In the Thomaston Town Records - Volume I - 1777-1825 it reads: The intention of marriage between Mr Isaac Dyer and Miss Susan Eastman, both of Thomaston were entered with me August 19, 1815 Joseph Ingraham Town Clerk[1]
Per Thomaston Vital Records - Births and Deaths - Volume I it reads: The following is a record of the births in the family of Isaac Dyer and Susan his wife viz;
- Ava (Asa) C,. born Octob 10, 1818
- Charles, born Jany 10, 1820
The above named Isaac Dyer died [blank][2]
Note
I have a letter that was sent to my grandparents in 1978 from a woman named Muriel Dyer Martin who lived in Lousiana.
She had done a lot of research and found that her 3d great grandfather had a grandaughter Martha Arey who married my 3great grandfather Asa C. Dyer
(Isaac's 1st born son -- Oct.10, 1818-- ).
All that I can tell you about Isaac (and this is what I recieved from the woman in Louisiana) is that he had a brother Capt. Charles <born?) and Capt. Charles married a Hannah Cooper. Isaac had two children 1.) Asa C. born Oct 10, 1818 and Charles born 1820." [e-mail from Heidi Dyer <hdyer at hedtron.com>]
Dyer Website. “Descendants of Dr. William Dyer of Truro (Cape Cod) MA www.familytreemaker.com/users/d/y/e/Frank-E-Dyer/GENE29-0044.html (26 Jun 1999)
LDS Pedigree Resource File, LDS Website (www.familysearch.org) (27 Oct 2001)
Eaton, Cyrus, History of Thomaston, Rockland, & South Thomaston, Maine From Their First Exploration A.D. 1605; with Family Genealogies. Vol I & Vol II (reprint Hollowed, Kennebec, Maine, Smith & Co, 1865)
Sources
↑ Groves, Marlene A., editor. ‘’Vital Records of Thomaston, Maine’’: Maine Genealogical Society Special Publication No.40, (Rockport, Maine, Picton Press, 2003), pg no.307
↑ Groves, Marlene A., editor. ‘’Vital Records of Thomaston, Maine’’: Maine Genealogical Society Special Publication No.40, (Rockport, Maine, Picton Press, 2003), pg no. 61
Source S101 Call Number: R929.2 S635uV.3, Title: Descendants of Edward Small of New England, Vol.3, Author: Lora Altine Woodbury Underhill, Publication: Boston & New York: Houghton Mifflin Co.: 1934, Abbreviation: Descendants of Edward Small of New England, Vol. 3, Note: NS113933. Source Media Type: Book, Master Listing Source: Y.
Source S1598 Title: Commissioners Records of Lincoln County, Maine, 1759-1777, Author: Georgianna Hewins Lilly, of Hallowell, ME, Publication: Lincoln County Courthouse in Wiscasset, Lincoln, ME. Abbreviation: Commissioners Records of Lincoln County, Maine, 1759-1777. Note: Prior to 1760, all of Maine was made up of two counties (York and Cumberland). On June 21, 1760, Lincoln County was established, originally covering three-fifths of what would become the state of Maine. This coverage remained until 1790, when Hancock and Washington counties were established, and these were followed by many additional divisions over the years. NS105893. Source Media Type: Book, Master Listing Source: Y.
Source S319 Call Number: CS71.K37, Title: Kent Genealogies, Author: Briggs, L. Vernon, Publication: Rockwell and Churchill Press, Boston, 1898, Abbreviation: Kent Genealogies, Note: Genealogy and history of the Kent family of Massachusetts. NS183933, Source Media Type: Book, Master Listing Source: Y.
Source S9 Call Number: LH7560, Title: History Thomaston, So. Thomaston, Rockland, Maine, Author: Cyrus Eaton, 1865, Publication: Hallowell Me.; Masters, Smith & Co., printers. Abbreviation: History Thomaston, So. Thomaston, Rockland, Maine, Note: NS174133, Source Media Type: Book, Master Listing Source: Y.
Source S901 Title: Downeast Ancestry, Abbreviation: Downeast Ancestry, Note: Source Media Type: Book, Master Listing Source: Y.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Isaac 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 Isaac: