JosephSmithSr.
So shall it be with my father: he shall be
called a prince over his posterity, holding
the keys of the patriarchal priesthood over the kingdom of God on earth, even the Church
of the Latter Day Saints, and he shall sit in the general assembly of patriarchs, even in
council with the Ancient of Days when he shall sit and all the patriarchs with him and shall
enjoy his right and authority under the direction of the Ancient of Days.
First Name:  Last Name: 
[Advanced Search]  [Surnames]

HUNTLEY, Hannah[1, 2, 3, 4]

Female 1708 - 1807  (98 years)  Submit Photo / DocumentSubmit Photo / Document


 Set As Default Person    

Personal Information    |    Media    |    Notes    |    Sources    |    All    |    PDF

  • Name HUNTLEY, Hannah 
    Birth 22 Jul 1708  Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Female 
    Death 26 Mar 1807  Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Burial Apr 1807  Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    WAC 13 Aug 1908  SLAKE Find all individuals with events at this location  [5, 6
    _TAG Reviewed on FS 
    Headstones Submit Headstone Photo Submit Headstone Photo 
    Person ID I19671  Joseph Smith Sr and Lucy Mack Smith
    Last Modified 19 Aug 2021 

    Father HUNTLEY, Aaron Jr. ,   b. 1 Dec 1680, Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationLyme, New London, Connecticut, United Statesd. 26 Sep 1748, Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 67 years) 
    Mother WOLF, Deborah de ,   b. 15 Jul 1690, Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationLyme, New London, Connecticut, United Statesd. 26 Sep 1748, Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 58 years) 
    Marriage 27 Jul 1707  Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F10255  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 GEE, Solomon ,   b. 1698, Devon, England Find all individuals with events at this locationDevon, Englandd. 13 Apr 1769, Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 71 years) 
    Family ID F10254  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 24 Jan 2022 

    Family 2 MACK, Elder Ebenezer ,   b. 8 Dec 1697, Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationLyme, New London, Connecticut, United Statesd. 8 May 1777, Lyme, New London, Connecticut, British Colonial America Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 79 years) 
    Marriage 20 Apr 1728  Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Notes 
    • MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 30 Apr 1728 ~SEALING_SPOUSE: Also shown as SealSp 4 Dec 1956
    Children 4 sons and 5 daughters 
    Family ID F10238  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 24 Jan 2022 

  • Photos
    Ebenezer and Hannah [Huntley] Mack
    Ebenezer and Hannah [Huntley] Mack
    At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.

  • Notes 
    • The New England Historical and Genealogical Register - Vol C Index of Persons Vol. 51-148 I-Q Mack Family: Azubah, Deborah, Elisha, Hannah, Hepzibah, John, Phebe, Samuel, Sarah (Bagley), Solomon, Stephen, Hannah (Huntley). "Hana Huntley was the ancestress of Joseph Smith, the originator of the Mormon faith." Source - New England Historical and Genealogical Register Volume C: Smith-Hale Genealogy.) ----------------------------------

      Huntley Association - "Notes on History of the Town of Marlow, N H." by Elgin Jones. Sentinel Printing Co. Keene, N. H. 1941 shows on pp. xii and xii that ten Huntley heads of households purchased a total of 28 parcels of Marlow land between 1767 and 1826. These were all purchases from the original Proprietors to whom the Marlow grant was made. (There may have been more land transfers to Huntleys during this time, second-hand, so to speak.) These parcels range from one to 500 acres, but most are substantial, 40 to 100 acres. These Huntleys trace their ancestry back to John Huntley of Lyme, CT, mostly through his son Aaron. "Images of America: Old Lyme, Lyme, and Hadlyme" Kathryn Burton Arcadia Publishing shows two photographs of the rather grand Lyme Huntley homestead and informs us, "John Huntley received a grant from the British crown for a home lot on July 12, 1666." We find that, after passing out of the Huntley family, the house served as home for some of the wealthiest people in Lyme until it was demolished in 1898. Through generations Huntleys have been prominent in Marlow town affairs, and many of their descendants still live here.

      That is why we are providing a link to the Huntley Association. It, in turn, provides helpful links to Huntley genealogy and the affairs of the organization such as the annual national Huntley Reunion. Huntley Genealogy Forum - Here is an extraordinary genealogy forum frequently posted by Virgil Huntley who has researched his family for a lifetime and written three volumes on the descendants of John Huntley of Lyme, Connecticut.

      Mack Family Tree - The Mack family in general has been unusual in its participation in bringing about the new American liberty and making good use of it. Although there are many resources on Mack genealogy, this one is particularly helpful because it allows us to see the etire family at a glance. This goes back to John Mack, an immigrant, which is as far as anyone has been able to follow so far. If you have an interest in the family, you will want to pursue it beyond this link, but this is a start. Marlow's West Yard Burying Ground - Here is a transcription of the inscriptions from Marlow's oldest cemetry in which the stones bear legible writing. In another cemetery, not far away, the stones either had no inscriptions or are no longer legible.

      The West Yard Cemetery is beside Baker's Corner, the location of Marlow's first settlement. Almost all of the people buried there were born in Lyme, Connecticut or are children of those born in Lyme. Virgil Huntley's History of John Huntley and His Descendants, Vol. 3 - This extensive, well-researched genealogy on the descendants of John Huntley is on the Aaron Huntley branch. It was Aaron Huntley, Jr. who came to live in Marlow joined by many of his family. John Huntley of Boston and Roxbury, Massachusetts and Lyme, Connecticut, 1647-1996 and some of his descendants book III Aaron Line (Vol. 3) by Virgin W. Huntley -----------------------

      John Huntley & Descendents by Hana Huntly http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/h/u/n/Robert-A-Huntley/index.html Bill and Lois Huntley of Old Lyme, CT were kind to send us a treasure from their archives. In 1948 the Huntley National Association held its Second Annual Reunion in Jones Hall, Marlow, New Hampshire. A special booklet was produced for the event which contains a synopsis of the Huntley family history in Marlow. The Huntley family is soon to celebrate its Sixtieth Annual Reunion in Lyme, CT, and Virgil Huntley, who wrote the Huntley family histories will celebrate his ninetieth birthday. For more information, see THE HUNTLEYS OF MARLOW Syracuse New York /Dear members and Friends: In this souvenir booklet, I have endeavored to give you a graphic picture of those Huntleys and Huntley descendants who did so much To "settle Marlow Township, Cheshire, County, New Hampshire, and their relationship to John Huntly, the immigrant who had settled in Lyme Township, Connecticut, some hundred years previous.

      The source of this information was from my own records, the records of Mrs. Alice P. Huntley of Hanover, Massachusetts, and the records of Fred H. Huntley of Evanston, Illinois, and from "The History of Cheshire County" owned by Roy D. Huntley of Marlow. All of the above named are personally interested in the Marlow Huntleys by reason of descent or marriage. This booklet is given to be used and studied until you tire of seeing it around - then chuck it! If I could have filled its pages with the stories and anecdotes such as the migrated Huntleys of Marlow must have known, I can assure you this book would be well-worth keeping; but the most of those tales are hidden forever in the many Huntley graves of Old West Burying Ground. Perhaps some of the Huntleys are included in the twenty-seven unmarked graves high on the hill beneath the brambles and tag-alders. The association extends sincere thanks to Roy annd Anna, and to Fred and Irene, who have done so much and made this gathering possible. Very sincerely, ROYCE E. HUNTLEY.

      ------------------- The Huntleys of Lyme, Connecticut, started their trek up the Connecticut River Valley in 1766. The Huntleys were that - they were Huntleys; but also they were the Macks, the Gees, the Tubbs, the Millers and the Lewises. All traced their ancestry to John Huntley, an early settler of Saybrook township, who, with a dozen others had set off that part of Saybrook east of the Connecticut River and called it Lyme. When the children of Aaron Huntley, II, and his wife, Deborah DeWolfe, came to Marlow township they built and settled at Marlow Hill. Aaron and Deborah's oldest child was Hannah, who married Rev. Ebenezer Mack. Of their nine children four of them came to New Hampshire.

      Solomon and his wife, Lydia Gates, came to Gilsum [They came to Marlow first and had four children before moving to Gilsum. Solomon was in Marlow in 1772 to sign a petition.], and later moved to Tunbridge, Vermont. He served in the Revolutionary War in General Israel Putnam's company. Samuel Mack married Lydia Brainard in Chatham, Connecticut, and they came to Marlow. He was the first person to build a dam across the Connecticut River. They are buried in the West Burying Ground. Hepsibah, a daughter of Rev. Ebenezer and Hannah (Huntley) Mack, married Abisha Tubbs, who came to Marlow shortly after their marriage. Capt. Elisha Mack married Diadama Rathburne, moved to Marlow, but in 1782 removed to Montague, Massachusetts.

      Aaron, III, and his wife, Mary Leach, sent one son, Sylvanus, and his wife, Mehitable, to Marlow Hill; Deborah Huntly, daughter of Aaron, II, married Solomon Gee and two of their three sons joined the Marlow party. They were Stephen and Solomon Gee; Phebe, another daughter of Aaron, II, married Nichodemus Miller, and with their two daughters, Amy and Eunice, came to Marlow. Jemima, still another daughter of Aaron, II, was the wife of Eber Lewis and they were among the first residents of Marlow. Probably the person whose name appears the most in the annals of Marlow is that of Nathan (Aaron, II; Aaron, I; John) or his descendants. Nathan was born in Lyme Township, June 2,1726, and died at Marlow Hill, April 31, 1798ยท.

      He was married in Lyme, October 6th, 1746, to Luce, a daughter of Quarles and Mary Smith. She was born in 1727 and died March 25, 1802. Nathan enlisted from Marlow, April 21, 1775, and served at the siege of Boston. They are buried at the old West Burying Ground. Their first child, Azubah, died young in Lyme. But Nathan and Luce, with their six sons, moved to Marlow - Rufus, Isaiah, Luman, Nathan, Russell and Elisha. Later Isaiah and his wife, [i]Eunice Church, moved to Dubxury Corners, near Waterbury, Vermont[/i]. Rufus married Esther, daughter of Asa Moore. He was a captain in the Revolutionary War; Luman married Lurena Beckwith and resided at Charlestown; Nathan, Jr., married (1st) Mary Persons, (2nd) Eunice Royce; Russell married Ama Miller, daughter of Nichodemus and Phebe (Huntley) Miller. He was a soldier in Col. Bellows Regiment at Ticonderoga.

      Elisha married Clarinda Gustin, daughter of John and Lydia (Mack) Gustin. He was a Brig.General of Military, and is the first of the Marlow Huntleys to spell their name with the e. All of these have been traced from John Huntly, Immigrant, through the line of Aaron. Yet, another quirk offers itself in the history of Marlow. Hannah, daughter of Benarjah, (Moses 3, Moses 2, John 1) married first Hezikiah Huntly (Samuel, John, Aaron, John). Hezikiah was killed at a barn raising. The widow married (2nd) Jonathan Huntly. From this line was the widow of Curtis Huntly, the last of the Huntleys living on Huntley Mountain.

  • Sources 
    1. [S989] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, International Genealogical Index(R), citing microfilm 0457614, downloaded 13 Nov 2009 (Reliability: 3).

    2. [S989] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, International Genealogical Index(R), citing microfilm 1239627, page 953, reference number 29936, downloaded 12 Nov 2009 (Reliability: 3).

    3. [S989] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, International Genealogical Index(R), citing microfilm 1239627, page 953, reference number 29933, downloaded 14 Nov 2009 (Reliability: 3).

    4. [S989] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, International Genealogical Index(R), citing microfilm 1239627, page 953, reference number 29938, downloaded 14 Nov 2009 (Reliability: 3).

    5. [S989] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, International Genealogical Index(R), citing microfilm 178101, page 346, reference number 11785, downloaded 30 Nov 2009 (Reliability: 3).

    6. [S989] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, International Genealogical Index(R), citing microfilm 1396132 for batch 8532690, sheet 23, downloaded 30 Nov 2009 (Reliability: 3).