Person:Phineas Stevens (3)

Watchers
m.
  1. Phineas Stevens1706/07 - 1756
  2. Azubah Stevens1708 -
  3. Samuel Stevens1711 - 1723
  4. Mindwell Stevens1713 -
  5. Joseph StevensEst 1714/15 - 1723
  6. Isaac StevensEst 1716 -
  7. Isaac Stevens1718 - Bef 1758
  8. Dorothy Stevens1720/21 -
  9. Joseph Stevens1723 -
  10. Lucy Stevens1725 -
  11. Mary Stevens1728 -
m. 18 Jan 1733/34
  1. Samuel Stevens1735 -
  2. Willard Stevens1735 -
  3. Simon Stevens1737 -
  4. Enos Stevens1739 -
  5. Mary Stevens1742 -
  6. Phineas Stevens1744 -
  7. Katherine Stevens1747 -
  8. Prudence Stevens1751 -
  9. Solomon Stevens1753 -
  10. Dorothy Stevens1755 -
Facts and Events
Name[1] Phineas Stevens
Gender Male
Birth[1][2] 20 Feb 1706/07 Sudbury, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States
Marriage 18 Jan 1733/34 Rutland, Worcester, Massachusetts, United Statesto Elizabeth Stevens
Death[3] 6 Feb 1756 Chignecto, Cumberland, Nova Scotia, Canada
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Joseph Stevens, in Crane, Ellery B. Historic Homes and Institutions and Genealogical and Personal Memoirs of Worcester County, Massachusetts: With a History of Worcester Society of Antiquity. (New York: Lewis Publishing Co., 1907)
    2:277.

    Captain Phineas [son of Joseph & Prudence (Rice) Stevens], born February, 20, 1706-7 at Sudbury, married Elizabeth Stevens; he was one of the founders of Charlestown, New Hampshire, and a noted Indian fighter.

  2. Phinehas Stevens, in Sudbury, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Sudbury, Massachusetts, to the Year 1850. (Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1903)
    p 137.

    Steevens, Phinehas, s. Joseph and Prudance, Feb. 20, 1706-7

  3. Matthews, Albert. Joseph Boucher de Niverville, 1715-1804. (Cambridge: John Wilson and Son, 1902)
    p. 4.

    A note in this source refutes date of 6 Apr 1756 given in Source:Stark, Caleb. Memoir and Official Correspondence of Gen. John Stark with Notices of Several Other Officers of the Revolution, p. 372, as part of a memoir of Phinehas Stevens. It cites a newspaper article in Boston News-Letter of 26 Feb 1756, as well as his wife's gravestone in Charlestown, NH,, which includes the following: "Capt Phinehas Stevens died at Chignecto, N.S. Feby 6, 1756, who had been for many years in the Wars, and was Commandant of the Garrison in this town, and at different periods had many combats with the French and Indians."