Benjamin
is my 2nd great-grandfather. He was born in 1826 in Perquimans
County, North Carolina, which is in the northeastern corner of the
state, which I visited in 1996. He was the son of Nathan Albertson
and Phariby Nicholson. I wrote about Nathan on the 5th of January
post.
Benjamin,
while still a child, traveled with his parents and extended family
going north in the 1830's to Rush County Indiana. He was still living
with his parents when they moved to Hancock County Indiana in 1837.
The family were charter members of the Quaker Walnut Ridge Monthly
Meeting. It was at the Westland Meeting House on 26 November 18,
1847, that he married Sabina Marsh. Her family had also been Quakers
for a number of years coming from New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio
before arriving in Indiana. In 1852 Benjamin and Sabina and their two
small sons, Nathan and William, were granted certificates from Walnut
Ridge to transfer to Westfield Monthly Meeting in Hamilton County,
Indiana, but Benjamin's family had already moved westward to that
area because they were counted there in the 1850 census. In 1855, the
family moved again, going farther west into Hardin County, Iowa. By
the 1880 census they went across the county line and were living in
Marshall County, Iowa.
A
family history of Bejamins's gt-grandmother's family, Genealogy
of the Bell Family: A Record of the Decendants of Lancelot Bell
which was published in 1907, lists Sabina's death as 4 Oct 1897, so
Benjamin was now a widower. He apparently moved with his daughter's
family as they are in Jericho Springs, Cedar County, Missouri by the
1900 census. When and where Benjamin died is a mystery I haven't yet
solved. Other researchers have listed the date as 23 Feb 1908, but I
have not seen their documentation for this. This date would not
contradict the family history publlshed in 1907 as it does not give
any death information for him.
Although
Benjamin owned land and worked as a farmer, he also worked as
woodworker, being listed in the 1850 census as a wagonmaker and as a
carpenter in 1870, 1880 and 1900.
Benjamin
was one of nine children, having seven brothers and one sister. I
find it interesting that Benjamin and Sabina had only one daughter
along with four sons. Then their oldest son, my ancestor Nathan Elias
Albertson, had only one daughter and four sons. So in my direct line
there were three generations where there was just one daughter. Do
you suppose those girls were given special attention in their
families?
See
Benjamin on my website:http://www.joanneskelton.com/p9.htm#i208
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