Descendants
of Ranulphus De Praers Lord of Vil of Stokes
Submitted By: DeLane Davidson
Generation No. 26 (12)
407.
GRANVILLE
W.26
STOKES
(WILLIAM25,
JARVIS24,
JOHN23,
JOHN22,
THOMAS
SR.21,
HENRY20,
HENRY19,
JOHN18,
THOMAS17,
GEORGE16,
THOMAS15,
THOMAS14,
ROBERT13,
THOMAS12,
JOHN11
DE STOKES,
ROBERT10,
EDMUND9,
RICHARD8,
ROBERT
DE7
STOKES
CUSTODIAN OF NEWCASTLE
MNT,
JOHN
DE6,
ROBERT
DE5,
ROGER
DE4,
SIR RICHARD
DE3,
WILLIAM
DE STOKE
OR FITZ2
RANULF,
RANULPHUS
DE1
PRAERS
LORD OF VIL
OF STOKES)2302
was born September 26, 1810 in , Burlington, New Jersey, USA2302,
and died May 19, 1882 in Clear Creek Twsp. (near Utica), Warren, Ohio, USA2302.
He married JANE ROBINSON2302
18392302.
Notes for GRANVILLE
W. STOKES:
!NOTE: (D.A.D.- 2/07/02)
"Genealogy of the Stokes Family," 1903, pg. 219a states this about Granville
W. Stokes:
"Granville W. Stokes was born
in Burlington County, New Jersey, September 26, 1810, an d came by wagon to Ohio
at the age of seven, with the family of his father.
He attended the district school during the winter months, working on the
farm at other times for his father until he was twenty-two years old, when he
entered college at South Hanover, Indiana.
A manual training department was connected with the school, and while in
attendance, he learned the carpentry and cooper trades.
He then read law under Thomas Corwin at Lebanon.
He was engaged at his trade a few years in the South, also as a railroad
employee, and taught school in Jefferson County, Mississippi.
He afterwards attended the Cincinnati Law School, from which he graduated
and was admitted to the bar in the 4th month, 1839, and practiced his profess
ion successfully for a number of years at Lebanon, and for a time was associated
with Governor Waller, practicing at Hamilton, Ohio. For five years he was Clerk of Common Pleas Court in Warren
County, Ohio. At the expiration of
his term as clerk, he removed to the country and engaged in general agriculture,
which he continued until a few years before his death, he having purchased the
old homestead where his father settled on, coming from New Jersey, which he
improved and beautified, and on which he lived to enjoy for a number of years
the fruits of his labors and beauty of the scenery and surroundings that were
mainly the work of his own hands.
At the age of twenty-nine, he married Jane
Robinson, and to them eight children were born.
At the Presidential election in 1852, he
was a member of the electoral college, when Franklin Pierce was a
candidate of his party for the Presidency.
He represented the Butler-Warren Senatorial District for the term
beginning in 1853, in the Senate of Ohio. He
was made a Brigadier General in the Ohio militia previous to the Rebellion, but
was prevented from active field service in that war by an accident that nearly
cost him his life, by having a limb almost severed by a reaping machine.
During his eventful life, he had collected
many specimens of different kinds, which he highly prized, and took great
pleasure in reciting their history and exhibiting them - among which was a
musket that Mrs. Stokes' grandfather had carried through the Revolutionary War;
also a brick that was taken from the first house built by William Penn in
Philadelphia, being made in London; and a six-pound cannon ball, presented to
him by General De La Mar, aide-de-camp to General Jackson at the
battle of New Orleans.
Granville W. Stokes was a man of
broad mind and superior ability, a man of general information upon all
questions; he could quote the Bible at will, repeat his party's platforms fro m
the time the first one was made the fundamental principle of his party by Thomas
Jefferson , to the day of his death. He
was possessed of a very retentive memory, recalling incidents and language with
the utmost ease. He was a thorough
student, deep thinker, and absolutely original in his expressions, and gave them
such force that they carried with them admiration and conviction.
He was a master of his pen and the English language, a fluent speaker, an
d as an orator had few equals. He
was frequently on the stump for his party during the campaigns, and delivered
many stirring addresses. He was
attractive in form, feature, and address , and drew the attention of those he
mingled with. He was magnetic,
broad, liberal, and tender-hearted. He
was the pride of his parents, his brothers and sister, his family and
acquaintances, universally admired and loved.
Between him and his family, there was a chord that could not be broken.
He loved his children, and this in return was reciprocated by them.
He lived a great man, and as such, he died May 19, 1882, in his
seventy-second year. " W.
J. W. S.
Children of GRANVILLE
STOKES
and JANE
ROBINSON
are:
i. ADA A.27 STOKES, b. August 18, 1841; d. September 19, 1841.
ii. ADOLINE STOKES, b. May 07, 1843; m. WILLIAM WINDLE, January 1866.
628.
iii. VIRGINIA
P. STOKES,
b. October 13, 1846.
629.
iv. FRANCES
J. STOKES,
b. July 28, 1849.
630.
v. JEFFERSON
F. STOKES,
b. September 16, 1855.
vi. LUCY
ANN STOKES,
b. March 1857. Notes for LUCY
ANN STOKES:
Died in Infancy
vii. ALICE
STOKES,
b. November 02, 1860.
viii. W.
E. STOKES,
b. January 22, 1861; m. EMMA
WOOD,
October 17, 1898.
408.
BENJAMIN
A.26
STOKES
(WILLIAM25,
JARVIS24,
JOHN23,
JOHN22,
THOMAS
SR.21,
HENRY20,
HENRY19,
JOHN18,
THOMAS17,
GEORGE16,
THOMAS15,
THOMAS14,
ROBERT13,
THOMAS12,
JOHN11
DE STOKES,
ROBERT10,
EDMUND9,
RICHARD8,
ROBERT
DE7
STOKES
CUSTODIAN OF NEWCASTLE
MNT,
JOHN
DE6,
ROBERT
DE5,
ROGER
DE4,
SIR RICHARD
DE3,
WILLIAM
DE STOKE
OR FITZ2
RANULF,
RANULPHUS
DE1
PRAERS
LORD OF VIL
OF STOKES)2302
was born September 03, 1812 in , Burlington, New Jersey, USA2302,
and died August 14, 1899 in Warren County, Ohio2302.
He married MARIA
L. MULFORD2302
March 31, 18412302.
Notes for BENJAMIN
A. STOKES:
!NOTE: (D.A.D.- 02/21/2002)
"Genealogy of the Stokes Family," 1903, pg. 219b - 219d states this
about Benjamin A. Stokes:
"Benjamin A. Stokes was a
native of Burlington County, New Jersey, born September 3, 18 12, and was the
last of the seven sons of William Stokes to depart this life.
He became an inhabitant of Ohio when four years old, in 1817, by the
removal of his father to this State a t that time.
Until his majority, he gave his service to his parents upon the farm, and
during the winter months he attended the district school.
For a number of years, he taught school in different States of the Union,
mostly in Mississippi. At the age of twenty-six, he became a trader on the Ohio and
Mississippi rivers, buying wheat, corn, flour, and pork in Cincinnati and
vicinity, and shipping them by flat boat, selling and trading them as the boat
move d with the current on its way to New Orleans, at the towns where the stops
were made, finally selling and exchanging the residue of his cargo for cotton,
sugar, and molasses in New Orleans, which he brought North and sold and traded
at the towns on the return trip, usually disposing of the remainder of his stock
in Cincinnati. In 1839, he began a
mercantile life, purchasing a stock of general merchandise of William D. Mulford,
located in Utica, and continue d in the mercantile business until 1853.
During this time, however, he packed pork and shipped it to Cincinnati
and was engaged in trade in general in whatever, in his judgement, formed a
legitimate business, and out of which a legitimate profit could be reasonably
expected.
His business was successful
from the start, and up to the time that he disposed of his stock , he had
accumulated sufficient means to purchase from Nathan Graham the farm to
which he moved in 1853, building a house and making improvements, and where he
continued to reside for forty-six years until his death.
He was one of the organizers
of the National Bank at Waynesville, and at the first meeting o f the
stockholders for the organization, he was elected a director and was chosen vice
president, which position he held until his death.
He conducted a bank for a time in Lebanon, under the name of B. A.
Stokes & Co., finally selling the same to the Lebanon National Bank, and
at the time of the organization of the latter, in which he became a very large
stockholder , he was elected a director and chose vice president, which
positions he also held until his demise.
He was a member of the Board
of Directors of the Orphans' Home for a number of years, until he voluntarily
resigned. He was a Justice of the
Peace of his township for eleven years, refusing a further re-election.
Although he had never sought office, he had frequently been t he
candidate of his party, against his wish, for various positions, and came near
being elect ed Treasurer of Warren County on the Democratic ticket in the early
sixties, although the county was strongly Republican.
He was recognized as a man
of rare business attainments, and possessed the confidence of hi s
acquaintances, and was frequently consulted in important business matters.
He was conservative, yet aggressive, a man of rare judgment in business
matters, and at one time was one o f the largest landowners in the county.
He was keen and shrewd, and was always able to take care of himself and
guide his financial ship safely through threatened disaster. He was broad in his views, a man of much general information,
and a great reader. He was
thoroughly posted on the events of the day, and investigated all subjects that
interested him. He was a n
independent thinker, and adopted no one's ideas that did not conform to his judgment.
H e was original in expression, and ready to defend in argument what he
believed. He was free of deception,
open hearted and as true as steel. He
was honest, economical, industrious, thrifty, and full of energy, and he liked
these qualities in others. He was
the foremost citizen of his neighborhood, possessing the confidence and
admiration of all. He admired
nature in all its manifold and multiplying forms.
To him, it was always beautiful. The
bird that chirped upon his doorstep and the fowl that ate from his own hand were
dear to him, and h e loved them. He
clung tenaciously to life and beat back the wave of disease and infirmities of
old age with a wonderful vitality. His
vigorous constitution finally yielding to the in evitable, and even in his last
sickness, and but a few short hours before his death, he said , "I won't
give up; I won't surrender the fort yet."
He loved his home and surroundings, an d the door was always open to all
comers of whatever station in life, humble, or otherwise .
His hospitality was a part of his nature, and no one ever left his hearth
feeling that the y had not been welcomed.
He married Maria L.
Mulford, March 31, 1841, and was the father of ten children, all of who m
reached their majority, and eight of them surviving him.
He gave them all a good common school education, inspired them with
ambition, and retained their confidence and fatherly love until the last.
He loved his family and was always happiest when surrounded by them in a
n unbroken circle of the living. Having
lived a just and generous life, he passed away, retaining the esteem of every
one, dying on the 14th day of August, 1899, nearly eighty-seven years old."
W. J. W. S.
Children of BENJAMIN
STOKES
and MARIA
MULFORD
are:
631.
i. ANNA
ELIZA27
STOKES,
b. January 30, 1842.
632.
ii. RHODA
ADELLA
STOKES,
b. November 21, 1843.
633.
iii. ADA
AUGUSTA
STOKES,
b. October 23, 1845.
634.
iv. THOMAS
L. HAMER
STOKES,
b. March 28, 1848.
v. WILLIAM
J. WORTH
STOKES,
b. December 08, 1849, Utica, Warren, Ohio, u. S. a.; m. A.
ALICE
WHITE,
May 01, 1879; b. of, Columbus, Ohio, u. S. a..
Notes for WILLIAM
J. WORTH
STOKES:
NOTE: (D.A.D.- 02/21/2002)
"Genealogy of the Stokes Family," 1903, pg. 219e - 219f states this
about William J. Worth Stokes:
"William J. Worth
Stokes, the fifth child of Benjamin A. Stokes and Maria L. Mulford Stokes
, of Utica, Ohio, was born December 8, 1849.
He removed with his parents to what is now know n as the Stokes
Homestead, near Ridgeville, in 1853. He
attended the district school and the National Normal School at Lebanon, Ohio.
After concluding his studies in December 1871, h e located at Lincoln,
Illinois, and engaged in the mercantile business.
He being of a studio us and professional disposition, while attending to
his business at the same time read law with Hoblit & Foley, active
practitioners, and was admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court in Illinois in
January, 1876. He at once began the practice of law, won prominence and
distinction, and was elected corporation counsel of the city, which position he
filled with credit to himself and to the true interest of the commonwealth.
Ability and good fortune attending him from his first efforts in the law,
his ambition caused him to seek wider fields for hi s practice.
He removed to Chicago in October, 1888, and there won additional laurels
for hi s reputation, until October 1893, when his health succumbed to over study
and overwork, from which indisposed physical state he did not recover for a
number of years.
He removed from Chicago,
Ill., to Dayton, Ohio in 1893, where he continues to live, has regained his
health, is well known, honored, and respected as a superior businessman, a
capable public man, and value citizen. His
services have been invited by all classes. Positions of trust and responsibility seeking the proper
incumbent have and continue to seek him. In
character, he much resembles his New Jersey cousins.
He is honest, generous, genial, and hospitable.
As a student along practical, political, and religious lines, he is
superior always, going deep to the underlying basic principles, which enables
him to be both intelligent and charitable.
In religious sentiment, he is
a Quaker. In politics, he is a
conscientious Democrat, and has been solicited by his party to represent it in
the Senate of Ohio and as city council of Dayton.
On May 1, 1879, he married A.
Alice White, of Columbus Ohio. This
union has been congenial and happy, but has not been blesses with offspring.
They enjoy a wide circle of acquaintances and are prominent and popular in social affairs. " C. S.
vi. JOANNA
STOKES,
b. August 26, 1851; d. August 13, 1877.
635.
vii. MARY
S. STOKES,
b. July 29, 1853.
viii. JOHN
JAY STOKES,
b. February 23, 1856; d. July 30, 1879.
ix. LELIE
MARIA
STOKES,
b. November 08, 1858; m. NEWTON
L. BURNETT,
March 12, 1901.
636.
x. HORACE
BENJAMIN
STOKES,
b. October 24, 1860.
409.
CAROLINE26
STOKES
(WILLIAM25,
JARVIS24,
JOHN23,
JOHN22,
THOMAS
SR.21,
HENRY20,
HENRY19,
JOHN18,
THOMAS17,
GEORGE16,
THOMAS15,
THOMAS14,
ROBERT13,
THOMAS12,
JOHN11
DE STOKES,
ROBERT10,
EDMUND9,
RICHARD8,
ROBERT
DE7
STOKES
CUSTODIAN OF NEWCASTLE
MNT,
JOHN
DE6,
ROBERT
DE5,
ROGER
DE4,
SIR RICHARD
DE3,
WILLIAM
DE STOKE
OR FITZ2
RANULF,
RANULPHUS
DE1
PRAERS
LORD OF VIL
OF STOKES)2302
was born October 01, 1814 in , Burlington, New Jersey, USA2302,
and died June 30, 18942302.
She married JAMES GRAHAM2302
18332302.
Children of CAROLINE
STOKES
and JAMES
GRAHAM
are:
i. TWIN
127
GRAHAM.
Notes for TWIN
1 GRAHAM:
Died in Infancy
ii. TWIN
2 GRAHAM.
Notes for TWIN
2 GRAHAM:
Died in Infancy
iii. GRANVILLE
S. GRAHAM,
b. October 09, 1835; d. May 03, 1839.
637.
iv. EUPHRASIA
GRAHAM,
b. March 10, 1838.
638.
v. HANNAH
J. GRAHAM,
b. July 01, 1842.
639.
vi. WILLIAM
DALLAS
GRAHAM,
b. January 23, 1845.
640.
vii. LAFAYETTE
GRAHAM,
b. October 19, 1847.
641.
viii. ELIZABETH
F. GRAHAM,
b. October 18, 1850.
642.
ix. CAROLINE
M. GRAHAM,
b. March 19, 1856.
410.
ELIZABETH
ANN26
STOKES
(WILLIAM25,
JARVIS24,
JOHN23,
JOHN22,
THOMAS
SR.21,
HENRY20,
HENRY19,
JOHN18,
THOMAS17,
GEORGE16,
THOMAS15,
THOMAS14,
ROBERT13,
THOMAS12,
JOHN11
DE STOKES,
ROBERT10,
EDMUND9,
RICHARD8,
ROBERT
DE7
STOKES
CUSTODIAN OF NEWCASTLE
MNT,
JOHN
DE6,
ROBERT
DE5,
ROGER
DE4,
SIR RICHARD
DE3,
WILLIAM
DE STOKE
OR FITZ2
RANULF,
RANULPHUS
DE1
PRAERS
LORD OF VIL
OF STOKES)2302
was born February 23, 1816 in , Burlington, New Jersey, USA2302,
and died August 02, 18972302.
She married JOHN MCCOWEN2302.2302.
Child of ELIZABETH
STOKES
and JOHN
MCCOWEN
is:
i. ELIZABETH27
MCCOWEN,
d. August 02, 1897.
411.
WILLIAM
H.26
STOKES
M.D.
(WILLIAM25,
JARVIS24,
JOHN23,
JOHN22,
THOMAS
SR.21,
HENRY20,
HENRY19,
JOHN18,
THOMAS17,
GEORGE16,
THOMAS15,
THOMAS14,
ROBERT13,
THOMAS12,
JOHN11
DE STOKES,
ROBERT10,
EDMUND9,
RICHARD8,
ROBERT
DE7
STOKES
CUSTODIAN OF NEWCASTLE
MNT,
JOHN
DE6,
ROBERT
DE5,
ROGER
DE4,
SIR RICHARD
DE3,
WILLIAM
DE STOKE
OR FITZ2
RANULF,
RANULPHUS
DE1
PRAERS
LORD OF VIL
OF STOKES)2302
was born July 22, 1820 in Clear Creek Twsp. (near Utica), Warren, Ohio, USA2302,
and died 1896 in Lytle, Warren, Ohio, u. S. a..
He married SUSANNA
THROCKMORTON2302
January 31, 18492302.
Notes for WILLIAM
H. STOKES
M.D.:
NOTE: (D.A.D.- 02/21/2002)
"Genealogy of the Stokes Family," 1903, pg. 219e - 219f states this
about William H. Stokes, M. D.:
"William H. Stokes was born in
Warren County, Ohio. His father
died when he was eighteen years old, and he was thrown early in life upon his
own resources.
The small patrimony that was
left to him by his father was largely used in his education.
He attended Miami University of Oxford, Ohio, and applied himself
industriously to his books at odd times. At
the age of twenty-one, he was recommended by Governors Corwin and Morrow,
receiving an appointment to West Point as a cadet, and entered that military
school soon after , and remained a student there until April 18, 1844, leaving
the school, however, before graduating.
Soon after his return from
West Point, he began the study of Medicine, and graduated at the Ohio Medical
College, in Cincinnati, in 1848, and immediately began the practice of medicine
in partnership with Dr. M. H. Keever, residing and having his
office in Ridgeville, and continued the practice of his chosen profession until
1861, when he settled on a farm northeast of Utica, where he resided until the
spring of 1869, at which time he removed to the Jarvis Stokes farm, near
Lytle, which he had in the meantime purchased, and where he continued t o reside
until his death.
Dr. Stokes was a man
of energy, refinement, and good taste, and at once began extensive improvements
upon his farm until it was looked upon and recognized from all points of view as
the model farm of the county. Dr.
Stokes was elected from the Butler-Warren District, and served his
constituents well and favorably two terms in the Ohio Senate, voluntarily
retiring at the end of his second term. He
took much interest in politics and was thoroughly posted up on all public
questions. He was an industrious
student and burned much midnight oil reading standard works.
He was an admirer of good,
substantial stock and fowls, and had the choicest of these upon h is farm.
He loved the animal creation and made great pets of them, and in their
use they were his companions rather than his beasts.
He loved nature in all its beauty, from the sturdy oak to the daisy that
grew beneath its protecting limbs. He
loved the birds and their music, and gave them a welcome habitation as near his
own as their nature allowed them to venture .
He loved flowers in all of their radiant beauty and fragrance, and the
bees that sipped the nectar from their folds.
Nature was full of perfume to him, and his every sense reached out to
embrace it. He loved music, and its
melody soothed and gave him rest, and under its strains he could find repose in
sleep.
He married Susanna
Throckmorton, January 31, 1849, that union being blessed with twelve
children, seven of whom, with his aged consort, are still living.
Dr. Stokes was a man
of character and his word was the height of honor. His friends were a s numerous as his acquaintances.
He lived quietly and in peace with his neighbors.
He was active, full of energy, and loved his family, and did much for his
children, dying in his seventy-sixth year, universally honored and
respected." W.
J. W. S.
Children of WILLIAM
STOKES
and SUSANNA
THROCKMORTON
are:
i. JULIET27
STOKES,
b. December 15, 1849; d. October 14, 1851.
643.
ii. RUSH
STOKES,
b. July 09, 1851.
iii. FREDONIA
STOKES,
b. September 05, 1852; d. July 12, 1853.
644.
iv. MOTT
STOKES,
b. May 06, 1854.
645.
v. MEIGS
STOKES,
b. March 03, 1856.
vi. FLORA
STOKES,
b. October 18, 1858; d. September 22, 1860.
646.
vii. STELLA
STOKES,
b. March 01, 1861.
viii. EVA
STOKES,
b. September 01, 1862.
647.
ix. LOCKE
STOKES,
b. August 11, 1866.
x. LEE
STOKES,
b. July 31, 1867; m. (1) ELLA
SEARS;
m. (2) FLOY
EARNHART.
648.
xi. MARIETTA
STOKES,
b. February 25, 1870.
xii. ADA STOKES, b. September 01, 1871; d. September 13, 1873.
412.
HANNAH26
STOKES
(WILLIAM25,
JARVIS24,
JOHN23,
JOHN22,
THOMAS
SR.21,
HENRY20,
HENRY19,
JOHN18,
THOMAS17,
GEORGE16,
THOMAS15,
THOMAS14,
ROBERT13,
THOMAS12,
JOHN11
DE STOKES,
ROBERT10,
EDMUND9,
RICHARD8,
ROBERT
DE7
STOKES
CUSTODIAN OF NEWCASTLE
MNT,
JOHN
DE6,
ROBERT
DE5,
ROGER
DE4,
SIR RICHARD
DE3,
WILLIAM
DE STOKE
OR FITZ2
RANULF,
RANULPHUS
DE1
PRAERS
LORD OF VIL
OF STOKES)2302
was born January 06, 1823 in Clear Creek Twsp.(near Utica), Warren, Ohio, USA2302. She married JOHN
SIMONTON2302
18412302.
Children of HANNAH
STOKES
and JOHN
SIMONTON
are:
i. HIRAM27
SIMONTON,
b. January 29, 1843; d. April 17, 1903.
649.
ii. LEONIDAS
SIMONTON,
b. October 01, 1846.
iii. LUCY
SIMONTON
TWIN,
b. September 07, 1860; d. December 21, 1873.
iv. MARY
SIMONTON
TWIN,
b. September 07, 1860; d. August 25, 1861.
v. WILLIAM
S. SIMONTON,
b. October 30, 1864; m. SARAH
ELIZABETH
ENFIELD.
413.
ELIZABETH26
STOKES
(JARVIS25,
JARVIS24,
JOHN23,
JOHN22,
THOMAS
SR.21,
HENRY20,
HENRY19,
JOHN18,
THOMAS17,
GEORGE16,
THOMAS15,
THOMAS14,
ROBERT13,
THOMAS12,
JOHN11
DE STOKES,
ROBERT10,
EDMUND9,
RICHARD8,
ROBERT
DE7
STOKES
CUSTODIAN OF NEWCASTLE
MNT,
JOHN
DE6,
ROBERT
DE5,
ROGER
DE4,
SIR RICHARD
DE3,
WILLIAM
DE STOKE
OR FITZ2
RANULF,
RANULPHUS
DE1
PRAERS
LORD OF VIL
OF STOKES)2303
was born September 18, 18082304.
She married CYRUS MOORE2305
18382306, son of CYRUS
MOORE
and MARY
AUSTIN.
He was born November 30, 17982307.
Notes for ELIZABETH
STOKES:
NOTE: (D.A.D.- 03/24/98)
"Genealogy of the Stokes Family," 1903, pg. 34, states this about Elizabeth
Stokes:
"Elizabeth Stokes, the wife of Cyrus
Moore, was the daughter of Jarvis Stokes and Abigail Woolman. Jarvis was the son of Jarvis Stokes and Elizabeth
Rogers, the daughter of William Rogers.
Jarvis was the son of John Stokes and Hannah Stogdelle,
whose family see, page 18 , for further ancestry of Elizabeth Stokes."
Notes for CYRUS
MOORE:
NOTE: (D.A.D.- 10/09/98)
"Genealogy of the Stokes Family," 1903, pg. 99 states this about Cyrus
Moore:
"Cyrus Moore, who married Elizabeth
Stokes, was the son of Cyrus Moore and Mary Austin , the daughter of Jonathan
Austin and Rebecca Mason. Jonathan
was the son of Francis, the son of Francis Austin, the
progenitor of the Austin family, and Mary Borton, the daughter of John
Borton and Ann, the progenitors of the Borton family.
Cyrus Moore was the son of Joseph Moore and Patience Woolman,
the daughter of Samuel Woolman and Elizabeth.
Samuel was the son of John Woolman, the progenitor, and Elizabeth
Borton, the daughter of John Borton and Ann , the progenitors of the
Borton family. Joseph Moore
was the son of Benjamin Moore and Sarah Stokes, the daughter of Thomas
Stokes and Mary Bernard, the progenitors of the Stokes family, (page
8). Benjamin Moore was the
progenitor of the Moore family, and came from Birmingham , Lincolnshire,
England."
Children are listed
above under (139) Cyrus Moore.
414.
CHARLES26
STOKES
(JARVIS25,
JARVIS24,
JOHN23,
JOHN22,
THOMAS
SR.21,
HENRY20,
HENRY19,
JOHN18,
THOMAS17,
GEORGE16,
THOMAS15,
THOMAS14,
ROBERT13,
THOMAS12,
JOHN11
DE STOKES,
ROBERT10,
EDMUND9,
RICHARD8,
ROBERT
DE7
STOKES
CUSTODIAN OF NEWCASTLE
MNT,
JOHN
DE6,
ROBERT
DE5,
ROGER
DE4,
SIR RICHARD
DE3,
WILLIAM
DE STOKE
OR FITZ2
RANULF,
RANULPHUS
DE1
PRAERS
LORD OF VIL
OF STOKES)2308
was born June 16, 18142308.
He married JOSEPHINE A.
YATES2308
18392308.
Children
of CHARLES
STOKES
and JOSEPHINE
YATES
are:
i. WILLIAM27
STOKES.
Notes for WILLIAM
STOKES:
Died Unmarried
ii. EUGENE
STOKES,
m. CARRIE
MOODE.
iii. LAMBERTINE
STOKES,
m. AMELIA
TAYLOR.
iv. GRANVILLE
STOKES,
m. MISS
GREEN.
v. SYDNEY
STOKES
M.D.,
m. MISS;
b. (A Southern Lady).
vi. ETHEL
STOKES.
Notes for ETHEL
STOKES:
Unmarried
415. GRANVILLE W.26 STOKES (JARVIS25, JARVIS24, JOHN23, JOHN22, THOMAS SR.21, HENRY20, HENRY19, JOHN18, THOMAS17, GEORGE16, THOMAS15, THOMAS14, ROBERT13, THOMAS12, JOHN11 DE STOKES, ROBERT10, EDMUND9, RICHARD8, ROBERT DE7 STOKES CUSTODIAN OF NEWCASTLE MNT, JOHN DE