Jonathan Cole I is an NSSAR Patriot Ancestor. NSSAR Ancestor #: 339120 Rank: Patriotic Service
Jonathan Cole I is a DAR Patriot Ancestor, A024190.
Deacon Jonathan Cole I was a Civil Servant in the American Revolution.
Biography
1730 -- Jonathan was born probably at Boxford, Essex county, Massachusetts. -[1]
May 1, 1751 -- Deacon Jonathan Cole and Edith Davis married at Harvard, Worcester county, Massachusetts. [2]
1752 -- moved from Boxford, Essex county, Massachusetts to Westmoreland, Cheshire county, New Hampshire and settled "on Canoe Meadow on land that was owned by successive generations of the Cole family." [3] He "built a block house for protection from the Indians." [4]
1752 -- one of those to whom the Colony of New Hampshire granted the Charter for Westmoreland. [5]
1790 -- U.S. Census, Westmoreland, Cheshire county, New Hampshire -- Jonathan Cole and family lived at Westmoreland Town. Jonathan's household consisted of two free white males of 16 years and upward, including heads of families; four free white males under 16 years; six free white females, including heads of families; zero other free persons; and zero slaves. [6]
1800 --
1810 --
September 13, 1813 -- Jonathan Cole died at Westmoreland, Cheshire county, New Hampshire. [7]
Sources
The Early Genealogies of the Cole Families in America. Thomas Cole. Revised by Frank T. Cole. May 21,?1887.
History of Westmoreland (Great Meadow), New Hampshire 1741 - 1970 and Genealogical Data. Westmoreland Historical Committee. 1976, Second Printing August 2007. Page 384.
Heads of Families at the First Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1790 -- New Hampshire. S. N. D. North, Director. Department of Commerce and Labor, Bureau of the Census. Originally Published [at] Washington [D. C. by the] Government Printing Office. 1907. Page 27.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Jonathan by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known yDNA or mtDNA test-takers in his direct paternal or maternal line.
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Jonathan: