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Joseph Haines (abt. 1703 - abt. 1785)

Joseph Haines
Born about in Monmouth County, New Jerseymap
Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
[spouse(s) unknown]
Descendants descendants
Died about at about age 82 in Morris County, New Jerseymap
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Profile last modified | Created 30 Aug 2015
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Biography

Joseph Haines was born between 1680-1703 in New Jersey. Joseph Haines ... He passed away in 1785 in New Jersey likely in Morris County.

Joseph Haines was in the area of Northumberland County Pennsylvania (later Lycoming County) by 1773 and he named an Isaiah Sutton as his "nephew." Ref. PA Magazine Vol 7, 1883 p 422. Joseph Haines was the first settler at Jaysbury on the mouth of Lycoming Creek at about 1773. Haines made improvements and built a log cabin there. Haines appears to have returned to New Jersey sometime after 1785.

In March 1801 Wm King made a statement in a deposition of Lycoming Circuit Court that at in 1775 he came upon the land claimed by Joseph Haines, Joseph wanted 30 pounds for it by King would not pay that. Joseph said he was going to New Jersey and he would leave it in the care of his nephew Isaiah Sutton. Some time later Sutton was wanting to sell the land and King was asking if he had the right, various neighbours told King that Haines had forfeited the right, thus King bought the land for 9 pounds from Sutton, King then goes on to describe his time on said land, abt neighbours Edmund Huff, Samuel Doughtery, then Wm Paul offered him 30 pounds for the land, Paul built a cabin on the land...the Amariah Sutton testified 5 July 1800 that he came to the plantation where he lived in 1770 and that he was a relative of Joseph Haines. Pennsylvania Magazine Vol 7, year 1883 https://books.google.ca/books?id=JMsbAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA420&source=gbs_toc_r&ca d=3#v=onepage&q&f=false

1785 State Tax for Turbutt Twp: Joseph Haines 100 acres, 1 horse, 1 cow for 9.5 units of tax. And Bartholomew Haines who had 200 acres, 2 horses and 3 cows and was taxed 19.4. Also John and a James who were single freeman at the time and both had 100 acres of land and paid 8.6 in tax that year.

"Joseph Haines

Birthdate: 1703

Death: Died 1785 in Morris Co, NJ, USA Immediate Family:

Father of Mary Letitia Letitia Sutton."

http://www.geni.com/people/Mary-Sutton/6000000000494683728

"ID: I917857 Name: Joseph Haines <<$>>-<<< Surname: Haines Given Name: Joseph Suffix: <<$>>-<<< Sex: M Birth: 1703 Death: 1785 in Morris County, New Jersey _UID: 431F583A239572488D9366C7C46637C5D9F3 Change Date: 19 Jul 2011 at 01:00:00

Marriage 1 ??-<<<

Children

Letitia Haines <<$>>-<<< b: ABT 1733 in Piscataway, Middlesex County, New Jersey."

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=adam993&id=I917857

"Husband: Joseph Haines

Birth/Chris: ... 1703 at ... Death/Burial: ... 1785 at ...

Wife: unknown Birth/Chris: ... 1703 at ... Death/Burial: ... 1785 at ...

Married: ... at ... Children:

1. Haines, Letitia - Birth/Chris: ... 1733."

http://www.mytrees.com/ancestry/New-Jersey/Died-1785/Ha/Haines-family/Joseph-Haines-da002272-9726.html

"Letitia Sutton (born Haines) was born circa 1733, at birth place, New Jersey, to Joseph Haines.

  • Joseph was born in 1703.

Letitia married Amariah Sutton. Amariah was born on January 4 1728, in Piscataway, Middlesex County, New Jersey. They had one son: Isaiah Haines Sutton. Letitia passed away on month day 1781, at age 48 at death place, New Jersey."

https://www.myheritage.com/names/hines_haines

"This Joseph Haines was the fifth son of Richard and Margaret Haines who sailed from England with four of their children on the ship ‘Amity’ (Richard Diamond’s ship) on a Wednesday of April 1682. They belonged to the Banbury Friends’ Meeting in England. They had a long and tedious voyage. The father sickened and died during the voyage, and Joseph, the fifth son, was born in mid-ocean. John Haines, the oldest son, had come to America in 1678 and settled along the Bancock Creek, in Burlington County, New Jersey. The family landed in Burlington County, New Jersey, in the autumn of the year 1682. They lived in New Jersey many years. Then the Joseph Haines who was born during the ocean voyage went to Nottingham, Chester County, Pennsylvania, which is now Cecil County, Maryland. Later he went to Pipe Creek (now in Carroll County, Maryland) and he and his brother bought the tract of land called ‘Cornwell’ on Little Pipe Creek. He died in 1763, but his second wife Elizabeth (Thomas) Haines lived until 1796, and was 100 years old when she died. He had two sons, Nathan and Daniel. The son Nathan evidently lived on the home place, and he was the father of William Haines (the great-grand father of W. Morris Haines who owns ‘Forest Home’)."

http://www.hsccmd.org/Documents/Carroll%20County%20Times%20Yesteryears/2001/11-04-2001.pdf

"Joseph Haines Xyz420 Family tree created 10may15(2)_replaced_17jan16

Birth: dd mm 1703 - Monmouth, United States

Marriage: date - PA (Pennsylvania)

Death: date - city, Morris, New Jersey, United States."

Ancestry.com link

Sources





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Comments: 1

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Hello Timothy...tried to add additional sources in the biography. Still not certain to whom his parents were? So many Joseph Haines in New Jersey just like my Evans family. The Haines and Evans family's emigrated to West New Jersey on the ship "Amity" in 1682. Our families were friends, neighbors and members of the Quaker "Society of Friends" in Burlington County, New Jersey,
posted by Jeffrey Evans

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