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Hannah (Kemble) Pittman (abt. 1720 - 1776)

Hannah Pittman formerly Kemble aka Loker
Born about in Burlington, Burlington County, Province of New Jerseymap
Ancestors ancestors
Wife of — married 4 Nov 1741 in Mt. Holley, Burlington County, Province of New Jerseymap
Descendants descendants
Died at about age 56 in Bedford, Fulton County, Province of Pennsylvaniamap
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Profile last modified | Created 2 Mar 2018
This page has been accessed 306 times.

Biography

Hannah was born in 1720. She was the daughter of Samuel Kemble (1667-1729) and Mary (Hill) Kemble (abt.1670-bef.1728). Hannah married (first) Samuel Loker, and secondly to William Pitman/Pittman. She and William had 7 children. They were: Mary Pittman, Parthenia Pittman, Syche Pitman, Sarah Pittman, Obediah Pittman, Elias Pittman, Richard Pittman. She passed away in 1776, and was buried at Sideling Hill Christian Church Cemetery, Sipes Mill, Fulton County, Penna.[1]

She was mentioned in her father's will. She may have been the Hannah Kimble who married Samuel Laker in 1730.

Sources

  1. Find A Grave: Memorial #16246278 : accessed 01 March 2018), memorial page for Hannah Kemble Pittman (1720–1776), Find A Grave Memorial no. 16246278, citing Sideling Hill Christian Church Cemetery, Sipes Mill, Fulton County, Pennsylvania, USA ; Maintained by Sue (contributor 46867941) .
  • Possible marriage: "New Jersey, County Marriages, 1682-1956," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VKM6-BR5 : 20 May 2019), Samuel Loker Or Laker and Hannah Kimble, 05 Nov 1730; citing Monmouth, New Jersey, United States, New Jersey State Archives, Trenton; FHL microfilm 802,943.




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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Hannah by comparing test results with other carriers of her mitochondrial DNA. However, there are no known mtDNA test-takers in her direct maternal line. It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Hannah:

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Comments: 1

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Kimble-523 and Kemble-222 appear to represent the same person because: Duplicated person due to LNAB.
posted by Peter Rohman

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