Sarah Jane Jacobs

Sarah Jane Jacobs

Female 1890 - 1969  (79 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Sarah Jane Jacobs was born on 16 May 1890 in Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA (daughter of William Lloyd Jacobs and Betty Baldwin McFarland); died on 16 Jun 1969 in Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.

    Sarah married Harrison Jackson Stambaugh on 10 May 1929. Harrison was born on 12 Apr 1888 in Cuyahoga Falls, Summit, Ohio, USA; died between 1941 and 1953. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  William Lloyd Jacobs was born on 8 Oct 1856 in Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died on 9 Jun 1922 in Ohio?; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.

    William married Betty Baldwin McFarland on 3 Jul 1888. Betty (daughter of Anderson McFarlin and Sarah Jane Mary Kirk) was born on 11 Aug 1858 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died after 1936 in Charleroi, Washington, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Betty Baldwin McFarland was born on 11 Aug 1858 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA (daughter of Anderson McFarlin and Sarah Jane Mary Kirk); died after 1936 in Charleroi, Washington, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Betsey Baldwin McFarlin

    Notes:

    Betty B McFarland was the fifth child of Anderson and Sarah Jane (Kirk) McFarland and was born in Coitsville, Ohio August 11th, 1858 on the family's farm. she grew up there with her older sisters Vine and Olive, and brothers; Wm Kirk, Frank, and T homas.
    In 1880, Betty was teaching in nearby Liberty while boarding with the J D Everett family. In 1888 Betty married Wm L Jacobs, of Youngstown. They had two children; William MacFarlin Jacobs and Sarah Jacobs. By 1910, she, husband Will, son William a nd daughter Sarah, were living in Columbus, Ohio where Will owned a retail hardware store. By 1920, still in Columbus, Will had retired and they lived together alone.
    1930 finds widow Betty living in her own apartment in Charleroi, Pennsylvania, next to the apartment of her son William MacFarlin Jacobs and his wife Bethel. She died sometime after 1936.

    (Research):PFM's sources for Betsy B McFarlin; School-teacher
    1860 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 13 with her father Anderson McFarland (Betsy's age 2, born in Ohio)
    1870 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 107 with her father Anderson McFarland (Bettie's age 11, at home and school, born in Ohio)
    1880 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 90 with her father Anderson McFarland (Betty's age 22, born in Ohio, school teacher, both parents b in Ohio)
    1880 census; Liberty, Ohio p 6, Bettie McFarland boarding with J D Everett family (her age 21, born in Pa sic, teacher, both parents b in Ohio)
    1889-1890 Youngstown, Ohio directory, The Stambaugh Thompson Co, Elm St
    1890 census; not extant
    1900 census; Betsy not found
    1910 census; Columbus, Franklin co, Ohio ED 173 p 54, with W L Jacobs (Betty, wife, her age 50, born in Ohio, both parents b in Ohio)
    1920 census; Columbus, Franklin co, Ohio ED 261 p 1, with Will Jacobs
    1930 census; Charleroi, Washington co, Pennsylvania ED 63-34 p 40 (Betty B Jacobs, widow, age 71, born in Ohio, both parents b in Ohio)

    Other References
    *1 McFarlin; 2003 Many of the McFarlin (McFarland) births, marriages, and deaths, with the names, are from the 1832 William McFarland bible, presented to his grandson, William Kirk McFarland by Wm K's mother, Sarah (Kirk) McFarland, March 9, 187 7 (1897?). Photocopies of the vital records pages in that bible, plus copies of other vital record notes and letters, were given to Peter F McFarlin in 1974, by his uncle, Charles Kirk McFarlin, in Short Hills, New Jersey, who had the bible and no tes in his possession at that time.

    Children:
    1. William MacFarlin Jacobs was born on 31 Mar 1889 in Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died on 30 May 1933 in Armstrong, Butler, Pennsylvania, USA.
    2. 1. Sarah Jane Jacobs was born on 16 May 1890 in Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died on 16 Jun 1969 in Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Anderson McFarlin was born on 12 Apr 1828 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA (son of William McFarland and Elizabeth Loveland); died on 18 Aug 1890 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Anderson McFarland
    • Name: Anderson McFarland

    Notes:

    ANDERSON MCFARLAND/MCFARLIN 1828 - 1890
    by; Peter F McFarlin - 2008

    This was written in 1881-1882 (*1 p 168) about William (son of John)
    McFarland; he "...reared a large family. Eleven children arrived at years of maturity. But one son is living, Anderson, at Coitsville. Four of his daughters are living, viz: Mrs Lydia Mahan, Liberty, Trumbull county; Miss Jemima McFarlin, Niles; M rs Matilda Price, Coitsville, and Mrs Lavina Harris, Youngstown...". In the sketch for William McFarland's wife, Elizabeth Loveland, (*1 p 165), Williams wrote, "...Elizabeth became the mother of six sons and six daughters."
    This Anderson McFarland (McFarlin) was born April 12, 1828, at the William McFarland farm on the Hazelton road, Coitsville, Ohio. He was the ninth of twelve children and eventually outlived all of his five older brothers. The 1830 Coitsville censu s first enumerated him in his father's household as the boy under five. Then in 1840, at twelve, he was still the youngest man shown, along with his two older brothers, William age sixteen, and Amos age twenty-eight. It's likely he helped on the f amily farm while he went to the local school, at least until about sixteen, when he farmed at home full time. During the 1840's, he became acquainted with miss Jane Kirk, who lived nearby with her family. Her parents, Andrew and Elizabeth (Baldwin ) Kirkpatrick were living in the northwest part of Coitsville in 1850, near Thorn Hill.
    Anderson and Sarah Jane were married April 26 1849,(*2),(*3), probably in Coitsville, by A O Rockwell. Soon after, when they are listed in the 1850 census, they are shown in the census-taker's sequence that puts them on the Hazelton road, (perhap s on a part of his father's farm there). The listing order of the 1850 census is particularly informative, in that almost all the neighbors on the later 1874 town map (*4), are enumerated in the same order as in the 1850 census. If true, this woul d put their first small farmstead between the McCartney's and the Vale's farms, and also near the Mahoning River valley farms of Anderson's grand parents, Amos and Jemima Loveland, and their families. Town land records would prove this, or not.
    During the next few years, their family life had a number of personal tragedies. Sarah's mother, Elizabeth (Baldwin) Kirkpatrick died in May 1851, age sixty-nine. Then Anderson and Sarah's first child, William E McFarland, died in August, 1851, ju st nine months old. Next, Anderson's father, William McFarland, passed away in December of 1853, his age seventy-three, and finally, Anderson's second child, Alice Kirk McFarland, died in August, 1854, at age two.
    But their lives turned for the better, as their next six children lived. In 1860, Anderson apparently was still living on the Hazelton road (near the McCartneys) and was still next to his widowed mother Elizabeth (Loveland) McFarland with her smal l household. Anderson and Sarah at the time, had; Lovina age six, Mary age four, Betsy age two and William Kirk McFarland four months old.
    By the next census in 1870, the Anderson McFarland family had prospered. They had moved to a new neighborhood in the center of Coitsville village (see map). Also moving up to the center, in a household next door to Anderson's farm, were his mothe r Elizabeth, brother Amos and sister 'Lucinia' (Lavina). Anderson's farm real estate value had increased by twenty times to over ten thousand dollars, the eighth highest 1870 valuation in the township (out of more than two hundred). About this tim e of 1870-80 the Anderson McFarland/McFarlin family began spelling their last name McFarlin.
    Indicated in the 1880 census, Anderson was still farming, Sarah kept house, and five of their six living children were with them, (Mary Olivia McF having moved out). Vine J McFarland, the oldest daughter at twenty-six, was a school teacher, as wa s her sister Betty McFarland, age twenty-two. Perhaps they were both giving classes in the corner school just to the north, a mile and half away on the main road (see map).
    William Kirk McFarlin, their oldest son, was now twenty and listed as still attending school, however this 'school' was the Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio where William registered at the University as "...Will K McFarlin, son of A McFarli n."(*5). A younger brother, Frank McFarland, age sixteen, was helping on the farm while finishing up his primary schooling, (taught by his sisters?). Anderson's youngest child, Eddie McFarland, age fourteen, was also still in school while living a t home.
    Information is given in the 1880 census as to the birth places of the parents of all people listed. This becomes good confirming evidence for tracing obscure data as to various ancestor's locations. For Anderson and Sarah McFarland, the places o f birth given in 1880 are very useful; Anderson's father (William McFarland), was born in Ireland, and his mother, (Elizabeth Loveland), born in Vermont. For Sarah, her father, (Andrew Kirkpatrick), was born in New Jersey, and her mother, (Elizabe th Baldwin), was born in Pennsylvania.
    Williams had stated in his 1882 biographical sketch that Anderson had become the "...owner of a good farm of one hundred and ninety acres situated near the center of the township...Mr McFarlin (sic) has been a Republican since the party was formed . He was postmaster at Coitsville for seventeen years. The family are well known and highly respected in this county" (*1 p 175).
    Anderson died in August 1890, at the age of sixty-two, probably at his home/farmstead in Coitsville center.

    PFM's sources for Anderson McFarland(McFarlin); Farmer, Postmaster;

    1830 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 249 with his father William (Anderson's age <5)
    1840 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 190 with his father William (Anderson's age 10-15)
    1850 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 584 (his age 22, farmer, born in Ohio)
    1860 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 13 (his age 32, farmer, born in Ohio, real value $450, pers value $600)
    1870 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 107 (his age 42, farmer, born in Ohio, spelled McFarland, real value $10,220, pers value $1,630)
    1880 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 90 (his age 52, farmer, born in Ohio, spelled McFarland, father b in Ireland, mother b in Vermont)
    Other References;
    *1 Williams; 1882 v 2
    *2 McFarlin; 2008 Many of the McFarlin births, marriages, and deaths, with the names, are from the 1832 William McFarland bible, presented to his grandson, William Kirk McFarlin by Wm K's mother, Sarah (Kirk) McFarland, March 9, 1877 (1897?). Ph otocopies of the vital records pages in that bible, plus copies of other vital record notes and letters, were given to Peter F McFarlin in 1974, by his uncle, Charles Kirk McFarlin, in Short Hills, New Jersey, who had the bible and notes in his po ssession at that time.
    *3 Marraiges of Mahoning county; 1846-1851 p 108
    *4 1874 Map of Coitsville, Ohio
    *5 1971 letter to P F McFarlin from Ohio State University
    FSID LLSR-GZ3

    (Research):Family Tree DNA (www.familytree.com)
    Family Tree for Mr. Peter Folsom McFarlin

    Anderson married Sarah Jane Mary Kirk on 26 Apr 1849 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA. Sarah was born on 21 Jan 1830 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died in 1893 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Sarah Jane Mary Kirk was born on 21 Jan 1830 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died in 1893 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Sarah Mary Kirk

    Notes:

    "...Mrs McFarlin is the daughter of Andrew and Elizabeth (Baldwin) Kirk. Andrew Kirk came at an early date from Washington county, Pennsylvania; he was originally from New Jersey. Elizabeth Baldwin was the daughter of Caleb Baldwin, one of the fir st settlers in Youngstown..."(*1 p 175).
    Sarah Jane Kirk, daughter of Andrew and Elizabeth (Baldwin) Kirk(patrick), was the youngest of thirteen children. Her father Andrew was one of the first blacksmiths in Youngstown, Ohio (about 1800). Andrew's blacksmith shop (and home?) was next t o Caleb Baldwin on the north side of Federal street in 1805 -10. Caleb reportedly had given his daughter Elizabeth and her husband Andrew a farm of fifty-three acres nearby in Coitsville, just south of the Thorn Hill area on the McGuffey road. Thi s farm they made their homestead at least by 1826, and Sarah was born there in Coitsville, Ohio, January, 1830.
    In 1849, at age nineteen, Sarah married Anderson McFarland, who grew up on the William McFarland farm, two miles to the south on the other side of Dry Run Creek in Coitsville. The young couple first lived on the Hazelton road near his father Willi am's farm, where they began their family. They lived in this area for at least the next ten years and, with many of their neighbors, attended the nearby Methodist Episcopal church on the Youngstown-New Bedford (PA) road where the Poland road inter sects it (*1 p 170).
    By 1870 they had moved to a larger farmstead two miles east, just to the north side of Coitsville center near the Bissels and McGeehans (see 1870's Coitsville map). Here, on their large farm of 190 acres, they remained at least until 1882 when Wil liams writes of them and their children in the History of Trumbull and Mahoning Counties (*1 p 175). They had nine children, with two dying young.
    In 1877 (1897?) Sarah (Kirk)McFarland presented her husband Anderson's family bible to her oldest son, William Kirk McFarlin (along with a small, ca 1875 photo of her brother, Thomas Kirk) (*2).
    time.

    (Research):Family Tree DNA (www.familytree.com)

    Family Tree for Mr. Peter Folsom McFarlin
    Sarah McFarland's date and place of death have not been located and further searching of vital and church records is needed here.

    Sources for Sarah Jane Kirk(patrick)
    1830 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 248 with her father Andrew Kirkpatrick (her age <5)
    1840 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 190 with her father Andrew Kirkpatrick (her age 5-15)
    1850 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 584 (her age 20, born in Ohio)
    1860 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 13 (her age 30, born in Ohio)
    1870 census; Coitsville, Ohio 107 (her age 40, born in Ohio, keeping house)
    1880 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 90 (her age 50, wife, born in Ohio, keeping house, father b in New Jersey, mother b in Penna)
    1890 census; not extant
    1900 census; Sarah McFarland(McFarlin) not found

    Other References
    *1 Williams; 1882 v 2
    *2 McFarlin; 2003 Many of the McFarlin (McFarland) births, marriages, and deaths, with the names, are from the 1832 William McFarland bible, presented to his grandson, William Kirk McFarland by Wm K's mother, Sarah (Kirk) McFarland, March 9, 187 7 (1897?). Photocopies of the vital records pages in that bible, plus copies of other vital record notes were given to Peter F McFarlin in 1974, by his uncle, Charles Kirk McFarlin, in Short Hills, New Jersey, who had the bible and notes in his po ssession at that

    Children:
    1. William E McFarland was born on 4 Nov 1850 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died on 6 Aug 1851 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.
    2. Alice K McFarland was born on 25 Aug 1852 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died on 30 Aug 1854 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA.
    3. Levina Jemima McFarlin was born on 2 Apr 1854 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died on 4 Mar 1886 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.
    4. Olive Mary McFarland was born on 26 Feb 1856 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died on 15 Apr 1929 in Columbus, Franklin, Ohio, USA; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.
    5. 3. Betty Baldwin McFarland was born on 11 Aug 1858 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died after 1936 in Charleroi, Washington, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.
    6. William Kirk McFarlin was born on 12 Mar 1860 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died on 6 Dec 1943 in East Orange, Essex, New Jersey, USA; was buried on 9 Dec 1943 in St Stevens Episcopal Cemetery, Millburn, Essex, New Jersey, USA.
    7. Frank Malt McFarland was born on 17 May 1864 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died in 1895 in Ohio?; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.
    8. Thomas Edward (McFarland) McFarlin was born on 10 Oct 1865 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died in 1947 in Kansas?; was buried in Mount Allen Cemetery, Hays, Ellis, Kansas, USA.
    9. Charles Anderson McFarland was born on 19 Sep 1868 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died on 8 Oct 1869 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  William McFarland was born on 8 May 1780 in Co. Tyrone, Ulster, Northern Ireland (son of John McFarland, BY7777 +2 JoM01 and Margery Anderson); died on 13 Dec 1853 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; was buried in Pioneer Methodist Cemetery, Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Occupation: Farmer and Distiller
    • Immigration: 1796

    Notes:

    WILLIAM MCFARLAND/MCFARLIN (1780 to 1853)
    SCOTS IRISH PIONEER and OHIO DISTILLER
    (Research by 2nd gr gr grandson Peter Folsom McFarlin - May, 2012, rev
    ised Dec, 2019)

    William McFarland was born 8 May, 1780; (Pioneer Cemetery record) in I reland (confirmed by his 1850 census and son Amos' 1880 census) and im migrated to America along with his family, about 1796. (*1). This arri val date also agrees with his olde r brother Alexander's deposition giv en about the same time.
    William's father; John McFarland was likely with the family when the y came from county Tyrone, Ireland. They all apparently lived somewher e in eastern Pennsylvania, since his father John McFarland; "... was k illed east of the Mountains..." (* 2 p 1024). (see John McFarland’s De c 2019 biography elsewhere).
    About 1799 William's mother, the widow Margery (Anderson) McFarland ap pears to have arrived in Hopewell (New Bedford), Pennsylvania with he r children. (see Margery McFarland’s Dec 2019 biography elsewhere). Sh e apparently lived with her brothe r John Anderson in Hopewell/New Bedf ord for a few years. She and her children are likely enumerated with J ohn Anderson in the August 1800 US census (pg 433 for Mercer co, PA) , "... and then moved to Trumbull County, Ohio, where (William McFarl i n) was engaged in farming and distilling. (*2 p 1024)."
    About 1803 William, age about twenty-three, arrived in Coitsville, Ohi o with his widowed mother Margery and five brothers and sisters, wher e they likely lived together with his older brother Alexander for th e first few years (*3 p 168). Willia m may have received (bought?) 10 0 acres of land in Oct of 1807. (*4a). He was a farmer (as most all we re termed) and was on the county poll tax lists in Coitsville, Ohio a t least for 1807 through 1811 (*4b). In December of 1812, William an d ne ighbor Elizabeth Loveland were married. They were both of Coitsvil le, Ohio (*5). She was the daughter of Amos and Jemima (Dickenson) Lov eland.
    William and Elizabeth "...settled on the top of the hill on the Hazelt on road...in early times had a distillery and pushed the business wit h energy for some years... He reared a large family. Eleven children a rrived at years of maturity" (*3 p p 168,171).
    William was conscripted into the US army to fight in the War of 1812 ( *6) and he "...served six weeks, then returned home and hired a substi tute." Dates of enlistment were January 1st to March 9th 1813. He serv ed as an infantry private in Capt . James Hezlop's company.
    In 1820, all six of William and Elizabeth's children at the time wer e listed as under ten. The 1820 Coitsville census lists the widow Marg ery McFarland's four sons; William, Andrew, James and Alexander, in th eir own households all living near e ach other in Coitsville, three eve n adjacent. See 1830 map below; showing the four McFarlin brothers. Al so shown nearby in southwest Coitsville, across the Mahoning River, i s Amos Loveland, age 58, and his family. All four of the McFarlin fam i lies were 'engaged in agriculture'.
    By the 1830 census there were eleven people enumerated in William’s ho usehold. In the 1831 Coitsville personal property list ‘William McFarl in’ owned two lots of land; 50 acres and 167 acres. (see 1830 Plat ma p above) He also owned two horses a nd six cattle. "... In 1831, Will iam McFarland built the old stone house to which the parents of Mrs Cr eed moved..." (*8 p 859). In both the 1840 and 1850 censuses, he rema ined in farming. In the census of 1850, he named IRELAND as his pla c e of birth and value of real estate at $4,800, a substantial family fa rm for those days.

    This 1840 Coitsville Town Plat map indicates the first town roads by d otted lines. Land owned by the four McFarlin brothers shows them in th e southwest and south area of the town.

    Alexander McFarlin died 1833 (age fifty-five) Owned sawmill. His heir s own - 77 acres
    William McFarlin - age sixty - 160 acres and 50 acres. Ran a successfu l distillery.
    Andrew McFarlin - age fifty-six - 80 acres. Postmaster and ran “Temper ance House” in the Village
    James McFarlin died 1838 (at age forty-three), distiller. His heirs ow n - 124 acres

    William McFarland died on his farm in Coitsville, November (or Decembe r?), 1853, aged seventy-three. He "died Nov 12(sic), 1853" (*7 Edwards ). In his estate settlement (*9), his widow Elizabeth and son Anderso n were appointed administrators, an d on the bond were "A D Jacobs an d John McFarlin". A. D. Jacobs was a merchant in Youngstown who ha d a William McFarlane, clerk, age twenty-seven, boarding at the mercha nt's home in 1850. This may indicate some kind of family connection. T he J ohn McFarlin, also on the bond, was likely William and Elizabeth' s son John (age about 34), who had been living at nearby David Lovelan d's farm in 1850.
    The 18 Dec, 1853 Inventory shows goods set off to widow, and debts owe d to the estate were from; Edward Mahan, Calvin Applegate, David Lovel and, (son) Anderson McFarlin, Henry Morgan, J. B. Wolf, John Milligan , A.Y. Boak, A.D. Jacobs, and Davi d McMullin. At the 30 Dec 1853 vend ue (public auction) for William McFarland's remaining estate, the onl y McFarlands present were "Jno. and Andrew." These probably were clos e family members; likely his sons John and Andrew.
    The Scots/Irish immigrant William McFarland was buried in the Pionee r Methodist Cemetery, Coitsville, Ohio. His cemetery marker reads; "Wi lliam McFarlin Born May 8 1780 Died Dec 13 1853" (*10).

    The family members who erected the cemetery marker chose to spell th e family name in the newer fashion; McFARLIN

    PFM's SOURCES for WILLIAM MCFARLAND/MCFARLIN;

    1820 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 240; sp McFarland (his age 26-45, a fa rmer)
    1830 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 249; sp McFarland (his age 40-50)
    1840 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 190; sp McFarlane (his age 60-70, a fa rmer)
    1850 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 577; sp McFarland (his age 70, a farme r, born in IRELAND, real value; $4,800)
    1853 Mahoning Co Graves Registration card; "William McFarlin died De c 13, 1853. born May 8 1780, bur Coitsville Methodist Cemetery; Row 10 , block 9, grave # 15. Served in War of 1812, 1/1/1813 to 3/9/1813. In f private in Capt James Hezlop's Co. "

    Other REFERENCES;

    *1 1809 Depositions on Contested Election of Richard Hayes on 7 Nov 18 09; Trumbull county; Ohio Gen Soc Report 24:3 p 202. William McFarlan d states; "America 1796", and (his brother) Alexander McFarland avows ; (he was in) "America about 14 year s".
    *2 History of Mercer County, Pennsylvania, Brown, Runk & Co. 1888
    *3 History of Mahoning and Trumbull Counties, Williams, 1882 v 2
    *4a Ohio Land Records Pre-1908 Homestead ... and Plat Entry Index, Do c # 1868; from James Culbertson - to - William McFarland 100 acres sur vey date 1804/01/23 ref 1 Stat. 82.
    *4b Ohio GS Report 27:3 (1987) pp 129-131
    *5 Ohio County Marriages (v1-p58); William McFarland to Betsey Lovelan d, both of Coitsville township on 17 Dec 1812, by Nathaniel Blake sle y JP, (of Youngstown).
    *6 Ohio Historical Society, Columbus, Ohio
    *7 Mahoning Dispatch 19 April 1878, John M Edwards; "The Very Oldest I nhabitant" [Mrs Elizabeth (Loveland) McFarland, William's mother]
    *8 20th Century History of Youngstown and Mahoning Co Ohio; 1907 Gen T homas W Sanderson
    *9 Mahoning Co Probate #447: 7 Dec 1853
    *10 Henry R Baldwin Gen Records- LDS Microfiche 6051349-1 p 11
    FSID GCYW-M1Y

    (Research):Family Tree DNA (www.familytree.com)
    Family Tree for Mr. Peter Folsom McFarlin

    William married Elizabeth Loveland on 17 Dec 1812 in Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA. Elizabeth was born on 7 Aug 1790 in Vershire, Orange, Vermont, USA; died on 16 Jun 1881 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; was buried in Pioneer Methodist Cemetery, Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Elizabeth Loveland was born on 7 Aug 1790 in Vershire, Orange, Vermont, USA; died on 16 Jun 1881 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; was buried in Pioneer Methodist Cemetery, Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Betsy

    Notes:



    ELIZABETH (LOVELAND) MCFARLAND/MCFARLIN
    (1790 to 1881) OHIO PIONEER
    (Research by her gr gr grandson Peter Folsom McFarlin, - Jan 17, 201
    1 reviewed Dec 2019)

    Elizabeth (Betsey) Loveland arrived in April of 1799 from Vermont int o the Western Reserve of Connecticut, which soon became Coitsville, Oh io. She was about age nine, and traveled with her siblings and pioneer ing parents, Amos and Jemima (Dicki
    nson) Loveland.

    Amos Loveland; Revolutionary Soldier, Surveyor, Pioneer and Farmer
    There is much found in the records and histories about Elizabeth’s fat her; Amos Loveland which will not be presented here. But, here's som e of his interesting story anyway.
    Amos was the third of five boys and eight girls. While living in Glast onbury, Connecticut, on 1 May 1777, he enlisted at age fourteen for th ree years in the CT Continental Line's Seventh Regiment. He took par t in the battle of Germantown, and w as discharged 1 May 1780. Amos ree nlisted 1 July 1780 as a private in the Second CT Regiment and was dis charged again 9 December 1780 (*a). Now just 18 years old and a three- year veteran of the successful American Revolution, he returned to Gl a stonbury. In 1785, at age twenty-two, he married Jemima Dickenson, dau ghter of David and Beriah (Loveland) Dickenson. The couple immediatel y headed for the new opportunities now found in Vermont, made safer fo r settlement by the end of the Re volutionary hostilities. They settle d and started their family in Vershire (and Chelsea?), Vermont, livin g there for thirteen years. He is found there in the first federal dec ennial census of 1790. (He is not found in any federal census in 18 0 0 or 1810 - Ohio’s are not extant).
    Early in 1798, at age thirty-five, he went to the Mahoning River valle y of the Connecticut Western Reserve (in the area which later became O hio). There he spent the summer in assisting John Partridge Bissel sur veying the new Connecticut Reserv e lands purchased by the absentee lan d company's owner, Daniel Coit of Connecticut. In the fall of 1798 Mr . Loveland purchased all the lands in that part of Coitsville townshi p on the south side of the Mahoning River; four hundred and twenty-fo u r acres. This sale was formalized in the land records five years late r (*b). Amos returned to Vermont in the fall of 1798, settled his affa irs there, and “...in December, 1798, with his wife and six children h e left Chelsea for his new home.. ." (*c). In two sleighs, (loaded wit h bedding, farming utensils, and furniture) drawn by four horses, thei r family of eight 'headed West' across New York and Pennsylvania towar ds their new homestead. It is possible that they may have stopped i n t o visit or stay with their (cousins), also named Amos Loveland just ea st of the Hudson river in the town of Greenbush (now Sand Lake), Renss elear co, New York.
    They sleighed across the frozen Susquehanna River at Whitestone, and , since the snow was now melting, Amos exchanged his sleighs for a wag on and continued on. After completing the hard, four-month journey t o the Mahoning on 4 April 1799, they o ccupied the log cabin near the r iver, which he had erected for their use the year before. One half wa s floored with 'puncheons'; split logs dressed out with an axe, the ot her half remained earthen.
    The Lovelands; Amos 37, Jemima 37, Elizur 13, Milly 12, Elizabeth 8, L ucina 7, Amos jr 5, and another son (?) were all shown in the Vershir e census of 1790. They became the first permanent settlers of Coitsvil le. During the first year, the fami ly depended largely on hunting an d some supplies from neighboring settlements. Amos cleared his farm an d resided there with various sons, daughters and their families unti l his death in 1851.
    Just after Christmas, 1851, Amos died, probably at home, age 89. He wa s buried in the family cemetery on his farm, the land he'd long ago pl anned to live on after first seeing it during his pioneering survey o f 1798.

    Amos Loveland’s story Notes;
    *a- Revolutionary War Pension File W8090; 21 Aug, 1832; Amos applied f or pension age 69
    *b -Trumbull County, Ohio deeds; A-166, 167; Dated 22 Aug 1803. "We, M oses Cleveland, Joseph Perkins of Connt., and Daniel Lathrop Coit of N ew York City, trustees of Erie Company, by our atty. Simon Perkins o f Trum Co Ohio, by letters dated 1 7 Mar 1803, for $726 from Amos Lovel and of Trum Co, land in Coitsville, range 1 Twp 2, lot 28, on the sout h bank of the Mahoning River."
    *c - *3 Historical Collections of the Mahoning Valley; 1876 v 1 p 71

    ELIZABETH BECOMES OLDEST RESIDENT OF THE WESTERN RESERVE

    However, Elizabeth did all her traveling when a child, for she staye d continuously in the town after reaching Coitsville, except to live w ith her daughter Lavinia (McFarland) Harris just a few miles away in Y oungstown the last few years of he r life.
    In 1812, at age twenty-two, Elizabeth married William McFarland, ten y ears older (*1). She moved only a few miles away, still in Coitsville , to his farmstead on the Hazleton Road. They appear to have had thre e boys and three girls by 1820, poss ibly two of the children were twin s, since six single birth children in eight years would be unusual, ev en in those times. The 1830 census shows William and Elizabeth, with e leven children. It is reported that she, "...became the mother of s i x sons and six daughters..." (*2 p 165).
    The 1850 census lists her birthplace as Vermont, and confirms that sh e is ten years younger than her husband, William. The McFarland childr en still living at their home are; Amos, (age 38, b Ohio), Jemima, (ag e 30, b Ohio), Candace, (age 20 , b Ohio), Lovina, (age 17, b Ohio, i n school), and Annetta, (age 8, b Ohio, in school). Ten years later, i n 1860, she is a widow, living next door to her son Anderson and his f amily. Elizabeth McFarland is head of her own small household, wit h so n, Amos, age 48 ("idiotic"), and daughter Annetta J, age 18 (school te acher, and attending school).
    In 1870, at age 80, she still maintains her own home very nearby to so n Anderson, while living with son Amos and youngest daughter Lucinia ( Lavinia) McFarland, age 35, who is keeping house with Elizabeth. By 18 80, Elizabeth and Amos were boardi ng with her daughter Lavinia who ha d now married Hamilton Harris (about 1875). He had been widowed by th e death of Lavinia's sister Candace in August of 1874, and this arrang ement may have been a marriage of 'convenience' for all concerned.

    The following is quoted entirely from: Historical Collections of Mahon ing Valley, Youngstown, Ohio, May, 1876, pp 510-512.

    THE DEAN RAFTS
    "In December, 1804, an elderly gentleman came to this town (Youngstown , ed.) representing that he wished to contract for squared white-oak t imber and staves, the timber to be used for ship-building, and the sta ves to be taken to the Madeira Isl ands for wine casks. He was referre d to Isaac Powers, of this township, and Amos Loveland, of Coitsvill e Township, as men that could furnish what he wanted. He called upon t hem, and made a bargain, which they had to go to Poland to have writt e n. The contract was drawn at the house of Jonathan Fowler, and writte n either by him or Terhand Kirtland. The sizes and lengths of the timb ers were all specified. It was all large timber.
    The contract for the timber was made with Isaac Powers, and the stave s with Amos Loveland. Mr. Dean was evidently a man that understood hi s business, and capable of doing a sharp bargain, as he succeeded in g etting Mr. Powers into a contract en tirely in his own favor. Mr. Power s, although being a good mechanic in timber, never had the experienc e of the cost of furnishing timber of such sizes and weight, and conse quently got but little to pay the scant wages due his workmen and fo r h is own time and labor. He, however, furnished the timbers as calle d for by the contract. Mr. Loveland's part of the bargain will be unde rstood by giving it in the words of his daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth M'Far land, who is now living in Coitsvill e Township, and is eighty-five yea rs of age. She says:"
    'My recollection of the Dean rafts is that they were three in number , and were got up about the year 1803 or 1804. They were composed of s quared timbers hewed out, and of large air-tight casks. My father, Amo s Loveland, furnished all the timbe r for the casks, and helped to tak e it out. He also furnished the trees standing in the woods from whic h the square timber was made. He was not under contract for building t he casks or for any other part of the labor of constructing. He, howe v er, had the contract to furnish the staves dressed. The staves were go t out dressed and finished, and then set up for the wine casks, and af terward knocked down, that is, taken apart, and the staves destined fo r each cask bunched or bundled , each bundle being secured by a small h oop at each end. John Moore, father of Wm. 0. Moore of the Sarah J. St ewart tragedy, James Walker, ____ Holmes, with the help of my father , were the coopers who split them out (the staves) in the Summer , se t them up and built the casks in the Fall and Winter. The casks were i ntended to buoy up the rafts. We furnished the boarding and lodging an d shop for these coopers. We were often hard put to furnish the tabl e with the necessary substantia ls of life. For meat we often had game ; namely, wild turkey, venison, and occasionally bear meat.
    'Mr Powers took out all the timber and built the rafts. It took abou t one year to get them completed. They were successfully launched in t he Mahoning River in Coitsville Township at the south end of the prese nt Lawrence Railroad Bridge at the S pring flood in 1806. The river wa s swollen to its highest water mark, and most of the inhabitants of th e surrounding neighborhood were there to see them off. An old gentlema n, Mr. Dean, contracted for the building and launching of them. He w a s not here often, but his nephew, James Dean, bossed the job. He, Jam es, fell out of a canoe between this and Beaver Falls. He with two me n were traveling in the canoe. The others went ashore to sleep, leavin g Mr. Dean in the canoe to watc h their trunks and outfit. The next mor ning, he was found at the bottom of the river, wrapped in his blanket , dead. The rafts went to pieces on the falls of Beaver on account o f insufficient depth of water to float them over.'
    ‘The timbers of the rafts were lost, but most of the staves were gathe red, loaded in flat-boats, and taken to New Orleans. These rafts wer e about one hundred feet in length, and about twenty-five feet wide. T he casks for buoys or floats were ma de air-tight, and frames or yoke s were made, in which they were confined. Upon this frame or yoke th e raft timbers were placed. The casks were about four feet in diamete r and six feet in length, and made of very heavy staves, and well boun d wi th hoops. The exact number to each raft is not known, but we are l ed to believe it was twenty-four. They were framed in the timbers in p airs, to move endways on the water. On the top of the rafts were pile d the staves.
    ‘Jonathan Fowler, the first settler of Poland Township, was drowned a t that time at Hardscrabble in the Beaver River. He was accompanying t he party that was running the rafts. While passing the rapids at tha t place, the canoe in which he was ri ding struck a rock and upset, an d he was lost. The others that were in the canoe at that time were res cued.
    ‘At the time these rafts were got out, and until after they were gon e and lost, there were no suspicions but what they were intended to b e used for legitimate purposes. It, however, afterward was rumored tha t Dean was a confederate or in the em ploy of Aaron Burr, and it was su pposed and believed by many that they were intended to be used by hi m in his treasonable purposes against the Government. Nothing, however , positive was ever known to the people of this country as to their in te nded destination.
    Yours, etc.,
    Youngstown, O., December 24, 1875.’

    By the time Elizabeth died in June of 1881, she had been "...a residen t of the Western Reserve longer than any other person, having reside d continuously in the Mahoning valley over eighty-two years..." (* 2 p 165). She was buried near her husban d in the Pioneer Methodist Cem etery in Coitsville Center, Ohio.
    Monument reads; Elizabeth Loveland McFarlin, born Aug 7 1790 died Jun e 16 1881.

    PFM's SOURCES for Elizabeth (Loveland) McFarland/McFarlin
    1790 census; Vershire or Chelsea, Orange co, Vermont p 219 Amos Lovela nd (Elizabeth's 4 mos)
    1820 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 239; (her age 26-45)
    1830 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 249; (her age 40-50)
    1840 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 190; (her age 40-50)
    1850 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 577; (her age 70 sic, born in Vermont)
    1860 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 13; (her age 69, born in Vermont, rea l value $1,000)
    1870 census; Coitsville, Ohio p 107; (her age 80, b Vermont, real valu e $1,000, pers value $500)
    1880 census; Youngstown, Ohio ED 104 p 264; with Hamilton Harris (Eliz abeth's age 89, boarder, born in Vermont,)
    PFM's Other REFERENCES
    *1 Trumbull County Marriages (1-58); William McFarland of Coitsville t o Betsy Loveland, on 17 Dec 1812, by Nathaniel Blakesley JP, of Youngs town.
    *2 History of Mahoning and Trumbull Counties. Williams, Vol II 1882
    FSID 2S3B-GMV

    (Research):Family Tree DNA (www.familytree.com)
    Family Tree for Mr. Peter Folsom McFarlin

    Children:
    1. Amos McFarland was born on 10 Feb 1813 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died on 28 Jun 1880 in Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; was buried in Pioneer Methodist Cemetery, Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.
    2. Lydia McFarland was born about 1814 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died on 22 Apr 1897 in Liberty, Trumbull, Ohio, USA.
    3. son McFarland was born about 1815 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died before 1830.
    4. John McFarland was born on 16 Aug 1817 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died on 24 Mar 1862 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; was buried in Old North Cemetery, Hubbard, Trumbull, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.
    5. Jemima McFarland was born about 1820 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died after 1882.
    6. Dickinson McFarland was born in Jan 1822 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA; died on 30 Jun 1838 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.
    7. William McFarland was born about 1823 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died about 1856.
    8. Matilda Elizabeth McFarland was born on 18 Dec 1825 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died on 16 Dec 1890 in Coitsville, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.
    9. 6. Anderson McFarlin was born on 12 Apr 1828 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died on 18 Aug 1890 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio, USA.
    10. Candace McFarland was born on 23 May 1830 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died on 8 Aug 1874 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA.
    11. Lavinia McFarland was born in 1835 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died between 1882 and 1900.
    12. Annetta J. McFarland was born in 1842 in Coitsville, Trumbull (later Mahoning), Ohio, USA; died before 1882.