Descendants of William Hascall of Fontmell Magna (1490-1542)

Notes


5326. Aaron Stickney Haskell


Aaron Stickney Haskell and his first wife, Hannah (Marshall) Haskell, had no children.
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The following notes are from World Family Tree, Vol 85, pedigree 746:

Aaron's second marriage was to a widow, Margaret McDaniel Atwood, who married him 15 August 1837, as Margaret McDaniel.  She was many years younger than Aaron and came from Nova Scotia with Captain John McGrath, who was engaged to marry her.  During a trip McGrath made to New York, his fiance made the acquaintance of Aaron S. Haskell and married him before McGrath's return.  McGrath was soon after drowned, with all his crew.

Historian Hosmer says the following regarding Mr Haskell.  "Aaron S. Haskell was the eldest son of Ignatius Haskell Esq., and lived here from the time of the removal of the family here in 1778, when he was but three years of age, till his death in 1864, at the age of 89 years.  He was a tanner by trade.  The name of his first wife was Hannah Marshall, a daughter of Ezekiel Marshall, one of the early settlers.  She had no children and died many years ago.  In 1836 he married a widow who came here from Cape Breton Island.  Her place of residence there was the town known as Arichat, not far from Louisburg.  She was nearly forty years his junior, and they had a family.  Only one of her sons by her marriage with Mr. Haskell remains here, and one by her former marriage - the present Captain Dennis Haskell, as he is called.  They are both energetic and capable master mariners.  The house built by Mr. Haskell near the Northwest Harbour is still known as the Aaron Haskell house."  Aaron was 63 years of age when his first child, Mary, was born.  He was eighty years of age when his youngest was born.


12653. Mary Stickney Haskell

The following note from World Family Tree Vol 85, tree 746:

Captain John Graves was of Newburyport, Massachusetts.  They lived there for a few years and then went to Boston where John was the manager in John P. Squire's pork packing establishment, in Cambridge until his death.  Mary then sold the home in East Boston and went to live with her sister, Martha Watkins, in Roslindale, Massachusetts.  The Graves had no children.


12658. Susan Jane Haskell

The following notes from World Family Tree, Vol 85, pedigree 746:

Jane Haskell died at age 17 years of consumption (tuberculosis).  Jane and Eben had no children.


Capt. Ebenezer Bray Haskell

In the 1850 census, Eben is listed as a sailor. He was a sea captain and died of cancer of the throat about 1880.  His widow (Dorothy) went to Boston and died in a hospital there.  The children were cared for by relatives.


12660. Charles D. Haskell

The following notes from World Family Tree, vol 85, pedigree 746:

Charles Haskell followed the sea in his younger years, but later changed to the carpentry trade which he followed until his death.  He and his wife lived in Mansfield, Massachusetts.  They had no children.


5328. Mary Polly Haskell

The following note from World Family Tree, Vol. 85, tree 746:

Mary Haskell came to Deer Isle as a baby with her parents.  She married John Foster  who came to Deer Isle prior to 1800.  He was a hatter by trade, conducting a shop which stood opposite Sam Scott's livery stable at Northwest Harbour.  When Mary died John took their two daughters, Mary and Abigail, to Boston where they resided with his son Eden Foster, a printer.   The two sisters remained unmarried.


John Foster

John Foster was a hatter.


12665. Abigail Howard Foster

Abigail Howard Foster was unmarried.


Dr. David Angell

The following note from World Family Tree, Vol. 85, tree 746:

A native of Rhode Island, he came to Deer Isle, Maine, close to the beginning of the 19th Century.  He was a very successful medical practitioner in Deer Isle for many years, was well educated, and possessed a natural ability and a keen wit.  He was very observing and well informed upon almost any subject.  During the administration of Presidents Jefferson and Madison he was collector of customs at Deer Isle, as his political opinions coincided with those of the party then in power.


12670. Amos Stickney Angell

Amos Angell was lost at sea in the schooner "Shakespeare".


5332. Ignatius Haskell

War of 1812 widow pension file
Application 5720
Widow Sally Haskell
Ignatius was a Captain in Massachusetts militia.
He died November 21, 1848 at Deer Isle.
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War of 1812
Enlisted June 18, 1812
Joined Captain John Hatcher's Company, Colonel John Black's Regiment, Massachusetts Militia
Promoted to Captain
Discharged in 1812
Bounty land warrants # 106-462 and 106-448 for 320 acres
Reference
The Haskell Family in the Armed Forces, Volume 2
Editor: Peter P. Haskell, 2004
Page 92