Person:Stephen Ustick (3)

Watchers
Rev. Stephen Clegg Ustick
m. 29 Dec 1772
  1. Rev. Stephen Clegg Ustick1773 - 1837
  2. Jane Ustick1773 - 1810
  3. Thomas Whitear Ustick1776 - 1830
  4. Hannah Ustick1778 -
  5. Sarah UstickAbt 1780 -
  6. Mary Brown Ustick1780 - 1832
  7. Elizabeth Ustick1782 -
  8. John Gano Ustick1784 - 1844
m. 10 Sep 1796
  1. John Shields Ustick1797 - 1828
  2. Hannah Whittier Ustick1799 - 1897
  3. Rebecca Ann Ustick1810 - 1878
Facts and Events
Name[1] Rev. Stephen Clegg Ustick
Gender Male
Birth? 5 Sep 1773 New York City, New York, United States
Marriage 10 Sep 1796 Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United Statesto Rebecca Shields
Death[4] Nov 1837 Batavia, Clermont, Ohio, United States

Notes

  • printer in Philadelphia
  • Ustick and his father, Philadelphia bookseller and Baptist minister Thomas Ustick, were active members of the Philadelphia Baptist Association, and Stephen Ustick did most of the printing for the association, including their minutes, circular letters, &c. Ustick also printed the David Jones reply. Samuel Jones (1735-1814) was minister of the Lower Dublin Baptist Church from 1765 until his death.
References
  1. Bartow, Evelyn P. Bartow genealogy : containing every one of the name of Bartow descended from Doctor Thomas Bartow who was living at Crediton, in England, A.D. 1672, with references to the books where any of the name is mentioned. (Baltimore?: unknown, 1878)
    114.
  2.   Biography and Bibliography of Stephen C. Ustick, in Bulletin of Friends' Historical Association
    29 (1 Spring 1940), 44-47.

    Biography and Bibliography of Stephen C. Ustick. (Appreciation of the Quaker printer, of Mount Holly, New Jersey, who lived in the late eighteenth century.) Manuscript partly completed.

  3.   LW5S-K45 (FamilySearch Family Tree), in FamilySearch Family Tree
    includes sources, last accessed Oct 2022.
  4. Baltimore Sun. (Baltimore (independent city), Maryland, United States)
    24 Nov 1837.

    DIED at Batavia, Clermont Co, Ohio, Mr. Stephen C. Ustick, formerly of Philadelphia, but more recently of Washington and Alexandria, D.C.