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Lieut Aaron Paddock

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Lieut Aaron Paddock Veteran

Birth
Dutchess County, New York, USA
Death
18 Dec 1860 (aged 87)
Muir, Ionia County, Michigan, USA
Burial
Muir, Ionia County, Michigan, USA GPS-Latitude: 43.0014035, Longitude: -84.9370552
Plot
138
Memorial ID
View Source
From the Paddock Genealogy p 102-103

Lt. AARON PADDOCK b. Southeast, Dutchess (now Putnam) Co. N.Y. 15 Apr. 1773, d. Muir, Ionia Co. Mich. la Dec. 1860 "at the home of his daughter Rhoda Soule"; bd. Muir; m. abt. 1796 SARAH BENJAMIN, b. Dutchess Co. N.Y. 10 Oct. 1779, bp. Dutch Reformed Chh. Accord 5 Dec. 17791 "must have died long before her husband"; b. Norwich, Conn. 9 Feb. 17521 d. DeRuyter, N.Y. 1830, Homesteaded land east of De Ruyter Village, N.Y. 1794. Then of Dutchess Co. N.Y. bought Lot 53 "in the Gore" 4 June 1794 rec. Chenango Co. and the same day gave a mortgage of 116 pounds on same land to conveyors John Linklaen of Herkimer Co, and Herman LeRoy and William Bayard of New York City, rec. Oneida Co. 25 June 1796 He and wife sold to sou Daniel B. Paddock 61 acres, Lot 53 "of the Gore" 24 Sep. 1800 Ensign 1800 (Chenango Co.), Lieutenant 1800, resigned 1803. Described as "tall, spare, slender with a long nose active but not bust ... had a crippled hand, probably caused by a burn." Saw the burning of Danbury by Benedict Arnold. First white settler, Phoenix, N.Y. and built first log house there 1801. Then of Lysander, N.Y. sold land in Lot 51 there to sons Daniel B., Nathan and George Paddock 8 Jan. 1834 rec. Onondaga Co. (45:483 o Lived once at Baraboo, Wis. and established a "potashery" near Milwaukee 1836/3 with sons Daniel, Aaron, Nathan, George and daughter Jane "as he had been engaged in that business in New York."
From the Paddock Genealogy p 102-103

Lt. AARON PADDOCK b. Southeast, Dutchess (now Putnam) Co. N.Y. 15 Apr. 1773, d. Muir, Ionia Co. Mich. la Dec. 1860 "at the home of his daughter Rhoda Soule"; bd. Muir; m. abt. 1796 SARAH BENJAMIN, b. Dutchess Co. N.Y. 10 Oct. 1779, bp. Dutch Reformed Chh. Accord 5 Dec. 17791 "must have died long before her husband"; b. Norwich, Conn. 9 Feb. 17521 d. DeRuyter, N.Y. 1830, Homesteaded land east of De Ruyter Village, N.Y. 1794. Then of Dutchess Co. N.Y. bought Lot 53 "in the Gore" 4 June 1794 rec. Chenango Co. and the same day gave a mortgage of 116 pounds on same land to conveyors John Linklaen of Herkimer Co, and Herman LeRoy and William Bayard of New York City, rec. Oneida Co. 25 June 1796 He and wife sold to sou Daniel B. Paddock 61 acres, Lot 53 "of the Gore" 24 Sep. 1800 Ensign 1800 (Chenango Co.), Lieutenant 1800, resigned 1803. Described as "tall, spare, slender with a long nose active but not bust ... had a crippled hand, probably caused by a burn." Saw the burning of Danbury by Benedict Arnold. First white settler, Phoenix, N.Y. and built first log house there 1801. Then of Lysander, N.Y. sold land in Lot 51 there to sons Daniel B., Nathan and George Paddock 8 Jan. 1834 rec. Onondaga Co. (45:483 o Lived once at Baraboo, Wis. and established a "potashery" near Milwaukee 1836/3 with sons Daniel, Aaron, Nathan, George and daughter Jane "as he had been engaged in that business in New York."


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