Nathan Brown died at Poplin, New Hampshire, in 1772.[4]
Sources
↑Baptism:
"Massachusetts Births and Christenings, 1639-1915"
citing FHL microfilm: 890246; Record number: 11444177;
FamilySearch Record: FC3K-KG6 (accessed 21 May 2023)
Nathan Brown baptism (born 3 Sep 1735), son of Benjamin Brown & Sarah, in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Nathan by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known yDNA test-takers in his direct paternal line.
Mitochondrial DNA test-takers in the direct maternal line:
If this is the one Buried in King's Creek Cemetery, Newberry County, South Carolina - we are talking about the same person.
My Great Grandfather the Rev. Mitchell Matthews Brown (born in Ohio in 18200 wrote of him in a handwritten manuscript from 1897.
Marsha Hoffman Rising (deceased) traced his descendents in a book published by Newberry Street Press (NEHGS), Boston, 2010.
There are differences between what Rev M.M. Brown wrote and Rising. He guessed dob as 1736, but I think Rising is right about c.1731. On other matters I suspect MM Brown is correct, but he misquoted tombstone epitaph.
My Great Grandfather the Rev. Mitchell Matthews Brown (born in Ohio in 18200 wrote of him in a handwritten manuscript from 1897. Marsha Hoffman Rising (deceased) traced his descendents in a book published by Newberry Street Press (NEHGS), Boston, 2010. There are differences between what Rev M.M. Brown wrote and Rising. He guessed dob as 1736, but I think Rising is right about c.1731. On other matters I suspect MM Brown is correct, but he misquoted tombstone epitaph.