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EDWARD KETCHAM
An old spelling in England for Ketcham could have been "Cheetam" or Chetham." A pedigree of a James Chetcham in 1635 mentions children Edward, George, Henrie, Edmund, James, Humfrey, Edmund, Jane and Isabell. This seems to be the most plausible theory of a missing Henry and of Edward's father. (21)
On March 9, 1635, or 1636, Edward Ketcham took the Oath of a Freemen in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts. Probably in the 1640's the Ketchams moved to Long Island, New York. In 1654 Edward owned land in Southold, Suffolk County, though it seems likely he already resettled in Stratford, Fairfield County, Connecticut, by that date. Edward Ketcham died in the above Connecticut location in 1655. In his will he named his 2nd wife, Sarah, his son John, and daughters Mary, Hannah and Hester. His inventory is dated June 9, 1655. By 1660 his widow Sarah Ketcham had remarried to Henry Whitney (4). Edward and Mary's chiildren were: 1. Mary Ketcham baptized
May, 7, 1620
Edward Ketcham married to
a second wife, Sarah Salmon in Southold,
Long Island, New York.
JOHN B. KETCHAM
From at least 1619 to 1628 Edward lived in Cambridge, but was not a native of County Cambridge. Most likely his origins are with the Ketchams of Kent or Middlesex. The last baptism of a Ketcham child in Cambridge took place in 1628 and it seems likely that the family resettled elsewhere in England. The Ketchams' departure for Massachusetts was in 1635, perhaps from the port at Ipswich in County Suffolk, England (3). In the late 1640's
John Ketcham married, Susan Payne, daughter of William Payne.
Sometime before 1676, John Ketcham's wife, Susan Payne Ketcham, died. On February 26, 1676, in Newton he married Bethia Richardson. She was born in 1653 to John Richardson and his wife Martha Mead, daughter of William Mead (9). William Mead was born about 1600 and he left Lydd, County Kent, England, and sailed with their families April 1635 in the ship "Elizabeth," Captain Stagg commanding. William Mead, his wife (name unknown), and children first settled at Wethersfield, Connecticut, but moved to Stamford in the exodus of 1641. On December 7, 1641, he was assigned a home lotand 5 acres (Stamford Town Records). William Mead died on September 19, 1657, Martha, the second child and first daughter, was born in Lydd, County Kent, England in 1632. Martha married John Richardson of Stamford (10).
John B. Ketchzam, died on May 7, 1697 in Newton, Queens County, Long Island, New York JOSEPH KETCHAM
Matha died 16 Aug 1749 at New Jersey Children of Joseph Ketcham and Martha Owens were: 1. Joseph Ketcham, Jr. born
May 11, 1715
at Newtown,
Suffolk County, N.Y.
In 1732 Joseph Ketcham, Sr. & Martha Ketcham left Long Island to relocate in Hunterdon County, New Jersey. This part of Hunterdon County became Mercer County after 1838. They also lived in Christiana, New Castle, Delaware. JOSEPH KETCHAM, JR.
The above according to the Holly Bible owned by Deborah & Samuel Holly. The Ketcham family lived in Maryland throughout the Revolutionary War. In 1784, several of the Ketcham children and their families along with the elder Joseph Ketcham, Jr. and Gertrude, traveled down the Ohio River in a flatboat to Louisville, Kentucky. landing there in May 1784. The year before, the first store with glass windows was constructed. The Ketchams went east 45-50 miles and settled in the part of Jefferson County that became Shelby County in 1792. Joseph Ketcham, Jr. died in Shelby County on January 14, 1809. DANIEL
KETCHAM
After 3 children were born
in Maryland, Daniel and family joined the 1794 emigration to Kentucky as
stated prior.
In 1792, Daniel Ketcham was captured and held for some months by Indians and is described in an obscure phamphlet (19, 20). A brief summary of Hopkins' narrative. Daniel Ketcham died on March 17, 1828, in Shelby County at age 75. All evidence of his grave has disappeared. In 1834, his widow, Keziah, died. REBECCA KETCHAM
Rebecca Mitchell 26-44
The oldest daughter, Kezia(h) was living next door with her husband Edward Talbott, Jr. About 1823, Rebecca Mitchell and her children, including those who had married by that time, all left Kentucky and resettled in Jefferson County and Ripley County, Indiana. Rebecca was never again listed in later census records as head of household. She apparently lived with one or another of her children. She was probably in Cross Plains, Ripley County, with daughter Malinda's family until about 1840 when the Copelands moved to Andrew County, Missouri. During this period the court in Shelby County finally made a division of the Mitchell properties in Kentucky. July Term 1834. An allotment of Dower to Rebecca Mitchell, widow of Thomas Mitchell deceased - a division of the lands of which Thomas Mitchell died seized & possesed between his heirs. Thomas Mitchell had 105 acres, 92 in the tract on which the mansion stands, and 13 in another parcel. To Rebecca, 25 acres in the 92 acre tract and 5 1/2 in the 13 acre tract; by lot, 7 1/2 acres each to James Mitchell, Eliza Mitchell, Daniel K. Mitchell, Eleanor W. Maddox, Jane E. Mitchell, Malinda Copeland, Thomas Mitchell, Keziah L. Hite, Pleasant L.D. Mitchell, and Sarah K. Mitchell. In the description of the land, the road leading from Mitchell's rope factory is mentioned. Probably in the early 1840's
Rebecca Mitchell and several families of her married children resettled
in Perry Township, Monroe County, Indiana. On December 3, 1850,
Rebecca and sons Thomas & Pleasant L.D. Mitchell were in Bloomington,
Monroe County, Indiana, when she applied for bounty land to which she was
entitled by the Act of September 28, 1850 as widow of a Warof 1812 veteran.
She obtained a warrant for 80 acres, and then "legally disposed" of the
land. In April 1855, in the same county, she again applied for land,
under the Act of March 3, 1855.
Sometime in the 1850's Thomas Mitchell's family also moved to Missouri,
and Rebecca Mitchell spent her last years in their log house on a farm
about 4 miles NE of Lentner
in Shelby
County, Missouri. On September 13, 1859,
she died. On her gravestone in the cemetary of the nearby Bacon Chapel
Methodist Church is the following inscription:
RICHARDSON NOTES
Nov. 16 1679, John Richardson,
Westchester ... To my three daughters ...
John Ketcham was a Newton
taxable in the records of 1675: John Ketcham, 3 males land and meadows
45, 1 horse, 4 oxen, etc. (12). Another record: 1694, July 2.
Assignment by John Ketcham senior and wife Berthia of Newton, Queens Co.,
N.Y. to Thomas Stathem of West Chester Co. of "the within specified Deed."
(13).
Ketcham and how the name relates to the author and his immediate family. 1. Edward Ketcham b.c. 1600
References: 1. Torrey, Clarence A., New England Marriages Prior to 1700. Baltimore 1985, p. 435. 2. Bishop's transcripts of the Parish Registers of St. Andrew the Great, Saint Nicholas Society, Genealogy Record, vol. 4, New York, 1916, p. 100. 3. American Genealist, vol. 30, Jan. 1954, p. 2-6. 4. Jacobus, Donald L., History and Genealogy of The Families of Old Fairfield, vol. 1, New Haven 1930. 5. National Society Colonial Daughters of the Seventeenth Century, Lineage Book, New York 1979, p. 164. 6. Street, Charles R., Huntington Town Records, Including Babylon, Long Island, New York: 1653-1688. vol. 1, Huntington 1887, p. 93. 7. Riker, James Jr., The Annals of Newtown, in Queens County, New York: Containing Its History from Its First Settlement, etc., New York 1852, p. 89, note 1. 8. Hoff, Henry B., ed. Long Island Source Records: From the New York Genealical and Biographical Record, Baltimore, 1987, p. 116, 129. 9. O'Callighan, Edmund O., New York Marriages Previous to 1784, Baltimore 1968, p, 212. 10. Mead, Spencer P., History And Genealogy of the Mead Family of Fairfield County, Connecicutt, Eastern New York, Western Vermont and Western Pennsylvania, New York 1901, p. 124-125. 11. New York Wills, vol. 1, p. 64. 12. O'Callighan, Edmund O., Inhabitants of Colonial New York: Ecerpted from the Documentary History of the State of New York, Baltimore, 1979, p. 85, 132. 13. Book No. 6, Salem County, New Jersey, Deeds (New Jersey Colonial Documents, Wills, Vol. 1, 1670-1730), p. 619. 14. Brumbaugh, Gaius M., and Hodges, Margaret R., Revolutionary Records of Maryland, Part I, Washington 1924. 15. Crothers, Bessie S., Oaths of Fidelity to Maryland, vol. 1, Chesterfield, Missouri, (no date) p. 60. 16. DAR Patriot Index, vol. 1, 1966, p. 384. 17. Nelson County, Salt River district, Jan. 5-6, 1786, Book 2, pp. 195-197. 18. Early Kentucky Tax Records: From the Register of the Kentucky Historical Society, Baltimore 1984, p. 94 & 242. 19. Reminiscences of Col. John Ketcham of Monroe County, Indiana, by his Pastor, Rev. T.M. Hopkins of Bloomington 1866, p. 7-10. 20. Banta, Richard E., The
Filson Club History Quarterly, vol. 22, no. 3, July 1948, p. 173-179.
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