Person:Charles Bellows (1)

Watchers
Charles Cotesworth Bellows
 
m. 6 Mar 1791
  1. Ephraim Hartwell Bellows1792 - 1861
  2. Caleb Strong Bellows1793 - 1804
  3. Benjamin Franklin Bellows1795 - 1818
  4. George Lyman Bellows1798 - 1831
  5. Mary Brown Bellows1800 - Aft 1880
  6. Phebe Strong Bellows1802 -
  7. Laura Livermore Bellows1804 - 1878
  8. Caleb Strong Bellows1806 - 1863
  9. Moses Brown Bellows1808 - Aft 1880
  10. Elizabeth Rowe Bellows1810 -
  11. Caroline Pickney Bellows1813 - Aft 1870
  12. Charles Cotesworth Bellows1813 -
m. 7 Oct 1838
Facts and Events
Name[3] Charles Cotesworth Bellows
Gender Male
Birth[1][2] 6 May 1813 Walpole, Cheshire, New Hampshire, United StatesTwin to Caroline
Marriage 7 Oct 1838 New Ipswich, Hillsborough, New Hampshire, United Statesto Abby Parker Champney
References
  1. Bond, Henry, M.D. Family Memorials. Genealogies of the Families and Descendants of the Early Settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts, Including Waltham and Weston (1855): To Which Is Appended the Early History of the Town. With Illustrations, Maps and Notes. (Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown, and Company, 1855)
    536.

    Children of Caleb Bellows and Mary Hartwell: "12. Charles Cotesworth, b. May 3 [sic], 1813; m. Abby P. Champney of Toledo."

  2. New Hampshire, United States. New Hampshire Birth Records, Early to 1900. (New Hampshire Division of Vital Records Administration)
    [1].

    Child's Name: Caroline Pinckney & Charles Cotesworth Bellows
    Date of Birth: May 6 - 1813 (Twins)
    Father's Name: Caleb Bellows
    Mother's Maiden Name: Maria Bellows
    Clerk of: Town of Walpole

  3. Dwight, Benjamin Woodbridge. The History of the Descendants of Elder John Strong, of Northampton, Mass. (Albany, New York: J. Munsell, 1871)
    Vol. 2, p. 1172.

    Charles Coatesworth Bellows, s/o Caleb Bellows and Mary Hartwell, b. 6 May 1813, m. 7 Oct 1838 Abby Parker Champney of New Ipswich. Resided Dubuque, IA; Toledo, OH; Buffalo, NY; and now New Ipswich, NH. General Quarter Master of US Sanitary Commission in Washington DC during Civil War.