On 23 Sep 1799, Nathaniel Beal of Livermore, Maine, and Pamela House of Turner, Maine, (both towns were then in Massachusetts), published at Livermore their intention to marry.[2] They published the inention at Turner on 29 Sep 1899, and they married there on 20 Oct 1799.[3] There is no record of any children from this marriage.
On 1 Aug 1802, Nathaniel Beals and Hannah Leavitt, both of Livermore, Maine (then in Massachusetts), published at Livermore their intention to marry.[4] Their first child was recorded at Livermore on 23 Aug 1803.[5]
Residence
The deaths of five of the six children of Nathaniel Beals are recorded at East Bridgewater, Massachusetts, between 1876 and 1888.
Death
No record has been found of the death of Nathaniel Beals. A record in the Maine Veterans Cemetery Records says he was buried at South Livermore, Maine, but it gives no date of death.[6] A previous version of this profile said, without citing a source, that Nathaniel died at Livermore on 5 Feb 1830.
Sources
↑Vital Records of Pembroke, Massachusetts to the Year 1850 (Boston, 1911), [1]
↑Cemetery record for Nathaniel Beals, in Maine, Veterans Cemetery Records, 1676-1918, database with images, FamilySearch > Revolutionary War > A-Cushman, J > image 227 of 942; State Archives, Augusta.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Nathaniel by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA.
Y-chromosome DNA test-takers in his direct paternal line on WikiTree:
Thomas Beals :
Y-Chromosome Test 37 markers, haplogroup R1B1A2
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Nathaniel: