Connecticut Town Birth Records, pre-1870 (Barbour Collection) Publication: Name: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006.Original data - White, Lorraine Cook, ed. The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Vital Records. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1994-2002.
Godfrey Memorial Library, comp. Title: American Genealogical-Biographical Index (AGBI) Publication: Name: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 1999.
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Paternal line Y-chromosome DNA test-takers:
Shane Booth :
Family Tree DNA Y-DNA Test 37 markers, haplogroup I-m253, FTDNA kit #361447 +
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Wikitree has two Mabel Booths born in Newtown, Connecticut between 1750 and 1755 who could be a daughter of Gideon Booth and Anna Hawley.
3. Mabel Booth abt. 1755-1832. Born in Newtown, Connecticut, parents and siblings unknown, married Ebenezer Barnum in 1722 in Kent, Connecticut, died in 1832 in Barnumtown, a village in Monkton, Vermont.
4. Mabel Booth 1750-1832, born in Newtown, Connecticut, parents, siblings, and spouse unknown, died in 1832 in Monkton, Vermont.
North American Family Histories, Find-a-Grave, and some town records support birth, death, and marriage information for Booth 3.
Gideon Booth, who was born in Stratford, Connecticut, lived most of his life in Newtown, where he had most of his children by Anna Hawley. Their son Elisha Booth has a death record in Hinesburg, a town adjacent to Monkton, Vermont, and so was also an early settler of that area. Moreover, Gideon Sr. went to Monkton as an elderly widower, where he died in 1820. Most likely he went to live with a child's family. Mabel Booth, who settled Monkton as the wife of Ebenezer Barnum and who died there in 1832, would be their middle child, although she is not listed in the Wikitree profile for Gideon Booth.
My conclusion is that Mabel Booth 3 and 4 was a daughter of Gideon and Anna (Hawley), who married Ebenezer Barnum and was part of a migration of several local families to western Vermont after the Revolutionary War.
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3. Mabel Booth abt. 1755-1832. Born in Newtown, Connecticut, parents and siblings unknown, married Ebenezer Barnum in 1722 in Kent, Connecticut, died in 1832 in Barnumtown, a village in Monkton, Vermont.
4. Mabel Booth 1750-1832, born in Newtown, Connecticut, parents, siblings, and spouse unknown, died in 1832 in Monkton, Vermont.
North American Family Histories, Find-a-Grave, and some town records support birth, death, and marriage information for Booth 3.
Gideon Booth, who was born in Stratford, Connecticut, lived most of his life in Newtown, where he had most of his children by Anna Hawley. Their son Elisha Booth has a death record in Hinesburg, a town adjacent to Monkton, Vermont, and so was also an early settler of that area. Moreover, Gideon Sr. went to Monkton as an elderly widower, where he died in 1820. Most likely he went to live with a child's family. Mabel Booth, who settled Monkton as the wife of Ebenezer Barnum and who died there in 1832, would be their middle child, although she is not listed in the Wikitree profile for Gideon Booth.
My conclusion is that Mabel Booth 3 and 4 was a daughter of Gideon and Anna (Hawley), who married Ebenezer Barnum and was part of a migration of several local families to western Vermont after the Revolutionary War.
edited by Gregory McHone