Jabez C. Haskell was a farmer.
Rufus Haskell was a farmer.
Sidney Haskell was unmarried.
Harrison Haskell was a farmer.
21851. Elizabeth Hannah Haskell
Elizabeth Haskell was unmarried.
Haskell Journal, Issue 66, 2004
Elizabeth was a Shaker.
Admitted to the Sabbathday Lakem Maine community in 1887.
She served as 2nd eldress in the church family until 1920.
Newsletter of the International Haskell Family Society
Volume 15, No. 1, March 2005From the Boston Transcript of 17 April 1903:
Mr. Caleb S. Haskell, one of the twins said to be the oldest in the United States, died yesterday at his home in New Gloucester, Maine, after a short illness. He is survived by a twin sister, Mrs. Judith R. Bradbury, living in Roxbury. They were born in New Gloucester, August 1, 1814. The parents, Caleb and Judith Collins Haskell, had twelve children, of which ten grew to maturity. Five of them were black eyed and five blue; five were righted handed and five left handed. Their father, who lived to the age of ninety-one, had a twin sister who reached the age of eighty-seven.
John Haskell was a Congregational minister.
Obituary Record of the Graduates of Bowdoin College and the Medical School of Maine
John Haskell, son of Caleb and Judith (Collins) Haskell, was born 11 February, 1821, at New Gloucester, Me. He was prepared for college at North Yarmouth Academy. After graduation he taught for a year and then persued the regular couirse of study at Bangor Theological Seminary. On December 25, 1850, he was ordained and installed as pastor of the Congregational Church in Dover, Mass. A pastorate there of eight years was followed by one of six years at Raynham, Mass. He served the church at Revere, Mass., from 1865 to 1868; at Lisbon, Conn., from 1868 to 1872; at Newcastle, Me., from 1872 to 1876, and at Billerca, Mass., from 1879 to 1882, residing at the latter place without charge until 1895. He then removed to Gray, Me., where he died of paralysis 11 May 1902.
Of him a classmate writes: "As a Christian minister, he was a devoted servant of his master; as an alumnus, he was loyal to his Alma Mater, earnestly desiring her prosperity. He loved his classmates and rejoiced with them in their successes, untainted by lealousy. A man singularly sincere."
Mr. Haskell married first, 19 March 1851, Lucy J. Dickey of Bangor, who died 19 September 1872, without children; second, 18 November 1873, Annie P. Chase, daughter of Moses and Susan Erskine (Clifford) Chase, of Newcastle, who died 20, March 1879, leaving one son, John Newman Haskell (Bowdoin 1896); and third, Mrs. Mary A. Long, by whom he had two children.
Mary is listed as Mary A. Long, widow in 1880 census, for Billerica, Middlesex, Massachusetts