George Hibbard1
George Hibbard was the son of Joseph Hibbard Jr. and Martha Smith. George Hibbard married Lydia Allen, daughter of John Allen and Miriam Clark.
Child of George Hibbard and Lydia Allen
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, page 58.
Olive Hibbard1
Olive Hibbard was the daughter of George Hibbard and Lydia Allen. Olive Hibbard married Caleb Smith, son of Benjamin Smith.
Child of Olive Hibbard and Caleb Smith
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Aaron Cooke III1
Aaron Cooke III was the son of Aaron Cooke Jr. and Mary Cooke. Aaron Cooke III married Sarah Westwood on 30 May 1661.
Children of Aaron Cooke III and Sarah Westwood
- Joanna Cooke+
- Sarah Cooke+ b. 31 Jan 1662, d. a 10 Apr 1739
- Bridget Cooke b. 31 Mar 1683
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Elizabeth Hovey1
Child of Elizabeth Hovey and John Smith
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
John Smith Jr.1
Child of John Smith Jr. and Mary (?)
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Benjamin Smith1
Child of Benjamin Smith
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Caleb Smith1
Caleb Smith was the son of Benjamin Smith. Caleb Smith married Olive Hibbard, daughter of George Hibbard and Lydia Allen.
Child of Caleb Smith and Olive Hibbard
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Sophia Smith1
Sophia Smith was the daughter of Caleb Smith and Olive Hibbard. Sophia Smith married Joseph Smith Jr., son of Joseph Smith and Eunice Goodman.
Child of Sophia Smith and Joseph Smith Jr.
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Samuel Allen Jr.1,2,3
b. 1634, d. October 18, 1718 or 1719
Samuel Allen Jr. was born in 1634.4 He was the son of Samuel Allen and Ann (?) Samuel Allen Jr. married Hannah Woodford, daughter of Thomas Woodford and Mary Blott, on 29 November 1659.4 Samuel Allen Jr. died October 18, 1718 or 1719 at Northampton, MA.4
Child of Samuel Allen Jr. and Hannah Woodford
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
- [S52] Henry R. Stiles History of Ancient Windsor II, Vol. II:Pg. 14/Family 1.
- [S155] Willard Allen, "Samuel Allen."
- [S431] Willard S. Allen, "Samuel Allen, of Windsor, CT., and Some of His Descendants.," Connecticut Families - Allen, I, Page 15.
Hannah Woodford1
Hannah Woodford was the daughter of Thomas Woodford and Mary Blott. Hannah Woodford married Samuel Allen Jr., son of Samuel Allen and Ann (?), on 29 November 1659.2
Child of Hannah Woodford and Samuel Allen Jr.
Hannah Allen1
Child of Hannah Allen and Nathaniel Alexander
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Sarah Alexander
Child of Sarah Alexander and Joseph Smith III
Alexander Smith
Child of Alexander Smith and Rebecca Warriner
Joseph Smith
Child of Joseph Smith and Eunice Goodman
Joseph Smith Jr.1
Joseph Smith Jr. was the son of Joseph Smith and Eunice Goodman. Joseph Smith Jr. married Sophia Smith, daughter of Caleb Smith and Olive Hibbard.
Child of Joseph Smith Jr. and Sophia Smith
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Mary Wilson Smith1
Child of Mary Wilson Smith and Charles William Phelps
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Charles Henry Phelps1
Charles Henry Phelps was the son of Charles William Phelps and Mary Wilson Smith. Charles Henry Phelps married Mary Booth.
Child of Charles Henry Phelps and Mary Booth
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Mary Booth
Child of Mary Booth and Charles Henry Phelps
Eleanor Phelps1
Eleanor Phelps was the daughter of Charles Henry Phelps and Mary Booth. Eleanor Phelps married Frederick Huntington Clark, son of John Bates Clark and Myra Almeda Smith.
Child of Eleanor Phelps and Frederick Huntington Clark
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Lydia Gager1
Child of Lydia Gager and Simon Huntington III
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Joshua Huntington1
Joshua Huntington was the son of Simon Huntington III and Lydia Gager. Joshua Huntington married Hannah Perkins.
Children of Joshua Huntington and Hannah Perkins
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Rachel Young Doty1
Child of Rachel Young Doty and Mark Rork
- Mary Ann Rork+1 b. 1827, d. 1868
Citations
- [S629] Coralee Griswold, Griswold 6 & 7 vol 2, page 262.
Jabez Huntington1
Child of Jabez Huntington and Elizabeth Backus
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, page 58.
Jedediah Huntington1
Child of Jedediah Huntington and Anne Moore
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Thomas Huntington1
Thomas Huntington was the son of Jedediah Huntington and Anne Moore. Thomas Huntington married Elizabeth Colfax, daughter of George Colfax Jr. and Mary Robbins.
Child of Thomas Huntington and Elizabeth Colfax
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Elizabeth Colfax1
Elizabeth Colfax was the daughter of George Colfax Jr. and Mary Robbins. Elizabeth Colfax married Thomas Huntington, son of Jedediah Huntington and Anne Moore.
Child of Elizabeth Colfax and Thomas Huntington
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
George Colfax Jr.1
George Colfax Jr. was the son of George Colfax and Lucy Avery.
Child of George Colfax Jr. and Mary Robbins
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Pages 39, 58.
Charlotte Stoddard Huntington1
Child of Charlotte Stoddard Huntington and John Hezekiah Clark
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
John Bates Clark
Child of John Bates Clark and Myra Almeda Smith
Frederick Huntington Clark1
Frederick Huntington Clark was the son of John Bates Clark and Myra Almeda Smith. Frederick Huntington Clark married Eleanor Phelps, daughter of Charles Henry Phelps and Mary Booth.
Child of Frederick Huntington Clark and Eleanor Phelps
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Eleanor Clark1
Eleanor Clark was the daughter of Frederick Huntington Clark and Eleanor Phelps. Eleanor Clark married Robert Penn Warren.
Citations
- [S82] Gary Boyd Roberts and William Addams Reitwiesner, Princess Di, Page 58.
Robert Penn Warren
b. 1905, d. 1989
Robert Penn Warren married Eleanor Clark, daughter of Frederick Huntington Clark and Eleanor Phelps.
American novelist, poet, and critic, whose work reflects his concern for maintaining human dignity in the face of corruption and abuse of power. In 1986 Warren was named the first United States poet laureate.
Born in Guthrie, Kentucky, Warren was educated at Vanderbilt University and the University of California. In 1930 he received a Rhodes scholarship for study at the University of Oxford. From 1935 to 1942 Warren and the American critic Cleanth Brooks edited the Southern Review, a journal of literary criticism and political thought. Brooks and Warren belonged to a group known as the New Critics, who stressed close reading and interpretation of the texts; the two collaborated on widely read textbooks on criticism, including Understanding Poetry (1938) and Understanding Fiction (1943). From 1961 to 1973 Warren taught English at Yale University.
Warren is best known for his novel All the King's Men (1946), a character study of a powerful Southern governor resembling the Louisiana politician Huey P. Long. In this book the complicated personality and actions of Governor Willie Stark, who like Huey Long is both progressive and corrupt, forces the narrator, Jack Burden, to confront the complexity of personality, the intricacy of moral decisions, and his own newfound self-understanding. All the King's Men exemplifies many of the themes that recur in Warren's prose and poetry. Warren maintained a strong interest in Southern history, and his works often explore the past and its relation to the present. He also was concerned with the struggle of the individual for self-recognition. His works reveal the sometimes uncomfortable moral discoveries that occur in such a process. For All the King's Men, Warren received the 1947 Pulitzer Prize for fiction, and the book was made into a motion picture that won the 1949 Academy Award for best film. Warren also wrote short fiction. His collection The Circus in the Attic (1948) contains the fine autobiographical tale "Blackberry Winter."
In 1958 Warren won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award for his collection of poems Promises: Poems 1954-1956 (1957), a volume that illustrates his use of intense symbolism. His other books of verse include Selected Poems: New and Old, 1923-1966 (1966), for which he received the 1967 Bollingen Prize; Now and Then: Poems 1976-1978 (1979), which in 1979 won him a third Pulitzer Prize; and Being Here: Poetry 1977-1980 (1980).
Warren's other novels include Night Rider (1939), World Enough and Time (1950), The Cave (1959), Flood (1964), and Who Speaks for the Negro? (1965). Selected Essays was published in 1958. Warren's later nonfiction includes Jefferson Davis Gets His Citizenship Back (1980), based on an article in The New Yorker magazine.
"Warren, Robert Penn," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Robert Penn Warren was born in 1905 at Guthrie, KY. He died in 1989.
American novelist, poet, and critic, whose work reflects his concern for maintaining human dignity in the face of corruption and abuse of power. In 1986 Warren was named the first United States poet laureate.
Born in Guthrie, Kentucky, Warren was educated at Vanderbilt University and the University of California. In 1930 he received a Rhodes scholarship for study at the University of Oxford. From 1935 to 1942 Warren and the American critic Cleanth Brooks edited the Southern Review, a journal of literary criticism and political thought. Brooks and Warren belonged to a group known as the New Critics, who stressed close reading and interpretation of the texts; the two collaborated on widely read textbooks on criticism, including Understanding Poetry (1938) and Understanding Fiction (1943). From 1961 to 1973 Warren taught English at Yale University.
Warren is best known for his novel All the King's Men (1946), a character study of a powerful Southern governor resembling the Louisiana politician Huey P. Long. In this book the complicated personality and actions of Governor Willie Stark, who like Huey Long is both progressive and corrupt, forces the narrator, Jack Burden, to confront the complexity of personality, the intricacy of moral decisions, and his own newfound self-understanding. All the King's Men exemplifies many of the themes that recur in Warren's prose and poetry. Warren maintained a strong interest in Southern history, and his works often explore the past and its relation to the present. He also was concerned with the struggle of the individual for self-recognition. His works reveal the sometimes uncomfortable moral discoveries that occur in such a process. For All the King's Men, Warren received the 1947 Pulitzer Prize for fiction, and the book was made into a motion picture that won the 1949 Academy Award for best film. Warren also wrote short fiction. His collection The Circus in the Attic (1948) contains the fine autobiographical tale "Blackberry Winter."
In 1958 Warren won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award for his collection of poems Promises: Poems 1954-1956 (1957), a volume that illustrates his use of intense symbolism. His other books of verse include Selected Poems: New and Old, 1923-1966 (1966), for which he received the 1967 Bollingen Prize; Now and Then: Poems 1976-1978 (1979), which in 1979 won him a third Pulitzer Prize; and Being Here: Poetry 1977-1980 (1980).
Warren's other novels include Night Rider (1939), World Enough and Time (1950), The Cave (1959), Flood (1964), and Who Speaks for the Negro? (1965). Selected Essays was published in 1958. Warren's later nonfiction includes Jefferson Davis Gets His Citizenship Back (1980), based on an article in The New Yorker magazine.
"Warren, Robert Penn," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Robert Penn Warren was born in 1905 at Guthrie, KY. He died in 1989.