notes for JOHN CHAMPLIN:
1850 census Westfield Twp. John age
11 born
Pa.
More About JOHN CHAMPLIN:
Burial Location: Champlin Cemetery,
Westfield,
Pa.
Children of CLARISSA DODGE and JOHN
CHAMPLIN
are:
i. ADELIA LEE3 CHAMPLIN, b. December
08,
1868, Westfield, Pa. Tioga
Co.
Pa.;
d. 1923; m. ANDREW JOSEPH CLARK; b.
1864.
More About ADELIA LEE CHAMPLIN:
Burial Location: Champlin Cemetery,
Westfield
Pa.
More About ANDREW JOSEPH CLARK:
Burial Location: Champlin Cemetery,
Westfield,
Pa.
ii. FRANK CHAMPLIN, b. 1874, Westfield,
Pa.
Tioga Co. Pa.; d.
February
1923,
Addison, New York Steuben Co..
Notes for FRANK CHAMPLIN:
Died age 48 yrs.
More About FRANK CHAMPLIN:
Burial Location: Champlin Cemetery,
Westfield,
Pa.
iii. CARRIE CHAMPLIN, b. December 23,
1875,
Tioga Co. Pa.; m. CHARLES
HOWARD
SWEAZY, November 07, 1896; b. September
27,
1867, Westfield Twp.
Tioga
Co..
6. ANNIS2 DODGE (ISRAEL1) was born
1849 in
Harrison Valley, Pa.
Potter
County, and died 1914 in Renova, Pennsylvania
Clinton Co.. She
married
EUGENE KILBEY STEVENS March 22, 1868,
son
of KELSEY STEVENS and
EMELINA
WATROUS. He was born April 21, 1847
in Freetown,
New York Cortland
Co.,
and
died August 19, 1909 in Renova, Pennsylvania.
More About ANNIS DODGE:
Burial Location: Fairview Cemetery,
Farwell
More About EUGENE KILBEY STEVENS:
Burial Location: Fairview Cemetery,
Farwell
Children of ANNIS DODGE and EUGENE
STEVENS
are:
i. MAUDE3 STEVENS, b. Unknown; d. Unknown;
m. NEWTON PRESS, December
25,
1888, Ceres, New York.
ii. CLYDE J STEVENS, b. September 21,
1882;
d. February 10, 1970.
More About CLYDE J STEVENS:
Burial Location: Fairview Cemetery,
Farwell
iii. FRED EUGENE STEVENS, b. 1882;
d. 1892.
More About FRED EUGENE STEVENS:
Burial Location: Fairview Cemetery
Farwell
Generation No. 3
7. RAY3 CUMMINGS (ANGELINE2 DODGE,
ISRAEL1)
was born June 1852 in
Harrison
Valley, Pa. Potter Co., and died 1932
in
Harrison Valley, Pa.. He
married
JULIA ESTHER SWETLAND, daughter of
HARMON
SWETLAND and ROSAMOND
WATROUS.
She
was born September 16, 1842 in Freetown,
New York Cortland Co., and
died
February 20, 1914 in Potter County,
Pa..
More About RAY CUMMINGS:
Burial Location: Potter Brook Cemetery,
Tioga
County, Pa.
Children of RAY CUMMINGS and JULIA
SWETLAND
are:
i. HENRY N4 CUMMINGS, b. Unknown.
ii. LOUISE L CUMMINGS, b. October 03,
1881,
Harrison Valley, Pa.
Potter
Co.;
m. HARRY WRIGHT, September 01, 1901;
b. December
28, 1880.
iii. HARMON CUMMINGS, b. July 07, 1883;
m.
BESSIE WOMBAUGH.
8. ANNA M3 ALDRICH (ELIZABETH2 DODGE,
ISRAEL1)
was born 1871 in
Harrison
Valley, Pa. Potter Co., and died 1967
in
Potter Brook Pa. Tioga
County.
She
married ARCHIBALD D. STEVENS July 23,
1891
in Potter Brook, Pa. Tioga
Co.,
son of JASON STEVENS and ANGELINE DARLING.
He was born 1868 in
Harrison
Valley Pa. Potter County, and died
1949 in
Potter Brook Pa. Tioga
County.
More About ANNA M ALDRICH:
Burial Location: Potter Brook Pioneer
Cemetery
Notes for ARCHIBALD D. STEVENS:
Buried Pioneer Cemetery, Potter Brook,
Pa.
Tioga Co.
More About ARCHIBALD D. STEVENS:
Burial Location: Potter Brook, Pioneer
Cemetery
.
Children of ANNA ALDRICH and ARCHIBALD
STEVENS
are:
9. i. FRED EUGENE4 STEVENS, b. October
26,
1905, Potter Brook, Pa.
Tioga
Co..
ii. ALDRICH MANN STEVENS, b. Potter
Brook,
Pa. Tioga Co.; m. CECELIA
JANE
BAKER HUGHS, November 22, 1921, Norfolk,
Virginia.
iii. ARNOLD J STEVENS, m. MARY MOTTLEY,
August
07, 1920, Longview,
Texas.
iv. AURILLA ELIZABETH STEVENS, b. November
02, 1912, Potter Brook,
Pa.; d.
1984.
Generation No. 4
9. FRED EUGENE4 STEVENS (ANNA M3 ALDRICH,
ELIZABETH2 DODGE, ISRAEL1)
was
born October 26, 1905 in Potter Brook,
Pa.
Tioga Co.. He married
HELEN
EMMA
SWETLAND, daughter of HENRY SWETLAND
and
ANNA SMITH. She was born May
27,
1905 in Mills, Pa. Potter County, Pa.,
and
died August 11, 1982 in
Elmira,
New York.
More About HELEN EMMA SWETLAND:
Burial Location: Fairfiew Cemetery,
Painted
Post, New York.
Children of FRED STEVENS and HELEN
SWETLAND
are:
10. i. JASON HENRY5 STEVENS, b. February
03, 1934, Corning, New York
Steuben
Co..
11. ii. JOHN CLYDE STEVENS, b. September
22, 1939, Corning, New York
Steuben
county.
Generation No. 5
10. JASON HENRY5 STEVENS (FRED EUGENE4,
ANNA
M3 ALDRICH, ELIZABETH2
DODGE,
ISRAEL1) was born February 03, 1934
in Corning,
New York Steuben Co..
He
married UNKNOWN June 13, 1981 in St.
John's
Luthern, Orange,
California.
Children of JASON STEVENS and UNKNOWN
are:
12. i. BROOKE ELIZABETH6 STEVENS, b.
June
29, 1966, Hollywood,
California.
ii. JASON CARL WATROUS STEVENS, b.
February
26, 1969, Hollywood,
California;
m. UNKNOWN, January 29, 1991, London,
England.
11. JOHN CLYDE5 STEVENS (FRED EUGENE4,
ANNA
M3 ALDRICH, ELIZABETH2
DODGE,
ISRAEL1) was born September 22, 1939
in Corning,
New York Steuben
county.
He
married UNKNOWN November 04, 1968 in
Hammonsport,
Steuben County, New
York.
Child of JOHN STEVENS and UNKNOWN is:
i. FRED6 STEVENS, b. May 14, 1975,
Steuben
Co. New York.
Generation No. 6
12. BROOKE ELIZABETH6 STEVENS (JASON
HENRY5,
FRED EUGENE4, ANNA M3
ALDRICH,
ELIZABETH2 DODGE, ISRAEL1) was born
June
29, 1966 in Hollywood,
California.
She married UNKNOWN.
Children of BROOKE STEVENS and UNKNOWN
are:
i. ROWAN OLIVIA7 WILLIGAN, b. September
07,
1993, New York.
ii. MACKLIN WILLIGAN, b. March 13,
1995,
New York City.
----------------------------------------------------
Barb, received the wonder newsletter
yesterday
and
noted that you are going to looking
for ancestors
for
Tristram. Low and behold, the same
day, I
came across
the below mentioned book and copied
a couple
of
sections that I thought you might find
interesting.
Good luck researching! Judy
Genealogies of Rhode Island Families,
Vol.
II, N-W,New
England
Historical & Genealogical Register,
Genealogical
Pub.
Co., Inc., Baltimore,1989, page 334-335
,
found at the
Rogue Valley Gen. Soc., Medford, Oregon
:
"In 1684, a list of the Freemen
of new
Shoreham was
entered on the town records, which
shows
a
considerable augmentation of the population
by the
arrival of certain new comers. This
list
was printed
in 1859 in The Register [vol.XIII,
p 37]
by J.D.
Champlin, Jr., Esq., of Stonington.
"
The list while
containing numerous repetitions, does
contain
names of
several Dodgemembers, namely: John
Dodge,
Tristram
Dodge Sr., William Dodge, Tristram
Dodge
Jr, as well
as others who intermarried with the
DODGE
families:
Edward BALL, John Rathbone, Samuel
George,Tormet
Rose,
Alexander Enos [misread by Mr Champlin
as
"Alexander
Junior" pg 335.]
pg. 343:
States that the early settlers of Block
Island
were
landsmen, except for Tristram Dodge,
however
over the
next 2 generations developed a race
of seamen
and
fishermen.
pg. 330:
Tristram Dodge, the ancestor of the
well-known
Dodge
family of New Shoreham and of the Dodges
of
Connecticut, was beyond all doubt from
Devonshire,
where the name Tristram Dodge occurs
at a
somewhat
earlier period. He was evidently one
of the
Devon
captains who were engaged in the Newfoundland
fisheries, and in 1647 he was residing
at
Ferryland in
that Island [cf. Aspinwall, pp. 126,
127]
. He was
engaged by the first settlers to come
from
Newfoundland to the Island, in order
"to
teach them
the art of fishing", the town
records
state. The
Island Dodge descend from his three
sons
John,
Tristram, and William. A fourth son,
Israel,
removed
to New London and was the ancestor
of the
Connecticut
Dodges. he may have had also another
son,
Thomas, who
appears in the New Shoresham records
in 1680.
He
probably died young, leaving no issue
[cf.
Austin,
op.cit. and "The Dodge Genealogly"].
--------------------------------------
Subject: Hello
Date: Mon, 28 Jun 1999 12:31:27 -0500
From: "Douglas Lorson" <lorson@midusa.net>
To: <NEDodge@AOL.COM>
CC: "Barbara V. Dodge" <barbvdodge@dodgeoffice.net>
DODGE, David Har 9A
DODGE, Edward C. Ric 14
DODGE, Jeremiah Leb 15
DODGE, John Leb 15
DODGE, Josiah Har 10
DODGE, Samuel S. Ash 8A
DODGE, Usebius Leb 15
ERIE and)HURON COUNTY, OHIO, MARRIAGES
through
1838
DODGE, Angeline ....STEVENSON, James
....30
Sep 1835
DODGE, Daniel ....FISH, Migee ....28
Apr
1830
DODGE, Sarah ....WHITEFORD, Dennis
W. ....7
Jan 1838
CUYAHOGA COUNTY OHIO - HISTORY: Newburgh
History says that “Samuel
Smith
BALDWIN, son of Samuel and
Hannah NORTHROP BALDWIN of Ridgefield,
Conn.
Came to
Newburgh in 1808 and settled upon a
farm
on Aetna Street.”
He brought with him his wife Sarah
CAMP BALDWIN,
and several
young children. At this time they had
been
married about
eleven years. The writer of this sketch
had
the privilege
of examining a diary and docket written
by
Samuel S. BALDWIN
and preserved through all these years
by
one of his
descendants. In these he tells of much
of
the daily life of
those early times. He held the offices
of
Sheriff and
County Surveyor and was an important
man
in the community.
His daily life was recorded as attending
to acts of justice,
surveying and taking up new tracts
of land
upon the Western
Reserve, and “logging”
in which neighbors with their oxen
assisted him. Frequent mention was
made of
such neighbors
as W.W. WILLIAMS, Joel THORPE and Amos
SPAFFORD.
In this
Diary he tells of one of his surveyors
crossing
the ice at
Black River on horseback, carrying
a bag
of provisions
eagerly expected by the women at home.
The
horse broke
through the ice and was drowned, its
rider
being obliged to
walk back to Newburgh. The bag of provisions
was later
fished out of the river. Mr. BALDWIN
also
tells of the
calamity that befell the CARTER family
by
the drowning of
Harry CARTER, a lad of ten years, in
the
Cuyahoga River and
the search for the little body.
Mrs. Samuel S. BALDWIN (Sarah CAMP)
was a
delicate woman of
culture and refinement. In leaving
the comforts
of her
Eastern home she had little realization
of
the hardships she
would encounter as a pioneer in a new
land.
She brought
with her a fine wardrobe and accessories,
indicating wealth
and good taste, but quite unfitted
to pioneer
life. She
departed this life in 1818, after the
birth
of twins, at the
early age of thirty-six years. Her
daughter
Lucretia
married Reuben HENRY. Caroline became
Mrs.
Victor M. CANNON
of Aurora, Portage county, Ohio. Julia
married
Thomas
NORTH, Sarah, Almeron DODGE, and Emily,
one
of the twins,
became Mrs. Francis MORAN.
After the death of his first wife,
Mr. BALDWIN
married Rhoda
BOUGHTON, daughter of Nathan BOUGHTON
of
Stockbridge, Mass.
And of Revolutionary War fame. She
proved
a real mother to
his motherless children, but was herself
left a widow three years
later.
GEAUGA COUNTY OHIO - Bainbridge Township
Cemetery Files
SURNAME FIRST_NAME DOB DOD AGE NEE
RELATION
RELATED_TO CEMETERY SECTION
LOT SERVICE SER_ORGANIZATION POB STATE
POD
STATE
CLUB_LODGE
NOTES
DODGE Sarah 11/14 Jun 1836 59y w/o
Seymour
BA Fowler 2 38
NO old and dark in 1925; missing 1982
&
1996
FULTON COUNTY, OHIO MARRIAGES 1864
- 1927
Dodge, Davis - Paulsen, Emma 18 Feb
1904
8-522
HURON COUNTY OHIO - INDEX OF CEMETERY
INSCRIPTIONS
DODGE
AMELIA ANN, 552
ELLA, 580
TRUMBULL COUNTY OHIO - HISTORY: Part
5 (published
1874)
THE FOURTEENTH OHIO BATTERY
was organized August 20, 1861, and
was mustered
into service September
20,
1861. It was composed of one hundred
and
fifty-six men, five officers,
and
one hundred and twenty-five horses;
the greater
proportion of the men
being
from Trumbull County.
The officers of this Battery from Trumbull
County were--First
Lieutenant,
Homer E. Stull, Warren; Captain, Seth
M.
Laird, Mesopotamia;
Lieutenant,
Geo.
Hurlburt, Warren. Lost thirty men killed
and wounded, and seventy-two
horses,
at battle of Shiloh, April 6, 1862.
This Battery served in the Western
Army under
the following
generals:
Generals Grant, Halleck, Sherman, McPherson,
Logan, Oglesby, Dodge,
Blair,
and
Thomas.
Was in the Army of the Tennessee up
to and
during the Atlanta campaign;
after
the fall of Atlanta, was transferred
to the
Army of the Cumberland;
served
through the war, and was mustered out
July,
1865, at Columbus,
Mississippi.
It received several complimentary notices
in general orders, from
Sherman
and
McPherson, for its promptness and bravery
during the Atlanta campaign.
PORTAGE COUNTY OHIO - Shalerville -
Births,
Marriages; Various Dates;
Abreviations: B=Born p=Parents M=Married
M[2]=Second Marriage
GOODELL George B: "Warwick, MA",
3/31/1815
p: Jonas & Eleanor Ayer Goodell
M: 8/21/1840, Julia Dodge
p: Winthrop Dodge
Children: 10
Probate Record, Volume B, 1842-1846
Dodge, Heman estate 387
Toledo Attic Biography website
Henry Dodge was a native of Toledo,
born
on 27 December 1871. His
parents,
Frederick B. and Caroline (Perkins)
Dodge,
came to Toledo in 1861 when
Henry's father became the principal
of the
first Toledo high school.
His
father later moved into the law profession.
Henry's father died in 1893
and
his mother died in 1911.
Henry was one of five children. He
was schooled
at the High School of
Toledo
and graduated in 1889. He then attended
the
University of Michigan
where he
specialized in electrical engineering,
graduating
in 1893. Once he had
finished his education he returned
to Toledo
where he joined the
engineering
department of the Toledo White Lime
Company.
He eventually left this
job to
work in the engineering department
of the
Ohio Electric Car Company,
where
he stayed as general manager until
1915.
In 1915, Henry started his own business.
He was president of the H.p.
Dodge
Engineering Company and the inventor
of a
number of electrical devices
which
he later patented. The Dodge Engineering
Company was an immediate
success in
the manufacture of battery acid and
electric
batteries for cars. Henry
was
involved in the development of some
important
innovations, including
the
"Dodge Process" for hydrating
lime
which helped revolutionize the quick
lime
industry. He also invented a new process
to manufacture storage battery
plates which claimed to improve the
life
of the plate as well as
lowering
the cost.
Henry had a wide variety of business
and
social interests. He was the
director of the Walding, Kinnan and
Marvin
Company of wholesale drugs.
He
was involved in the social clubs of
the city.
He was a member of the
Toledo
Yacht Club, the Toledo Commerce Club,
the
Maumee River Yacht Club, the
Toledo Tennis and Toledo Country Clubs,
as
well as the American
Institute of
Electrical Engineers.
On September 25, 1896, Henry married
Gertrude
Marvin, the daughter of
Henry
Marvin who owned a Toledo druggist
company.
They had two children,
Henry
Marvin Dodge and Charleton M. Dodge
(who
later married a Baumgardner).
Henry
p. Dodge died on June 17, 1943 and
is buried
in Section 148A, Lot 42 at
Woodlawn Cemetery.[John M. Killits,
ed.,
Toledo and Lucas County, Ohio
1823-1923, vol. 3. (S.J. Clarke Publishing
Company: Chicago & Toledo,
1923),
540-41. Killits was the only source
found
for Henry p. Dodge leaving 20
years unaccounted for in his life.]
GEAUGA COUNTY OHIO - Chardon Village/Municipal
Cemetery
DODGE Edward 1886 4 Oct 1918
(s/o) (Joseph & Mariam) Pvt Co
A 26 Inf
Killed in action 4 Oct in
Meuse
Argonne, France.
DODGE Joseph 1859 (29 Sep) 1938 (h/o)
(Mariam
BOSS)
DODGE Mariam 1863 (4 Oct) 1952 (Joseph)
DIMMICK Lillian M. 1884 (17 Dec) 1973
DODGE
( ) (w/o) (Dan)
DIMMICK Alger (1992) (83y) (s/o) (Dan
&
Lillian)( 1st m.to
Arlene)
ashes 31 Aug
1993
DIMMICK Dan 1863 (cr 19May) 1947 (h/o)
(Lillian
(DODGE)
2m.)
DIMMICK Ethel (1990) (85y) MERRILL
(w/o)
(Alger 2m.) (1st m. Nyle
WELLs ashes 31 Aug
1993
DIMMICK Forrest N. 1887 (cr 16Feb)
1891(s/o)
(Dan)
put in vault, brought from Kalamazoo,
MI
DIMMICK Hannah 1851 1894
YOUNG
DIMMICK Orlando Alger, M.D. 28 Jun
1837 6
Jun 1920 (h/o) (HannAH
YOUNG
Claridon Cremated.
(s/o Asa & Mary (ALGER) DIMMICK)
DIMMICK Paul Moseley (30 Nov) 1880
(27 Feb)
1922 (s/o) (Orlando &
Hannah
(YOUNG)
GEAUGA COUNTY OHIO - Munson Township
Cemetery
Files
DODGE Jeremiah 30 Aug 1869 70y 5m
11d
DODGE Lydia, His Wife 26 Sep 1870 66y
2m
11d ORVIS ( )
hw
DODIG Hattie 1896 (cr23 Jun 1973)
(69y)
DODIG Vincent 1923 (6 Mar) 1973 (49y)
CENSUS YR: 1850 STATE or TERRITORY:
OH COUNTY:
Champaign
DIVISION:
Rush twp REEL NO: 665 PAGE NO: 260b
REFERENCE: Enumerated by d. F. Spain
3 Sept.
1850
Dodge Levi 38 M Farmer
NH
Dodge Ruth 41 F
RI
Dodge William 13 M
NH
Dodge Francis 10 M
NH
Dodge Fredrick 5 M
OH
Dodge John 1 M
OH
ERIE COUNTY OHIO - And Then They Went
West
(published 1897)
During the fall of the year 1833, was
erected
a double log house, used
for
a boarding house, which stood upon
the bank
immediately in front of the
site of "Island House' at Kelleys
Island.
Mr.Luther Dodge, with his
family, occupied the boarding house
upon
its completion, he having been
appointed superintendent of the interests
of the Messrs. Kelley, and
having
moved to the island a short time previously.
During the winter of this
year, the present wood dock was commenced,
and enough completed to
afford a
landing for steamboats, which,in the
following
spring, commenced
"wooding" therefrom. During
the
year following, Julius Kelley, son
of
Datus, was in charge, and was succeeded
by
his brother Addison,who,
from
that date until the removal to the
island
of Datus and his family, in
1836, remained in charge of the business
of the firm. A short time
after the building of the south side
wood
dock, was built a stone dock
at the north side, and a few years
subsequently,
by Horace Kelley, the
dock that was owned by Charles Carpenter.
At this date, and up to the
winter of 1837-8, the island constituted
a portion of Danbury, and was
included within the limits of Huron
county.
During the winter of 1837-
8,
was created the county of Erie, and
the island,
as a part of Danbury
township, was set off into that county..
On the 21st of January,1840,
in
accordance with the prayer of a petition
to the legislature to that
effect, it was enacted that all that
tract
of land and territory of
land known as Cunningham's Island,
situated
on the south side of Lake
Erie, within the county of Erie, be
and the
same is, hereby constituted
a township to be known and distinguished
as the township of Kelley's
Island." By section second of
the same
act, the islands, known as the
Bass Islands, were constituted a township
called Van Rensalaer, in the
said county of Erie. On the 6th of
March,
1840, was passed the act
creating the county of Ottawa, which
county
included within its
boundaries the new island townships
of Kelley's
Island and Van
Rensalaer. The first election for organization
as the township of
Kelley's Island, was held on "the
first
Monday in April, " 1840. The
total number of votes polled was 15.
Chester
Stocking, Walter
Beardsley
and Ephraim T. Smith were appointed
judges,
and George C. Huntington
and
Addison Kelley, clerks. Addison Kelley,
Oliver
Emory and Walter
Beardsley were elected trustees; Horace
Kelley,
treasurer: Datus
Kelley,
clerk: John Titus and Hezekiah Bickford,
overseers of the poor: Chester
Stocking,George Wires and Henry Provast,
fence viewers; Joseph Willet,
constable; Henry Harris, supervisor
of Highways.
George C. Huntington
was elected justice of the peace, his
bonds
being filed and accepted
on
the 8th of June following. In May,
1840,
" An election was also held
for
County of Ottawa, and the returns duly
made
to the temporary seat of
Justice at Port Clinton." As the
population
of the island increased,
and
as its business connections, from its
geographical
position, were
entirely wth Sandusky (nothing but
legal,
township, and jury matters
calling the inhabitants to Port Clinton
),
its poitical connection with
Ottawa county became very irksome,
and determination
was formed to
effect a separation therefrom, and
a reinstatement
as a township of
Erie
county. A petition was therefore, presented
to the legislature to that
effect, and in Februrary,1845, was
passed
an act which " set off that
tract, and territory of land known
as Kelley's
Island into the county
of
Erie." Thus , within the space
of some
seven years , the island formed
a component part of two townships and
four
counties, and it is remarked
" that of four children of Addison
Kelley,
born in the same house, no
two were natives of the same township
and
county."
LAWRENCE COUNTY MARRIAGE RECORDS Apr.
1857
- Jan. 1863Steed
Steed Elisha B. Dodge Maria 130
Dodge Thomas Davis Mandana 154
Ohio Post Offices and Post Masters/Mistresses
(1816
Point Harmer, Nathaniel Dodge, jun.,
clerk/assistant,
N. Hampshire
PORTAGE COUNTY OHIO - Center or Disciple
Cemetery, Randolph Township
DODGENellie, d/o George w. & M.
E. Dodge,
died Oct 15, 1869 age 4 yrs.
GEAUGA COUNTY OHIO - Auburn Township
Cemetery
Files
Includes the following cemeteries:
Maple
Shade, Shadyside
DODGE Ella M. 6 Nov 1878 29y w/o J.H.
AU
Shadyside
DODGE Grace ) 7 Jan
1977
DODGE Hannah p. 6 Feb 1888 69y w/o
Joseph
DODGE Henry B. 8 Feb 1863
20y
DODGE Herbert 6 Feb 1931 87y h/o Emma
BARTHOLOMEW
DODGE Joseph 7 Apr 1878
66y
DODGE Orrin A. 1858
Royalton Township, Fulton County, OH
1850
Census
Dodge May 18 f NY Ohio Fulton Royalton
Dodge Warren 47 m farmer NY Ohio Fulton
Royalton
Dodge Permela 41 f
NY
Dodge Rufus 20 m labourer NY
x
Dodge Martha 18 f
NY x
Dodge Sarah 16 f
NY x
Dodge Sabre 13 f
OH x
Dodge Elizabeth 9 f
OH x
Dodge Davis 7 m
OH x
Dodge James 5 m OH
x
SECOND REGIMENT OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY
This Regiment was organized at Camp
Dennison,
Ohio from July 17, 1861
to
September 20, 1861 to serve for three
years.
The original members
(except
veterans) were mustered out October
10, 1864,
by reason of expiration
of
term of service, and the veterans and
recruits
were transferred to the
Eighteenth Veteran Infantry Regiment
on October
31, 1864. The following
is
a list of battles in which the Regiment
bore
an honorable part.
DODGE, William F S Prin. Mus.
DODGE, William Co. D 46 Musican
ALLEN COUNTY OHIO - HARRODS Cemetery
DODGE, JOHN R 1868 - 1957
DODGE, LEONARD C 1861 - 1952
Official List Of Pythians Lodge Members
of
Ohio 1910
COLLINWOOD---J. D. DODGE
--------------------------------
The following article was taken from
the
November 1989 issue of the
Dodge Family Journal.
The Dodge Center retail and office
complex
is located on the Georgetown
waterfront at K Street and Wisconsin
Avenue
in Washington, D.C. Built
for $10,000,000 in late 1975, this
complex
tower above the old Dodge
Warehouse complex. The Dodge Warehouse
is
the result of hard work by
Francis Dodge, Sr. and his brother
Allen.
Frances Dodge, Sr.
(#868 in Dodge Geneology) moved from
Salem,
Mass. in 1798 at the age of
16. Georgetown was later incorporated
into
Washington, D.C.
James H. Dodge, Association member
and Great-Great
Grandson of Francis,
Sr. has kindly supplied the information
for
this article, a portion of
which is derived from "A, Portrait
of
Old George Town" by Grace Dunlop
Ecker.
Until 1893 or 1894, the very interesting
old house where Francis Dodge
and his large family lived for years
remained
as a fine landmark in
Georgetown. This home which was originally
owned by Nicholas Lingan,
the brother of General Lingan, was
purchased
by Francis Dodge in 1810.
Francis had moved to Georgetown in
1798 to
join his brother Allen who
was established in a prosperous coastwide
shipping trade dealing
largely with the West.
One of the first experiences young
Francis
had after his arrival in
1798, was one afternoon when he returned
from a row up the river. As
he was mooring his boat, he noticed
an elderly
gentleman hurrying down
the street and out onto the wharf.
The gentleman
asked if the ferry was
in yet, and when the boy turned to
answer
him and looked into his face,
he saw that it was General Washington.
Francis
replied that the ferry
had gone and, noting the terrible disappointment
of the great man,
offered to row him across the river
in his
own little boat. The General
gladly accepted, and during the crossing
asked the young man his name.
"Francis Dodge, sir," the
boy replied,
at which the General exclaimed,
"By any chance related to Colonel
Robert
Dodge, who served so gallantly
with me during the War"? "Yes,
General, he was my father." "Oh,
indeed!" said he, "I am greatly
pleased to know you, young man. You
must come to Mount Vernon some time
to see
me."
Whether or not Francis Dodge got to
Mount
Vernon before the General's
death the following year, I do not
know,
but for over forty years his
grandson, Colonel Harrison H. Dodge,
was
the honored superintendent
there.
Young Francis was taken into his brother's
counting house, and a few
years later, in 1804, was sent to Portugal
to investigate trade
conditions in Europe.
In 1807 he married Elizabeth Thomson,
a daughter
of William Thomson, of
Scotland. They first resided below
Bridge
(K) Street, west of High
(Wisconsin Avenue),probably in Cherry
Lane,
where lived also, according
to tradition, Philip Barton Key, the
Maffits,
and other families of
distinction.
Mr. and Mrs. Dodge had the usual large
family
of those days, six sons
and five daughters, and all grew to
maturity.
While they were still
small children, however, the British
came
to Washington, causing great
alarm to the citizens of George Town
also.
Mr. Dodge apparently sent
his family out somewhere near Rockville,
for this is a letter he wrote
to his wife at that time. It gives
an interesting
picture of those
exciting days.
Georgetown.
Aug. 26,1814,
12 o'clock A. M.
Dear Wife:
We have positive information that the
British
have left the City on the
Baltimore Road, and passed the toll-gate
last night. Some of their
pickets are still around the city.
We believe they are either going to
their
shipping on Patuxent or
direct to Baltimore; or that they received
information of an intention
to attempt to cut them off. At all
events
I am satisfied you would be
perfectly safe here, and much more
comfortable
than where you are. I
wish yourself, the child, Emily, Frank,
and
Isabella, to come home and
bring, if you can, one bed. Peggy and
Betty
can come if they please.
Not one Englishman has been in this
town
or within sight of Ft.
Warburton below. They have burnt all
public
property in the city. It
was a dreadful sight. The rope-walks
in the
city are destroyed. The
General Post Office and Jail stand.
I hope
they will not return here
again and can't think they will, they
behaved
well.
The town was very quiet last night
and I
got a good sleep for the first
time. I hope you are well.
Yours affectionately,
F. Dodge.
...............
Aug. 27, 7 o'clock A. M.
After preparing yesterday to send this, William
came and advised to ostpone till today. You
ran all come now in the stage, bringing all
books and what else you can.
We have no news today but expect the British
are near their shipping. We have escaped
wonderfully.
---------------------------------
From:
07/05/00 8:06 PM
Subject: censusTo: "Barbara V.
Dodge"
<barb@c575204-a.whtrdg1.co.home.com>
Hello Barbara,
I was again able to copy a few names
from
the Indiana 1850 census today. All
Dodges:
In Lagrange County, Indiana:
Charley(to me this almost looks like
Chancey.
You know the writing then.)
age 36 Constable born Ct.
Ann age 24 born NY
Charles age 6 born Ohio
Noviet???female age6 born Ohio(I even
wondered
if this were Violet???)
Ellen age2 born Michigan
Also in that home...Iva Elsworth age
25,
student born NY
Lagrange County:
David age 45 Laborer born NY
Clarrisa age 40 born Ct.
Chancey age 17 Laborer born NY
Worder age 5(I think this is is error)
Laborer
born PA.Surely his age
is 15. The taker must have run out
of ink.
Sarah age 13 born Pa.
Lagrange County; the print for this
one was
very faint
Stephen age 32 farmer born Ohio
Rhoda A. age 33 born NY(her age hard
to read)
James age 12 born Ohio
Leroy?(another hard to read) age 11
born
Ohio
Mary J. age 9 born Ohio
David age5 born Indiana
In the same home/same property, anyhow:
Cornelius Cator age 25 farmer born
NY
Sally Ann Avis age27 born Ohio
Emma age4 born Indiana
Lydia age1 born Indiana
Lake County, Indiana:Center Twp.
Cynthia Dodge age 11 living in the
home of:
Welling A. Clark age 34 farmer born
NY
Mary C. age 31 born NY
Henry A. age5 born Indiana
Hellen (I missed her age) born Indiana
Charles S. age 2 born Indiana
in same home:
Everlin Sanger age 19 born NY
Lake County, Indiana:West Creek Twp.
Henry age 32 farmer born Vt.
Lucretia age 28 born Canada
Cynthia age 12 born Indiana
Rachel age 10 born Indiana
Martcha(??) age 8 Blind
Paul age6 born Indiana
Henry age3 born Indiana
in same home:
Frederisk C. Wiberly farmer born in
Germany
Paul Dodge 69 farmer born New Hampshire
Lake County Indiana: Cedar Creek Twp.:
Riply age 33 farmer born Maine
Zelinda or Belinda age 28 born Maine
Lovieo or Lovico age 6 born Missouri
Masia or Maria age 2 born Indiana
|