Keywords: Genealogy Loveland Wethersfield
Glastonbury Connecticut Norwich Norfolk England Andover Salem Essex Massachusetts
Hart Busfeild Edwards Hale House Hills Strickland Risley Kilham Goodell
Goodale Lovejoy Foster Carroll Livingston McGillivray Bowmore Islay Morven
Kimberly Smith Cochet Cushatt Cyes Selkirk Settlement Manitoba
A Genealogy of the Loveland Family
My name is Doug Loveland, and this is my genealogy home page, not so
brand new anymore, and still a mess.... please click here
to send me a note about anything you might see on these pages, particularly
corrections of egregious errors.
These pages will be updated as soon as possible.
"Those who may regret their brevity
must remember the facts have been wanting. We regret that more knowledge
of our deceased has not been furnsihed us... those who have desired
to see an earlier appearance of this work will remember that we could give
only our spare time to it. " J.B. Loveland, 1892
An introduction to the three-volume Genealogy
of the Loveland Family, published 1892-1895.
Surnames
Index Persons
Index Sources
Index
Here are about 20 generations of largely unsubstantiated Ahnentafel
Report, for what its worth...
Here is a short excerpt from Evidence!
by Elizabeth Shown Mills.
Current research topics
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The English origins, recently confirmed in Norwich, Norfolk, England, of
Thomas Loveland of Wethersfield (now Glastonbury), CT.
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Please click here
to visit John Howard's fantastic and superb Loveland Web Pages, regarding
John Loveland (1556-1648) of Norwich, ENG.
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A brief history of the settlement of Wethersfield,
Connecticut.
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Family group sheet
for Thomas Loveland and Charity Hart.
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Info on Edmund
Hart, the father of Charity Hart, recently found to be the wife of
Thomas Loveland
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The story of Benedict
Arnold's expedition against Quebec in 1775, during which my 5G Grandfather
Joel Loveland and two of his sons were captured and died as prisoners.
Click here
and here
for huge maps of the expedition from Codman's history.
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Please click here
to see a Descendant Report for Joel Loveland.
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The possibly Loyalist origins of Luke Carroll of Thorold, Ontario.
He served in the militia during the War of 1812 and had his farm expropriated
for the Welland Canal.
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The Salem Witchcraft Trials and the families involved in Andover, Massachusetts,
particularly Ann
Foster, who in 1692 was accused as a witch, confessed, and was convicted
and imprisoned in Salem, Massachusetts, where she died.
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The Scots origins of Donald Livingston (Islay or Morven) and Ann McGillivray
(Nairn?). They were Selkirk Settlers in 1813 on the Red River of the North
in modern Manitoba. Donald was employed as a shipbuilder by the Hudson's
Bay Company, and met Ann at York Factory on Hudson Bay following her arrival
from Scotland.
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The Descendants
of Daniel Lovejoy and Elizabeth Gordon Patee Lovejoy, including the
abolitionist martyr Elijah Parish Lovejoy; his brother Owen Lovejoy, 'Abolitionist
in Congress'; and their youngest brother, John Ellingwood Lovejoy.
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The Huguenot Andre Cochet, who emigrated in 1700 to Virginia and soon settled
in North Carolina. It is likely his descendants became known as Cushatt
or Cashatt.
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The ancestry of Martha Royce, the spouse of Alonzo B. Loveland.
Cyndi's List of Genealogy Sites on the Internet
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Much more genealogy to come.
My Great-Grandparents, Charles Owen Carroll and Catherine Ann McGerty.
A typical kitchen in Andover, Mass around the time of the Witch
Trials, 1692.