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

Notes


19350. Capt. Francis Thomas Marshall

Francis Marshall was a mariner. He is listed as a sea captain by the Deer Isle town records in December 1898.


Francis A. Abbott

Francis A. Abbott was a farmer.


19353. Eliza Carver Haskell


Obituary
January 8, 1898

Mrs. Eliza C. Haskell, who lately died in Deer Isle, is worth of more than a passing notice. She was about seventy two years of age. Her life was that of a modest and quiet woman, a devoted and thoroughly unselfish mother. Her heart and hand were ever open to the needy the distressed and for all in sorrow.

She was the daughter of Capt. David Haskell, who in his lifetime was a well-known citizen. Mrs. Haskell lived all her life on lands once owned by her great grandfather, Deacon Francis Haskell, one of the first settlers of the Island. She first married John B. Richardson who died in New York nearly fifty years ago, while in command of a vessel, and when he was only twenty six years of age. Her second husband was Bishop Haskell, who died at sea from yellow fever in 1863 while in command of the ship “Charles & Jane.”

From each marriage there was a daughter and a son. The oldest daughter, wife of the late Dennis Haskell, was drowned at sea twenty years ago, by the sinking of “Kremlin” from collision with an English steamship. By all this it will be seen that to the subject of this notice the knowledge of her severe sorrows came suddenly and it might be truly said that she never really recovered from the shock and grief caused by her daughters tragic death.

The oldest son is Capt. Ed A. Richardson; and the youngest daughter, Mrs. J. J. Spofford, both of Deer Isle. The youngest son is T. B. Haskell of Salem, Mass. Ed A. Haskell, who is master over the second division of the Boston & Albany railroad with his headquarters at Springfield, Mass.


Capt. Bishop Haskell

Bishop Haskell was a master mariner.  He died of yellow fever and was buried at sea while in command of the ship "Charles and Jane".


19354. Stephen Babbidge Haskell

Stephen Babbidge Haskell was a sail maker.


37996. James Lewis Haskell

James Lewis Haskell -- buried in Mt Adams Cemetery, Deer Isle, in same burial plot as his parents.

Stephen Haskell was born on the same day as James Lewis, research by B. Lake Noyes led him to believe that Stephen's name was changed to James Lewis.


Capt. Davis Haskell

Find-a-Grave notes

Davis was called Davis II only when his uncle Davis was alive. He was a stately man of good physique and had long clean white whiskers. He was the son of Francis Haskell 2nd "Captain Frank" and Phebe Carman of Deer Isle, ME.

Davis first went to sea as a master mariner at the age of 9 years on the brig GENTLEMAN.

In 1846 Davis learned the caulker's trade filling up cracks in ships. He was a jack of all trades and could do almost any kind of mechanical job.

His house was the second house on the Eastern side of North Deer Isle Road on Scott's Landing Road.

In 1850 when Davis was 23 he was living with his mother Phebe Carman Haskell. HIs father drowned in Boston Harbor in 1839 and his mother never remarried.


37997. Laura Holyoke Haskell

The date of death (from LDS database) may be a typographical error.


19356. Charlotte Maria Haskell

After the death of her husband Henry, Charlotte and daughter Statira in 1870 are living in the home of her parents David and Lucy Haskell.


Capt. Henry Clay Carman

Henry Carman was a mariner at age 28 (1860 census of Deer Isle). He died in 1866 by drowning in the Mississippi River.


38000. Lizzie Warren Carman

Lizzie Carman died young from typhoid fever.


Amos Howard

Amos Howard was a farmer.


19360. Deacon Hale Powers

.


38016. Harland Page Powers

Harland Powers was a casualty in the Battle of Fredericksburg, Virginia, during the Civil War.


19364. Peter Powers

Peter Powers was a mariner. He is reported to have died of exposure at Westport, Nova Scotia.