Captain George GREEN[1]
1821 - 1910 (89 years)-
Name George GREEN Prefix Captain Born 9 Jul 1821 of Sayville, Suffolk, New York, United States Gender Male Died 16 Jul 1910 Sayville, Suffolk, New York, United States [2] Buried 18 Jul 1910 Union Cemetery, Sayville, Suffolk, New York, United States [3] Person ID I2787 Patterson & Markham Family Tree Last Modified 17 Mar 2019
Father Thomas GREEN, b. 21 Nov 1789, Sayville, Suffolk, New York, United States , d. 28 Nov 1834, Sayville, Suffolk, New York, United States (Age 45 years) Mother Temperance BLYDENBURGH, b. 16 Apr 1791, Hauppauge, Suffolk, New York, United States , d. 27 May 1847, Sayville, Suffolk, New York, United States (Age 56 years) Family ID F25 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family Anna OVERTON, b. Cal Nov 1824, Bayport, Suffolk, New York, United States , d. 24 Oct 1889, Sayville, Suffolk, New York, United States (Age ~ 64 years) Children 1. Alice GREEN, b. 31 Jan 1850, , Suffolk, New York, United States , d. 13 Jun 1911, Lake Grove, Suffolk, New York, United States (Age 61 years) 2. John E. GREEN, b. Jan 1855, , Suffolk, New York, United States , d. Cal 1924 (Age ~ 68 years) 3. Anna May GREEN, b. Dec 1862, , Suffolk, New York, United States 4. George Francis GREEN, b. Cal 1854, , Suffolk, New York, United States , d. 29 Nov 1867, , Suffolk, New York, United States (Age ~ 13 years) Family ID F1452 Group Sheet | Family Chart
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Notes - "He remembers when a boy of going often to his uncle Johns which was the nearest house to get some fire to kindle their own fire. if their fire happened to go out in course of the night. and just as often would some of his uncle Johns folks come to them with a pan or perhaps an old horsefoot sheet to get a few live coals. sometimes his father would use the Flint and Tinder box to start fire with. for in those there was no stoves and it was long before coal come into use." pages 206-207
"...has always lived here in his own house on the west side of Candie Ave."
Died at AE 89 YEARS; at home
- "He remembers when a boy of going often to his uncle Johns which was the nearest house to get some fire to kindle their own fire. if their fire happened to go out in course of the night. and just as often would some of his uncle Johns folks come to them with a pan or perhaps an old horsefoot sheet to get a few live coals. sometimes his father would use the Flint and Tinder box to start fire with. for in those there was no stoves and it was long before coal come into use." pages 206-207
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