Puffer Genealogy

SMITH, Winthrop Henry

Male 1879 - 1962  (83 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  SMITH, Winthrop Henry was born on 25 Feb 1879 in Columbia, ME (son of SMITH, Winthrop Jefferson and SAWYER, Sophronia E.); died on 25 Oct 1962 in Portland, ME; was buried in Portland, ME.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11

    Notes:

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=119481973


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  SMITH, Winthrop Jefferson was born on 22 Mar 1849 (son of SMITH, Maj. Harrison Gray Otis and PUFFER, Mary Allen); died on 17 Jul 1926 in Portland, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11

    Notes:

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=25573126 70889884

    Winthrop married SAWYER, Sophronia E. on 10 Jan 1874 in Columbia Falls, ME. Sophronia (daughter of SAWYER, Daniel A.) was born on 11 Feb 1850 in Steuben, ME; died on 29 Jun 1931 in Augusta, ME; was buried in Columbia Falls, ME. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  SAWYER, Sophronia E. was born on 11 Feb 1850 in Steuben, ME (daughter of SAWYER, Daniel A.); died on 29 Jun 1931 in Augusta, ME; was buried in Columbia Falls, ME.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11

    Notes:

    A school teacher.

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=72494785

    Children:
    1. SMITH, Josie Ethelyn was born in 1877 in Columbia, ME; died on 12 Nov 1895 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia Falls, ME.
    2. 1. SMITH, Winthrop Henry was born on 25 Feb 1879 in Columbia, ME; died on 25 Oct 1962 in Portland, ME; was buried in Portland, ME.
    3. SMITH, Daniel S was born in Feb 1883 in Columbia, ME; and died.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  SMITH, Maj. Harrison Gray Otis was born on 20 Jun 1820 in Jonesboro, ME (son of SMITH, Ebenezer and FARNSWORTH, Deborah); died on 20 Jul 1891 in Washington County, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11

    Notes:

    "They lived in half way to Columbia Falls in the 1st house after the R. R. track down in the woods towards the river." Hazel Smith Bradeen

    "Served in the war of the rebellion and was promoted from captain to major for meritorious service." Co. H., 1st Maine Heavy Artillery Regiment. Wounded 18 Jun 1864 during a charge in the 2nd Battle of Petersburg in the head and arm.

    He was a Pensioner of the state of Maine Certificate Number 88,674 for " chr. diarr." (chronic diarreha?) $5.00 per month.

    The 1860 Federal Census lists his occupation as a Master mason.

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=25573126 70889906

    Harrison married PUFFER, Mary Allen on 23 Sep 1843 in Columbia, ME. Mary (daughter of PUFFER, John Sr. and STANWOOD, Catherine Redman) was born on 11 Mar 1822 in Boston, MA; died on 18 Oct 1898 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  PUFFER, Mary Allen was born on 11 Mar 1822 in Boston, MA (daughter of PUFFER, John Sr. and STANWOOD, Catherine Redman); died on 18 Oct 1898 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11

    Notes:

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=25573126 70889943

    Children:
    1. SMITH, Edith Forrester was born on 10 Aug 1844 in Columbia, ME; died on 29 Nov 1919 in ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    2. SMITH, Miriam Catherine was born on 11 Mar 1846 in Columbia, ME; died on 21 May 1918 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    3. 2. SMITH, Winthrop Jefferson was born on 22 Mar 1849; died on 17 Jul 1926 in Portland, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    4. SMITH, Eva Bell A. was born on 25 Dec 1855 in Columbia Falls, ME; died on 12 Sep 1908 in ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.

  3. 6.  SAWYER, Daniel A. was born in 1808; died in 1891; was buried in Steuben, ME.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 11

    Children:
    1. 3. SAWYER, Sophronia E. was born on 11 Feb 1850 in Steuben, ME; died on 29 Jun 1931 in Augusta, ME; was buried in Columbia Falls, ME.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  SMITH, EbenezerSMITH, Ebenezer was born on 6 Jun 1786 in Middleborough, MA (son of SMITH, Capt. Job and BOOTH, Diadama); died on 24 Apr 1878 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 6

    Notes:

    Came from Middleboro, MA. to Steuben, ME when 10 yrs old. From then he w ent on a whaling voyage, which lasted two years. He built the first ti de mill in Jonesboro, ME, when he married Deborah Farnsworth and came t o Columbia in 1827 to enter into the lumber business in the neighborhoo d of Saco (not the town).

    His son Harrison G. served in the war of rebellion and was promoted fro m captain to major for meritorious service. He married Mary Puffer, da ughter of John Puffer. A Donald Smith has the razor Harrison carried wi th him during the Civil War.
    "Centenial Historical Sketch of Columbia"

    His gravestone reads
    "Remember friends as you pass by
    As you are now, once was I
    As I am now, so you must be
    Prepare for death and follow me."

    He was a Lumberman-Miller in Jonesport, ME.

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=20080532

    Ebenezer married FARNSWORTH, Deborah in 1812 in Jonesport, ME. Deborah (daughter of FARNSWORTH, Isaac and HILL, Hannah) was born in 1793 in Jonesboro, ME; died on 19 Feb 1870 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  FARNSWORTH, DeborahFARNSWORTH, Deborah was born in 1793 in Jonesboro, ME (daughter of FARNSWORTH, Isaac and HILL, Hannah); died on 19 Feb 1870 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 6

    Children:
    1. SMITH, Sylvina H. was born on 6 Apr 1813 in Jonesboro, ME; died on 8 Apr 1888 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    2. SMITH, Diadema Booth was born on 15 Mar 1814 in Jonesboro, ME; died on 11 Oct 1889 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    3. SMITH, Priscilla H. was born on 1 Nov 1815 in Jonesboro, ME; died after 7 Jun 1880 in Steuben, ME; was buried in Deblois, ME.
    4. SMITH, Russell was born on 20 Jan 1817 in Jonesboro, ME; died on 22 Jun 1889 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    5. SMITH, William Sewall was born on 5 Feb 1819 in Jonesboro, ME; died on 11 May 1897 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    6. 4. SMITH, Maj. Harrison Gray Otis was born on 20 Jun 1820 in Jonesboro, ME; died on 20 Jul 1891 in Washington County, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    7. SMITH, Keziah was born on 30 May 1822 in Jonesboro, ME; died on 12 Jul 1889; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    8. SMITH, Richard was born on 20 Dec 1823 in Jonesboro, ME; died on 3 Nov 1827.
    9. SMITH, Eri Hathaway was born on 24 May 1815 in Jonesboro, ME; died on 19 Jun 1903 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    10. SMITH, Harriett J. was born on 19 Dec 1827 in Columbia, ME; died on 27 Jul 1897 in Columbia Falls, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    11. SMITH, Isaac P. was born on 14 Jun 1828 in Columbia, ME; died on 29 Apr 1907 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.

  3. 10.  PUFFER, John Sr. was born on 29 Nov 1793 in Canton, MA (son of PUFFER, Elijah and BILLINGS, Taphenes); died on 28 Jun 1877 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia Falls, ME.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Ref#: 204
    • _COLOR: 6
    • Residence: 1820, Boston, MA; Ward 11
    • Residence: 1826, Columbia, ME

    Notes:

    "He followed the sea when a boy and was in Gloucester when the War of 1812 broke out. He served three months in the militia. He did not like the service on land and, when the privateer Basilisk, was fitted out, he enlisted and went to sea. After taking some prizes, he and five others were put aboard one of them, but they were captured by a British man-of-war. An Irishman swore that he knew John Puffer as an Irishman. John was asked to pronounce the name Blair. His accent was decided to prove that he was Irish and he was impressed in the British Navy. He had his "protection" and kept it secreted until he reached Halifax, when he appealed to the authorities, and proved that he was an American. He was then made a prisoner of war and later transferred to the war prison at Dartmoor, England. While there he kept a diary, which is now in possession of one of his grandchildren, while another has the "protection box". Another grandson has a chest which John had when he moved to Maine, and a copy of the will of Robert Redman (date 1760), an ancestor of his mother. In 1822 he was living at 29 Pleasant Street, Boston. About 1823 he moved from Boston to Frankfort, Me on the Penobscot River, 13 miles below Bangor, but a year later moved to Columbia, Me., where most of his children lived. He was a carpenter by trade, and a lumberman in the forests of eastern Maine at the time when ship building was a prominent industry in the coast towns. He was living in 1876."

    According to the Reed genealogy, ".. and when they were fired upon by the guards, in the prison-yard, a ball grazed his jacket, and killed a fellow prisoner."

    His gravestone reads
    "I am now at rest weep not for me
    From sin and death I now am Free
    Transplanted to my home above
    I dwell where all is peace and love."

    in 1823 moved to Frankfort, ME
    in 1824 moved to Columbia, ME

    Before he served onboard the privateer Yorktown, he served in Capt Lemuel Bradford's Co 21st US Inf during War of 1812
    =========================================

    According the British Admiralty records, he was a Lt. aboard the privateer Yorktown. This ship was capture
    on 8 Jul 1813 at sea by the HMS Maidstone. He was "interned" at Halifax, NS, aboard a prison ship till 19 Nov
    1813 (3-4 months). On that date, he was shipped to England aboard HMS Nemesis bound for England.

    He remained in Dartmoor Prison for 2 years and five months. He came to Columbia in 1825, and bought the betterments of the place at Little River, so called, of Moses Leighton, where his son John and daughters, Taphenus and Arabella now live. He was active in town affairs and took an interest in building up society. "They came from Braintree in 1824 or 1825 and settled at Little River Corner. He built a big farm house up by The Rips (in our pasture and 2nd field where the big rock is)." Elizabeth Roberta Puffer

    =========================================

    ED NOTE: In 1986 I took a trip to Columbia to locate the "diary" and "protection box". After a long and suspenseful search, on my last day there, I learned that the "diary" had been in the possession of Elizabeth Roberta Puffer, a cousin of my grandfather Charles K.W. French. She had died two years prior. The "diary" was given by her to the State of Maine Archives. I drove to Augusta to view the "diary".

    I had a chance (about an hour or two) to examine the contents. Its not a "diary" in the strict sense. It doesn't record daily activities. Its a large, burlap covered book with many different types of entries in two distinct sections.The first section contains mostly mathematical questions and solvings. The second section contain some poems (sea shanties?) about the war and some of the battles as well as small drawings of ships. One page lists the names of men killed and wounded in the massacre of prisoners that happened at Dartmoor at the close of the war when the Americans were about to be repatriated in a prisoner swap. The conditions at the prison were abominable. Barely one in 10 men survived a year. I postulate that "Dartmoor" John used the "diary" as a textbook to teach fellow prisoners mathematics to pass the time and to keep his sanity. His name is written on the book cover in his own hand. It is a priceless piece of family history and it is too bad that it transferred out of family hands to the State of Maine. It can be viewed at the State Archive in Augusta.

    According to a letter from Roberta Puffer "It was there that he continued to keep the journal which we still have. It is in a safety box in a bank. It is getting old. It covers 1820-1870 and is crumbling with age . There are about 70 pages". According to family history, "John Sr. was put in Dartmoor prison in England as a political prisoner 1812-1814. He was taken off the clipper ship The Basilisk by an English vessel in 1812. They were going to impress him into the British Navy but he had his protection papers which he showed to the authorities in Halifax, where he was declared to be an American citizen from Boston. However the English vessel took him to England and he was put in Dartmoor until the end of the war of 1812." This is a mystery still. The book I saw was not a diary nor did it cover the period stated. Could there be another? Further investigation of Dartmoor Prison records show no John Puffer listed as a prisoner. Another mystery. Did he use an alias?

    "John Puffer Sr also brought up two other boys, Ira Barney and John Page who did well in life." Roberta Puffer

    ED NOTE: 8/24/05

    What a great week for discovery this has been. After searching online for years to locate information about Dartmoor John (Puffer) perhaps our most illustrious ancestor, I was able to make contact with a man in England who is an historian on Dartmoor Prison. He provided me with information about Dartmoor John's capture, and subsequent imprisonment.

    I had begun to doubt his story of ever being in prison because I was unable to find any outside information to verify the family history (as related in the Puffer Genealogy).

    There is no record (that I can find) of any ship by the name of Basilisk during the War of 1812, either American or British. There was no record of his name in the lists of prisoners that I was able to find.

    In fact, the ship he was on was the Yorktown, a well-known American privateer. HMS Nimrod took the Yorktown as a prize in 1813 off the coast of Nova Scotia. John Puffer was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, where he spent some time in prison there, before being shipped to Chatham, Kent, England where he spent almost a year in prison there. Finally he was shipped to Dartmoor Prison in Devonshire, where he spent the rest of the war. He survived the 'massacre' there in December of 1814 (a well documented historical event). He was released from Dartmoor in 1815.

    One of the frustrations of this search is that his 'diary' has only one brief mention of anything to do with the prison. It is a short list of names of wounded or killed men. Since I now have a source I can check those names against the prison list and see if he's accurate. For a man who spent the better part of 2.5 years in prison you might expect a bit more biographical writings of that experience.
    (2016) listed below are the names that appear in the "diary" and the injury they suffered.:
    Robert Willet left left thigh, amputated
    Thomas Finley in the thigh
    William Appleby in the arm
    George Campbell dead
    John Peach in the thigh
    Cornelius Garrison head and hand
    John Geir left leg amputated
    William Lane in the eyes
    Pain Perry in the shoulders

    A month ago I doubted his story was true. I even suspected that he fabricated the story based on what he had heard of other prisoners' true-life stories of impressment and imprisonment. Many books of the time were written by former prisoners about this most notorious of English prisons. I thought John Puffer had taken those verbal and written stories and made them his own.

    I am relieved to know that he, in fact, was a prisoner, even if some of the facts were wrong in the family history.

    Prison number 3431 2791
    By what ship or how taken British Squadron British Squadron
    Time when (taken) 26 July 1813 13 July 1813
    Place where (taken) Halifax off Halifax
    Name of Prize Yorktown Yorktown
    Man-o-war/Privateer/ MV Privateer Privateer
    Prisoners name John Puffer Jonathan Puffer
    Quality (rank) Seaman Seaman
    Time received into custody(at Dartmoor) 13 September 1814 7 Jan 1814
    From what ship or whence received HMS Niobe from Chatham from Halifax
    Place of Nativity (where born) Cantor (Canton, MA) Cantor (Canton, MA)

    Age 20 20
    Stature (height) 5`6" and a half inch 5`6" and a half inches
    Person stout(means muscular) Stout
    Visage/ complexion oval/fresh oval /fresh
    Hair brown
    Eyes brown hazel
    Marks or wounds none

    Date of supply (bedding etc) Chatham Feb 18 14
    Exchanged/Discharged/Died or escaped Discharged Discharged 8 Sept 1814 to Dartmoor by HMS Niobe
    Time when 28 May 1815
    Whither and by what order Released Boards Order 16 March 1815
    end of Dartmoor record

    So a short synopsis of his war experience:
    He was captured off Halifax, Nova Scotia, and taken to the HMS Niobe, a prison ship or hulks (ships used as prisons in Halifax, NS) on 26 July 1813, he was kept there until he was taken in at the Chatham hulks (County of Kent, England) on 7 Jan 1814. (A period of 5.5 months). He was kept there (Chatham) until 8 Sept 1814 when he was sent to the Dartmoor War Prison. ( A period of 8 months)

    He arrived at Dartmoor Depot on the 13 Sept 1814, this was a fast trip of about 250 miles sea voyage to Plymouth, then the last 17 miles was a severe march up to 1500 feet above sea level to the prison carrying his bedding etc. He was not supplied at Dartmoor, but at Chatham, so he carried his bedding up to Dartmoor.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    On June 13, 1873 his wife sold land to John Puffer (her father-in-law) for $1500. On Nov 14th, 1863 she bought 34 acres+- of land for $425 from Levi W. Ingersoll. (David M. Caranci has the original deed.)

    The 1870 Census shows him as John PUFFIN. He is 76 YO and is a farmer. He lives with his wife Catherine who is 72 years old and a housewife.

    "He enlisted in the navy in the war of 1812 and was taken prisoner soon after and lodged in Dartmore prison, where he remained two years and five months. He came to Columbia about the year 1825, and bought the betterments of the place at Little River, so called, of Moses Leighton, where his son John and daughters Taphenus and Arabella now live. He was active in town affairs and took an interest in building up society."

    =========================================
    June 12, 2011
    Another week of great discovery by my contact with another great grandson of Dartmoor John, Homer Morrison.

    He has been able to fill in many (if not all) of the missing pieces regarding how John Puffer came to Dartmoor prison. He has the records of the English Admiralty of his capture and transfer from Halifax, NS to Chatham, England to Dartmoor.

    American Prisoners of War Held at Halifax During the War of 1812 by Harrison Scott Baker

    Below is Baker's summary for John Puffer, Volume II, p. 327. This was the key:

    Puffer, John Prisoner 3619 Rank:Seaman From: Manchester RC, Privateer
    Captured: 11 July 1813 at sea by HMS Maidstone Interned: 28 July 1813 Discharged: 09 November 1813
    Belongs to Yorktown Privateer. Received from Recruit. Nemesis for England per order of Adml Sir J B Warren.

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=20024267

    John married STANWOOD, Catherine Redman about 1816 in Boston, MA. Catherine (daughter of STANWOOD, Henry and MERRITT, Mary Allen) was born on 6 May 1797 in Gloucester, MA; died on 25 Jun 1886 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia Falls, ME. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  STANWOOD, Catherine Redman was born on 6 May 1797 in Gloucester, MA (daughter of STANWOOD, Henry and MERRITT, Mary Allen); died on 25 Jun 1886 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia Falls, ME.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _COLOR: 6

    Notes:

    Her gravestone reads

    "Asleep in Jesus blessed sleep
    From which none ever wakes to weep
    A calm and undisturbed repose
    Unbroken by the last of foes"

    A letter from Roberta Puffer lists her as "(the one who was heir to the German throne." (Ed Note: this has long been a family anectdote. Small doll china in the possession of David Caranci, is supposed to have come from a German castle. DMC 2-18-16)

    A letter from Hazel Bradeen says "Through the Redmond side she was heir to the German Throne."

    According to some old deeds she's named as Catherine E.

    FindaGrave:
    GRID=20024274

    Children:
    1. PUFFER, Jerusha Ann was born on 24 Aug 1817 in Boston, MA; was christened on 29 Sep 1858 in Columbia, ME; died on 2 Aug 1890 in Columbia Falls, ME; was buried in Columbia Falls, ME.
    2. PUFFER, Catherine Redman was born on 15 Nov 1819 in Boston, MA; died on 16 Jul 1908 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    3. 5. PUFFER, Mary Allen was born on 11 Mar 1822 in Boston, MA; died on 18 Oct 1898 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    4. PUFFER, John Jr. was born on 29 Jul 1825 in Frankfort, ME; died on 25 Feb 1910 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    5. PUFFER, Alice H. was born on 15 Apr 1827 in Columbia, ME; died on 27 Dec 1859 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    6. PUFFER, Redman was born on 1 Oct 1829 in Columbia, ME; died on 6 Aug 1833 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    7. PUFFER, William Henry was born in 1832 in Columbia, ME; was christened on 29 Sep 1858 in Columbia, ME; died on 17 Dec 1912 in Harrington, ME; was buried in Harrington, ME.
    8. PUFFER, Elijah Redman was born on 29 Jul 1834 in Columbia Falls, ME; was christened on 3 May 1857 in Columbia, ME; died in 1917 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    9. PUFFER, Taphenes N. was born on 12 Sep 1836 in Columbia, ME; was christened on 29 Sep 1858 in Columbia, ME; died on 19 Aug 1897 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    10. PUFFER, Winthrop Jefferson was born on 22 Dec 1838 in Columbia Falls, ME; died on 22 Oct 1841 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.
    11. PUFFER, Susanna Arabella was born on 28 Jul 1843 in Columbia Falls, ME; died on 23 Oct 1898 in Columbia, ME; was buried in Columbia, ME.