Person:Jonathan Chase (17)

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m. May 1728
  1. Samuel Chase1728 - 1790
  2. Dudley Chase1730 - 1814
  3. Gen. Jonathan Chase1732 - 1800
  4. Elizabeth Chase1735 -
  5. Capt. March Chase1738 - 1822
  6. Mary Chase1740 - 1742
  7. Sarah Chase1740 - 1814
  8. Mary Chase1743/44 - 1745
  9. Anne Chase1746 -
  10. Prudence ChaseAbt 1748 - 1756
  11. Abigail Chase1753 - 1756
m. 28 Nov 1759
  1. Prudence Chase1760 - 1808
  2. Mary ChaseAbt 1762 - Est 1800
  3. Elizabeth ChaseAbt 1765 - 1793
  4. Son Chase1768 - 1768
  5. Son Chase1768 - 1768
  • HGen. Jonathan Chase1732 - 1800
  • WSarah Hall1742 - 1806
m. 22 Oct 1770
  1. Jonathan Chase1771 - 1843
  2. David Hall Chase1774 - 1794
  3. Sarah Hall ChaseAbt 1776 - 1848
  4. Libbeus Hall Chase1779 - 1865
  5. Pamelia Chase1780 - 1855
  6. Gratia ChaseAbt 1783 - 1826
Facts and Events
Name Gen. Jonathan Chase
Gender Male
Birth[1][2] 6 Dec 1732 Sutton, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States
Marriage 28 Nov 1759 Grafton, Worcester, Massachusetts, United Statesto Thankful Sherman
Marriage 22 Oct 1770 Note: No primary record found.
to Sarah Hall
Military? 1777 Combatant of Saratoga
Death[1][4] 14 Jan 1800 Cornish, Sullivan, New Hampshire, United States
Reference Number? Q6272748?


the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Jonathan Chase (December 6, 1732 – January 12, 1800) was a soldier in the American Revolutionary War.

Chase was born in Sutton, Province of Massachusetts Bay to Samuel Chase and his wife, Mary Dudley. As a young man, he moved to Cornish, New Hampshire and married Thankful Sherman of Grafton, New Hampshire on November 28, 1759. Together they had three children; Prudence, Elizabeth, and Mary. Born July 21, 1739; Thankful died at the age of 28 on November 25, 1768. Jonathan Chase remarried on October 22, 1770, to Sarah Hall; born December 15, 1742 and died October 13, 1806. Jonathan and Sarah had six children, Jonathan, 1771; David Hall, 1773; Sarah Hall, 1775; son Lebbeus Hall, 1779; Pamelia, 1780; and Gratia, 1782.

He was a farmer, a surveyor, a store keeper and a miller in the new township of Cornish. In 1775, with the coming of the American Revolutionary War, Chase was appointed Colonel of the 13th New Hampshire Militia Regiment. Jonathan Chase led his regiment to Fort Ticonderoga in 1776 to support the Continental Army. His regiment served in Gen. William Whipple's Brigade of New Hampshire Militia during the Saratoga Campaign of 1777. At the surrender of Gen. John Burgoyne, Col. Chase drew up the Articles of Convention for the Surrender of General Burgoyne's Army for Gen. Horatio Gates. His regiment was also called up in 1780 in response to the Royalton Raid in Vermont. Chase was promoted to Brigadier General in the State Militia of New Hampshire.

He died at his home in Cornish, New Hampshire.

This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Jonathan Chase (colonel). The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with WeRelate, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
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References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Jonathan Chase (colonel), in Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia.
  2. Sutton, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Sutton, Massachusetts, to the End of the Year 1849. (Worcester, Massachusetts: Franklin P. Rice, 1907)
    39.

    Chase, Jonathan, s. Samuel and Mary, Dec. 6, 1732.

  3.   Family Reported, in Colonial Dames of America. Chapter 1, Baltimore. Ancestral records and portraits: a compilation from the archives of Chapter I, the Colonial Dames of America. (New York: Grafton Press, 1910)
    2:618.
  4. New Hampshire, United States. New Hampshire Death Records, 1654-1947. (New Hampshire Division of Vital Records Administration)
    [1].

    Name: Gen. Jonathan Chase
    Died: Jan. 14, 1800
    in his 68th year
    One of the first settlers
    in this town.
    Tombstone in Cornish N.H.
    [Note: see also Find a Grave.]