Compiled by Lorraine Cook White, The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Vital Records, Vol 8 - Derby 1655-1852, General Editor - Lorraine Cook White, Baltimore, Maryland, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc, 1997, p. 285. " ... by Rev. Joseph B. Wakeley."
Compiled by Carole Magnuson, The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Vital Records - Oxford 1798-1850., General Editor, Lorraine Cook White, Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 2000, p. 67.
Norman Litchfield & Sabrina Connolly Hoyt, Ph.D., History of the Town of Oxford, Connecticut (1960), pp. 107-8. . "Much of the work done in Gen. Humphreys' woolen mill was done by apprentice boys .... we do know that two of the apprentices, Samuel Wire and Isaac Rowe came to Oxford later as grown men and established businesses of their own ... 1824 ... a woolen factory situated in Quaker's Farm, on ye eight mile brook ... The buyers of this factory, Feb. 6, 1824 were Isaac Rowe Jr. and Frederick Rowe, twin sons of Isaac Rowe Sr. who had come from Brattleboro, Vt. to work for Gen. Humphreys ..." http://www.our-oxford.info/Books/Litchfield-Hoyt_History_of_Oxford/107.html.
1830 Oxford Census.
1840 Derby Census.
Donald Lines Jacobus, Families of Ancient New Haven ([CD]Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1981[originally]Rome, N.Y. and New Haven, Conn., 1922-1932), vol 5, p 1038.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Frederick 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 Frederick: