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Permelia <I>Stanton</I> Warner

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Permelia Stanton Warner

Birth
Manlius, Onondaga County, New York, USA
Death
7 Oct 1876 (aged 79)
Farmington, Davis County, Utah, USA
Burial
Montpelier, Bear Lake County, Idaho, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 3C, Lot 29, Sp 8
Memorial ID
View Source
Permelia was the daughter of Isaac Stanton and his wife Elizabeth Smith.

Permelia's grandfather was Amos Stanton (1746-8/14/1806), died in Onondaga Co., NY. He was a Private in the Revolutionary War and served in the 3rd Battalion, Berkshire regiment, Massachusetts. Memorial #5407420.

Permelia married Luther-6 Warner, the son of David-5 C. Warner Sr. and his wife Mary Russell, on June 10, 1821 in upstate NY.

As an adult, she joined a Mormon caravan, leaving her home in Reading, Hillsdale, MI. She was in Utah in the 1850 and 1860 census. In 1850, her husband became ill while traveling with LDS brethren to Utah and within hours died from cholera (as did several other travelers) just west of crossing of the Missouri Territory into Nebraska. Unknown if Permelia was traveling with him and others in the family.

8 WARNER children. See spouse, Luther Warner, for particulars.
__________
Reference:

1850 Great Salt Lake Co., UT:
[Deceased Luther Warner's children and wife]
Isaac S. Warner 21
-->Permelia Warner 54 [Luther's wife]
Tirzah Warner 16
Sarah Warner 14
Charles Warner 10

1860 Centerville, Davis, UT:
Simon Dolton 55 PA [Dalton]
Elnora Dolton 39 [daughter of Luther and Permelia Warner]
Rosetta Dolton 13 MI [Elnora and Robert Berry's daughter]
Charles A. Dolton 15 MI [Elnora and Robert Berry's son]
Frances E. 12 Iowa
Simon e 8 US
Alonzo 6 US
Frank 4 US
Joseph 6m US

1860 Battle Creek, Utah, UT:
Permelia Warner 63 NY [widow] [Luther's wife]
Charles 19 MI B-1841
__________
Name: Permelia ?Margaretha Warner
Gender: Female
Christening Date: 1892
Christening Place: Idaho

1860 Centerville [living next door]:
Wm. Howard 35
Terza Howard 27 [daughter of Luther and Permelia Warner]
Wm. R. Howard 6
Don Howard 4
Manerira Howard 3 [Manerva]
Terza Howard 1
__________
STANTON lineage: Permelia-6 ?Margaretha (Stanton) Warner, Isaac-5 Stanton, Amos-4 Stanton, Samuel-3 Stanton, Thomas-2 Stanton, Thomas-1 Stanton (1616-1677) born in Wolverton, Warwick, England, sailed at 20 years of age on the "Bonaventure" from London to Virginia, thence to Boston, to Hartford, CT., where he was a founder of Hartford, CT in 1637.
__________
ROMNEY connection: Luther-6 WARNER, Elnora-7 (Warner) BERRY, Mary-8 (Berry) ROBISON, Alma-9 (Robison) LaFOUNT, Lenore-10 (LaFount) ROMNEY, W. Mitt-11 Romney: a prominent political figure.
______________________________
NOTES ABOUT Mary Elizabeth (Warner) Dalton:

Daughter Mary Elizabeth Warner married Simon Dalton's brother, Charles Dalton on August 11, 1842, in Homer, Calhoun, MI.

3 DALTON children:

1. John Luther was born Oct. 18 1843, in Nauvoo, IL.

2. Elizabeth Permelia was born July 10, 1845, in Nauvoo, IL.

3. Martha Jane was born Sept. 30, 1846, in Shell Creek, Missouri.

In February of 1845, Mary Elizabeth (Warner) Dalton traveled to Jackson Co., MI with her husband, Charles Dalton, where he was to serve as LDS conference president. While in MI, Mary visited with her parents; she had not seen them for several years.

Mary Elizabeth died in Farmington, Davis, UT on March 28, 1856.
__________
WARNER lineage: Mary-7 Elizabeth (Warner) Dalton, Luther-6, David-5 C. Warner Sr., Jesse-4 Warner Sr., Samuel-3 Warner Sr., Daniel-2 Warner Sr., Andrew-1 Warner who with his wife and several children sailed to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1632-33 from Broad Oak, Essex, England.
__________
Census research: Fraya Weiss, 2011.
__________
Research: Mary E. Warner, 2011, 2013.
______________________________
PERMELIA STANTON's link to
"The Founders of Hartford", the Society of the Descendants of Hartford: Thomas Stanton."
http://www.foundersofhartford.org/founders/stanton_thomas.htm

"Thomas Stanton came from Virginia, whither in 1635 he had gone from London, at 20 [yr]; an original proprietor of Hartford.

"His home-lot, in 1639, was on the north bank of the Little River, about where the Jewell Belting Works now are. He served in the Pequot War; in 1638 he was appointed by the General Court a public officer, or county marshal, to attend the Court upon all occasions, either general or particular, and also meetings of the magistrates to interpret between them and the Indians, with a salary of £l0 per annum. In 1646 he was absent and his place was filled by Jonathan Gilbert ; but in 1648 he was reappointed to attend the Court, or magistrates in any of the three towns, Hartford, Windsor, and Wethersfield, as an interpreter, and to have £5 yearly.

"He was a merchant, made trading voyages to Virginia, and, in 1649, the General Court granted him liberty to build a trading-house at Pawcatuck; appointed Commissioner at Mystic and Pawcatuck, Oct. 13, 1664. He removed to Stonington, perhaps, 1658; he was deputy, from Stonington, 1666; d. 1678. He m., about 1637, Ann, daughter of Thomas Lord, of Hartford, who d. 1688."

MORE about Thomas Stanton:
From http://www.jhowell.com/tng/getperson.php?personID=I4869&tree=1.

Note the father Thomas (b. 1585) and mother Katherine Washington.

•From STANTON GENEALOGY, by William Stanton, page 65, 66.:

"Thomas of Stonington [B-1616 in Wolverton, Warwick, England], embarked at London, EN, Jan 2, 1635, in the merchantman "Bonaventura". He went first to Virginia and then to Boston. In 1637, he settled in Hartford CT, where he married Ann Lord, daughter of Dr. Thomas and Dorothy Lord of Hartford.

In 1650 he established a trading house in Stonington CT on the Pawcatuck River. His family lived in New London for a few years until finally their permanent residence came to be on the Pawcatuck."

From STANTON REUNION BOOKLET, given out at the Stanton Reunion on the Davis Farm, the first house Thomas Stanton had in Stonington. August 1991.

From ANCESTORS OF ALDEN SMITH SWAN AND HIS WIFE MARY ALTHEA FARWELL, by Josephine C. Frost, The Hills Press, New York, MCMXXIII, page 199.:

"Thomas was born in Wolverton, England and was in early manhood, in England, educated for a cadet but not likeing the profession of arms and taking a deep interest in the religious principles of the emigrating Puritans, he left his native land in 1635 for the new world, and after staying a short time in Boston and being recognized by Winthrop and his associates as a valuable man, he was selected by the Boston authorities to accompany Fenwick and Peters, as interpreter on a mission to Saybrook, CT, to hold a conference with the Pequot Indians, after which he took up his residence in Hartford, locating there about 1637, and he became the Indian Interpreter to the General Court of CT in all controversies between the whites and the Indians. It was while thus employed, in an interview with Ninigret, in the Narragansett country, that he became acquainted with the Pawcatuck Valley, and he became the first white man to join William Chesebrough in the new settlement, and he asked the liberty to errect a trading house in that place in 1651, but he did not remove his family there until 1657."

"After the articles of confederation between the New England colonies had been established in 1643, he was selected as Interpreter General, and in this capacity he acted especially between the ministers employed by the Commissioners of the United Colonies, acting as agents of the London Missionary Society, and the Indians to whom they preached. He also aided Rev. Abraham Pierson in the translation of his catechism into the Indian tongue, certifying to the same in his official caapacity."

"After locating in Stonington he became very prominent and was elected to almost every position in public trust in the new settlement. In 1658, when Pawcatuck was included in the town of Southertown, under the jurisdiction of MA, he was appointed Selectman and magistrate.
In 1637 he married Anne, daughter of Thomas and Dorothy Lord, and he died Dec 2, 1677, aged 68 years, and she survived him about eleven years, dying at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Noyes, in Stonington CT." [4, 5]

Thomas died 2 Dec 1676 Stonington Twp. New London, CT.
Buried at Wequetequock Burying Ground, Stonington, New London, CT.

10 STANTON children:

1. Thomas Stanton, B-1638, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
2. John Stanton, B-1641, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
3. Mary Stanton, B-1643, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
4. Hannah Stanton, B-1644, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
5. Joseph Stanton, B-21 Mar 1645/46, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
6. Daniel Stanton, B-1648, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
7. Dorothy Stanton, B-1651, Stonington Twp. New London, CT.
8. Robert Stanton, B-1653, Pequoit, New London, CT.
9. Sarah Stanton, B-1655-1656, Pequot, New London, CT.
10. Samuel Stanton, B-1657, Stonington Twp. New London, CT.

Sources 1.[SAuth] John Spencer Howell, Jr., John Spencer Howell, Jr., (http://www.jhowell.com/ [email protected]).

2.[S1087] Nancy Ann Norman, (http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1034016), http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1034016&id=I2789 (Reliability: 0).

3.[S1087] Nancy Ann Norman, (http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1034016), http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1034016&id=I2790 (Reliability: 0).

4.[S1088] Ancestors of Alden Smith Swan, Josephine C. Frost, (The Hills Press, New York MCMXXII), p.199 (Reliability: 0).

5.[S1098] Stanton Genealogy, William Stanton, p. 65, 66 (Reliability: 0).
__________
Research: Bruce Gillett, 2013.
Permelia was the daughter of Isaac Stanton and his wife Elizabeth Smith.

Permelia's grandfather was Amos Stanton (1746-8/14/1806), died in Onondaga Co., NY. He was a Private in the Revolutionary War and served in the 3rd Battalion, Berkshire regiment, Massachusetts. Memorial #5407420.

Permelia married Luther-6 Warner, the son of David-5 C. Warner Sr. and his wife Mary Russell, on June 10, 1821 in upstate NY.

As an adult, she joined a Mormon caravan, leaving her home in Reading, Hillsdale, MI. She was in Utah in the 1850 and 1860 census. In 1850, her husband became ill while traveling with LDS brethren to Utah and within hours died from cholera (as did several other travelers) just west of crossing of the Missouri Territory into Nebraska. Unknown if Permelia was traveling with him and others in the family.

8 WARNER children. See spouse, Luther Warner, for particulars.
__________
Reference:

1850 Great Salt Lake Co., UT:
[Deceased Luther Warner's children and wife]
Isaac S. Warner 21
-->Permelia Warner 54 [Luther's wife]
Tirzah Warner 16
Sarah Warner 14
Charles Warner 10

1860 Centerville, Davis, UT:
Simon Dolton 55 PA [Dalton]
Elnora Dolton 39 [daughter of Luther and Permelia Warner]
Rosetta Dolton 13 MI [Elnora and Robert Berry's daughter]
Charles A. Dolton 15 MI [Elnora and Robert Berry's son]
Frances E. 12 Iowa
Simon e 8 US
Alonzo 6 US
Frank 4 US
Joseph 6m US

1860 Battle Creek, Utah, UT:
Permelia Warner 63 NY [widow] [Luther's wife]
Charles 19 MI B-1841
__________
Name: Permelia ?Margaretha Warner
Gender: Female
Christening Date: 1892
Christening Place: Idaho

1860 Centerville [living next door]:
Wm. Howard 35
Terza Howard 27 [daughter of Luther and Permelia Warner]
Wm. R. Howard 6
Don Howard 4
Manerira Howard 3 [Manerva]
Terza Howard 1
__________
STANTON lineage: Permelia-6 ?Margaretha (Stanton) Warner, Isaac-5 Stanton, Amos-4 Stanton, Samuel-3 Stanton, Thomas-2 Stanton, Thomas-1 Stanton (1616-1677) born in Wolverton, Warwick, England, sailed at 20 years of age on the "Bonaventure" from London to Virginia, thence to Boston, to Hartford, CT., where he was a founder of Hartford, CT in 1637.
__________
ROMNEY connection: Luther-6 WARNER, Elnora-7 (Warner) BERRY, Mary-8 (Berry) ROBISON, Alma-9 (Robison) LaFOUNT, Lenore-10 (LaFount) ROMNEY, W. Mitt-11 Romney: a prominent political figure.
______________________________
NOTES ABOUT Mary Elizabeth (Warner) Dalton:

Daughter Mary Elizabeth Warner married Simon Dalton's brother, Charles Dalton on August 11, 1842, in Homer, Calhoun, MI.

3 DALTON children:

1. John Luther was born Oct. 18 1843, in Nauvoo, IL.

2. Elizabeth Permelia was born July 10, 1845, in Nauvoo, IL.

3. Martha Jane was born Sept. 30, 1846, in Shell Creek, Missouri.

In February of 1845, Mary Elizabeth (Warner) Dalton traveled to Jackson Co., MI with her husband, Charles Dalton, where he was to serve as LDS conference president. While in MI, Mary visited with her parents; she had not seen them for several years.

Mary Elizabeth died in Farmington, Davis, UT on March 28, 1856.
__________
WARNER lineage: Mary-7 Elizabeth (Warner) Dalton, Luther-6, David-5 C. Warner Sr., Jesse-4 Warner Sr., Samuel-3 Warner Sr., Daniel-2 Warner Sr., Andrew-1 Warner who with his wife and several children sailed to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1632-33 from Broad Oak, Essex, England.
__________
Census research: Fraya Weiss, 2011.
__________
Research: Mary E. Warner, 2011, 2013.
______________________________
PERMELIA STANTON's link to
"The Founders of Hartford", the Society of the Descendants of Hartford: Thomas Stanton."
http://www.foundersofhartford.org/founders/stanton_thomas.htm

"Thomas Stanton came from Virginia, whither in 1635 he had gone from London, at 20 [yr]; an original proprietor of Hartford.

"His home-lot, in 1639, was on the north bank of the Little River, about where the Jewell Belting Works now are. He served in the Pequot War; in 1638 he was appointed by the General Court a public officer, or county marshal, to attend the Court upon all occasions, either general or particular, and also meetings of the magistrates to interpret between them and the Indians, with a salary of £l0 per annum. In 1646 he was absent and his place was filled by Jonathan Gilbert ; but in 1648 he was reappointed to attend the Court, or magistrates in any of the three towns, Hartford, Windsor, and Wethersfield, as an interpreter, and to have £5 yearly.

"He was a merchant, made trading voyages to Virginia, and, in 1649, the General Court granted him liberty to build a trading-house at Pawcatuck; appointed Commissioner at Mystic and Pawcatuck, Oct. 13, 1664. He removed to Stonington, perhaps, 1658; he was deputy, from Stonington, 1666; d. 1678. He m., about 1637, Ann, daughter of Thomas Lord, of Hartford, who d. 1688."

MORE about Thomas Stanton:
From http://www.jhowell.com/tng/getperson.php?personID=I4869&tree=1.

Note the father Thomas (b. 1585) and mother Katherine Washington.

•From STANTON GENEALOGY, by William Stanton, page 65, 66.:

"Thomas of Stonington [B-1616 in Wolverton, Warwick, England], embarked at London, EN, Jan 2, 1635, in the merchantman "Bonaventura". He went first to Virginia and then to Boston. In 1637, he settled in Hartford CT, where he married Ann Lord, daughter of Dr. Thomas and Dorothy Lord of Hartford.

In 1650 he established a trading house in Stonington CT on the Pawcatuck River. His family lived in New London for a few years until finally their permanent residence came to be on the Pawcatuck."

From STANTON REUNION BOOKLET, given out at the Stanton Reunion on the Davis Farm, the first house Thomas Stanton had in Stonington. August 1991.

From ANCESTORS OF ALDEN SMITH SWAN AND HIS WIFE MARY ALTHEA FARWELL, by Josephine C. Frost, The Hills Press, New York, MCMXXIII, page 199.:

"Thomas was born in Wolverton, England and was in early manhood, in England, educated for a cadet but not likeing the profession of arms and taking a deep interest in the religious principles of the emigrating Puritans, he left his native land in 1635 for the new world, and after staying a short time in Boston and being recognized by Winthrop and his associates as a valuable man, he was selected by the Boston authorities to accompany Fenwick and Peters, as interpreter on a mission to Saybrook, CT, to hold a conference with the Pequot Indians, after which he took up his residence in Hartford, locating there about 1637, and he became the Indian Interpreter to the General Court of CT in all controversies between the whites and the Indians. It was while thus employed, in an interview with Ninigret, in the Narragansett country, that he became acquainted with the Pawcatuck Valley, and he became the first white man to join William Chesebrough in the new settlement, and he asked the liberty to errect a trading house in that place in 1651, but he did not remove his family there until 1657."

"After the articles of confederation between the New England colonies had been established in 1643, he was selected as Interpreter General, and in this capacity he acted especially between the ministers employed by the Commissioners of the United Colonies, acting as agents of the London Missionary Society, and the Indians to whom they preached. He also aided Rev. Abraham Pierson in the translation of his catechism into the Indian tongue, certifying to the same in his official caapacity."

"After locating in Stonington he became very prominent and was elected to almost every position in public trust in the new settlement. In 1658, when Pawcatuck was included in the town of Southertown, under the jurisdiction of MA, he was appointed Selectman and magistrate.
In 1637 he married Anne, daughter of Thomas and Dorothy Lord, and he died Dec 2, 1677, aged 68 years, and she survived him about eleven years, dying at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Noyes, in Stonington CT." [4, 5]

Thomas died 2 Dec 1676 Stonington Twp. New London, CT.
Buried at Wequetequock Burying Ground, Stonington, New London, CT.

10 STANTON children:

1. Thomas Stanton, B-1638, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
2. John Stanton, B-1641, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
3. Mary Stanton, B-1643, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
4. Hannah Stanton, B-1644, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
5. Joseph Stanton, B-21 Mar 1645/46, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
6. Daniel Stanton, B-1648, Hartford, Hartford, CT.
7. Dorothy Stanton, B-1651, Stonington Twp. New London, CT.
8. Robert Stanton, B-1653, Pequoit, New London, CT.
9. Sarah Stanton, B-1655-1656, Pequot, New London, CT.
10. Samuel Stanton, B-1657, Stonington Twp. New London, CT.

Sources 1.[SAuth] John Spencer Howell, Jr., John Spencer Howell, Jr., (http://www.jhowell.com/ [email protected]).

2.[S1087] Nancy Ann Norman, (http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1034016), http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1034016&id=I2789 (Reliability: 0).

3.[S1087] Nancy Ann Norman, (http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1034016), http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1034016&id=I2790 (Reliability: 0).

4.[S1088] Ancestors of Alden Smith Swan, Josephine C. Frost, (The Hills Press, New York MCMXXII), p.199 (Reliability: 0).

5.[S1098] Stanton Genealogy, William Stanton, p. 65, 66 (Reliability: 0).
__________
Research: Bruce Gillett, 2013.


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