Old Dead Relatives

The genealogy of my extended family

Who's Your Daddy?
First Name

Last Name
Joel Albion FRIEND

Joel Albion FRIEND

Male 1841 -

Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Joel Albion FRIEND was born on 18 Oct 1841 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine (son of Amos FRIEND and Sally Dewolf FULLER).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Amos FRIEND was born on 16 Sep 1800 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine (son of Phineas FRIEND and Hannah CARTER); died on 16 Jan 1864 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine.

    Amos married Sally Dewolf FULLER on 4 Jul 1825. Sally was born on 3 Mar 1808 in Carmel, Penobscot, Maine; died on 24 Nov 1894 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Sally Dewolf FULLER was born on 3 Mar 1808 in Carmel, Penobscot, Maine; died on 24 Nov 1894 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine.
    Children:
    1. Edmund FRIEND was born on 9 Jul 1826 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine; died on 31 Dec 1909.
    2. Albion FRIEND was born on 15 Dec 1827 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine; died on 7 Jan 1834.
    3. Mary FRIEND was born on 18 Jul 1835 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine; died on 7 May 1843.
    4. Diantha FRIEND was born on 30 Mar 1833 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine.
    5. Eliza Williams FRIEND was born on 18 Apr 1837 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine; died on 28 Nov 1908 in Belfast, Waldo, Maine.
    6. 1. Joel Albion FRIEND was born on 18 Oct 1841 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine.
    7. Varila Dyer FRIEND was born on 28 Jun 1843 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine; died on 28 Jul 1910 in Brewer, Penobscot, Maine.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Phineas FRIEND was born on 23 Mar 1770 in Wenham, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 5 Nov 1849 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine.

    Phineas married Hannah CARTER on 9 Nov 1795. Hannah (daughter of James CARTER and Lydia DAY) was born on 14 Apr 1771 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine; died on 12 Apr 1829. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Hannah CARTER was born on 14 Apr 1771 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine (daughter of James CARTER and Lydia DAY); died on 12 Apr 1829.
    Children:
    1. Phineas FRIEND was born on 7 Feb 1799 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine.
    2. 2. Amos FRIEND was born on 16 Sep 1800 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine; died on 16 Jan 1864 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine.
    3. Joel FRIEND was born on 18 Jun 1802 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine; died on 7 Apr 1803 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine.
    4. David FRIEND was born on 25 Apr 1804 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine; died in 1894.
    5. Hannah FRIEND was born on 14 Apr 1806 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine.
    6. John Crosby FRIEND was born on 24 Oct 1808 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine; died on 8 Jun 1883; was buried in N Etna Cemetery, Etna, Penobscot, Maine.
    7. James C. FRIEND was born on 15 Aug 1810 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine.
    8. Lydia C. FRIEND was born on 3 Jul 1813 in Etna, Penobscot, Maine.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  James CARTER was born on 11 Feb 1740 in Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine (son of John CARTER and Hannah SANDS); died on 20 Jun 1818 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine; was buried in unknown.

    Other Events:

    • DNA Fact: confirmed by triangulation
    • DAR#: A019947
    • Military Event: American Revolution - MA, Capt Nathaniel Fales, Maja Bagaduce: Pvt
    • Served American Revolution?: Y
    • Military Flag: Y

    Notes:

    Military: Bet 1 Aug 1779 and 29 Aug 1779 Castine, Hancock, Maine.
    Came from Edgecomb Maine to Blue Hill in 1770.
    ——
    Revolutionary note: Expedition
    ——
    The expedition organized by the Americans in June, 1779, to dislodge the British who had occupied the point where is now the town of Castine, Maine, as a base of supplies and a naval station, has been known in history as the Bagaduce expedition, but at that time was called "The Expedition to the Penobscot." The arm of the sea now called Bagaduce River was in former times called Matchebiguatus, an Indian name meaning at a place where there is no safe harbor. At the time of the Revolution it was known as Maja-Bagaduce, which was contracted into Bagaduce and hence the name of the expedition.
    The fact that the campaign was a disastrous failure has probably deterred historians from the preparation of a full history of the affair; but as it was one of the most prominent events in Maine's Revolutionary history, it seems proper that the service, with the company rolls of the men who composed the regiments, should be recorded. The men were in no wise responsible for the results, and no doubt acted as well as they could under the circumstances in which they found themselves placed.
    http://www.kinquest.com/usgenealogy/revwar/bagaduce.php
    ——
    The Penobscot Expedition was a 44-ship American naval task force mounted during the Revolutionary War by the Provincial Congress of the Province of Massachusetts Bay. The flotilla of 19 warships and 25 smaller support vessels sailed from Boston on July 19, 1779 for the upper Penobscot Bay in the District of Maine carrying a ground expeditionary force of more than 1,000 colonial Marines and militiamen. Also included was a 100-man artillery detachment under the command of Lt. Colonel Paul Revere. The Expedition's goal was to reclaim control of what is now mid-coast Maine from the British who had seized it a month earlier and renamed it New Ireland. It was the largest American naval expedition of the war. The fighting took place both on land and at sea in and around the mouth of the Penobscot and Majabigwaduce Rivers at what is today Castine, Maine over a period of three weeks in July and August of 1779. One of its greatest victories of the war for the British, the Expedition was also the United States' worst naval defeat until Pearl Harbor 162 years later in 1941.
    On June 17 of that year, British Army forces under the command of General Francis McLean landed and began to establish a series of fortifications centered on Fort George, located on the Majabigwaduce Peninsula in the upper Penobscot Bay, with the goals of establishing a military presence on that part of the coast and establishing the colony of New Ireland. In response, the Province of Massachusetts, with some support from the Continental Congress, raised an expedition to drive the British out.
    The Americans landed troops in late July and attempted to establish a siege of Fort George in a series of actions that were seriously hampered by disagreements over control of the expedition between land forces commander Brigadier General Solomon Lovell and the expedition's overall commander, Commodore Dudley Saltonstall, who was subsequently dismissed from the Navy for ineptness and failure to effectively prosecute the mission. For almost three weeks General McLean held off the assault until a British relief fleet under the command of Sir George Collier arrived from New York on August 13, driving the American fleet to total self-destruction up the Penobscot River. The survivors of the American expedition were forced to make an overland journey back to more populated parts of Massachusetts with minimal food and armament.
    ——
    From “The Carter Families of Hancock County”
    Blew hillbay Fabruary 25d 1779
    Cornel Buck Sir
    I Have Reseved a Grait Loss By the ingins I now Live On A island Alone & the Ingins Came & sott Down here with me & there Dogs Have Drove 6 sheep in the water & Drowned Them & I have gott 2 fleeses out of them & 3 yews & the Rest was All Lost The ingins ses that if I Right to you that they will pay you so that I may have may pay if they Dont Pay you I should Be glad that you wold send me word to Cornel Holt & some of them ses that Cornal Johnathan Lowder will pay me there is 3 or 4 injuns that must pay Sum says that one did Drive them (some) that the other Did Drive tham But it Layes in the Club (group?) for they All sott Down together there was meeseee & sabattes & Little Essah & Sabees & I shall be very Glad if you wold Be so kind As to Take sum Note of thes fue lins & Git the pay or Let me in sum way to Git it for i am a poor man & want toe wool to cloath my Famely very much the injuns Has Desirerd that I should send to you By them So No more A present But I Remain you Most ABliged.
    Frind
    James Carter
    Sir pray send me A fue lins to Cornel Heth.

    James married Lydia DAY on 4 Jan 1764 in Lincoln, Penobscot, Maine. Lydia (daughter of Jonathan DAY and Lydia BENNETT) was born on 13 Feb 1743 in Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts; died on 29 Aug 1828 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine; was buried in unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  Lydia DAY was born on 13 Feb 1743 in Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts (daughter of Jonathan DAY and Lydia BENNETT); died on 29 Aug 1828 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine; was buried in unknown.

    Other Events:

    • DNA Fact: confirmed by triangulation

    Notes:

    She died at Carter's Point in Blue Hill, ME. Rev. Jonathan Fisher said that she was deranged in the latter part of her life.

    Children:
    1. James CARTER was born on 31 Oct 1764 in Damariscotta, Lincoln, Maine; died on 4 Nov 1834 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine; was buried in Carter Point Burying Ground, Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine.
    2. Lydia CARTER was born on 25 Oct 1765 in Edgecomb, Lincoln, Maine; died in Jun 1834 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine.
    3. Joanna CARTER was born on 3 Dec 1766 in Edgecomb, Lincoln, Maine; died in 1839 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine.
    4. David CARTER was born on 24 Jul 1768 in Edgecomb, Lincoln, Maine; died on 14 Mar 1844 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine.
    5. Mary E. CARTER was born on 14 Jan 1770 in Edgecomb, Lincoln, Maine; died on 5 Mar 1857 in Bartlett's Island, Hancock, Maine.
    6. 5. Hannah CARTER was born on 14 Apr 1771 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine; died on 12 Apr 1829.
    7. Jerusha CARTER was born on 11 Aug 1772 in Edgecomb, Lincoln, Maine; died on 28 Feb 1773 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine.
    8. John CARTER was born on 6 Feb 1774 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine; died on 28 Feb 1774 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine.
    9. John CARTER was born on 31 Mar 1775 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine; died on 19 Dec 1858 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine; was buried in 1858 in Old Birchland Cemetery, Brooklin, Hancock, Maine.
    10. Abigail W. CARTER was born on 30 Aug 1778 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine; died on 1 Feb 1844 in Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine; was buried in Sedgwick Rural Cemetery, Sedgwick, Hancock, Maine.
    11. Judith CARTER was born on 21 Jul 1780 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine; died on 14 Sep 1839 in Islesboro, Waldo, Maine.
    12. Robert CARTER was born on 29 Oct 1782 in Blue Hill, Hancock, Maine; died on 7 May 1807 in At sea Sulawesi, Tengah, Indonesia.


Notes

This website uses dates from the Gregorian calendar (New Style), unless otherwise noted.

For more information on dates, see Wikipedia: Old Style and New Style dates.

I strive to document my sources. However, some people and dates are best guesses and will be updated as new information is revealed. If you have something to add, please let me know.

Updated 23 Dec 2023