She married Gardner Wiman, and they were the parents of 11 children, and lived in New Haven, Oswego, New York. He was a Captain of a State Militia unit formed in New Haven, and had four of his sons serving with him. He reportedly died in a military hospital in December of 1812, and the wording of the reported record would lead one to understand the death was not war related. In some way widow Hannah ended up in Upper Canada, later Ontario, Canada, and is buried in the Cataraqui Cemetery, across the street from the Cataraqui United Church and Cataraqui United Church Cemetery.
Hannah was the mother of Meres (1790-1884), Horace (1791–1849), Erastus (1793–1834), Chancy (1796–1871), Chauncy (1797–1871), Truman (1799–1870), Alonzo (1803–1872), Hannah (1805– ), Louisa (1808–1898), Laura (1808–1894), and Marcia (1810–1837). That is 10 names for the eleven children.
The spelling of Gardner's surname can be found as Wiman and Wyman.
She married Gardner Wiman, and they were the parents of 11 children, and lived in New Haven, Oswego, New York. He was a Captain of a State Militia unit formed in New Haven, and had four of his sons serving with him. He reportedly died in a military hospital in December of 1812, and the wording of the reported record would lead one to understand the death was not war related. In some way widow Hannah ended up in Upper Canada, later Ontario, Canada, and is buried in the Cataraqui Cemetery, across the street from the Cataraqui United Church and Cataraqui United Church Cemetery.
Hannah was the mother of Meres (1790-1884), Horace (1791–1849), Erastus (1793–1834), Chancy (1796–1871), Chauncy (1797–1871), Truman (1799–1870), Alonzo (1803–1872), Hannah (1805– ), Louisa (1808–1898), Laura (1808–1894), and Marcia (1810–1837). That is 10 names for the eleven children.
The spelling of Gardner's surname can be found as Wiman and Wyman.
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Blessed are the dead
which die in he lord
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