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- on the 1816 tax list in Warrensburg
There is an Ephraim Kellam and
Elisabeth Titus, widow of Huntington, married 2 Oct 1738 in Huntington,
Records of the First Church in Huntington, Long Is...
Permanent Link: https://dcms.lds.org/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE218543 Title Records of the First Church in Huntington, Long Island, 1723-1779 : being the record kept by the Rev. Ebenezer Prime, the pastor during those years, containing lists of members of the Church, and of baptisms and of marriages, a confession of fa
Author Prime, Ebenezer, 1700-1779; First Church in Huntington, Long Island (New York) Description "The First Church in Huntington was organized at about the time of the settlement of the town, say 1660. It was then an Independent or Congregational Church, after the pattern of the churches of Connecticut, and did not become a Presbyterian Church until 1748, as appears in this record"--Intro.
Physical Description 144 p.
Ancestry.com
John Kellum will 1739
to son Isaac Kellam, parcel from patent "Kellam's Choice" between the head of the slash & the road s.e. of slash; to son William Kellam 75 a. out of patent "Addition" and 30 a. of "Kellam's Choice" out of westernmost side; to son Joshua Kellam remaining part of "Kellam's Choice" & 30 a. of "Addition" being a corner between Kellam's Choice & Beaunasse Savannah; if Isaac, Wm, or Joshua die with no issue, their share to revert to their brothers; to son John Kellam IV 50 a. "Chance," hand mill, cider cask, old gun, and one cow; to daughter Sarah Kellam, daughter of Sarah Kellam, one bed, dishes, etc.; to wife Sary Kellam things in her possession; to three daughters: Sarah Poyntor, Charity Landfort, Ann Hall, each five shillings; what my son John Kellam IV has in his possession, he shall divide between my two daughters: Mary Kellam and Jemima Kellam; to sons Isaac & William Kellam my clothes, but William to have silver buttons and short gun. Wts: Sampson Wheatly, Henry Portor, Bell Maddus. Source: John Kellam II & III Kellam Will Research - June 30, 1994, by John L. Dawson, Park Ridge, NJ.
Kellam's Choice
On December 15, 1774, Isaac Kellam Sr. sold to his son William Kellam II 150 acres of Kellam's Choice, which "had fallen to me by death of my brothers William I & Joshua Kellam. Additionally in 1739, John Kellam III willed to sons William Kellam I and Joshua Kellam tract "Addition" formerly patented in 1726 by John Kellam for 100 a. in Coulbourne district #6. On Jan 23, 1750, Joshua Kellam II, son of Joshua Kellam I, with his wife Elizabeth Kellam, sold to Isaac Kellam Sr. 50 a. of Kellam's Choice & Addition.
On Jan. 23, 1750, Isaac Kellam Sr., sold 300 a. of Kellam's Choice to Thomas Martin, land lying on n.w. side of Pokomoke River being part of John Kellam II's (the Elder) patent given by his will to his son John Kellam III, (the Younger). John Kellam III by his last will on March 2, 1739, gave to his son Isaac Kellam Sr., this same tract. Isaac Kellam Sr. sold to Thomas Martin a tract which lay below the old road on the s.w. side of James Martin's plantation near land of Elisha Purnell. Isaac Kellam Sr.'s will dated Feb. 7, 1776, was probated July 19, 1780 in Worcester, Co, Md., named sons William Kellam II and Isaac Kellam Jr., and daughters Rachel Caudry, Leah Payne, Charity, Nancy, Molly, Esther & Sarah Kellam. His wife, Jemima Kellam, was named executrix.
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