3 1833 00035 6722
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Fermai_D7 Charles Augustus
Universal, ihternationau
eENEAUoev ... ancient
Fernaud famiuies
A
UNIVERSAL INTERNi\TIONAL GENEALOGY AND OF
THE ANCIENT FERNALD FAMILIES
WITH CRONOLOGY FROM CRKATIO.V FOUND IN THE DISCOVERED LOST
1Roll0
PRIMITIVE BIBLE
Squares
HEBREW, EGYPTIAN. »nd OTHER LANGUAGES, FROM A STUDY OF THIRTY-FOUR LANGUAGES. ALPHABETS OF THREE
HUNDRED, RECORDS FROM ONE HUNDRED .nd FORTY CEMETERIE,S, ANCIENT jnd MODERN COINS. INSCRIPTIONS,
THIRTY THOUSAND BOOKS, MEDALS, MONUMENTS. MOUNDS, MOABITE GENEALOGY STONE, OBELISKS, MANUSCRIPTS,
PAPYRUS PRISSE, PYRAMIDS, RELICTS, SACRED RECORDS, FOR MONUMENTAL PURPOSES, HONORING
So6, COUNTRIES, STATES, and FAMILIES In OtUtb
By CHARLES AUGUSTUS FERNALD, M. D.
(PlKE-j0HNSON-SAVACF.-R(>GERS-HlNCKS-SpVME.WASHINr,T0N-VVARBURT0N-AMAND-CoLlGNYCnM.MENll)S-LuiLllER)
.Principal of_G. U. S. & F. A., Physician and Surgeon of^sociatior; P. Ph)sician and Surgton of St. Joseph'!
Peoples' Palace Salvation Army Lorps; Fellow of the/
\ Lecturer in Thirteen Languages; Herediiaiy Member
\MaS5achuselts and Suffolk Medical Sociel.e.V
\tl.e Society of Colonial Wars; P. Chaplain Knight
\of PMhias;P. Physician and Suigeon of the /
\Memher of the Harvard Medical Alumni./
\ .Member of the American Medical Asso- /
\Nickerson Home; Author Ola Biographical/
\ciation for the Suppression of Qua-/
\Sketch and the Downfall of Rome or /
\ ckery; P. Member Webster His- /
\ History Repeating Itself; P. Sht-/^
\torical Society; .Member/
\ geon of the Providet^ce Rail- /^
\ of the Maine Geneal- /
\road Comp3n\; P. fo. /
\ ogical Society; P /
\ lice Suigton manv y/
X M. Andover/ ^
-^^ \ vears. Boston/
X"— / jm
rak \ p°"« /
Thii
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'Those Who Fought Upon Breed's (nol^
'Bunker) Hill, Charlestown, Mass.; Free an.
'Accepted .Mason of .Morning Star Lodge, Wolf-'
'borough, N. H.; Discoverer of .Method for Qu
'moval of Needle fror» Human Body; Bone Union of Pate
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Discoverer of Safe Cures for Ale
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and
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/nbonogramm ic Blpbabetical Jflag
Sent to Hmerlcan Deleoatca for tbe Dague Banner
jfernalb Coat of Hrms
riDotto: ^rue to Gob, Country, State, m\b jfatnil^
Alfsn CoaI^^>' P'A'.'x Library
Applied for
Copyright 1909,
Charles A. Fernald, M. D.,
Boston, Mass.
Copyright 1910
as per Act of Congress 4 March 1909.
All rights reserved for Hague and God's United States and Foreign Alliance.
^ ^ [>
DiEU DES EnFANTS
115899S
AUBUE &JC2<nEAi<o&iqxrE
=n %^ o
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GOD BLESSED NOAH k FAMILY : COhH«Ar<0ED ALL TO MARRT.
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U. S. A. HUmr con lucrlpOon of Tnnpniiic* WuUstMD. VIdov Tkenn FarnaM
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TO GRATEFULLY HONOR A FEW AMONG MANY APPRECIATIVE FRIENDS OF
• "GOD'S UNITED STATES AND FOREIGN ALLIANCE"
THEODORE ROOSEVELT
<H3.Jaaow\j.M or Sweden
Ki^t ot 9ott'9 l/nttM Statn nt forttt» >
HFtBnicn itti i»oti.
ty trKttvl tmrt. I MM Urttry Int Honor to »(lwr to ]
SoMTtif njaty f (HI Altai t iiukH tor i»i tyactni tittntu le i
Ex-President, a descendant of Author's ancestor,
General Zebulon Pike.
■«-^^'2001
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thro>j«h th.
d..tK of B.H.Klni Bu.l..rl.
Con.ul c.n.r.l of 11. 1,.
SORROW DEEP AND SINCERE FOR THE UN-
TIMELY DEPARTURE OF GOOD KING
HUMBERT— HONOR THE KINGS
Che ^haaad ht VmUt bx ItxtSm,
of jott* pmcBC* at tk* fnsxnU Sfrlrfc**
ta in lull a> tW
Jl p. ou IkmoEai aiu ipiaini ani aiglit
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at tka f artaguM. tiunh al ^. Jolia tlif ^aptbt,
Jfortk f raaat ^rtt, ^attaa,
|ii» Jlitjutg J-faig «UrJo» I of yortnjid,
aai kia jLa;al ^ijkaaaa tka tsaUm ftitsa ^ii JKUlifip.
■UCKINGHAH PAUtCE.
The Private Secretnr)- is commanded
by The King to express His Majesty's thanks
to you for your kind .in^ loyal letter of
s\mpathy
FOR the GOOD OF THE HAGUE, NATIONS;
BE IT KNOWN ! Reported, Published, at Boston,
three months before, Pubhclv; tlie intent to slav
President WILLIAM McKINLEY, slain by a R. C.
Ex-Saloonist, the son of a R. C. and an cx-Saloonist.
notw ithstandinj^ he forjfave the storaj^e of tire-arms
to use against State and U. S. ; sayinj^ "keep them till
1 call for them." A beloved wife, only daughter,
four sisters; thirty-scvan witnesses all die mysteriously:
Thirty-nine attempts on one life. DANGER PUB-
LISHED AND SENT TO THE LAWFUL
RULERS OF EARTH THAT GOD HATH
GIVEN UNTO THEM TO COMMAND THE
INHABITANTS AND PROTECT THEM.
f^ fc '^-V^^^
^7^^^^
T^^pf^:^
ittrs.Hau
anJ U«- famtln
3'
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At Huntington Avenue evidence was found and reported
showing intent against life of the great and honorable John Hay.
THIS DEDICATION IN MEMORY OF
SISTER SOPHRONIA CHASE FERNALD
Asserting Best Characteristics; Defender of Every Faithful, Generous Cause:
HEAVENLY IN JUSTICE, Kind, Loving Mercy: Noblest Of Pure:
Qualified Righteously, Sisterlike, To Unite Virtuous Wisdom;
XIPHIAS, Yarely, ZEALOUS IN ALL GOOD ACTS;
GAVE HER LIFE FOR THE CAUSE OF RIGHT
July 28th. 1906. AND PATRIOTICALLY
REMEMBERED HER NATIVE STATE
NEW HAMPSHIRE IN VERITY
THIS TOKEN
By Brother Charles A. Fernald
PREFACE
For honorahle peace and not war is written this brief work condensed to give the gen-
erations a field of labor to honor themselves and me by perfecting these discoveries to aid
in conferring greater happiness on the lines of universal brotherhood of all mankind and more
closely unite all those created in tlie likeness of (;od who loved .ind honored with perfect
gifts Ava and Adam our parents that with us know not all the wisdom of omnipotent Cre-
ator whose Commandments and Laws obeyed and enforced is the highest ideal of our best
conceptions.
A vast mine stored within the granery of good and evil opens up with the search and
research, richly stored with the wisdom of the ages, badly encumbered by the errors that the
evil atteinpts for unworthy motives and purposes to force upon the honest and unwary glean-
ers, which is only to be with almost infinite labor excluded from the pen of the pure laborer
who must work fearlessly, boldly, impartially to prevent those evils we combat for its hydra
venomous heads and fangs are to be found in the most unexpected places destroying the
innocent to finally, if successful, to destroy itself.
Three principal sections are to comprise this work that should stand for all time and
people. The First to be the Holy Universal Bible which God gave to us. The Second to
comprise the Ancestors of the People that God commanded each to honor. The Third to
contain some facts in Philology that may prove an aid for the gleaner.
The construction of the ancient Mounds conforming to the language of picture symbols
and the primitive ALPHABET which religious significance and military and defensive ar-
rangements, historical and sacred uses typical of primeval and ancient requirements.
Special relations are set forth in all the languages which are evolved from one which
have continued changing every twenty years till the world has 36(1 dialects with each con-
taining traces of the one with a trend to return to the common mother tongue that never
had any sudden confusion, but gradually lapsed into new sounds and words as may be ob-
served on the monuments and oldest MSS. Moabite Stone, reveals the primitive.
When but few letters enter into an alphabet the value of those letters show an increase.
Nor is it strange that the first three letters have in each the name of God. 1st Trinity,
=2nd and 3rd Trinity, with \Vo-M:in Kind; all aiiatoniical parts for we were all made in the
likeness of God our Father.
VHTHI.V JI'DOES
CHAPTER I
PLATE 3-TRANSLATrON OF FIRST WORD, CHAFER I OF GENESIS
aoA50^ = n'WAf-i3
God, three in one and one in three. Creator of Heaven and Earth, Created Woman and Man,
Ava and Adam, Form of God, that they should be one, a line of beauty, pure and holy, like unto
God. Their bodies made of the earth and waters, given the Soul, Spirit, Breath of God. Their
bodies shall return to earth and waters, and Souls, Spirits, Life unto God and dwell in God when pure.
In accordance with the deeds committed in their bodies they shall be Judged by a Righteous Judge,
God, who will reward them and punish in exact Justice. Finally they shall go to God and dwell in
God for they are part of God and the children of God, who destroys not them for the sake of Christ
the Messiah, our brother. Son of God, Mary and Joseph. His only perfect line of beauty that came
to us and went to his Father God without sin. Give to God's line of beauty, man and woman that
which is God's own and for Churches.
m
'ORLD. God Created 5810 hc-forc Clirist: I.rc;HrS 5397 B. C. and Animated Lives
() MAN KIND Fa Created 4376 15. C-. Iheos Son to lie horn'of Mari and Josf in
' orldlv and heavenly \^cdlock the like unto Deusand form of his earthly Parents V= )' ^Fa
^God that promisetl Ava and Adam in Adan^Kden.
GENESIS Translated from Hebrew to ^-Ei^Nptian has one of many true translations as follows, as
was known to Moses that uas conversant with all the mysteries of /Egypt anil faithfully copied: — that
"Fa^God, the Trinity, Creator of Heaven, Earth and Waters, Created Woman, Man, Ava and
Adam that they two should be one, pure and holy like Theos their Creator: their bodies made of the
the earth and waters: their soul and spirit of JEHOVAH who giveth the breath of all life. Their
bodies shall return to earth and waters and soul spirit into Dia who gave it. For the good deeds done
within the body and mind they shall be rewarded. For evils deeds punished by the just judge Dios in
exactness proportioned to acts- Finally they shall go to Dieu and dwell in Dieus when pure! For
they are the children of the great spirit Manitou who does not destroy Gott. The Supreme Being."
AMERICA'S Tenn. from Brakebille Mound has crudely sculptured on a shell far
dvanced into stages of decay a crude engraving of the process of creation
ncient /Egyptians corroborate it, by Air, Earth, Electricity, Fire and Waters: plates here
Piatt 2 Above the fight names of God are fouml in languaeei that exist to-.lay among the 170 diferent spellings. This shoxv the earth as revolving.
ECOND Shell from a stone i^rAvc in Kane\- Field is Order from Chaos.
|UNDAY, December 7th, God complfted the Creation of Ava and Adam and
AW "HIS work and it was ^ar?f^Btfew jjood. Commanded them to keep
IT HOLY. SACRED. /(I^^^^^^^ Worshipping' God with love,
purity. Tnith. Unto your long line I y^^g^^^^^sBk will be with you and give my SON
Sabbath Worship me." Said God : — ^S^^^^S^^^^M^ "Animated Lives. P'emale and
Male. Inanimate life the earth and wa- ^BJ^^^SKraS^ ters are for you : my children, use,
not abuse, kindly treat, honor and ^f^S^f^J^SOe^ respect all thy fathers handiwork:
i>lessed laiior I tc.ich you for your delight, joy, irippiiR-.s" ih "The bird of song rejoketh at
the rising Sun, which symbol is my name on the Tablets I give to thee Ava Ad(a)m loving teachings
of rules commandments wisdom do ^ttfe^^^^^^ ''^"" *" ^""^ '"^ honor and thy
good." "Do right— jOY: Do not ^MBBBMBEBIg^w^^ choose wrong and suffer, darkness,
disease, sorrow, misery, death, judg- ^SSH^^^^^^^^ ment," Plates 2, 4 and 5 set forth
as follows. From a snow -ball sent ^^|^WBBB^@3B^^^^g% revolving down hill on a thin layer
of moistened snow it augments in ^SSKwE^^'^^^^A -^'^e. An object thrown into a mass
of du.sty water heated or cold will ^t^^^^^^^^^^^^ increase from glutinous constituent,
through space coming into collision XQ^r^^JG^ with another. The collision of
stones containing Iron, nickle aiul other constituents at an immense speed will not only cause great
heat, but give the agglutinated mass rotatory m)vements and other motions, as illustrated by the
planets which were best known to the ancients in most primitive times, for the Creator was their
teacher. .Afterward much know ledge was lost from ignorance resulting from sin, the choice of Adam,
Cain, sons of men. jt J sVH' =^"'''1 ' P'- 6) whose choice was evil. Adam, Abel, Seth were the
tirst astronomers whose science was po.s,ses,sed by Noah, and its celestial language as
found in part on the (PI. 1337) map, foretold events that have come to pass and are fulfilling till
earthly time ceases. Probably Chaldeans were to a great extent familiar v\ith this, possibly fully.
Earth thrown off from the SUN.
On PI. 4 the 14 ovals represent days and nights of 24 hours each inclusive of TWO SUNDAYS.
The four cuned lines and two circles indicate six labor days for Wo-Man-Kind: eight Circles with
circle and geminal spot inside reprcsents=S\3^24 hmirs in a day, also S planets inhabited: the ovum
with geminal spot and \esicle: seed of animate and inanimate life: reptiles by curved lines, that God
created 2nd. hence the great honor paid by /Egyptians to Serpents: Dogs created first (PI. LV ) of
United States Government work at centre. (.Also PI. 6S) to protect and hont)red by God's name spelt
backwards. Birds, beasts, reptiles &: Fish created 4441 B. C. date is to be read from 4 Circles x by 4
cur\ed line.s=40()() 5c diminished by O centre circle equal 4110 equalizing by multiple 4 lines x 10^40
plus l=God's 4441 lines of beauty labors, 14 outer ovals X by 26 inner circle.s^364 days, circle of sun
for one day and the inner next with curved the hours with centre two minutes and seconds of our
year that a very perfect calendar is kept in the flag of Fna .Apries^Afrias the Pharaoh of /Egypt of
the long line proved by Sacred I listory; S circles is a count of Roman Star points; 6 of the Hebrew
Star derived from .Egyptian 5 points and seal on Star.
D %^ □ ■ I
^a
^i^ERE is found in the line and cipher long lost languages that the Dove was the first bird crc-
Tia ^^^"^ ■ ^^'^ ^'""^' ^'^"'^'^'' ^"^^^ '^''''' '^^"'* '^y" ""'-'y f''*^'' the sun uninjured', which corrcs-
fJ^M ponds with the Aegyptian. Three regions in North America only could support a large
) number of people without cultivation of the land which was began early by Abel, son of Ava.
Columbia valley was the first and chief. Forests abounded with game and rivers with
salmon, shellfish on the coast, and roots, and berries.
Minnesota lake regions the second, and home of the Dakotas, which, translated symbols into the
Aegyptian primitive language declares ;— "The earth of Noah King, that God the Father taught and
brought from Araat." The third I The south shore of Lake Superior the home of the Ojibways trans-
lated has— "The Great Spirit is 1, and one with Trinity, Ham, line of God whose son Adam fell, or
literally turned upside down from God that gave of Ava and Adam his son Christ to come and go !
The many Indian tribes from translation give statements of primitive language as descendants keeping
in part the primitive religion, believing in the Great Spirit which is only another name for God that
remotely was called Fa and the symbol that spelt his name was a picture of the SUN which the Per-
sians and Natchez worshiped keeping the sacred fire burning in their temples in honor of God one of
whose other names was Allah worshiped by Mohammedans who practice what they preach. In South
America, the Mississippi Valley, North and South through the interior of the Continent, 12(t(» miles in
width: riows its River more than 4000 miles from head to outlet of its longest branch. It receives 57
other rivers from the east and west corresponding to the description of those rivers that flowed from
the Garden of Eden described by Moses in Genesis, Chap. II 'PI. 50. PI. 7
This plate translated : — "God of
Adam, two with Trinity, a STAR
with Creator: gave the garden of
ting Cain and Ka Na Fa Ta Fa/
"Cain killed Abel ( ^ 2 S ) and
Anona, OMO, AMA," (ancient
counted by feathers on head of Ava,
ra^oTro^^^RTO
heaven came down made Ava and
points to be the count of their lines
ADN (we spell Eden) there beget-
twins, Abel and Seth ( n r )".
God's Angel drove them forth to
name of America) "Si.x persons are
by six hieroglyphics between their
heads, serpentine Cain is represented in left hand of Ava, and sister pure projecting from boat part
circle, right hand, godly Abel who m. Zana, Seth, long line of God, the son of Adam and Ava,
m. Sana, da. of Abel & Zana." "Messiah^^Christ is here foretold to be horn of Mary and Joseph
from God the Fr. & God the Holv One." PI. 5. Shell from Nashville, Tenn., gives part of this.
Under boat: — Trans. "Fallen man and women driven forth from Eden — the long line to people the
world, God commands build the serpent Mound of God's promise of coming Christ, of heavenly and
earthly parentage; on the water, Christ to Annona, Christ taught women, and men, and children, from
sacred two rolls as
^ ... . „
the God written
promised at build-
Mound, tablets,
pure loving words
for inhabitants of
H. ) Adams sin
is here told and it
the acts that dis-
theory. "Ava was ever
mg or serpent
engraved, God's
of Heaven's Christ
earth." etc. (PI.
with s;ime of Noah
actually illustrates
prove Darwin's
pure and holy." etc.
D^
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CMAfllM ll.V.IX, Tttiti U,U.;U -~IA)
OF AVA ABMwROTE on thesouare.tabletS.oavPOHAVAAILL.THE
iff^^RSaa^JSiS IL«MS,A®CI3,»7Zi\RI.i.?AJ!jJ\,HW,iiE),J)[?'17.E3®SDS, lA13;iL?J,^Q??jri) (3©1
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<:^¥»^=i^^^^^3*^'^''^^f^^"^'0^"" '^'^i^. ^f^'-'i'^'^- io,oct.:,iN' ::£.'.7e:; to, ocT.-HiFRiA HN.^^f? roll:
' 'Tj^S^^^-^'^*^' tablets, D'SQieAiag EsaaiSAViio Bt ©®® in ma '.uT-^-tnttPaism &i.v- T"
ira«
J^^V
'-AWlEiSlJCA,
Wrilings Monhcga,
^^d N THE MOUNDS OF THE ANTEDELUVIANS, aborigines no longer; in the primitive
^1 languages: In Genesis by translation into original Hebrew, and that into Aeg>'ptian with
T I this INTO ENGLISH of which it is nearest kin of all the languages of this Earth UPON.
j^ W It is most richly supplied from all as is demonstrated by fifty-three years search. THAT the
earnest, honest gleaner from the inexhaustless graner>' for facts and TRUTH may fill to
overflowing the repository; of MSS. for the honor and glory of God and the universal relationship of
Wo Man Kind, as is designated the two sexes by tlie ancients.
LINE NAMES OF THE GREAT PYRAMID
-...^aAty zAua ■'iCCfX.cCLcC AVA -^ Ct>e.
OTA = CZ£Ca^K,.A -AAA I AA = i-'f^i<i->y<-'>~', -Arx^^l
\\ is always to iic remembered that the Aegyptian Language is to he read from right to left and
left to right: top to bottom and bottom to top: then a general reading not unlike to the study and de.s-
cription of a landscape scenery or a marine view. Chinese has all of these modes of reading except
the last two. The Hebrew should be read as in Primitive without p:>ints that are a modern interpola-
tion oiiscuring history, as it originally read from right to left and from left to right. "It was not lost,"
said the scholars, truthfully. .Abundant proof exists of the change every 2(1 years of language.
MOUND HISTORY OF CRE-
ATION KROM ONE OF FIVE
TRANSLATIONS ALL TRUE.
INTO THE PRIMITIVE PIC-
Tl'RE SYMBOLS AND LAN-
GUAGE OF THE /EGYPTIANS
AND THIS PRIMITIVE LAN-
GUAGE INTO THE ENGLISH.
"GOD, the Trinity, Creator of
heaven and canh and u aters. Created
woman and man (and children) that
they two should he one in and on the
square and circle, pure and holy like
unto God, and Christ, and Trinity,
that from the earth and waters made
their bodies to which the Lordgiveth,
breath, spirit, or .soul, mind or intel-
lect with power to beget children
pure whose line shall be iioiiorcd by
begetting Christ the Me,ssiah &: son
of God, woman and rnan. Adam
and Cain sinned and God ca.st them
from the garden of Eden. F"or Cain
slew Abel his brother, beingdrunken.
God slew not but did curse Cain and
alcoholics. Commanded Adam and
Ava, and descendants to build the
Serpent mound, with Egg of Promise
that the Messiah Christ, born should
be of the line of Noah, Ham, Shem
and Japcth.
Opposite the Serpent Mound is
Wisconsin indicating the strong un-
changeable, perfect laws of God, and
below 10 parts made after the 1st
three alphabet symbols &; picture
hieroglyphics: I & 0=in yf:gyptian.
One God: a picture of the name of
God, God the Holy One, & God the
Messiah & God the Christ is spelt the
•same, and from two lines wjiicli two
constitute all lines of earth and waters,
viz: A STRAIGHT & A CURVED
LINE: also signifies heaven, earth,
sun, moon, stars, .square of a circle.
Thus built the Antedeluvians and left
history, we in lack of wisdom do not
so faithfully record for our po.'^terity.
\p^^m
m
3
— =1 — ,.>.-iiA. —c.-m
TW
THE NAME OF GOD
/E
yp„.n=F.-0
1
Ait
erion lndi>n =
9
An
An
A«
Arr
cric.n=Sup,.n
bic=Alljh
.riir=ElMh
no<,a:.= r.uli
at Brinn
/Eo
Ch
han and Doric=
ldjic = Eliah
= Ilos
C.I
Cr.
icandGa.lic=
jn= ThiOT
Di>.
=<;o<i
Fren<:l.= Difu
FtemJsh^Go«d
C;r.ek= Thm.
German and Swii»— Goti
Hebr»« = Elohim. Floha
Hindo>tai^r=Kain
lMlian=Dio
lrish=nii
U« Rum Rir
Indulteiv
Plate 11 The Holy Bible fr«)m the discovered said to have been lost language, gives the twelve
lineal tirst descendants, first Ava, their sculptured form ; and at base of tallest Monument the two
GOLDEN SyUARE TABLETS OF GOD'S COMMANDMENTS.
n=)
/^
^
J^
u ;
J^^^
CL_L
t=/
rz=7
^
cn^
^
(^
((^
®
:n ^
^^^"l^OT now obsciirctl by those who joined with Napoleon that said "History is wtiat we ajjrec
iJW'l to make it." But the truth can never die or be destroyed the one that Deity protects.
^^^%J Facing page of this thirteenth plate in lower left hand corner will be seen Marcus Aggrip-
pa Lucius Furnius the great Naval Commander of the Emperor Augustus the Emperor of
Rome with his features in obscurity anil n.imc was found written over C. Furnius, also, again written
by engraving in the primitive language of lines by himself 29 B. C. who engraves: — "I Marcus
Agrippa Lucius Furnius sail with five ships from Roma here XXIX to the land of Annona, which I
name Augustii and raise on this Rock the Sea Green Flag, (given to me by the Emperor Augustus, ) in
this land of Omo, Ama, Amo, where God in the garden of Adn=Eden first created woman and man,
Ava (Eve) Adm (Adam) and seed; return from Omo 2H B. C with three ships or vessels, wife, son
&c daughter: I left Daughter and son Graecianus Julius Caius Furnius and da. Isabel, they commenced
the Tower before I left for defence. Temple and Monument, with the name of O (:=F'a) to be built
over it. This I do in the land where the sun first shone on my fore-parents, Ava and .-Xdam. '
($
RAECIANUS J. Calba F., "I, do not complete the Tower, Temple, Fort but return to
Roma, B. C. with one ship and SO men." His and F'rs. name on Me. Rock ln.scriptit)n.
"1 Fnr Chia and Bahman Generation CV (IDS) sail with two vessels or ships from Ears
(Persia) with chart Log of forefather \l. Agrippa and compass, finished the Tower Tem-
ple and here buried a son, Marcus Lucius, that was horn here. The people were fierce and blood-
thirsty, did slay F. Bahman, who saved my life, and many people of us and they were slaync;
at the mouth of the river I buried him: my oldest son was .sorely wounded: My husband died
June 8th 223: my oldest son F. ^^ Sa.ssan, Died Dec. 10 and with
his spear and his father's and ft^ mace I buried him near the
River Mouth (Taunton now ~Sff called) TSEON; with my son, of
the long line, I visited the serpent £a|^Mb^ Mound of F. Adam in thelanil of
Anona where the Sun, first name flif^^^BH epria__ "^ ^'"'' ^"'' 'i'"'^' symbol letter of
Light, shone on my fore-mother ^^ Vf&^^^S! fe^"^^ Ava and Father, earthly .Adam.
My heart was .sad for under the ^^^^^^TB^^j^ arch I burieil my husband slain,
under the arch of the tower jB ^V/^>;^|k ^gg<^^ I buried my baby son and near
the mouth of River Tseon or Ts n ^^jpiy^ On w ith his armor on, his sword,
their Spears, I lay away my be- & A loved and girt me up for pure
God Labor, and with my living son went forth." *
^^^\ HEOS, I Christ, the son of my Heavenly Father God come up from the waters antl write
I I my name ** within that of Goil on this Rock and l^igrave hereon for men anil the .sor\s of
^^^^ all women and men for I am sent by the Father to teach that all who believe in ine shall
^"^ have Eternal Light for I AM HE THAT I AM: I the son of God the Father and God
the Holy One of Israel, sail from Roma XV to .Anona the land of Omo, Ama where God from Air,
Earth, Electricity, Radium, Water made woman and man, Ava, Adam in his glorious form and image
to be children of the Light and Multiply for the glory of God. I Christ t)ie son of God to teach you
to do the works of my God who gave to you his symbolic letters O A V here shown. Returned 10
plus 10 plus 111=23 to Roma", etc. Translated from Dighton Rock Inscription.
*Notes : **Muchleft unwritten: See the letters on Dighton Rock, at Taimton River, .Mass.
#
4
D f4=» 1^ «4=> D
N PI. 13 of Marcus Agrippa are imperfectly delineated f)y plate maker an enormous mass of
immutable history from his stolen coin, forefathers and descendants — therewith may be
observed his son beneath him: the sea green flag: the two golden squares of God's Com-
mandments, being taught: colony of Augustus: New Port Tower marked S. C. that was
at the Vatican, Roma: sections of Tower, Temple, Fort: Good Queen Bess-traced autograph signa-
ture: grave of Mianton-\)M(), bearing the name of Deity line and, 1643, with the primitive America's
name Omo land and at the right and below the names of the Great Spirit, Trinity, and below this
the Primitive Alphabet, F. A. M. which God gave to Ava and Adam in the garden of Eden which is
the key of all ancient and modern, over 300 alphabets that are found from the primitive languages to
be religious, anatomical, historic: sections drawn from the spot of New Port Tower that show forth
the TRUTH which can never die: tlie coin that shows forth the completed Temple Tower is enlarged
at bottom centre showing the barricading or rushing to Arms for warding off the Indian attack that
cost F. Bahman his life and Fnr. Chia's great sorrow: the stars and stripes of the shield of America in
centre, makers are gone (to Trinity united in one) with the coats of arms of the thirty-six states are all
written on the Square and the 36th beareth the face of Washington. Three of the four lines are A
Constitution United America (symbols) with the world of God, (letters) For Three Laws: Chinese
Coins, of which 1 have a more valuable one not shown here, contain the two golden squares of God's
Commandments, Laws, etc. Sanscrit hears the name of God, and the date, 4376, of creation of Ava
and Adam and descendants, as chiseled on Colorado stones, the ROLL OF GOD'S LAWS, etc.
Chinese Compass bearing the names of God, King Solomon, Hiram of Tyre and date 1010 B. C:
Chinese pillars bearing Hieroglyphically priiiiitive truth emblems, etc.: primitive erroneously called
Sun worship beareth the symbols of human beings going to God and dwelling in God when pure:
Picture of Vishnu bringing Sacred Scriptures written by God from the Serpent Mound: Map, Chart,
Foretold Events God gave to Ham and Noah after the Deluge on which is prophecy that came true
July 28, 1906, in part, it has many readings all confirmatory and no contradictions from the line, star,
cipher, sacred, anatomical, primitive alphabetical, numerous languages of primitive times, more of this
herein and Book of second Edition which to do full justice to all the discoveries would require 20,(100
pages of closely written Mss. Dr. Webb of Providence, acct. of plate 15, found at Fall River, near
mouth of Taunton River leading past Dighton Rock Inscription that is exposed and covered at every
ebb and flow of the tide. See Sears American History published 1846, pp. IS & 16. I have made 16
Photographs of Rock fast crumbling into decay.
NOW standing picturesque are the Colorado stones, beautiful and sublime, as may be ohseneil
in plate eleven, which Moses describes in Genesis. NEW OLD history from plate nine
that has and will come to stand till the Last Great Day when all shall be changed in the
twinkling of an eye, emerging from the shell of mortality into immortality, to be justly re-
munerated bv our Heavenly Father and KING OF KINGS in the Realm God Created to gloriously
stand forever dazzling bright, gloriously beautiful with perfect Light and Love, unchangeable by the
Celestial Perfect Lord of Universal Creations, that the greatest best conception of mortals can but faintly
delineate its glory, honor, justice, love, mercy, peace, potency, righteousness, rewards, satisfactions,
usefulness, wisdom, all united in ONE C;OD OF TRINITY and Wo Man Kind His Children
Honored by HIS MOST GLORIOUS SPIRIT FORM!
D ^^> □
CHAPTER II
(U
HAT AMERICA was
known lo the an-
drank no wine from
ihe gt. gr. Fr. of Fna.
Apries or Afries to
J to gather facts from
ition the good that they
enjoy like blessings from
practi
Pla
origir
of Am:
ited in Chap. I. in
accord with the Map given to
Ham and Noah. In Plate 17th
held up that the world might see
and be convinced is the letter
symbol A three lines before his
face forms M his eve called by
Hebrews Avm=A, staff and part
of right arm the Hebrew R, staff
I. top of flower C, sharp long ]>oint
A. aiJIng the same spelling as in
Genesis of Amarica. and also AM A
using the first three along hishead
that bears the long two feathers
indicative of first parents Ava and
Adam, which point to the Serpent
Ava. Adam and Seth. (See pi. No
^^Ty-^EAVEN'S God, the Trir
>i "I, FA, three in one;
le to Earth, Thcos engraved:
the Heavens, earth, valleys,
s and seas. Wo Man Kind
i
t.
>tjL
c
•j:u
>u, woman, man, singing-birds, animated creations,
My son Christ shall be born of the long line of
.ch my holy truths of harmony, praise, giving the
g, a sword against powers of evil, by sea and land,
foung unborn, tljen my son will return unto me,
— I ■►i'5i?-'^*=t>tfc*- — ^^*>^^'*^*^j6y*;i^'^^ Lord loveth and
iZ^^^^^:. -_f^fe2^B^^^^'' S"''"^ power, joy to j
Tfl tTi ,V -^:^^^i^^^^^^^^U7 I of aif. seas and land.
Ava and Adam to tt
PLATE 16 bread of life everlasti
to destroy ; even the
Father God.
FIRST SEVEN COMMANDMENTS : Laws That I Trinitv Givi Unto All My Children or Earth : I. Live in on the
square with Theos=God=FA, Just, Holy, Pure and Upright. II. Worship God in purity and truthfully. IIL Labor six
days, rest, keep holy Sabbath, in praise and honor of God. IV. Unite (marry) and chastely beget children Godly. V. Do
not drink alcoholics e-vile, fall to earth mire: die cut off by God. VI. God giveth, protecteth, life, seed kill not; love wo
VII. War for God, holiness, purity, country, family, love, nations, states, Theos.
one in five all true— are ist, left ; 2nd, right; lower third of plate, bottom.
10
^•'^♦'ORTH from thtVlarktcnipestdLisOtcan comctli
jM LJ the Mariner's Li^ht, a j;lcam tliat hanishes of
^ I I that nij^ht all fear forGod has heard his prayers
^^•^ and safely they glide into the haven of peaceful
rest for the long voyage is successfully ended.
Plate 20 is part of a Book said to have heen found,
(from a vision of Joseph Smith, h. 1S(I5, kil. 1H44) at
Manchester, N. Y., 1H37, 111. 1S43: that has with his
work heen the cause of rrtuch evil and we hope may be
prolific of some great good if the original find is genuine
duplicate of these two pages engraved on gold plates replete
with ancient data and history of Anona, Omo, U. S. A.
They denuded of the trash of untrutiis and selfish desires
of bigots, supply proof of ancient history supposed to ha\e
been lost, now coming to light of immutable history that
will aid in the discovered said to be lost of Hebrew and
itlgyptian languages that either fully proves everv' allega-
tion, or by continued research, throws out incorrect
statements, which have thus far been substantiated by
geographical facts and the wonderful mounds of the
Antedeluvians and their descendants.
Plate 21— God wrote the Commandments on golden 2 tablets and roll mentions Serpent Mound,
Laws: shows honor given to .\pis or Ox in garden of Eden by bearing O A v.
A SYMBOLIC NAME OF GOD, MonoKranimic. the Roll, feathers indicatiiiK Ava and A-
dam's gifts at tlie jjardcii of Eden, tlieir fall, expul.sioii ; proinisc of Christ ; teachings to build
the Serpent Mound with the Egg of Promise (of God in Genesis proof pi. 9) the sorrow
of Eve for Adam's serpentine sin:— the book of six golden leaves conft)rniing typically
to pi. 20, as caught by the hands of priect from .serpentine man above ox and Trinity
connected with above the serpent after the sin of Adam; A\' .\ I'l'RE.
(H
PLATE 22
HE ANC:]ENr /KCJYI'TIAN WORSHII' OF THE SUPREME BEING NOW
KNOWN BY 17(» NAMES. THE ONE GOD WITHOUT BLOOD SACRIFICES,
THAT MARK THE AGES OF CHANGE BY MAN OF GOD'S COMMAND-
MENTS AND LAWS.
i
EAVENLY COMMANDMENTS AND LAWS BROKEN; THAT HAVE DES-
TROYED 15l»,()00,()0() OF MARTYRS, reduced from alleged 25l),(MII),IM)l) by search and
research of the .Author. ,
without TRUTH, is vanity, vexation of spirit I
delineation of good SACRED and profane
the mother of religion and knowledge with
top: — "From the land of the Antedclu\ ian
ful swans comcth to the Nileus where the
sacred, beautiful flower, points East to the land
earth, time, 7 days, one
Sabbath: and the line to
Adam, Abel, eleven shad-
and 11th child son point
was built unto the Lord
from the pyramid, the
the great waters, where
of honorable promise and
ovals giveth the number
Six more give from the
monogramic bird that
Israel; with the count
PLATE 24 Tomb. The two Seal
Rings keep the names of Seth and Noah long lines between the two great plume feathers in the claws
of this wonderful Sacred Bird that bears on rings the two GoldeTi Tablets with the names included
therein and thereof of Trinity. The round sun-shaped symbol at base is the name of Fa^ as we spell
it God : it was the seal of Fnr Lamar the wife of Noah : IT is the first letter of the primitive Alphabet
and called F and reads from right to left is the second A surrounded both sides by hieroglyphic letter
M which has a religious reading of names of Trinity : Mary and Joseph pictured, as parents of Christ,
and again in the Ring the Hebrew terminal letter M : likewise reading from left to right gives F, A, M,
from which the 360 alphabets emanate. The Honey Bee shows the great loss to our common fore-
parents with their fall from Eden (see squares in rings) from the lusts of Adam the father of the long
/•^^ARTHLY men's wisdom
^[ Plate XXIV is a marvelous
T [^^ history derived from .-Egypt
^g^ wisdom. Translation from
Mound builders the grace-
lotus flower bloometh. pointeth its
where Creator of theV
Sabbath in 7 days, one
Noah inclusive, counting
ed spacesaretheir number
to the pyramid altar that
in the the land of ^-Egypt
Serpent Mound, across
.■\va wore the six feathers
the Mound shell of six
of Nations (See pi. 7)
tail of the large centre
number the 12 Tribe? of
kept on Peter Faneuil
serpentine line that serpentine like in
of lust with inferior creation and was
suffer; but through Christ and God
Mound Serpent in Omo where arose
the sun, whose bright light gladden
a
Flood.
ECORDED found in one h'
issippi Valley this Marble V^
circumference with in-
that NOAH Son of LA-
HAM to i^gpyt and re-
Ava wrote, copied Adam,
second partook of the forbidden apple
spotted with disease and his chn.
as promised by him at building of
and set, beyond the earth and waters,
the heart, mind, redeemed.
of the smaller Mounds of the Miss-
Globe four and five-tenths inches in
scriptions in line symbolic language
MECH from Mt. Araat went with
turned to OMO=Annona after the
copied from God's Hand Tablet An-
nals of God: Seth, ZANA da. of Cain & wife Ka Na Fa Ta Far of Ava and Adam wrote all.
Note. Here is recorded the first Queen and King Ava & Adam the first pyramid of Oregon and
second letter of the alphabet, and first the globe, the third the diamond-shaped — turned on side —
Hebrew terminal M and the Y-shaped lines show its origin, from M = V=n.
(i
inuch line wriririK
several Indian cha-
racters of their also
ever changing
languages that
throughout the
whole world is
gaining and lost in
parts every twent)'
years with a trend
toward the primi-
tive speech.
Top triangle is
the name of God,
white, pleased,
darkened angry;
3 lines. Trinity
counted hy the
three headless
sacred birds on
one neck a line
that there indicates
Wo Man Kind; 3
lambs sheweth
forth the love of
God: Christ
Hebrew, teachings
and first, laws.
Commandments
of God. In catou-
ches Indian Pipe,
Tomahawk, Great
Spirit, etc. Below
is a mixture of
Celtic, Hebrew.
Sanscrit, I n d i a n
arrows, spear
pointing to
Mound for know-
ledge.
IN Catouche is
the promise of the
Great Spirit that
Christ Cometh.
PLATE 2t
At Berlin Museum is the
saucer obtained in /F^gypt
and its hieroglyphics record
it as the compass of Noah
and Ham used on the Ark
at time of deluge, which,
when placed on Map at
Gulf of Mexico points to
Mount Araat. Communi-
cationsfrom Berlin Museum
showing it is a present from
a French Gentleman.
On Plaif. 26 — Translation
"I Fna Noah, obedient to
God's commands with my
fami
th God, hv
compass, chart, map, from
Omo,Ama,Annona,toAraat
over the waters from the
land Adani where I arrive
safe with God the Father
and God the holy one."
The central part is similar
to that on Ark of Antede-
luvians by Fnr Lamar's his-
tory of Creation.
Plate 27, used after
Donnelly records bringing
the body of Misraim from
JEgypt to Anon the landi
of Mounds and Ava and
Adam's Land.
MUM
i s c Tree,
count of Tri-
nity and man
line to earth,
Flag over the
waters casting
lines of holi-
ness, Justice
The Pipe of
Peace, etc.
Last inner
Catouche
reading from
! one above is
Atto'sson^is
Fna Ohio a
great Chief
whose 3 SOILS
had sons and
das., who had
many sons.
4
^•'v^ROM base of first Monument
flJ M (P'- 3o) to ^ Translation: —
"I I "When the waters over the earth
had abated and God's long line of
Noah and family uith animated creatures
had arrived, from Anon the land and
waters of the serpen*; Mound of the Egg of
promise of Christ to pure white, Ava and
Adam; AT Araat with his wife Fna Lamar
and his sons pure wives arrived; God said,
" my eye seeth that my son Christ shall be
born of your descendants coming from ME
and you my children, and the earth that I
have cleared by the waters of sinful mankind
for pure women sake, men are dark and sinful
and disobeyed me for which I told them they
should surely die and for your disobedience
and sin within thee, dark evil that will kill my
son Christ, who is to come from the line of
the 1st of Anona Mounds, so sorrov\ful that
he "ill weep and the angels of heaven sorrow;
for I will hold my hand when 1 see his heart
pierced, hut my face shall be darkened and
men shall fall, for with my hook I will draw
them to their fall, till my measure of Justice
is filled, though for the pure, I will forgive
them and my anger shall become less after
they have been punished ; a banner shall be
raised; and I will raise my son Christ higher
above the heavens for women, pure women,
even Mar>', like a birdling of the earth and
Heaven, shall be of the long line of Ava Adam
and their hearts shall rejoice for my son's sake
who 1 gave to earthly children that from dis-
obedience left the garden of Eden after Adam's
fall by lust sin which the Mound shows in
Anana. Upright man shall again enter the
garden of Eden at the Millenium which shall
be ushered in by holy Trinity, peaceful swan-
like, fallen men will disport, — " etc.
i
ISTORICAL TRUTH DOTH ACCURATELY REFEATETH ITSELF. FROM
LONG SEARCH, RESEARCH was found, a plate of the tablet of Abydus at the
British Museum. By arduous labor restored it. See ACTS, Chapters VH.
PLATE NO^ 32
Is
»5
{Ji
■i\^ a.
'0 2 2.
HISTORY OF CREATION COMPASS
fmv^m^^
^^»^j^^f-c
Note. Plates 31 and 32 referring to Acts in French language with Hebrew, /Egyptian, Syric tongues.
16
^4'
J
T is the Rlory of God to conceal a tliini,':
>r of Kin^js to search out a matter.
F= 0 =
A= A
M= <v/>
PLATE 33
ASCoe FG+-flJCI_ rn^ n^ O P q Q li 5 T U V UU X >y X
A eCC>^p<5HIJt<L/V\,^Of<1QF?.'iTVVWXyT_,
,A> BCDE F G/<ld »CL e/IN. c^P OPqQjR,0iT UVWDC^X
I a ^ ^ 5 <i> t 8 9 10. II. lO.O. lOOO.
=0, I
=A,A
=V,M
The Primitive Alphabet Universal Showing Its Construction Into English With Origin Of Numerals.
PLATE 34
ALPHABET OF EGYPTIAN HIEROGLYPHICS
Fnm'TMcHoNuHenrsoeeovpr'-Hdwki-
1 8*9
\\-Q> -1
.^■^■°^'.%..l..^.^.
^■U-^-^-(w^-Mi-^-D
■VZ^ • d • Z) • ^
■07i\-3-s)p.
A-II-/°
g-^-g
71^
e-d-d •
LV#
n-w.^.j/.f .@.|.=^.
0-l-o-c*v.
A-(->-0-F-
D-U-— —
AAV-0[\-
Z- AAMA-
Y M- L— J'
K-w- gPi-
It is found that the Banner of F"na Apries was constructed to represent the Primitive Alphabet with Numerals
and a perfected Calendar of minute fractions of Seconds, Seconds, Minutes, Hours, Days, Months, Seasons, Years,
Centuries, and is wonderfully Religious, — with Anatotnical lines shown. Thus demonstrating an extent of
knowledge that has been hidden from modern experts. English letters at left of large plate are not correct.
ACRED MOUNDS were
built unto the Lord in the
Land of Omo, "So shall
knowledge of \\ isdom be
unto thy soul: w hen thou
hast found it, then shall he a reward,
and thy expectation shall nut he cut
off." it is noted that in left hand of
top plate are 10 openings, and 10 in
primitive language is the symbol for
One God. the letters O A V arc
here built to stand for Trinity and
eight O with an oval of Roman des-
cent, as is indicated by an eight
pointed Star. On plate .'^5 of old
Washington Fernel is to be found
the .same alphabet with the spellingin
his autograph signature, P'ernel by
reading the ton part of his name.
The 23 five pointed stars on shield
show the number of .states admitted
into union when plate was engraved.
The apex of Light Hou.se is in form
of Greek triangular letter Delta that
Was the A in primitive languages and
Hebrew terminal square n=M in
first light, second for garden of Eden
and the other two lights represent
the engraved golden .squares that God
wrote. Commandments, Laws on.
D-n
"'I'his above all, to thine own self
be true, And it must follow, as the
night the day. Thou canst not he
then false to any man." — Hamlet.
However brilliant an action may
be, it ought not to pass for a great one
when it is not the result of a great
design.
The virtues are lost in interest,
as rivers arc lost in the sea.
The world more often rewards
the appearance of merit than it does
the merit itself.
The vices enter into the compo-
sition of the virtues as poi.sons into
that of medicines. Prudence collects
and arranges them, and uses them
beneficially against the ills of life.
=D
44
01
()NFinF.*C'F. ill ill! iinfiiithhil man in time of troiihic is like ,\ broken Tooth and
Foot out of joint."
OFIED by tfie ancient ;+',(^yptians was the Pyramid built by God at Oregon."
PYRAMID AND LAKE AT OREGON, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
"LINE HAS NEVER SOUNDED IT NOR ANY VISIBLE
OUTLET OF ITS PURE WATERS."
RF:sroRArioN of /Fgyptian pyramid-iuble prophecy
G(;D in his 170 NAMES BE WITH US: GO UP AND BUILD MONUMENTS
WITH HEROIC BUSTS OF THE LAWFUL RULERS OF THE NATIONS
REPRESENTED BY HONORABLE CONSULATE SIGNATURES OF
OVER 1,160.()0(),()()() PEOPLE IN FAVOR THEREIN FOR PEACE
ON EARTH AND GOOD WILL TO ALL! !
19
c -
•''Sn/'n
^ -i — '--J ^ c S i o a.
T' E _ -'5 « c*^''::
" , 2 = !^ '^^•u r- -^y ~
- 5 .--2 5 C >;-£ 5^,-
:?^-"#SS;:i
j2 E<=
Isi^^.E^^
^: =, £ otto's 5--f^ ^-^ -
- K ; .^ c . Q Q. n -^ - '" >
I^V^Ji^^^i:;! ,. ,f^y:z^^^:^^'^l^^^i^^
20
^'Bcj=^''i'^.=
i! 31 =^ u = t:-i'^5ij
O 5
Se
.'CHAPTER III
"®
INTMENT and perfume rejoice the heart: so does tlie sweetness of a man's friend
by hearty counsel."
Only a few of the Symbolic 3(),(H)() Mounds of Antedeluvian, Descendants, in U. S.
PLATE 39
%*
1 rQ. "1^;
Notes on Plate 39. See Bureau of Ethnology : J. VV. Powell, Director
^^
ai
NTO
fully seen. Fl.
Priesthood of
and Genesis
Noah and Lamar which trans-
were wicked and destroyed them
survivors that I would not
I gave Rainbow as token of
count of Noah's family, head,
ken, and F sepa-
a week, one S u n-
count tribes of Israel :
shoulder the /Egypt
power of God over
nels copied on Tomb
Noah's Map Chart:
13 stars of Map.
Mound of Promise
with another, white,
of serpent represents
mid Lake &theNile,
by Step Pyramid jn
Sacred animal indi-
Mound. And Spears
Noah. Name of God
God's pair of like.
foot power of Man
women. Two larger
of Ava and Lamar:
the Trinity with
and killed by the
Plate 41 lines
place of Noah and
Mounds of Graded.
Ohio.
Plate 42 records
returned to Heaven,
free moral Agents,
rather than good :"
Brother Abel.
Line, etc., etc.
4(1, calial "tiic bli.cid of the
the Bow" is shown .Egyptian
with the primitive tongue from
latcii: "I God saw mankind
with water and Covenanted with
destroy them again by water,
promise" etc. Step Pyramid
two Tablets of Gold, laws bro-
r n t e (I ii y 7 d a y s
day: 12 panels
five squares from
Star: wings the
life and death: 12pa-
of Peter Funal and
13 circles, dots ;
Serpent, egg, is the
(Adams Co., Ohio I
at Colorado and body
pure waters of Pyra-
further represented
-Tgypt. Oval egg on
cates egg of Serpent
the sin of Adam and
on animal and dot
Small [diamond the
trying to crush pure
Diamonds the purity
the Three signify
Christ persecuted
wicked.
read; "The burial
Ham." It is the
Way, Fiketown,
that "God tharcame,
sorrowful that .Men,
wilfully chose evil
and destroyed h i s
Trinity cursed Cain
THIS CINCINNATI TABLET AFTER SHORT DISPLAYS
CREATION OF SUPERIOR AND INFERIOR
ANIMATED LIFE BY TRINITY
S foLllul I
S. A.
Tnins.
()\V is she \iith(Hit, now in the
streets, and lieth in wait at everj'
corner." From Washington Gov-
ernment Printing Office 1SH3 this
wonderful Rehc was issued that
Mound, Union Countv, Illinois,
•'Large circle THE CiRKAT SPIRir
and two small ones complete count of Trinity. Long
perpendicular line points it out and is an I, |, F,or H.
Four squares represent two Tahlets of God's Com-
mandments: Garden of F.den and Hebrew terminal
M^i^^i J. Inner lines the points of the Compass.
The si.\ lines count labor days, and inner cross the
death of Messiah. Four large triangular openings, and
largest spcli ANONA, Greek V and .Egyptian A &
(). The whole .\rm form of Greek C or G and
promises coming of Christ the Son of God. It is
similar, without the engraved lines, to the Seal on
I'cter liincuil's tomb. White triangles represent
ISr.inn.lsc.f Colorado, Mevicoand .F.gypt built, also
foimil crudely built by Nations to represent Trinity.
Plate +4 shown in left hand center the egg
of promise sign and lines repre.sent blood vessels,
waters or rivers and electricity. Trinity in middle
portions and creation lines above.
The health of the soul is no more secure than
that of the body; though we may appear clear from
pa.ssions, we are in quite as much danger of being
carried away with them as we are of falling sick when
we are in health.
For the credit of \irtue it must be admitted that
the greatest evil which befall mankind are caused by
their crimes.
The name of virtue is as serviceable to interest
as vice is.
On hallowed or unhallowed ground.
Seek and embrace the truth.
Where'er 'tis found.
A truly virtuous man is he who prides himself
upon nothing.
It is to be a truly virtuous man to wish to be
always exposed to the view of virtuous people.
^f
SI
HE wicked are overthrown, and are not:, but
the house of the righteous shall stand."
THE GENESIS RELIGIOUS AND
NATIONAL MOUND AT
MISSISSIPPI
Plate 46. This ancient Mounds outer circle 1200 ft. in
circumference, walls 3 to 5 ft. high, width 12 to 16 ft. Walls
of pentagon 4 to 6 ft. high: inner circle slightly elevated:
central mound 36 ft. in diameter.
Plate 47. Length of embankment the same, height 3,
4, 5 ft. addition of this gives height 12 ft. of Central Mound
and the Square of 12, 144 ft. the length of the Embankments.
THE AMERICAN INDIAN WITHOUT A KNOWN
EXCEPTION WORSHIPED GOD BY HIS PRIMITIVE
NAME SYMBOL THE SUN. In works of this kind
the same accurate, nice proportions are observed, in the length
but vary in height. The sum of the heights equal height of
Central Mound showing great engineering skill. In Missouri
mound works a large settlement near New Madrid, large and
small mounds are very numerous and countless residence sites.
One was enclosed by earthen walls. In the forest height 3 to
S ft. width IS ft. Near the Lake in 1811 with a clear sandy
bottom that is now a swamp, where remotely flowed the Mis-
sippi River, the Town of 50 Acres stood on its embank-
ments, it is now 18 miles away. THE PI. 49, also
discovered by Mr. Pidgeon, with nineteen rays or an-
cient JEgyptian T's and D's surrounding the Central
Son line seal of the names of Deity and the primitive
symbol of the name of GOD, retains in outer Circle.
The rays of ^Egyptian Star count of Trinity,
Woman and Mankind.
PI. 48 carries on the History of plate thirteen.
PLATE 46
o-o
Ho. X AMCIENT WOEKl
Love of glory, fear of shame, the design of
making a fortune, the desire of rendering our lives
easy and agreeable, and the envious wish of lowerin
the fame of others that are often the causes of that
valor so celebrated among men.
Hypocrisy is the homage which virtue receives from vice.
The good we have received from any man should make
us respect noble traits and give us much weight in the balance
against the evil that he does us.
Right is true equity and impartial justice.
24
\
EXAI/IETH A NATION: BIT SIN
and li o 1 y
like unto
God their
creator.
Their bod-
ies made of
the earth
and waters.
Given t h c
breath spirit
of God
there w a s
violence on
t h e earth,
it was bro-
ken with
contention,
Blood was
shed by the
knife. God
saw it. One
He found
pure and
holy — F n r
Lamr t h e
wife of
Noah.
Noah
sinned, h e
drank wine
and was
ark, birds, beasts, & creatures;3 Sons, Wives and sons, a bundle united, strong, chn. of God, He would save and did
at Mt. Araat. This was written by Fnr Lamar, the wife of Noah. On the Ark at Mt. Araat." She affixed' her
name and seal. (In the right of left column of Plate SO at the bottom, and is found to be true.) PI. 52 and S3 —
Chinese History, Creation, Commands, laws & their descent from Fut:=Phut=Phuth. PI. S8 — Babylonish His-
tory of Creation. The same. PI. SO from the Tablet of Abydus at the British Museum, enlarged from the plate
by a careful maker of plates that gives a clear statement of facts and truths that can never die, although they have
been hid from the liglit for about 2000 years. Map, Genesis proof Rivers of the Garden of Eden. PI. 51 is a
Monogram from A to Z the Initial letters of Ava and Zana the wives of Adam and Scth. Plates 52 and 53 have
thereon the ancient picture symbols of China founded by Phut^Fut=Fo. Plate 54 is the Chinese Mariner
Compass dated IDIO B. C. with primitive name of God, King Solomon, Hiram of Tyre, and numerals 1 to 24.
Plate 55, Babylonish fish figure has in it, top and back the names of Noah, Ham, Shem, Japeth in line and Hebrew
language. Plates 56-7-8 also have a not conflicting creation history.
THESE IMPORTANT HISTORIC PLATES TRANSLATED INTO THE DISCOVERED PRIM-
ITIVE LANGUAGE AND THEN INTO THE ENGLISH GIVES A VERY CLEAR STATEMENT OF
CREATION WHICH CHANGES SOMEOF THE MINOR AND MAJOR PARTS OF GENESIS THAT
THE SEVENTY HAD SO MUCH TROUBLE IN EXTRACTING THE PARTLY TRUE MATTERS
FROM SUCH MSS. AND AIDS THAT THEY COULD GLEAN AFTER THE BURNING OF THE
CHINESE DOCUMENTS AND DESTRUCTION OF ALEXANDRIAN LIBRARY BY UNGODLY.
25
REPROACH TO ANY
d r u n ken,
did beast-
iality. For
the sins of
m e n, — He
destroyed
the world
with water,
savi ng La-
mar, family
and Noah,
(right hand
column) It
rained forty
days and
nights: the
windows of
heaven
were open-
ed and the
fountains
of the deep
were bro-
ken up.
Adam had
sinned as
did Noah.
God told
Noah to
build a
house three
stories high,
to save the
seed of
man kind,
his wife,
sons, wives.
He took
into the
^a (^ <^ f^ o^
ETA LITTLE SLEEP, A LITTLE SLUMBER, A LIITLE FOLDING
OF THE HANDS TO SLEEP: SO SHALL THY POVERTY COME
AS ONE THAT TRAVAILETH : AND THY WANT AS AN ARMED
MAN."
Plate 59— Man Noah
Mound at Wisconsin
that has the God name
, ,r . ., . PLATE 60
over the i signifying
Noah's sin when drunlcen and he turned upside down from or broke
God's laws though made in His most glorious image. It gives the letters
F A M and records Noah's land in Omo and the point of the inverted
A Spear that he was buried at Piketon:THUS- I =Noah I -^=Ham,dark
shaded left line and top of first circle death. P I K ETO V V Greek N.
name foretold b y Prophet recorded, I S this symbollic mound.
Plate 60 Sculptured on Rock at
Independence, Ohio, on shores of
Lake Erie with 44 inscriptions
inclusive of dots elaborately done
and a link in the endless chain
of truth. Stone was found under
earth and trees': a maple 18 to 20
in. stood the stump over this por-
tion: some of figures an inch deep
beautifully cut. Two men figures
•®
O 9
rrr
Qo o
oeoe
'..1 f 1 I 1^ ««'ftl^>^
PLATE 61 Compire with m»p of NH. HM.
were destroyed before a good description could be obtained of them,
when taken from the sand stone grit quarry. Life serpentine line about
6 feet long. It tells of the two expeditions of Marcus Agrippa Lucius
Furnius with S ships, and Fna Bahman with wife Chia: cuinmcnceineiit
of New Port Tower: birth of a son: pyramid at Colorado: Egg of
promise at Serpent Mound: birth ofChia'sson: death of Sassan, etc.
THIS WAS CUT BY CHIA AFTER COMPLETION OF
TOWER. Plate 61 — Ham and Noah return to Anona, and Ham to
.itgypt. ^^gyptians, Hebrews and Greeks co-existant. Time of writing
this— ^gypt, 1700; Greeks, 2000 of Woman and Mankind. Plate 62—
At page 75 of Divine Legation of Moses by relative Warburton is illus- platz t:
trated part of North side Ramessaen monument from Kircher on which is recorded:
Noah's, son ( I -=)Ham took his wife Fnr Anr back to the land after the Hood
a %^ D
u hereon
26
#
OD saw the sins, of mankind and their dead bodies, fell to the earth inhabited. In the Ark
saved Noah, Ham, Shem, Japeth and their familes, frpm land to the land where Ava and
Adam's descendants' had fallen from God and saw God's pyramid stand in the Lake
Oregon, the Universal King ruled, near the garden of Eden, God sent to build the Mound
of the Serpent, that Ana and Ham visited, the promise of God the Father and God the
Holy Spirit that his Christ upright line should be born on the square (plumb) upright from heaven a
son, Christ the great from sinful Noah and Lamar line pure his wife. The Lord's hand engraved the
Commandments of Trinity and Christ will teach, and China shall have the great spirit of Trinity who
is King of Kings and Lord of Lords. "On Golden Squares I Fa engrave, write, on Tablets, on Roll,
that Christ shall, the Bow, come and teach and his feet go forth to my children of earth line that fell
from my Commands." etc.
"A
SOFT
answer
turneth
a v\ a y
wrath'.
but grievous words stir up
anger." L'homme furieux
excite la querelle: mais
l'homme tardif a la colere
apaise la dispute." THIS
pi. 63 also from Cousin Rev.
Wm. Warburton's Works,
1811 Vol. IV, p. 199 gives
70 Generations from F.
Apries to Ava & F. Adam
their wives, sons and daugh-
ters, in cyplier languages
with stars and lines. The
line is proved on the Tablet
of Abydus at British Mu-
seum, by Holy Biblei,
Coins, Records, Wills,
Monuments, Tombs, Sac-
red and Prophane Histories
Fig. 1. is Natatas=Nietatis
offering religious rites to
her God of Father Afras^
Apries; thus to keep her
vows and Honor her
Father's religious instruc-
tions and the Commands of
God that the child should
worship God only by song,
acts, words, for Father CJod
gave earthly Father Afras
that worshiped God, gone
to dwell with God the great
one Spirit, who made woman, Man whose mouths shall Honor Mother and Father & labor for Christ
one with Trinity As she presents the 5 glasses of Air, Water, Milk, Honey, and wine glass broken — "I
thank God for the gift of a good father and I again come here to pray and say: — I have kept my vows
I have loved, kept God's Laws". The names of Alexander the Great & Attilla of lin^ at base of
Apries: and their generations are counted to Ava and Adam the children of the heavenly father God.
27
■yi^ifi-em tk/yS entwine ^^rle^
f^
1
^=a
IRTUOUS NAT ATAS PRAISING THE GREAT SPIRIT ONE ONLY GOD
OFTHK LIVING, UNIVERSAL LIVING, CKKATOR VVI lo COMMANDED
'LOVE AND HONOR THY EARTHLY PARENTS THAT THY DAYS
MAY BE LONG UPON THE EARTH WHICH I GAVETH."
Counting the 13
eight-pointed Ro-
man Stare of Gener-
ations of the great
Indian King,
Oratota she said "I
am of the line, and
wife of Fna Camby-
ses born June 9th :
3 76 7, mourn my
father's death, 3784,
give thanks that
from my gt. gt. gr.
father not a Pharaoh
drank a drop of
wine to fr. Noah."
Am comforted by
Cambyses who said
"my love is for
Thee, throw off
unseemly a n i m
human grief. Thy
father is with
Trinity God whose
two golden square
commandments we
have not small but
large for God who
built the pyramid in
A n n o n a , where
father Noah and
Ham came, as a fish
up from the waters,
and the singing bird
that they brought
from the Serpent
moundland; believe
in the God one of
heaven the Trinity
for in thy hands
thou mayest hold
the symbol of God
m
rm
that yours may have
built at Noah and
Lamar's land that
symbol which thou
boldest so precious,
that God the Great
Trinity, Omnipo-
tent, Omnipresent,
Omniscient, who
hath created the
Dog, the Sheep, the
Lion, and the vvon-
d e r s of heaven,
waters, earth and
life: the Thirteen
Solar months.
Seasons for earth.
His beloved line of
beauty, God the
Christ who is to
come and go across
tile waters and as a
bird of meekness
and song gladden
the heart." This
is translation of left
hand Obelisk with-
out some of t h e
names, etc. reading
from top to bottom
Plate 65— Afras is
represented in top
Catouche and two
golden squares of
Trinity, etc. Below
at right on plate but
left in print is the
name of Cambysas
and next Cyrus the
Great. Below
M a n d a n e and
C ^' R U S THE
GREAT, etc.
^^
T£
XALT H(R: AND SHE SHALL PROMOTE THEE: SHE SHALI, BRING
THEE TO HONOR: WHEN THOU DOST EMBRACE HER. I HAVE
TAl'GHT THEE IN THE WAY OF WISDOM : I HAVE LED THEE
IN RIGHT PATHS." "SAPIENS MULIER /EDIFICAT DOMUM
SUAM : INSIPIENS EXTRUCTAM QUOQUE MANIBUS DESTRUCT."
At a point called by the Indians
jf
Wa-bi-Se-Gon near the entrance
Nemakan or Sturgeon Lake, is an ex-
posure of Mica Slate*^ with Felspar
Veins, whicii from resemblance to a
Serpent, is regarded by the Indians as a
Manitou or God. See plate 66. It has
some resemblance to the Mound Ser-
pent, more to the primitive letter M
ti>:it has within its construction the
names of Irinity, Mary and Joseph
that from the elapse of ages has escaped
the recollection of the Indians
66 from D. D. Owen. Plate 67
that has on it the readings or records which
state that to the long line of .Ava and Adam, Mary
and Joseph that there shall be born the Son of
God Christ and this is engraved to record God's
promise that Christ would be born of the Line of
Noah "Ham, Shem and Japeth" "One With
Trinity One."
Plate 68 taken from a grave stone or grave Tablet in
jEgypt is a most valuable find of creation and prayer with
prophecy. Earth, Villages, Architecture, Arts, Sciences,
Alphabets, Habits, Sacrificers of the World.
Principal Parts Of Six All True Translations Of Plate
LXVIII Off An /Egyptian Tomb At Eileithyias Of First
Laws Commandments Of God F>om Which 370 Relig-
ions, Each Containing Parts Of The Truth Which By
Comparison With The Most Ancient Mound Histories
And Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Babylonish, Greek, Hebrew;
Pyramids, Obelisks, Papyrus, Books Of The Dead, Inscrip-
tions On Metals, Rocks, Ivories, Horns, Shells, Roman
Mss., Coins, Copper, Silver And Gold, Bronzes, Medals,
Dighton Rock, Newport Tower, Peter Faneuil Tomb,
Steel, Wills, Deeds, Books, Tablets, Grave Stones, Engravings,
Sculpured Materials, Hieroglyphics, Monograms, Rings,
Seals, Coats Of Arms, Animated anri Inanimated Creation,
Of Waters And Heavens, Nations, States, Towns; Cemeteries,
Catacombs; Spires. Of Mankind and Womenkind — The
Self Obeying Best God's Holy Laws.
,0 -T" «^ A^9
/y /wwsA /vvJ^ II 0
III I I I LV. \
•0 '^T^Wl^
» % » • VV. I I I
PLATE 68-GOD S GIVEN PRAYER
=D c4=> "4^ 1=4^ D=
■OLY GOD TRINITY GIFT PRAYER TO AVA AND ADAM. DAUGHTERS
AND SONS OF GOD ! TRANSLATION !
1
J^mtM "God, Our Mother And Father, Omnipotent, Omniscient, Omnipresent: We Bow
) Before THEE in adoration to thank and Worship Thee for tiie gifts of Thy Glorious Form,
Souls, Senses, Spirit; Air, Waters, Love, Planets Inhabited, Sun, Stars, Moon, Light and Darkness,
Blessed Labor and Rest: For the Creation of Mother Ava from THEE pure and holy, Honoring the
loving line of Beauty, Mother of the first and all human beings born on earth, Foremother of Christ
the Messiah completing Trinity with Mankind to overcome evil with Good Works in War for God:
We thank THEE for Creation of Adam to be companion and protector of Ava: Our foreparents in
THY IMAGE, Most Perfect, Greatest Gift of Love: Authority, Power to Ava with Written First
Roll and Two Tablets that THOU taught and Commanded to Copy, Chisel, Engrave Write: For
the Dog named for Faithfulness, (Spell backwards) Cow named for meekness and bearing in form
and features the symbolic primitive Alphabet: For the Birds, bearing in form honored with quilled
Pen to write. Sing Enchanting Melodious Songs of Praise and Worship of TRINITY, gladdening
God's Creatures for gifts to Ava and Descendants from Adam: For the ( Primitive) Alphabet, F. A. M. :
Commands: Instructions, Laws for all of us in kind loving kind with Godly Love in Purity Prefering
Unselfish One the Other: All ForThee For Thine Is Ever The Bright Glory, Honor, Power, Wisdom,
For All Time And Eternity Beginning And Never Ending As Thou Hast Decreed And Written.
A-M-EN.
SECOND TRANSLATION AT SENATOR'S ROOM
STATEHOUSE
AFTER LEAVE TO WITHDRAW THREE LAWS
ELEVENTH YEAR
God, Our Father, Omnipotent, Omniscient, Omnipresent: Universal Creator: We Worship
Thee Glorious Trinity: Thou Upright And Holy God: We Thy Children Bow In Reverence And
In Adoration Thanking Thee For Creation Of More Light, Purity, Pure Air And Waters: Sun,
Moon, Stars,. Planets Inhabited: Forcing From .^ir. Earth, Soul, Spirit, Vital Force, Waters, Our
Mother Ava After Thy Most Glorious Form By Ihy Perfect Handiwork To Be The Mother Of
Mankind Endowed With The Greatest Gifts Of Thy Holy Spirit Vital Soul, Staff Of Authority
Line Of Power, Skill Greater Than Man To Copy Thy Chiseled, Engraved, Written Rolls,
Squares, Tablets; And Blessed Labor: For protection by Dogs honored in name for faithfulness:
Cows, cattle, honored in name for meekness, prophetic, aid in labors: Birdi honored by THEE,
forbearing the quilled Pen, that THOU wrote the Rolls with, and to 'copy THY SACRED
ROLLS, Songstresses whose melody gladdens: Fish of pure waters: Animated Creation of Air,
Earth and Waters, that THOU gave less potions of THY Spirit, Soul to, than AVA and Companion.
J
«
^ =a ^ f4^ «4^ D
> > -^^^N HOLY communion one uitli Aihmi that IfUkl t;uiKlit Mes.sed lahor too, ^md in
t't' il Eden planted and gave to them!! GOD GLORIOUS (iREA I" BRIGHT AS THE
SL'N! ! ! We thank Thee that THOL' madest Lamar and Noah, F. Anna and Ham,
K. Raiiaka, and Shem, F. Talimar and japeth, for F. Mary and Joseph to be the
Lawful United Earthly parents of Christ the Messiah and SON OF GOD UNITED
WITH WOMAN KIND! ! ! ! As Laws, Letters, .Sonars, Symbols and Wonls declare on Land and
Waters. . , \ A-MA-N
Champollion's translation was: — "Thresh for \ourselves (twice, a) 2. O Oxen, 3. Thresh for
yourselves (t\vice, b) 4. Measures for yourselves, 5. Measures for your Masters" "(From Sir J. G.
Wilkinson)." He repeats measures and threshings, probably a sarcasm, not daring to publish ALL
THE rRlTH which we do that it may stand!
r H F r H I R I) r r u f i r a n s l a t ion
"GOD TRIUNE OUR MOTHER FATHER LINE OMNIPOTENT, OMNISCIENT,
OMNIPRFSFN'I', UNIVERSAL INSTRUCTOR AND CREATOR. In adoration we bow to
thank 'THEE for 'THY perfect gifts and our forefather Adam unto Mother A\' A who were made of
Air, Earth, Water, \^ital Force, and THY Holy Spirit Soul to be the parents of Wo Man Kind and
Ciiildren that one on the Square with 'TRINITY, go forth from the garden of Eden To Build The
Serpent Mound, Adains Co., Ohio, Symbolic of their fall and God's promise of Christ To Be Born
From TRINITY, man and woman of the line of Noah, Ham, Shem and japeth: To carry Two
Sacred Rolls, Two Golden Squares, Six Tablets. Eiglit Commandments: Seven Laws for All : NINE
Commandments for China ( Founded by I'"ut^Fluitli and named for son Cbing Hong) whose banner
shall hear the Dragon, GOD written thereon. Of HIS gift; GOD Songs: Laws: Coinmandments:
.■\lphabet: for Noah Lines prayers, pure. Clear, Bright as tile Sun, Moon, and Stars, Pure Sparkling
W.ATERS: Birds of Song whose resplendent gifts gladden the inhabitants of Eden, Earth, Planets
of TRIUNE. . , A-MAN-A
A FOURTH TRUE TRANSLATION
EIGHT PRIMITIVE RELIGION COMMANDMENTS FROM GOD
FROM WHICH 370
1 GOD THE TRINITY! WORSHIP ONLY THY GOD.
2 Labor Six Days: keep holy the 7th. Sacred Sabbath: Live upnght for God Creator Instructor,
Uni\ers;d: Protect, Love one'another: Honor house. Love God's animals, made for (Jod, woman and
man to help, protect, and sing for God and US:
3 AVA, ADAM, Children, line Write, Engrave, Chisel, Copy ALL GOD Written Rolls.
GOLDEN SQUARES, TABLETS SACRED:
4 Do not abortions, kill children, destroy seed of human life: Unite ( marry ) chastely beget
children Godly:
5 .-Mcoholics do not drink, even vini evil vile and die degraded diseased fall in dirt, mire, a more
unclean spot: Drink Milk, Bright pure sparkling W.ATFRS that the SWORD OF GOD SHALL
BE with thv swords and conqueror the vile destroyers of Happiness, Home, Justice, Laws, Mercy,
Order, Purity: WAR FOR GOD, Country State and Family, Self, ON Land and Waters: Honor
and obey Heavenly and Earthly Parents, Commanders, Rulers,
=a f4=» ^ (4^
OBER LAWS OF BEAUTY. DUTY, GOD, HEALTH, JUSTICE, LIFE: BUILD
^2^ ALTARS. FORTIFICATIONS, FORTS, MANSIONS. MOUNDS, TEMPLES.
t^^/ Tombs, Vessels, Warships. Guard Land and Water: God's Noah Line, Men. Women,
Children, Young Vital Forces!
6 GOD the Trinity witli Be One on the Square, Godlike, just, holy, pure, true! Do not
Covet, Deceive, Lie, Steal, Vilify.
7 ONE GOD seek, from knowledge, power, strength, wisdom: create.
8 Do Abstain from All Evil: Keep inviolate the Commandments and Laws: Love God with thy
whole being, heart, mind, strength. Love one another unselfish in honor preferring. Universal
Brotherhood Concord, at impartial Justice, uprightness as God loves you:
God said: — "Cut, Engrave. Write This for My Children of Earth and Planets and { will send to
you My Son Christ tlie Mcs.siah nnd (mhI Spiritual King of the Earth."
THE FIFTH TRANSLATION HISTORICAL CORRESPONDING WITH INSCRIPTIONS
ON DIGHTON ROCK, TAUNTON RIVER, MASSACHUSETTS,
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
BEAUTIFUL HIEROGLYPHICS AND LINES STRANGE
God the Eternal Mother and Father of Christ the Son to be Born from Mary and Joseph: —
"XV, I, Christ the Messiah, came by Ship from Roma, to be known Dighton Rock, Taunton River.
Massachusetts: and say 1, the Great Spirit, Chisel My Name in the Rock in My Father Fa(0=Fa=
God name) .^ On the Rock East of where Marcus Aggrippa Lucius Furnius, Driller of the Names of
God the Holy One and God the Father, and from former raised the Sea Green Flag: by Chart and
Compass :;: ^ I came bringing to the Land of Omo. Ama=Annona=Augustii^Amarica. foretold
by Moses, the Serpent Mound Land, bringing the Sacred Rolls, Squares and Tablets given to Ava and
Adam and Seven Laws, where Cain was born, given: I taught the Antedeluvians from the Squares to
be One with Trinity, that willed all United in Brotherly Filial Love a Branch of Triune the Manitou
God: I taught: 10 and 10 and 3 years returned to Roma: Thus my Father God ordered and made most
perfect, His children. Female and Male. Daughters and Sons line to count by the Stars. Completed in
Messiah Christ and Saviour." This and much more is read in the inscription from Dighton Rock,
that the tide conceals and reveals twice in twenty-four hours; fast disappearing, without (till this
hundreds of years past) correct translation lost, which, is honestly, carefully presented for Justice, verity.
PART HISTORY OF REBELLION IN HEAVEN OF SATAN, LUCIFER,
WIFE OF THE DEVIL
SIXTH TRUE ABBREVIATED TRANSLATIOIjI
COMPARE PLATES
\
HUN EVIL COMMUNICATIONS FOR LIKE WINES THEY STINGETH LIKE
an adder and biteth like a serpent: Virtue and Wisdom are the lawful parents of Happiness.
"Ambitious to fill, equal and excel the God Head, Lucifer and the Devil united in Satan,
created by God, rebelled and waged war with Omnipotent in Heaven and Air six thousand
years before Christ came, after in planets, seas, oceans, waters, children; men and women;
animals, birds, dragons,
livingcreatures, fishand §erpents,
inanimate, mineral, granite
kingdoms, for supremacy in
heaven, planets, earth, waters
and air, against God, innocence;
to destroy wisdom, truth, peace,
iKippiiicss and tlienisehes from
alcoholics, diseases, gold, hell
lire, evil, vile lusts, mal-practice,
power Satanical over all good
joys, acts, deeds, to change the
golden squares of God's perfect
commandments and divine laws,
celestial resplendent forever har-
monious as the music o f the
waters, forests, spheres in perfect
accord and unison perfected by
Omniscient Father of all good
and perfect model transplendent
pure, loving Creation.
PLATES ITEMS
FOR STUDY
7 upright lines
days of week, one
Sunday, seven
laws for the people
on waters and
earth: 9 lines the
Chinese com-
mandments, and
these lines
arranged form Greek
letter C, and wavy lines
symbolic of serpent,
dragon, alligator, also
Serpent Mound: S
points on wavy lines
point of /EgyptianStar :
under center half circle
I I I
V '\"J ' ' ' 111
ay v,*AAw vwA^
0.
PLATE 69— The Inscription
From U. S. History 1353
Coin, dug up by Indian al Mackln;
. of Imp Trojano AugusI
PLATE 70 -Top i
! Dighlon Rock Inscrtptlo
by bringing two ends to a
pyramid point we have the
Roman 8 pointed star and
eight God's commandments
and each point is the name Fa
and A by Gks. shown in their
ancient Alpha, banner point
shape symlwl: Square is a
monogram of Trinity and Wo
Man Kind, etc. Thirteen dots
at next square correspond to
Plate 14. God gave to Noah
historic of Christ and United
States of America which is spelt
fully out there so clear no
intelligent person can fail to
read by one minute instruction !
Reversed mounds are prophetic
of evils, alcoholics, inebriations.
Note:— Plates 69, 70 and
unconnected after
Christ came, two
before, two
squares on each
plate placed
cornerwise on
Rock with a line
showing them
retu rned: 3 O's
were ancient nam-
A. es of Trinity — 2
D., before Christ came
and 3rd. left lower
corner middle p 1 a te
added by Christ that
gives the time he
taught at that locality,
C in the O, his initial.
It has on Rock the
names of M. Agrippa.
L. F., Christ, Chia
and Fna Bahman.
I Sept.. 52 /
ISDOM RKACHKl H FROM ONK EN 13
TO ANOIHKR MIGHTILY: AND
sweetly doth she order all things." "For
there is no king that had any other bcgin-
"Wherefore I prayed and understanding
I called upon God, and the spirit of
"For she is more beautiful than the
rder of stars: being compared with the
ning of birth."
was given me.
wisdom came to me
sun, and above all tht
light. She is found before it. ■ "I learned diligently, .uul tlo
communicate her liberally: I do not hide her riches."
Plate 71 from plate 61 Bureau of Ethnology by J. W. Powell
1S'8()-1. Washington Printing Office,
1883, page 288, gives from a mound
in Fain's Island, Tenncsec:
2 1-2 in. in diameter Busy con.
With the greatShoshone family , accord-
ing to Professor Powel), the spider was
the first weaver, and taught the fathers,
etc. Translated: "Godat Edentaughtto
Ava and Adam weaving in the land of
the pyramid in lake of waters and said :
'I made the spider whose web thou
canst imitate but not his venomous ways,
etc' " Plate 72 of Universal Alphabet
was an attempt of a scholar unknown
to me for finding the primitive alphabet
by the modern grammer that obscures
true history and its laws and rules must
be laid aside if any satisfactory progress
is made in the search for most ancient
truths that were lost during the dark
ages of men. Plate 73 is one of my
continued research for the primitive now
found alphabet and key to true knowledge and
properly used will give great happiness to the
world's inhabitants, as on the plate of 72 arc
two squares 1 have thought he had ; then, as be-
low, he shows religious traits; may have found
that they remotely contained the command-
ments of God. Plate 73 lias at top the name
of God the Father and ■ Holy .Spirit, B. C I,
is the letter F in 26 languages or ditTerent
symbols in same. It was not then proved
that all the sj'mbols were of a religious
meaning, but since discovered that there is no
name but is a Godly term. Before degeneration.
The Univer fall Alpli aL ct
TheTahb cfConfanantt \
1
2
3
4
5
6
>
1. ^
u
7 ;
V B
^7 =
^ =
? L
l,r
7) t
%cA
H^ a
Vi =
?! =
^ 171
% 71
"hi^n
%-^:9
%x^
%^-=
% =
7>^^
1>J
'y B
"hv
%!^
fed
^ =
Ti n
^sji
^cS
%f
^ S
8
^
to
11
12,
lid
Oi y
%r
H^W
1^
lAcTatlc qfVawels
v^a^ ~SVOC»\lO\vJV<H^l.SiO'-
v>/^<ovcDC--Unl\^
gi g) g) e o VcS);i r-.B) f* o s^i a
Th eZ ords Prayer in XngVJk
PLATE 72 An ailtmpt lo find Ihc prirr-
languaje-Mik-Mjc. Canada Indian
alphabet symbols. Thanl^s
>r= dLi= Cs
£oypr/M @ 1
o
a.^
F=^
I
n )
' J
J
i
^V
' 0
3
9>
/J
f
f
ft s
?C
d
ff
Ai
77
f
C=3
to
p//maJ^ omK
LATIN-
■H£BmJ
Z
K
^^
Q
^
7 ~\
K
:d
3
R
<=>
"f :l A,
f^
n
4
A
\
^
i:::^
A lA
A
X
5
Z
t
t
X
X
7
6
N
WW,
V
■«^
1
1
V
D
7
0
(0
C5
0
0
V
8
T
I
I^
-f
T
T
D
il
H
®
s
LIj
B i
n
-m
1158998
D
INE IS A MOCKER, STRONG DRINK (Opium) IS RAGING: AND
WHOSOEVER IS DECEIVED THEREBY IS NOT WISE."
Cbapter Ift)
The Nine Great Coinmandments of the Chinese translated into the Ancient ^Eg^ptian Language,
gives, 5S 10 B. C. creatio'p of our world, Lights 5397, and date 4376 coming of promised Christ.
&: Gen. F. Confucius
Generation F. Noah
Secret Name. U. S. A.
F. Fut, the founder
of China
<3'
XABOR SIX days. Honor Ihe Sacred Sabbalh : Do NOT
EVIL: Partake NOT of Alcoholics. VILE POISONS
and (all from GOD and Heavenly Mansions; Be HOLY.
PURE, Worsfiip GOD only.
HLL GOD'S daughters and sons from Fnr Ava and Fna
Adam marry chastely line begetting in unison holy
Children on broad lines ol land and waters for peopling
Earth lor Heaven GOD the FATHER COD the HOLY
SPIRIT ONE IS complete Creator of Messiah. Mri and
Josf to whom HIS SON CHRIST is given the Brother and
Saviour of all Mankind ONE with TRINITY. Angels. Woman
and Mankind Honor Chisel. Engrave. Write the COM-
MANDMENTS. LAWS of TRINITY COD on the Square.
Rolls. Leaves, and Shells of Oceans; PRAISE GOD with
dignified speech, voice, music, instruments, acts, deeds in
spirit, truth, thought, mind, heart, and in all thy members
piously preparing for THE JUST Judgment with rewards
proportionate to Merits; punishment from exact JUSTICE
(or the evil practices done by. in and (rom the earthly body
THAT GOD ENDOWED WITH FREE MORAL AGENCY
FOR CHOOSING AND REFUSING GOOD, TO THE
WAR FOR GOD, HEAVEN, Mansions, Paradise. TRUTH.
HOLINESS. RULER. COUNTRY. STATE. EARTHLY
PARENTS, LONG LINE OF BEAUTY, LIFE, LAWS,
ORDERS COMMANDMENTS OF THY FATHER COD
WHOSE SWORD WILL BE WITH THY SWORD to
TRIUMPH AGAINST THE VILE DESTROYERS OF
HAPPINESS, HOME, MERCY AND PURITY : FINALLY
when PURE to CO TO COD and dwell in God for you arc
the Children from God and part of God that destroys not
COD
2)°
1 Godly Love ; COD is PURITY
TThOU shall NOT KILL ANY MADE In God-j Ukeness
>*' GOD only GIVETH LIFE and THE SEED OF LIFE
and GOD alone hai THE RIGHT TO TAKE LIFE, and
destroy THE SEED of LIFE ETERNAL ; LIVING bury thy
dead, MARK their graves with Tablets; Returning their
Bodies to Earth and the Waters. CO Soul and Spirit to COD
that GAVE IT PERFECT.
VI,
fl'NOLY IS TRINITY, all possessing Creator gave to the
"-' Womankind LIGHT ; the Sun. Moon. Stars, Planets,
Inhabited Land, Waters, Earth Food, Animated Life. Power.
Dominion, and Possessions: DO NOT STEAL from any Do
not LIE, Do NOT DECEIVE; Be TRUTHFUL, PURE,
HOLY, CHASTE ; ALL belongs to God of Heaven who
IS JUSTICE COD OMNIPOTENT
IIn a SQUARE thou art ONE WITH TRINITY, LOVE
" HONOR and OBEY thy FATHER IN Heaven;
HONOR. Love, Obey, Respect Thy MOTHER AND
FATHER. OF GOD. on Earth and Land and the Waters.
CXeEK for Justice WISDOM FROM GOD ; Heaven
»^ Waters, Earth, Planets and all things pure and i
THEREIN thy CREATOR COD IS OMNIPOTENT
OMNISCIENT.
/noO'9 Commanliments, nor
^^ Laws, Love, Mercy, Obedience.
Righteousness. Truth. Wisdom from un
PRESENT GOD: To do unto all othi
Justice. Labor
ngeaiile OMNI-
merciful Creator. Image of purl
TRINITY GOD.
e*-See Plates No. 10. 52 and S3
0=Fa which was the primitive name God the Benign Father of all Wo Man Kind on Earth
D
35
c] ^ ^ ^ n=
OP
N EARTH THERE SHOULD BE LOVE AND PEACE TO MANKIND: IN
heaven there will be impiirtial justice, punishment for the wicked: rewards for the
righteous! !
f
Fut, the son of Ham, and brother of Cush, Mizraim, and C;iiiaaii, was the founds
China and his monograminic name is in the center pi. 75, p. 35, Vide Genesis X, 6. & I, Clironicles
I, 8: also 8 on Dighton Rock and the monogram C of New Port Tower & seal on Peter Faneuil
Tomb: Put, or more correct of many spellings, Fut, that wrote a tablet Q Fa, Fo, Foe, Fohi
claiming his line as the son of God, Adam, Noah, Ham, and China was named after his son. Chin
Hong, and it was said to have been destroyed by Ching Hong, but that is ver>- doubtful, for plate lOth,
page 5th, translated into primitive languages, gives that as the tablets of Fut which he copied from the
tablets of Noah that God gave to them.
The secret name of China is called by Chinese "the Secret Eye" and is monogrammic of every
ancestor of Ching Hong's ancestors, female and male, to Adain and God.
Fnr Chia, wife of Fna Bahman, was a blood descendant of Chin Hong, that mud was thrown at
in allegation that he was the tirst to discover the making of wine from rice that was first made by Cain
and spelt "Vino." Cain drank serpentine evil 6c God's purity went from him and he cut and slew
body of upright Abei whose soul went to CJod," "Ivxly fell."
1st Generation, Noah; 2nd, Ham; 3rd, F'ut; 4th, Ching Hong; 5th, Hwang Ti; 6th, Ti Ku; 7th,
Yan; 8th, Shim. Fa na, Fa Fo, was another name for Fut and the A is an Arabic letter like unto our
I or 1 : Nh, Noe, Na, Nl, Noa, synonymous with Noaii and same before the nn)dcrn graminars,
partly destroyed history which herein are partly disregarded. PI. X, 2nd row towards right may be
observed the "Eye of China" — Morality, before Confucius name. Fa Na Ld which is the Chinese
name for Fernald, and under after rivers of first line the Chinese word of four lines= =, IL'STICE.
Tam.Vbl.j.J'iue. .
TfuTUmajiMiuau rusafjitarfiuytlitr
IIIUUI
W cEtaKiiD CO c X 1 ©
I n m IV V VI -vn vn -vmi x xi x ir x m xv
^>i +$ in + 3+H-h4<-l-V +-<-!-
xx XX wx xxx Moc L , i^ , y^ P^
f,' pt' Ui fC lilt p»- ju^p^iunlK^Ji^iUityanjef.'aii
mitt 1] ffl: 111 imsjaiM- 'i '^f V\ \f fi< lil U
{^ Ur pc pi xt li mu v' Jiu i^" JW )C ^--—^
nj DC uoK vi*«~v »■««':
A3..;il^ ►-nN^^
Jy/ )r^^^T'.fn!Pfimi>in^^^nr-'^
D^
36
"E
EMOVE NOT THE ANCIENT LANDMARK. WHICH THY FATHERS
HAVE SET. ROB NOT THE POOR BECAUSE HE IS POOR: NEITHER
OPPRESS THE AFFLICTED IN THE GATE."
T/ie Iq^ o/^ fur C/?/a a/7c/ fr/a Ba/)/r7an,
w/)oje names ar&^/? D/^/ito/7 ^oc/c
Taunton ^/Ver Mass.
PLATE 78
Plate 78. This ancient chart log recordeth the sea voyage to Anona of Chia and Bahman.
"I, Fnr Chia a descendant of Ching Hong and wife of Fna Bahman of Fars:=Persia to the Land of
my forefathers, Noah, Ham whose son Fut from the land of the pyramids to, China, so called from
name of Fut'sson Ching Hong, fr. Hwang Ti, fr. Ti Ku, fr. Yan, fr. Shim, my honored ancestors:
I fix my old family seal that of mother Fnr Lamar, wife, fr. Na=Fna Noah and place within seal of
my hushand Bahman lines * in seal of our Father Noah which I darken as the face of God was dark
for wine drink of Noah and his sin. From Ears we sail and row, June Thursday, 221 A. D. to
Omo=Ama, Annona=Augustii. Sunday we worship God and his face is no longer darkened and for
seven days we sail and worship God the Father and God the Holy One and Christ. With mariner
compass made in /Egypt and used by Marcus Agrippa Lucius Furnius and Christ, and Paul, (See Acts
XXVIII, 12 & 13) (and ahove Compass) at right of Coffin, and Seals — one made darker — also two
below: 1st, Killed by old foes at Tower; 2nd, Chia's on which she had pictured her grievous sorrows
for the great affliction that had taken her beloved Husband's and Son and a Child's
D
37
MH
f4^ ^ D=
^■P^EPARTURE TO THE GREAT SPIRIT. SUNDAY THEIR IHREE SHIPS, 90
iUI DAYS SAIL ARRIVED AT LAND OF PYRAMID LAKE AND WORSHIPPED
W rl ^^^ ^^^ HOLY ONE. TWO DAYS LATER THEIR ARMED FOES ARRIVED
^^M from Roma. Chia's son was born Monday A. M. of lawful descent from oldest line of
Noah, Antedeluvians line of Pyramids of Anona, /F,gypt, Roma, Fars, China, Babylon,
Arabia, Furni, (see picture writing on 2nd white space of Almanac Genealogical Chart Log, Pyramid
Lake at top, Arrow, Spear, Legal Square Document), squares and pyramid with 16 lines and the son
born. Serpent Mound and Egg of promise of God to Ava &<. Adam of Antedeluvians and Noah, Lamar:
Family Rake with ten lines and proved claim at third Letter Symbol in the Hebrew first word of
Genesis BRASFT, and the union of these shown in next notch, the Sword of C. Furni which is
claimed in secret name of Confucius, (as FAN A C. FAN EUS=present Chinese as Fa Na) (and in
the U. S. is found in Newport Tower, monogrammic construction) and Chia a descendant, (and his
Birth June 19, 551 B. C, at Loo Shantung and died 479, Had Son and gr. son Tse-tsi. And in 1671
A. D. 11,000 bore his name
74 generations:) the sword
China as son is here marked
SON: the Keys below of
of 221 with the three ships of
and Chia and top of third
and good heart of the ancient
the Oregon Lake, Mexican
ers (and to Confucius secret
pyramid" that gives it), four is
Peter Funal tomb, variously
name" spelt in 125 different
a deed, power of Atty., Wm.
Firnald, my honored father;
on History of Creation, True,
Mounds, 46, 47, 49, 50, (54,
also, on U S. Coin of features
New Port Tower, Dighton
PLATE 79— Masonic Emblems. Primitive Alphabet, Et(
of males, most of them b. in
part of C. Furnius and part of
with dot of sun or properly
lights bear the ancient date
theline,wards,thatof Bahman
column showeth the union
half pike united below with
and i^gj'ptian pyramid build-
name I have added the Pike
kept to this day in seal on
spelt, Faneuil ("Fernald-
ways^^) with the said seal on
Firnald to Jonathan Poor
and after it, Fnr Lamar's seal
which is kept in Plates of
55,) 59, 61, and this Chart,
of Temperance Washington;
Rock, and Roman Coins, with many others, even on the Ancient
Masonic Tressle Board that is above full of True History: Also Primitive Alphabet, God's Gift to
Ava and Adam. Returning to this above True Chart called by those not conversant with it or True
knowledge that on it a large volume might be with much profit written. We site the 5 ships of
M. Agrippa L. F. Cos. Ill at 2nd long symbol on space, white, of first four upright on right columns,
beneath 5 of Agrippa, the three ships of Chia, their foes two warships: Chia's good loving Hearts one
married union to Bahman long line (see B) the New Port Tower work that was commenced by
Marcus Agrippa L. F. and son left there who had four descendants and died: Chia's harmonious (harp)
construction in building the Tower, which Agrippa and son had not, but she completed for building
the Altar that God commanded in Omo where Sun first shone on his son Adam: the letter of Agrippa
and Chart of Noah and Ham: 3rd column — the mound copied on tressle board: dates 1533:
Masonry formed 335, January 1, when Cain slew Abel, and his children did wrong. (See plate of Noah
in 2nd edition) This was done by their foes who did acknowledge their claims to the Egg of Promise
for generations complete to Christ 4376 and revolving time to 44 Christ return to God of Annona and
JEgypt the Tower and the Rock (read from bottom up to top of Tower being raised) and even their
scales of right gave them the original squares, but they claimed the copy of them by Fo: the true right
they ceded to Agrippa's line the pure brave heart of Chia who was related, but» nearer in Fnr Bahman
her well beloved husband whose hearts and minds were in unison of the lines for 22 generations were
perfect, even with them from marriage with their line in the eleven lines, the glorious Sabbath they
as wounded F". Bahman
under Tower buried. The
(C X C °^ Agrippa L. F. line had ap-
partake of the waters of Corn-
worship of God their hearts in
Bahman 's eleventh descent from
to A u j; u sta, /Egypr, Omo,
for all that is recordeth in and
of Anona, U. S. A. On third
pictured heads of Bahman
Chinese head, dotted t\vo
showing shapes of arches
etc., etc., all confirmatory
entirety is too voluminous
record in conformity with
the Log Chart placed
and study. After writing
XXXVII, V. 16-20, refers
writings
H e b r e u-
are now
n umbers
daysofKing
in the
h i s glory,
w i sd o m .
8 1 were
iflgypt and
Fna Afras,
a t i o n s to
.Atta, son of
Mrai, son
F. Animim
F. Mizraim
"H a m=i n
Hm, son of
82 is very
thereon i s
languages most interesting historical and religious facts and data. "First principals"
gives in the primitive language the date 4376 of the creation of VVo-Man-Kind and the date 4376 of
the coming of the Son of God the Messiah and Christ pure Son of God. It shows the names of the
Trinity, and Woman, Man & Children, to be honored by birth of Christ the Son of God. Babylonish
I characters give Trinity first letter is the second of the primitive alphabet. At right hand the .-Egyptian.
D 1
nninjl
Seals. Symbols, Chan
4
\ D ^ 4^ 4. D
^^ro WORSHIP CHRIST AND TRINITY: FOR CHRIST THERE HAD COME AND
/-g GONE: THE GREAT SPIRIT, MANITOU, with the Indians, whose daughter had
1 ^ L married Marcus Agrippa L. F. son, line; and she was born of Oratotta the great king line,
^^^^ and she one of the Egg's, promised line. They raised the steeple together that bore upon
it the name of God, the Great Spirit, Fa, that they all unitedly worshiped (see Roman Coin
at, Chapter X, in Vatican, round O with ten lines in it on hieroglyphic 4th column below Pitcher, o,
in center of same the antrient name of Omnipotent God. ) After the triple union, monument com-
pleted. Inscription <
=Farenes was killed
union was purely perfect: a son
peared and all again joined to
munion and life in their line
unison and Chia showed forth
M. Agrippa I,. F. and true claim
universal brotherhood of Christ
on the Tower Altar in the land
Sarcophagus or coffin is
& Sassan their
Pyramids, 8 towers
and (two dead) cotfi
of pan reading wh
for this edition,
very ancient times is on
before you for evidence
I find that Ezekiel, chap.
39
^f
m
PEN THY MOUTH
lUDGE RIGHT-
eously, and plead
the cause of the poor
and needy."
On Plate S3, from Bureau of Eth-
nology, p. 272, 1881, are fifteen plates,
obtained from mounds, ancient graves
of Mound Builders: 8 cut in shells:
one in stone: three painted in pottery,
and four on copper. Four Pyramids,
top left Oregon, 10 lines: right, 13
lines, prophecy of U. S. A., Avon, Map
Chart of Ham and Noah : two below,
14 and 12 lines genealogy of family of
^Egyptian descent surrounded with
circle seal : cross points of compass from
N. to S., E. to VV. Plate 12, the Greek
Cross, lines signify Ava, Adam, Nh.
Hm: 6, going forth of Noah and sons
to people the world. 2nd plate the same
as first, except it shows that Christ the
pure was to come from impure menkind.
3rd. 14, 15 imprisonment, death for early
Christians after Christ. 7th, Greek, 33
circles for Roman Star, 8 & 13, Seal on
Peter Faneuil Tomb. 4 & 9, Garden of
Eden and four rivers flowing from it and
that the Mississippi. 9, Anglaise, English
peopled from here and their Flag Cross
U, gives this as Land of Raven.
5, Bahman & Chia and circles 5 pointed
stars of JEgypt & Annona, center the
worship of the Son of God. 10 repre-
sents one God Trinity. Hebrew 12Tribes:
the Squares four are the Greek initial for
Christ and 16 lines are four sqs. end sticks Log
Chart of Chia's and put the eight r together and
the two golden Squares God wrote commandments
thereon for Ava, Adam. PI. 84, Shells from Stone
graves, Tennessee. Record, 1, Christ licre teaching
the descendents of Marcus Agrippa 21 A. C. and
M. Agrippa L. F. here 29 B. C. part on Bone from
New Jersey ; the two Square Tablets he taught from
God's truths. PI. 85, 222 A. D. Chia Tablet
found 1841 at Cincinnati: 5 in. x 2 and 6-10 of fine
grain sandstone it Recordeth — "I, F. Bahman and
wife F. Chia cometh in three ships from Ears to
Omo, Anon with my five children and sailed
Thursday June 221 : 11 in descent from my fore-
father Marcus Agrippa Lucius Furnius who came Wed. B. C
D %m D
f^
f
(la. of the
KeKettetli a
\\ "Mill
■^
ERE WAS M A
RIED MY SON
of Roman, Hebrew
and Confucius d e-
scent to the Queen
Country of Oratotta and
;)n. Father Agrippa's heirs
born here are as the Trees of the Forest
Numerous and show Roman descent.
Am of Thecla and Egyptian forefathers
and .son of China Fo^Fut. We pursued
by two armed ships they, the — " For
further translation see Second Edition:
-Plate H8, Newark Works: Elliptical
enclosure 1250 and 1 ISO ft. in diameters
was .formed by embankments 12 ft.
high, 50 ft. at base with an interior ditch
7 ft. deep by 30 ft. wide. From this an
avenue leads to a square of 20 Acres, with .seven
mounds, symmetrically disposed. Many other
works for religious and military use occupy hun-
dreds of acres with their geometrical configurations.
One Octogonal Earthwork over SO Acres is con-
nected with walls 300 ft. with a true circle 28HO ft. ,
Parallels on opposite sides 100 ft., then midway
r
'"11(111
if
«— *— :,-H-^
PLATE 86 PLATE 87
across this an oblong mound 100 ft., and rises 8 ft. above walls "The Observatory." "A Relic in-
scribed with Hebrew characters and called the Ohio HolyStone": that I hope later to obtain photograph
of it. Plate 87 — Peru, Sierra da Onca, right bank Rio Doce was found a drawing in red ochre
recording: "Marcus Agrippa came from Roma 28 and 1 B. C. with 5 Vessels to Oma and began to
build a spear Uemple and on went to a River Rock and chiseled on it and called the land Augusti,
Ananoni and sailed away with two vessels 220 and 1 years came Fna Bahman and finished the Temple
Fort and went to the Rock & wrote: three vessels came and landed soldiers and chief with long spear
killed in battle long Chief and Chief or King of three Ships was killed by the Indians as an Otta stabbed
through, they united friends and rejoiced worshiped at Temple, Went out and son of Chia Married
Indian of Agrippa line and Chia went away with one V^essel." "16 armed vessels shall go forth upon
the waters," etc. PI. 87, No. 3, is to be seen most important symbolic, religious, Military and Historic
Works that add a long chapter to the long needed true history that is immutable and can never die:
N. B. Observe name of Trinity: primitive alphabet: and connection of the Y shaped to Square
Hebrew M with count of Six a *, also with inscriptions on rocks at Monegan and Damans Cove Is., Me.
^D
^^
3
WISDOM DWELL WITH PRUDENCE, AND FIND OUT KNOWLEDGE OF
WITTY INVENTIONS." Plate 89, an earthen ware copy of part of the history foretold by
God on the written Map Chart and given to Ham and Noah when he said, "I will make of you
a great nation who shall return to Omo form a great Country whose Banner shall be the stars of
/Egypt and people Anglais and both shall worship Christ the Messiah." 13 Pyramid points, two
Tnissing, and 13 circles, two missing, represents original thirteen states of U. S. Two pyramids on head that of
'Oregon and /Egypt. Serpent tail the Mound serpent at Adams Co., Ohio, emblematic of God's promise to Ava
& Adam for his
sin and Noah's
thereon shown
Plate 90, Con-
firming truth
depicts more
clearly the
detestable sin,
etc. Plate 91,
On the north-
ern banks of
the Wisconsin
rises a group
of mounds
\\' h i c h have
been a true
puzzle to ex-
plorers. It h, s
one figure IHO
ft. long: an-
other 16() ft.
arranged hori-
zontally and
perpendicular
as regards for-
mer. A series
of mounds. It
decl a r e t h : —
"The II child
shall reveal the
sin of Adam
and Noah to
U. S. A. and
his name is
r A o
the center
round body
^roweth Large
from sin" etc.
PI. 94, Group
of mounds at
Straddle Creek
Ava & all. etc.
and Plum h
Rivers, Illinois.
This mound
allegeth wor-
ship by Chia
and Fna Bah-
man of God,
The Father,
God the Holy
One and God
the Christ;
with their fam-
ilies. The great
darkeni n g of
the face of God
for killing
Christ and the
blood rep r e-
sentation H e
would call to
O O CCe
"^^ p. 1^ ^=n) !h"em1o" t'lieir
4^ |1 \\ sins, and the
F Si churches that
ri
slaughtered the
pure. Plate 92
recordeth t h e
promise of God
to ancestor of
Incas of t h c
coming of
Christ to be
born of the line
of Noah, Ham.
She 111 a n d
J a p e t h ( See
PI. of .Adam
and Ava) that
they should
teach from the
PLATE 94 PLATE-93 tWO Tablets of
God's gift to
93, Ameghmo's reproduction from Argentine Republic, Rock at Ceara. "A great Nation
^hall go forth from Hm. Nh. Sm, Jft whose Flag, 5 pointed Star emblem, shall Herald Freedom welcomed
42
PI.
^^
Fnr Chia of oldest
and Tablets of Purity
Japan and Rome
By Translation from
"After the Flood
had the Golden
Rolls loosed a Raven
Dove that returned
branch." TA VA N
A - /a I S U V n
named Fi Ru =
son Atta and Mra
Pyramid built by
Land, Omo. Ata
Nation who wor-
rejoiced the six
Ala Fu Cha through
and Bahman who
of M.Agrippa L. Furnius
B. C. Their names were
M Ama Oa L L O who
Father of all from His
picture of the Sun and
Inca & built Cu ZcO His
seen on the Rock at
F. Bahman from Att,
Mexico was peopled by
from Marcus Agrippa son
land of the Serpent of
wife La and a tribe
Agrippa were the first to be
tribe Chic C i and wife
fragment after reporting hor-
to be ever regretted that the
were destroyed by fanatical
be monuments of Idolatry,
peror Fo were said to employ
by Quipos and if that is correct
conversant with the strange
China in the primitive lan-
the upright line from Noah's
the Pure One in God. PI. 96.
Fort Hill, Ohio. Compare
AY UNTO WISDOM, THOU ART MY SISTER: AND CALL UNDER-
STANDING THY KINSWOMAN." "La sagesse ne eric— t— elle pas, et 1'
intelligence ne fait — elle pas entendre a voix?" Confucius wrote: — "The men of
antiquity used knotted cords to convey their orders." In This Quipo that beareth
the ancient sword of Furni, China and Japan on upper border that Fna Bahman, and
mnns OF cmciKH.
line with God's Roll
with which China,
were conversant: —
right to left: —
Noah and Ham who
Squares and written
that flew to Omo, a
with an olive
TI SU Y U='^ A V
Peru by Spaniards
or F. Ava line Ata,
of land of Lake
God in Mounds
formed a mighty
shiped God and
Nations: Chili the
da. of Fna Chia
married a descendant
and Ohrat-Ota 1, b. 628
Man Cocea C. Married
worshiped God the
Symbolic Name, the
Moon. He was the first
and their record may be
Anona, by Chia and
Mrai, peopled Japan."
the line of beauty Chia
of Anono the Mounds
Promise. Tu and h i s
descended from Chia and
followed by a more warlike
F. Macca." And here this
rible barbarities, ceases. It is
greatest number of the Quipos
Friars that conceived them to
The Chinese before the Em-
this mode of keeping records
Fut's father must have been
writing. The meaning of
guage is "Christ of Heaven,"
God and God's line is Christ
Ruins of Chichan. PI. 97.
PLATE 97
this with the History given on
Tablet of Abydus, 37, 38, 39, 40 and 41. It counts 68 generations of F. Chia's dead husband's
ancestors and 1855 years. It was built by Chia and Agrippa's descendants who worshiped God the
Father and Christ the Son of God and commenced Dec. 30, 223, 20 days after death of F. Sarssan,
finished 7 December, 224.
'%
USTODIET RECTORIM SAI.IIF'.M, F.'l I'ROIKGET (JRADIRNTES SIMPLIC-
ITF.R," Comiiifj to ijciicnition V and I'latc yS wc liavc tlic httiny out of an cvpcdition by Fiia
Ramanka against Omo even then kno\\ n as the land of Anonna, Serpent Mound, where he witli
his son Fna Usakaf where he got his head injured by a War Club and was Trephined and died
1632 B. C. at a cemetery of the Yucay Valley which Squier speaks of as a Peruvian Skull but is
that of F. Usakaf which in Gen. 38 the
The form of Operation is of religious
Squares God wrote the Command-
inflammation, and some eminent Sur-
not hesitated to attribute this to an op-
years, May 22. His son lived 222 yrs.
Plate 99. This Ax ploughed up
six in. long by three and one-half
American Ethnological Society had on
two above blade on groove for handle
sides of the blade, the appearance con-
and no proof to the contrary. Trans-
" Cyrus the Great": from S3rd to
Government it is of inestimable value
found name of "Washinton" 926 B. C.
is on immense Mound on high point
country, cone shaped, 131 ft. across
ft., 62 ft. high, surrounded by trench
hewn steps of stone showing an ad-
foot below the surface there was a
entire top of the mound: placed in
to defy the ravages of time in all com-
ft. wide, 11 ins. thick, hollowed in cen-
ft., relics in it a broken column
Plate 100. Religious Mounds com-
Messiah. Three Pyramidal interior
Ramparts the days of Labor Right
age of Christ who was born of Mary
in Heaven 10th of October 44 A. D.
Kind the right hand lower corner and
was built by Gnaeus Agricola
wife, 4431 M. Furna and the
Agrippa L. F. of ^Egyptian de-
where God built the first Pyra-
Oregon. Was it named from
count the 6 pyramids on Helmet
ical of descent, containing on
one God, copied on top of New-
C around neck of Christ united
waters edge of coin, right shoul-
branch broken offforT initialof his
Taunton, River, 4 dots of o, in
more truth from these Mounds;
symbols r. cor., bottom one God
kind : Sth pyramid two sitting on,
piece of bone removed is illustrated,
origin indicating the form of the
ments on. The bones showed ancient
geons, such as Nelaton and Broca, have
eration during life. He died aged 182
gr. son 224. See Catouches.
at Pemberton, New Jersey, 1859, about
broad, reported by Dr. J. C. Evans to
it 12 Characters, letters or symbols and
the former running around on both
sistant with the idea of its genuineness
iation: — " Anm^Anamin 2nd" to
71st Generations inclusive. To any
and most to U. S. as it records the first
Township 31, Greene Co., Missouri,
of a hill, 300 ft. above the level of the
summit, circumference of base 1,500
except causeway on North; rough
vanced state of civilization. About one
regular and solid platform covering the
position with a precision and firmness
ing ages. A flat stone 12 ft. long, 10
tre 6 ins. Margin around it about 1
found with a tooth and pottery,
memorating the coming of Christ the
Mounds represent the Trinity: six
hand upper Corner the earthly parent-
and Joseph 10th October, 4376: Born
and is ONE in God united to Wo Man
left after his death or translation. This
Julius C. Furna-Furnius and his
numerous descendants of Marcus
scent at Oma land of Anona
mid in Lake of Oma, now called
these works? See Gen. 96:
show-points of Hebrew Star typ-
top the round symbol name of
port Temple Fort, three o and
with Mankind, Pyramid on
der;,cross points of compass, and
mother Thecla, Dighton Rock,
cross compass points, etc. Much
6 lines days of labor, M and C
with Christ united with man-
a claim, the land of Ava & Adam.
"(i
•Sa^ hiP nicftt gerotlicft ouf ben SBtq btr »9fcn, nod) iiiitcr bit Dtrfc^rttn Sdjofi^er.
J. ESCHENBURG.
N MANUEL OF CLASSICLE LITARATURE by J
ADDITIONS, N. W. FISKE.
PLATE lOZ Stone hamn
Pembsnon. N. J.
|JJ<ApiOC3JNlHpOCOYKeTTOp0y
eHeNBOYXHXC€BCDN '
H V H Y L Sh. iftx
H n H I A :2: J K'
I
I
A
^f
PI. 101. VVe have important facts and
data before the learned gentlemen were
conversant with the Primitive Alphabet in
fact they had arranged it on this plate with-
out knowing the great good they were ac-
complishing. As it is on pp. XXII &c XXIII
described we may touch a few of many
parts: — "2 top lines 1st Letters symbol,
O and Q, l equal Fa, and in Gk. Omega,
which means Trinity in the ^, that is three
is one God, which was meant by Christ
when he said "1 AM, Alpha and Omega"
and even here the three letters I A M. is
the alphabet for 1 is an Arab A — an /t^gyp-
tian I, J, H, F, and three sides of A repre-
sents Trinity, last letter of ht hne is the
j£gygtian V shown (5) in Catouche under
sch, the 1st. letter 2nd. line is Greek TH
and symbol of THEOS whose English
name is GOD and half 0 is shown in Fig.
H. AAt C Fig. the right Pyramid represents
that at Anon^America. Plate B the first
letter is A primitive and earth picture, is pyra-
mid on lake Oregon land, Ohio serpent
Mound was built and the mouth of this sec-
ond letter is form of the terminal M=Y of
our alphabet. The terminal N is Hebrew A
called 01if=01ive. Left Catouche repre-
sents God's Face darkened.
AT THE MODERN OMEGA 2nd
letter and 2nd line from right is kept the
names of Trinity by first third God the
Father — 2nd third a Gk. C pointing top to
left, God the Christ, 3d part, God the Holy
One in Three.
Fig. D, reverse and at right hand upper corner read "God the Trinity Creator of Heaven and all
below, created Ava & Adam, that they two should be one pure and upright, like unto God their
Father: etc. At 2nd space bottom when reversed see picture of pyramid of Ham, told in 7th space
3rd of last three Hieroglyphics, in Anon that yEgypt copied of Trinity and Ava and Adam were fourth
Trinity God their Heavenly Father that came down to Earth. Opposite III is the symbol B
<J.<fT.-U.<JY.TTT.<<.V
^ mil K-.'-ii .<vi :<< .\ .
D.A.R.M . E.U .Un ■ • .
■<(i7 .^.frr jV'T(r'?VT<-i<A
a .jc!)- e • n .1 . 8 . H .tsa- •
PLATE
fror
(PI. H) and first in Hebrew Bible the Churches copied from and the same in /Egyptian, which cor-
rectly read gives the TRUE and FIRST PRIMITIVE RELIGION before its change by priest craft
and orJers from tiiosc in Authority over Nations. For Satan's sins and tiic emulation of mankind to
equal GOD, The Serpent Mound over the waters of i'Egvpt that hath the promise of Christ the com-
ing Messiah his son who would TEACH FROM THE GOLDEN TABLETS. It gives the namt
of Animim the son of Mizraim the first, etc. He the son of Hm, s. of Nh, s. of Lmk, s. of ancestry
to Ava and Adam the children of God Our Universal Father. (1st mention of Golden Tablets found)
45
1
Iva fiepiao) tois e'p.( dyanuKni' v-nap^iv^ koX tov<; &T)cravpov<; ainui' (finXecroj aya.6011'
Eav avayyuKu) ^vplv ra xaO rffxtpaf yivoficva, pvr]p.ovivaui ra tif aluivo^ apiBprjaa-i-
— Proverbs XX, 1
Plate 104. The Babylonish
Earth, Waters, and all therein,
with Trinity. That they turned
obedience God drove them from
brought the waters of the flood
another and led women and men
made in the image of God their
ambush for evil and war. Tiiey
they were fair, they coveted them
tivity and would not let them escape
of Shem, son of Noah, who led
land of Omo where the Sun first
Mother World Anon of God, the
he by command of God and advice
Good, and there abideth to the
As the body politic became more
the pure were wronged and
pursued. Some were slain and
the slaves and worse of their
angered God that they of
choose evil and use every
down totheir own depth the
i n g the innocent whose
tected them and they were
MENE TEK EL U P-
commanded and decree
ALL THE WISE MEN
■ Plate 103 is the Eight
Chinese nine which it adds
TRUTH TO ALL MAN-
Babylon, Chaldean, and
' 'The conf usionof tongues' '
Babel is untrue. Every
change and in all are to be
language of primitive times,
and he knew the primitive,
glyphics were the most
change by an ancient Phy-
anatomical illustrations
very first and all others were
history declarcth -
The Garden of
PLATE 104 BABYLONISH HISTORY..
- "God the Trinity created t h e Heavens,
Eden beautiful to behold. Mankind one
_^ from God and for their d i s-
the garden and for their sins
upon them for they slew one
into captivity. Destroying man
heavenly Father. Even lurked in
looked upon the daughters of men,
for wrong, led them away intocap-
their evil power. For Asshur, son
them from God built Pyramid in
shone on Ava & Adam. The
One God. Asshur s;uv the land
of Noah led them unto that it was
downfall of Babylon the wicked,
and more sinful while, evil was,
persecuted, as they fled they were
others led back captives to become
merciless conquerors who
their own freewill should
effort in their power to drag
godly. Thus as ever destroy-
prayers answered : God pro-
self destroyers. "MENE,
HARSIN." "For the king
went forth : DESTROY
OF BABYLON."
Commandments fame as in
to the Second: "TEACH
KIND." From Assyrian
Ancient Greek Languages,
at building the Tower of
twenty years all languages
found a part of the primitive
Christ taught in languages
Picture symbols and hiero-
valuable. The myth of a
sician of the alphabet into
needs an oblivion for the
copied from God's whose
in entity were celestial anatomical, of Vegetable and floral, animated Kingdoms^both of land and water
and all therein and thereon with a sacred meaning.
C^
n=^^
^^
IN yUELLA STESSA NOTTE BELSASAR, RE DE CALDEI. FU UCCISO."
"FIGLIUOL MIO SE TU RICEVI I: MICI DETTI, E RIPUONI APPO
TEIMIELCOMANDAMENTI:""PERCIOCCHEIOVHODATABUONA
DOTTRINA: NON LASCIATE LA MIA LEGGE. PERCIOCCHE lO
ANCORA SONO STATO FIGLIUOL DI MIO PADRE: TENERO ED
UNico appresso;mia MEDRE."
PLATE 105. Letter A is the Signet Ring
of Marcus Agrippa L. F. Generation 9 4
which counts his line to 53 Fna Anm on
whose Catouche is our ancient Seal that has
been carried down through the ages and on
gr. fr.'s Deed: both his Coin and Catouche
have III on it, marks dome shaped on both,
and the Arches in Newport Tower, and on
right hand of the Ring, the half curves —
Mounds of America, The Catouche show the
Serpent Mound in Anona over the waters and
many more parts in common proving claim.
Ring C is that of Cyrus the Great and has his
initials on it and a count of ancestry to gener-
ation 37 Fna Ramanka and his wife Fnr
Bunala.
PLATE 2. Seal of Cambyses Generation,
71 who married Niatatis da. Afras, king of
i'Egypt that he conquered. In symbols and
letters hereon is the Primitive Alphabet and
his son and wife, her Mother T h a la, &
Sammis and others with symbol of Land of
Mounds, Serpent Mound, Lake Pyramid,
Serpent of ^gypt from Mound, turn seal
upside down the crown or the cap
turned back, and a V, and Greek N,
of Pyramid and the top triangle is
etc. The I is made up of four lines,
the waters and Earth: the two lines
counts Trinity and Mankind & is I, J, '^d/l'uc
inverted V in hand on right, etc.
coin of C. Fonei and Seal O on necks
on head is the letter M, W, when
the A and I were remotely symbolic
duplicated by obelisks, count. Trinity
top representing Heaven, and bottom
upright 11 and 1 is an Arabic A, four
oi?SfJ.NC™' F, A, H, etc. A corresponds with the
Letter D is Signet of Gen 11, see
pyramid coin line, etc. Ring Seal 3
is monogrammic and compriseth the signet of Fna Nachro (see Catouches) gen. 68, 67 where
inverted pyramid is righted and the V of last letter is seen, reading from right to left, and 66 gen. of
So or Zo (see my coin of Z Zo=Fana Zo showing in the Z two VV or W when arranged in position;
the R tail represents serpent, oval, the mound the two united lines as I before & R is initial of Ramsass
gen. 65 and C his Mother Camilla, and V is Gk. N, initial of Namrut and Vashatana da. Nasa son of
Gen. 57, is seen at Seal 1 that declareth her to be of Hebrew descent from
DELUGE CONFORMING TO
THE TRUE PRIMITIVE.
MULTO IN PARVUM.
^f
I
«
^ MH <^ p^ p^ D I I I ■ II
Cbaptev D
fSAAC, JACOB. AVA AND ADAM THE SONS OF ONE GOD, WHO
COMMANDETH ALL CREATION AND GIVETH AUTHORITY AND
Power to Heart Rule unto Wo Man Kind of the Earth and Waters. Jesus Christ,
Messia\j of the line of God's Noah, Ham, Shem, Japeth that came of Anona: Omo,
Land of Mounds where Adam and Noah sinned across the waters to Araat and if^gypt,
shall be born, of God at Bethlehem, Judea, a Nazarene, Christ, from Mary and Joseph, in a manger,
whose coming shall be heralded by the bright star guide to the wise, and He to be the Spiritual King
of Purity for all people of earth, one in Trinity Universal God, 4376: and this is the wonderful seal,
mighty in history of the Robert Le Fort and his ancestry as per line back to God from Ava=Evc
and Adam to his wife, F. Alif,
made in form of oval Egg of
Promise of God lai of Serpent
Mound at Omo=America, and round O with dot in center means son of — and oval at bottom of seal
is an R=? Robert son of (on Crown is the same .Egyptian symbol name) King Robert, of France,
(Vs. Papa Urban) and in secret cipher records on U. S. Coin was kept Robert as Pike Family
ancestor (see plate) Generation 155. Cleopatra and Fna Antiochus Seal Ring, marked F on plate, and
Gen. 90. Gen. 88 and 89:— Seal Ring of Fnr Arsinoe and Fna Antiochus (Theos) Epi Fanous (see
Coins) B on plate. Generation 53: — Mariner Compass of Fnr Hazzalal and Fna Anm 11, (see
Catouche lower round body the compass and a Calendar, count lines, etc.) the needle on back side,
and at base below center pivot the crescent typical of mound and above other mounds built from that
of Anon which needle represents: by placing the bag shaped body on map at Gulf of Mexico turning
calendar underneath the needle points North and the other part has the lost head part of beetle on
catouche restored: therefore in both we have again the knowledge of /Egypt in its crude form giving
picture illustrations of truth. The lines and dot and circles make a division into six labor days and one
Sunday, 4 weeks a month, 3 months a quarter, 12 months one year. It beareth the names of Anm
1st and 2nd and Noah and Ham: etc. On other catouches find parts resembling this relic. At Fig.
H is Gen. 58 illustrated in part, viz:— Top two circles and line initials of Ava & Adam, shaded parts
the waters of Flood, two balls on Apex (reversed) of pyramid the two names of God and the deter-
minative symbol of Arlina and Bocharis. Thus even from jewels we may from work of engraver gain
facts and data, 3394 is this date and birth of Boccharis. The oval at right is the Egg of Promise and
it is kept on rings; Peter Faneuil Tomb as also Heart at No. 3. Humboldt in "Vues des Cordilleres
Plate 106 an Engraved Aztec Hatchet of feldspar passing into true jade obtained from Professor at
Mexico. This shows true knowledge of ancient history by beginning at left and read to right: —
"Before the flood in the land of Omo and mounds where the Lake Pyramid off from the Garden of
Eden was built, and mankind first learned by vessels to go upon the waters: then before Christ was
born and after the union of Trinity with Wo Man kind vessels were made that sailed N. & S, E. & W.
that carried the Golden Squares, Seal on Faneuil Tomb, a compass to sail the waters. Disobeying
God they were driven ( Frequent mention of Golden Squaresare found from different sources of proof)
L>s=
f^
N'
ORTH OFF THE GARDEN OF EDEN GOD'S HAND LED THEM AND
BY HIS COMMAND THEY BUILT THE SERPENT MOUND EGG
OF PROMISE AND MADE MOUNDS IN THE EARTH AND CEN-
turies passed: one half sailed to the West: one fourth to the N. W. built Mounds
and Vessels that had the Holy Name of God attached, built mounds and settled.
A branch went off to Gulf: one fourth went N. E.. and the finger of God pointed the way, and God
directed them, and
there they built
mounds and obelisks,
and were fortified and
mighty; before, a
branch went to the
region of snow like an
arrow, had the Lord
with them, and their
seventh day was
Sabbath, and they
worshiped true God."
Quipos, some kept
these records, others by
lines, cyphers, and
symbols from the
Squares.
'%:
"Gdy czynil w Egipcie znaki swoie, a cuda swe na polu
AL DEANS CONCEIVED THE WORLD AS
Plate No. 107: That may be briefly described as the
Upper abode of Trinity and glorious honored immortals, "The chosen best
who improved their talents." 2nd. The planets and their atmosphere &c
media. 3rd. Atmosphere of this Planet, Eanh, Rocks, Waters surround-
ing it, crust of earth and its inhabitants, and the molten Center of Earth like
unto the rising Sun beyond the Hills and Waters of Mother Ocean to its
Inhabitants. "Chwychwi sydd yn barnu yn ol y
cnawd; / nid ydwfr fi yn barnu neb." — John 8:15
"A
m
1 — f
-fff
fi'/
I ^
II
WISE MAN WILL HEAR AND WILL INCREASE
learning, and a man of understanding shall attain unto
wise counsels." Plate 108. Figure 2. The top of obelisk is cut off to
indicate the Lake Pyramid at Oregon: remotely ever the Triangle repre-
sented Deity and cut off point in j^gypt their descent from Anona^Omo
=:Ama=America as is now known by names. One of several true trans-
lations in part of this Obelisk hath: — "After their arrival from Anona that
the finger of Ham pointed out to his wife F Anr who desired to go to
the East (see Plate 106) (read from top, 2) God was with Anr and Ham to
whom He gave authority over the heart and kingly power to religious
upright Ham who He made Queen and King of JEgypt from Anona and
promised saying: Go forth upon the waters and 1 will make thee rujer of a great Nation for from
the Serpent Mound I will lead you: thy children shall multiply and thj^. people sword shall be one to
rule the long hne that I giveth thee, build Houses, temples, fortifications, one for Fna Ham family,
one for Noah, as I promised thy foreparents Ava & Adam's long line of World in the land of Anona,
saith the Lord, thy God, to beautiful singing women I giveth the long line, sons, daughters, of mine
and my children that I will send"
49
PLATE
'f
bv evil diseases.'
"01'
Sft^Kf^^
URE HEARTS. FROM O M A, ACROSS THE WATERS. FROM
F. VASHATANA:*WOMAN,OASAKON,BEAUTYLINES,FROM HEAVEN
and Mound Land of Anon they built, and I them, and pyramid, for bird like peace
and harmony, to multiply, for honor and glory of Lord, that, to each I give part My
Holy Spirit and wisdom to teach, as I them have taught, and to be thankful, and bow
down and worship me in words, song, that their spirit may be in unison on land and
One! As in love women and
' more perfect happiness on earth
Trinity united, one, a pyramid
see, perfectly thee keeping my
square ; and not fall down to
as Figure 1. I mercifully by
would worse destroy themselves
AG EIGHEACH A MUIGH.
FRAIDIBH. THA I A
.MACH A GUTHA:" Prov.
20. The Plate 109 is contin-
Plate 108 where in second
symbols the death of "Tta son
Mizraim s. Ham s. Noah s. Lmk
Frd (first Greek letter A and
Egyptian co-existant) s. Mhllal'
and Adm, children of omni-
Universal. Their mothers are
"Holy Eye of God seeth All."
Lmk, 11 day in land of ^gypt
Figure E is Tta who holdeth
son Att, gr. s. Atta, gt. gr. s. and
Hasafta." and Catouche ( F)
peopling the country of America
son of Ham, and Animim, is the
the Lord in the land of
symbols and the Altar is pictured
promise of the coming of C=
Adam (3 lines represent) Christ
& Japeth (see and feel C in
Justice is God, One: the Sword
Commandments and Governor
Granary Cemetery" ) (S) "Fa
worship as God commanded at
Pyramid Altar unto God with
Sheath Obelisk to the promised
Noah, I chisel the Catouche,
Perfection of Christ and God
(next Figure) God and Son arc
Kind united one in four lines:
Arrow shall be granted to the
his evil workers of Earth to
and do good all over the waters
Kings is with Us Thee Forever
O
waters. Trinity is Lord dj Love
men unite for greater lov* and
preparing for heavenly joys with
point of love, that my eye may
laws and commandments on the
darkness, hate, misery and death
waters destroy the diseased that
by evil diseases."**
HA GLIOCAS
ANNS NA
CUR A
chapter L verse
ued from the
column, last 6
of Ynm:^Anm=Anamim son of
=Lamech s. Mtfslh s Hnfk s.
Hebrew terminal M found with
s. Kfnn son of Anos s. St s. Ava
potent Lord God of Heaven,
mentioned first in greatest honor
Date of Tta death 2000 month
from land of Omo first country,
forth his name and ancestry and
wife Honor and Husband
right gives Ham and Noah as
=Omo by Oratota, Indian
son also that built the Altar unto
Mizraim: Figure C, count 12
in hand of Anm: 13, "t h e
Christ (see letter C) to Ava and
of upright lines of Ham, Shem
Dig h ton Rock) and honor
Obelisk (see plates of Chinese
Hancock Monument, Old
(the name of God) I Fna Anm
the Serpent Mound and built the
my hand I build the Sword
Christ to Ava, Adm, Lamar &
both I do not Mark for the
(the lines declareth) Almighty
Universal King that Wo Man
the Sword of God and Mankind,
Pure to destroy the Satan and
gain; worship God and Christ,
and land for the Great King of
*A German V is an English F: here first name of woman VVashatan A= Washington, Anona Land
Heb. A=N=0.
"Diseases shown from alcoholics and concomitant lusts more degraded than animals.
L—H f
l5
Pis^
^JQ
^ ^^l
mt
y^^'
* * +
'PORgUE JEHOVAH SERA TUA ESPERANCA: E GUARDERA
TEUS PES DE OS PRENDEREM."
■ BRAHAM. SON ISAAC. SON JACOB, SON JUDAS. SON FARES. SON
Esrom, son Aram, s. Aminadab, s. Naason, s. Salmon, s. Booz, s. Obed, s. Jesse,
son David, son Solomon,
son Roboam, son Abia, son
Asa, son Josafat, son Joram.
son Ozias, son Joathan, son
Achaz, son Ezekias, son
Manasses, son Amon, son
Josias, son Jechonias, son
Salathiel, son Zorobabel,
son Abiud, son Eliakim.son
Azor.son Sadocson Achim,
son Eliud, son Eleazar, son
Matthan, son Jacob, son
Joseph married Mary o f
whom was born Jesus called
Christ. St. Matthew, chap.
I, verses 2 to 16. St. Luke
hath chapter III, verses 23
to 58: — Jesus, son of Joseph
and Mary (who had: —
Jesus Christ the Messiah,
born 11 hour, 10th Oct. ( =
Ham==1 AV) 4376, born
in Heaven,Sunday,10 Oct.,
21 hour, 4420; da. Thecla,
b.Dec.(=Anm,) 10, 4378:
^ d. 10 June (==Enoch) 4442
James: Joses: Simeon:
Judas:" Jesus mentions John his Brother: Chapter VI, v 3, St. Mark, "James: Joses, Juda: Simeon
and Sisters:" Said Joseph, son Heli, son Matthat, son Levi, son Melchi, son Janna, son Joseph, son
Mattathias. son Amos, son Naum, son Esli, son Nagge, son Maath, son Mattathias, son Semei, son
Joseph, son Juda. son Joanna, soji Rhesa, son Zorobabel, son Salathiel, son Neri, son Melchi, son
Addi, son Cosam, son Elmodam, son Er, son Jose, son Eliezer, son Jorim, son Matthat, son Levi, son
Simeon, son Juda, son Joseph, son Jonan, son Eliakim. son Melea, son Menan, son Mattatha, son
Nathan, son David, son Jesse, son Obed, son Booz, son Salmon, son Naason, son Aminadab, son
Aram, son Esrom, son Fares, son- Juda, son Jacob, son Isaac, son Abraham, son Thara, son Nachor.
son Saruch, son Ragau, son Faiec, son Heher, son Sala, son Cainan, son Arphaxad, son Sem, son
Noe, son Lamech, son Mathusala, son Enoch, son Jared, son Maleleel, son Cainan, son Enos. son
Seth, son of Adam the son of God. (See pi. 320.) Ring of Christ's genealogy, two, reconciled.
Mari=Mary the mother of Christ was born 22 yrs. B. C. and killed by the sword 51 yrs. after
Marriage, of Mary and Joseph 3 Dec. 4375 B. C. Their or Thecla was the daughter of Mary and
Joseph and oldest Child born after Jesus. Thacla was the name of a daughter born of C. Furnius
that was a Martyr of the Roman Senate A. D. 26 She was the Writer of the Alexandrian Codex.
There were two or three more found by the name Thecla. The seal of Thecla photographed may be
seen at Gen. 95. Alexandrian Codex at British Museum.
Chap. XXXIV of Nuinbers. "And the Lord spake unto Moses saying,\Command the children
of Israel, and say — the border shall fetch a COMPASS from Azmon unto the River of Egypt, and the
goings out of it shall be at the SEA." The old not correct Chronology, 1452. Before Christ.
i>
N
OT UNTO US, O LORD, NOT UNTO US, BUT UNTO THY NAME GIVE
GLORY FOR THY MERCY, AND FOR THY TRUTH'S SAKE.-Ps. CXV, I.
From Bureau of Ethnology Plate 111, Fig. 5 is an important and valuable stone, line,
circle, star. Primitive Language, religious calendar. Tribal historic plate. Translation: —
"Before Christ, God the Father and God the Holy One at Anon land and waters of his
first built pyramid, Omo
son of Att and Mother Pjir
Christ as promised to A^a
announced by the Six
completing the union of the
Kind and Christ too made
and Great Spirit One i n
earthly Parents to be born
in Heaven 10 Oct. 44,
represent the 12 months of
and 12 hours one day of
Hebrew six days of Labor,
the D at base of Pyramid,
months a quarter of a year,
line spaces=12 Months a
Seth and his wife Fnr Sana.
Ala. that \vas also listed Ga.
tions of the National Mu-
inchaud about HI inches in
notches represent Trinity,
Moon and Sun & two last
date of deaths of F. Lyra
wife 2300 of Creation of
Obtained from Lick Creek
It is names of Trinity again
Center cross lines
Faneuil Tomb and
American Delegates at
and South, E. & W.
quarters representing
Ham, Shem, Japeth;
Primitive Alphabet:
Lake at Oregon and
mids in Mexico,
for burial of Phara-
an ancient engraving of
Denis Pris Du Pont."
vast fund of Historical
logical data. Figures
Etowah Valley Ga. and
Ala. Very Valuable.
Religious building of
carrying : — "F n 1^^
Mr. literally meaning
Children all byCreation
God promised to Atta the
Mrai that the coming of
& Adam 4376 should be
pointed Tribal Star thus
Holy Trinity with Wo Man
of the Earth and Waters
God, Man & Joseph his
IDth. Oct., Sat. 4376 and
Sunday." Twelve Arches
year: 12 Hebrew Tribes
light: Six pointed Star
Sunday by inner Sun, and
triangle and Moon 3
that multiplied by the white
year as by the Calendar of
Fig. 1 A Stone Warrior River
In Archsological Collec-
seum. It is nearly one-half
diameter: Trans.: "Nine
Woman, Man, Da. Son,
seen inside two of Trinity:
and Fna Tta 2000 and his
Ava & Adam. Figure 2.
Mound, East Tennessee,
and a Calendar see Fig. 5.
duplicated on Peter
and Flag sent to
Hague :showeth North
dividing the world into
the Families of Noah,'*
One of the letters of
beareth the Pyramid of
the building of Pyra-
JEgypt; one in France
mond, that writer has
—title "Vue De St.
Incorporated in it is a
Religious and Genea-
3 and 4 from Stone,
Stone found Carthage,
PI. 112. Showeth
name Fa=God and
Miss, Fnr=Mrs., Fna
God honored his
from Himself Pure.
^^■f HIS PLATK, 113, OK IXIOHWAY OF TOMIt
'/^ I AT UIZEH. MOST WoNDKItKll.LY WISH
I I .KGYI'TIANS KKl'T IT AS I'AKTOK
^fL T H K I K O W N A N D INTERNATIONAL
^i^ HISTORY FROM THE LAND O I' oMo
WHEKE (iOD'S FACE WAS FIRST DARK-
ened from Adanrn ilisobedience. See sluuled O ii|ii>er
right hand coiner which is the monotnmiiiii<- historic
connection nitli Schoolcrnft's excellent 185.") (iovernment
Work, r. S. riintiny: I)et)ui ttnent. That in this for
inability to use the separated symbols it will be less clear
to those not conversant with Indian and .K-ryptiiin
primitive symbols and 34 tongues. Therefore till Second
Edition it will be abbreviated as much as po8sii)le.
King I'owhattan of Virginia was a descendant of
Oratota. Five .Nations were defeated and iiicorpDiated
with the other nations descended from sons of .Marcus
Agrippa Lucius Funiius, and so strong they became that
the facial expressions or features resemble the old
Romans unto this day. Peace was enjoyeil for many
suns, or yeai-s. Mohawk, from .Marcus, is now coiiKiileied
the oldest Indian Language.
I'late 114. .\ picture of Christ from .Mosnic Circle
around head count 8=Koman Oestent: ariaiigenieiit of
5 & 6 Circle Star ^-Egyptian & Hebrew lineage : upright
part over head means descent from Japeth ; note Seal?
as on Peter Faneuil Tomb. Two of the supporters rep-
resent Thecla & Their ; Theela, the da. of Mary and
Joseph wrote the .Xlexamlrian Codex. (See features,
pi. 114)
a D-D i^
Plile 1 13. From my Oilord Bible. >€gypllan Tomb Gateway.
One of the mosl important historic platea in the world.
(iREAT SPIRIT IS THE NAME OF O.NE
ONLY ttOD, IN 170 WAYS SPELLED.
I'n-Kii ilKiirr II.vnh S(jiaiikk
Transliitioii : — "Aniericiiii I n d i a n s"
"Yatatonwatea is Washtoii, .^. 2rj((0 yeare
before Columbus era.
1. Atatar son F. Runala and F n a
Raiuanka, Gen. 37 and I4t) vrs. after the
lieluge: Had-da. 2. ATAR.N da. 3. ATOKN
da. 4. ATIAN s. 5. ATORN da. 6. ATTARNA
da. 7. OARTA da. 8. TAROR da. 'J. OTR da.
RATANOs. 10. 0N.\TA8. 11. ANOTR da.
12. TA.NOs. 13. MANTOs. 14. AORT.iNR
da. 1.''.. OITAR da. 17. A IOTA R da. m. Anm
ll.Y'atonHata.(seecoiiipii8s ."3)17. A.NHL'RY
da. Oratota 1 m. 18. YATONWATA b. 1049
B.C. 19. ORATOTA 11 s. Same name 20,
21, 22. 23 Oto Tar Ho s. 24. ORATOTA s.
and the same names to Gen. I'M : = XIII. In
the reign of King Oratota XIII and s. of (i.'i.
Columbus came to .\inerica=Onio=.\iiona=
.\ugusti=.\ma — etc. The Keatahkiehroneah
were fighting w\fh the neighboring tribes and
were injurious to the frontier settlement. The
FiveNations sends Thoyenogea with an army
of 5000 (men) Warriors, defeated and drove
them to west side of the Ohio River, laying
waste the country, attacking other tribes"etc
"(§
'h/.h/.l iu.,,^ phn^ t
YR* ARGLWYDD YW
iPLL-r • [t-l-r^.U.-^^i, ^5 , 9-^. ^ . , /^/.^ 1]
FN YR' ARGLWYDD YW DECHREUAD GWYBODAETH • OND
FFYLIAID A DDIYSTYRANT DDOETHINEB AC ADDVSG " "LLYFR
PENNOD I. 7. "WINE IS A MOCKER. STRONG
deceived thereby
Y DIARHEBION
drink is raging: and whosoever is
Plate US. This bottle of baked
Missouri, and the rays of equal
red. It has the date of 2300, and
Lyra & F. Tta, F. Mrai.& F. Att,
F. Ava &; Adam Creatioft. It is a
in worship of the Great Spirit or
wa t e r bottle, not wine, to be
called Fa Oma Wa (God's Pyra-
consists of two V's and reversed is
represents God built Pyramid and
V is a Greek N and this A of
Adam and forced from Garden of
turned upside down or fall from
striped parts find on U. S. Flag and
the third letter of Genesis of Holy
point, a Pike, the Babylonish A &
glish of Turkish name Allah^
Plate 116. A Monogrammic
of arrow point. Fa, shaft, of I, ),
Mound. Right hand Mound of
the initial C of Christ and the
and G^r, also arrow point, a
godly Abel, of Cain that slew him,
broken Commandments and life
Cain who was drunken; and slew
Plate 117. He counts it back
Ramanka Averaging48and asmall
ation who did not live to a very old
He counts ten Queens, Four
nine very important Chieftans.
Agrippa Lucius Furnius
Bahman Ferenes and that
Spirit, ONE GOD, and
Mounds. On his neck
Pyramid ; the dot, a son
from the large circles on
line langunge: — "Christ
will come again in His
"1 will establish my cove-
shall all riesh be cut off
flood : neither shall there
destroy the Earth. This
nant which I make be-
PLATE
A:^
PLATE
ever)' living creature that is \\
the cloud, and it shall.be for
o t wise,
clay was found in a mound at
size are white, brown and bright
names of F. Adr & F. Anm, F.
Fnfr Mra &: F. Atta: date from
water bottle ustfd for religious rites
God the Holy One. The holy
obtained from Pyramid Lake, then
mid Lake Water) W at top
letter M, the center inverted V
a German V is an English' F, the
Hebrew language. After sin of
Eden two VV represented them
Pure God Commandments:
also Stars points. In .'Egyptian
Bible, A is an inverted V, an arrow
suord point: initial letter in En-
God's name.
Bow And Arrow is a picture symbol
H, F. Left hand the Serpent
Antedeluvians: and remove string
string is in form of Greek letter C
pyramid, again initial letter of
broken lines of Bow typical of
line of Ava & Adam's son Abel by
his Brother and went to Judgment.
67 generations to 37 F. Bunala &
fraction of years. Suns, each gener-
age due to warlike habits.
Great Chiefs or Kings and
That he is a descendant of Marcus
and Fna Chia and
they vvorshiped the Great
h i s Forefathers built
Collar is picture of Lake
of CJreat Spirit had come ;
Chest it states in cipher
has coinc and gone :ind
Cireat Glory." God said :-
nant with you: neither
any more by waters of a
any more be a flood to
is the token of the cove-
i-LATE 118 RAIN £,ow o,. ARARAT tivccn me and you and
th you, FOR PERPETUAL GENERATIONS: I do set my Bow in
token of a covenant between me and the Earth."
54
^^^-^f^:^
"^^M
^^P
^m
Wi
H
m
^^m
^
Bmeiican ITnMan on
Creation of tbe XlXIlorl6
FNA ATATAR WRH-TEN
AFewCHINESESYMBOLS
ANCIENT
Y a n d(=) Masculine of
Perfection, Heavenly, Light,
Warmth. Yin (=) Fem-
inine of Imperfection, Terres-
tial, Darkness and Cold.
Combination {=)=. Piety
(=)=. Morality( = )=^.
Justice (=)==. Wisdom.
iEEGYPTIAN PRIMITIVE
(=) Water, Earth, Death.
m, n, I (=) I. J. H. F.
Heaven, Honor, Uprightness,
Fa, or God. 0=God.i.=Lord
25S
o
GENERATION 38 FN*
GREAT SPIRIT THE TRINITY CREATED
the HcstvcDS «nd Eirih, Woman »nd m»n like
unio God their Creator at Omo, Lake Pyramid
Land. Anonna and the creaiures of earth and
water», like for like in their sq. God had cre-
ated light for them man and woman he gave
dominion, 6 days of blessed labor jih Worship
of Great Spirit, Fa Fo=:Lord God of earth and
heavcD. With Coil, trinity, Wo Man Kind, one
with God when Christ son of God comes then
united one in four, shall be they in Trinity God
be : HE the universal King in unity when pure
hearted like Theos a small pail of mankind
thrown of the earthly and waters body to be
resurrected to God and eternity. For their
Tree of life shall bear &uit meet too Trinity ac-
ceptance, though bent of the straight line.
PEUS in centre of square, a Pyramid of ever-
lasting strength and beauty, one with four, the
stars lasteth five points on the banner to be
U. S. A., with (Jod protection, on four sides, at
Eden:=Aden, Lake Pyramid Land, Oino=Oma.
Anonna, saved shall be by pure hearted in war
for God. Country. State, and Family, beareth
Sword. Lord one God Allah uniting the NA-
TIONS, Four Pyramids like unto into one
people THE EGG OF PROMISE OF GOU
to Ava and Adam, recorded at Adams Co., Ohio
to destroy the Serpent of Lust and Greed, evil
pierce and Serpent head crush by Roll, power of
Great Spirit. All primitive religion is purity.
LINES WRITINGS OF
CHINA.
Double combinations and signs
or symbols of remote, changing
of primitive line languages.
^(=) Heaven. s^(=)
Moisture. =-=(=^)Fire.
(=)Winds. =-^(=)Watcni.
= =(=) Earth. =^(=)
Mountains. ==( = )Thundcr.
'a=Trinity. A=Theos. ^=
Birth. '»^Dcath, Earth, etc.
ATATAR. Pl^TE 246.
THE SERPENT OF LUST, GREED, ALCO-
HOLICS VPLE mankind destructive Evil over
mounts the Erth Then trying in hypocrisy using
the name of God to mount the ladder to God
over God to aided by man Serpent Tail the X
to cheat God and of Hell capture Heaven!
Captured, pierced shall he be by Omnipotent
God of Land, Seas, Universe and all therein,
notwithstanding his Devilish bloated Mammoth
body ilnkeih out to devour a vast expanse.
Even God the Superior Trinity that he the
DEVIL hath covered God, Truths, and a great
expanse of the Earth and waters with lines of
darkness and vile serpentine evil by bloody
slaughters ol God's pure, even taken the fallen
E to use for innocent victims, whose bow string
is broken and anchor is fouled in their remains;
260
261
The Great Spii
Omniscient, on<
even Chrisi
It seeing, Dieu goetb forth the
with His Saints and conquereth
cr attempting to hold from evil
God in subjection whose pure
Deus saints shall walk over and build hill mounds
to cover his remains and the spark of purity that
remaineth in him shall go to God for judgment
and earthy part corrupt into mother earth (or
punfaction that the Commandments and Laws
written by God and given to Noah and Ham,
Shem and Japeih are literally ful6ile<l on waters
and land as declared by God in the Mound land
of Omo. A powerful armament cometh up from
the Sea to destroy pure shall not prevail. I
GOD Trinity am a Fort and Fortification in the
land of Lake Pyramid, Omo at Annon, Omni-
present that guardeih my own and lay their foes
deep beneath the waters ol the Sea and earth ol
the Land, CMC, ihai I protect Not idol worship
^iS»
1^
271
4
276
277
278
^ ^ ^ D
(Breat Spirit pra^^er
<'OD UREAT OLORIOIS WRITKR,
KXGKAVER OF TAHI.ETS, SlilARES,
ROLLS. BLILOER OF LAKE PYRA-
Min, MOINTALV. OUT To AVA,
AUA.M. PRAYER TAIGHT IS ! !
OLR CREATOR PLRE AND PERFECT
OMNIPRESENT. We thank THKE for
nil THY Blessing, Gifts unto us who
bow before and worship with thankful
hearts for th.v love n 11(1 niercv and for-
triveness of 'uir sins evil twriJentiiie coin-
mittetl that lowers us beneath the ser-
l>ent thiit crawls on the eurtli, and
praise thee for blessings making the line
ofC. S. the line of beauty, Christ Saviour
thy |iroiiii»wl son to l«e born of the long
line of Ava and Adam by Mary and
Joseph and KLN'G of all thy perfect cre-
ation which even the turtle by drawing
in his extremities doth honor THER by
forming the nyuibol I,ORI» that Thou
taught to Ava, Adam, created Thou
them in thy glorious, bright image and
taught them wisdom, honor, love, ord-
er, worship, to do blessed labor, record
days of work, and praise thee on Holy,
sacred Sabbath and knowledge of thy
planets. Sun. .Moon, Stars, thy wonder-
0U9 gift of Lig!it,Heat, CTaceful beauties
for them ana their inhabitants, and
THOU the bountiful Giver of Christ,
thv Son from thv love, to fall for them
andthat TRINltY IS JEHOVAH KING
SUPREME OF KINGS AND UNIVER-
SAL CREATION, ON LA.N'U AND
WATERS.at the Pyramid i^ke, of Oma
=.\merica, Oregon to be called, the
.Mound Land of TRINITY, EGG OF
PRO.MISE CHRIST. THE .\II><SIAH.
WASHINGTON TO BE OF THIS THE
F.\THER EARTHLY AND SPIRITUAL
OF HIS OMO the .Mounds Land, the
Wigwara Land of Nh., Hm., the Ser.
pent Mound of AVA and ADAM A. OMO
there first this prayer was given and
praises; worship of the JKH<^VAn by
Fna .\tatar;rhe first .Nh. document, God
gift: worshiped CREATOR OMNIPOT-
ENT GOD OF l^)VE AND RIGHTEOUS
JU.STICK who here completeil most |)er-
feet the ('reation, giving song birds of
pniise before the (X)mmondnientH. Tab-
lets to our foreparcnts first that goeth
forth to have Dominion over the whole
earth to make honoroble penceuble kind
loving gifts to this world of Nh., Hm.,
Sm., Japeth, our foreparents from God,
gift,bles8ing,obeying God even from the
land of Gold sprea^ling broadcast, pure,
holy, gift* of love and coiuiuoii n-lutioii-
ship to the Uttermost bounds of the
l-^rth, that God here has so bountifully
blessed us with, that they too may ever
join 0 S from God .Made Pyramid O.
with pure holy Praises, Worship, Songs,
Deeds, icts, Tx)ving one another ns fiod
loves us. Forever and Eternity then
God cometh, we pray to forgive us all
our sins, and calleth us Home to live
nrithout evil in paradises celestial, in the
enjoyment of most perfet:t bliss, giving
Glory unto the SUPREME BELN'G GOD
OMNIPOTE.NT, OMNISCE.NT, OMNI-
PRESE.\T GOD. BE THINE, GLORY,
HONOR, PRAISE frTERNAU AMEN I
N/^Ry
i
286
^BCrVE ONE OF SIX TRANSLATIONS
This Pharaoh Fna Atta is told further about on the right of the Center panel of Plate 113 where
is pictured his coming here in vessel: the Indians he is the Chicftan of with Tree of Genealogy: the
Pyramid of /Egvpt built after the Lake Pyramid, Oregon, U. S. A. : the faithful Dog watching
pyramid gen. tree line: the .Mounds of Antedeluvians and the GOLDEN SQUARES OF GOD'S
COMMANDMENTS: the i€gle: Sun darkened time of Flood: the earth as it was: pure: as it shall
be again pure: the Garden of Eden etc. etc. Also sec Plate 113 for much further true history that
belongs to all mankind. Especially observe the Mariner Compasses in top center square. Ever it is to
be remembered that the picture hieroglyphic symbols are the condensed stenographic writings of the
celebrated wise itgyptians whose wise comprehensive alphabet was the three symbols God gave to
Ava and Adam which I here show modern descendants to meet the requirements of these later days:
O A V that are imperfectly represented in our English Alphabet as F. A. M. G. F. Adye writes on
Ohio Mounds, Vontonville, Spencer Co." One mound covers about three acres, is 20 feet high, and
C(wered by alxnit 12 inches soil on Corn Island, near Troy, under a layer of flat stone .skulls of giant;
larger than the whole head of man were found. 20 or 30 other mounds filled with large skeletons,
relics of copper wedge, etc. Near Petersburg, Pike Co., Indiana, covering 4 acres at base,oneat top;
70 feet high, «cre found immense sized skeletons, hatchets, arrows, etc. marking a race of giants,
showing great antiquity. See Henry B. Dawson's Historical Magazine, Morrisana, New York
t *
o
"A JUST WEIGHT AND BALANCE ARE THE LORD'S: ALL THE WEIGHTS
THE LORD'S: ALL THE WEIGHTS OF THE BAG ARE HIS WORK." "BUY THE
TRUTH AND SELL IT NOT: ALSO WISDOM, AND INSTRUCTION, AND UNDER-
standing. Righteous lips are the ^^^^-^ delight of kings: and they lovcth hir
that speaketh right." The full soul ^^B^S^^^^ loatheth an honeycomb: but to the
hungry soul every bitter thing is /J^StS^^^^S^mk\ sweet.
The symbols on Plate 288 in the
double round O the names of God the
having been in visible person with a
Noah and is leaving it: the two first
Lake Pyramid, Oregon, etc.
Plate' 289 is a Mexican ancient
red hand at Serpent Mound,
drowning world: the Tree
justice in rebuke for evil
Bird the promise of Christ
Creator God and the trunk
is the primitive M and Nh.
shape of Heb. terminal M.
Plate 290— A n i m a
men, also letter symbols
the Squares of God
Plate 291 is a scene
Sculptors showing, not "a
engravers at work for
and Tablets Commands
Truths in History that
Tablets are seen at top
denoting Trinity and
coming Christ at right
tools for engraving and
nating Ava and Adam
separated, and Tablet
tool he finishes
of God: tail
Ham. From
now read
Eden: right
O m o , etc.
have remains of
mounds and
ing traces of
ants and migra-
ne primitive language pictures by the
Father and God the Holy Spirit as
Compass in the Ark with Nh=Noe^
pyramids built aher or copied from the
ustration of Flood, and the black and
Adams Co. :. the Ark and
of Trinity in giving lawful
deeds committed: the flying
to Ava line promised by
and three branches of Tree
familv: the water is in
head, traits of degenerated
while above is represented
mandments, etc.
from the Egyptian Stone
sandal cobler," but skilled
perpetuating the Squares
of Deity and remote
can never die. Five
with three projections
Egg of Promise of
God's Square. At left
ong line tool desig-
line, two Squares not
with h i s mouth and
t h e seal name
part line Noah,
great Square
Garden of
the Mounds of
Several nations
t h e primitive
pyramids show-
early inhabit-
Babylon is b Distort
®0=GOD, Trinity A and n=V=/^ Establishci His Temple in Righteousness, Truth, Purity,
Holiness, Love, Power, Might, Force, Ram, Church Militant Commanded to send forth all armed
to fight the Foe to his destruction with bis-spear and battering ram, mace, globe and sword, ax and
spear, OS)®ball and shot, horns and dart, with arrow and bow of God, as declared bv the mouth of
PLATE 292
Babylon Hlslory
Anr that His arm shall shoot the arrow and from His darkened Altar pierce the Serpent lust that
tempted mankind from the first of the world Adam to the last who have all sinned to God the Christ
=C, to be born of Mary and Josf, Jews, the Tribe Christ singing of peace the pure Son of God, one
with the Trinity one GOD FA: CHRIST slain by WINE Imbibers of mammon Serpent lust indulg-
ers which seductive Satan has and will tempt the world till HE be overcome ceasing to then beguile
sinful men and women which have rebelled against God and his holy teachings so far that one Church
has, the Temple, Ruled over by Satan's the Devil's dominion, under two aided by the Scorpion over
two Churches for money and the sinful man and woman have stained with Rivers of Blood, death and
evil the name of God, the Holy Altar under which is the pit of destruction. A=>^^Fa, the Baby-
lonish name GOD whose High Priest Failed to destroy the Serpent that even there intertwines, enfolds
his victims from even Godly Altars, built before .-Egypt. Tribes of Judah, A.ssyria. China, Confucius,
Buddists. China, founded by Phut^Fut whose .son Ching Hong, its name, that it was desired to dis-
grace by charging him with making Alcoholics from Rice: F. FUT= n2 ' and 0®a. The
^Egyptian, Assyrian spear point pierced, but did not reach the heart of the serpent Lust who defeated
them from inherited evil; wine; thus fell Troy, Babylon, Greece, /Egypt, Etruria, Rome, and under
the sign of the Cross has not fallen the Serpent but overcame in the slaughter of 150,000,000 Protes-
tants and Roman Catholic Martyrs that even the Crescent aided this aggressive slaughter: Although
all these hath a part of God's Commandments and Laws of Life, joy. Paradise. That from all of these
shall come the Pure Holy ONE Church of God: SWEET and pure is the musical songs of praise by
the sacred Bird Blessed by our Creator as She stands on the monogramic universal SYMBOL of Cre-
ation that in front the honored faithful Dog Blessed by God guardeth them.
^ fzA, ^ D=
WITH FIDELITY NOT SURPASSED. BOUNDLESS COURAGE FACING THE FOES
OF MANKIND THAT HE LOVES AND PROTECTS, UNCHANGEABLE. MUCH LIKE
the .-Egle who boldly looks at the Sun in its brightness typical uf the glorious attributes of Christ and
God who will gather all his children in loving care as the bird its young protecting with his powerful
arm and strong hand, which will cast the spear and shoot the arrow that will pierce and kill the lustful
Serpent, if he will work blessed labors trustingly, believing and obeying our Creator with his 170 names,
all One Ciod.
Genesis, chapter IX,
enlarge Japeth and he shall
and Canaan shall b e his
Mutenna. 24 generations
son of Japeth and 36 from
Menophthas son of F n a
and brother of Fna Usakaf
/Egypt after h i s brother
Mounds, Omo. Proof: —
Bible: Catouche Gen. 37
sculptured head, etc. On
and right of Tablet which
a matter o f surprise that
this announced for c o n-
that are never idly spoken
These symbols on Plate
name of God of day and
Fanueil Tomb at Old
monogrammic.and the X=
God: the exploded worship
toward the original pure
Sun was taken to spell the
Pyramid shape repre-
Mexico, JEgypt and the
PLATE 293. GEN 39
ENOPHTHAS.
^=R-^0'
Plile 297
PUte 298
Mexican ® for da/, and IMBV fo' beaTCB.
The Egyptian symbol for the Utter is Ir^"^^-!.
PLATE 294
in the land of ^gypt. The next represents Suns, Stars the
nine pure of heaven and earth S plus four in flood, a son of
the four watching armed incoming foes from the waters, a
sarcophagus, tomb, Ark. Third symbol an emblem of
earth, waters 4 boats, heavens above, five pointed Stars, etc.
Plates 295, 296, 297 and 298— These very interesting let-
ters, symbols are a clearly defined bit of religious history to
further establish the primitive religion of this planet: first
name under the authority at head of this Alphabet Adm of
heavens God and earth land pyramid and on right Heb. H,
i^gyptian C for Christ: 3, the universal and v: V 4, God's
name B. C. Fa Fo: S, "11, a lamp with flame from which
the Ph : 6, an enlargement of aforesaid M and v elongated,
names of earth planets, waters. Trinity, etc.
Plates 299, 300 and 301— One of the Primitive Alphabets
in fourteen hieroglyphics is Fro, first O name of God, second
represents pure Woman, 3rd son: 2nd two pyramids sVords
points, Greek, Delta, Ava.
verse 27th; — "God shall
dwell in the tents of Shem:
servant." His wife F n r
from Dodanim son of Javan,
Ava (k Adm. married Fna
Bunala and Fna Ramanka
Gen. 38 had the Throne of
went to the_ land o f the
Papyrus Prisse and the Holy
and the Monogrammic
Papyrus hnd facts on left
are very clearly shown and
they were not long before
firming the words of God
unto men.
294 represent Fa the ancient
night, and the Seal on Peter
Granary Cemetery is there
10 literally meaning One
of the Sun is an advance
worship of God when the
name of Fa=God. The
senu the pyramids of Omo,
Altar built unto the Lord
?!
•^
r.
F— F
F-V
MYSTERY PLATE FOR
J.H.F
THE WISE TO SOLVE.
"Hamyaritic characters in hiero-
of great Pyramid cf G i z e h '
in land of Lake Pyramid, Q, at the
and Japeth with wives, the remnant
the great waters from IVtssissippi
Adm line of Nh and Hm from
ment li;ie of Ancestors: forth went
in the Boat, Ark or Ship over the
Mount Araat where unto God
Mound Land Omo over the sub-
and over our Ship that moved
was our Guide, Pilot, His Hand,
glided into the safe Harbor of rest
again lighted our ways with more
THIS BEARETH "THE
and Nh, Hm, Sm and wives,
pletion of this Pyramid, III Ham
Omo." The primitive alphabet is
figures. A, at top and M the second
points are Modern and the Plate
ABBREVIATED TRUE DES-
"A, B, C, Inhabited Land of
Noah. D, the Pyramid Lake,
Land=A'an: Deus Tablet and
F, E, Tablets written by Fa=
gon Lake Pyramid: Two Golden
and God the Holy One, that here
the Sun and Moon Light. I, The
River, Mass. 2nd Rock back of
Ocean where Mankind dwelt be-
Eden. L, Gulf of Mexico. M,
Euphrates, Hiddekil." N's points
proclaim Truths. T, U, V, OMO
drank and slew Abl that our Laws
tice otherwise: Noah here became
Land of Omo were Buried. Z,
overcome and Christ go
Mounds. X,Y, andZ:
doth see the attempt of
to even capture Omo,
and all therein by the
censed evil to by its poi-
year in U. S.
ica the Omo Land is il-
stars on the under parts
that was honored Lod
American /F.gle, waters,
Trinity, one only God
earth and all therein:
tions arc here warned
coming foes. See His-
No. 310. Correct-
this book.
glyphical inscriptions from interior
"God the Creator of Ava and Adm
Deluge, went with Nh, Hm, Sm
of long line of womankind over
gulf, M with Lamar of Ava and
C(ol()rado) Adm. and Ava monu-
they from the Serpent Mound
drowned world, God our Pilot, to
guided Us, His long line from the
merged world : Trinity was with
safely onward to Araat. Trinity
Voice, Compass, led as we gently
and peace, the Sun and -Moon
light from darkness into Day.
GREAT SEALS OF LA M R
Dated 1656 was the Flood. Com-
=Oct., 1700, and this Day sail to
shown. F=the O at bottom
symbol. The top three letters and
310 Mystery Plate. I add it.
CRIPTION of COSMAS MAP.
Omo^ono, by descendants of
Oregon, U. S. A., and Mounds
Noan's Flood.
God. 4 & 5 OMO Land: Ore-
Squares written by God the Father,
first created two, Ava and Adam:
inscription Rock at Dighton
1st J, Land, Omo, beyond the
fore Deluge. K, the Garden of
R, S, Q, Rivers "Pison, Gihon,
of the Compass that Heralds shall
Land, Pyramid Lake where Cain
would hang. God meted out Jus-
Drunk: Noah and Ham in this
Man from God shall see those evils
to the Omo Land of the
Trinitv one God will, or
the Triple Crown Man
the Pyramid Lake Land
Whiskey, alcoholic li-
sons kill 300,000 per
Plate 309. Amer-
lustrated by thirteen
of the domestic Cow
blessed by God : and the
worshiping men of
of the Heavens and
that with all good Na-
against your present and
tory repeating itself,
ly solve for a present of
* °=
"1
UT TO DO GOOD AND TO COMMUNICATE FORGET NOT: FOR
WITH SUCH SACRIFICES GOD IS WELL PLEASED." "EL QUE
VUELVE MALES POR BIENES, NO SE APARTARA EL MAL DE SU
CASA." "LAS SUERTES SE METEN EN EL SENO, MAS EL SENOR
DISPONE DE ELLAS."
Plate 119 appears to have been covered by a mask, but not by any desire of the writer. Is it not
the duty of twentieth century inhabitants of earth to remove all the masks of the 360 religio'ns that
have in each beauties and much purity a great blessing. Generation 54. 1022 before Christ, is a
picture herald of his coming from the Lord, for all lines of earth, and waters, and 55 his union of
wo man kind with Trinity, etc.
From Plate 113, 2nd
date of 1010 B. C.
Fnr Anannaah who
Sufis, b.l074;d. 1022
another rectangle is
guage says Christ
man and woman
Mary and Joseph,
around the world
land C : her right
her heart, and left
genealogy that is in
of t h e long panel
the Greek letter C,
over the initial of
the ship upon the
his complete union
kind, showing on
lets and square gold-
mandments and
mouth unto all tlie
(shown in the tall
copy from the small
pyramid made by
Spirit guardeth them
thrown the green
menced by Marcus
Furnius and com-
scendants; eleventh
Rahman whose
the Hebrew Bible
their symbols of the
both of which were
Greeks."
hieroglyphics declare
rectangular part is
with the name of
was the wife of Fna
and over Mound is
a comet and its Ian-
shall come from God,
with the initials of
and that he shall sail
even unto the goUlcn
hand is placed over
points to the tree of
right hand corner
which forms with it
and this tree roots
Christ and below it
waters sailing toward
of Trinity with man-
bottom row the tab-
en of God's Corn-
Laws that He by
inhabitants of /T-'.gypt
Pyramid made by
white inside, Anon
God ) who.se faithful
that forth will he
Flag and tower com-
.Agrippa Lucius
pleted by son de-
generation, Chia &
names are given in
when translated in
/F:gyptiaM languages
co-existant with
The next four
'Christ, birdlike with the Commandments and Laws, the One of Trinity
will be the Spiritual King of All the Earth, earth of God the Father and Holy One from which part
Christ to come will bring Peace, Joy, Love unto the Rulers of mankind and to Universal Creation.
As seven days is the week the 7th call Sunday for Trinity, Man, Woman and Children for the cycle
of Ava and Adam the first man is completed in Holy, pure Christ of God united with them, spake the
Lord sweetly like the music of the song bird to cheer Adam at Anon, where I'^iuilt the Pyramid, and
House in the garden for Ava and Adam, with pure sparkling (bottle of) waters-for the line that God
gave unto His Most Glorious Name for all the Earth and Waters with gift of Christ and the Primitive
Alphabet written on the Rolls and Tablets supported by the Arms of Justice upright and Holy."
o=
"J
SAID, O^MY GOD, TAKE ME NOT AWAY IN THE MIDST OF MY
DAYS: THY YEARS ARE THROLGHOUT ALL GENERATIONS. OF
OLD HAST THOU LAID THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE EARTH :
AND THE HEAVENS ARE THE WORK OF THY HANDS."'
— Psalms, chapter CII, verses 34 and 35-
i
V
q V
3 .V
1=
6 ;*■
c
3-':
I
5 ^
(J ^(1
PLATE 120
Platel21 — Bas-rt
at Co pan, Centra
statue delineated has
Chia ( Bureau of Eth-
shows the primitive
mode of worship, and
mention li e r wit h
Tlie date of licr death
thereon.
See Prehistoric
pages 571, 575; date
whicii mentions the
Fnr Cilia's da Chia
w ho had Zenobia,
whose das. descendants were living in
descendants in Arabia in ISth century,
tioned. Said Zenobia Septima, Queen
had .^thenodorus Vaballathus whi) had
bia was a ver>' beautiful woman, and
nese, Arabic and Latin Languages. She
genealogy to Ava and .Adam as per line
Faraohs by primitive language. It is to
nobia's written genealogy by herself.
Plate 122— Valuable if not spu-
is, or was, truthfully copied from
PLATE 121. TOMB AT COPAN
leif. East Side of Statue
.America. The first
on it the name of Fnr
nology). This Plate
religion was here their
the thirty six symbols
much more history.
May 6th, 2 3 0, is
World by E.A.Allen;
^ upperlefthandcorner^
Newport Tower, R. I.
m. Arab Chief Hucula
Queen of Palmyra
Rome the 5th century, and her sons
In Robbins' Journal the sons are men-
of Palmyra, by her first husband Valabal
three sons and three daughters. Zeno-
conversant with ./Egyptian, SyriacChi-
was Queen of the East and wrote her
through t h e .-Egyptian Pharaohs or
be regretted th;i
I cannot find Zent
rious ( ? ) Therefore is important, if it
/Egypt. Errors co.st more than truth.
.
a:
^u
0 ~
2C o
■i
W ^
;^
^?f
CO
2i u
i^
c«
s
V3
z ?f
■:^ -S
t'
CO ui
tri
>
<
Q
W
1
T
h
!^
si
V 1
s- U
^
ll
S
<
.H
Z
5^
Z
c <-"
o
X
•G D
<
CO
< s
"A
-g^^
PLATE 124 SANSCRIT DOCUMENT
FRIEND
loveth at
all times,
and a
brother is
horn for adversity." Frov.
xvii. 17.
Mercy to the evil
proves cruelty to the inno
cent.
When we commend
good and noble actions, we
make them in some meas-
ures our own.
We can no more cor-
rect all the ill opinions in
world, than we can heal all
the distempers that are in
it.
A divided family can
no more stand than a di-
vided commonwealth.
Nature is like quick-
silver, that will never be
killed.
In nature nothing is
superfluous.
There are none that
fall deservedly so unpiticd,
as those that have raised
themselves upon the spoils
of the public.
Nothing goes wrong
when prudence is the guide.
•Counsel and wisdom
achieve more and greater
exploits than force.
O SHALL THE
KNOVVLFDGE OF
WISDOM BE UNTO
thv soul: when thou
hast found it. Then
there shall be a revv ard, and ^hy expecta-
tion shall not be cutoff." Searching the
archives of suppressed truths, attention
was called unto the great Oceans, Rivers
and Brooks "ith the Mountains, Mounds,
Pyramids, Monuments of God:
This Plate 126 has new features that
every school child should be familiar with.
And right corner beareth the true histor>'
of Creation by Fnr Lamar the sinless
wife of Noah and the ancient corner seal
which with her name she affixed is the
round O with lines on at Mt. Araat con-
taineth the holy name Fa of Deity. At
lower left hand corner is the grand al-
most indestructible stone Colorado, at
Monument Park, hard formation that
Genesis describes as containing the re-
mote ancestry of all the living people of
earth that exist to-day as the progenitors
of all coming persons whose very names
are told in the Decree of Cyrus the Great
for about SOO years from the present era
and the same may be seen on (pi. ) Envel-
ope attached to the Hancock Monument
at old Granary Cemetery built by Massa-
chusetts, Sovereign State of the United
States of America, in form of the Sheathed
Sword of C. Furnius the Martyred son of
Marcus .Agrippa Lucius Furnius a lawful
descendant of C. Furni, father and son,
Orators and Historians, B. C, whose
orations and Histories disappeared during
the turmoils that were said to have laid
"250,000,000 of pure noble Christian
Martyrs beneath the sod by fanatic anarchists that from much labor continued persecutions infinitely worse than
Christ suffered: have been reduced to 150,000,000 by the Churches of Roman Catholicism when in power: Prot-
estantism when in power: Mohammedism when in power with the foolish boast that the seeds of the Church arc
its Martyrs. In primitive religion all worshipped God and no martyrs nor blood sacrifices: why not turn to it?
Herein is given the key! The primitive God given religion! !
64
PLATE 125
Lake Neuchalel.
of Fa Fo name.
20 In. tn length,
used In worship
of Cod the Holy
ONE.
OR THOU SHALT HEAT COALS OF KlUE I'PON HIS HEAD A.M) THE Loltl) SHAM
REWARD THEE." "Remove not the old I^mliinirk : iiinl enter imt into the l'ie|il« of tht
Eatherless : for tlieir Redeeliier is inijrhtv ; He Hhiill pleail their L-aUNe vvilh The*.."
Plate 125— Right hand
upper comer is the coat
of ar lUB drawn fro ni
sword of pfi by General
George Washington to
cousin Captain Tobias
Fernald. It hath the an-
cient Persian crown crest
with the Rattle Snake,
used on Flag in American
Revolution. The Fire
Altar and name of God,
the Shepherd Staffs or
Crooks refer to Faraohs
or kings of .Egypt, when
they reigned. Coming to
the lower left hand cor-
ner, find recorded the
music a 1 Rattle Snake
lirook named ironi pre-
4 miles long and its outlet is
Crossing, Wolfboro Center, New Hamp-
shire. Near this brook is drawn the
Rattler and ancient C. Furni sword, typi-
cal, and at right a Roman Maiiner Com-
pass. Above this the Historic Ronmn
Line Coin, (see Plate J94) Then First Ni-
leus Cataract. Right u|i|ier corner, an
Assyrian Compass. Top right half, is
a Roman Compass. \ pike iiead points
to the Pike familv JiistDiic ring an<l Coin
of Kaisa PEAC same PIKE family: he
raised higher than the mountains is em-
blematic of return of his spirit to God,
whose justice trialsareniore
perfect than letinetl GOLD.
The coin of .Augustus
appointed of (iod shows his
Furnius descent. The Fish
Compass cm Saucer at Her-
lin .\lu.seum IS THAT OF
HAM .*i NOAH rsED ON
ARK FROM MISSISSIPPI
RIVER TO MT. ARAAT.
Pliite 127— The Iron
Grave Tablet with features
photograph of John Fernald
S. Service .\m. Rev., A; wile
Marv .Savage, and Colonel
Tobias Fernald witli Abra-
ham Feniald. It is'lielieved
to l>e the one, with recor
given by .lolin Ferni
Boston Society anot
of his family on which
recordeil the death of .1
Fernald, that beareth
Crest, thehigh Roman Crown
that his forefather, Charles pla^
VIII, King of France, was crowned with; and paiil a i
disputed with lirother Haiazet for throne of .Muliammed 11
PI. 128- The "Papyrus Prisse'at Paris Nation il Libr.i.
ogical and Religious data. Facts and Truths that may or n
Decree when translated into the primitive .Egvpriau hingui
ants to A. D. about 2700 and ends. Two generations bor
The Primitive Languages in Papvrus Prisse otficiall,
husband, Fna Ramfarka, Generation Nuiabar 31. 19:).) B
PLATE 127. FERNALD IRON GRAVE TABLET.
^^1
ANOTHER PROOF
11 to Pope Alexander
copv of letter SfUt t.i
I lie Si.\th foi- Zizit
llisturic
h.-GiHat
eneal-
descend-
1 Decree.
decree of Cyrus the Great, aiu:
0. 'Th<!
ith chronology set correctly forth.
65
4 o ^ ^ ^ □ ■
^^r^^'VEN THE PROPHET JEREMIAH SAID, A-MEN: THE LORD DO SO:
*"*■ ^'— ' JEREMIAH, CHAP. 28, V. 6." TRANSLATION:— "ONE THOUSAND
?i'
Nine Hundred Years Before Christ wrote Fnr Afr and Fna Ramfarka under and
above our Seals for the Glory of God who commandeth daughters and sons of to
write off his written Rolls for Ava & Adam: We write for our children, daughter Fnr Tatar
da. Noa, son F. NahkA- and F. Af Anr: and our son Fna Huni, copyists off. Roll of CJod and
writers of Anona long line of God: In the Pyramid land of /Egypt from God built Pyramid over the
long waters at Omo Lake Oregon Anm copied in Altar built hereunto God a long way off from Ser-
pent Mound of Oma land where the sun first shone on God created Woman and Man that was built
by F. Adam, St, Cain and Godly Aiil as wrote F. Saio forefathers of Afr and Ramanka that wrote the
promise of the coming of Christ, promise of God of heaven, the Trinity Lord God, gave to Ava and
Adam, as wrote /ana daughter Cain and wife of Abl, and his daughter Sana, who married St, who had
the God gift of Laws and Commandments, writings of God gift to Ava and Adm. Sana and Zana
wrote the record of Cain that wa< drunken from wine he made and killed Abl that was Godly: that
Cain married Ka Na Fata Far his twin sister: mother of Zana: St studied the Stars: God said, A Star
of Heaven will show the coming of Christ to be one, with Wo Man Kind the 4th — with Trinity: to
be ONE CHRIST line of God Spiritual Commander of the Earth and Waters: all therein and on of
which FO should be Lord 1366 from creation of Ava and Adm: as I God made, wrote engraved on
the Rolls, two Golden Squares. Tablets whereon are my Commandments, Laws, Instructions for
Wo Man and NTan and of men to obey, do, liy the line of beauty, separate, unite upright, pure, holy
for I am thv Creator God to he honored, worshiped, loved singly, but in one, is before Christ arrives,
Goil the Father and God the Holy One, that is one Omnipotent, Omniscient, Omnipresent, Lord God
of Ava and Adm tiiat I created in Oma and is Omo land of Lake Pyramid I built which shall be called
.\marica that thou earnest from the Land of the Serpent Mound that was built by Ava and Adm, Cain
K.a Na Fa Ta Far, Abl and Zana, St and Sana: S (see fig. A on Dighton Rock) write, cut, engrave,
chisel this on .stones, metal. Silver, Gold for Adm's lion sins I turned you from the garden of Eden^
Adan: For Cain murder of Abl: Cain thou shalt be a servant of and thy children servants decpised by
all generations saith the Lord a spot I put upon you thy guilt is alcoholic accursed Satan's weapon evil
ways you willfully embraceth — and my Holy .square commandments Laws you shall not or families own
or destroy; thou shalt be a marked line for the ages but enlarge and become a head of the power of
Evil in the world I will by Hood destroy in its height and diseases for man shall surely die as I decreed
but as you killed Abl after birth of Zana I will not hold that line to punishment but when yours and
others sin the wicked shall be drowned by waters and one family remanent I will save to people the
world anew: this I do for the sake of pure Ava that disdained to listen to the lionlike venemous
serpent that diseaseth, drunkeneth and killeth, like Cain his brother Abl, venom serpentine even to
the fall that will try to bring into darkness even Ynm=Anm=Anamim and Adar, Mizraim and Lazar
after their foreparents St and Sana: Mizraim was pure, I God giveth unto him and his line the Golden
Square Commandments and Laws: Anm went forth from foreparents the line of beauty Ava and Adm
that I united in Cain and Abel line Anm line your parents Saio and Anos, Nasata and Cainan, Lalor
and Mahalalal the upright that keepeth my Commandments, Santa and Fa —
D (4k <4U 4U D'^—"— ^ I I
^ ^^l/^ADA, SARA FANA AND ENOCH, THE LONG LINE FROM PYRAMID
^ ^ #114 ^'^'^^ ^^^ SERPENT MOUND, OMO ACROSS THE SEA WATERS,
T^%^ where I the LORD GOD brought safely Noah and Family from Omo to Mt.
^^'^ Araat from the Bay of the long River, that shall be called, Mississippi; NOAH
AND FAMILY which I brought with Sea Compass to the land of AGIPT where
I told Noah Family to build an Altar a pyramid unto me the LORD GOD and gave compass in
Centre my Eye to Noah Family (See Saucer Plate No. 26 at Berlin Museum) I saved from deluge
Lamar & Noah, Anr & Ham, F Talimar & Japeth, F Rabakar & Shem: These the hand of God
saved from the land of Omo, the Pyramid Lake line Anon, the Serpent Mound land that their seed
people the earth and commandeth, keep my Commandments and Laws descendants of Salah and
Matoslah, Ladar & Lamak, seed of Lamah & Noah^Nh long line that begetteth all the inhabitants
of the Earth till I thy God cometh to gather Thee into my Hand for my Heavenly Mansions that en-
dureth time everlasting." Here endeth the 2nd line a part of the careful true reading for all (see 2nd
Edition, also part of 8 & 9 hieratic symbols of 3d by count to right and last symbol of third line with
two c, a, between.
3. "Pure holy Commandments, Laws of Ava - Adm, Nh, Hm, (spelt here as in Heb. ) F. Miz-
raim, to all the long line: I the LORD give to generations of men, begetters of Christ the pure, every
people under the sun my, (God's) children to Wisdom truth unto Wo Man Kind seed, keep, write,
record this and I God will protect it and naught shall prevail against me: my power is supreme and
the son seed of M. A. L. F. shall proclaim me and it out of Eg3'pt in the land of Annona, Omo,
Mounds, My built Pyramid land in lake waters where the people liveth: there raging deadly wine lust
for women pure that upright three men begetteth in a consolidated line of beauty. Lord's and God's
line in \5 . S. that the Sun first shone on and chose the line to make in aggregation for heavens line of
beauty, God's Universal People are united with Trinity by Christ, begot by Joseph and Mary Christ
complete union of 4th. Earthly parents Mary Joseph, b. Christ', Thecla', Anr", Sarah*, Mary', Lucy",
Sons were: James', Joses', Juda', Simeon'°, John", beloved of God, the long line of Noah, see, and
it is good, the Lake Pyramid, and records, even of Christ in Rock, Tower, Arch, Temple of Chia &
Bahman," (Thus endeth 3d and commenceth 4th line.) (Read from Left to RIGHT. ) "Nothing
is concealed but it shall be revealed by the Lord unto all the people of God. Even the thoughts in
the inhabited worlds of planets: that in this here the long line from Noah after flood: Ava & Adam
before, the begetters, as the Lord told me to record on panel, ( pictures as four sides, now read back to
it), as Falafar and AfTosis (^Apophis=Apofes=Apophes, etc.), Lara and Bianchas, Farada and Mars,
Rachar and Mantha, Hanar and Hasaftr, Fnf Mra and Atta, Mrai and Att, Lyra and Tta, (return,
read gen. 21.) Fora and Butan, Rafa and Kaka, Rafar and Bainuter, Naomi and Utnas, Muta and
Santa, Arta and Tata, .'\f Anar and Nahka, Maron and Sabas, Aloa and Tata II, Falamar and Satos,
the Lords great Afr and Ramfarka, Tatar and Huni, Tatar and Sanafra, Mathar and Khufu, Fammr
and Ratataf, Malona and Rashaf, Bunala and Ramanka, and over Sea pyramid first built line copied,
where the Golden Square, Marion and Usakaf, Marifu and Rasahu, Farna and Ramisar, (see Catouche
gen. 38) the Lord's Oma line of Musar and Harmanka, Francasa and Ratatka, Hulda and Mnas, Fnr
Funarand Tata III, and with line projecting tail in ./Egypt head and Body at Annona, (Taunton River,
Dighton Rock. Thus endeth the fourth line on the right. Fifth line Geno.4S commenceth on left
to right.) Farna and Ramasi, Fafur and Mananra, Frna and Tyrous, Lnar and Satas, Batha and
Nafakara, Bithia and Nabkth, (See Catouche, Gen. 49), Noanah and Hana.
"^be sovereion abtlit^ consists in hnowincj tborouobl^ tbe value
of tbings."
Plate 311— The Pyramids of if^gypt were copied from Lake Pyramid in Oregon, United States of
America.
Plate 312— The Old Man of the White Mountains, New Hampshire, was honored by the Indians
as the sacred work of God.
Plate 313 — Ossippee, Indian Mound, near Lovel's Brook in New Hampshire.
Plate 31'( — An ^Egyptian vessel of great swiftness. Its lines of construction are alleged to be in
use to-day among the builders of fast sailing yachts. Phoenicians were the descendants of the
^'Egyptians and a strong hardy just people.
<2
"CUSTOM IS THE PLAGUE OF
WISE MEN, AND THE IDOL OF
FOOLS." -Eng. Tbeop-
"Most men judge according to their
interests, and abound in their own sense.
Let two be of a contrary opinion, yet each
presume to have right on his side. But
reason has always been faithful, and never had
two faces." —Cratian
"The omission of good is the commission
of evil."
"The true spirit of religion cheers and
calms the soul. It is not the business of
virtue to extirpate the affections of the mind,
but to regulate them."
"Any sin committed in jest, is greater
than when it is done in earnest."
"As antiquity cannot privilege a mistake,
so novelty cannot prejudice one."
—Sir T. P. Blount
"Judges aught be more learned than
witty, more reverent than plausible, and more
advised than confident. Above all things,
integrity is their portion and proper virtue."
— Lord 'Bacon
"The truly religious person tolerates the
honest belief, worship, of all others, in truth."
"The principal point of wisdom is, to
know how to value things as they deser\'e.
There is nothing in the world worth being a
knave for."
In this .Egyptian Pyramid of "Gizeh"
was a Record by the Family of Noah and
Seals. Build at Washington a wireless tele-
graph 800 feet high with a heroic bust of the
lawful ruler of every nation known. Line
busts of 169 generations of our universal fore-
parents honoring.
Plate 317.
Generation
XLI. Ferna=
Fna Rameses
III taken from
his Tomb at
Thebes: He was
son of Ramisar
II and brother of
Fna Harmanka.
The workman-
ship is mono-
grammic : sails
embroidered in
many colors:
Era's Vessels.
PLATE Tll.
of Churches, Temples mnd Pyramid.
*
THERE IS ONE GOD AND FATHER OF ALL. WHO IS ABOVE ALL. AND
THROUGH ALL. AND IN YOU ALL.
ttbc Xor&'e pravcr In fTlcb noac In&lan an^ (Bcrman Xanguagce
TRANSLATKD INTO
E.VOLISH :
OUHFATHKHuhich
art in heaven, Hallowed
be thy name. Thy king-
dom come. Thy will be
done in earth as it is in
heaven, (iive us this day
out daily bread. And
forgive us our debts as
we forgive our debtors.
And lead us not into
temptation, liut deliver
us from evil: FOR THINK
IS THE KINGDOM.ANU
THEPOWER.ANDTHE
GLORY FOREVER.
AMEN.
This is a copy from
the excellent book of
Prof. CARL FATl-MAN:
1880.
It is- interesting to
note a pleasant surprise
in the .\Iiche .Mack Indi-
ans hieroulyphic Cana-
dian language the 'kept
with only a s I i g h t
changed primitive .\lpha-
bet. @ V A
Plate 31'J is the
ruins of a Temjilf. It
was built t
the I'nivei-sa'
who was known in primi-
tive language as FA. the
numerous F's designates the Father
of all who gave their names Fnr and
Fna that signifies we are line created
of and from, by God. Plate H20 is a
aluable RING found by excavating
S*-t
u
SCHRIFT DER MIKMAK-INDIAXER.
L^ ^ ^s;^ ^
ebin
tSiptuk dehriilZin
a «iB,jt dcin Nmiie
legAvidedeniek
§ 1^- V ^a, a^ H
ISiptuk ignemw
mOtje gacdhii i
nulek uledelSinen.
wayot n'telidanen
deli §kedulk'
§ { h'iWi © g-^^' ^^-^«
^y
deli Stedulek makimigwek eimek.
w dir gehortht wtrden auf Erden wo wir tin
Delamukubenigwil e5emi?^vel
r,t rfii ii/u ijeyebtH ka^ m dicae/ Ait
A .£ie Oi H-cfj ^ib ga3£^ ^<=l«
«-\Jc' {
Del;abikiikukaSik
Wir tergtbaid jaim
H
abiliiklwiT
«-i^?
winnSuJil ma k'tigalina kediinukamke winnSigwel
cider Hand nicU zufalttn, haUefemvonwa Leiden,
^i^ >-^h SiHffc 1-1
r
PLATE 320
a garden in Etruria. sold to a Flor-
ence Museum that became poor and
sold it to the honorable and mo.-^t
reputable gentleman that writer pur-
chased it from.ItismonogrammicHnd
the Pyramid like projections and
hieroglyphics when arranged in se-
quence as the line language gives the (ienenlogy of
Christ without the apparent aiscreijancv as is found in
the Holy Hebrew Language of both Old and New Tes-
taments. It says nn it count the pyrarnids 5, and my
ancestor's name was .\chim. count his 1, Azor, 2,
Abiud, 4, Amon ; 2, Achaz : =Asa : 1, Abia : 3, Amin-
adah : Aram: .', The Great Aliraham : 7, Arphaxad :
9. ANFS=Enos=:Anos. .Egyptian, O.A-O S: 2, AVA
and ADM who were created bv God the Father and
God the HolvOne. 2nd line Reading: bv God created.
QA V. "The Primitive Alphabet, F. A. M, is pre- plate 3i9
eminently religious : Every Symbol is the ancient name . , ■ ■ . .
of God, the Father in Ist Trinitv in each of second and third inonogramic beautiful syujbols, which wasgiven by
GOD to Avaand Adam in the garden of Eden. From these curved and straight Imes all Alphabets of the Earth.
The /Egyptian Primitive name of F. Alios trutlifully translatcil
the names by A was to honor each of tlici
Xttniversal ITnternational (Senealogical ZTablet
/AS LALLKD
A NEW OLD TRANS-
LATION.
"AVA, ADAM, OF TRI-
NITY Created: Kanafatafa
& Cain, Twins; Abl, b.they
for continuation of the long
line for earth and waters:
Cain m. Kanafatafa: Had
Zana, the writer of Sacred
Annals with Abel that she
married and had Sana, m.
St of the long line, had
Cainan, m. Nasata, d a .
Stair and Masui, Had :
Mhllal, m. Lalar da. Fna &:
Mri. da. Fna & Far, da.
AnosandSaio: Had F.Frd,
m. Santa, da. Maris, s. Das,
s. Tassa, s. St and Sana:
Had: Hnak.= Enoch m.
Sara, da. St & Sana; of Ava
& Adam." Here endeth
the first line, left to right.
It mentioned the "long line
12 times" part as repetition
I do not continue repeating
THE SECOND LINE :
Enoch &: Sara Had :
Mtoslh, m. F. Salah, da.
St & Sana, da. Zana & Abl,
da. Cain: Had: Lmk =
Lamech, m. Ladar, da. Anos
&, Saio he S.St bro. Abl,
Cain, Canafatafa, children
or seed of Ava 6*: Adm of
God: Had: Nh m. Lamr,
Golden Squares and here on right endeth the second line. And then commenceth the 3rd on left to right where
F. Mars m. in Pyramid Lake Land, Fnr. Fardar, da. adopted from the land of Omo, she of the longest upright
line son of Noah Hm,of Sm, of Jpfth, Atta's son At's da. of Second Family, ancestor of the Oneida Tribe of Sec-
ond Family in Oma, Had: Blanches, ni. Lara, da. Hasaftr and Hanor (here as elsewhere often is found the a
changed to o), Had: Fna Afofis=Afofsis, translated by Greeks Apophis, the gianttthat had an immense family:
one authority said 60 chn. And in the first of these two families of the Five Natidns from Noah was found the
first name of Washington and spelt Vashatana and in above "Moabite Phoenician Stone it is spelt Wshinton and
that has the Gk. G=Washington. Afofsis, m. F. Falafar da. F. Mars and F. Fardar, Had Son F. Butan m. F.
Fora, da. Mars and Fardar: Had: Kaka, m. Rafa, da. F. Far and F. Rana, s. Bianchasand Lara: Had Bainutar,
m. Rafar, da. Fah and Rala, s. Bianchasand Lara: Had da. Sara m. Abram and son Utnas, m. Noami da. F.
Afofsis and Falafa: Had: F. Santa, m. Muto, da. of great Afofsis and Falafar, Had: Tata and they went forth to
the Land of Omo=Oma and here as in Genesis it is spelt Amarica, the land of Zana where she wrote annals of
God across the Great Ocean, they went with Compass and returned from this first Inhabited land bringing many
Inhabitants.
71 \
4 Y Wn •»■•'• '■^•* •* ^°7^7^6>NX <r-*1«(/=W4;y^»
'r,//fri'<-y>'>;r4=L"3.^.77./->n./^<.o -
4 jfll^-i-^^rxYiK-f-f
PLATE 321
da.Mtfslh & Salah, Had :Hm,
Sm, Japcth,were in the Flood
■of Waters and piloted by God
the Creator dots 10th
Generations to Mt. Araat....
sons...G o d Trinity Saved
son God line &; Cain the
Kanafatafa line, Lamr wrote:
.Anr, da, -Saio & Anos: m.
Hm, Had: Mzrom=Miz-
raim: Laza, da. Mtfslh=Me-
thuselah and of son^'dot
long line of Ava and Adm,
Cain and Abl, Canafatafa and
Zana, Sana and St, Mizraim
and Laza Had: Ynm^Ana-
mim m. Adr, da. Maf o=son
Hm, Adr and Ynm=Anm
Had Tta m. Lyra, da. Hm
and Adr: Tta and Lyra had
son of earth Att, m. Mrai da.
Fna Mizraim and Laza, Had:
Atta, who was with his father
a Free Mason, line to Nh and
Hm and mother Lamr, m.
Mra, da. F. Mah and F.
Mri, son of Mizraim, and da.
of Tta. Atta m. Fnfr Mra
and had F. Hasaftr m. F.
Hanah, da. F. Mizraim and
Laza Had: Mantha, m. F.
Racha, da. Atta and Mri, s.
and da. F. Anm, son of Att;
Had: F. Mars, who went
with his Fatlier and a. com-
pass to .Anana, Zana Land of
Noah over the Ocean where
Zeus^God engraved the
\ n e^ e^ t^ n -^
WHO BROUGHT WITH THEM THK GOLDEN Syl'ARE GIFT OF GOD COM-
MANDMENTS: LAWS: ANNALS, SACRED GOD WRITTEN ROLLS: ZANA AND
SANA'S WRITINGS WITH THOSE FROM AVA AND ADAM. HERE ENDETH
3. (Commenceth 4 line) Gani=Generatinn 26th. Arta, da Afofsis and Falafa, m. Tata, son of Santa,
Had: Nabka, m. Af An Ar, da Kaka and Rafa, Had Sabas, m. Maron, da. Vana and Afa, son of F.
Kaka. Had: Tata, m. AJoa, da. Ramaf and Ala, s. Utnas and Naomi: Had: Satos, m. Falamar, da.
Almo=.AIma, s. Tata and Arta; Had: son, Rainfarka, in. Air, da. F. Mars. Santa and Muto: Had:
Huni, m. F. Tatar, da. Noa, s. Nabka and Af Anr=:Af An Ar: Had: Sanafra, m. Fata, da. F. Noa,
s. Nabka and Af Anr. Had: Khufu, m. Mathar, da. Mn*, s. Sabas and Maron; Had: Ratataf, m.
Fammr, da. Fafar and s. Huni and Tatar; Had: Rashaf, m. Marlona, da. Fna, s. Huni and Tata:
Had: Ramanka, m. Bunala, da. Fna, son. Khufu and Matha. (Endeth 4 and commenceth Sth line. )
TRIN1T^' blesseth tiiese women: Had Usakaf, m. Marit)n, da. F. Sanafra and Fata; Had: Rasahu,
m. Marrifu, da. F. Marian, s. F. Khufu; Had: Ramisar, m. Farna, da, Rashaf and son of Ramanka
and Bunala: Had: Harmanka, m. Musar, da. Ramanka s. Marrifu and Rasahu and these generations
were from their forefathers great Mariners going to and fro with their families to the land of Zana,
Ava and Adm Land where Trinity Ble.ssed His creation: Had: F. Ratatka, m. Francasa da. L'sakaf
and Marion; Had: Mnas, m. Hulda, da. Rashu, s. F. Rasahu and Marrifu; Had: Tata and
On-A^=OAmLLjO=P'anius=janius=OnV and ^J=V Founded Italy, Peru: Peru founded Japan:
Tata III m. Funar, da. Ramisar and Farna; Had: Ramasi, m. Farna, da. F. Harmanka and Musar;
Had: .Mananra, m. Fafur, da. Ratatka and F"rancasa: This Mananra=:Mann Ra Founded Germany.
Here endeth (6th. line) Mananra and Fafur had F.=I. TYROUS, m. Frna, da. Mnas and Hafr, s.
Mnasaiid Hulda ; Had :Satas, m. I.nar.da. Fata and Mara. s. Tala and Funar: Had :Nafakara, m. Batha
da. Farnal and Fura, s. F. Tyrous and Fnr; Had: Nabkth, m. Bithia, da. F. Tyrous s. F. Mananra
and Fafur: Had: Hana: Nabkth was a great Fra, worshiped God the Trinity, a mariner, built Tem-
ples in j^gypt and Omo the Mound Land, God showered great bles,sings upon this numerous and
godly family: He and wife Bithia Had F. Hana, m. F. Noanah, da. Tyrous, son F. Satas and F. Lana,
Had: Ramankhfa, m. Mahataval, ila. V'afras, s. Nafakara and F. Batha. They were mighty in the
Land^Had: Anm II, m. Hazzalal, da. Vafras and son Nafakara and F. Batha, Had: Sufis, Anm III,
Yatatonwatea b. 1071 B. C. at Oma, Mariner, Indian Chief, Compass (shown here and on Catouche
Gen. S3 he was b. Dec.=Anm 23rd: see Schoolcraft's U. S. Government pub. p. 634, AfTairs of In-
dians) He died 829 B. C. Recorded in Genesis 61, buried in Mound of Serpent, Adams Co., Ohio: his
•son Oratota I was a Mariner, upright and great in Anona, Zana Land: Endeth 6th line and 7th. Son
F. Sufis, m. Anannaah, da. A. C. Funis, s. F. Satas and F. Lnar, Had: F. Mizraim, m. Aaglaha, da.
A. C. Furnius, s. F. Nabkth and F. Bithia: Had: Fna Shishark m. Halarh and da. Hano, b. month
May 3rd, m. King Solomon, s. King David, born of Bath Shua, da. Ammiel, (Chron. 3, verse 5.)
(See pi. 113, Gold sent to King Solomon formed an alliance and m. his da. Anbury: Acts 28: verse 13
Records the Mariner Compass and Chinese Compass dated 1010 B. C. with names of King Solomon
and Hiram of Tyre and numbers 1 to 24, etc. Daedalus and his Nephew made Chip Ax, Saw, Wimble,
Perpendicular, Compass, Turning Lathe, Glue and Potters' Wheel, and his father Eupalamus the
.'\nchor: In Chronology of Sir Isaac Newton, page 148, it claims incorrectly those as inventions
presumably from incorrect translations. John Jackson in the Chronological Antiquities, 1752 A. D.,
Printed in London, Vol. 2, pages 436 and 437, declares "Hoanm Ti. which name signifies Great
Emperor, invented a compass 2438 which showed the four cardinal points of the Heavens, pages 472
and 473 p..Ching Yong began his reign, 1096 B.C. About this time a Magnetic Inde.x pointing
North and South, like the Mariner Compass was known in China. Chen Kong presented the Ambas-
sador of the King of Cochin, China, one of them to direct them better in their way home. This in-
strument was called Chinan: /Egyptian name is -^ I-A-, a pretty good illustration of it that is drawn
on Catouche Generation 18 and 2422 B. C. and on Fnr Lamr's Histor>' of Creation with which we
may wisely dismiss Compass to its good use. (GK-^ delta and v=N=/Egyptian A=A. )
<: f4» <4^ <=^ o
FNA SHISHARK, M. HALARH, DA. FANA. S. P. HANA AND F. NOANAH: HAD
TACHNATIS. M. BAKU, DA. FOHI, S. F. ANM.AND F. HAZZALAL: HAD: FNA
BOCCHAIS. M. F. ARLINA, DA. F. MIZRAIM AND F. AAGLAHA: HAD: FNA
Osarkon, m. Fnr. Riua, da. F. Anm, s. F. Anm and F. Farna: Had: SiHasi, m. F. Saraho, da. F.
Shishark and s. F. Shishark and F. Halarh: Had: F. Orsakon, m. Fnr Vashatana, da. Nasa, s. F.
Tachnatis and F. Baru: Had: Namnit. Records in j'Egyptian Showeth the burial of Ataton, and on
the ancient Tomb is found Ohratota, former 829 B. C, latter, the name spelt backwards, as Atotarho
(See Schoolcraft's Government Work on Ethnology, page 638, volume 1855. The si.xth family
invades the fifth Nation at Omo. Also this Genealogical Stone essentially the same. Fna Namrut
(aforesaid), m. Arkona, da. F. Boccharis and F. Arlina of long line: Had: Takalut, and son Oratota,
b. 828, d. in B. C. 5 Sept. he went by boat to Annona, Pyramid Land across Ocean. F. Takalut, m.
F. Mutta, da. F. Boccharis and F. Arlina: Had: F. Shamkon, m. F. Camilla, da. Karla, s. F.
Osarkon and F. Riua, and went across the Ocean to Anona, Omo. Endeth 7tli and bcginneth 8th
line of "Ata and Adm whose son united long line of da. and son F. Shamkon and wife Had F.
Ramsass, m. F. Mullah, da. F. SiHasi and F. Saraho, s. Tubal Cain: Had: F. Zo=So (spelled both
ways in Holy Bible) m. Fnar Noara, da. Hafana, s. F. Namrut and F. Arkona: Had F. Samiticus,
m. Fna Zara, da. Nahi, s. F. Takalut and F. Mutta: Had: F. Nachro, m. Fnar Saio, da. Faconr, s.
F. Shamkon and F. Camilla; Had: Fna Sammis, m. F. Srta, da. Samal, s. F. Ramsass and F. Mullah;
Had: F. Afras, (Apries) m. Thala, da. Alasandra, s. F. Nachro and F. Saio; Had: Niatatis, da. F.
Afrasand F. Thala, m. (9th line) F. Cambysas; Had: FNA CYRUS, m. F. ANAR MANDANE,
da. Cyaxaras II who was Darius the Mede, s. Astyages; (Vide Generation 72 for facts) Had: FN.'^
ATTOSAR, da. F. CYRUS the Great King, son of F. Cambysas and F. Niatatis, m. Fna Darius, s.
Hystaspes; Had: F. Arta Ba Zanas, m. F. Amastris, da. Ono=Fnf Fas=Phas=Otanes; Had: F.
Hvstaspes, m. F. Musar, da. Manada and C. Fanu; Had: Arta Farnas=Anti=Fonos, m. F. Furina,
da. C. Furnius and Hranci, da. M. N. Fonos=:Fones; Had: C. Fonei, m. Fnr Atthis, da. C. Furnius
and Atta; Had: N. C. I. Farna, m. Anagna, da. Hystaspes and Anna Ferenna, da. Phanuel of the
Tribe of Asher. Thus endeth three last hieroglyphics of 9th and commenceth two on lOth line, left
to right. The Bible and Stone Tablet speaks of her as a Prophetess. Anagna and Fame; Had: Farna
Bazus, m. Agraea Fauna, da. Arta Farnas and Fnr Furina; Had: C. A. S. Furna, m. F. Camils Farno,
da. Fatnus Faunos and Fauna; Had: F. C. C. Arta Bazus, m. Fnr Cleopatra, da. Cleomenes, and
Coma, da. Ptolomy and Builder of Alexandria; Had: Bazine, m. Alexander the Great, son of Phillip
and Olympias, Fnr Bazine was the da. of F. C. C, Arta Bazus and Fnr Cleopatra, he claimed descent
from mother side Archillc and Father line of Fna Sammis. They had: Hercles SeJucius A. F., m.
Fnr Apama, da. Arta Bazus and Epi Da Fne Antiochia, s. F. C. C. Arta Bazus and Cleopatra, Hercles
and Apama had Antiochus Theon, m. F. Stratonice, da. Demetrius Polior Cetes and Filia; Had:
Antiochus Theos, m. Fnr Laodice, da. M. Lepidus and Alexandria; Had: Seleucus Callinicus, m. F.
Laodice, da. Andromarchus and Avah, s. Aches; Had: Antiochus the Great, m. Fnr Laodice, da.
Mithradates IV and King of Pontus; Had: Antiochus Epi Fames, m. F. Arsinoe, da. Phillip the son
of Alexander a descendant of Alexander the Great. Here beginneth the 11th with a Hag of honor for
the Great Alexander who inscribed his record on the Tomb of Afras his ancestor at bottom under the
monogrammic Embalmed Fna Apries, F. Arsinoe wife of Antiochus Epi Fames; Had: Demetrius
Sotor, m. F. Laodice, da. Antiochus Epi Fanous V and Achia; Had: Fna Antiochus, m. Fnr Cleopatra,
da. C. Mernusand Ana; Had: Antiochus Epi Fanous, m. Camila, d. M. Fanis and wife Staor, da. C.
Deonusou; Had: C. C. L. Furnius, m. Fnr Scribona, da. General \. L. F. Laucieus and E. X. C.
Fnaf; Had: M. M. C. F. Lucius, m. Fnr Farna, da. M. C. N. Stati Libo and Julia; Had: Marcus
Agrippa Lucius Furnius, the great Naval Commander of Emperor Augustus. He and son and wife
goeth to Oma, and he becometh ancestor of many Indians. He m. Tom Fonia=Pomponia, da.
T. P. Atticus and Filia; Had: nine sons and many daughters. 14; He was ancestor of G. Washington
Family, went to Land of Oma, Pyramid Lake Land, AMERICA, com\ncncc(l Tower: 1 1th and 1st
12th line.
I a Hf Hf Hf D' ^
X=TOWER BUILT UNTO @ GOD THE FATHER AND GOD THE HOLY ONE
(NEXT SYMBOLS SAY) AND TEMPLE, FORTIFICATION IN OMO THE WOMAN
LAND OF W. MARCUS AGRIFPA & TOM FONIA HAD GR^tCIANUS J. CALB C-
Furnius, m. Thecla, da. Mary and Joseph that changed his name to C. Furnius, killed hy Roman
Senate A. D., 26, Mary was killed by the sword 51 years after marriage, 20 Lmk=^Aug. Thacla=
THCLR was an itgypti^n Lady of high rank (Mary's features are on Coin Gen. 95 and da. Thecla
;^present spelling face on'scal, vide.) Thacla wrote the Alexandrian Codex (at theJBritish Museum. )
She was of the long blessed line b. after Christ, first, before her brothers, James, Joscs, Juda, Simon,
John and sisters, Jesus said unto the world: A prophet is not without honor, but in his own country,
and among his own kin, and in his own house. Gr^cianus J. C. Calb Furnarius and Their, had:
Gn»us Agricola Julius C. Furnius, m. M. Furna, da. Germanicus and Agripina; had (Father named
Furna and Son Furna) Scribonius C. Furnius, m. Julia Procilla, da. Thecla the writer of'Codex
Alexandrian, of God's and Ava and Adm's Annals for all Mankind, and Gr*cianus J. C. C. F. ; had
Cinsus Agricola Julius F., m. Demito Decida Ana, da. F. Galba and /Eiotarou, da. Deistriou: had
Fnf Furna, m. Fnr L. Honar, da. Bonevent Scribonis and Putea; had Thecla, da. L. Honar and
Furna, m. C, Fabi C. Furnis. Both Theclas wrote the Alexandrian Codex of Trinity which for
purity has withstood the test of time, at Museum British. Fonii=Fodii=Fabii of forefathers from
whom descendeth the immortal 306 in battle on the Cremea: said Thecla, gt. gr. d. C. Furniu., and
m. C. Fabi C. F. ; had S. N. Cornel Leucius C. Furnal L. C. L. Furna, m. Fnr La-lia V. F. da.
Strabo, s. Donatius Valens and Far Na; had (endeth 12 and 13 lines except) Flag and dot Star of
Oma, which is their son C. F. Fabi J. S. V. L, m. Fnr Livia Octavias, da. Pontus Lepidus and Con-
cordia; had Fna Leonidas F., m. Fnr Marina, da. Marcellus Noninus and Marcia Furnella, whose
husband was the Grammarian and helped to turn upside down true history; had C. C. Is Fendear=
Fars Fnadal=Fandarl, translated from Persian=Is Fendear as this Stone and Holy Bible unintimidated,
declareth m. Fnr M. Farnia, da. Helvidius and Antea and s. of Helvitius ann Fannia; had Farenes=
Bahman, m. Fnia Chia, da. Chinese Emperor '*; ^ V i they with family went over the great Ocean
to finish the Newport Tower in the Land of Omo, a Temple unto God the Trinity (Commenceth
15 line.) A Lookout: Fort: Tower, was built of stones and a receptacle for golden Squares of God's
Commandments; by Marcus Agrippa and son commenced who had Indian help from six families of
five nations (of Noah and Ham) that intermarried with the ancient ^Egyptians. The Temple was
monogrammic: Foundation of Stones and arches and round body and a Pyramid was placed over it of
stones and trees fell for the interior work: it was carried up and had the name Fa=God on it, steps or
a ladder led up in interior which was finished the .whole by eleventh=ll Generation from Marcus
Agrippa L. F. to signify the Deity, Christ: Genealogy over the top pyramid covering was erected a
tapering obelisk passing up and projecting through the Sun, Globe, Primitive Letter F=Fa the name
of mtst High Omnipotent God: Pyramidal shapes in stone of its internal construction (Pls.9& 1040)
in it was kept the Rolls Squares and Tablets of God and it was Dedicated with religious services to
God for all the people on earth and waters ol this planet as was given to our foreparents Ava and
Adam, a remnant and one of three sons were left here at Omo, Lake Pyramid Land: battle fought:
Fnr Chia and Bahman; had F. Sassan, m. Fur Ennia, da. Macro and Codia; had (16th line) F.
Babek Yezdijird, m, Irena, da. I Hostalus and Sarsena; had Arta Xerxes Adishir Babigan, m. F.
Tashti Arta Ducta, da. ^ir Sarani: had F. Sapor, m. Fnr Furan, da. Arta Bazus; had F. Hormuz,
m. F. Arcam, da. Theodosius, fr. Genl. Theodosius; had F. Farenes=Varanas I (with this name 17
line) m. Purana, da. Atta=Otta=Otto; had F. Fernis, m. Fur Ana Fir UZ, da. OKA'i'A=Far
Rama, s. Arta Xerxes and F. Tashti; had F. Shapur Zulu Kata m. Fnr Car Zarna, da. Adishir Bab-
igan Arta Xerxes and Fnr Tashti Arta Ducta (Here endeth the 17, line.)
<I
=o <^ ^ ^
HAD: (IS line) FRA MOND=FH RAMUND, WHO BOWED IN PRAYER UN I'O GOD
THE TRINITY, M. FNR CONSTANTINA DA. • CONSTANTINUS MAGNUS AND
MINERVINA; HAD: F. MUND ZUNK, M. C. IRENA COMMENA, DA. ISAAC. S.
Lucius, s. F. Fernis and F. Ana. Had Fna Attila, m. F. Hilda, da. Constans Flavius, Attila was
the prophesied Scourge of God on land and sea, he yielded the Scythian sword of C. Furnius; had
Irnac= I •s'-AC F. Rna Clovis, m. F. Aridne, da. Zeno and Ari Ducta; had Joannes Mcrovoeus,
ni. F Sarah, da. Constantius anil Fausta: hati ChiKlcrick, m. F. Ala Fcnius da. Vas;i Al Fenius and
V'eria, 12 gen. from Petrus Varus AH Fenius; had F. F. F". Clovis, m. F. Clotilda, da. Chilperic,
of Burgundy had F. Clotharius, m. F. Ingonda, da. Justin I, Emp. of Rome. Had (19th line),
Fna Sigebert, m. Fnr. Brunechilde, da. Athanagildus, k. Visgoths; Had: F. Childebert II, m. F.
Failuba, da. Antharis, king of the Goths; had F. Thierry II, m. Fnr Thudachild, da. Tiberius
Emperor of the East; had F. Pepin, m. Fnr Ayasha, da. Mahommed and Ayasha; had F. R.
Bagi Zadah=Begga, m. Zada Baga, da. Mahommed's da. Fatima and Ali; and sister Ha Fne m.
Begga, s. F. Pepin and Ayasha; had F. Pepin De Heristal, m. Fnr Plectitude, da. Aribert, s. Arbet,
s. Clothair; had F. Childebert, m. Clotilda, da Baggis, son of Bagga, s. Charibert; had Robert Le
Fort, m. F. Alif, da. Verimund^Fari Mund I, king of Spain, had Robert, Duke of France, m. Al-
satha, da. of Alfred the Great and Elswitha had Edward and Fna=lna, 3 das.; had Hugh the Great,
m. Edgina, da. Otho I and Theo Fania, sister Emp. of Germany; had Hugh Caput (20th), m. Fnr
Adelaid, da. William III Tower Head; had Roben the Pious, m. Bertha, annulled by Pope son of
earth, m. Constantia, da William Cut Iron Count of Toulouse; had Henry I, m. Matilda, da. Con-
rad II the greatest prince that ever sat on the Imperial throne since Charlemagne, m. Anne da. Jaras-
laus, king of Russia; had from this last m. Phillip I, m. Bertha, da. Florentus Count of Holland; had
Lewis Le Crasus, m. F. Adelaid, da. Humbert Count of Maurrcmie and Savoy; had Lewis VII, m.
Alice da. Thibaud Count of Champagne; had Phillip II Augustus (Endeth 2()thline), m. Isabella,
da. Baldwin Count of Hainault; had Lewis VIII Heart of Lion, m. Blanche, da. Alfonso, king of
Castile; had Lewis IX, St. Lewis m. Margaret, eldest da. Ramond II Count of Province; had Phillip
III the Hardy, m. Isabella of Aragon; had Charles of Valois, m. Fnr Jolante, da. Alphonzo X king
of Leon and Castile and wife lolante, da. king of Arragon; had Phillip VI De Valois, m. F. Jane,
da. Robert Duke of Burgundy and Agns; had John Le Bon, m. F. Bonne, da. John king of Bohemia;
had Charles V Le Sage, m. Joan, da. Duke of Bourbon and Isabella; had Charles VI Bon Ami, m.
Isabella, da. Duke Stephen; had Charles VII Victor, m. (22nd line) Mary, da. Lewis II king of
Naples; had Lewis XI, m. Charlotte of Savoy, da. Lewis II and Anne of Cyprus; had Charles VIII
who was great as the Pyramid of France, Espoused to Margaret, Austria, m. Anne of Britainy, da.
Francis II Duke of Britiany; had Charles Orland, Charles, Francis, Annie, killed: JEAN FERNEL,
(after A^^'^^'\=A in i'Egyptian) m. Magdalene, da. Jean Luillicr, Attorney General of France,
nine went to their death. Jean Fernal= Fernel (»=death by poison) and Magdalene (L. ) Fernal
had Francis Junius Fernal, m. 4 wives, Maria Commenius, da. John Amos Commenius, s. Phillip of
Savoy; had John Furnal, m. Annietta, da. Gaspard De Coligny Admiral of Ocean Navy of France,
and wife tiJ; had WILLIAM FERN ALD, b. Castle (Endeth 22 Line: now commenceth 23 line)
of Hiedleberg, Baden, Germany, m. Elizabeth Amand, da. Girard Amand and wife Elizabeth Wash-
ington; had (A) Dr. Reiiald Fernald went to tiie land of Lake Pyramid, Anonna, OMO, m. Joanna
Warburton, da. Judge Warburton; had Thomas FFernald, m. Temperance Wasiiington, da. Robert
Washington & wife Annie Cotton, da. Sir Robert Bruce Cotton, Va., from Eng. ; had John Fernald I
in land OMO, m. Mary Spynie, da. Thomas and Margery Spinney; had John Fernald II, m. Sarah,
da. Judge John Hincks and wife Elizabeth, da. Nathaniel Fryer, Judge. (End 23, 1.) Captain
John Fernald, m. Elizabeth Rogers, da. Rev. John and Martha Rogers; had Mr. John Fernald IV
of America, m. Mary Savage, da. Thomas, John and Savage in American War; had William Fernald,
m. El izabeth= Betsy Johnson, da. Phineas.and son Col. Samuel, s. of Captain Timothy, s. Lt. John
Johnson; had Jonathan Poor Firnald, m. Mary Cotton Pike, da. Robert and Mary Cotton, da. Col.
Wm. Cotton, gr. da. General Zebulon Pike (24 line.)
t>
\ , g ,4^ ^ ^ UN
GENERAL ZEBULON PIKE, FATHER OF BRIGADIER GENERAL ZEBULON
MONTGOMERY PIKE THUS ENDETH THE 24TH ' LINE WITH AT LEFT TO
RIGHT ON 25 LINE THE CREST OF THREE SPEARS OF THE PIKES COAT OF
Arms, Had: (the next three generations and on mentioned that which is a fac simile of the Decree
of Cyrus the Great who mentioned the line for ahout 800 years from 1900.)
ji j> j> j>
Thus foretold with(^ut a change of one jot or tittle these events from God thy Father I have used
in my translation the Plate Copy in Book of William Norman Irish, who gives credit to Scribner &
Co., N. Y., for Plate that was originally taken in "squeeze paper" by M. Ganneau, and correctness
certified by first discoverer, the Rev. Mr. Klein: but Dr. Ginsburg claims it was also curved at bottom.
jt jt jt jt
"The neglecting ti)e study of true wisdom, says an eminent writer, will revenge itself: the despisers
of it not being able to do well in their greatest prosperity, and the lovers of it not being willing to do
wrong in their adversities. All virtues are in agreement; all vices are at variance. "A good man is
influenced by God, himself, and has a kind of divinity with him." ^-Seneca.
jt jt jt jt
"The great philosopher Socrates, on the day of his execution, a little before the draught of poison
was brought to him, while entertaining his friends with a discourse on the immortality of the soul,
said. Whether God will approve of my actions, I know not; but this I am sure of, that I have at all
times made it my endeavor to please him: and I have a good hope, that this my endeavour will be
accepted by Him."
Philip III, King of Spain, seriously reflecting upon the life he had led in the world, cried out
upon his death bed, "Ah! how happy should I be, had I spent those twenty-three years that I have
held my kingdom, in a retirement!" At the same time saying to his Confessor, "My concern is for
my soul, not my body."
Cardinal Wolsey, one of the greatest ministers of state that ever was, poured forth his soul in these
sad words: "Had I been as diligent to serve my God, as I have been to please my king. He would
not have forsaken me now in my gray hairs."
Cardinal Richlieu, after he had given law to all Europe for many years, confessed to Peter du
Moulin, that he being forced upon many irregularities in his life time, by that what they call reason
of state, could not tell how to satisfy his conscience upon several account::. And being asked one day
by a friend, why he was so sad, he answered: "The soul is a serious thing; it must be sad here for a
moment or forever."
ji ji j< j>
Cardinal Mazarine, having made religion wholly subservient to the secular interests, discoursing
one day with a Sorbonne doctor, concerning the immortality of the soul, and man's eternal state, said,
weeping, "O, my poor soul, whither wilt thou go?" And afterwards seeing the Queen-Mother, said
to her, "Madam, your favors undid me; and were I to live my time again, I would be a capuchian
rather than a courtier." In ancient times the pope at his inauguration used to have four marble stones
presented to him, out of which he would choose one for his tombstone."
D^
dbapter IDIT
N'
'OW SEE GEN. S3. MAHATAVAL AND RAMANKHFA (AND SEE FOUR
symbols the fifth line) Hazzalal and Anm II^Anamim 2nd. Sec Ax found at Pembenon,
New Jersey, Gen. 53) Anannaah and Sufis, 24 Gen. Catouche wines the large letter C
and Greek C:^r and G. Aaglaha and Mizraim II, Halarh and Shishark, and Catouche Gen.
56 declarcth Christ is to come and prayeth unto G(k1 the Fatherand God the Holy Onc,Baru
and Fna Tachnatis, Arlina and Boccharis the line of beauty of Riua ( Riva)and Osarkon, Saraho
and Si Hasi, VASHATANA and Orsakon the mighty, Arkona, and Namrut,(See Catouche 62, )Mutta
andTakalut, Camilla and Shamkon, Mullah and Ramsass, Ncara and Fna Zo, (See Coin ) (Catouches)
Zara and Samiticus, Saio and Nachro, Srta and Sammis, (Vide C. Gen. 68-9). The Square Tablet on
69 is part copy
i^^gyptian Chart,
gave to Ham
contained the state-
ing to ILastand sailed
a new country whose
teen Stars and its
be the Stars and it to
and thev shall Wor-
of God" the Holy
bolson line to second
Thalia and Afrias=
Cambysas, (PI. 63)
who attempted t o
Genealogy and pre-
such an extent he
this Plate of Kircher
and Adam correct
two of the Primitive
tom under panel ha,s
the Great and Alex-
Attilla the Sword
is on this line of Gen.
and Cyrus the Great,
Decree Rings forth
musical tones that are
World in ^Egyptian
Plate 403 gives
man and Mankind
beyond the present
Christ. See PI. 129. --^E^i^^y^i
Fna Darius, Amas- l-:i:'J,-l:F:^':!'::t^'
Nas, Musar and F.
bottom line project-
.'\rtar^Anti Fonou^F"ernes, Sec
glyphics not connected from right
Anagna and C. A. S. P'arna, Agrai;i
Farnoand C. A. S. Furna II. Fnl
Fna Bazine and ALEXANDER
Olympias born at Pella and d. killed
Mother Archili and F'ather Fna
Aprics or Afras: Plate 130 — a Compas
Fna .'\tta that declarcth the line of Noa
Box at Br
^ent fror
from same in the
Map, that. God
a nd Noah which
ments of Hood sail-
to the West to form
flag should have thir-
Coat of Arms shall
be called U. S. A.
ship Christ the Son
One etc. Count sym-
figure and read :
Apries, Nietatis and
from Jesuit Kircher
write the World's
vented, persecuted to
desisted. Count on
is from Afras to Ava
and he has letters
Alphabet and at bot-
the names of Cyrus
ander the Great with
Scourge of God, who
F. Anr Mandane
whose immortal
the Golden Silvery
heard around t h e
genealogy reading.
Generations of Wo-
to about 800 years
time, 1909. After
[C£vE"H"HH:. "Fnr Attossar and
ri'i^.'.-Utr.v.r.Vj tris and Arta, Ba Za
Hystaspes, ( Figure 8
ing,) Furina and
Coin, Gen. 76, and 4 and 5 hiero-
of Sth line: Atthis and C. Fonei,
Fauna and Farna Bazus, Camilo
Cleopatra and F. C. C. Arta Bazus,
THE GREAT, son of Phillip and
' at Bainlon. He was descendant from
Sammis and cut his name under F.
ish Museum dated, 2532 B. C, with the name of
Oino, Anon, to people the whole world in its
hieroglyphic language which remaineth till the last great day with Pyramids of Stone and of Earth.
A PLATE OVER ALEXANDER THE GREAT IS HERE THE MOST ANCIENT
NAME OF AMERICA: IT SPELLS IN ITS MONOGRAM, OMO, ANONA.
OMA, AUGUSTI, ADN=EDEN, AND HATH THE THIRTEEN COUNT
of Stars on Map Chart of Ham and on United States Flag. The ancient family kept
Sacred Seal down throu^jh all the ages and affixed to gr. fr. Deed to Fr. Hercles Sehicius
Antiochus Femes and wife Fnr Apama, (6th Line, left to Right) Stratonice and Antiochus
whose ancestors came from Omo whose e Country shall be known by its Flag of 13
Stars of 5 points each. After Figure 13 sec 3 ^ lines connected viz:— 5, 6, 7 and next symbol
connects two, and where connected, they are o.«-» to be translated differently in each line
Laodice and Antochus Theos whose line is i^-» "''^^^^ f'"°'^ '^'■^' Adam, Sethand wives to Fnr
Chia and Bahman: Christ of God foretold pu,e 132 would cut his name by letter in name letter
of God name cut by Marcus Agrippa L .F. at Oma across the long waters where Agrippa
will raise the Sea Green Flag declareth God." "Laodice and
Seleucus Callinicus, Laodice and ffrgjlHg^ '^jjt Antiochus the Great, Arsinoe and
Antiochus Epi Fanous, Laodice ^wSj^^^fek^^^^ Demetrius, Cleopatra and Antiochus,
Camilla and Antiochus Epi Fanous, "^"^^^BS^J^^ (son of preceding) Scribona and
C. C. L. Furnius, P'arnaand M. M. Iffl^MB^^gi^ L. F. Leucius, Tom Fonia and
M. A. L. Furnius of Roma \\ ho ^mS\[ ^^^ will write and cut h i s name on
Dighton Rock, Flag, Oma Land: ^^''jirAv '^^S^\. Thecla, da. Mary and Joseph, sister
of Christ the line of beauty, as God fTjM^^^^^S^f'^ ^ promiseth it was done: She was born
10 Jun. 4442, married Grecianieus ^jgf ^jHH^ ^^ J- ^- ^- ^^ Furna and Gnaeus
Agricola J. C. F., the line of beauty vfj/^^P'^ ^ of Lord, Julia Procilla and Scribonius,
C. F. Domita, Decida and Meneus, '«^*^^ Agricola Julius, L. Honor an'd
Furna, Thecla, da. Honor and Furna ^^j^,^^ m.C. Fabi C. Furnius: She wrote
the Alexandrian Codex at British ■^ — :». Museum, London, Old England,
(pi. SSI) Laelia V. F. and S. N. "*"l>llll||ii.|l^^ Cornel Leucius C. Furna L. D.,
6th line and part of 7th and 8th:) plate 132 Livia Octavius and C. F. Fabi J. S.
V. L. Marina and Leonidas F., and they went to the Pyramid Land,
Omo, across the great ^— — — — ^,^ waters: M. Farnia and
C. C. Is Fendear or the t-jy|^^JgBKv^:^!!^^ same as Farndal; F. Chia
and F. Bahman cut l|*|i!j|jaWffl '■^j^^iMi names on Dighton Rock
and will finish Temple ,j^|^jji^^mj<jj^,rfyi!j P^^ ^^j here was
killed her beloved, one yl^^^^^s. ' /r^^^^>v ^"" ^^ Spear and hus-
A r t a Xerxes Adishir x^^^t^^ ^<^^^^ Babigan, Furan and F.
Sapor, F. Arcam and plate 133 F. Hormuz, F. Furana
and F. Faranes^Vara- nes, Fna Ana Fir Uz
and F. Fernis whose footsteps goeth forth : sail : Car Zarna F. Shapur, becometh great in Anon Land
he reigneth; Constantina and Fara Mond, Irena Comeni and Fna Mund Zunk, F. Hilda and F.
Attilla who here is represented as Sword and Pike or spear of the Lord's vengeance upon the wicked
that will be destroyed, Aridne and A. M. Frna Clovis=Innac^Frnac, they remove and carry Golden
Square to Mound Land of Serpent Mound this line God Blessed. Part of tfiis chapter is a return to
Moabite Stone, Payprus Prisse, Decree Cyrus, Coins, /Egyptian Monuments, etc.
Plate 133 — Mariner Compass made by Fna Afofsis, 2200 B. C, and gives in symbols his ancestry
to Noah on this Box of Compass now at British Museum.
-Tii
d «4=» ^ ^
ET NO MAN SAY WHEN HE IS TEMPTED. I AM TEMPTED OF
GOD: FOR GOD CANNOT BE TEMPTED OF EVIL, NEITHER
TEMPTETH HE ANY MAN." F. SARAH AND JOANNES MEROVEUS,
Ala Fenius and F. Childerick, F. Clotilda and F. F. F. Clovis, Ingonda and D.
Clotharius, F. Brunechild and Fna Sigehert, and herein book his Shield and Initial
eth on it and connected
pent Mound, Lake Pyra-
Ava Genesis described
right from left same line:
mid lake Oregon land;
found name of men be-
man used. In France,
not inherit Government,
Thierry and Thudachild,
of Alexander the Great
some most important facts
letter of his name appear*
with the line above, Ser-
mid, Colorado Adm &
monument ancestral: at
he goeth forth to pyra-
now, Salic Law passed is
fore women at late time
the courteous, women,
Childebert II & Failuba,
F. Pepin & Ayasha; Coin
recordeth on his PI. 134
and data: count from left O's bring his Gen. 82 to forefather 58 and Seal on Catouche and also right
side of this coin. Sword blade thirteen dots representing Stars on Ham Map that foretells U. S. A'.
as does this sword and 13 on Papyrus Prisse in Chapter V. He had the two Golden Squares and is
descendant of foreparents as per proof: The 0:=Fa or first letter of primitive Alphabet, next Symbol
is a Hebrew Ayin called A or Eye, it is also, the letter in Egyptian M; terminal Heb. M, shape of
letter on his sword, Greek L is an ^gpptian A also the A, lower eleven O's that a prophecy that child
of line shall write the lines as declared above at 11 O on coins means son also child, at end, left is seen
the pyramid of Oregon God, made as white spot in it, is name pure God, at left of this 2nd white dot
means son of Ciod, also the black line above and below at right is the so-called serpent Line Mound at
Adam's County, Ohio, and a line of waters that represents Dighton Rock and River Taunton, while
above the T is a fallen pike point carved on said Rock prophesying fall of killed Alexander and Sassan
the T is constructed similar to the name of Lamar as seen on Tablet of Abydus and again the pike is
3rd letter in Genesis of the word translated into itgyptian and on Mss. Papyrus the pike as well as on
Rock is to be seen: the T is a monogrammic spelling of Noah and Lamar, Ham, Araat, and turn the
coin upside down and T symb. declares Lamar Noah and Hm. went from Araat and next symb. "to
Pyramid Lake, Oma" also Anm (other lines declare those who returned Y Agpt[=Egypt] declareth
Agypt peopled by OMO and oldest returneth after Anona was purified (dot in tail of Y— M is one of
thirteen circles or dots circumscribed on coin.) "The Great Seal O" will be seen to have, as on
Dighton Rock, the Initial of "Christ son of God in" it, etc. To be complete some of capital point
mentioned would enlarge this work, far beyond the intent to more than bring before all, especially
expert linguists, positive evidence to glean, for the granary store house of history, crude sheafs of
TRUE un winnowed perfect grains that if well received — is to be put into 2nd Edition: the opponents
will be, are those, set forth in past EncycliEC who profit by ignorance and sin. Papyrus further record-
eth:— "Begga and Zada Baga, Pepin de Heristal and Plectitude, Childebert and Clotilda, Robert Le
Fort and Alif, ancestors of Pike one line family, Robert Duke of France and Alsatha, Hughe the
Great and Edgina, Hughe Caput and Adelaid, Robert the Pious and Constantina, Henry I and (Ma-
tilda,) & Anne, Phillip I and Bertha, Louis le Crasus and Adelaid, Lewis VII and Alice, (Adelaid m.
Lewis VI s. was VII) Isabella and Phillip II Augustus, Richard VIII Coeur de Lion and Blanche.
79
V ^'■yr^^'^" ^^"^ WISDOM CRY ? AND UNDERSTANDING PUT FORTH HER
*■ *'j|rl VOICE ? SHE STANDETH IN THE TOP OF HIGH PLACES, BY THE
Trl WAY IN THE PLACES OF THE PATHS. SHE CRIETH AT THE
^^^ g<tes, at the entry of the City, at the coming in at the Doors. Unto you, O men, I
call: and my voice is to the sons of man." — Proverbs 8, verses 1, 2, 3 and 4.
"St. Lewis IX and Margarett, (he, canonized by Roman Catholic Church and a day of festivi-
ties set apart; celebrating.) Phillip III Le Hardi, & Isabella and on Stone (see sym.) Charles de
Valois & Jolante, Phillip VI de Valois and Jane, John le Bon and Bonni, Charles le Sage and Joan,
Charles Bon Ami VI and Isabella, Charles VII Victor and Mary, Lewis XI and Charlotte, Charles
VIII and Anne of Brittany, da. Francis II Duke: Dr. Jean Fcrnel and Magdalene Luillieur, Francis
Junius Fernel and Mariae Commenius, he a Doctor, 4 wives. Minister, Lawyer and Warrior: See
8th symbol of 10th line and read left to right with A Greek over symbol and under duck shaped
compass plate) Dr. John Fernel and Annietta de, da. (Gasparde de Coligny Admiral of France to
formeth a colony in Anona: ) he, J. F. stabbed to heart kil. by Jesuit,) Captain William Fernald and
Elizabeth Amand went to Anona, 1630 A. D., the cradle of Cain and Sister, Abl and Zana, St and
Sana, Dr. Renald Fernald and Joanna Warburton goeth to Oma July 4, ar. in Warwick, 1631, with
sword and seal; Tho. FFernald and Temperance Washington, da. Robert and Anna Cotton, his wife,
da. Sir Robert Bruce Cotton. Robert Vashatana=Washington (claimed his) a descendant of Gen.
61 (turn last three lines upside down and then Right three symbols give descent gen.) 6 and 1=61 (on
11th line, which further says: ) "Dr. R. F. off to Omo from Bristol, England, Mother Country." (Last
three Hnes of the thirteen giveth fully the correct line) that was written 1900 B. C. (which it is believed
that Cyrus the Great was conversant with before his startling Immortal Decree.) (Continued we have)
Era of Lord 18 Gen. 'Honor and Hasaftr,' (before turning upside down) (some marks of it on
Catouche) bird line and Seal of Nh and Hm, etc. Honoring Women, Fnr Fardar and Fna Mars and
of Ava, Adam, Ladar and Lamech, Fanar Sara and F. Hanok (Enoch) 68 Gen. Fnr Saio and Fna
Nachro whose long line from heaven hath the Lord Blessing Promised:" 86 Gen. on "Coin records
bearer of God s gift Seal of the Sun and Moon to and from Seleukou pen and Latxlice Arrow and Pike
and javelin and bow, which with love, honor, justice doeth Godly work for All (See Plate 292 ) beings
destroyed evile Alcoholics, sin, disease, that will with protected and protecting criminals; for God with
Christ and pure wageth war with hook, mace, battle ax, swords and implements against them in battles
strong and mighty, far and near, raging till the cycle or circle of God exterminate and Fa is Supreme
God Omnipotent to whom all shall bow on their knees worship.even after punishment for their sins."
'(It is now a repetition of laws and coinmandments, see: Read left to right for Omo line here recorded: )'
11th Line:— viz. "Mary Spiny, m.-John Fernald, Sara Hincks m. John Fernald, Elizabeth Rogers
m '(WarriorShip)' John F, Mary Savage da. J. S. m. J. F., Bt.sy Johnson m. Wm F., her fr. and Jno
in American Revolution, (see) sword point and a Pike (12th and 11th lines connected) 12th indicate
12 chn. and at connection eleven hieroglyphs with; count 11 chn. of M. C. P. m. J. P. F., chn.
M. R. D. kil., M. E. C, kil. H. H., kil.; J. W. F., m. S. H., P. F. m. E. H. P. C. A. F. m.E.
A. (M.) A.; da. F. J. F., kil.; the Assassin is P. and tool E. R. of 3.; and there shall arise dreadful
wars and the Lord is with the Lord's line banner F. upright, that hath borne the burdensome yoke
and ariseth above all foes, that the Lord leadeth and chooseth to wage war against unholy abomination
that under guise of Lord, striveth to destroy God, and this Satan of woman ajid man beguiled from
the 8, and letter to five, hath aroused Omnipotent and Omniscient to their .complete destruction.
Signed, Sealed. Afr. 1900 B. C. Fna Ramfarka, Jul. 8 da. of Lord God. (Trans. 190S A. D. ) The
Papyrus Prisse which is like Moahite Stone, Decree Cyrus Genealogy. This bequest for justice.
D %^ D ^^^^^^
o
^ * ^ 'fr
^^
AID GOD UNTO MOSES, I AM THAT I AM: -SAY— 1 AM HATH SP:NT ME UNTO YOU."
HERE IT IS CLEARLY DECLARED TWICE IN THE PRIMITH E HEBREW AT
EXODDS III, VERSE XIV, CAREFULLY TRANSLATED INTO THE ANCIENT
PRIMITIVE LANGUAGE THAT THE ALPHABET IS F. A. M. AND THE FOURTH
SYMBOL IN EACH IS A PICTURE OF THE MOUTH THAT SPEAKETH : ALSO
IN THE BEAUTIFUL EGYPTIAN IT IS GIVEN, EACH SYMBOL, AS THE NAME
of G o d and its equiv-
= FAM=OCMand ISM
and F are iri these few
changeable and equiva-
lology. Genesis, chapter
Joseph's name:— "Fanr
Had : Mnsh and Afrom."
scription on Ledge of
Monhegan, off coast of
H. C. and 31 of Jared=
riage of Anhury da. of
Fur Hano the mother,
tota a great War Chief,
son of Y'atonwater, son
F. who came from Roma
Plate 136. Mexican
Lake Pyramid at Omo.
land valuable inscriprion
of Kingiktorsoak, in Baf-
Copenhagen. Genuine
scendant from the primi-
value. Part of its Rec-
the flood goeth forth Nh,
one family to people
from Araat, to Annon
the River Mi, An-Anon,
where the waters of
fountains of the
where man, woman
the light and received
Squares, Laws, Com-
giver of all perfect gifts
and Man." PC d'eclar-
"Mullah and Ramsass:
Hm Map Chart and
Funal Tomb : descent
F. and Chia and Bah-
Trinity," etc.
Rock inscription with
D. 1696 paso D M."
copied after seal of
three bear the com-
mitted by Nh and Fnr
They claim from land
the Mounds: worship
Holy Spirit: the Fnr
cus Agrippa L. F. Bird
Bahman. (11 Gen.)
mmmi
alent is I A M=0 A M=
for Trinity, H lOS A
lines with the C, inter-
lents: very valuable Phi-
XLI, 45, 51 and 52.
Fania Fanio m. Asnt :
Plate 135 -The in-
Homblende on Island of
Maine, U. S. A. 1013
May, I Oratota and mar-
King Solomon who m.
month of Jarada. Ora-
with Bow, Arrow, Spear,
by m. .Marcus Agrippa L.
with five ships," etc.
Pyramids copied from the
Plate 137. Green-
found 1824 on the Island
fins Bay, preserved at
Norse Runic a direct de-
tive and is of world-wide
ord:— "From the Ark of
Hm,- Sm Jft, and wives
the World. They came
from Lake Pyramid by
the .Mounds Land
heaven descended and
Deep were broken up
and children first saw
the pure Golden
mandments of God the
to His Children woman
eth Jew cent from
counts 13 of Nh and
Papyrus: 12 on P.
"from M. Agrippa L.
man : the worship of
Plate 138. Moro
a monogram and "A
The D before M is
Papyrus Prisse. All
mon parent Seal trans-
Lamar to descendants,
of Lake Pyramid and
of God one in Fr. and
and Fnr tree of Mar-
symbol of Chia and F.
TRIVE NOT WITH A MAN WITHOl'T CAl'SK, IK HE HATH DONE THEE NO HAUM,
FOR THE UPRIGHT SHALL DWELL IN THE LAND, AND THE PERFECT SHALL
REMAIN IN IT: BUT THE WICKED SHALL BE CUT OFF FROM THE EARTH,
AND THE TRANSGRESSORS SHALL BE-Rt)OTED OUT OF IT." Plate 13U—
Babylonish hath thereon oeven pvrHniiilH that are rejiresentutive of one week, the highest is
Lake Pyramid at Oregon and right of .K'.'vpt prophetic of its coming downfall among seven
nations : Two inner circles
coming of the Son of God
its inequalities prophetic of
from primitive commands
grandizement : ^Egyptian
with part of Crescent the
hommed and its great
they preach : large right
Mound in U.S. and the Egg
Nations of first Anon, and
Cross is symbolic of Mound
shall come here and cut his
which he did. See symbol
C^Creator, Ava and Adm,
made: (.■Vbl pure:) Gen.,
Moonday nas 8th day:
toxicated slew Bro. Abl in
driven from Garden of Adn
month, said Theos=God=
rangle of four weeks 1 Moon
"This is the year of expul-
Janu=Fanu 8." The first
built before the Deluge.
dated 1650, last, left
each symbol four sides
upper leftconier=16 and
is C=Century whole
count III and two part
a 0=50, count 6 sym-
165« Bis C=B. C. The
symbol of Ark, waters
River under l=Missipi
etc.
Plate 140— One Cal-
As on earth the jEgyp-
gious, wise, just and tern-
sample:— Here read from ria^ht to left:
named right to left :— Hebrew, English.
PLATE
THE BABYLONISH FACTS
s^'yT
92'*^
?ji:'^
?i:^
liU'iiir'5r
LLI-
III ii
IiLI-
liLI-
God B. C, and Cr
b. of Mary and .Joseph and
the fall of two churches
and worship for self ag-
and English or Roman T
Turkish Religion of Ma-
power from pracficing what
hand oval that of Serpent
of Promise is given to Five
the large C at the foot of
Laud, declareth that (Jhrist
line on Dighton Rock,
is names of Trinity. 1 God,
the godly St: Cain, Vini
twin of Kanafatafar m. :
Kfn=Kon=Kin=Cain i n-
Mound Land, Omo, after
=Eden : St name first
Januri. Thus endeth quad-
= Month of 31 days with
sion from Eden. 100 day,
eight months show Mounds
Last four the Flood
quadrangle by count of
and center of tigure
two part cirele8=oo and
1600: 50 in 2nd to right,
circle8=5, last over star
bols, right=6, a total of
last on right is a picture
under M next, iss. and
River. Correctly Read,
PLATE 140-THE >€CYPnAN CALENDAR
endar of -Kgypt the wise
tians were the most reli-
perate we find here a
■'Star is symbolical 12 months
Mtfslh=Methu8elah, July.
Link=Laniech, August.
Nh=Noah, SeDtember.
Hm=Ham, October.
Mzrfin=Mizraim, Nov.
Anm(om)=Animim, Dec.
Ills
\
all
St=Seth=Jan.
Ano8=Anf8=Eno8=Feb. 8.
Kfnij=Cainan, Mar. 9.
Mhllal=Mahalaleel, 'Apr. 10.
Frd=Jared, May. 11.
Hnak=Enoch, June. 12.
Plate 141. Fna Atta, Gen. 15 writes history of Creation and his wife
Fnf Mra hath the Commandments and Golden Square of God's Gift to Ava
and Adam ; First Flag Gift to .Nh and Hm and Route from Mound and
Pyramid Land death of wicked from skin bottle of wine. Monogramic
names : Egg of Promise an ans. to prayer of Adm and Ava to God, etc.
Plate 142. Is after the flood Generation Kith. Fnr. Hanar=Honor and
and Fna Has.^ftr of the Land of FENE Bsfrora that his father Atta received
from Att his father that received from fr. Tta from fr. Ynm=Anra=Anaiiim
from fr. Mizraim from fr. Ham who came from the OMO, Anona, Pyrainid^
Mound Land where fell our fore parents: chn. d. by flood, diseased, wicked,
in the land of the Serpent Mound brought and gave to me the Sciuares and
Tablets, Laws for all Wo Man Kind, to teach and give my son F. Mantha.
82
-m
'HIGH IN HIS TIMES HE SHALL SHEW, WHO IS THE BLESSED
AND ONLY POTENTATE, THE KING OF KINGS. AND LORD OF
LORDS:"—! Timothy 6:15 "AND HATH MADE OF ONE BLOOD
all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined
the times before appointed, and the bounds of their habitation;" — Acts 17:26.
The best parts of
ever be Supreme Laws
framed from God's
commands and laws
enforced gives safety
dividuals with happi-
even unto remote pos-
ration of Rights and
thus practiced b y
Hampshire, God's
Plate 14.1— Is to
Plate 144-Isthe
per or, Empress or
of earth. A very brief
of five is as
"TheTrin-
created Ava
that they
Queen and
land, earth
annointed
with oil of
given t h e
God perfect
who should J
of the long
and Adam,
of O m o,
ramidLand
God and
be the spi-
of All the Earth and
Habitation in the Garden
were driven forth for
by the hand of God.
ments of sin, went forth
Trinity God's face was
Woman pure that forgave
Woman h e gave great
earth to be the mother of love and men kind: God the Lord said part of the power I with
my hand take from Thee Adm and punish, thy line suffer: Go to and build a mound of
Serpent that thy sin may not be forgotten nor the promise to Ava : build it at Adms C,
near waters, at mound the Egg of promise of Christ, go with Cain, Abl, St, and wives: Man
hath done evil in my sight: IT was done: men grew, multiplied on the earth and sinned:
the face of God was dark with anger at their diseases and sin: Noah drank wine and sinned
as Adam, but greater for he was drunk : God in his righteous anger told Noah he would
destroy all if it was not for pure Lamar and his Promise, but doth destroy, excepting Noah's
family, and animal life sufficient to people the earth again from line of first two in one: Rain
is to destroy it, save four men and four women and I will be with the women and men on
Ark build with the women and thy three sons to ride the waters and I with Compass will
be with thee and pilot thee out of the land of Omo on waters of Miss. : take my Sacred Rolls, Golden
Squares, Tablets, to Araat from Mound Land and waters for I am thy God the Father and Holy One."
PLATE 145. ThtUn
all the laws that must
are constructed and
abso.lutely perfect
which ever when fully
unto nations and in-
ness and prosperity
tcrity. Our Dec la-
Constitutions were
my native state. New
Bible, its Laws,
lionor God for his gift,
/^igyptian Royal Em-
King and Queen line
partial translation, one
follows: —
ity Is God
and Adam
should be
King of the
a line one,
by the Lord
purity and
spirit of
in Christ
come born
line of Ava
in the land
Anon, Py-
created of
Christ shall
ritual King
Waters. From their
of Eden man and woman
Adam's serpentine s i n
Adam and Cain, monu-
on hills and waters :
darkened. He saw
him the evil deed :
powers o n waters and
''(§
YE SIMPLE, UNDERSTAND WISDOM: AND, YE FOOLS, BE YE OF
AN UNDERSTANDING HEART." "OPEN THY MOUTH, JUDGE
RIGHTEOUSLY, AND PLEAD THE CAUSE OF THE POOR AND
NEEDY."
After closure by the two lines in Plate 144 and from Plate 145 that was found
at ^gypt and it signifieth combination in ancient Chinese primitive languagc:=and the four lines
Justice, Wisdom. Then appearcth the most remarkable Catouche of Fna Mizraim and the line to the
Great F Alexander that includes some of the same ancestors as those on the Tablet of Abydus that a
comparison of two Tablets will prove. Translation: — "God gave the seal ring unto Ava, Lamar and
Nh in the land of Washn over the waters where Trinity God told Nh to build the vessel=ark with
double walls and sloping roof: God's vessel to save God's children in Adan: at the mouth of the
River, at the land of Nh and Hm to save his family from flood: To take therein beasts, birds, ani-
mated life: them to save for repeopling the Earth and fulfilling his promise, too, for the birth of the
son of God. Water covered the Earth and from Anona the land of Omo, Mounds and Serpent
Mound they went forth with compass to Arat=Ararat and God saved them."
FNR LAMR, THE WIFE OF NOAH WRITES THE HISTORY OF CREA-
TION WHICH WAS COPIED BY MOSES IN GENESIS, AND
HER DESCENDANTS ARE KEPT ON THE TABLET OF
ABYDUS AT THE BRITISH MUSEUM AS
IS HEREIN SET FORTH.
A FEW
ABBREVIATED
FACTS:
Plate No. 1 A.
Plate No. 2 A.
Plate No. 3 A.
Plates 4 A, 5 and 6
Plate No. 7.
Plate No. 8 A.
Plate No. 9 A.
0
GOD THE TRINITY, THREE IN ONE: CREATED FROM
EARTH AND WATERS, ELEMENTS. FROM CHAOS,
NIGHT; ORDER, LIGHT, PLANETS, AND WO MAN
KIND, THREE: HIS PUREjBEAUTIFUL HOLY CHIL-
DREN OF EARTH AND ELEMENTS WITH HIS SOUL
SPIRIT, HEAVENLY I GOD CREATOR OF HEAVEN,
HONOR, JUSTICE, ALL THREE IN OMNIPRESENT,
OMNISCIENT AND OMNIPOTENT GOD UNIVERSAL
POTENTATE WHOSE GREATNESS IS: EARTH, WATERS
AND WORLDS ARE BUT ATOMS, DROPS, IN COMPARI-
SON, MADE ALL. THE CELL, SEED, OVUM, OF NAT-
URAL ANIMATED AND INANIMATE LIFE WITH FNR
AVA AND FNA ADAM LINE OF MANKIND IN HIS
GLORIOUS IMAGE. WOMAN AND MAN D IN A
SQUARE, TWO TO BE ONE PURE <=> HOLY: NO
WINE, EVIL, LIKE SOUL UNTO FATHER GOD. THEIR
BODIES MADE OF THE EARTH AND WATERS TO
WHICH THEY SHALL RETURN, SIMILIA SIMILIBUS,
AND SPIRITS WITH SOULS UNTO GOD: WHEN PURE,
DWELL WITHIN GOD THE RIGHTEOUS EXECUTIVE
THERE WAS VIOLENCE UPON THE EARTH, AND THE
UNITY OF MANKIND BROKEN BY EVIL DEEDS,
BLOOD WAS SHED BY THE SWORD^HARMONY, LOVE
DESTROYED.
84
"E
Plates 10 A and 11
Plate No. 12 A,
relates 13 A and 14.
Plates IS A. 16 and 17.
Plate No. IS A.
Plates 19 A and 20
Plates 21 A and 22
Plate No. 23 A.
Plate No. 24 A.
Plate No. 25 A.
Plate No. 26 A.
^
^N'C-0<o.i
«
\
EMOVE FAR FROM ME VANITY AND LIES: GIVE ME NEITHER
POVERTY NOR RICHES: FEED ME WITH FOOD CONVENIENT
FOR ME: THEN I SAW WISDOM EXCELLETH FOLLY." VANITY.
Trinity God's face was darkened with righteous displeasure as He looked upon His
Creation of Woman pure and wicked Man in his likeness that He gave purity,
power, judgment, wise justice and lives. God saw four women
pure and holy, the wives of Nh, Hm, Sm and Fna Jfpt: Fnr
Lamar most perfect wife, of Nh who drank wine and was drunk
and beastly evil, wicked indulgent lioness conceived Apedom
confusion. For vile acts God destroyeth creatures of the world
by waters: Save family of F. Lamar, eight, and pairs of dogs,
birds, apes, animals and living species for procreation
and rehabitation of earth.
On 600th year of Nh life, 2nd month] of Anos
=Feb. 17, 16SS, the windows of
Heaven were opened and the 3
• fountains of the deep were
broken open and the rain was
upon the earth forty days and forty nights: the
waters of the flood were upon the earth at
Mississippi River Land of Fna Noah and
Lamar Land covereth all the God given land
to Fnr and Fna Ave, and Adm who did evil, copied by
Cain, and Nh=Noah, wine both Cfn and Nh dr
vile cursed drink, not Adm; whose sin is here told.
FOR WOMEN, MEN. CHILDREN be it told ♦ ' '
GOD THE HOLY TRINITY said— Nh and family build a
house, vessel, ship, ark to sail the waters safely thy family: I,
God, with chart, compass, hand will lead you to save my seed
the small remnant of Wo Man Kind while I utterly destroy all:
saving thy family: dogs, birds, beasts in pairs take
into the vessel. Lamar and Noah family unitedly
Strong with Trinity one in purity, that with my protecting arm
Lamar family One for the world in me God their Father
my child I will guard, guide, watch and keep from destruc-
tion of world drowned over which I will lead safely Lamar
the upright wife of Noah, and mother of Hm, Sm, Japeth,
and wives to Mount Araat off the Serpent Mound, Land of
Omo, Anona: I, as God Commandeth, write, being the wife
Fna Noah, born in Mound Land of Oma, where the sun
first shone on the Father God's lines of beauty creation, gift
_^ of God. His Name Seal with five lines I, 27th of
I Anos^Feb., 1SS6, prefix it, Fnr Lap
Child
iby ^j
•ank I , , f
mL^
cg^
prefix
jf GOD, at Mount Ararat.
worshiping
"i
ISCRETION SHALL PRESERVE THEE, UNDERSTANDING SHALL KEEP
THEE: BUT THE WICKED SHALL BE CUT OFF FROM THE EARTH',
AND THE TRANSGRESSORS SHALL BE ROOTED OUT OF IT." "THE
curse of the Lord is in the house of the wicked; blesseth the godly children of the Just."
Plate 28— Calendar of
Lamar.
Plate 29 A— Calendar
of Fnr Lamar
Salvation
\7
Plate No. 27 A— with
^ <->
data:
00 0
Line and circular lan-
^£=> <=>
guage in primitive.
05^^"
TMt
m
b^
God Created the Universe 5810 Before Christ the Messiah
His Son born of Mary and Joseph in lawful wedlock the
only one pure man: And the Lights of Sun, Moon and
Stars for us: 5397 B. C.
The Lord God Created Wo Man Kind, 4376 B. C : He
gave to them speech, love, power, beauty, intellect,
knowledge, skill and wise symbols: Perfect after His
most glorious likeness and image He made to be up-
right, honest and just, like unto God, return in unison,
record pure, without blemish or any such thing. He
Created Waters 6977 B. C. : fruits, vegetables, milk and
waters, for food, beverages and good.
Twelve Months in One Year, Recorded by 12 Hebrew
terminal letters (O) square M, initial of Month: The
two perpendicular lines are H, I, J, F, A and R, in
yEgyptian: terminus fork is an M, and Greed A: 12
Hours one light day: 12 Hours one dark night: See
{Vandal acts continued in this day: ) God permitted it
patiently to teach patience to Us. Seven nights and days
one week. (Count shaded) Seventh star point is name
Fa^God and Sabbath. Four weeks a fraction, one month,
Hebrew square M. Seven light days one week and 7th
is God's. Square all your works by the commands of
God. Fourteen days and nights are two weeks and two
Sabbaths are God's and His mankind line for worship and
rest with joyful pure songs. Messiah is Christ and he
alone stands the upright Son of God, begot of Mary and
Joseph His earthly parents and was of the line of Ham,
Shem and Japeth. One Saviour for all who so loved all
his brothers and sisters that He gave his life, teachings,
sufferings, from persecution, that all might be happy
and saved."
Plate 30 A— Birth of
Christ. Literal Fulfil-
ment of God's Promise
to F. Ava and Adam is
thus hereon and re-
corded: Our Messiah!
Plates 31 A, 32, 33 and
34 following.
cz;^-
Translation: "Christ, the son of Mary and Joseph was
born Sat. 10th of Oct. 4376, 11 hour; was born in Heaven,
Sunday 10th Ham and Oct. 44 A. D., 21st hour: of the
line Nh, Hm, Sm, and Jfth: j^gyptian, Hebrew and
Roman descent: Thecla the next oldest child and his
sister, the Writer of Sacred Scriptures Annals. THE
MARRIAGE OF MARY AND JOSEPH was the 3rd
of Animim, and December 4375." IT IS PROVED
by Hebrew Old and New Testament: Isaiah, chapter 7,
verse 14, and St. Luke, chapter 1, verse 26, translated into
theiEgyptian and primitive languages, these into English.
86
"i
lEU FA, GOTT, THEOS. ALLAH, DEUS, DIGS, DIA, ALHOM. LORD,
(ALL ARE ONE) GOD, MADE TWO GREAT LIGHTS: TKE GREATER
LIGHT TO RULE THE DAY. AND THE LESSER LIGHT TO RULE
the night: he made the stars also. Set them in their orbits above Wo Man Kind.
This was the fourth day. Every living creature that moveth, Fifth Day. Woman
and man. Sixth Day. God made holy the seventh Sacred Sabbath for Worship of God and gave the
Great Seal of it and His Bright Holy Name Fa with the five lines of fifth day of Creation with Do-
minion to Ava and Adam that Fnr Lamr, the wife of Noah affixeth to Honor God, Remembrance
for all descendants lovingly to keep
<^fm^
PLATE 33
ii/CDM
am
PLATE 32
PI. 33
from the Waters
nals of God's
tion. Religious
icles. Ham's line,
the Bee, Words
as honey from
na's Annals from
Rolls and Tablets
Tree copied by
wife from the
that drank not
fr. of F. Apries
Plate 187. "I,
scendant of Ava
F Lamr, and Nh,
the Lotus Land
/Egypt, with
fathers and
Heavenly Father
my Minister and
Fna Ramisar to
of Oma where
family worshiped
forefathers in
Holy truth to my
king pure Ciiief
Anona that he a
Christ, honoring
that Commanded
Serpent Mound
it God, whose
tail, forth from Waters of Deluge and Brother FnaOratota
■#a
till Son of God Comes, Their Seal."
F. Lamr, mother of Ham,.
Shem, and Japeth, wife of Noah
wrote the history of the family saved
in An- , , ^
c r e a-
Chron-
busy as
sweet PL. 37
F. Za- ■^"'Se.i
God, written on
with Ancestral
Moses and his
pure /Egyptians
wine from gt. gr.
to Noah.
Fna Rasahu, de-
and Adm line of
Hm and Anr in
of F. Agipt =
thirty-eight fore-
mothers to my
God, sent forth
Son of Marrifu,
Adn, Lake land
Nh and Hm, one
God as did my
pure spirit and
Brother Oratota,
of Land of Flood
Pike to War for
Promi.se of God
to be built the
of the Great Spir-
Hand led us, the
jndeth unto Us love and Pike from his
Throne to our Pike, Bow of Heaven our Throne his courteous fecilitations and by his right hand af-
fixeth Seal (same on Peter Faneuil Tomb, Old Granary Cemetery) with Theos Christ like love.
(Right hand Catouche is of Oratota spelt from top 2 symbols and part ol upper third of theCatouche,
now read proof within Catouche.) On left is an /Egyptian=/Egiptian symbol and record of battle at
or near Dighton Rock, Taunton River, Massachusetts, United States of America. There has been
found arrow heads and other evidence of a great battle. Only a very small portion of the wonderful
and beautiful .'Egyptian language is translated. Ama land destroyed by the flood and ark on it with
the four families, count on top of it. The envoy ship to and from Serpent and Lake Pyramid land
and Scepter an Ota above, M below.
N. B. The Rosetta Stone is in part, i{ not all, a forgery.
87
^ o
4^^^^gm IGHT BEFORE GOD THE TRINITY AND THE KINGS HE HATH
♦-♦■ iU f APPOINTED TO RULE JUSILY." "I, HONORING GOD THAT
1
HAS BOUNTIFULLY BLESSED OUR TREE OF GENEALOGY AND
GIVEN TO ME THIS POWERFUL KINGDOM, AGREEABLE TO
Trinity commands say: Go forth Minister, over the waters where my first parents
were created and bring to me the Tablets and Laws of God; the Birdlike beautiful songs taught by the
Lord in the Garden of Eden, Noah had; the Golden squares, bring over the Great Waters, Fna Nh
brought in Ark, Trinity saved and was with on the waters, saving four families from the Deluge, that
destroyed the wicked. God's upright line Roll Squares bring to me in the Land of the Lotus, to save-
Let thy feet hasten, take the Dudi Compass, and God of Ancestry be with Thee to and frOm the Lake
Pyramid land that fell. Hasten thy step to bring the Square of Trinity pure to teach my people right-
eousness that may remove the clouds of displeasure from God's Face in /Egypt." (Now read five
columns over Head of Ambasador.) "Oratota said; — I in the land of Oma, Gods Pyramid Land,
Anonna where the Garden of Eden the Lord expelled Ava and Adam for falling from me and my
commands; God's prayer I taught and gave them before the pure land was sullied from sin. I that
drowned the world by water save Ark inhabitants I God with Compass, the best parts, with hand guid-
ed to Araat in answer to prayers of Nh and Lamr: one family to Lotus Land whose seal shall be five
pointed Star and Circle: A son, five families of Genealogical Tree to Anona and their Seal a Circle
and X or four lines inside and hereafter shall be theirs with the Aegle saith Trinity God, that I giveth
to Nh, Hm. Sm and Japth's descendant Chriet who will teach here and over the great waters from
the golden Square, the Mound, Lake Pyramid Land where for men sins I destroyed them, the voice
of Christ shall teach all, the Faraoh's line of beauty, Christs songs of Fa Fo and line of Noah at both
sides of' the waters, from Pyramid Land my son, at Oregon, at Dighton Rock where He cutteth His
Holy name within mine and as a sign shall be seen in the clouds -n (and was seen) there fell the
deluge, and War drenched the earth with blood of slain with one escape, Fna Orata a great Chieftian
King fighteth Agrippa's son Aegle and square banner from over the waters, Roma's descendant of re-
ligious prayerful Av.i's. A'lm. Nh. Hm, Sm, jpft, upright men th it c.un- from the Garden acros-s the
Great waters, where built the Serpent mound of Promise had there the Sacred Squares over the waters
from Eden, where .'\nmand Adr, three lines vi<ited Gardens to Saio and Nachro (Gen 68) at land over
waters that God built Pyramid. One Chief Fna The Great Bull that bore the Christ Sq. Command-
ments, Laws went across the waters to Fra of Agipt." (This Indian Chief Sombol of Bull is still kept
built on Cor. High and Congress Sts., Boston.) "Thus Fra of Aigpt had the Genealogy Tree and
God's promise of Chri.st coming to the land of Misraim, across the three great waters pouring forth
Truths like the sparkling waters from resevoir more pure than the River Nile that refresheth and give-
th gladly moving wings of Joy frorti God to His Children the sons of mankind in JEgypt that had in
Misraim Land begun to do evil that Fra would prevent from God Tablets Sqrs. a never ceasing Oceans
and Rivers, as Lord spake and Hand sent from mound land over the waters musical truths from Ora-
tota to /Egypt; over half who had fallen by battle and evils; that the son of God Christ, Roll=Oratota
may send unto me, the strong Bull Roll to Lotos Land by my Envoy across the Great waters where
the Lord spake to Ava, Nh and Lamar at the River Miss, before he left in the Ark, the Land that
God destroyed for their diseased evils, and remedy like here. I, Thy son, O King of /^gj pt bring
from Chicftan King Oratota my Uncle His Signet Ririg with his prayers God's Golden Squares,
Tablets, Rolls, nine Commandments given to Ava and Adam, made 4376 B. .C. which he had from
his fathers three generations of the Great OrAToTA. Joy: God has HonorVd with His Blessings
and Safely Guided by Thy Duck Compass God Giveth Thee."
"A
T GRAVE^CREEK
OHIO RIVER
180 Trans. "After
Hm, Sm, Jft, family
Pyramid, Omo, An-
and found Agipt, China and all the
the family. To Ava and Adam land
people Land build, Mounds, Worship
Seals Nh, Stone. Hm, AffiySun Seal O
"God Trinity created Women, Man to be o
LARGE MOUND
FOUND." PL.
fall of Adam Nh,
m. go from lake
ona forth to Araat
earth people with
Nh, Hm returneth
God : sign names,
white on PI. 179.
PLATE 180
like Gc.d; promised Ava a Son Christ to plate its
be born of Trinity, Mri and Josf. (see Catouche Gen. 6H) Their Trans. 'Vigcis M(agnus) D(ottir) Huilir
Her Glede Guth Sal HeNo Hi 8. Higdis, Magnu, Daughter, rests here; may God gladden her soul.' (seeZndEd.)
NAMES OF OUR FOREPARENTS IN THE FOLLOWING
BIBLE LANGUAGES:
HOMANCAIH- PROTESTANT F. J. 1 F. T., 1581 18% 1 KW 1819
18W 1821
1852
EVE, ADAM EVE and ADAM CHAVAM, ADAM HEVAM.ADAM ETAS. AdAM
Sflh Shtlh Schtih Seth Zi/i
Enoj Eiiosh Rnosch Enc» T,nn
Cdinan Kenan Kenan Caiiian K<u»aF
Malileel Mahalaleel Mahalaleel Malakel .MaX/X»i|»
Jared Jered Jered Jared lo^J
HEVA, ADAN
HEVA, ADAM EVA, ADAO
CUBA, ADAV
Seth Seth
Sec
Enos Eno!
Enos
Kenan Cainan
Cenan
Mahalaleel Malale
Mahalileet
lared Jared
lered
Henoch Agnoch
Henor
Mathusalem Mathusale
MetusaUh
EUBHA and ADHAMH EVE, ADAM
g€Oi unb 3133^21
£no3
Mtnan
Mabalaletl
lartS
gitlbufala^
Ilo:ib
\)n,»
illiiraim
-Jnamim
") DTArn?
n ti' *
on: jvr *
m> '
')>:')') 770-
-r-i • •
Ttbci'i no*
ID)'
7i: '
D n •
Q'~\-^ o '
D'o jy •
EBM.AAAant
HEWA, ADAM
HEVA, ADAM
Seth
AO I. O
5 A-A
5 AlO
5A°A
5 O I
°AV°
A-O 5
K O --
VI<=°A<=
O A<= Ac
l-OK
VT-^OV
y-v
To keep the Commnndments, Laws OF God ! Honor our universal parents whti cared for us is my pleasant
duty that we may please and benefit truly all posterity ; God's Children. Russia fired on our troops at China War.
N^ B IT WAS CLAIMED THAT THE RUSSIAN COPIED FROM A BIBLE WAS NOT CORRECT. 1 GAVE IT AS I FOUND IT.
-m
'HOSE VOICE THEN SHOOK THE EARTH: BUT NOW HE HATH PROMISED.
SAYING. YET ONCE MORE I SHAKE NOT THE EARTH ONLY BUT ALSO
HEAVEN." "WISDOM IS TOO HIGH FOR A FOOL: HE OPENS NOT HIS
MOUTH IN THE GATE." "FOLLY IS JOY TO HIM WITHOUT WISDOM:"
THESE ARE PHONETIC NAMES BY THOSE CONVERSANT WITH /EGYPTIAN.
T«i
Atholhis
Aloti
Kenkenet
All
Un.ph„
He..p
Usaphiedul
Merba
Miebidii
M.rb.ip.n
Kjb.h
Stmcmpui
B.eneche.
Kabthu
Nebki
Serbn
T..»
S<ta
Ranferki
Necherophe!
Totorthrus
Ty.ei.
Sephuris
Suphis II
' RhaIoc»«
Richcris
Seb«rcherej
Uurchern
Sephrn
Nephcrchcrc
Suir«
Rithurcs
Menchere*
Tancberes
Rancferka
Sckari Nefirka
T.fa
Khufu
Rataiuf
Rashaul
Pepi
M,m Ct
eratioD 12, ANM = YNM
roamed Fnt Adr =
KMi,
" 13. T.a
14, Alt
•• Lyra
'• Mrai
15, Ana
" Mra
16, Hasaflr
" Hanar
Oi'Oaxa.l
17, Mantha
" Rachar
,M.<3..
18, Man
" Fardar
" 19, Biancha.
" Lara
2U, Afofii.
" Falafar
B«9o.
21, Butan
■' Fora
K..<x'X»
" 22. Kaka
■■ Rafa
B.«Op.i
23, Bainular
•• Rafar
TXai
24, Utnaj
" Naomi
I«^MI
•• 25, Sonta
•• Muto
■• 26, Tata
" Arta
'^"P'PXVP^t
27, Nabka
" Af Anar "
Zttroxvpi'
2S. Saba.
•' Maron
" 29, Tata
•• Aloa
30, Sato.
'■ Falamar "
31, Ramfarka
■• Afr
Tvp,.,
■■ 32, Huni
■■ Tata,
33, S.nafra
.. pj„,
34, Khufu
" Mathar
" 35. R^utaf
" Fammr "
Xv.r.
36, Ra.haf
" Ma.lona "
37, Ramanka
•■ Bunala
X-K^ptr
38, Uwkaf
" Marion
Mf-X-K/W.
39, Ralahu
" Marrjfu "
l>Vvxvp«
40, Raroaiar.
" Fama
r.*p«
41, Haraat.ka''
" Musar
'• 42, Ratatka
" " Francasa "
N<#<px'^>(>n
43, Mnas
" Hulda
P.«.^
44, Tau
" Funar
^•'xvf^'
45, Rama.i
•• Fama
Tai^xv/xi
46, Mananra
'• Fafur
Offrv,
■• 47, Tyrou,
" Fma
48, Satas
■• Lnar
" 49, Nafakara
" Baiha
0^1
50, Nabkih
" Bithia
" 51, Hana
" Naanah
MCT^. ,<,„*„
52. Raraankhfa
■• Mahataval "
; B-
53, Anm
" HaiiaUl "
•■ 54. Sufi.
" Anannaah "
-o Aoo
O voA
VoA 1
Y«=> A
I A-Ao
OA-iA"
O AouAo
OAo A
O AOAOA
QOOA
OAO A
OAOA»
-AOVI
VUOQ
Ao-^A
AOA7Y*
VAoo-
AOOA
OA«>AYA°
0 A^AO
OACiAO
VAqiao
OAYV<=>
YAOOOA
QU-AOA
VA^IO-
VA°o|OJ
OAo-A
VUiiAO
O o A->^'A
1 U«>oA
Ou-AO
OAOuo
OAOUO
Qo- A
O- Ao
QAQIA
^ I c I lA
VAI
^A-Al
THE BEAUTIFUL PERFECT PRIMITIVE LANGUAGE CORRECTS ALL IMPERFECTIONS AND BRINGS THESE VALUABLE RECORDS AND
DOCUMENTS INTO UTILITY THAT WE ALL MAY DERIVE THE GREATEST GOOD FROM AND HONOR GOD,
4- o
Chapter DITIF
/^^^ ' hearts,
of the
tor and Giver of
affording us, in
providence, a n
hherately and
out fraud, vio-
of entering into
plicit, and solemn
eacli other: and
God's United
Alhanceand Gen-
sehes and postcri-
imploring His di-
teresting a design,
ordain and cstalv
ing and following
alogy of the NA-
Earth : that a
been made of
honoring the
that Deity has
He graciously has
warded by the
eries of long hid-
truths, which,
or our Creator
we bring with
OR WE OF THE INTERNATIONAL, UNIVERSAL
m a n -
BROTHERHOOD OF
kind acknowledg-
with grateful
the goodness
perfect Legislat-
the universe, in
the course of His
opportunity, de-
peaceably,. with-
lence, or surprise,
an original, ex-
compact with
of forming a new
States and Foreign
ealogy for our-
ty: and devoutly
rection in so in-
do agree upon,
h the preceed-
God given Gene-
TIONS of the
faithful study has
since 18SS ; for
Lawful Rulers,
foreortiained: and
preserved : re-
bountiful discov-
den, or forgotten
herein to hon-
and Foreparents
grateful
Gen. 45. Calendar of Pna Ramasi, b. 2774, d. 3152: m. Fnr Farna
thanks!
THIS plate was copied from the Astronomical representations on the ceiling of Ramesseum at Thebes
and is Genealogical, Historical, and pre-eminently Religious. The three circular lines are added to
the original by the author from one of many careful translations of the fifth line of the circular arranged
hieroglyphics showing the symbols that correspond with the Hebrew Letters symbols in Genesis of
Hebrew Bible w ithout the points that were a modern interpolation to change and obscure truths.
Nine are the remote ancestral names, common forefathers of the 1 411 171 3S1 Representatives, Most
Honorable Consulate of the L-awful Emperors and Empresses, Kings and (Queens, Presidents and
Governors; by that immense number of people that thus are greatly honored including the Envoys of
Russia and Japan to whom was sent the certificate for Peace on Earth and Good Will to all: without
bigotry, not\\itiistanding the Remanent of the World estimated at 138, 128, 619 refused their signatures
for the advantage of their people afflicted with the e\ils that they would not then use their influence
to suppress for their great good on earth and blessings in the future immortal Life:— some of that
small number in comparison were not represented by Hon. Official Consuls at Boston for extending
a helping hand to the union in the greatest good for largest number. The perpendicular pike or spear
line at top has the ancient initial letters of God, Ava and .Adam : Fig. below monogramic name of Seth
and si.\ lines above labor days in a week: large white centre, Sunday: horizontal line dividing into
quarters the four seasons and also the Cardinal Points of the Compa.ss, North. South, East and West:
and the dogs, two faithful guards for mankind. Nileometre four circle union of men with Trinity.
=a <^ <^ (4=" n=
> ^ /,J[\^ IHE FIRST DAY. 5810 B. C. GOD CREATED THE WORLD, GAVE
i Irl LIGHT TO THIS EARTH PLANET," "ON THE SECOND DAY, 5397
I |Li B. C. GOD MADE THE F1RMAMENT=0 i •^V'^VC -a=:®«i* *=Sun,
\^Jx Moon, Stars: 'i'=V=Waters: I TS&'^Body, dust, thrown off from the Sun set
revolving: first proof Shell Plate No. 2 of America's Mound, The old definition
of firmament is erroneous: i^gyptians second proof for Expert Theologians: "On the third day God
made inanimate life to reproduce fruits, food, seed, and its kind. On the fourth day God regulated
the Lights from Sun, Moon and Stars establishing time." "On the fifth day God created creatures
of the waters and fowls of the air of its class and specie: blessed them and commanded them to be
fruitful and multiply." 2nd Shell Plate 4. "On the sixth day God created the living creatures after
their kind, from least to greatest." "Aor=Afr^Ava and Adam=Adm with prefix Fnr and Fna, He
created 6th and 7th December 4376 B. C." (Plate 5) "Sunday He finished all that work and
Blessed and Sanctified the Holy Sabbath for Worship and Rest." "Lord God planted'a Garden in
Eden beautiful to behold and gave it to Ava and Adam with dominion over the living creatures of the
Earth and Waters. From the Garden flowed a bright, sparkling River of Waters: From thence it
was parted into four Heads." See Plates 32 and 308. ) The first was called "Foson" (before change
of Hebrew language, in Hebrew,) that compasseth the whole land of "H HOoLh," where there is
Gold, H Bdlm and Onyx Stone? The second river "Gohon:" the third river "Hdkl," go toward
"Asor:" The fourth river "HoaFrt?" (The English translation of these rivers are down as 1st,
"Pison;" 2nd, "Gihon;" 3rd, "Hideekel;" and 4th, "Euphrates.") (From the declared lost Hebrew.)
The /Egyptian is, Q)OSO-*:eo I 0-& 1 ^\< ^& I QAO^a from Hebrew and from English O I S^s*
-, <■- I I 0-, I I w l<<a>, C-nO I <?'A/af,S It is interesting to observe that the English letters give in
all these four Rivers from the /Egyptian as follows: — 1, Miss the line of beauty: 2, Missi and I: 3,
Missipii No iiisss N : 1, Missiouri and Orat C, which I leave for those expert in mysterious discoveries-
FACTS:
OO ******** ♦♦♦♦ O^OO ♦♦♦♦ *******;^t
Proved by Genesis. Decree o( Cyrus Ihe Creal, Moabite Slone. Payprus Prisse, Elc.
Generation No. A GOD CREATED F. AOA=AVA=EVE AND F. ADM=ADAM, SAT-
urday and Sunday, December 6 and 7, 4376: the literal part meaning of their
names translated from the primitive languages are: viz: God made woman in
his form a blessing to be the mother of all mankind from God Adm of God
and Earth and Waters, souls or spirits to conceive with Wo Man Kind.
Ge.neration No. "=V FNR AVA died 10th July, 930: Sunday: Fna Adam d. Th. 2 June, 930 C.
M. (C. M=Creation of Wo Man) KANAFATAFAA m. Cain, Mon.'lOOct.,
Mon. 27. Had: FNR ZANA, da. of Twins, F. Kanafatafar and Cain, m. FNA
ABALA=Abel Godly b. 10 Dec. 60: Killed by maker of and drunk by
Wine Cain, 10, Sept. 310: F. Zana, b. 1 June 86: d. 3 Aug. 296: copied
Sacred Chronicles or Annals from Ava and Adm'scopy from written. Engraved
Rolls Tablets, Squares that God did, and gave to Ava: Had FNA SANA, b.
Gen. No. 1. 10=0 i 29 Dec. 200: d. Mon. 10 June, 1042: m. F. SETH, b. Mon. 3 Apr HO-
d. 11 Nov. 1042, Friday:
N. B. Observe the monogrammics Alpha for first two: the Omega for Cain
and wife, da. and Abel, symbol of O I ^One God, for Sana and Seth, that as
found is copied in this true line, amply proved by Sacred and Profane History
that from loss of facts and concealed data by bigots for their supposed self
interest, that with great folly they attempted to place paramount to the wisdom
of God's Sacred Truths has led to not only their downfall but the affliction of
innocent nations and loyal patriotic individuals unto the present time.
U <#=> eyf^ <4f> D
^Vt EMEMBERING ALL WO, MEN, KIND FROM AVA AND ADAM, CREATED
All BY THEIR FATHER LORD GOD, ARE FREE AND EQUAL, AND HAVE
1#1 CERTAIN NATURAL. ESSENTIAL, AND UNALIENABLE RIGHTS:
>^% AMONG WHICH MAY BE RECKONED THE RIGHT OF ENJOYING
AND DEFENDING THEIR LIVES AND LIBERTIES: THAT OF
acquiring, possessing, and protecting property: in tine, tiiat of seeking and obtaining their safety and
happiness: free from Cain's beverage, evil acts, that destroyed godly Abel, Adam and Noah's serpen-
tine sins: that Serpent Mound of America and pure religious /Egyptians (Adam uith Abel not counted
but) recorded Plates 8, 9, 10, 17, 18, 20, 21, 187 chastely delineates national dangers.
Generation No. 2 F. SAIO, da. F. Stair and F. Masui, son of F. Sana who Wrote the Sacred
Scriptures and F. Seth, was b. Sat. 2 Nov. 238, d. Monday 1 July 1201: m.
F. ENOS=Anos=Anfs, son of F. St=Seth and F. Sana: b. Tuesday 2 Nov.
235: d. Sat. 5 Apr. 1140: Proof Genesis Chap. V, verse 7, English Bible:
They Had Cainan.
" 3 FNRNASATA, b. Tu. 2SJune350: d. Wed. 22 May 1229: da. of Fnr
Stair and F. Masui, s. St and Sana: m. FNA CAINAN. s. of Anos, s. St, s.
Adam, that was b. Fr. 2 Sept. 325: d. Wed. 1 May 1235: They had as all
others have many Synonyms: a few are Fnr Niosiovnoanaa, Nsyoibat, his.
Kionn, Sionn, Faonn, laonn, etc. (see plates 101-5 from Classicle Literature
give her name and the proof from Genesis Chap. V,V. 10, Holy Bible, trans-
lating Hebrew into /Egyptian language and that into mother tongue;
English, which is the one most akin to the ancient primitive language of
earth.
" A Had: Mahallal
FNR LALAR, b. Fr. 1 Oct. 431, da. Fna and Mri. da. Fna and Fah, da.
F. Anos and F. Saio: d. Wed. 15 Oct. 1275: m. FNA MAHALLAL=0^
F. Mhallal, b. Tu. 10 Dec. 395, son of Fnr Nasata and Fna Cainan, d. Tu.
22 Sept. 1270. This Generation is Proved by the Holy Bible Genesis Chap.
V, V. 13 and by Papyrus Prisse, also from Decree of Cyrus the Great of line
and Moabite Stone etc.
" 5 Had: Farada^ared
FNR SANTA, da. F. Maris, s F. Das, s. F. Tassa, s. F. Seth and F. Sana,
s. F. Ava and F. Adam: b. Fr. 23 July 459 and d. Tu. 21 Oct. 1622- m.
FNA JARED=Farada, s. Mahallal, s. Seth, s. Adam: b. Fr. 2 Dec. 460:
d. Sun. 11 July 1422: This Generation is proved bv The Holy Bible, Gen.
Chap. V, V. 16.
6 Had; Fna Hnok=Enoch:
FNA SARA FAINA, da. F. St and F. Sana; b. Th. 11 Jan. 621, d. Sun.
22 Dec. 1022: m. FNA HNOK, s. Fared=Jared and Santa: This Gen. had
prefix P'anar: The /Egyptian symbols of Enoch, b. Sat. 3 Apr. 622: d. Wed-
1 Feb. 987, and Hnok= i -ol< walked with God=© and was not, is fully
explanator)'. The Holy Bible, Gen. Chap. 1, V. 26.
" 7 Had; F. Mtoslh=Methuselh=Matoslah
FNR SALAH, da. F. St and F. Sana, da. F. Zana and Abal, da. Kanafatafar
and Cain, da. F. Ava and F. Adam children of God made from Earth and
the waters, was born Sun. 6 .Apr. 701: d. Sun. 3 fan. 1651, m. FNA
METHUSELAH, b. Tu. 2 Dec. 687: d. Wed. 22 xMay 1655, he lived 969
years; This proved by Holy Bible, Chap. 1, verse 26 also by the Hebrew and
/Egyptian of Genesis Chap, v., verse 22; This Genesis gives her name as
Earn Slii; Had; F. Lmk=I,amak=Leniech.
"8 FNR LADAR, da. F. Anos and F. Saio, was b. Fr. Ill Oct. SS3; d. Sun. 1
Mar. 1650; m. F. LMK, s. F. Salah and Mtoslh, b. Fr. 21 julv S74; d, Tu.
3 Mar. 1651.
+ ^-
W'WX/THE GREAT CR
r
RIGHT TO ALL TO WORSHIP THE SUPREME BEING,
EATOR AND PRESERVER OF UNIVERSAL CREATION
IN EVERY ONE OF HIS 170 FOUND NAMES. NO PERSON IN THE
exercise cif this diitv slinll \ie hurt. iiioleHteil, or
V. or estate, for n()|-8hi|pinii Ood in the
manner aiui seiison most u^M-eeable to the dictates of con-
science; or lor relijrions profession or sentiments; pro-
ilic peace is not ilislnrhed. or «i
#
F DEITY IS THE HAPPINESS AND PROSPERITY OF NATIONS AND
PEOPLE, AND THE GOOD ORDER AND PRESERVATION OF GOV-
ERNMENT ESSENTIALLY DEPENDENT UPON PIETY, RELIGION AND
morality: and as these cannot be diffused throughout the world but by worship of God,
and instructions, at home, and in public: Therefore THE HAGUE, to promote their
happiness, and to secure the good order and preservation of each individual, should and do have a right
to invest their nations with power, and to authorize and require, and the nations shall, from time to
time, authorize and require, the towns, cities, governments and nations and other bodies politic, or
religious societies, to make suitable'provisions, at their own expense for the worship of God, and for
the support and maintenance of teachers of
piety, religion, and morality, in all cases where
such provisions are not made voluntarily.
Ever>' denomination demeaning themselves
peaceably, and good subjects of government
shall be equally under the protection of the
law: nor shall any denomination inflict any
punishment except verbal, or written on its
members or any other denomination, except
by executors of the law in that country, as
elected, or appointed, and no surbordination
of any one sect or denomination, to another,
shall ever be established by law.
Plates 199 from /Egypt:
20(1 at Berlin Museum. 201
was copy of find at New Jer-
sey, U. S. A., and the primi-
tive writing gives Anamim's
Genealogy to Ava and Adam
the Children of God.
FNR ADR=Adar, da.
F. Maf, s. F. Ham, b. Sun. 3
Nov. 1750: d. Wed. 1, Dec.
2160:m.FNAANM
=Ynm=.'\nimim,s.
of F. Mizraim and
F. Laza, b. Mon. 5 k^
Feb. 1765: d. Tue. V
10, Dec. 2175. This
liiis.K^-f<t
A
■\ A
GENERATION NO. 12
Generation is proved
by The Holy Bible.
Genesis Chapter X,
\'erse Thirteenth.
Inscription says he
was named for Lake,
Pyramid built bv Deity, Oregon, Omo.
FNR. LYRA, da. F. Hm and F. Anr,
b. Tu. 13 Iulvl791: d. Th. 10 June 2300: m.
FNA TFA, s. F. Anm and .^dr, b. Tu. 1 May
1793: d. Sat. 11 Aug. 2000: This is proved by the
Holy Bible, Genesis, Chap. 1, Verse 22: Papyrus
Prisse: Decree of Cyrus The Great: He weareth
the emblems of the promise of Christ and of God
Holy One whose son is to be born of Mary and Josf as God declared
PLATE 205. GEN
the Father and God the j . r ,- ■ r. ■ . . .^ i
Anonna, Omo, & She that God promised the great Honor at Omo, Land of Lake Pyramid 6c Mounds
I OWN THE FAST FLOWING RIVERS OF TIME. IMMUTABLE, UNCHANCE-
ablc History to Eternity when mankind shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more: for
the Lord shall feed them, and shall lead them unto bright sparkling living fountains of pure
FNR MRAI, da. Mizraim and
Laza, b. Mon. 6 Jun. 1836; d.
Tues. 12 Nov. 2393, C. M., m.
FNR ATT, son F. Tta and F.
Lyra, b. Tu. 15 Dec. 1829: d.
Fr. 1 Oct. 2216; had Atta and
sons and das. They engraved
the Shell of Creation at 2204,
PI. 2, 4, S and both their names
are cut on it with Christ coming,
time, 4376. See Bureau of Eth- piait 207
nology by U. S. Government on
"Aborigines" no longer, but American Antedeluvians and descendants; Fur
Lamr's name was also found thereon. Tavantisuyu=ffl^VA-'a I SUYU which
Spainards call Peru. Its literal meaning is Fnr Ava line and Noah, man line
after the Flood from Anon, America land of Mounds and Lake Pyramid (Sec
Gens. 13 and 37 with 43.) They peopled Japan: Gens. 14 and IS father and
son were Free Masons
who are mentioned in
IS. /^ >v the j^gypdan of first
word of Genesis that
also Chap. 1, Verse 22,
proves these names of
Generation No. 14th.
PIilc210. Ccn. 15.
FNR MRA, da. F.
Mah and F. Mri, s. F.
Mizraim and F. Laza,
b.Th. lOApr. 18S6;d.
Th. 21 Aug. 2411; m. '""'"
FNA ATTA, s. F. Att and F. Mrai.b.Th. 3 May IBSS; d. Mon. 17 June, 2600;
Had Hasaftr daughters and sons. At, s. and Fnfr 1 /»©«■ 1 writer of Pentateuch
and with af 1 2311 date was written by her and 1 <aa 1 =Atta that copied
from 0=God's n=Tablct, and their son was a child of God 9 jn A Lake
Land of Pyramid, Oregon, U. S. A., which Government is named on Map
Chart that God gave to Ham and Noah: FIVE NATIONS from Noah is re-
corded with or of Six Families: 1st Fam. TEHAWREHOGEH, now called
MOHAWK settled at Sliawnatonty, Hudson; they agreed to kceptlic chain of
alliance, and facts, from God,s Tablet of Nh and Lamr and to this day its truth
may be seen in the primitive Alphabet of the Mic Mac Indians of Canada; (sec
pi. 318 of Lord's Prayer in German, Indian and English, from excellent work
of Carl Faulman.) They removed travelling toward the Sunset about two
days, settled at a creek, (branch of Susquehanna) called CAWNATAW-
TERUH, which means, God's written Tablet by Vashatan, it was and is called
Pineries. 2nd Fam.
96
■ONSTITUTION OF MASSACHUSETTS DECLARETH THAT "GOVERNMENT
is instituted for the common good: for the protection, safety, prosperity and happiness of
the people; and not for the profit, honor, or private interest of any one man, family, or
class of rrien. Therefore the people alone have an incontestible, unalienable, and inde-
feasible right to institute government; and to reform, alter, or totally change the same,
when their protection, safety, prosperity and happiness require it," which cannot too
quickly be done by placing in each
school the Hebrew, Roman Catholic
and Protestant Bibles all in one to be
read every morning • (with Moham-
medan for those who want it,) or 39
years continued protection of crim-
inals and alcoholic saloonists uncon-
stitutionally protected in depreciating
values of real estates, and all evils vs.
citizens, states, governments and law-
ful Nations.
Gen.
FNR HANAR, b. Sun. 1 Apr.
8S3; Th. lOJun. 2435, da. F. Miz-
raim and F. Lada; m. FNA HAS-
AFTR, s. F. Atta and F. Mra, b. Fr
2 Feb. 1877; d. Sat. 1 May 2429; had
chn. Mantha.
This generation is proved by Holy
Bible, Genesis Chap. 1, V. 22.
FNA RACHAR. da. Atta and
Mrie, b. Th. 3 Aug. 1938; d. Fr. 13
July 2451; m. FNA MANTHA, s.
F. Hanar and F. Hasaftr, b. Fu. 6 July
1925; d. Sat. 23 Nov. 2438. Their
Tombs at Gizah and a good PI. 113 in
my Oxford Bible. A picture of four
Compasses on it for navigation of the
waters: Chinese record it as 2634 being
used B. C. ; had sons and das.. Mars.
This is proved by Holy Bible,
Gen. I, 22.
FNR FARDAR, da. F. Atta and
F. Mra, b. Sat. 2 July 1954; d. Sun.
1 Avg. 2384; m. FNA MARS, s. F.
Mantha & F. Rachar, b. Th. 13 Oct
1954; d. Sat. 11 Dec. 2384. Proof
Genesis Chapter 1, Verse 22. Had
chn. Fna Bianchus.
Catouche on PI. restored to No.
215: here Gen. 18, PI. 218.
FNR LARA, da. F. Hasaftr and
Hanar, b Tu. 29 May 1972; d. Mon.
21 May 2331, m. FNA BIANCHUS,
s. F. Mars and F. Farada, b. Fr. 10
Apr. 1980; d. Mon. 19 July 2300.
Had chn. Afofis=Apophis.
This Gen. is proved by the Holy
Bible. 2nd INDIAN familv,NEHAW-
RETAHGO "BIG TREE was dir-
ected to make their residence near the
Creek:" i£gyptian is F. At (t) and
F. Mrai came in a boat with his chil-
dren, hence, ONEIDAS, worshiped
(Christ's) Great SPIRIT GOD! ,
97
Si
Qa
t
(^
PLATE 225. CE
t A
CU Ci
PLATE
22fc
GEN.
22
The.se (
aiMl .M<
iioyrniii-
mil- I'a
■Hs «,,ell
thf lin
FNR FALAFAR. DA. F. MARS
AND F. FARDAR. BORN FR. 3
AUG. 2000: DIED SAT. 5 MAY
2174: m. FNA AFOFSIS=Apophis
s. F. Bianchas and F. Lara, b. Wed.
17 Aug. 2004; d. Sat. 3 Dec. 2200:
Had many chn., F"na Butan:
Proved by Tablet of Abydus, Papyrus
Prisse, and Genesis, chapter 1, verse
22. His Catouche records the Mari-
ner Compass and Aniionn, Oma
FNR FORA, da. F. Mars and Far-
dar, b. 10May2038:d. 4Aug. 2254:
m. FNA BUTAN, s. of Afufsis=
Apophisis, b. 5 Dec. 2032: d. 1 May
2352: Had das. and sons: Kaka:This
Gen. proven by Holy Bible, Gen. 1 :
22, etc. FNR RAFA, da. F. Far
and Fnr Rana, s. Bianchas and Fnr
Lara,h.7 May 2068: d. 10 May 2404:
m. FNA KAKA, s. F. Butan and pia,c222
F. Fora, b. 10 Aug. 2062: d. 2 June
2351: Had chn. F. Bainuter: et als.
This is proved by Genesis 1 :22. Tab-
let of Abydus at British Museum,
Papyrus Prisse, ParisNational Library
and Decree of Cyrus the Great.
FNR RAFAR, da. Fah and wife
Rala, s. F. Bianchas and F. Lara, b. 7
May20S6: d. 1 May 2342, m., (the
Great Ocean by Compass Naviga-
tor,) FNA BAINUTER. s. F. Kaka
and F. Rafa, b. 9 Aug. 20H5 : d. 6
Sept. 2502: Had clin. numerous and
illustrious: Fna L'tnas; and FNR
SARAH, m. ABRA HAM the
progenitor of worthy Hebrews. She
was born 2 Dec' 2119. This is
proved removing the not nice
charges against great and
beloved godly .Abraham
the father of Isaac. Sec
Plate 128. Proof, and
r -riiTo r- i P'^le 227. Gen 23
from THIS CauuKhc,
Bible, Papyrus,, etc.- By counting
eight s\iiibols o r hieroglyphics o n
third line from top of Payprus Prisse
reading from left to right you will
find the name of Fna Bainuter and
it s.iys in the nr\t four compound
monograms that S.ir.ii=Sarah w ;is the
daughter of said I'l 1 A RAOH = H.A-
RAN = FARAN, etc. married the
great AHK.MIAM, ami ISAAC born
of s.iid uedlock.
fc ^
l^
.©
JbK
1
NDERSTANDrNG IS A WELL SPRING OF LIFE UNTO HIM THAT HATH
IT: BUT THE INSTRUCTION OF FOOLS IS FOLLY GET WISDOM r^r
UNDERSTANDING: FORGET IT NOT: WISDOM IS ThT PR^n6i?aI
thing: therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting, get understanding.
MI. da. F. Afofsis and
b. 10 Oct. 2109: d. 20
m. F. UTNAS, s. F.
and F. Rafar, b. 22
d. 3 Jan. 2562: Had
L--^
L2^
Plait 230. Gen. 24.
Much mono-
grammic his-
tory ison these
Catouches, &
on faces to
■which the
Primitive Al-
phabet, lan-
guage is the
MUTO da. F. Afofsis
afa, b. 9Juiv21SS: d. 8
m. FNA SANTA, s.
and F. Naomi, b. 5
d. 2 May, 2310: Had
-' p w''^^ ^^^tanri^^ '*^7''^ cla. F. Afofsis and F.
^faf' ' ^^H^HP^'^ A f ' 20 Dec. 2192: d. 3 Jan.
a-?V f": } wHr " ^^ l,''^\^''- ' «-'^
r^ ^^a^^H^H W "c^-i. Muto, b.
4 Dec
4 Dec
Had chn
As all t
nealogy isam-
the Holy Bi-
cree of Cyrus
Frisse it is
for it is given
unlocks t h e
historical
"Third Fam-
ICAN IN-
direct ed to
home, by the
Heaven,
Lord God of
mountain
daga, which is
O— A— 5i>A^A
Ac(orrorG)
Land of Noah
Fnf Anon,
Family was named Seuhnowkahtah : their company continued their journey towards
the sun setting in the West.
Fourth Family was told to make their residence at Lake Goyogoh COVOCOl
that they call a "Mountain rising from the waters," which describes the. Pyramid
Lake at Oregon. It is now called Cayuja, OAVU I A which is only a proper philo-
logical change in beautiful primitive language. This family called their name
SHONEAWETO-WAH=0 i O - j> A w E> ^ O vv A i =God's fallen Nh was
from wine, Noah was lustful and fell from God of heaven, he the line of beauty from
which should come Christ the son of man and woman, and son from God of Heaven
99
^^0\V WISDOM RESTETH IN THE HEART OF HIM THAT HATH LNDER-
J VH STANDING, THE KING'S FAVOR IS TOWARD A WISH SERVANT. FOR
\-\\ RIGHTEOUSNESS EXALTETH A NATION: EVIL IS A REPROACH TO
^^ ANY PEOPLE THAT CAUSETH SHAME, WHICH BEING KNOWN.
FOOLS EMBRACE. THE WISE DO SHUN IT.
Generation No. 26. FNR ARTA, da. F. Afofsis and
Falafa, b. 20 Dec. 2192: d. 3
Jan. 2394: m. FNA TATA. s.
F. Santa and F. Muto, b. 4 Dec.
2184: d. 14 Dec. 2494: Had
Nabka: das., sons.
No. 27.
i^
Plate 233. Ctn. 26.
Plate 232, Cenerali<
FNR AFANAR, da. F. Kaka
and F. Rafa, b. 1 Jun. 2214: d.
3 Apr. 2424: m. FNA NABKA
s. F. Tata and F. Arta, b. 15
Aug. 2214: d. 12
Sept. 2530: Had
Sabas: sons and das.
FNR MARON.d.
F. Vana & F. Afrn,
s. F. Kaka and F.
Rafa, b. 23 Apr.
2251: d. 4 Nov.
2384: m. FNA SA-
BAS, b. 1 Jan.
2242: d. 1 Jun.
2562: s. F. Nabka
and F. Af Anar:
Had F. Tata: das.
and sons.
AMERICAN IN-
DIAN FAMILY.
NUMBER FIVE!
Was to make their
home near to hij^h
Nolc Lake Canan- __ _
daijjiia 1, that was " ' "'^
named TEI.MEA- Pla.e235 Cen 2?
ATA WAKE 2, .S:
the family was named TE-
HAWNEA.MAHENT 3. =
priniitivclant^uaf^cs: 1. C A-A-
"^A I ^wA2,'G»3 I VSAA^aAvv
Ai< 3 3,a3 I AVV-3AVA i 3
-/^. Names translated are "God
wrote tile Tablet of Heaven:
God's women and men wrote
and engraved tile line of fallen
women and men of God's Heav-
en who fell from God into a pit: God's line that begot children from tlie first
that God created pure and Holy in his likeness that did evil at Anona, Omo
that fell after Noah's goiUy teachings for the line of Earth and waters for
Heaven and God taught and meted out equal justice in acct)rtlaiice w ith tlie
deeds done, blessing and rewarding the pure and good, punishing the evil who
by wrong acts also punish in a great degree themselves: but fully it shall at the
great day of perfect God judgement be rendered unto each in e.xact proportion
to the merits of their acts.
Plate 234. Gei
100
4^
01
HE SEVENTH FROM ADAM, ENOCH PROPHET SAID: BEHOLD,
the Lord cometh with ten thousand of his saints, to execute judgement upon all, and
to convince all that the ungodly among them of all their ungodly deeds which they
have ungodly committed, and of their hard speeches which ungodly sinners have
spoken against Him." lude, verses 14 in part and 15.
29 FNR ALOA, da. F. , ^, Ramaf
Noami, h. 29 August
TATA II s. F.
7 May 2614: Had,
FNR FALAMAR,
Antn.h. 1 Feb. 2.11(1:
s. F. Tata II and F.
WnA ; Ramfarka :
.'\mericTn Indnns
and wascalied KAL-
toward mid
c a m e to :
"Ol ALW
the Miv
d F. Ala, s. F. Utnas and F.
22K2: d. 4 Sept. 2652: m. FN A
Sabas 6c F.Maron, b. -8 Dec. 22H2: d.
Satos, Sons and Daughters.
F. Almo, s. F. Tata and F.
M) May 265(1: m. FN A SATOS,
Al),i, b. i [an. 2314: d. 1 Feb. 2614:
sons and das.
S \th Fimily Went toward Sunsetting
11 M\ \NAHACAP celebrated then
lay Sunsetting between, &
arge River that was named,
K YO KA' ' , that is called now
pi. (Tradition). The people
gr.ipe vine across the River
over on it: the vine broke
rciiiiined iiccame their foes.
GREAT SPIRIT taught
make Bows and arrows
Head of the Babylon
copied in their Letter
symbols and is
g u a g e the
I in its ,\
itive was FA &:
\' primitive
three symbols
.\\a in the Gar-
Many of these
during the dark
world was over-
natic ignorant,
pie, that in brute
then it, as their
glory todes-
of God in those
ored by calling
Children.
t
PLATE
"I
EMEM^ERi FOR THE EARTH SHALL BE FILLED WITH THE
KNOWLEDGE OF THE GLORY OF THE LORD. AS THE WATERS
THAT COVER THE SEA. BEHOLD ME AMONG THE HEATHEN,
and regard, and wonder marvelously: for I will work a work in your days, which yc
will not believe, though it be told you."
Generation XXXI FNR A- .^c^MEH9BS359S3^^^Bb FR, da. F. Mar, s.F.
Santa & F. ^^B^^twS^^^m^^^^ ^^"'" ^' ^^ ^'^>''
2340: d. 30 ^^^KKm^iBMMBUmSBl^k ^^y-(^'^'^- m- FNA
RAM FA- ^B^^|l{aftaife RKA, s. F.Satosand
F.Falamar, ^BKkMa^^^^^HHn^^B ^- ^ "^"g- 2340: d. 7
J^"- ^^^-- a^^aC^^^^^^^mHul^H HadHuni: s. £cda
Plate 232. Cen. 31
\^
f
33 FNR FA-
F. Nabka&
2400: d. 10
SANAFRA.s. F. Hu-
3 Jan. 2404: d. 3 Nov.
sons AUi] (iaiigluers.
34 FNR .MATHAR.da,
E.Maron, h. 10, Oa.
2614: m. FNA KH-
.^ K. Tana, b. 2 Mar.
2694: Had: Ratataf:
AMERICAN Indian.s
tituian I'art wi-nl or
Sunrise and touched
Great River and were
their residence at C;in-
now called Nu.se River
Although language
■fl eration: the six Fami-
il language. The Holder
F AFA The Greaf Spirit re-
and forms a confeder-
NEH "A LONG
increasing in (years.)
ages in the country,
by KONEARAU-
of the si.xth Family
the River when the
the Tribe A ran n.
serpent came and in-
the defeat of Hrst
on the waters by
foe. Necessitating
the Five Families:
nology, U.S.A. Hist-
LATE 231. GEN. 31. FNR AFR
TAR, da. F. Noa, s.
and F. Af Anr, b. I
d. 1 May 2612: m.
NI,s. F.Ramfarka&
Oct.2384:d.21Sept.
Sanafra, sons & das.
TAR, da. F. Noa, s.
F. Af Anr. b. 2 Apr.
Feb. 2553: m. FNA
(S:F. Tartar, b.
605: Had: Khli
changing every gen-
licsdid not loose their
of Heaven, God,
turns ti) the Families pi 235 Ce., 32
acvGONEA-SEAB-
HOUSE."=C@-e
i'ive Families
Winters made \'ill-
Thev were Invaded
NEH The company
which failed to cross
vine broke formed
The <nK-n) Lake
vaded them after
Hamites, coming
lH)at, a dreadful
Fortifications b \
etc. Bureau of Eth-
on'.
^
k
I
PI. 23fc Ctn 3-1
fET INDIAN TRADITIONS of America and their value cannot he understood without the
Wisdom accumulated from great ancestry who was taught hv the only perfect teacher God
that from their neglect ^<=::;;-_;^^=HS~-^ and environment degenerated
notwithstanding which, ^W>^^^^^^^^^^ their
key of cardinal truths
weeds of no savory
spring of ignorance nourished hy
evils.
Generation 35 FNRFAMMR,
F. Tatar, b. 1
FNR P AT A-
ar, b. 23 Mar
Rashaf: dns and
FNR MARLO
Tatar, b. 21 \H>
RASHAF
F. Fammi _^
d. 23 Jun ~ ■
das. R a ^
z a w h o
M O S I S
of her I he
^:':
i ^i
escendants have kept the
indestructable, though hid hy
growtii that are indeed the off-
the stupendous breasts of fanatic
,11
I
m
u
Vide Gen. 1+ puis 245.
Dictionary of F. M
37 FNA RAMAN Ka
da. F. Tafar and s. F. Huni and
July 24S6: d.l .May 2652: m.
T^F s F Khufu and F. Math-
2452 d 11 Aug. 2634: Had:
N A di f ni, s. F. Huni and F.
2472 d 12 July 2722: m. FNR
s F Ratataf and
b 6 Jin. 2482:
2662 Had s. &
manka: da. Loi-
M\ed the great
that w is learned
Annals of .■Eg\'pt
esen the wearing
of God's promise
mgof CHRIST
KINGand warn-
religious ^■Egyp-
roahs -igainst the
punished man-
committing.
tom. Gen. 36, ^■\!i^iz2.
touche is a prom- p,^,^ ^^
that came from Cm 36
said his son
born of line Nh, Hm, Sm,
and on Papyrus Prisse ninth
ed the same before, and on
TABLETS that is very clear
tvcn to those not conversant
^uages of the present day.
1 H E HEBREW wrote
"^icred Scriptures and Annals
loss of language and
, lints are the lamentable
ne Christ for one part of
\LA, da. Fna, s. F. Khufu
b. 9 Jun. 2536: d. 17
_ PNA RAMANKA. s. F.
^ Marlona, b. 23 Dec. 2530: d.
r° Had: Usakaf: Atotar f r.
mankr' was a FVee Mason:
^ pi. 246 Cyclopedia &
Chapter IPHiril
OVEREIGN STATE
JUSTICE.
Generation No. 38.
FNR MARION,
Mar. 2560, d. 21
F. Ramanka and
May 2744: Had
Bigotry has no head,
cannot feel — when she
pauses it is in the midst of
god is a demon — her
is eternity — herdecalogue
victims — and if she stops
infernal flight, it is upon
whet her vulture fang
and replume her wing
desolation.
39. FNR MARRIFU
Khufu and F. Matha,
Nov. 2814: m. FNA
Aug. 2582: d. 16
Ramisar : sons and
The drafts which
onposterity, although
be honored as soon as
to be paid with corn-
end.
A beautiful wo-
use a double circum-
will tempt others, her
Plate No. 325.
Gen. 38. 40. FNR FARNA,
Ramanka and P. Bu-
d. 1 Mar. 2814: m. FNA RAM-
d. 10 July 2834: Had Harmanka:
Even human knowledge is per-
in some degree, and on certain oc-
pure and primary source: and this
more conspicuous than when it
means of producing its opposite
Plate 322. Gen. 38. FNA USAKAF.
Plate 323. Gen. 39. F^
EQUALITY, IMPARTIAL
da. F. Sanafra and F. Fata, b. 1
May 2814: m. FNA USAKAF. s.
F. Bunala, b. 23 July 2562: d. 22
Rasahu: das. and sons.
and cannot think — no heart, and
moves it is in wrath — when she
ruin — her prayers are curses — her
communion is death — her revenge
is written in the blood of her
for a moment in her
a kindred rock, to
for keener rapine,
fora more sanguinan,'
da. F. Marian, s. F.
b. 2 April 2590: d. 3
RASAHU, b. 15
Aug. 2 80 4: Had
daughters.
true genius draws uf>-
they may not always pi^^ ^^^
they are due, are sure Cenerado
pound interest in the
man, if poor, should
spection;for her beauty
poverty herself.
da. F. Rashaf, son F.
nala. b. 5 Nov. 2616:
SAR, b. 9 Aug. 2610:
sons and daughters.
mitted to approximate
casions, to Deity, its
assimilation is never
converts evil into the
good.
*'®
H R O U G H D E-
RATED H I M -
MEDDLETH
Gen. 41 FNR MU-
rifu and F.
2900, m. F.
4 Aug. 2882:
The day is past when
antiquity, reverence: or
of the most bold and
in the midst of us, yet
mistake error for truth.
r®i
Gen
42 FNR
— T-»
and F.
1
PI. 332
d. 26
KA,h.
H a d
^
Ih
Gen. 43 F. H U L-,;
Rasahu and
2720: d. 10
MNAS. b,
3100: Had:
founder of
and founder
names were
O O O - or
I 0-. (See
Trans. Noa
God people
Gen. 4A FNR F U-
and F. Far-
4 Jun. 2900,
b. 4 Feb.
Had: Ra-
Did man govern thcm-
the world would be
To triumph over our
quests the most glori-
Men may give good
not give the sense to
Men of principle are
men.
SIRE A MAN. HAVING SEFA-
'^ SELF. SEEKETH AND INTER-
WITH ALL WISDO.M." Selah!
SAR, da. F. Ramanka, s. F. Mar-
Rasahu, b. 5 Sept. 2652: d. 1 Apr.
HARMANKA, b. 9 Oct. 2642: d.
Had: Ratatka: daughters and sons.
custom could procure acquiescence:
power, obedience to error: and that
dangerous kind, has her worshipers,
is simply and solely because they
FRANCASA, da. F. Usakaf
Marion, b. 1 May 2684:
Jun. 2864: m. F. RATAT-
1 Apr. 2684: d. 7 Aug. 2932:
Mnas: sons and daughters.
GOD'S gift ft. '■■ "=*
Roll toAVA & (?V^
ADAM. Az-
tectes Rec-
ord of one
Gift of God
7 days in a
week, to la-
borandwor- pi. 33o b
ship God, teaching children the
same.
DA, da. F. Rashu, s.
F. Marrifu, b. 1 Oct.
Aug. 2952: m. FN A
Nov. 2714: d. 1 Jan.
Tata: OVAO- the
Germany: Italy: Peru
of Japan whose ancient
Dai Nippon ^A I - I '
Dia Nihon='a i A- I
Gen. No. 14)OVAO-
(h) F=Family 0=of
of the world, s. & das.
NAR, da. F. Ra.iiisar
na, b. 1 Jun. 2744: d.
m. FNA TATA III.
2:^44: d. 22 Dec. 3030:
niisi: das. and sons.
.selves as they ought,
well disciplined,
passions, is of all con-
ous.
advice, but they can-
make a right use of it.
always the principal
A
DIVINE SENTENCE IS IN THE LIPS OF THE KING HIS MOUTH
TRANSGRESSETH IN JUDGMENT, WRONGING SELF AND PEOPLE!!
Wicked Judge taketh a'giftjout of the bosom to pervert the ways of judgment. C. Hall, B.
Generation 45 F. FAR-
b. 1 May
MAS!, b.
Mananra :
Gen. 46 F. FAFUR,
Francasa, b. 2
3184, m. FNA
3100: d. 11 Ju-
The spirit of liberty is
imagine, a jealousy of
but a respect for the
unwillingness that any
low, should be wronged
foot.
47
The
NA, da. F. Harmanka and F. Musar,
2784: d. 20 May 3152: m. FNR RA-
1 Aug. 2774: d. 20 May 3152: Had:
das. and sons.
are not knaves, but all knaves are fools,
principle, and you increase the need
The beginning of wisdom is to fear
the end of it is to love him.
da, F. Ratatka and F.
May 3106: d. 5 May
MANANRA, b. 23 Apr.
ly 3152: Had: Tyrous.
not merely, as multitudes
our own particular rights,
rights of others, and an
man, whether high or
and be trampled under
FNR
Mnas and
and F .
3120: d. 3
FNA TY
3130: d
Satas das.
breast of a good
en commencing on
Deity sits enthroned
fluence.
" 48
Tne holy Primitive
us the most perfect
form us from whence
we are to return, how
est miseries and secure
'cVn^'W that we are not destined pii,s340. cen. 48. f. lnar
immortal life with our
celestial satisfying eternal joys and inconceivable perfect bliss.
106
FRNA, da. F.
F. Hafr, s. F. Mnas
Hulda, b. 30 Aug.
May 3194, m .
ROUS, b. 1 Jan.
July 3204: Had :
and sons.
man is a little heav-
earth, where t h e
with unrivaled in-
da. F. Fata and F. Ma-
and F. Funar, b. 1
d. 9 Aug. 3240, m. F.
Jan. 3152: d. 2 Jun.
Nafakara das. and sons.
Bible Scriptures furnish
rules of life. They in-
we came, and where
we may avoid the great-
the greatest happiness;
to annihilation but to
Creator, participating
Woo beauty of mind, i
"®
RULY MY SOUL
HIM COMETH
REFUGE FOR
all things for him-
day of evil."
Genfration No. 49. F. BATHA,
and F n r
3 23 2, m.
d. 4 Feb.
Restsatisfied
talk about
with all
a m o n e a
el
V
S^
1 /
Gen. so. F. BITHIA
anra and F.
3258: m. F.
Sept. 32S2:
Hear no
enemy. Be-
yoa believe.
Gen. 51. F. NAAN-
Satas and
3230: d. 6
HANA, b.
Sept. 3272:
Deliberate
do but once.
Gen. 52. F- MAHA-
f ras, s. F.
a, b. 2 July
m. F. RA-
Aug. 3252:
Anm II.
Sell not vir-
Gen. 53
Citouche of FNA
ANM. Also jpelied
F. HAZ-
F. Nafakara
3282: d. 7
ANM, II, b.
3334; Had
Forget oth-
berthyown.
Plat. 345 G.
VVAITETH UPON GOD: FROM
MY SALVATION. GOD IS A
US. THE LORD HATH MADE
self: yea, even the wicked for the
da. Farnal and Fura, s. F. Tyrous
Frna, b. 3 June 3168: d. 3 Aug.
F. NAFAKARA. b. 8 Sept. 3172:
3362: Had Nabkth: sons and das.
with doing well, and leave others to
you as they please. Live in peace
men: and have but one counsellor
thousand.
da. F. Tyrous and son of F. Man-
Fafur, b. 20Jun. 3200: d. 30 Mar.
NABKTH, b. 5 Sept. 3202: d. 21
Had Hana: sons and daughters.
ill of a friend, nor speak any of an
lieve not all you hear, nor report all
AH, da. Tyrous, s. F.
F. Lnar, b. 20 Jun.
Nov. 3284, m. FNA
3 Sept. 3232: d. 10
Had Ramankhfa.
long on what you can
TAVAL, da. F. Va-
Nafakara and F. Bath-
3252: d. 1 Mar. 3290:
MANKHFA, b. 9
d. 24 Dec. 3304: Had
tue to purchase wealth.
ZALAL,da. Vafras, s.
and F. Batha, b. 2 July
Oct. 3334: m. FNA
I Feb. 3280 ;d. 3 Apr.
Sufis: das. and sons,
er's faults, and remem-
107
-'•J^'VIL MEN UNDERSTAND NOT JUDGMENT: PUT THEY THAT SEEK THE
^\j^ LORD UNDERSTAND ALL THINGS. THE THING THAT HATH BEEN.
Tl^ IT IS THAT WHICH SHALL BE: AND THAT WHICH IS DONE IS THAT
fjl^ WHICH SHALL BE DONE: AND THERE IS NO NEW THING UNDER
THE SUN.
Generation No. 54. FNA AN- .y=^^3->v ANNAAH, da. A. C. Funis, s. F.
Satas and r^-^'^^P /A (> F. Lnar. b. 11 Oct. 3302 : d. 1 July
3393: m. ^( ^^// ^ FNA. SUFIS, b. 1 Jan. 3302: d. 22
Apr. 3354: ^^^^^Z^:^ Had MIZRAM II:
Gen. 55.
Pl.tt351. Gtn. 53.
Z^
PUte 360. Gtn. 53.
Pl«le361. Gen. 54.
A pp r O V e
and win all
Do nothing
row. Use
F. AAG-
nius, son F.
b. 1 Apr.
m.F.MIZ-
3322: d. 6
hark: d[a .
Solomon, s.
da. Ammiel
OTA.I.s.of
C. (See PI.
Formed an
omon and
Anbury.
Gen. 56. F. HAL-
ARH, da.
Fana, s. F.
Hana and
F. Noanah,
b. 6 Dec.
3350: d. 15
Oct. 3434:
m. FNA
S H I S -
HARK, b.
8 Jan. 3352
d. 2 Oct.
3424: Had
Tachnatis.
57. F. BARU,
da. Fohi, s.
F. Anm&
F. Hazzalal
b. 6 Jun.
3370: d. 5
Jan. 3442:
m. FNA
T A C H -
NATI S.
b. 21 Feb.
3375: d. 22
Oct. 3430:
Had Bocc-
haris: Nasa.
Gen.
Pl.tt 355, Gti
>^^(\Tri
yourself to wise men by your virtue,
the rest by your civilities.
to-day that you will repent of to-mor-
temporal things, but desire eternal.
LAHA. da. A. C. Fur-
Nabkth and F. Bathia,
3320: d. 2 May 3384:
RAM II, b. 1 Apr.
Oct. 3404: Had Shis-
Hano, b. 3337, m. king
David, b. of Bath Shua,
(Chron. 111,5: O RAT
Yatonwater, b. 1071 B.
113) sent to Solomon:
Alliance with king Sol-
married his daughter
T-T
m
PI. 362. Gen. 55-
Plile 358. G«iermlic
108
thieldqf^, David
the teal of Solomon.
II spells DMA and AMARICA.
Sm acts XX'/lll (or Mariner
Compaas. at Verse 13. and the Plate
of the Chinese Compass, dated
1010 B, C. with the Names of
GOD: King Solomon and Hiram of
Tyre thereon: With hieroglyphic
Chinese letters that they say. after
demonstrating that part of their
earliest language is lost, or forgot-
ten, contains the numerals from
one to twenty-four. The pnmitlve
language fully gives the meaning
guages of this planet earth.
CHRIST spoke and chiselled it on
Dtghton and Maine Rocks.
f^
A
ND SOLOMON THE
STRENGTHENED
GOD WAS WITH
fied him exceedingly.
brought out of ^gypt:
Tyre, King, for a skilful man to work
in purple, crimson, blue, to engrave: —
=an expert. . . .
Generation 58 FNR AR-
F. Aaglaha, b. 7 Aug.
Q^ FNA BOCCHARIS, b
n
St
had Osarkon das.
Take heed of '
and
horn
Generation 59 FNR
Anm and F. Farna, b. 1
m. FNA OSARKON. b.
had Si Hasi das. and sons.
The laws of God are
Philip II of Spain, said
lenge any other two.
Generation 60 FNR
and F. Halarh, b. S May
FNA SI HASI, b. 1 Jan.
Orsakon sons and das.
The ruins of time are
In times of peace pre-
Generation 61 FNR
F. Tachnatis and (see seal)
Aug. 3520, m. FNA OR-
6 Jan. 3520; had Namrut.
Of all prodigality, that
Generation 62 FNR
charis and F. Arlina, b. 13
m. FNA NAMRUT, b. 1
had Takalut.
It is with our time, as
band makes a little go a
Records found of bur-
Washintona^ ^ O V«»A
ancient Egyptian Tomb
tota with many Generations
America. (See p. 838 of
V, 1855, on Ethnology,,
as spelt ATTOTARHO
invades the kingdom or
by ^lon. A=Anona, •
Pltlo 365. Con. 58.
Plile366. Gen. 59.
Plllo 367. Con. 60.
Plate 369. Gen. 62.
109
SON OF DAVID WAS
IN HIS KINGDOM FOR
HIM AND MAGNI-
And Solomon had horses
sent to Huram^Hiram of
in gold, silver, brass, iron and
went son da. of Dan Cunning
LINA, da. F. Mizraim and
3392;. d. 1 May 3450: m.
30 Mar. 3394; d. 6 Mar. 3494
sons.
you speak, and to whom.
RIUA, da. F. Anm son of F.
Nov. 3403, d. 31 July 3511;
1 May 3412; d. 12 Jun. 3511;
immutable and unchangeable,
thus: time and I will chal-
Catouche Gen.59, Spell Ohio.
SARAHO, da. F. Shishark
3426; d. 6 Aug. 3520; m.
3432; d. 13 Oct. 3512; had
the monuments of mortality,
pare for war till the millenium.
VASHATANA, da. Nasa, s.
F. Bam, b. 9 Jan. 3450; d. 2
SAKON, b. 1 May 3452; d.
sons and daughters.
of time is the worst.
ARKONA. da. F. Bocchar-
Mar. 3472; d. 11 Jan. 3550;
Sept. 3472; d. 7 Feb. 3552;
with our estates, a good hus-
great way.
ial of ATATONWATEA=
B. C. 829 Nov. lO&on the
face in ancient symbols Ohra-
of the Indian Tribes of Omo=
Schoolcrafts Gov. work Part
The name is also there found
II. The SIXTH NATION
territory of the 5th as shown
O^Omo=America,U. S. A.
OW THEREFORE. OUR GOD. WE THANK THEE. AND PRAISE THY
FOR JUSTICE.
da. F. Boccharis and F. Arlina. b. 1
10 Mar. 3560: m. FNA TAKA-
Sept. 3495: d. 7 Feb. 3573: Had:
sons and daughters.
GLORIOUS NAME
Gen. 63 F. MUTTA.
Jan. 3494: d.
LUT. b. 2
S h a m k o n :
Princes, and their gran-
py; for they live least
" 64 F. CAMIL- '^ ^
F. Riua, b. 1
SHAMKON.
Had: Ram-
1 can hardly think that
Cicero, who is destitute
" 65 FNR MUL-
h o ' s son t^
Mar. 3612:
3 5 44: d. 26
sons.
The ^Egyptians of old
Governor of the v%'orId:
and unfaithful servants,
day. untruths taught for
Christ.
" 66 F. NOARA,
Arkona, b. 3
FANA ZO,
Had: Samiti-
The Coin
Kings 17:4.
374. Ccn. 63.
" 67 F. ZA-
a n d F .
1 Dec .
b. 1 May
Nachro:
It is certain there
was no God. but
sons not sound, that
dees, of all men
alone.
the most unha
LA, da. KARLA, s. F. Osakon and
Jan. 3525: d. 23 Apr. 3572: m. F.
b. 2 Jan. 3520: d. 11 Oct. 3573:
sass: das. and sons.
ind, repeats
man to he in his righ
of religion.
LAH, da. F. Si Hasi and F. Sara-
Tubal Cain, b. 8 Mar. 3552: d. 4
m. FNA RAMSASS, b. 1 Oct.
Dec. 3632: Had: ZZO=SO: das.
acknowledged ONE MAKER and
under whom were many faithful,
who, taught truth, which stands to-
selfish desires. Gen. 65 "C" =
da. Hafana, s. F. Namrut and F.
Aug. 3565: d. 10 Nov. 3647: m.
b. 1 Jan. 3560: d. 2 Feb. 3662:
cus: das. and sons,
of ZO=SO (English Bibles.) 2
Good cannot do evil.
RA, da. Nahi, s. F. Takalut
Mutta, b. 7 Jan. 3600: d.
3684: m. FNA SAMITICUS.
3604: d. 21 Jan. 3684: Had:
was never a man that said, there
that he first wished it, for rea-
self be advanced.
^P^OWN FROM GOD
Jrl ^° ^^"^ ^^^' ^"^
Tk-l DARE TO DO
>^ EVIL.
LOVE GOD AND
MANDMENTS.
Gen. 68. F. SAIO da.
'1 f Camilla, b. 14
F.NACHRO,
Had Sammis;
E
Gen. 69. F. SRTA, da.
Mullah, b. 15
F. SAMMIS,
Had Afras=
Impenitency
ulity.
Gen. 70.FNR THA-
& F. Saio, b. 7
F. AFRIAS,
Had Niatatis.
A lexander
sword, Square,
est Map, Chart
was the da. of
brother Thales
Fna Cambysas
dane,da. Phra-
found absolute
Gen. 71. F.NIATATIS
Jun. 3764:d. 3
b. 8 May 3767:
For faces of
giving his gen-
and God, the
p r e s e n t
390. Gen. 71.
COMETH LIFE.
BELOVED BRETHREN.
RIGHT AND FEAR NO
KEEP ALL OF HIS COM-
Faconr, s. F. Shamkon and F-
Apr. 3620: d. 6 Jun. 3702: m.
b. 1 Sept. 3624: d. 4 Feb. 3725.
sons and daughters.
Saml, s. F. Ramsass and F.
Sept. 3657: d. 3 Jun. 3748: m.
b. 2 Jun. 3658: d. 6 Feb. 3724.
Apries.
is the undoubted issue of incred-
LA da. Alasanda, s. F. Nachro
Feb. 3681: d. 7Jun. 3780: m.
b. 1 Feb. 3684: d. 2 May 3784.
the Great beareth on Medal,
of 69 Gen. 13 dots=stars on old-
and History. Thala, another,
Examius and Cleobula: her
d. in 96th yr. of his age, and m.
the s. of Alabandus and Man-
ortas. Of this last I have not
proof.
da. Afrias, and F. Thala, b. 9
Feb. 3824, m. F. CAMBYSAS,
d. 9 Jun. 3841. Had Cyrus.
Niatatis and Afras see the PI. 63
ealogy back to Ava and Adam,
Universal Creator, our Omni-
Father.
^w^Wfertjjjji
OR • A L L
^^^^^^
OF WOMEN
It^^-^
IF THESE
were not true
^^W\J'/)
told you it.
^ct-^Jir'lJf ^
Generation
^^^^fcSr''
FNR AN-
'^raa^^?
DAN, da.
Pint 393 A,
who was
Mede, s. of
Apr. 3803:
RUS THE GREAT, b. 30 Nov.
Attosa.
To love the public, to study
interests of the whole world, as far
of goodness, and makes that temper
Cyrus, Emperor of Persia, ob-
after the battle he was so sensibly
with dead bodies that he ordered
wounded Assyrians as of his own
as well as we, and are no longer ene-
,\
X
CHILDREN
AND MEN.
THINGS
so I would have
LXXII.
A R M AN-
Cyax a r as II,
Darius the pi"< 399 c<:n f.
Astyages, b. 22 "»<! cod's Coiden sqs.
d. 10 Dec 3906; m. FNA CY-
3800; d. 23 Aug. 3870: Had Da.
universal good, and to promote the
as lies in our power, is the height
which we call divine.
tained a victory over the Assyrians:
touched on seeing the field covered
the same care to be taken of the
soldiers, saying: "They are men
CYRUS THE GREAT, mics, Seeing they are vanquished."
^^ 1 T r
These plates
in the He-
brew lan-
guage were
copied from
my Hebrew
Bible with the
points inter-
polated after
the allegation
that the lan-
guage was
"lost": these
points only
serve to
wro n g f u 1 ly
obscure true
history and
erroneously
change it for
reasons best
known then.
Without the
Points we give
the true line
of Universal
Genealogy, as
Prophecied
and Proved by
Facts. Gene-
sis I, gives
Washingtons' married line
LIBER EZR^
"^^J^ Dia^i^p B'-jb mi-ns; niir T^n n;;o-i>
» tth3 -iD« h3 : -lips'? ari3p3-DJ"i inia'jp-'jp? Vip
-I'^D
• •• D^B ••» Di9 1
EZR^E, CAP. ), 2. 3 M
Dpa'n "'nVs riirp ■^ \Ta p^sn hId'tzdo "73 cri| "tB
: ■TTirT';! -i^« d^b^3 n:? i'fr^iJ?'? ''z^ iBS'^''''?'!
-la's q'pa^T''? "7^.1 isj; vribs ^'T; U^ap DDp-ip i
DVl'^Kn Kin h^-p". Ni'?i? nirr n"'3-n« lyi rrrirr^
sirr-iK's nia^an-^ap -ix?^3n-'??i : pj?^-]''? la'i? 4
nannni b'i3')3i antii tip33 ibfip "'c'ls V-nKiyj"; 00*— ij
Plale 402 Genentlons.
••:^_- 4'i-iy ?
*^ 3.-U ,S iJ 3. s
■U 1 ;|3 -VJ ^ UJ
^-- J. 3
••55 A -u- ro -J
: n»3 3n; fiij;n"i D"'P'3 bbr^
Pine 402 A.
and Ezra I, 1, 2, 3, 4, S, and a part of 6th verse with II Chronicals gives
by transTati'ng the discovered lost Hebrew language into the found lost ^Egyptian language as may be
seen above and below and herein, (pi. 112.)
112
"A
T II CHRONICLES XXXVI CHAPTER AND VERSES 22 AND 23 IN
MOTHER ENGLISH IS:— NOW IN THE FIRST YEAR OF CYRUS
KING OF PERSIA, THAT THE WORD OF THE LORD SPOKEN
by the mouth of Jeremiah might be accompHshed, the Lord stirred up the spirit
of Cyrus King of Persia, that he made a Proclamation throughout all his Kingdom
and put it also in
Thus saith Cyrus
All the Kingdoms
the Lord God of
and he hath charged
House in Jerusalem
Who is there
his people? The
with him, and let
True Plates
low 404 of Wash-
The verses are
Bible numbers, but
ter the correct state-
brew language, that
points which are
polated.
PR0PHECy^GEN£SIS,Ghap.l.VeTS921.sfia^-
OOaoAA ©lOVA'^l ^-O^al ToSODOA'='G®--
®^ I lOi 1 ov^'^'ASoSoXO I VOBoVO- I QOA
o>'0©'^-®«-»-0-I000oAa<=>I ob^o«^oq
EZRA,Chap.i,V.l-6.DECREE OF CYRUS.
OQ^-^A |Q<s'^OoSU<i>B-©oJ'«.'^<»0'^«Q<=o lO^
IV®00<=>VOI I y 0°0 I O I iA ^oQ 1 '~'<»JV®w® <» f!
/oo/Qovo»QC •v»'^o'=>oo'?aav'^^0'»Airo y
C I A V'=''^°JV»»»®o J'^* VV*'^0'=' 1 A'=>X.-'='-'»
ooi oi A® lO iXvoao I OA®K^y* o<=>e— c^*
OQO^oo»oi»nA^oao iOcj i voocOTo«>yv
GO I OA® I ooyvoooy«<=>ooo^«>aA^oao i o
0 I OOQ-A^eO^O ) O I A» I OO^^A® 1 OA I A*
I OD AJ-oOOoOi<J>aOC « I -5aoT'^«> I YW-VC^",
A^o tOA'?^ojao-^AO I oA-5 ov»-ovoac J"©!
QT. 1 aoQo'^oioaQ \v i^rbi -oat «>ao^ ia**
I OD Aj;'oaOoO^*aOO»-OVO<!>A^O l aQC^^O '
tOo loa-OT-oic i-oQoi®oo«®'^«ij-ao
I A* I OD A'=^oO ) 0<a'>'*0'^«Q-0^ A'^aO'^'O I O
1 Aj'<»aoooj'oDOc<">J"aoa'=^o i d i xcoaooo
PLATE 403. UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL GENEALOGY.
Each /Egyplian Symbol Reprtsents a Hebrew Leller.
THE GREAT PROCLAMATION OF CYRUS THE KING
WHICH GIVES FROM THE EGYPTIAN ABOUT
FORTY GENERATIONS BEYOND THE
PRESENT TIME 800 YEARS
Book of Ezra has it : — "Now in the first year of Cyrus King
word of the Lord by the mouth of Jeremiah might be fulfilled,
the spirit of Cyrus King of Persia, that he made a proclamation
kingdom, and put it also in writing saying: Thus saith Cyrus
Lord God of Heaven hath given me all the Kingdoms of the
charged me to build him an House at Jerusalem, which is in
Who is there among you of all his people? His God be with
up to Jerusalem which is in Judah, and build the House of the
(he is the God), wliich is in Jerusalem. And whosoever remain-
wiiere he sojourncth, let the men of his place help him with
and with goods, and with beasts, besides tiie freewill offering for
that is in Jerusalem. pi ^^- Universal in-
Then rose up the chief of the fathers of Judah and Benjamin, '""»«™"C"eaiog:y ^^^ ^j^e priests, and
^ Second four symbols , ... ,
the Levites, with all them whose spirit God had raised to go up to lefiionehispeiiTAFT ouM the House of
the Lord which is in Jerusalem. And all they that were about them strengthened their
hands with vessels of silver, with gold, with goods, and with beasts, and with precious things, besides
all that was willingly offered.
113
a
M
k
0-i:o
1
0O o>
C 0 (□<
oo>.e
nsoci
X
0 -OQ
o
©o^c
(^
it- OJ-
d
oo®(a
n
>^km
'nO © J/
01
oo>o
^
oo^o
<
u© 0 a
( )
oaoo
Z
a -c o
■•O- 9
o
<-o>
S
0 00 6
1 oo c
n
^(Q< 0
CJ D - '.^
^
oa oo
wntmg, saying :
King of Persia :
of the Earth hath
Heaven given me;
me to build Him a
which is in Judah.
among, you of all
Lord his God be
him go up."
Nos. 403 and be-
ington Genealogy,
not as recorded in
are more to aid bet-'
ment of found He-
had originally no
wrongfully inter-
of Persia, that the
the Lord stirred up
throughout all his
King of Persia, the
Earth; and He hath
Judah.
him and let him go
Lord God of Israel
cth in any place
silverand with gold,
the House of God
m
J© ^T^
^^^
<s>
"I
FERNA
CYRUS KING
OF ALL EARTHS KINGS GIVEN
TO ME BY MY FATHER OMNIPOTENT GOD
WHO IS KING OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS TEMPORAL
THE TRINITY UNIVERSAL OMNISCIENT AND OMNIPRESENT ONE GOD
That All Should With Me, King of Fars, Worship and Obey His Commandments to Give
This Decree Unto All the People on Lands and Seas Saying: Give Unto All My Children
Wo Man Kind the Names of Their Foreparents I Created and Blessed to be Honored From
Beginning from 3) to Their Change Ever with O (Symbols names of God.) Begin at
Jerusalem in Juda to Build Me a Temple: Let Thy Descendants Build Pyramids. Obedient
Unto Comminds of My Father 3) the H:)ly One: in Fars From, Be It Said, Let Joyfully, It
Be Willingly Begun: For God Who Made Us the First Two for the Land, Pointed Out by the
Hand of Zana Oma Land of Mounds Where the Sun First Shone on Wo Men Kind.
'i'^i»z^.^^V<&A'^Trans. BEFORE ME CYRUS was the beginning of my pure foreparents at Omo:"
TRANSLATION OF PLATES 403 AND 404.
"Before me were Fnl Nietatis and Fna Cambysas: Fnl Thala and Fna Afrias: Fnl Srta and Fna
Sammis: Fnl Saio and Fna Nachro: Fnl Zara and Fna Samiticus; Fnl Noara and Fna Zo: Fnl
Mullah and Fna Ramsass: Fnl Camilla and Tna Shamkon: Fnl Mutta and Fna Takalut: Fnl.
Arkona and Fna Namrut: Fnl Vashatana and Fna Orsakon; Fnl Saraho and Fna Si Hasi: Fnl Riua
and Fna Osarkon: Fnl Arlina and Fna Boccharis: Fnl Baru and Fna Tachnatis: Fnl Halah and Fna
Shishark: Fnl Aaglaha and Fna Mizram II: Fnl Anannah and Fna Sufis: Fnl Hazzalal and Fna
Anm II: Fnl Mahataval and Fna Ramankhfa: Fnl Naanah and Fna Hana: Fnl Bithia and Fna
Nabkth: Fnl Batha and Fna Nafakara: Fnl Lnar and Fna Satas: Fnl Frna and Fna Tyrous: Fnl
Fafur and Fna Mananra: Fnl Farna and Fna Ramasi: Fnl Funar and Fna Tata: Fnl Hulda and
Fna Mnas: Fnl Francasa and Fna Ratatka: Fnl Musar and Fna Harmanka: Fnl Farna and Fna
Ramisar: Fnl Marrifu and Fna Rasahu: Fnl Marion and Fna Usakaf: Fnl Bunala and Fna Ra-
manka: Fnl Marlona and Fna Rashaf: Fnl Fammr and Fna Ratataf: Fnl Mathar and Fna Khufu:
Fnl Fata and Fna Sanafra: Fnl Tatar and Fna Huni: Fnl Afr and Fna Ramfarka: Fnl Falamar and
Fna Satos: Fnl Aloa and Fna Tata: Fnl Maron and Fna Rafa: Fnl Af Anr and Fna Naba: Fnl
Arta and Fna Tata: Fnl Muto and Fna Santa: Fnl Noami and Fna Utnas: Fnl Rafar and Fna
Bainutar: Fnl Rafa and Fna Kaka: Fnl Fora and Fni Bjtan: Fnl Falafar and Fna Afofsis: Fnl
Lara and Fna Bianchas: Fnl Fardar and Fna Mars: Fnl Rachar and Fna Mantha: Fnl Hanar and
Fna Hasaftr: Fnl Mra and Fna Atta: Fnl Mrai and Fna Att: Fnl Lyra and Fna Tta: Fnl Adr and
Fna Anm=Ynm: Fnl Laza and Fna Mzraim: Fnl Anr and Fna Hm: Fnl Lamr and Fna Noah^
Nh: Fnl Ladar and Fna Lmk: Fnl Salah and Fna Matoslh: Fnl Sara Fana and Fna Hnok^Enoch:
Fnl Santa and Farada: Fnl Lalar and Fna Mahallal: P"nl Nasata and Fna Konn:=Cainan: Fnl Saio
and Fna Anos: Fnl Sana and Fna St=Seth: Fnl Zana and Fna Abl: Fnl Kanafatafaa and Cain
(that slew godly Abel) they twins of Ava and Adm: Fnl Ava and Fna Adam=THE CHILDREN
OF GOD."
n=
^ c^ □=
3
.. . ADM, MY FOREPARENTS AND YOURS, AVA AND ADAM CREATED BY
♦■•■ _i| OUR GOD THE TRINITY ONE UNIVERSAL GOD, CREATOR, COM-
MANDETH TO BE BUILT THE MOUNDS IN OMO, ANON, THAT GOD
built the Pyramid Lake, O for /Egypt to copy and keep in memory Serpent Mound, O,
that now commandeth me to build a part of the Temple, us to finish it for Israel and
all to worship him everywhere and in Temples kept sacred, dedicated to God."
"I the mighty King Cyrus of all the earth and waters anointed from God speak. I write the
words God my father of heaven commandeth saying by my mouth speaketh and say to all: After me
shall come, Fnl Attosa, my pure daughter God's gift to me, and Fna Dariuc: Fnl .Amastris and Fna
Arta Ba Zanas; P"nl Musar and Fna Hvstaspes; Fnl Furina A and Fna Arta Fonou Femes: Fnl
Atthisand Fna C. Fones; Fnl Anagna 'and N. C. A. L. Farna: FNL AGRAI FAUNA and Fna
Farna Bazus; FNL Camils Farno and Fna C. L. S. Furna; Fnl Cleopatra and F. C. C. Arta Bazus;
Fnl Bazine and Fna Alexander the great king of the world; Fnl Apama and Fna Hercles Selucus
Antiochus Femes; Fnl I. Stratonice and Fna A. Antiochus Theon; Fnl Laodice and Fna Antiochus
Theos; Fnl Loadice and F"na Seleucus Callinicus: Fnl Laodice and P"na Antiochus the Great: P'nl
Arsinoe and Fna Antiochus Epi Fanous: Fnl @ Laodice and Fna Demetrius: Fnl Cleopatra and
Fna Antiochus; Fnl Camilaand Fna Antiochus Epi Fanous; Fnl Scribona and Fna C. C. L. Fur-
nius; Fnl Farna and Fna M. M. C. F. Lucius C. Furnius; Fnl Tom Fonia and Marcus Agrippa
Lucius Furnius; t^O that goeth to the mound Land of Omo where after Christ the son of God one
with trinity goeth; Fnl Thacia and Gra-cianus Julius C. C. Funarius; Fnl Furna and Gneus Agri-
cola Julius C. Furnius; Fnl Julia Procilla and Fna Scribona; Fnl Domita Decidi Ana and Gneus
Agricola Furnius; Fnl L. Honor and Fnf Furna; Fnl Thecla and Fna C. Fabi C. Furnius;
Fnl La-lia and Fna Leucius Charinus Lentulus Furna; Fnl Livia Octavias and Fna C. F. Fabi J. S.
V. L. ; Fnl D. Marina and Fna Leonidas: Fnl M. P'arnia and Fna Pars Fandarl^C. C. Is Fen-
dear; Fnl Fnia Chia da. Chinese Emperor and Fna Bahman^Farenes king of Persia that goeth to
the land of Oma and buildeth the commenced -a Tower, e^O Temple, Fort 'V at R. I.; Fnl Ennia^
Annia and Fna Sassan; Fnl Irena and Fna Babek Yezdigird; Fnl Tasthi Arta Ducta and Fna Arta
Xerxes Adishir Babigan; Fnl Furan and Fna Sapor; Fnl Arcam and Fna Hormuz; Fnl Purana and
Fna Farenes=:Varanas; Fnl Fu r Ana Fir Uz and Fna Fernis; Fnl CarZarma and Fna Shapur; Fnl
Constantiua and Fna Fara Mond ; P'nl C. Irena Commena and Fna Mund Zunk; Fnl Hilda and
Fna Attila, A Sword of God; Fnl Aridne and Fna M. Frna Clovis; Fn. Sarah and Fna Joannes
Merovoeus; Fnl Ala Fenius and Fna Childerick; Fnl Clotilda and F. F. F. Clovis Fnl Ingondaand
Fna Clotharius; Fnl Brunechilde and Fna Sigebert; Fnl Failuba and Fna Childebert II; Fnl Thud-
achild and Fna Thierry; Fnl Ayasha and A^'i'^t. da. Mohammed and Ayasha and Fna Pepin=
I ^}/^=e^=tlS^^; Fnl Zada Baga and Fna Bagi Zadah=Begga ; Fnl Plectitude and Fna Pepin De Her-
istal; Fnl Clotilda and Fna Childebert; Fnl Alif, da. Verimund, k. Spain, and Fna Robert Le Fort,
strong of the Land; □0=God eyes of France; Fnl Alsatha gr. da. Alfred the Great, and Fna Robert
Duke of France; Fnl Edgina and Fna Hugh the Great; Fnl Adelaide and Fna Hugh Caput; Fnl
Constantina and Fna Robert the Pious; Fnl Anne, da. Jaraslaus k. Russia, and Fna Henry I; Fnl
Bertha and Philip I; Fnl Adelaid and Fna Lewis VI Le Crasus; Fnl Alice and Fna Lewis VII; Fnl
Isabella and Fna Philip Augustus; Fnl Blanche and Fna Lewis VIII Caur De Lion; F"nl Margaret
and Fna Lewis IX St. Lewis; Fnl Isabella and Fna Philip III LeHardi; Fnl Jolantc and Fna
Charles De Valois; Fnl Jane and Fna Philip VI De Valois; Fnl Bonne and Fna John Le Bon: Fnl
Joan and Fna Charles V. Le Sage ; Fnl Isabella and Fna Charles VI Bon Ami; Fnl Mary and Fna
Charles VII Victor; of the Land D I , France; Fnl Charlotte, P"na Lewis XI, most Christian King;
Fnl Anne of Britiany da. Francis II and Margaret De Foix and Fna Charles VIII the & Single Eye
Pure for the Glory of France. I'hat tUe Hand of God Points out. His Son the Mighty Man Writer
of Medical Annals that All the World will be blessed there from despite evile Foes.
'%
■ET NO ONE OPPOSE THE POWER OF OMNIPOTENT GOD THAT
CHANGETH NOT NOR HIS WORD. L=FNL (MAGDALENE LUILLIER
AND FNA JEAN KERNEL.,) GOD PROMISED "AVA AND ADAM
shall be ancestors for making great the land of Pyramid Lake, Mounds Land, Omo=
America." Fnl Maria Commenius and Francis Junius Fernal; 4 wives: Fnl Anni-
etta De Coligny, da. G. De Coligny, Admiral, Commander of French Navy, Fna Dr. John Fernel:
slain by Jesuit, pr. Pope: Fnl Elizabeth Amand da. Girard Amand and wife Elizabeth Washington,
and Fna Captain William Fernald who sailed to Amarica n=OMo=OnO: Fnl Joanna Warburton
and Fna Dr. Renald Fernald, sailed to live in Omo: Fnl Temperance Washington and Fna Thomas
Fernald: Fnl Mary Spinney and Fna Dr. John Fernald: Fnl Sarah Hincks and Fna John Fernald:
Fnl Elizabeth Rogers, da. Rev. John and Martha, and Fna Captain John Fernald, of Waters and Cap-
tain Mark F. killed: Fnl Mary S.nvage, da Thos., John S. and Fna John Fernald, Priv. Scctry. C;<.v.
John Wentworth, was in American Revolution: P"nl Elizabeth Johnson, da. Fhineas, s. Col. Samuel
and Fna William Fernald: Fnl Mary Cotton Pike, da. Robert, s. Genl. Zebulon: gr. da. Col. Wm.
Jonathan Poor Fer-
forty more genera-
able Decree that de-
Cotton, a n d F n a
nald: (with about
tions on this remark-
clareth the long line)
protected by God
waters and children
me, dwell with me,
one, God. "It fur-
about 8(10 years the
two generations h'-.nc
discovery bearing
previously recorded :
search and research
plete lawful punish-
and every mass of
been protected in
setts and in New-
crimes from the least
a continual addition
150,000,000 of) mar-
the vital centre of all
Nations for the Gen-
Shall Cease Fully by
Hypocrites Whose
to Point the Way to
:als. Chap. XXXVI, V. 22 and 23. Part
o I eeocx^vo i o i ^^oc
!0 I aOoO I C Oo-''V<»to- ®oXOO>' i
o<T>Q'~><5>v<3>c o '^ooc Bav '^^ GcB .
.!»>■
- Oj'^ i O I I OV S ^ S S-oSoT-O I VOD<^VO~ I a
Oa aCoj^O©<»VO- IOOOoA^<I.| OD'^O'HlOa
Ezra, Chap. 1. Verses 1 10 6: 19. Hebrew Lell«ri of 5. l}.
IVOOOovOl » i< OoO I O ) A^<=>0 1 '^OJ' V<j>o-©
o.^oo>'ao»o<r.Qc<'v«>'^o'^ooeoav'^'='s«.A
VO ?C I A V<='^o.?V «>;»•©<=> i"^«'VV<»C C^" I A<^\
-<»0 0 lOl 4<BlOiyvO»0l0A©K- „3rcs>0<o
a_oo<E,oQo^acki>o.j<r>a AJ"o-ao/ oo I ^voa
CdV^oJ^VOO I Oa<!»/ O Oy VOOOj'«>«>OoOJ'<2>
tnAJoBOiOwlOOa-A^eO^OiOi A<«.iOOJ
oA'.&i D AiAo I ODa^c>QOoO-<'«»d 40C<:. I -^ a
o-vOo ivo-vo^aJ-oiOa To-ToO-'^'a O / O a -^
^ov»-ovoBcj" ®a«>aT.» qo^o^osoqq ivm
ya 1— oQioQO— i\<»iO t3 a J^oOOoO s <3>o JO'
Oja-OVOo A.f O I aQC— OQOa I OQ-OV-O i ^
I — O QO I '"'OO a-««>^«-l i/O ot K-^t Oa h. ^oO i O
<»y«»0'='<»a-Oa A»aO°0 lOi A X<=>B 0<:>Oj^c»a
; 21. Pan 22 Pla
Firnald shall live
Trinity till All earth
thereon cometh to
in my kingdom, of
ther alleges that it is
earth is to remain:"
been born since the
the names that were
Expert investigation,
requested with com-
ment of every single
criminals that have
Boston, Massachu-
Hampshire in all
to the greatest with
well known (over
tyrs ever striking to
Governments and
eral Destruction that
the False Perjured
Favorite Pastime is
Heaven and Walk.
Run, to Satan's Kingdom of Vile Evils; That Are Principally Remedied by Enactment and Enforce-
ment of Our Three Great Moral Reform Laws. The Crown Was Offered to General George Wash-
ington by England, That He Properly Relused, although From Ancestry Had a Right To Be a King
In This Country That He Is, Was and Ever Will Be Father For Although It Has For Many Years Been
Surrendered to the Unconstitutionally Licensed Rum Ring and'a Clique, He Would Look With Hor-
ror Upon If He Could Arise From His Grave and See the Thirteen Years' Defeat Of Our Spirit Let-
ters of Declaration of Rights of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Inhabitants with the Constitu-
tions of Sovereign States and United States of America, Land, Omo Cursed By a Church, That I Have
Reduced Its Martyrs From 250,000,000 to 150,000,000, Due to Ever Meddhng With States and Na-
tions for Blood Shed by Ignorant Fanatics, Who Had Many Common Ancestors, All the Children of
One God. Those Two Plates Compare with Other Two True Ones, page 112. Note the Change:
Beware! !
fET HE ALSO IS WISE, AND WILL BRING EVIL, AND WILL NOT CALL
BACK HIS WORDS: BUT WILL ARISE AGAINST THE HOUSE OF THE
EVIL DOERS, AND AGAINST THE HELP OF THEM THAT WORKETH
iniquity. For the Lord is our Judge: Lawgiver and King Omnicient. That declareth
unto '3)€'?0= F. Cyrus=KuPa)2=0-A V =ei2 ' Son of FNR CAMBYSAS AND NI-
ATATIS, DA. F. AFRAS=APRIES, AND HUSBAND OF- F. ANAR MANDANE.
"ISAIAH Prophet of God THAT SAYETH "Even I will give thee dark treasures,
'I will go before thee, and level mountains, And the hidden wealth of secret places:
I will burst asunder the folding doors of brass That thou mayst know, that I THE LORD,
And split in twain the bars of iron. Who called thee by thy name, am THE GOD.' "
Isaiah declared his name (44: 28) above a Century before he was born. Josephus says the Jews
showed this passage to Cyrus. The few particulars in the Hebrew Bible from its found (called) lost
language with the i'Egyptian are authentic: a small part is given in this Edition to all. Xenofon in
his Cyropaedia or Education of Cyrus: the basis of which is true history adorned and refined by phi-
losophy, and exhibited for universal admiration with imitation of the pure acts of the prince Cyrus
cradled in the ancient Persian school of the Pischdadians of the Socratic. Anointed, Chosen as the
messenger by GOD to execute his high behests, one of the genealogy line of every person of earthly
foreparents, and those to come Cyrus, Papyrus Prisse, Genealogy God for Mankind Stone, called
Moabite, given, Cyrus subdued and reigned over the nations, viz: — Cilicians, Syrians, Paphlagonians,
Cappadocians, Phrygians, Lydians, Carians, Phoenicians, Arabians, /Egyptians, Babylonians, Assyri-
ans, Bactrians, etc.
SAADI in his Gulistan copies the wise inscriptions which Cyrus ordered to be inscribed on his crown:
"WHAT AVAILS A LONG LIFE SPENT IN THE ENJOYMENT OF WORLDLY
GRANDEUR, SINCE OTHERS. MORTALS LIKE OURSELVES, WILL ONE DAY
TRAMPLE UNDER FOOT OUR PRIDE! THIS CROWN, HANDED DOWN TO ME
FROM MV PREDECESSORS, MUST SOON PASS IN SUCCESSION UPON THE HEAD
OF MANY OTHERS."
PLINY comments of the tomb pf Cyrus at Passagardae, in Persia=Fars. ARRIAN and Strabo de-
scribe it and they agree with Curtius, that Alexander the Great offered funeral honors to his shade
(shade^tomb, death, earth, grave: that God commands) there: HE opened the tomb for his great-
est treasure left, HIS SWORD, and found it the Persian Cimeter, that God honored; two Scythian
Bows: symbolic of the duality of God, after Christ came, kept on the Chinese nine commandments
of God and here PLATE 108 the original displayed Gift of same to AVA and Adam with be-
low the nine horizontal lines, ^ = the gift to China, & Washington, and the universal creation,
and its hieroglyphics record r' -^ unto all people of earth and waters: Gift at Omo, Anonna, the
Land of Lake Pyramid and Mounds where creation first begun imd sun arose first to shine
on the image or likeness of mankind created after Woman: Cyrus shield was found returning to dust.
Plutarch records the inscription on the tomb, in his Life of Alexander as follows:
"O MAN, WHOEVER THOU ART, AND WHENEVER THOU COM EST, FOR COME,
I KNOW, THOU WILT. I AM CYRUS, THE FOUNDER OF IHE PERSIAN EM-
PIRE, ENVY ME NOT THE LITTLE EARTH THAT COVERS MY BODY."
CYRUS=S) (3?0=
KHOSRU "THE SUN"
FOUNDER OF FARS=PERSIA AFTER A LONG BLOODY
WAR SUBDUED EMPIRE OF lURAN REPAID EVERY FAMILY IN PER-
SIA PROPER THEIR WAR TAX: A RELIGIOUS REFORMER IN PEACE, 7 YRS. D.
n
117
i
ARED TO HIRE UNHOLY COUNSELLORS AGAINST THEM TO FRUSTRATE
THEIR PURPOSE ALL THE DAYS OF CYRUS KING OF PERSIA TILL THE
REIGN OF DARIUS KING OF EARS.
Generation LXXIII.
Plate 403. C(
FNR ATTOSA. dn. F. Natatitis and F. Cvrus, h. 10 May 3S24: d. 1(» Oct.
3894: m. FNA DARIUS, s. Hystaspes and Halalialy, b. 10 Jun. 3819: d. 17
Aug. 3894: Had Arta Ba Zanes: Mandane: Ochus: Rhataguna: Fnr: Xerxes:
Gobyraus: Sogdianus: Achaemenes: Ti Sa Fernes=Tisaphernes: Ratystone:
Hystaspes: Ersones: et als.
THE LETTER, "Ezra V.
UNTO DARIUS THE KING: Governor Tatnai:
ALL PEACE:
BE it known unto the King, that we went into the
province of Judea, to the Temple of the Great GOD, which is builded with great
stones, and timber is laid in the walls, and this work goeth fast on, and prospereth
in their hands.
We asked: Who commandeth you to build this Temple?
Answer: "We are the servants of the GOD of heaven and earth."
THEN DARIUS THE KING made a DECREE:
Search was made in the House of the Rolls, where the treasures were laid up
in Babylon. There was found the Roll: Decree of Cyrus.. "ALSO I have
made a Decree: That whosoever shall alter this Word: Let timber be pulled
down from his house, and being set up: Let him be hanged thereon. And the
GOD that hath caused his name to dwell there destroy all Kings and People,
that shall put to their hand to alter and to destroy this Temple of GOD which
is at Jerusalem. I'he Jews builded, prospered and finished it according to the
Command of GOD: Decree of Cyrus: Decree of Darius, said, I Darius have
made a DECREE: LET it be done with Speed. AND ARTA Xerxes King
of Persia: The Temple was finished on the Third Day of the Month of .Adar;
6th Year of the Reign of Darius= I ^ j THE KING. They
Joyfully kept, dedication of GOD'S ^rV ^ j^ \^ Temple."
"ARTA XERXES, KING OF KINGS, Unto Ezra the Priest, Scribe of the
Law of THE GOD OF HEAVEN and COMMANDMENTS OF THE
LORD, AND OF HIS STATUTES."
"PERFECT PEACE:
And L Even I ARTA XERXES THE KING DO
MAKE A DECREE to all the Treasures which are beyond the River: That
whatsoever Ezra the Priests the Scribe of the Law of the God of Heaven, shall
require of you: It he done speedily. Who.soever will not do the 1-aw of God and
The King; LET Judgement be executed speedily upon him; whether it be unto
death; Banishment; Confiscation of Goods; orto Imprisonment.
BLESSED be the LORD GOD of Our Fathers."
^^
(§
LORD GOD TO WHOM VENGEANCE BELONGETH: SHEW THY-
SELF: WHO WILL RISE UP FOR ME AGAINST THE EVIL DOERS ?
OR WHO WILL STAND UP FOR ME AGAINST THE WORKERS
of iniquity? There shall no evil befall Thee, neither shall any plague come."
— Psalms.
Generation 74. FNR AMASTRIS,
F. Morar P. b. 28
ARTABAZANAS,
3839:d. >Oct.3909:
Picus= Pike: Had
da. Ono Fas=Ono Phas=Otanes and
Aug. 3830: d.. 1 Aug. 3902: m. FN A
s. F. Darius and F. Attosa, b. 20 Oct.
Had Hystaspes who is identified with
sons and daughters.
F. Arta Ba Zanas was the most powerful king of Media Atropatene and was
never conquered by the Macedonians.
Generation 75. FNR MUSA, da.
b. 23 Nov. 3860: d.
b. 10 Apr. 3866: d. 1
an adoption of his son
Musar: They had
Phernes= Phernes:
Manada(d. Q. Pomponi) and C. Fana
20 Oct. 3911 : m. FNA HYSTASPES,
May, 3916: (See Chart Plate record,
by his Father) Musa=:in i^gyptian
Ant I Foneou := Arta Femes ^ Ara
Plates 412 »nd 413. Gen. 75.
What is fame? The advantage of being known by people of whom you your-
self know nothing, and for whom you care as little.
Generation 76. FNR FURIN A,
Fonei, b. 2 July
ARTA FFER-
Fonei, b. 1st Oct.
et als. A temple
purity by the Ro-
andFaunaorFaula
of the Tiber with
lars and the cypher
from God the Fa-
da. C. Furniusand Hranci, da. M.N.
3881: d. 6 Aug. 3980: m. FNA
NES= Faenas^ Ant I Fonoou=
3885: d. 1 May 3955: Had C. Fonei:
was built in her life time to honor her
mans: the same as khown as Faunus
and the Temple was built on an Island
a Round Temple in Rome with pil-
reading of coin declares of religion
ther and God the Holy One: Attho.
Plate 419. Gen. 77.
Generation 77. FNR ATTHIS, da. C. Furnius ann Atta, s. Attho, b. 11 Dec. 3901: d. 2 Aug.
3974: m. CIRUS FONEI, b. 1 Oct. 3904: d. 2 Aug. 3974: Had N. C. A. S. L.
Farna: et als. This coin counts up their genealogy to Ava and Adam, and their
possession of the Golden Tablets with EIGHT Commandments of God.
119
^ ^ ^ D.
"W
'HOSO REVVARDETH EVIL FOR GOOD, EVIL SHALL NOT DEPART
FROM HIS HOUSE." Prov.
Generation 78.
FNR ANAG-
b. 1 Aug. 3927: d.
FARNA, s. C.
20 luly 39H2: Had
Plate 420. Ceneratt
g^^ NA, da. Hystaspes and Anna Fcrenna,
1 Nov. .3979: m. FNA N. C. L.
Fonei and Atthis, b. 2 Jan. 3928: d.
Farna Bazus, et al.s. ( Farna full pre-
fix initials, M. N. C. A. 8.) Anna Ferenna was the da. of Fanuel of the Tribe of
Asher, a Prophetess: became a widow: went about and did much good: N=:in
in English A=in Hebrew.
Generation 79. FNR AGRAA FAUNA, da. F. Arta Farnas and F. Furina, s. C. Fabi, s. C.
Foni, one of 306 killed at Cremera, 477, said F. A. Fauna, b. 2 Aug. 3944; d. 23
June 4011: m. FNA FARNA BAZUS, s. C. A. S. Farna and F. Anagna, b. 5
Apr. 3952: d. 2 Jan 4000: Had C. A. S. Furna: et als.
Plale 423. Cen(
Generation 80. FNR CAMILS FARNO, da. Fatnus Faunus and Fauna, b. 10 Feb. 3982: d. 10
Feb. 4052: m. C. A. S. FURNA (same S. C. A. S. V. Fenas) b. 10 Feb. 3975:
d. 20 Aug. 4052: Had F. C. C. Arta Bazus: (His mother had prefix C. Mari C)
other sons and das.
Plate 425 Ce
Generation 81. FNR CLEOPATRA, da. Cleomenes and Arta Coma da. Ptolemy, b. 10 Oct.
4003: d. 10 Apr. 4061: m. FNA C. C. ARTA BAZUS, b. 3 Feb. 4000: d. 1
May 4067: Had BAZINE, et als.
The merit of great men is not understood, but by those who are found to be
such themselves; genius speaks only to geuius.
True valor braves danger without neglecting resources.
^ D
(Tbapter If
99
-W2^
SEEN IN THE TRUE
AND MODERN THIS
^^OW THERE IS TO BE
J V4 HEBREW ANCIENT
«_S1 WORD WHICH HAS I BEEN FALSELY
Lm TRANSLATED WINE ' AND NOT WATERS AS
^^ ^ it is, because they loved wines, alcoholics, that the Saviour Christ did not make or drink:
but did Pure Holy Water at the marriage feast in Cana of Galilee. St. John, 2.
Generation 82 FNR BAZINE, da. F. C. C. Arta Bazus and F. Cleopatra, b. 10 Dec. 4020: d. 21
Mar. 4072: m. FNA ALEXANDER, b. 3 May 4021: d. killed by Tolus, 4 Sept.
4054: Had: Hercles: 2nd. Hercules, killed: Alexander, killed.
PLATE 427. Generation 82.
Gen. 82. ALEXANDER THE GREAT: MOTHER, WIFE AND
CHILDREN OF DARIUS AFTER HIS DEFEAT WITH 630,000 AT
ISSUS, TREATED WITH UTMOST DELICACY AND RESPECT BY
ALEXANDER THE GREAT SON OF PHILLIP II AND HIS WIFE
OLYMPIAS. AN EXAMPLE TH.^T IT IS WELL TO IMITATE.
Alexander was born at Pella and killed at Babylon: descendant by mother of Arch-
illelineand Father from FnaSammis: he and Attilla visited the Tomb of Apries their
forefather and cut their names below the embalmed Fna Afras=.'\pries as is shown
in Kircher's plate with Nietatis renewing there her vows and honoring ancestor as
God hath commanded: After his
death his foes were said to have
slain his children and probably
did Hercules, brotherof Hercles
saved that many pages might be
written of him and coins.
PLATE 428 PLATE 429. Ctneralion 83
Generation 83 FNR APAM.-\, da. Arta Bazus and Epi Da Fne Antiochia, b. S Aug. 3038: d. 27
May 4090 : m. FNA HERCLES, s. of Alexander the Great, b. 3 June 4040: d. 4
Nov. 4194: Their cypher, hieroglyphic coins are valuable, his has a count from it
taken from my Bible, to Avaand .\clm. the O means son of. refers to Mounds Land
F. Afras, etc. her coin beareth her monogram, GOD'S Golden Squares, also on his
sword that refers to Omo, Eden: Had: Fna Antiochus, 14 Sons, 7 Daughters.
121
m
■ITH THEIR NAMES WHICH ARE SYNONYMS, THE SAME IN FULL, SHOWING
AND RECORDING FNR=HEBREW LNR = ^EGYPTIAN ^-^AODA WHOSE
SYMBOLS WERE ALL DERIVED FROM THE ORIGINAL F. A. M. AND THEIR
R interchangeable with Lon CIN. I I I V: his, Fna Hercles Selucius Antiochus Femes: Had
o-o
Following Plates, Nos. 432, 433 and 434, are records of Fnf Hercles and
Plate 430 is the most ancient name of America, Amaana=Anonna, known
is derived; therein showing the Pyramids and Hebrew letter M. The
gift of the Golden Squares Commandments to Ava and Adam
touchc of God in Omo Land of the mounds and record of dog
^
or his faithfulness and is
Creation, water, earth ,
Golden Squares Command-
woman blessed labors, sail
swim. Plates 435, 436,437,
love children, keep tree of
tations for birds and man-
tion of Cain and Ca Na Fa
Deity spelled backward
Ava, God named Adm,
ments, birds pure waters,
\s aters and Oceans, and
438. Obey God's Corn-
genealogy, marriage protect
kind for joy, safety and
Ta Far .^dam and Eve and
A. Antiochus, et als
Alexander the Great
after OMO from which it
arrangement declares the
for all. Plate 431 is a Ca-
namc, given by God to hon-
lUustrates a continuance of
gave dominion t o them,
to drink: taught man and
steps to travel the earth:
mandments, worship God,
family, build walls, habi-
protection, with an illustra-
their first da. (Cain's)
Zana that m. Abel a
son of Ava and Adm.
6, Gift of God's Laws:
Catouches of St and
Sana, after teaching Ava
and Adm to navigate
the waters: Slaughter
of Abel by Cain, burial
in mound of earth : sor-
row of Ava and Adm :
Birth of St, son, and
wife.their marriage and
one golden Square giv-
en to her. 7, Ava and
Adm, Cain and Abl,
and their pure wives,
the first kings and
queens : 41 39— Records
first two created by
God. 440— Omo land
of mountain: 441 —
Monogrammic names
of earlier, before Flood,
men and women first
najnes. 442— Omoland
of Mound and serpent
peopling itgypt is 443 :
444 is religious promise
Christ son of God, a
Lamb. 445— Ham af-
ter Deluge. 446— Rec-
ords first Laws of God
at Lake Pyramid Omo
and the names of At
andTa,Nh,Hm,Lamr,
III sons. 447— Lanir
returns to A nnona.
448— Garden of Eden:
twins of Admand Avr,
one a son: Squares,
Mound of Abl: 449—
Catouche of Oma, Nh
and Lamr: Kfn=Cain :
Abl, in fact the Primi-
tive Alphabet in another
form, give from God
all names of earth and
waters: 450— Serpent
Mound commanded to
bj built by GDd. Abl slain by Cain, Golden Squares, Adam, Cain, St and uives built Mound: serpent represents
lust and long line of Gen. with the serpentine ever in pursuit of pure woman, lion e.vil of Cain, cup he drank wine
hnri? K /? , ^\ J ^"^A""''^' ^"xTu ° V "°^ 7"°"^ ^r'^"'",*^?'"',?"'^ ^^ows expulsion from Garden of Eden, House
Duut by God, Adam, Cain and Nh, lioness lust 452— Lake Pyramid /Egvpt copied: Squares. Laws. etc. Egg of
t-romise Serpent Mound at O: Lioness lust: St pure and women: Waters: 454-AIexander, 3 sons and 2 das.
t-Ji— Lake Pyramid, A and O both names of God, worship: Gen. Tree. 4^6— Ananna Nh counting fimilv
122 ^ ■■
JN HAND TH£ lake PYRAMID AND ONE GOLDEN SgUARE CARRIED TO
"AIGPT" THAT SEVEN WENT FORTH TO PEOPLE AND BUILD OVER
THE WATERS FRON OMO LAND OF LAKE PYRAMID. 457 TRUTH. 458
Mound earth where first two were created by God that promised Christ his son to be born
of Mary and Joseph, children of God. /Egyptsline from mound land and waters upheld by
hand of God there to grow mighty. 460 Embalmed Atta wife Mra. 461 Mound land Ur-
nor Tomb where first was buried and God
promised Golden Squares
Ava and Adm. Record
Adams Co. Name of
carried across the Waters
Recordeth the Prayers of
ing of Abel by Cain,
spirit one only God.
ters. Plate 46.'? Sarco-
In the primitive
may learn all requisite
knowing may learn to
It is no wonder that
with a book that finds so
The consent of all
very great weight with
thing is true, is when it
Thus we conclude there
en believe it, there be-
corrupt, that denies it.
As Atheism is in all
hateful, it is in this, that
of the means of exalting
Lord Bacon.
As infidelity is the
to give a man over to it,
Impenitency is the
credulity.
God has wisely pro-
ministration of things, to
of his just procedure to-
and yet to leave us in-
warded virtue and pros-
sure us that he intends
I never had a view
peror Aurelius, and yet
it is discoverable by its
constant experience of
a proof of His being, and
tion.
PLATE 463. SERCOPHACUS OF FNA
and gave with Laws to
of Serpent .Mound Ohio,
One God and Great Seal,
to i-Egypt. Plate 462
Fnr Lamr: after the kill-
Pure worship of great
Their trip over the wa-
phagus of Fnr.
Scriptures the ignorant
knowledge, and-the most
discern their ignorance,
wicked men find fault
much fault with them.
men, says Seneca, is of
us. An evidence that a
appears so to all the world,
is a Divinity, because all
ing no nation, however
respects despicable and
it deprives human nature
itself above human frailty.
greatest sin, so, for God
is the greatest punish-
undoubted issue of in-
vided, in his present ad-
give us instances enough
wards the good and bad ;
stances enough of unre-
perous wickedness to as-
and after reckoning.
of my soul, says the Em-
I highly value it; because
operations; and, by my
the power of God, I have
a reason for mv venera-
It was a good counsel given to the .Athenians, to be sure that King Phillip was dead, before they
expressed their joy at the report of it, lest they might find him alive to revenge their hasty triumph.
The like advice may be proper for all unbelievers. Let them be sure there is no God before they
presume to defy him, lest they find him at last to assert his being to their destruction.
He that walks only by the light of nature, walks in darkness. None are so blind as they who will
not see and understand truth from preconceived notions from illiberal education. Honesty, best policy.
123
01
ily: h
mids
HE PROPHECY OF NEWPORT MONOGRAMIC TOWER A TEMPLE BUILT UNTO
TRINITY AT PLATE 464 BY KARA THE WISE 465. A FRAGMENT OF PREVIOUS
THAT DECLARETH A LABEL OR INSCRIPTION OR PLATE SHALL BE PLACED
thereon. 466 Abl slain, lioness evil: Alcoholic curse brought by man suffered of God for their evil
across the waters pure for all; land of Egg of promise of a destruction of alcoholics 467 part of it, Peter
Faneuil Tomb Record, his Seal on Tomb, stabbed heart, time religious persecution of his ancestor's fam-
sMine is there recorded and is counted by the Stars. 468 — Trinity. 469 — God's blessings on Pyra-
obelisks, mound lands at
W^^kic
Omo, Asia, j^gvpt, etc.
470— Prayer, B.C., for that
at great blessing in both coun-
tries. 471. The gift of Gold
and pure waters. 472. Right-
hand pare prayer to God for gift
of water, earth, Wo Man Kind
2nd. Cain slew Abl his brother,
3rd. Trinity grace by and for
creation to perfect his children.
/Egypt peopled from Omo,
promise of God at Pyramid Lake
of Christ his son for all. 47-1 —
God two in one. Lord. 475 —
The Mound Land history shall
be protected bv hand and'arm of
God. 476— Pyramid or Altar
built after expulsion from the
Garden of Eden versus lion evil.
477— Pharaoh telling of Indian
people in 0.no=America. 478
—Rejoicing in tlie Lord's gift
of mercy. 479— Anm of N. J.
to be now e.vists. 480— Golden
Squares Commandments pre-
served by Mizraim. 481— Anm's
praise of the Lord for blessings
at Omo Land of Mounds. 482
—Lord's gift and eye that saw
theSeal that shall be and was used
in .£gypt and be on Tomb at
Omo, Noah's Land Omo, that
shall become mighty for God
and people under the lilv and
treeofgen. 483— Upright man
one the 4th with Trinity upheld.
484— The Bird count. 485—
^Egyptians raising the Cross with
the brazen serpent sword 2000
years B. C. 486— Another pro-
phecy bearing Faneuil Seal. 487
— St from mothe.- of Mound
Land. 488— Square of Mound
Land : Promise of Chri.st to go
there. 489— Christ cometh there
and teaching returns: wrote his
name on tlie Rock. 490— The
line of beauty Christ to come and
go one with Trinity, Man. the
Son of God to be born of Mary
and Joseph made earthv and of
waters, Heavens, God's perfect
one a sword and king of God
given. 491— Another Anm, a
mighty Man of God on earth
and waters. 492— A modern p.... 49,.
tallen Cross to banish the sins
S Mn.I'nH ^"^of'tu <^°""^"v 493-Daily Prayer worship of God. 494-Anm was a lion in
oi mounds. 495— The power that is potent has arisen that will prevail and 496 conquer 497
first Indians in America. 498— Voice of Sealed Urn of God's words. 499_God' '
call all Fnl, Fnr, Fna as his a line of and from God. It means
AT;-
Tl
Kind
traits in the Land
a long histor>' of
name is Fa that told Man
TaKi-.,. „i r- j"' ' '^'■' '■'" "-•••" - —■ A""- """• /■; '"^""^ '" our language Miss, Mrs., Mr. 500
50l_PrLl- l.T'u^T'V''^ Earth: Squares: Gen. Tree: Adam's the Lion changed to more valuable Dog.
5037nd \^r:A:^'P^'^".^^'' f -^- 502-God's Dog of Mound Land for Honorable peace or righteous War.
and Crl u ? ' ^"'^r ^°^^ ' '°"' ''i?' ^'■^" ^°'^ ^'^ "°' '^"^'"°y- 503-Center plate emblem sun, Mounds,
ana <_rovvn with advent of Serpent into /Egypt.
124
f
IE AWAY TO THE BATTLE FIELD, F
STATES AND FAMILY AGAINST EV
COHOLIC SOCIAL AND MALPR
FALLS IN THIS RIGHTEOUS GLOR
GREATER THAN 11)00."
When I look upon
every emotion of envy
I read the epitaphs of
i)r(linate(lesire};oes(>ut:
grief of parents upon a
melts witii conipassioii.
of the parents thein-
vanity of grieving for
aoon follow. When I
thosetheydepose, when
placeil side by side, or
vided the \vorld with
putes, I reflect with
ment on the little corn-
debates of mankind: p
al dates of the tombs,
terday, and some several hun-
great dr'y, when we shall all
makeour appearance together.
The providence of God
cth and directeth with intinire
The thoughts of thy heart
He knoweth thy determina-
Wonderful he is in all his
scrutable. The manner of
ihy conception.
O, reverence the majesty
tempt not his anger, lest thou
In the depths of his mind
the secrets of futurity lie open
IGHT FOR GOD, HONOR, COUNTRY,
ERY PERSON'S FOES. THE RUM AL-
ACTICE VILE RINGS. '-HE WHO
lOUS WAR I WILL BLESS AND MAKE
the tombs of the great,
dies within me: when
the beautiful, every in-
when I meet w ith the
tomb-stone, m\ heart
When 1 see the torn!)
selves,' I consider the
those whom we must
'-ee kings lying beside
I consider ri\al wits
the lu.ly men that di-
their contests and dis-
_orrow and astonish-
petition, factions and
when I read the sever-
of some that died yes-
dred years ago, I consider that
of us be contemporaries, and
is over all his \\orks.
wisdom.
He rul-
mind are open to his view,
tions when thev are made.
ways. His counsels are in-
his knowledge transcendeth
of the Omnipotent; and
be destroyed.
He revolveth all knowledge;
before him.
wisdom all honor and vener-
ble and submissive obedience
Pay, therefore, to his
ation and bow thyself in hum-
to his supreme direction.
There is but one God, the Author, the Creator, the Governor of the woHd: almighty, eternal
and incomprehensible.
Generation 84.
PLATE SOT. PLATE 508. PLATE 510.
FNR I. STRATONICE, da. Demetrius Palior Cetes and Filia, b. 1 Jan.
4052; d. 20 Oct. 4100; m. FN A A. ANTIOCHUS, b. 23 Jaji. 4059: d. 22
Aug. 4115. He was son of Gen. 83. Had Antiochus, Theos, Apama, Stra-
tonice, et als. He was called Sotor meaning from his line of Nh, Christ
should be born.
125
m
aD <4=» <4=» <4=»
HAT GENESIS DECLARETH DISTINCTLY THAT FROM THE LINE NH.
HM, SM. JAPETH, CHRIST THE SAVIOUR SHOULD BE BORN IS A GREAT
BLESSING AS ONE CHRIST IS ONE WITH TRINITY A SINGLE GOD FOR
THE NATIONS OF THE EARTH: HE IS SUPREME KING OF KINGS.
Generation 85
Generation
FNR LAODICE, da
2Jan.4082:d.
m. FNA AN-
T. b. 6 May
4130: Had :
inicus: Anti-
Stratonid: et
M. Lcpidus and
Alexandria, b.
3 May 4142:
TIOCHUS
4084 :d. lOct.
ScleuocusCall-
ochus Hierax:
als: He was
"• N h , H m ,
Christ was to be born.
PLATE 515. 8S^
FNR LAODICE, ds. C. Fundan and OBO b. 1 Oct. 4098: d. 23 Apr. 4147:
FNA SELEUOCUS, b. 1 Oct. 4194: d. 1 Apr. 4153: Had: Antiochus et als.
PLATE 516. GEN. 85-6
Generation 87 FNR LAODICE da. Mithradatis IV king Pontusand Lasa, b. 1 Oct. 4122: d. 20
May 4174: m. FNA ANTIOCHUS THE GREAT, b, 22 Oct. 4120: d. 22 July
4189: Had: Antiochus Epi Fanous et als.
Generation 88 FNR ARSINOES, da.
Philip the son of Alexander
TheGreat.b.l Oct. 4132:
d. 4 Feb. 4184: m. FNA
ANTIOCHUS EPI
FANOUS, b. 9 July 4132:
d. 10 May 4212: Had:
Laodice: Demetrius: et als
Generation 89 FNR O LAODIC, da.
Antiochus Epi Fanous (5c
/Echia, b. 10 May 4150:
d. 3 Jun. 4201: m. Grand
Son of Antiochus the Great
FNA DEMETRIUS, s.
of Antigonus and Straton-
ice, b. 1 May 4154: d. 1
Oct. 4226: said to have m. four times besides this one but was given credit probably
with those wives of Demetrius: I find their names as, Philia, Eurdice, that may or
not be the same as here recorded: Deidameia, and Ptolemais: Had Antiochus:
Anti Gonus: et als.
plate 522. CEN.
"If
E THAT OVERCOMETH SHALL INHERIT, ALL THINGS: AND I WILL
BE HIS GOD AND HE SHALL BE MY SON."— Revelation 21 : 7.
Generation 90. FNR CLEOPATRA, da. Marinius and Ana, b. 1 Mar. 4172; d. 3 Mar. 4259; r
FNA ANTIOCHUS, s. Demetrius and Laodice, da. Antiociuis Epi Fanous, b.
May 4175: d. 9 Jan. 4248: Had Antiochus Epi Fanous:
Plile 524. Genei
FNR CAMILA, (PI. 524, Gen. 91.) da. M. Fanis and wife Staor, da. C and
Dionusio, b. 1 Mar. 4184; d.9May 4261; m. FNA ANTIOCHUS EPI FANOUS,
s. Antiochus and Cleopatra, b. 21 Mar. 4194; d. 17 Mar. 4274: Had C. C. l!
Furnius:
Plale 527.Genei
Generation 93. FNR SCRIBONA, da. (PI. 526, Gen. 92.) of Genl. C. R. F. L. M.=Luciusand
E. X. C. Fnaf, b. 22 Mar. 4214: d. 22 Oct. 4264: m. FNA C. C. L. FURNIUS,
s. Antiochus Epi Fanous and Camila, b. 10 May 4214: d. 1 Jun. 4284: Had M. F.
F. I. C. F. Lucius: et als.
Plate 529. GencraHon93.
Generation. 93 FNR FARNA, da. M. C. N. Stati Libo and Julia, b. 2 June 4263 ; d. 5 Julv 4315;
m. M. FNA F. I. C. F., s. C. C. L. Furnius and F. Scribona, b. 26 May 4254;
d. 8 July 4304: Had Marcus Agrippa Lucius Furnius: et als.
Generation 94. FNR TOM FO-
and Filia, b. 10
FNA MARCUS
b. 13 Apr. 4313;
J.C. C. F.: etals.
ton Rock 29 B.C.,
the Emperor Au-
gustii (See coin-)
NIA=Pomponia, da. T. P. Atticus
Dec. 4327: d. 6 June. 4357: m.
AGRIPPA LUCIUS FURNIUS
a.,., Q^ d. 29 July 4364: Had Crscianus
njJM'^j His father wrote his name on Digh-
ly s I J and \vas a great naval commander of
gustus, and named America' Au-
Plate 594, Chapter XX.
E
d (4=, ^ ^
NVY THOU NOT THE OPPRESSOR, AND CHOOSE NONE OF HIS WAYS.
FOR OF OLD EVIL COMMUNICATIONS CORRUPT GOOD MANNERS.
II
Generation 95
Plate 534. Otn. 95. sword of c. furnius. and seal
OF THECLA HIS WIDOW
FNR THCLR=Thacla=Thecla, da. Mari=MARY and Joseph, b. 10 Dec. 4378
(=2 A. D.) d. 10 June 4442: m. GRi^CIANUS FURNARIUS J. CAIUS C.
FURNIUS, b. 1 Jun. 4357: d. 1 Jan. 4402 (26 A. D.): Had: Gna-us Agricola
Julius C. Furnius: Thecla b. 2 A: D. C. Rubillus Blandus: Agrippa A: A F.
Furnius b. 17: Julia Procilla b. 15 A. D. m. a cousin J. G. S. C. F. etc. Both
Theclars are recorded as writers of said A. Codex. THE FOUND NEVER LOST
HEBREW LANGUAGE GIVES MOST IMPORTANT HISTORY: HEB.
St. Luke, Chap. Ill Verse 23 and 24. 12 last symbols, r. to), a repetition:
fi»0n00-A4>.0 I aO I 0 0@/?»w/aA<aA04» I I <a I -0\30^©-es^ ! O I AOOO®
HEBREW LETTERS SYMBS. t] D' J ' 13 'i 3" 2 So;; ' lS ; Snno; 2 24:' Sy I
IMPROVEDOLD .EGYPTIAN ;@iO - O - OaO -<aO 5 ©.[H-fliO O ^.-AAA^jJ - <a24.0 ^ A-
To aid in Godly work with pleasure is given expert Theologians this truth.
Left to right: Mari.
m. Joseph=^f,cvz=
@000 s. Heli='^y
=0.s.A,s.Matthat=
nnt:=ai?»V s. Mel-
chir^'2^!:=0 3^V
s. Janna='r=0 -@ ^^,^ ^^
_Q^__^ PLATE 538
lESUS CHRIST THE SON OF GOD THE FATHER, AND GOD THE
"HOLY ONE WAS BORN Sat. 10th. Oct. 4376, the 11 hour: Was horn in Heaven
21 hour, 10 Oct. 44, equal Sunday 4376 from completion of creation of Ava and Adm,
7 Dec. and Sunday. The cypher and line work on this medal gives his birth and
death. Prophecy'fulhlled of death. Curse of God on those who wilfully changes
Trinity Laws, Commandments, Words, also, shown four sides of two coins of his
Ancestors. If Experts will examine with a magnifying glass the monogramic
symbol of Marv back of neck of F. FmFF=)osf=F. Jasf="Joseph" the myth of
an angel begetting Jesus is de.stroyed. The symbol on the double head coin gives
again Omo and Lake Pyramid Oregon with Mounds Land Ameri<.a pretty well tilled
by the tools, assassins, fanatics, that have stooped for vile power and lusts the evil ra-
pidly undermining our beloved nations God blessed here on Earth that mourn the
rapidly increasing towards 250,000,000 Martyrs.
D □
o
^^TRANSLATE ST. LUKE INTO THE PRIMITIVE LANGUAGE VERSE 27 AND
/■4\ IT DECLARETH: MRI THE MOTHER OF CHRIST WAS BORN 10 OCT.
i I L 4354: M. AET. 17. JOSEPH, D. KILLED BY SWORD 20 LAMECH=AUGUST
^^^ 4422: Thecla was the first child b. after Christ. Married C. Furnius who had a da. Thccia
the writer of the Alexandrian Codex at the British Museum. Thecla was a da. of a
brother of C. Furnius who married Mary the Widow (of Joseph kil. ) that she was killed 51 years
after her marriage to Joseph, when a wife of C. Furnius. Thecla would thus be his daughter in law.
Vide St. Luke, chapter 1, verse 27, below:
THE PROOF!
DO'^'ii' I CO I n<a. A I 0\i»0«sjaO V@0000 V OOOOA.®
:MF R M H M S H M L A H F I) F D T F M F S F F F .\1 S F S F .\ l>
O'? A'i'«^ O Aa I V.o.A<aA
S K .V .\l I. F T » H .ML A I, A
SEE FERNALD PHILOLOGY, CHAPTER XX.
.TION XCVl.
FNR M. FURNA, da. of Germanicus and Agripina, b. 10 Dec. 4380=A. D. 4: d. 4
July, 4442; m. GN^EUS AGRICOLA JULIUS CAL FURNIUS, s. Gr£cianus Julius
Caius Gna-us P'urnius=Furna and Thecla, b. 22 Jun. 4377=A. D. 1 ; d. 22 Nov. 4432=
55: Had a father named F. Furna and son Furna (Were they the Orators and Histo-
rians, "C. Furnii and Son.^" If so, who beside myself will try to find their history?)and
Trajan, fr. Trajanus, b. 18 Sept. 52; d. Aug. 117, whose grand neice Sabina, m. Hadrian:
Roman Biog. Dictionary under Trajanus; M. Furnius a son of Junius: Scribonius C. F.
appears as eldest son : et als.
Plate 543. Gt
Generation 97.
FNR JULIA PROCILLA, da. Thecla and Gra-cianus J. C. C, b. 30 May 15 A. D.:
d. 10 Jun. 69 A. D.: m. FNA SCRIBONNIUS C— F— , b. 3 Jun. 17; d. 23 Apr. 53,
he was son of Gnsus Agricola Julius Cal Furnius and M. Furna, da. of Germanicus and
Agrippina (not sister): Had Gna?us Agricola Julius F. : et als.
It is one of the great effects of Providence that every nation, however
may be, fancies that happiness cannot be found elsewhere.
Modesty is always inseparable from true merit.
liserable it
s
EJOICING IN THE HABITABLE PART OF HIS EARTH: AND MY DE-
LIGHTS WERE WITH THE SONS OF MEN. RICHES AND HONOR ARE
WITH ME: YEA, DURABLE RICHES AND RIGHTEOUSNESS.
Generation 98
FNR DOMITA DECIDA ANA, da. F. Galba and yEiotarou, da. Deistriou, b. 23
June 36 A. D. d. 10 Jun. 101 A. D. m. FNA MNtEUS AGRICOLA JULIUS F.,
b. 13 Jun. 37 A. D.: d. 23 Aug. 93 A. D.r Had: Furna: da. m. Tacitus: et als.
Acts Chap. XXVIII, Verses 1 1 and 13, for the Record of Mariners Compass. "And
after three months we departed in a Ship of Alexandria, which had wintered the
Gale, whose sign was Caster and Polliux (12) and landed at Syracuse, we tarried
there three days, I3th. And from thence we Fetched a COMPASS, and came to
Rhegium: and after one day the South wind blew and we came the next day to
Puteoli: 14, Where we found Brethern and were
desired to tarry with them seven days: and so we
went toward Rome. Primitive language on above
coins give said facts.
GENERATION
GENERATION 99. PLATE 548
Generation 99 FNR L. HONOR, da. Bonevent Scribonis and Putea, b. 1 Oct. 53: d. 5 May 110:
m. her Cousin, FNA FURNA, s. Gnea>us Agricola Julius Furnius and Domita
Decida Ana, b. 23 Apr. 57: d. 10 Jun. 125: Had: Thccla m. C. Fabi=(C. Foni)
C. Furnius and this is one of the Two Thcclas that wrote the Alexandrian Codex
that if Correctly Translated are the TRUTHS OF GOD FOR ALL PERSONS:
An exact fac-simile of the ALEXANDRIAN Mss. and of Mary, wife of Joseph
and FNR THECLA'S signature is found in Stow's History. F. I. From Sinai
Mss. with corrections at different times. 1, St. John V. 6-9. 2 St. John VI. 14, 15.
3 See next page.
tCt i-v-Z— *
I! :
2So^<M<Z
zooo
130
A
FALSE BALANCE IS ABOMINATION TO THE LORD; BUT A lUST
WEIGHT IS HIS DELIGHT. AN HYPOCRITE WITH HIS MOUTH DE-
STROYETH HIS NEIGHBOUR; BUT THROUGH KNOWLEDGE SHALL
THE JUST be delivered. A gracious person retaineth honor.
No. 2. St. John VT, 14, 15,
on left hand side is the name of Thecla, daughter of C.
is a correction that in Matt. V, 45 and X, 39 is
ll
5 I
>-0 s
I i ^l i
-<
.0 -
'i
'k
I I
I fc
^ ^ \i
O
0
i
I
PLATE SSO.
i
.1
.^. X-v
Wo
o z.
lit
2 (U ~ .^
Fenelion A Furnis. No. 3
copied from the writings
of Fnr Zana.wife of Seth.
5 a correction in 2 Cor.
.\, 12. Nos. 6 and 7 are
corrections from Matt.
IX, 10, III, 13.14. No.
8, cor. St. Luke XXIV,
51, from writings of Ava
and Adam in No. 9 is a
cor. .Matt. XXIII, 35.
Nos. 10 ami 1 1 are signa-
tures of C. Furnius and
wife Thecla of Rev. XI,
11, with authority of
God's truth, taught by
Christ that came and
went. On these ancient
Sacred Records Signa-
tures of=C. Furnius and
Thecla No. 12 Isaiaii
\'III, 22: with prophecy
against fdes for the mon-
ogramic names to stand
forever with God's and
Christ's blessings on the
line of genealogy that is
to be and for all NA-
TIONS. No. 13 is a
cor. in Timothy III, 16.
No. 14 is a cor. in Matt.
XIX, 3: God ni. Kst two
but did not in the crime
of C. S. Liilcy and C.
Blodget to protect the
wicked saloonists in Bos-
ton Courts to degrade.
No. 15, is "Remeir.ber,
Lord, the soul of the
sinner Dionysius the
munk, when tiiini coni-
est into thv Kingdom."
C. No. 1. 1 to 7. in
exact fac-simile of the
ALEXANDRIAN
MSS. in which there is
no defect in the writing
by THECLA fro m
Christ and .\lar\' the \\ ife
of C. Furni and" widow of
Joseph, Christ's earthly
father. Here on the border is their primitive language clearly distinct signatures with the Born
in Heaven Christ the Messiah .A. D. 44: and Birth 4376 from Creation of Ava and .Adm.
No. 2 is Rev. I, 1-4. from the same MSS with some of the letters obliterated by the ravages of
time. It \v\U be found and seen on trial, that such sligiu imperfections do not obscure the sense or
meaning in reading.
131
£>.
iiitili
'iir
}Hi,
PLATE 551
J
N THE MULTITUDE OF THE PEOPLE IS THE KING'S HONOR: BUT IN
THE WANT OF PEOPLE IS THE DESTRUCTION OF THE PRINCE AND
NATIONS. HAGUE LEGISLATION, OUR THREE LAWS, ARE PERFECT
SAFETY, HONOR, JUSTICE, RIGHTS, RIGHTEOUSNESS WITH GOD'S
BLESSINGS.
Gfneration C.
FNR THECLA, da. L. Honar and Furna, b. 22 Aug. 76 A. D.: d. 2Jun. PO- m.
FNA C. FABI C. FURNIUS, b. 23 Aug. 73 A. D.: d. 12 Dec. 120 A. D. : whose
ancestors' names were Fonii, Founi, Fodii, Fabii from whom descended the immortal
300 or 306 in the battle on the Cremera, his name was also spelled Furnis: Had S. N.
Cornel Leucius Furnius: C. Furna L. C. L. Furna: Thecla: De Cinaus Funius:
Fuvenalis, d. 127 A. D.
tNOh u\ ... fiB. ..ntofTi*".
titrrrTrv "j^""'";;' - /„i-;
■fit ck^o*. ^i-npui.
Plate 5S5. Genera
Generation 101 FNR LAELIA, da. C. Anni and Thecla, b. 10 May 90 A. D. : d. 20 Jun. 150-
m. FNA S. N. CORNEL LEUCIUS C. FURNA L. C. F. s. C. Fabi C. Furnis
and Thecla, b. 3 Dec. 94: d. 1 Aug. 145 A. D. Had C. F. Fabi J. S. V. L. : et als
•'®
-° * * * °=
MR PREPARATIONS OF THE HEART IN MAN,
OF THE TONGUE IS FROM THE LORD"
Generation 102.
VI AS. (in.
Concordia,
d. 3 lune
FABl' )U-
L.,b. 3july
of Sflucius
Furna and
and Tliecla:
Genekahon 103. F N R
lus Noninusand
13(1 A. D.; d. 2
NIDAS F.. s.
Livia Octavia.b.
Octo b e r 2 0 3:
darl: Origin writer of the Sacred Scriptures with his sister Thccia: He
and was beheaded l-y order of Severeus: Six sons and two daughters.
AND THE ANSWER
FNR LIVIA OCTA-
Paullus Lepidus and
b. 10 May 110 A. D.;
ISO;- m. FNA C. F.
LIANUSS. VALENS
1; d. 3 Aug. 148, s.
N. Cornel Leucius L.
Fnr La-lia, da. C. Anni
D. MARIN I, da. "Marcel-
Marcia Furnella, b. 1 Sept.
Aug. 220; m. FNA LEO-
C. F. Fabi J. S. V'alens and
21 Sept. 133 A. D.; d. 1
Had Is Fendear=Fars Fan-
Generapi
.N 104. FNR
vidius and An-
150 A. D.; d. 1
FENDEAR=
Persian Is Fen-
and Marina, b.
Had Fna Var-
==F a r e n e s :
M. M. FARNIA,da. Hel-
tea, son Fannia, b. 6 June
Sept. 220; m. FNA C. C.
FANDAL, translated from
dear, s. Leonidas^Leonides
8 Jan. ISO; d. 1 June 188:
a h ran ^ Bah ma n^ Bah ram
-IN lOS. FNA CHIA, da. Emperor of China and his wife, b. 4 Dec. 170; d. 6 May 230;
m. FNA VARAHAN=FARANES=BAHMAN=BAHRAM, b. S May 170; d. 8 June
223: Had F. Sassan: et als. They completed Newport Tower, fought with Indians, made
peace and intermarried with them: See ante: et post. Their inscription is on Dighton
Rock, Taunton River, Mass.
THIS COPAN STATUE IS REPLETE WITH PRIMITIVE
HISTORY, AND SHOULD BE TAUGHT IN OUR SCHOOLS.
LANGUAGE
Portrait, Coian.
PLATE IMl Rtslored (nol corrcclly : by C. I. Ptlcrs
145 High S:,. Bosion. Miss,
Rather avoid those vices you are nat-
urally inclined to, than aim at those ex-
cellencies and perfections which you were
never made for. Cicero.
Meditate often upon eternity, and no
accidents of this mortal life (vill trouble
you. Fr. Sales.
The conflict of patience, saith Eu-
'ripides is such that the vanquished is bet-
ter than the vanquisher.
He that needs the least, said Socrates,
is more like the gods who need nothing.
"It is a strange thing to behold what
gross errors and e.xtreme absurdities many
(especially of the first class) commit, for
want of a friend to tell them their faults
(BorMu of Kthnoiofj.) to the great damage of face and fortune.
PLATE 1038. CHiA. CENERATiON 105. Lord Bacon.
This Statue 1? ft. high, 4 ft. wide, and 3 ft. deep, in Central America. Copan has on it the fea-
tures of Fnr Chia the wife of Bahman and daughter of the Emperor of China, the honored ancestress
of General George Washington, the benign father of the U. S. A.
Giving only a few prominent features of it commencing at the top, we find in the primitive lang-
uage we have from top down, as follows: The names of God the father, and God the Holy One, in
irregular circles, with the hand line on forearm, also another on humerus over the son of God, and on
hand four lines that signifies Trinity united with mankind as Created by God, maker of heavens, earth,
waters, light, woman, man and the ribs, skeleton and then created the head from the earth, waters,
light, air, the nerves, vessels, which uniting gave life, and made man for woman in the land of .Anona.
Omo; in his likeness to beget children and have power over inhabited earth and waters: the greatest
honor gifts to woman. The Square tablet of God's Commandments is drawn and the Rolls of Trinit>-
which is also at the top, seen from above Newport Tower and two of its Arches over the head and
name of Chia. "Died 6 May, A. D., 230."
134
AT LEFT OF HER SCULPTURED FEATURES IS A LIKENESS OF "THE FLAG
THAT WAS PUT OUT IN AND OVER DIGHTON ROCK. HERE COVERED BY
THE TIDE. AT RIGHT OF LEFT ARCH AND BELOW, IS PICTURED THE
spear of Bahman, her husband, slain by Indians and buried under the Tower." "The right arch,
the tomb of her son, also that her child a da. was bur. under Tower. She had then living, two sons
and da. Chia.(see p. 132
that connects her with
Arabia and the hiero-
gives the dates and facts
facts of her gr. da.
Palmyra. After the
she remarried and had
The greatest ot the two
who hecame great na-
wentto China, and was
ius and their descend-
their sculptured faces
and her right arm.)
progenerator of thir-
shiped GOD. The
when God was forgot-
populated, 7 were saved
worship and they had
were hid, indistruct-
GOLDENSgUARES
shall be found in the
is built the Newport
O circle with the top
under the lowest blocks
M thereon and below
Squares over four slant-
knees." It tells where
The remains of
located at Rhode
commenced by Marcus
nius and completed by
man. It is m o n o -
at Vatican on a Roman
page of Chapter X.
Fernald has cut his
was the tirst Geneal-
in this country. He
ty Lieut. R e n a 1 d
to America in 1645.
to complete his fore-
He died by poison in
Tavern at New Castle
HlerDglyphlcB, top of
PLATE 1039
-3-4-5) for the history,
the great Chieftian of
glyphics of this corner
therein recorded with
Zenobia the Queen of
death of Fna Bahman,
numerous sons and das.
sons ivent to Anona,
tions, and the second
the ancestor of Confuc-
ants multiplied. (See
under the heart of Chia
She and they were the
teen nations, whowor-
dark bloody days came
en and Copan was de-
by God for Trinity
the golden squares that
able: AND THOSE
lost behind idolo t ry
land of Omo and there
Tower (see) the large
of the restored tower
head with the primitive
it the two bright Gold
ing panels between the
they are to be found.
Newport Tower, i s
Island, U.S.A. It was
Agrippa Leucieus Fur-
Fnr Chia and Fna Bah-
grammic to be found
coin, illustrated on first
Henry Washington
initials inside of it. He
ogist that I have found
came over with Depu-
Fernald on his return
Henry did not live
parents' genealogy.
Old Castle Hotel or
or Portsmouth, N. H.
Bncvclia XTlniperealie Bmericana
"fl>? WaPP? Home" #romlp6clojtaPbh^n>aMmc/Bounrtort
Plate lUS. JERL"SAM-;.\1. In his davs Judali shall besiive,!, snd Isi^^fl sIihII .Ivvell SMtelv: :uid tliis is his
namewherebv ueshrtll be called. THE LORD olH KKiHTEOISNESS. IN JISTK K. rKOIilTV. THUTH.
HOLINESS RENDER I'NTO GOIV: NATIONS. MANKIND THAT WHICH IS THEIRS IN VEIIITY I :
FOR .MANY NATIONS AND GREAT KINCiS SHALL SERVE THEMSELVES OE THKM Al.Sd: AND
I WILL RECiiMPEXSE THEM ACCORDING TO THEIR DEEDS. AND ACCORDING To THE WdRKS
OE THEIR OWN HANDS.
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
148} IVASHIMCTON STKh.ET
Boston, Mass..
/^
[POPES LEO XIII and] PIUS X, t^atuan, Kome.
Dollars.
.itr^.I^i'iV^%'GMrrp."rioT^r'AtoMS'^pirL'°^'^s^iT^
16 000.000 16 he
b:B:1'
E 5
1!^
(See Chan lot mQre_fMrliculari. hnce, $2.50.) Ulhec Cillciln U. S. A. aod Nallooi.
'ER.irRY CERTIFICATE FRO.M SIRORNEE liV IN.STHrcTIONS OF \
{;ODLY l'Kli;ST:-
"27 December, 1898." "I hereby certify that I was suborned to make oath against Di-. Climlps A. Fernald
bv Attornev .lames W. .McDonald to his injury and cost, not l<nowing or understandiny; what I wms doiu^r, but
after knowinjr it was not true that I made oath to, I went to Dr. Charles A. Fernald uiul did tell hini ihatras of
ray own knowledge I do and did know him to be an upright and honorable Christian man. with nothing, to the
best of mv knowledge, against him."
"I have read and heard this read, and it i« true;— .Mary E. Carney, HyanniH, Mass.: Witnesses of Signutun-,
Two good, true witnesses sign and their names reserve<l to prevent death mysteriously of :!S iind'.'it) wit-
nesses. This emanates from reporting Eire Arms concealed under a R. C. Church. I took a deposi; ion of capital
crime against the Bishop from the one who declared he helped to buihl the Seciet I'assage.s under Roman
Catholic Church, corner of Maiden and Washington Streets. This deposition was stolen while I wiis at ihurch
worshiping God.
For .Justice, Nations Protection, Right is this given under our hand and seal on this the
Fourth dav of September, 1!»09.
CHARLES A. FERNALD. .NL D.,
Principal of G. U. S.& F. A.
v. B ALL NATIONS HAD CHECKS SENT BY ME FOR REPATRIATION IN AMOCNT
LARGE ENOfGH TO OWN ALL PROPERTY OF ROMAN C.\THOLIC 'curRCH FoK
1000 YEARS. (This page substituted for stolen page 1.35.) PROTECT OCR NATIONS.
136
^^^
■o ^ ^ ^ o
^J^^
ALPHABET
lEnc^clia Hmeiicana et XHniversaKs
jrd, .Man's Wisdom cannot
ll:],l'
.1 lliLl.lK (0 1.-
.\.\TI(iNS .V.ND
E.\-l'Ri:siI)i;.\T \SD GUVEHiNOK'S MESSAGES: ".Against Wrath of J.t
avail." Foil V nf Man .\ til icts Innocent. Cniforniity in Divoiie. WatEnil.iittHs I k
slitutioMN. i.invH!! •■(Kiol) WOliK EOlt MASSACIHSKTTS I':NA( TKl) -WE
WUHLDS WORK ! ! ! Universal lirotherliood Strengthens All Nations.
"I'l'ltKillT .Mi;.N (of all .Nations) hIiiiII be nstonislied at this, and the inMoiint hliall Ktii iii, liiinself iieniiiKt
thellVI'dCUI'l'E." .lob.Nvi:,S.
().\E ULXURED AND THIKTY-EOLH REASONS WHY OUR LOYAL I'ATRIOTJC THREE GREAT
.MORAL REFORM LAWS SHOULD BE PASSED II ! I
1, .Money. 2, Constitutions. 3, Laws of Nations. 4, State ]>av\s. 5, United States Laws. 6, Command-
ments of God. 7, Confer good from evil. 8, Put one to three Billion Dollais in State and Unittd States Trea-
suries, y, Remove Financial Stress. 10, Double the pay of United States and State Ofiicials. 11, J'av every
-Mariner twice present salary. 12, Double pay for every Soldier. 13, Peksion Like Saviko Sehvice. 14, fcemov'e
taxes from food and clothing. (15) 16, liuild a Navy "for Atlantic Ocean. 17, Increase the efticiencv of the med-
ical Staff. 18, Give pure ALCOHOLICS for Patients. 20, Save 300,000 lives in United States yearly. 21 , Take
off the liquor dealers mortgage from unborn. 22, Permit the honorable doctors not to be tartkeps crmhin of
Saloonist. 23, Prevent more than three Harlot Houses to each licensed Rum Shop. 24, Pievent Muider by
each licensed Saloon. 25, Punish the alcoholic dealers for crimes now (26) jirotected. 27, Peimit protection of
le<;itiniate business now (28) unjirotected. Allow HOUSE ownershi)) BY ■•\M-: THIO PEOPLE" (2!) and 30.)
31, .\id all churches to enjoy their Worship of God. 32, By not accepting bribes from Rumseller for daily bread.
33, hecomm^ particeps criminis with the Saloonist who is (34) the direct (35) OR INDIRECT CAUSE (80 per cent)
OF ALL CRl.ME. 36, Prevent slaughter of 53 more United States marshals. 37, Empty our Piison Cells. 38,
Reduce insanity. 39 and 40, Prevent killing of another President by Ex-saloonist, son of an Ex-saloonist. 41 ,
Prevent killing of Lawful Rulers of Nations. 42, Prevent slaughter of another Governor (431 and Labor Union
Leader. 44, Cure foul specific disease. 45, That in four generations has affected three-fourtns of the jeojile in
the largest cities in the United States and worse in some (40) countries. 47, Preventing insults of United States
flag. 48, Desecrations continued of Peter Eaneuil Tomb. 49, Hancock Monument. 50, Old South Church Tomb-
51, R. C. Cemeteries. 52, Reform in Massachusetts, 1500 fallen (53) by alcoholic imbibers into (54) Social Evil
Houses in Massachusetts. 55, Now kept in over saloons. 50, Next doors. 57, In Hotels. 58. Tenement Houses.
59, Their procurers of (60) both sexes at work in Churches, (61) at Schools. 62, Balls. 63, I'artics. 64, Soci-
ables. 65, Intelligence Offices with one reported selling (66) the pure for from ?20.00 to ?200.00 (67) each. 68,
Chapter VIII St. John is a remedy. 69 and 70, Effected by Enactment. 71, A divorce was granted to the man
in our Court (72) that boasted of ruining 86 (73) and refused the pure (74) against a criminal guilty (75) with
16, and she was guilty of (76) perjury, (77) forgery, (78) attempts at murder, ( 1 9) poisoned (80)three (81 )8ipte
once robbed
nited States Mail, guilty of worse crimes, (84) It is needless to say (84) IT MAS
ng "protection" in "All,"(89)beaten "-• -
protect higher criminals, (91 and 92) (
(82) theft, (8^, ,„ . ... . - -
(85)a Beer Brewer's (86)daughter,(87,88)boasting "protection" in "All,"(89)beaten in Three Couits of four. (90)
walks Boston's streets not tried for '
I of which stored fireaims
igainst States (93) and United States, ({)4) and a deposition of capital crime was takeu ante mortem and
(95) stolen from him and by foes and (96) anarchists of every (97) Lawful Nation (98) Enactment prevents
50,000 (99) killed in Massachusetts annually. (100) And one every tick of the clock by Alcoholics, Social Evil,
-Malpractice and Infanticide. 101, Enactment prevents downfall of States, Nation, Nations and each individual
102-3-4-5. 106, Brings Peace on earth and (107) goodwill with (108) biotherly love (109) for all. (110 and
111) Honors and Immortalizes Massachusetts Legislators, (112) Washington, (113) Hague. 114, Removes the
violation of our CONSTITUTIONS by (115) killing off and making (116) unhappy the people by 96 per cent
poisonous (117) alcoholics, (118) Specific disease, (119) Malpractice by (120) instruments (121) or drugs. 122,
Protects the poor married woman that cannot raise another child without (123) starvation of some she has.
124, Empties the Poor Houses, (125-6) gives a Bank Account and Home to the PEOPLE. 127, ALL THE
PEOPLE WILL ARISE AND CALL US (128) HONORABLE "BLESSED" ! (129) "FOR the LORD is our defence;
and the Holy One of Israel is our King 1" Psalms 89 ; 18. 130-1-2-3-4, PEACE ON EARTH, GOOD WILL
TO ALL.
GIVEN from our office with our hand and seal this Saturday, September Four, One thousand nine hundred
and Nine. THE true Date of GOD'S Creation of Ava and Adam, Six Thousand Two Hundred and ^a^
Eighty-Five, Saturday, September Fourth, 2.32 P. M. At Boston, Mass., U. S. A. «a^
CHARLES AUGUSTUS FERNALD,. M. D.
Principal of G. U. S. and F. A
«*This page substituted for stolen page 136.
w
LORD GOD, TO WHOM VENGEANCE BELONGETH. SHEW THYSELF:
FOR THE LORD OMNIPOTENT REIGNETH.
Plale 568. Cenerall
Generation 106. FNR ANR=ENN1A=
s. Macro and Ennia, b. 8
s. Varanas^Faranes^
10 Dec. 223, at Omo=
Yezdijird: et als.
Plate 569 A. Cenerall
ANNA, da. Macro and Codia, Dr. Codratus,
July 17H; d. 1 Dec. 248; m. FNASASSAN,
Bahman and Fnr Chia, b. 23 May 188; d.
America, at Massachusetts. Had F. Babek
See page 8 for F. Sassan's remains.
Plate 570. Generation 107.
Generation 107. FNR IRENA, da. L
Jan. 256; m. FNA BA-
Aug. 266. He was son OeneraHon I
Xerxes Adishir Babigan.
Hostalus and Sarsena, b. 4 Jan. 2()U: d. 1
BEK YEZDIJIRD, b. 1 Apr. 206; d. 12
of F. Sassan and F. Ennia. Had Arta
Generation 108. FNR
T A .
FirOSe Plale573A. Cenen
Plate 574. Generati
Generation 109.
TASHTI ARTA DUC-
da.SaraniandO-O I •?'00=
=00 I PQOC (See Plate 574)
b, 10 May 220; d. 20
July 338; m. FNA
ARTJIXERXES
|S^j>3\ ADISHIR BABI-
UXM^] GAN,b.22 Oct.224;
d. 12 Jun 338. Had
F. Sapor = Shapur:
et als.
FNR FURAN, da. Arta Bizus and Narsas, b. 5 Jun. 240; d.
3 May 290; m. FNA SHAPUR=SAPOR. s. Arta Xerxes A. B.
and F. T. A. Duc-
ta, b. 1 May 240;
d. 8 Mar. 374;
Had Hormuz: et
als.
Plate 574 has
written thereon
Plate 576. Generation 10^ ria.e.j(/. k^enerai.on n/». THELLA in the
Primitive Language and a prophecy that has been fulfilled.
138
I
^ ^ ^ o
IGHTEOUS CONSIDER WISELY THE HOUSES OF THE WICKED: BUT
GOD OVERTHROWETH THE WICKED FOR THEIR WICKEDNESS.
A WISE KING SCATTERETH THE WICKED AND THEY ARE NOT.
Generation 110
GENERAT10^
Generation 11
FNR ARCAM da.
dosius, b. S Mar. 256:
HORMUZ.S.F. Sapor
d. 21 Aug. 374: Had F.
Theodosius fr. Genl.. Thco-
d. 6 Nov. 339: m. F N A
and F. Furan, b. S Aug. 258:
Farenes=Varahran :
PLATE 578 GEN
FNR PURANA, da. Attar and Hormisdas 11, b
16 May 270: d. 3 May 332, m. FNA FARENES=
VARANES. VARANAS b. 22 July 275: d. 27 Mar. 326:
Had F. Fernis. et als.
plate sao. GEN.
da. F
FNR FUR ANA FIRUZ
Rama, s. Arta Xerk.es
and F. Tashti, b. 15
Sept. 288: d. 1 Apr. 357:
m. FNA FERNIS, s. F.
Fernis and F. Purana, b.
H Sept. 293 : d. 1 Nov.
392: Had F. Shapur Z.
K. : et als.
PLATE 582
GEN
FNR CAR ZAMA, da. Adisl.ir
Tashti Arta Ducta, b. 7
m. FNA SHAPUR=
KATA, s. F. Furnis and
310: d. 7 Nov. 400: Had
PVance and the ancestor
Inhabitants have seen in
carrying out the designs of
fd in His only Omniper-
PLATE 584. GEN.
g ^ D
139
igan Arta Xerxes and Fnr
Mar. 306: d. 24 iMar. 377:
SAPOR III ZULA
F. Furana Firuz, b.23 Nov.
Fara Mond who was of
of its Kings, that the world
the greatest historic acts for
our Creator as God design-
fection.
13. PLATE 555 GE
1
NITED NATIONS. PEOPLE. FAMILIES. WE STAND ON A FIRM SOLID
FOUNDATION.
Cbaptcr J\
FOR UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL GENEALOGICAL PURE PURPOSES TO HONOR ALL WITH PLEAS-
URE WE GIVE A COLLECTION OF HISTORIC COINS, MEDALS, RINc^S, FACES, GEMS. ETC. TO PLEASE
^%l^ROFHECY. AND LABOR, O YE
i[-l EVILS THAT DESTROY.
^Ll A few of these
Hj^ coins were accumulated
by a King of France for ancestral
honoring the Nation. Nearly all
by the writer to honor God and
His beloved all nations on Earth
for Genealogy. Select those you
are related to and resemble; give
proof and we will aid you ail in
our power to attach to the found
and proved long line from our
common ancestors for your honor
and true prosperity.
To quickly remove a needle
from the animated body is done
by magnetizing a sharp, small,
strong tenototome. Insert beneath
needle, turn sharp edge against its
centre transversely, liold it firmly
fixed in position. Dissect tissues
to needle; grasp it with strong
serated forceps and easily extract it
from tissues.
A celebrated surgeon labored
two hours and fifty-five minutes
with patient under ether unsuccess-
fully to have it removed by this
new method of author in three
and one-half minutes without
ether.
-An apparatus devised by the
writer of this has in every case
used given a union by bone
of fractured patella, even beyond
the age of sixty years.
Many a little, constantly in-
creasing, makes a "niickic," be it
in knowledge, truth, wisdom,
freedom from mental or physical
pain, happiness, joys the forerun-
ners of peace and prosperity, that
can never be perfect without con-
tent that the good profit in glean-
ing.
m
ORK WHILE THE DAYLIGHT SUN SHINETH FOR WISDOM. FOR DARK-
NESS CQMETH. AND MEN ON THIS LAND THAT GOD GIVETH.
LABORS NO MORE. GOD BLESSED HIS CREATION WITH LABOR.
142
J
N OUR BANNER SENT TO THE AMERICAN DELEGATION TO THE
HAGUE IS THE MONOGRAMMIC PRIMITIVE ALPHABET THAT THF
LETTERS SPELLETH EVERY NAME AND HONORS UNIVERSAI
CREATOR.
"The earth
is the Lord's,
and the fulness
thereof, the
world, and they
that dwell
therein. For
he hath founded
it upon the seas,
and established
it upon the
floods."
Psalms 24: 1,2.
"Wait on
the Lord: be of
good courage,
and he shall
strengthen
thine heart:
wait, I say, on
the Lord.'
Ps. 27:14
"Let integ-
rity and upright-
ness preserve
me; for I wait
on tlice."
Psalms 25:21.
"Gather
not my soul
with sinners,
nor my life
with b 1 o o dy
men: in whose
hands is mis-
chief, and
their right hand
is full of bribes."
Psalms 26:9,10.
(T
HY ANC ES-
L O V I N<G
MAY OUR
CONFER
ON THE
"The Lord is my
.strenj|;tli a lul my sliiekl;
my heart trusteth in him,
ami I am helped: tliereforc
my heart greatly rejoiceth;
ami \\itli my lips will 1
praise him." — Psalms 2K:7.
"Blessed is the nation
whose God is the Lord ;
and the people whom he
hath chosen for his oun
inheritance."
— Psalm* 33: 12.
TORS LABORED IN
ACTS FOR THEE!
POSTERITY THUS
THE LIKE HONOR
UNITED STATES.
"Be of good courage.
I he shall strengthen
r heart
the Lor
-P:
Blessed is the man unto
\\liom the Lord imputeth
not iniquity, and in u hose
spirit there is no guile."
— Psalms 32:2.
1 ol v.'.'.irld3tcs L (.^lUre ) Cola of Milhrlditci I. (Greek)
►APPINESS IS THE GREAT IDEAL OF HUMANITY. THE GOOD. PURE PROFIT
FROME THEIR DEEDS.
.^i^TRINITY IS GOD WHO SO LOVED THE WORLD HE GAVE HIS ONLY SON
/■4\ FOR EACH ONE. H E TAUGHT US T H E WAY O F WISDONL RIGHT,
I I I JUSTICE. PROSPERITY AND GOOD ALL MAY HAVE. THEOS AND THEON
^^ was stamped in the Roman Coins to show that he whose face is
thereon claims descent from
Christ, should come. The
on it the primitive alphabet.
thclinethat the Son of God, Messiah,
O equals son of. This large coin has
146
^
OLY IS THE LORD GOD OF HEAVEN THAT REVEALETH SECRETS UNTO THE
KING WHAT SHALL BE IN THE LATTER DAYS.
IN HIS OWN EYES. GOD JUDGETH,
DO RIGHT THAT GOOD COMETH.
WISDOM AND GOD GAVE AND
FORMER IS MOST VALUABLE.
(U
O CALL THE PIOUS GOD
CONDEMN ALL WHO DO
TRUE CHRISTIANITY,
WHO IS UNTRUE TO
ily. Every man is a Son of God.
LOVING ROMANS HEATHEN AND
NOT BELIEVE AS WE DO IS N(;T
NOR IS ANY MAN A CHRISTIAN
GOD, COUNTRY, STATE AND FAM-
Ava was more honoi'ecl by God than Adm.
These two Hebrew coins beareth the primitive name of God,
viz;— Fa and seal of the long line of Genealogy with a count of
ancestors by cyphers reaching thereon partly around them
forming a large letter C or initial of Phriet, large two circleR
Fa Fo, which is name of God the Father and God the holy one!
ISO
THUS SHALT THOU REAP THE
EARLY TEACHINGS FORM IT.
THE ARRANGEMENT OF PAGES IS THUS NL^DE FOR STUDY TO FAMILL^RIZE THE
LEARNER WITH A LARGE MASS OF INDISPUTABLE HISTORY FROM THE STUDY OF EACH
COIN, AND COMPARISON WITH MODERN HISTORY.
151
WHAT GOD HATH FORE DECLARED LET^^ii^v
NOT ANY HUMAN PERSON DARE TO \\^^-
CHANGE AN IOTA.
152
^ ^ * * ^
(§
UT OF THE MOST HIGH PROCEEDETH NOT EVIL AND GOOD. WHY
SHEDDETH MAN'S BLOOD ?
3
=a ^ ^ ^ o
OR TO HIM THAT IS JOINED TO ALL LIVING THERE IS HOPE: FOR A
LIVING DOG, WHICH OF ANIMALS WAS' FIRST CREATED, THAN A
DEAD LION, CALLED KING OF BEASTS.
1
■ Q 'V' "^ *V' Df
UT IF A MAN LIVETH MANY YEARS, AND REJOICE IN THEM ALL;
YET LET HIM REMEMBER THE DAYS OF DARKNESS FOR THERE
ARE MANY. ALL THAT COMETH IS NOT VANITY. WE SHALL
SEE GOD. AND AFTER THAT THE JUDGMENT FEEL.
<4=> <4=» n=
AND I TURNED MYSELF TO BEHOLD WISDOM. AND NL^DNESS, AND
FOLLY ; FOR WHAT CAN A MAN DO THAT COMETH AFIER
THE KING? EVEN THAT WHICH HATH ALREADY BEEN DONE.
"Let them shout for joy, and be glad, that favor my righteous sense; yea let them say
continually. Let the Lord be magnified, which has pleasure in the prosperity of his
ser\'ants." Psalms 35, 27.
''OT THAT ONE IS
CAUSE THEY HAVE
THEIR LABOR.
one will life up his fel-
vvhen he falleth, for he
BETTER THAN TWO: BE-
A GOOD REWARD FOR
FOR IF THEY FALL, THE
low: but woe to him tiiat is alone
hath not another to help him up.
"False witnesses
my charge things that
•warded me evil for
my soul." Had I not
Psalms, 35, n, 12, 28.
rise up; they laid to
I knew not. They re-
good to the spoiling of
power to refute them.
"My tongue shall speak of thy righteousness and of thy praise all the day long. For evil doers
shall be cut off; but those that wait upon the Lord, they shall inherit the earth." Psalms 37, 9.
"Behold, God is mine helper; the Lord is with them that uphold my soul." Psalms 54, 4.
15H
FOUND IN THE CITV A P()(JK
HIS WISDOM DELIVERED
MAN REMEMBERED THAT
MAN.
Plate 872
Fna Anm Ear Set of Sur-
gical Instruments. PI. 848
159
IE
AT THOU NOT THE BREAD OF HIM THAT HATH AN EVIL EYE
NEITHER DESIRE HIS DAINTY MEATS: FOR AS HE THINKETH IN
HIS HEART, SO IS HE.
LOOK NOT THOU ON THE WINE WHEN IT IS RED, WHEN IT GIVETH
ITS COLOR IN THE CUP, WHEN IT MOVETH ITSELF ARIGHT. AT THE LAST
IT BITETH LIKE A SERPENT, AND STINGETH LIKE AN ADDER. HE THAT
IS DECEIVED THEREWITH IS FAR FROM WISE.
160
m
"BUT SOLOMON
HOWBEITTHE MOST
TEMPLES MADE
PROPHET, HEAVEN
MY FOOTSTOOL." —
.. HIM l/r 111 M AN HOUSE.
i>\high dvvelleth not in
|/\vith hands; as sah h the.
is my throne, and earth
ACTS VII : 47, 48, 49.
REMEMBER: ISAIAH, chapter 13, verses 11, 12 and 13: "And I will punish the wcr!d for
their evil and the wicked for their iniquity; and 1 will cause the arrogancy of the proud to ce ase, and
will lay low the haughtiness of the terrible." 12 — "I will make a man more precious than fi re gr. 'el-
even a man than the golden wedge of OPHIR"=0 FIR. 13— "Therefore I will shake the hea\trf,
and the earth shall remove out of her place, in the wrath of the Lord of hostj, and in the da y of his
fierce anger." .^11 prophecies will be fulfilled that have not been already, for all the great an d siralL
161
(§
iqyrar
N THE STAR OF ^GYPT A IS THE SACRED NAME OF ONE
PURE GOP, IN THE L\ PRIMITIVE LANGUAGE AN D THE
names of Ava and Adam. It '\V/^~^\~/' beareth our ancient Seal, that is kept from
tiieir form to my gr. parents ",}:;^^J^ Deed and Power of Attorney to my
parent. It is the Star of // \\ U. S. A. and hath pictured thereon the
ds and one of Lake Oregon, U.S.A.
Pill. 953,
It represents Sun
It counts Five Indian
"Nations & Six Famihes.
It beareth Primitive Al-
fabet. Spelt .Alphabet by
grammarians covering
true histor>'.
A
GOD ISTHE GREAT-
EST LIGHT, and gave
it to the World by Sun,
Moon, Stars, Lamps.
Good Acts, Great Men!
This Roman Lamp hath Pete
Faneuil tomb Seal and Heb. R. etc.
It hath the copy of C. ; Christ
wrote in Dighton Rock, found.
162
It is a promise of Univer-
sal International Geneal-
ogy Monuments for all
the World of God's
People.
A
Plate 949.
IT is the promise of the
coming and going of
Christ the SON of GOD,
who came, went and will
come again. A=.-\. : Ana-
mona, O is the ancient
name Fa=GOD, name.
J OR LOVE, HONOR, NA-
AND HAPPINESS CALL
ISAIAH LI. VS. 4 AND 7.
AND NATIONS!! Listen
biased attention to my words,
ceed from me, and I will make my judg-
Notwithstanding our foes of the Vatican
favoring the three greatest causes that
fall of Nations, States and In-
$1,800,000 has been used with
emanating from unholy cabals
years they have continued to
eous judgment by God, the
Omnipotent, Omnipresent,
for it. See Pamphlet with
aiding our foes to cease their
TION. Gather the good
all his BELOVED NA-
" Blessed are they that
doeth righteousness at all
"Fools, because of th
their iniquities are afflicted."
"They reel to and fro,
man, and are at their
"And there sha
the stem of Jesse, and a
his roots; and the spirit
on him, the spirit of wis-
thc spirit of counsel and
knowledge of the fear oi
"They did not de-
cerning whom the Lord
they sacrificed their sons
devils, and shed innocent
their sons and of their
sacrificed unto idols of
polluted vvitii blood."
No man is
person th;it per-
ligioiisoncwho \N \
lief and serves , ^ ^1
to the dictates
"Say unto
my sister; and
in^tlu kinsvvo-
VII, 4.
"But why
thy brother, or
set at naught
For we shall all
judgment seat
mans, 14, 10.
TIONAL SAFETY, PROSPERITY
THE ATTENTION OF ALL TO
AND SAY: AMERICA. HAGUE,
unto me, all my people; and give un-
O my Nation: for Three Laws shall pro-
ment to rest for a light to the people,
have decided to defeat them by duplicity
from time primeval has caused the down-
dividuals, which to defeat
all the subtile arts Satanic,
and conspiracies, for thirteen
oppose it; at the day of right-
only just and perfect judge
Omniscient, to be condemned
this book for Universal good
and your seH DESTRUC-
fruits God hath given unto
TIONS OF EARTH.
keep judgment, and he that
times."
transgression, and because of
and stagger like a drunken
little wits' end."
come forth a rod out of
branch shall grow out of
of the Lord shall rest up-
dom and understanding,
iniglit, tile spirit of our
the Lord."
stroy the Nations, con-
commanded them. Yea,
aiui tlicir ilaughters unto
blood, even the blood of
daughters, whom they
wrong; and the land was
:i pure religious
scented tjic re-
is sincere in be-
Cod according
of conscience.
wisdom, thou art
call understand-
dost thou judge
why dost thou
thy brother?
stand before the
of Christ." Ro-
TRINITY MOUNDS. Ml
163
*'?Ji
EARKEN UNTO ME,
NESS, THE PEOPLE
LAWS: FEAR NOT
NEITHER BE YE
Plate 1001 — The temple of Jove, has
only the primitive alphabet but other
history. Foni was old spelling of Jove.
Time is what we want most, but
must all give an account when time shall
Whatsoever thou takest in
thou shalt never do amiss.
Plate 1002— From Jewish
"HicestpraitusTubiasBarZa Har
BarZa Har Ona." It is interesting
Greek, Latin with the Hebrew
peated. They descend from
May 11, B. C. '■n'SE^'=lT^v=
Charles V, Emperor of
minions and retired to lead a
mony of Christian religion: —
in it sweets and joys that courts
Sir Francis Walsingham,
to Lord Burleigh: — "We have
try, to our fortunes, and to our
we begin to live to ourselves,
properly live to the latter with-
YE THAT KNOW RIGHTEOLS-
IN WHOSE HEART ARE MY
THE REPROACH OF MEN.
AFRAID OF THEIR REVILINGS.
cut on it and so constructed as to give not
distinctive features of ancestral religious
wiiat we use the
be no more.
• orst, and for which
In that day shall
the Lord in the midst
and a pillar at the
the Lord, and it shall
witness unto the
land of yEgypt, for
the Lord because o)
he shall send them a
one, and he shall
they shall vow a vow
keep it. The Lord
saying, Blessed be
and Assyria the work
Israel mine inherit-
Men should con-
not made for them-
ciety, for each other,
hand, reniemher the end, and
Catacomb in Via Portuensis: —
Ona et Tare Carius filius Tubias
to note that this inscription is in
oiSr=Peace four times re-
Fnr Saraho and Fna Si Hasi 3476,
PEACE", not correct.
Germany, resigned all his do-
reHgious life; and left this testi-
"tlie sincere profession of it had
were strangers to."
towards the end of his life, wrote
lived long enough to our coun-
sovereign, it is high time that
and to our God." We cannot
out loving the preceding.
there be an altar to
of the land of /Egypt
border thereof to
be for a sign and
Lord of hosts in the
they shall cry unto
the oppressors, and
Saviour, and a great
deliver them, — Yea
unto the Lord and
of hosts shall bless,
/Egypt my people,
of my hands, and
ance. Bible.
/Egypt's Found Tavi
164
sider that they were
selves, but for so-
and for God Just.
"A
WISE MAN WILL
LEARNING; AND
SHALL ATTAIN
Plate 1 005— Reverse of the Great
Trutli may be expressed witli-
stands in need of both.
Plate 1006 — An ancient Man-
ner Compass with Sea green flag
left by him in Dighton Rock,
U. S. A. It was a present from
great naval victory.
When the Emperor Conerade
ria, he would not accept of any
should be prisoners, but that the
without violation of their honor,
could carry about them, \\h
contrived to carry out on
bands and children, am
Emperor was so affected w itii
that he treated the Duke and
great humanity.
When we combat error
argument, we err more than
Truth in everything is
great Author, can be hut
reason stands as firm as the
Reason isevcr allied to truth.
Hypocritical piety
The Fanatic Bigot said
published a book."§
Tricks and
practice of fools, that
enough to be honest.
The Primitive
best friend of all.
Plate 1008 —
man Catholic Bible,
t h e Expulsion o f
the Garden of Eden.
Amicus Plato,
magisamica Veritas,
my friend, Socrates is
is my best friend.
HEAR AND WILL INCREASE
A MAN OF UNDERSTANDING
UNTO WISE COUNSELS."
Seal of U. S. not adopted at 1776.
out art or affectation: but a lie
cus Agrippa Lucius Furnius Mari-
pictured with history of its being
Taunton River, Massachusetts,
the Emperor Augustus for a
besieged Guelpho, Duke of Bava-
othcr conditions than that the men
women might go out of town
on foot, with so much only as they
w.is no sooner known, tlian they
their shoulders their hus-
eventhe Duke himself. The
the generosity of the action
his people ever after with
with any other weapon than
those whom we attack.
still the same, and, like its
one: and the sentence of
foundation of the earth.
double iniquity.
"Oh, that mine enemv had
treachery are the
have not sense
Bible, Truth is the
Copy from my Ro-
as made to illustrate
Adam and Eve from
amicus Socrates, sed
Translation: Plato is
mv friend, but Truth
g^ v_ /y^ IVE INSTRL
♦"♦"/l/ BE YET
■ i^ WILL I>
^ ^ ^ [>
INSTRUCTIONS
WISER:
NCR EASE
ONE HAGUE! ONE
"He that will sell his fame, will also
Plate 1009— One Ring of
His remains, ashes in an urn,
Fame is as difficult to be
acquired.
For it shall be, that as a
nest, so the daughters of Moab
or Anona.
The whole earth is at rest,
forth into singing.
A man who is rightly hon-
do, but to what he should do. ^4^,
tenance: speaks the truth: his^^>_
the blush of recantation: nor
good a lie with the secret glosses
Gent. Lib.
^^
Plate 1010— Temple o f p)rj
face coin with the Roman ^^gle — •
Cross as it is in many prints seen
cut his name on Dighton Rock,
of General George Washington,
the United States of America,
from his and Bahman line of
foremother, by marriage wit
peror of China, who descends
Omo, Annona, Augustii, now
their names are cut on Dighton
name by itself. Also C.
Plate 10 1 1— To
All ye inhabitants of
on the earth, see ye, when
on the mountains; and
pet,hearye." Isaiah 18:3.
And the works of
peace; and the effects
forever.
They also that err in
standing, and they that
doctrine. Woe to the pSi
the Lord, that taketh
and that cover with a
spirit, that they may add sin to sin. — Isai
=LATE !0I2
XXIX. 24; XIV
TO A WISE MAN, AND HE WILL
TEACH A JUST MAN, AND HE
IN LEARNING."— Proverbs IX : 9.
BANNER!! ONE GOD!!!
sell the public interest." — Solon.
MarcusAgrippa LuciusFurnius.
are at the Pantheon.
preserved, a
wandering bird cast out of the
shall be at the fords of Arnon
and is quiet: they shall break
est, looks not to what he might
He wears always the same coun-
cheeks are never stained with
does his tongue falter to make
of a double or reserved meaning.
Generation 94, whose excellent
or Eagle on staff not changed to
by writer. He, M.A.L. Furnius
29 B. C, and was the ancestor
the honored worthy Father of
that eleven generations after him
escendants, inherits from his
Fnr Chia, daughter of the Em-
ff.im Fut, a strong claim on
called America. All three of
Rock: afterwards Washington's
Furnius over M. A. L. Furnius.
honor.
the world, and dwellers
he lifteth up an ensign
when he blowetha trum-
righteousness shall be
quietness and assurance
spirit shall come to under-
murmured shall learn
rebellious children, saith
counsel, but not of me;
covering, but not of my
'God loveth not a quitter."
n^
"1
NDERSTANDING IS
HIM THAT HATH
In the pursuit of know-
like fern, it is the pro-
coin, its circulation is not restricted to any par-
idleness, and we continue so in manhood from
rant, than of heing instructed and she looks too
her. Therefore, condescend to men of low cs-
for power. He that rings only one bell, will
only one class will see but one scene of the
he had contrived to accumulate a mine of
He replied that he attributed Pint ion.
having been ashamed to ask
rule he had laid down, of con-
of men, on those topics chief-
culiar professions or pursuits,
profess to be in search of heav-
ture so far in their approxi-
lose sight of earth : and
danger of shipwreck, they
vices overboard, as other mar-
tish them up again when the
A WELLSPRING OF LIFE UNTO
IT." Proverbs xvi, 22.
ledge, follow it wherever it is to be found
duce of every country, all climates, and like
ticular class. We are ignorant in youth, from
pride: for pride is less ashamed of being igno-
high to find that which very often lies beneath
tate, and be for wisdom, that which Alcibides was
hear only one sound: and he that lives with
great drama of life. Mr. Locke was asked how
knowledge so rich, yet so extensive and so deep.
ROMAN STANDARD what little he knew to the not
for information; and to the
versing with all -descriptions
ly that formed their own pe-
In the voyage of life, men
en, but take care not to ven-
mations to it, as to entirely
should their frail vessel be in
will gladly throw their darling
iners their treasurers, only to
danger or storm is over.
.A clear and well de-
proper rule of life, the dis-
wrong. in our mind, must
ing; but clearly ascertained
Our view of duty must be
ims of a loose and pliant
word of God, and the die-
science. There must be a
lively feeling of obliga-
would "feel a stain like a
shrink at the very appear-
None should despair
them; and none should
can cross them.
America honors its
withstanding the poetical
my tent and lay down in
a season on bitterness fed ;
gone to the hills of the
hunger or lingering
white man hath swept
BOF MIANTONOMO.
167
fined knowledge of the
tinctions between right and
not be vague and fluctuat-
and thoroughly settled,
derived, not from the max-
morality, but from the
tates of an enlightened con-
quick perception, and a
tion, a moral sense, that
wound," and cause us to
ance of evil.
because God can help
presume, because God
true noble Indians, not-
lament; "I will go to
despair; I will weep for
For my kindred have
dead. They died not of
decay, the steel of the
them away!"
IE
° * * 't D—
ARTH HATH NO MYSTERIES CONCEALED FROM GOD ITS CREATOR
WHO ESTABLISHED BY HIS SONS THE HAGUE THAT IS PROLIFIC
OF GREAT GOOD. MAY HISTORY RECORD THE GREATEST =
Plates 1017 ami lOlS-G olden
hoiic and Prophetic.
Plate 1019— Greecewas founded bv
Had Phroneus: Had Ce-Cro-Pia
Cecro(p)fs: then Attica and then it
IVench an.l Crie Ciu-n Lan.l hv (ier-
As-G-1ANS=0 A ^ A O <2 A-0=F.
Atti, s. of Ce Cro Pia, m. Athenia=A.
their son Pel As G Ions was a P'onecian
tians. From Athenia was the name of
wife Athenia were skillful in the scien-
Zenon Zus who was honored as is to he
in a manner copied by the Roman
persons called Saints, and keeping
as was customary with the i'ERyptians,
louians, ;uul other ancient and modern
idolatry or intent to commit idolatry,
gious denomination is very pure when
not withstand the temptations of riches,
inherited traits from Adam,
The facts that the i^gyp-
co-e.xistant, and that there wa:
the slopes of the hills toward the
cisterns, cellars and remains ir
erally known as the "RockCity "
nicians in the 13th century B. C
tion of the olive tr
soil of the land.
Few cities, if any, can boast
Standing upon the Acropolis, ue
c a b e 1 1 u s , a conical-shaped
summit Zenon Zeus
rum where now stands
cated to St. George,
Greeks.
Roma uas foun-
B. C. who m. Fnr
of Serpent Mound.
Do not evil that
evil will be punished
Our Saviour divi-
and let no one pre-
hath put asunder. p,,,, io2o-uk. P.pi,
Vases from .-Egypt; Historical, Sy
FnaChua, s. of F.Utnasand F.Naomi:
(founded Athens) son of Phernes Fana
was from G. Rai Koi called, Grece bv
mans. The Greeks calle.l them IVl-
Fal As G I or Fans=lans or Ions.
Fenia,da. Poseidon and Trit Onis.and
and the Ph=Fonecians were /Egyp-
Athens the capital of Attica. Atti and
ces, arts and arms. They had a son
found by Tablets to the ' ' H ighest Zeus' '
Catholic Church i n honoring gooil
relics to commemorate their good acts,
Foenicians, Chinese, Chaldeans, Baby-
nations, even unto this day without anv
sacrilege or sin. As a rule every reli-
formed, but being like many men can-
power, success without revealing their
Cain and Noah.
^i^ tians, Hehrevvsand Greeks were
jj a settlement of the Foenicians on
sea, numerous graves, steps, seats,
form, constituting what is gen-
w'nh the facts of visits by Foe-
teaching, bringing arts, cultiva-
suited to the dry and chalky
of a more beautiful situation.
may see to the east Mount Ly-
mount, 911 feet high, on whose
had sanctum sancto-
a small chapel dedi-
the patron saint of the
dedby Fna Fnf, 1700
.•\nona of Omo Land
good may come: all
by perfect judge God.
Mn <4^ f4^ (4=^ o
PL>.~ 1346— THE WASHINGTON FERNALD IRON TABLET
Pl-Al/ OF
House
V"^
•Bosio*.
I
/feviK^FrmjstD
I "-
KrrcHB^
JirTufoHoan
Plate 14C"
appreciated fcr-
Mary Savage,
Revolution beg-
greatest and m
Poman Coin
Star of /^fypl.
FOR PEACE.
This page Is written as sub-
stitute for one of five, illegally
taken by the Quadruple Ring,
opposed to the Hague and the
Enactnfient of our Three Great
_^ Moral Reform Temperance Laws.
PLATE 1409.
— Governor John Wentworth's Wollboro. N. H,. mansion. Courtesy of Editor "Granite State News." gratefully
vj: forwarding loyal patriotic efforts. 1346 Col. Tobias Fernald.Capt. Abraham Fernald with John Furnald and his wife,
rirnot be too highly honored for their bravery and true, zealous labors for Mother England, and. after the American
.2 -j-.eir zeal and strenuoi's work for the United States, highly honored by General George Washington, the best.
V. ieloved man In America.
n=
Generation CXI\'.
NR CONS-
TATINA.
da. Constan-
t i n us the
Great and
Minervina,
b. 9 Dec.
322;d.20ct.
ri.„,5f. n.n.-.Mon.u 409;m.FNA " '
FAR A MOND=PHARA-
MOND, s. F. Shapur Z— K. and F. Car Zama. b. 6
Oct. 327: d. 22 Inn, 420: Had F. Mund Zunk: et als.
Generati
cxvi
FNR HII-HA
da. Co nst a n s
Flavius who wis
called Farniiis
lulius.b. 2Mar
351; d. 1 Aujj
463; m. FN \
ATTILA,"The
ScourgeofGod,
b. S Aug. 364,
d. 22 Jim. 453,
Had M. Frna
C=Frna Clov.s
= Irna C: sons
and daughters.
King .Agrippa, believest thou the prophets? I know
thou believest. Then Agripp;i s:iicl unto I'aul, Almost
thou persuadeth me to be a Christian. — Acts 26:27-28.
Generation CXVIII.
FNR SARAH, da. Constantinus and
Fausta, b. 1 Mav 410; d. 9 [un. 457;
m. JOANNES MEROVOEL'S, b. 12
Jun.413; d. 23 Nov. 483: Had Chil-
derick: et als.
Attention is respectfully called to the months and
dates of the months on this long line of genealogy of
universal foreparents with resemblance in features. On
the Plates and in the impression is to be seen and read
from primitive language information to which line and
generation he belongs. Hence the change from old to
true data as per Bible of found lost Hebrew language.
Generation CXV.
FNR C. IRENA COMMENA, da.
Isaac, s. Lucieus, s. F. Fernis and F.
Ana F., b. 6 Jan. 347; d. 20 Nov. 436;
m. FNA MUND ZUNK, b. 6 Mar.
347; d. 20 Sept. 437: Had Attila. the
prophecied sword of God: et als. Fara
Mond was buried in a pyramid, near
St. Denis where many of the kings
were laid to rest. Have, about 250 years old, a colored
plate of Tomb, Pyramid shaped, in which he was laid to
rest: before this St. Denis and several buildings, etc.
Have also two more colored prints or engra\ ings of about
the same age: Notre Dame and Versailles, for Second
Edition intended. Every wicked cou'rsc is adopted to
prevent this by crime for crime, vs. State, United States
and Nations.
Generation CXVII.
FNR ARIDNE, da. Zeno and Ari
Ducta, b. 22 Nov. 389; d. 23 Nov.
468; m. FRNA CLOVIS, s. of Attila
and Hilda, b. 1 Aug. 384; d. 23 Nov.'
460: Had Joannes Mcrovoeus: et als.
Generation CXIX.
FNR ALA FENIUS,
da. Vasa Al Fenius and
Veria, b. 23 Jun.428; d.
10 |un. 490; ,n. FNA
CHILDERICK. b. 10
May, 432; d.9 0ct. 500;
Her father was 11th, and
she 12th generation from
Pctrus Varus Ali I-'oiiius:
Had F. F. F. Clovis.
It is interesting to find that the same Birth marks
exist to day that were found described on the .Antioch
kings found described in a very old book by the Author.
It is a brown spot that varies in size and location in three:
generations examined: 4th Gineration no: as yet exam-
ined by writer. Although three ag;i Fernildi declared
that the birth-mark extended to their greatest ancestors.
Si parvat licet componere magnis. Translation: If
it is allowable to compare small things with great.
170
m
CEASE, MV BROTHERHOOD OF MANKIND, TO HEAR THE INSTRUCTIONS
THAT CAUSETH TO ERR FROM THE WORDS OF KNOWLEDGE. IT IS AN
HONOR TO CEASE FROM STRIFE.
Generations CXIX and CXX.
FNR CLOTILDA, da. Chilpcric, King of Bur-
gundy, b. 1 Dec. 447; d. 11 Jun. 527; m. FNA
F. F. CLOVIS. b. 4 Nov. 448; d. 10 Dec. 512:
Had
Cloth
Generation CXXI.
FNR INGONDA, da. Justin
I, Emperor of Rome, b. 1 Jan.
469; d. 1 fun. 549; m. FNA
CLOTHARIS, b. 10 AuK.468:
d. 10 Nov. 562: Had Sigebert;
Cherebert: Gontram:
Chilperic: and two das. French
Records give him four more
uivcs: Bible but one: I choose the Ho
Bible.
Genekation CXXII.
FNR BRUNECHILDE, da.
.\thangildus k. Visgoths, b. 22
Oct. 500, Bible Records; 537
French Records; d. 2 2 Apr.
613; m. FNA SIGEBERT, b.
10 Jun. 493; d. 22 Oct. 575:
Had Childebert II: 2 das.: In-
gonda: Clotilda: Many descen-
dants living in 15tl) an.i 16th
centuries. Most of those living
in America did not know their
descent that was concealed, to prevent
sudden deaths.
Generation CXXIV.
FNR THUDACHILD, da.
Tiberius, Emperor of the East,
b. 3 Mav580; d. 1 Jan. 613;
m. FNA' THIERRY, s. of F.
Childebert and F. Failuba, b. 2
Aug. 590: d. at Met/. 21 Sept.
613: Had F. Pepin; Childebert;
Meroveus and Gontran: due to
theTurkish marriages, the RomanCatholic Church
and King's Cut off line.
■Generation CXXVI.
FNR ZADA BAGA. da. Ma-
homet's da. Fatimi and Ali, and
sister of Ha Fne, b. 1 Dec. 641 ;
d. 1 Oct. 702; m. FNA BAGI
ZADAH^BEGGA, b. 1 Sept.
636; d. 10 Jun. 719: Had Pepin
de Heristal.
Plate 965.
As it is written, There is none righteous, no not.
one. — Romans 3: 10.
GENER.vrioN CXXIII
FNR FAILUBA, da. Antharis,
k. Goths, b. 8 Apr. 570; d. 2
Dec. 638; m. FNA CHILDE-
BERTII, b. 25 Dec. 571; d. 1
Jan. 596; s. F. Sigebert and F.
Brunechilde: Had Thierry;
Theodebert; and Brunechilde.
ThisTheodebert had a gold coin
struck claiming his Roman descent: Proved by
Holy Bible and part of French Records that have
been tampered with, as Bible by wicked, that has
deluged the earth with blood: God's Curse fore-
told fulfilled.
N.B.— Bible Records and French differ
Generation CXXV.
FNR AYASHA, da. Mahom-
med and Avasha, b. 1 Mav572;
d. 7 fun. 649; m. FNA PEPIN,
=F"AFIN, b. 1 Oct. 607; d. 10
Sept. 639: Had Bagi Zadah=
Begga; Charles the Hammerer:
Herefore may be observed the
cause, reason, or lack of wisdom
in allegations concerning Mayor of
Generation CXXVII.
FNR PLECTITUDE, da.
Aribet, s. Arbet, b. 28 May 670;
d.3 Jun. 729; m. FNA PEPIN
De HERISTAL, b. 5 Oct.662;
d. 14 Sept. 714: Had Childebert;
Carloman:=Charlemain; Gille.
a
EJOICE AND BE GLAD, FOR AFTER THE RAIN COMETH THE SUNSHINE.
BRIXGF.TH FLOWERS.
Generation CXXVIII.
FNR CLOTILDA,
da. Baggis, s. Bagga, s.
Cliariinu, h. 5 Oct. 696: d.
1 Sept. 748: m. FN A
CHILDEBFRT, h. 9 May
692: d. Ill Dec. 77 L Had
Robert, called Le Fon.
Generation CXXIX.
FNR ALIF, da. Ver-
imund^Fari Mund, king
of Spain, b. 1 Oct. 792: d.
3Jun. S+6: m. FNA ROB-
ERT Lc FORT=the
Stronj,N b. 10 Oct. 74S: d.
10 Oct. S67 and ancestor of
Pike family in U. S. of
America. Had Robert,
Duke of France.
FNR ALSATHA,
da. King Ina the Law
Maker's, s. Fna and Anr
and i^r. da. o5 Alfred the
Great, b.
3rd .Mav,
8 7i0: d.
!3" Mav
918: m'.
■^"""'"'""'' ''' '''^ FNA
ROBERT DL:KE,
FRANCE, b. I Feb. 844: d.
10 May 923. Had Hugh,
after called, the Great.
Generation CXXXII.
FNR ADELAID, da.
William III Tower Head,
b. 18 Oct. 942: d. 4 Mav
1002: m. FNA HUGH
CAPUT, b. 23 Dec. 941:
d. 24 Oct. 996. Had Rob-
ert the Pious, Havide, Ade-
laid, Goslinda. French
Records say: "Nat. s. Gos- ""' "'■ °"- '"'
linus Archbishop of Bourges, 1029." Priests
should m. and obey God's commands.
Generation CXXXIV.
FNR ANNE, da. Jar-
aslaus, king of Russia, b. 3
Apr. 1010: d. 26 Nov.
1042: m. FNA HENRY I,
b. 23 Apr. 1010:d. 30 Dec.
1060: Had Philip: Robert:
Hugh: .Ancestors of Anne
Igor m. Princess Olga-Svi-
atoslaff, kil. 972: 3 Valdi- ''""'"• '"'"• '^•
mer m. Anne, sister, Gk, Emp. Bosrlius
Porphyrogenitus 2 Yaroslav, or laro Slav, or
Jaraslaus, d. 1054, aet. 77. Henry I, m. old-
est da. of oldest line wife, see seal. Bur. St.
Denis.
Generation CXXXI.
FNR EDGINA, da.
Otho I and Theo Fania, sis-
terof Emperor of Germany,
b. 10 Oct. 897: d. 17 No'v.
960: m. FNA HUGH
THEGREAT.b. Oct.896:
d. 10 Oct. 956. Had Hugh
Caput: Otho: Henry:
Emma: Beatrix. Records '
state Hugh the Great, s. Robert Duke of
France and Alsatha, da. k. Fna and Anr, da.
Ceadwall who m. d. of Tiberius son of Jus-
tinian II: Tiberius m. FANA=|ANA da.
Alfred the Great. Ceodwall had a monu-
ment erected to him: Tradition related he
was a "Pagan" yet a child of God.
Generation CXXIII.
FNR CONSTAN-
TIA, da. William Cut Iron,
b. 29 Jun. 970: d. 7 Mar.
1032: m. FNA ROBERT
THE PIOUS, b. 13 July
971: d. 20 July 1031. Chn.
of Robert (133) Hugh:
Henry I: Rob.: Eudes:
andAdelaid: Adelia=Alisa, " "" "'" ""
m. Richard III. See Deed of 1026. Bible
Records prove sd. Robt. and Chn. He re-
fused kindly offered kingdom of Italy by
Italians. Bur. St. Denis: F. R. he m. Ber-
tha, wid. Eudes I. Had trouble with Pope
and Excommunicated, separated by Gregory
V. This Robt. F. A. \l. is recorded on my
Coin, Medal of Temperance Washington, m.
Thomas Fernald and Pike family in prim-
itive language there is Recorded.
Generation CXXXV.
FNR BERTHA, da.
Florentius, b. 3 Aug. 1050:
d. 1 Dec. 1093: m. FNA
PHILIP I, b. 3 Jan. 1051:
d. 29 July 1108. Had Lewis
VI: Henry, d. y. : Charles:
Constantia: Fr. R. sd. Nat-
Philip: Fleury: Cecilia:
Eustache a da. Bur. at Ab-
bey St. Benedict, Loire called St. Benoit.
¥
URITY.4AS A WORD FITLY SPOKEN ARE LIKE APPLES OF GOLD IN BEAUTI-
FUL PICTURES OF SILVER.
Generation CXXXVI
FNR AD EL AID. da.
Humbert Count of Maur-
ieme and Savoy, b. 11 Mar.
1098: d. 22 Aug. 1154: m.
LEWIS VI, b. 1 Apr.
1070: d. 1 Aug. 1137: Had
Philip: Lewis the Young:
Henry: Hugh: Robert: '^'•'^" u" iia.c ^79.
Peter, surnamed Mauclerc,
was Count of Britiany, m. Alice, heiress from
whom Anne of Britiany descended: Philip:
Peter, m. Isabella: Constantia, m. Eustace:
Generation CXXXVIII
FNR ISABELLA, da.
Baldwin, Count of Hainault, b.
22 May 1160: d. 3 Feb. IIQO:
m. FNA PHILIP II AUGUS-
TUS, b. 15 July 1164: d. 14Jiilv
1223: Had Lewis VIII: Philip,
Count of Boulogne: Mary, m.
Philip, Count of Namur, 2nd.
Henry I, Duke of Brabant:
Nat-s. Peter Chariot: 2iid. ni. '"="■ '^* '' '"'
Ingeburga, da. Waldemar, and
sister of Canute, ks. of Denmark: Philip put
her away: Innocent III, obliged him to take
her again. She d. 1236: m. 3rd. Agnes of
Merania, da Duke of Dalmatia: he repudiated
iier: it broke luTlu-nrt: d. 1211 He, bur, St.
Denis.
Generation CXXXVII.
FNR ALICE, da. Thibaud,
Count of Champagne, b.
17 Aug. 1136: d. 31 lulv,
kil. 1206: m. LEWIS VII.
b. 17 Aug. 1117; d. 18 Sept.
at Paris 1180: Had Philip-
Augustus; Alice; .^gnes:
French Records give him (,cii rj? lat^ 9s.,,
two more wives and chn.
Eleanor who he properly repudiated; Had
Mary and Alice; Constantina, da. Alfonso
VIII, 1160: Had Margaret, m. Henry the
Young and Bela III, k. Hungary, 1197, and'
had Alice: bur. at Babeaux:
Generation CXXXIX
FNR BLANCHE, da Alfonso
IX, k. of Castile, b. 21 ^ug
1180; d. 11 Aug. 1252: m 1 N\
LEWIS VI ii COEl R 1) t
LION, b. 5 Aug. 1187 d MiN
7th. 1226: Had Philip d \
St. Lewis: Robert Co
Artois: Philip, d. > |ohn touisvui
Count of Aniou and Maine, d. , „ ,
y. : Alfonso, Count of Poitiers
and Toulouse; Philip, surnamed
Dagbert, d. v.: Stephen, d. y. : Ciinrles,
Count of Anjou and Provence, k. Naples, d.
1295; Da. d. y. ; Isabella d. 1269, a saint in
abby Louciiamp, she founded. Blanche sister
Beranger, m. Alfonso, k. Leon; Had s. Ferd-
inand, k. of Castile to prejudice of Lewis IX;
Cluirdi enrolled both as Saints. He Inir. at
St. Denis.
During the dark ages nearly all history "was lost". As men became better educated, they searched
for the lost truths, and found many valuable facts, and much they did not understand! Alas!! They
attempted to translate unknown to them matters, under the great dithculties of persecution, and, often
death, if they dared to write truth. We cannot too highly appreciate those who did all they could for us.
173
CHARLtS VIII.
3N THE EPOCH OF CHARLES VIII, THE HISTORIANS DID THEIR BEST
TO PLACATE ROMAN PONTIFFS, WHO WERE SO DEGRADED THAT
SIXTUS 4TH DECREED THAT POPES' NATURAL CHILDREN "BE
Princes by right of birth, and estabHshed a Lupanar at Rome." Paul, "Religion ought to
annihilate science, because science is the enemy of religion." Their misnomer.
Charles VIII the Courteous, beautiful in person and mind, eyes bright grey and light
brown hair, worn long and in curls, possessing the courage of his forefather, Pepin who
alone of his officials dared to with the ancient Furni sword face and slay the Lion in the
amphitheater: was led by his great love of humanity represented by most noble forepar-
cnts, that but few have equalled and none excelled. Attempted to reform the horrible
state of iinnioriility existing in France that was typeficd by the Borgins. Went to the
fountain head by assembling an army and on Rome marched. Rome that had- duped
his father and used him as a tool prevented his education against his desires. No sooner
than he became his own master than he wisely pursued his studies with iiulefatigable
zeal. He was gentle till .some great occasion aroused him. Ever considerate of others and it was said
that never in his life did he say wilfully a single word to give pain to others. Lewis or Louis XI added
greatly to his domains during his lifetime. Toak by force a large district from Burgundy. Acquired
BDulogns by purchase. The Bretons were defeated at St. .\ubin, July 28, 1488 Duke of Orleans cap-
tured. The Dake of Bretagne did n:)t long survive his defeat, leaving Anne the sole heiress of the
duchy at thirteen years of age. Though young, she possessed a strong and vigorous mind, and discre-
tion far beyond her years. Some advised her to mirry the old Seigneur d'Albret, glorious spring and
fading autumn. Others to mirrv Charles that she looked upon as the natural enemy of her family.
Her choice fell upon Miximilian to whom for state reasons she was betrothed. He shamefully ne-
glected her by not going to see her or sending troops to aid in her difficulty. Charles, seeing her ne-
glected and not in love with Margaret that had been selected for him against his desires, renewed his
suit backed by "50,000" strong arguments. The strongest was his love. He entered her capital in dis-
guise and visited the Princess, pleading with such good success thai he won his cause and they were
married Dec. 10th, 1491.
With only 18,000 men and accepting the patriotic loan of the court ladies' jewels to raise money
on for defraying his troops' expense he invaded Italy 1494. He proclaimed himself "the friend of
Freedom and the enemy of Tyrants." "God blindfolded their eyes and had tied their hands by rais-
ing up this young king to chastise them for their impiety."
"1492 Christopher Columbus probably conversant with the Chart of Fna Chia and Bahman,
after whom was named the Bahama Islands, and possibly with the trip here of Marcus Agrippa Lucius
Furnius, that is corroborated by the Vatican retention of the coin of Newport, Rhode Island com-
pleted Tower. Showing their usual duplicity in claiming it as an emblem of the Hurdle Race.
Alexander Sixth having brought Ferdinand the Catholic and King John of Portugal to choose him as
mediator of peace. Drew a line which passed from pole to pole through the Azores or Western
Islands, and decreed, by virtue of his universal omnipotence, that all the countries which were beyond
the line, that is the West Indies, or America, should belong to the King of Spain, and those on this
side, that is the East Indies and the shores of Africa, to the king of Portugal. His Holiness imposed
no other condition on this magnificent gift than the immediate payment of a large sum of money and
to convert, willingly, or by force, the inhabitants. Sixty years after this bull: 15,000,000 had been
murdered by Missionaries." Is this the height of their religion, or the lack of it? True History.
D
174
II
^ ^ ^ n=
NTO THE KING THAT FAITHFULLY JUDGETH THE POOR, HIS
THRONE SHALL BE ESTABLISHED FOREVER.
ry rational person
ihs-nncf, U
o
When the scholars could not make a true translation, they
would guess at the truth and arrange the matters to a,>- Ui c( n-
form to their wishes or the desires of those in authority whtn
the (lark ages \\ ere passing av^ay ; thus error entered to le ci p-
ied by the earnest and honest searchers after only truth. We
labor for removing absurdities from history to ad\ance the uni-
versal good for all; conformatory to Gcd's first gifts unto ( ur
common parents.
Purity and its opposite exists in eve
which we look for in faith we find in s
philosophical self-congratulation.
GlntR/JTIon 140
FNR Margaret, eldest da. Ramond
II Count of Provence, b. 20 Nov.
121H: d. 5 May 1285: m. FNA
LEWIS IX ST. LEWIS, b. 22 May
1214: d. at Tunis 25 Aug. 1270:
Had Lewis, d. y. : Philip the Hardy:
John, d. v.: John Tristan, b. 1250:
d. 1270: Peter Count of Alencon: Robert Count
of Clermont: Blanche, 1243: Elizabeth, m. Thi-
baud, k. Navarre 6 Apr. 1255, d. 1271: Blanche,
m. Ferdinand ile la Cerda, s. Alfonso X, k.
Castile: Margaret, m. John, Duke of Brabant:
Agnes, m. Robert II, Duke of Burgundy, 1327:
Wherein any manner of religious worship
adds to the happiness of the individual, it is
excellent.
GrSEKATION 141
FNR ISABELLA of Arragon, b. 19
Aug. 1230: d. 10 May 1271: m.
FNA PHILIP THE HARDY, b.
11 Dec. 1245: d. 6 Oct. 1285: Hac
Lewis, d. y. poisoned: Philip t
„ . ^, , „ , „ PHILIPPE III.
rair: Charles, Count of Evreux:
Philip III the Hardy, m. 2nd. Mary, "-i "-i. Ce,,. 24i.
of Brabant in 1274: d. 1321: Had, .Margaret, m.
Edward I k. of England, d. 1317: Blanche, m.
Duke Rodolphus of Austria, eldest s. Emperor
Albert I.
St. Lewis' flesh and bowels were re-
moved to Montreal abby in Sicily
and placed in a marble Tomb. His
bone.'i were carried to St. Denis and
his head u as renH)\ ed from St. Denis
and to the holy Chapel. Lew is XIII
obtained a festival from Pope to be
celebrated bv the whole church.
FNRJOLANTE,
da.Alphonzo X, k.
Leon and Castile,
b. 23 |unel27n:d.
21 .^ug. 1321: m.
FNA CH.M<LES
De VALOIS, b. 6
Mar. 1267: d. 2 ' ""
Dec. 1304: her mother
da. k. of Arragon: Had. Philip VI:
John, kil. : John: Charles the Count
of Valois son Philip ascends the
throne: Charles De Valois is men-
tioned as a Minister 1325: Who
was he?
I'as lolante
175
'%
EMEMBER THEM THAT HAVE RULE OVER YOU, WHO HAVE
SPOKEN UNTO YOU THE WORD OF GOD."
Generation CXLIIl. ^ ^ p,^^ j^^j,_ ^^ R^hcn. Duke of Burgundy, and Agnes,
b. 13 July 1293; d. 23 Dec. 1348; m. FNA PHILIP VI. s.
of Charles De Valois and Wife jolante, gr. s. of Philip and
Isabella, b. 26 Jan. 1293; d. 23 Aug. ( Bible date) (French date
22nd) 1350: Had John; Lewis, d. at b. ; Lewis, d. soon after
b. : John, d. y.: Philip, m. Fnr Blanche, da. k. Charles the
Fi.9«7. G.n. 143. p^j^^ 1375. ^^^^ ^ j^^^ ^j Brabant Duke of Limburg,
1333. Philip VI m. 1st. 1313; 2d, 1349: FNR BLANCHE da. Philip Count
d'Evreu.x and Jane of Navarre: Had Blanche, 1371. Nat, s. John is mentioned
as Count d'Armagnac, fought a duel with Knt. of Ipres in Flanders in 135(1,
signed "Simplician" who alleged a victory for .said John.
Generation CXLIV. FNR BONNE, da. John, king of Bohemia, b. 23 Aug.
1315: d. 26 .\ug. 1349: m. FNA JOHN LE BON, son PhiUp
VI and Jane, b. 8 Apr. 1320: d. 8 Apr. 1361: Had Charles V: '^.
John Duke of Berry: (Amadeus VIII, Duke of Savoy, was Pope
Felix V time of .schism, was this prince's gr. s. by Mary of Berry,
his mother). Lewis, founder of the Dukes of Anjou, who formed
second branch of the kings of Naples: Philip the Hardy, from
whom the last Dukes of Bugundy were descended, 1404: Jane, \\.
of Charles, k. Navarre, 1373: Mary, m. Robert Duke of Bar: pi.vkm. c;.,, 144
Agnes, 1349: Margaret, 1352: John Le Bon, m. 2d Jane, da.
Wm. XII, Count of Boulogne and Margaret d'Evreux, 1349, d. 1361: Isa-
bella, m. John Gaeleas, Duke of Milan, 1372; KingJohn, bur. St. Denis.
Generation CXLV. ^ ^ FNR JOAN. da. Peter, Duke of Bourbon.
and Isabella of Valois, m. 1349. and was b. 11
May 1340: d. 7 Apr. 1377: m. CHARLES V.
LESAGE. b. 3 Aug. 1337: d. 16 Sept. 1380:
Fna Charles the Wise, s. of John the Good and
Bonne: Had Charles VI: Lewis Duke of Or-
leans: John, d. y. : Joan. d. y. : Bonne, d. y. :
Joan. d. y. : Mary: Isabella: Catherine, m. to
John De Berry, Count De Montpensier, 1388.
Plate 9S9. G.n i45 chiriw v Charlcs V, bur. St. Denis: Christian De Pisan,
WARRIORS. da. Thomas De Pisen, well named, agents: de-
Robtn D. Fitnnes, 1380, L. ChlrlM Dl U ,,,,,,. ,, , iru
Ctrd. of Spain, 1354. jamej De clared that the King d. the very hour her father
^°'"'"S;ilnnl: n'^b""" °' predicted. She gives him title as "The King's
Astronomer": translate poisoner and note the
deaths and persecutions to Charles VIII, who had energy enough to demand
justice of Pope.
•Generation CXLVI. FNR ISABELLA OF BAVARIA, da. Duke Stephen, m.
17 July 1385, b. 1 Feb. 1370; d. 24 Sept. 1435: m. FNA
CHARLES VI BON AMI, s. Charles V and Joan, b. 4 Nov. J
1368: Crowned by Archbishop Pique=Pike. 4 Nov. 1380: and
d. at Hotel de St. Paul, 20 Oct 1422, having led a life of repeated
druggings, poisoned, and not only shamefully persecuted, but vili-
fied by his powerful Vatican foes that he attempted to conciliate:
Had Charles, d. y. kil. Charles, Duke of Guiennc: Lewis: John:
Charles VII: Philip, d. y. kil. at b. : Joan. d. y. kil. Isabella, m. "*»'•" ^'
Jane. m. : Mary: Michelle, m. : Catherine, m. Henry V k. Eng- p, ^^ Gen. 146.
land: papal muck throwers sd. had Nat-Margaret: Isabella car-
ried in small boat to St. Denis where both were bur. The like is now carried
on in U. S. of America, N. B. G. U. S. and F. A.
176
"3
/^f/^^ALl: THINGS SHEWING THYSELF A PATTERN OF GOOD WORKS:
IN DOCTRINE SHEWING UNCORRUFTNESS, GRAVITY, SINCERHY."
Paul to Titus, Chap. II, V. 7.
Generation CXLVII.
FNR MARY, da. Lewis II, King of Naples, b. 10 Feb. 1400: d. 23 Nov. 1463:
m. FNA CHARLES VII, b. July 22nd: d. at Meun. France. 22 July, Th. 1461.
Had Lewis XI: James of France, d. kil. y. : Philip of France, d. kil. y. : Charles of
France, Duke of Normandy and Berry with Guienne. 1472: Radegonde: Catherine
of France, m. Count de Charlois: Joland of France, m. Amadeus IX, Duke of Savoy:
Joan of France, m. Duke John of Bourbon: Mary of France, d. kil. y. : Magdalen of
France, m. Gaston Count de Foix: 1486. Had nat-chn. by Agnes Sorel supplied by
R. C. C., as was offered in Boston by same in 1897, but here refused this bribe to work
against state and U. S.. and 3 more: Charlotte, m. James de Breze, kil. in ad-Lilley
protects at B. : Margaret, m. Oliver de Coetivy: Joan, m. Antony de Bueil Count de
Sancerre: Agnes Sorel poisoned alter she had served her purpose: FnrMary was a prin-
cess of extraordinary merit, Charles VII the Victor, was wofully persecuted and poisoned,
persecuted unmercifully: bur. St Denis. His distant relative Joan d' Arc, burnt to death
30 May 1431.
Plalc 9<>3. Cen. 148 Fna Lewis XI.
Generation CXLVIII.
FNR CHARLOTTE OF SAVOY, da. Lewis II, Duke of Savcv and Anne of
Cyprus, b. 30 Nov. 1420: d. 3 Nov. 1483: m. FNA LEWIS XI, s. Charles VII the
Victor and excellent MARY, b. 1 Jan. 1423: d. 30 Aug., at 7.45 p. m. : Had Lewis, d.
kil. y. : Charles VIII: Francis, Duke of Berry, d. kil. y. Louisa, d. kil. v.: Anne, m.
Peter de Bourbon: Joan, m. Lewis of Orleans, after Lewis XII, was divorced from her
to marry Anne of Britiany, widow of Charles VIII, who always wore crape after his
death: the Lewis, d. k. y. 1448 was s. of 1st wife Margaret of Scotland, who d. 1445:
neither father Anselm nor le Gendre, mention him, he is known by a piece extant in
the archives of our Lady of Clery: Nat-chn. had by Phelise Regnard: Guyette: by
Margaret de Sassenage: Joan, m. nat of Bourbon: Mary, m. Aymar de Pottiers, Lord
of St. Vallier, grandmother to Diana of Poitiers; Isabeau, married Lewis de Saint the
priests wrote history of the French kings and were fathers of their Nat-chn. even the good
fathers are forbidden against God's Laws to marry.
177
TX
AYING UP IN STORE FOR THEMSELVES A GOOD FOUNDATION
AGAINST THE TIME TO COME, THAT THEY MAY LAY HOLD ON
ETERNAL LIFE.
-^t-^
FNRANNEOF BRITIANY, da. Francis II
Duke of Britiany and Margaret de Foix, b. 7 Sept.
1477: d. 9 Jan. 15L^: m. FNA CHARLES VIII,
b. Aug. 30th 1470: d. 7 Apr. 1498: Had. Charles
Orland, d. kil. y. : Charles, d. kil. soon after his
birth: Francis, d. kil. soon after his birth: Anne,
ivhose life was saved by Marrietta Fierno, the
in nativity Anne of Britiany was betrothed to
iEOFBKlTlASV
d. kil. v.: jean (French) John (Engjisli) Fernel
Nurse and wife of Petrus Darius Fernel Italians
Maximilian and his da. Margaret of Austria was not only betrothed to Charles VIII but educated
at the Court of France where she was said to have borne the title of Madam the Dauphinese
that was sent back to her fatlier before the m. with Anne 13 Dec. 1491. In the treaty between
France and Britiany there was a clause that if Charles VIII died without issue Anne should marr\-
his successor, hence one of the causes tliat was advanced for m. of Anne that knew of the slaughter
of her chn. and not only concealed Jean Fernel but caused him to be sent to England where he
was lost, as a mere child and found on a Fern hearth from which was the allegation of the origin
of name of Fernwarld, Fernland, Ferneley and Fernald came, although he was adopted by P. D.
Fernel and wife Marietta, the nurse of Anne, when Jean was born. The money ol Anne rewarded
the Constable, I withold his name, and defrayed the expenses of Jean. The Cordelier of black
knotted lace around her coat of Arms \\ as a custom that has been preserved ever since, and is on
the Tomb or iron Tablet grave "stone" in possession of writer, and Crest coat of Arms the High
Roman Crown, depicted thereon. It is believed to be the one that ancestor John Fernald, presented
"ith a Roll of Fernald Genealogical Records to a Boston Historical Society. Roll lost? Disappeared!
"I
mi <^ (=^ (^ n> >
'E TYME AFTER RETYNE FROM CAPTURE OF LEWISBOURGE, BYE
CAPTYNE JOHNE FURNELLE. 1745—6. WYTHE INSTRUCTIONS
THAT THE GYFTE BE CONTINUEL KEPT FOR YE GUDE OF
Countrie and al ye family. With this is the Washington Iron Tablet of Fernald.
Parts of body of Anne were scattered among the churches: that were better in the
tomb undesecrated." "Her heart was encased in a gold egg shaped body, kept by ye church."
COPY OF LETTER TO POPE
FROM SULTAN BAJAZET:
"The Sultan Bajazet, by the
grace of God, the greatest King and
Caliph of the two continents of Asia
and Europe, to the lord ALEX-
ANDER, father of all Christians.by
the gift of Providence, and most
worthy Pontiff of the Roman
Church, reverence, kindness, and
sincerity." "I have, my Lord, until
now, paid with exactness to your
holiness forty thousand ducats a year,
for the support of my brother
Zimzim : but as Innocent the Eighth,
your predecessor, as I have been in-
formed, whilst he has been receiving
large sums from me to guard that
ambitious prince, was also listening
to the proposals of the Sultan of
iEgypt, and accepting his money to '
set Zimzim at liberty. I am led to
fear, lest one day your successor may
furnish troops to my brother, to
enable him to dispute my throne.
"Your envoys are well apprized
of rny apprehensions, and have ad-
vised me to address myself directly to
you, to procure for my mind the
tranquility I so much need, and to
put an end to the cause of my alarm.
They have even induced me to hope tk_
thatyou would listen favorably to my possession i found under
propositions. lqvellsgun store, wash-
"I then pledge myself to give ington street, boston,
you three.hun'dredShoJsand duLs. -^^^.1',,^^':^.'^.^
several cities, and the shirt of Jesus
Christ, if your holiness will remove Zimzim from the world in any way you may judge best. A
signal service will thus be rendered to the prisoner himself, for according to the prophet, he should
prefer death to fervitude, and you, most illustrious lord, will not commit a crime, since, by your
religion. Christians are ordered to exterminate heretics and infidels."
The official document containing the Pontiff's acceptance disappeared, as did the communications
from Leo XIII to Father Fitzgerald at Boston, U. S. A., and my taken deposition of ante mortem
charges of capital crime against the highest in Boston, Leo XIII's official: Fitzgerald and brother
found poisoned and the claims of suicide passed the protectors of infinitely worse crimes, now America's
deluge. Comines' affirmation is corroborated by the treaty, secret, between the courts of Rome and
Constantinople, Bajazet, to supply the Holy See 6000 cavalry, 6000 infantry against French.
179
il
^ * * *
D^
N THE EPOCH OF CHARLES VIII, THE HISTORIANS DID THEIR BEST
TO PLACATE ROMAN PONTIFFS, WHO WERE SO DEGRADED THAT
SIXTUS 4TH DECREED THAT POPE'S NATURAL CHILDREN "BE
Princes by right of birth, and established a Lupanar at Rome." Paul, "Religion ought to
annihilate science, because science is the enemy of religion." Their misnomer.
Charles VIII the Courteous, beautiful in person and mind, eyes bright grey and light
brown hair, worn long and in curls, possessing the courage of his forefather, Pepin who
alone of his officials dared to with the ancient Furni sword face and slay the Lion in the
amphitheater: was led by his great love of humanity represented by most noble forepar-
ents, that but few have equalled and none excelled. Attempted to reform the horrible
.state of immorality existing in France that was typefied by the Borgias. Went to the
^^^ fountain head by assembling an army and on Rome marched. Rome that had'duped
' his father and used him as a tool prevented his education against his desires. No sooner
Gen 149 ^^^^ ^^ became his own master than he wisely pursued his studies with indefatigable
zeal. He was gentle till some great occasion aroused him. Ever considerate of others and it was said
that never in his life did he say wilfully a single word to give pain toothers. Lewis or Louis XI added
greatly to his domains during his lifetime. Took by force a large district from Burgundy. Acquired
Boulogne by purchase. The Bretons were defeated at St. Aubin, July 28, 1488, Duke of Orleans cap-
tured. The Duke of Bretagne did not long survive his defeat, leaving Anne the sole heiress of the
duchy at thirteen years of age. Though young, she possessed a strong and vigorous mind, and discre-
tion far beyond her years. Some advised her to marry the old Seigneur d'Albret,' glorious spring and
fading autumn. Others to marry Charles that she looked upon as the natural enemy of her family.
Her choice fell upon Maximilian to whom for state reasons she was betrothed. He shamefully ne-
glected her by not going to see her or sending troops to aid in her difficulty. Charles, seeing her ne-
glected and not in love with Margaret that had been selected for him against his desires, renewed his
suit backed by "50,000" strong arguments. The strongest was his love. He entered her capital in
disguise and visited the Princess, pleading with such good success that he won his cause and they were
married Dec. 10th, 1491.
With only 18,000 men and accepting the patriotic loan of the court ladies' jewels to raise money
on for defraying his troops' expense he invaded Italy 1494. He proclaimed himself "the friend of
Freedom and the enemy of Tyrants." "God blindfolded their eyes and had tied their hands by rais-
ing up this young king to chastise them for their impiety."
"1492 Christopher Columbus probably conversant with the Chart of Fna Chia and Bahman,
after whom was named the Bahama Islands, and possibly with the trip here of Marcus Agrippa Lucius
Furnius, that is corroborated by the Vatican retention of the coin of Newport, Rhode Island com-
pleted Tower. Showing their usual duplicity in claiming it as an emblem of the Hurdle Race.
Alexander Sixth having brought Ferdinand the Catholic and King John of Portugal to choose him as
mediator of peace. Drew a line which passed from pole to pole through the Azores or Western
Islands, and decreed, by virtue of his universal omnipotence, that all the countries which were beyond
the line, that is the West Indies, or America, should belong to the King of Spain, and those on this
side, that is the East Indies and the shores of Africa, to the king of Portugal. His Holiness imposed
no other condition on this magnificent gift than the immediate payment of a large sum of money and
to convert, willingly, or by force, the inhabitants. Sixty years after this bull: 15,000,000 had been
murdered by Missionaries." Is this the height of their religion, or the lack of it? True History.
c g ^ D ^^^^^^^^^_
180
^k#NITEDIN RIGHT. CHARLES VIII DISMISSED ALL UNJUSTJUDGES AND
Jh| UNWORTHY PERSONS FROM THEIR OFFICE. DETERMINED TO EFFECT
Tfl A REFORM IN THE CLERGY WHOSE VICES RENDERED THEM CON-
^^Tw temptible to the people. He marched on to Italy: — Alexander to avoid embracing Charles
the Courteous, as proper ceremony required, feigned to faint, and fell back in the sofa;
Charles, took a seat near a window, until they had brought the holy father to by the use of salts. The
"talk" began: — Alexander agreed to live in peace with his cardinals, to pay them the rights due them;
to place in possession of the king the cities of Viterba, Civita, Vecchia, Terracina, and Spoleto; not to
confer any legation without his permission; give cardinal hats to two of Charles VIII's Captains: ac-
cept ransom for Zimzim, investiture of Naples; his son Cardinal Borgia, as a hostage. The Pope
kept his agreement, that is, so far as he was to be beneficed by it. His son as a hostage, ninth day he
escaped, took the money of the Sultan of itgypt, poisoned Zimzim with slow poison, who died the
eighth day after he wassurrendcd to Charles the Friend of Freedom. Thus his Holiness got besides
the sum paid by France, three hundred thousand ducats from the Sultan of Constantinople. Charles
was greatly enraged, and he swore vengeance against the pontiticial family. As his interest took him
another way he marched on Naples and carried it by assault and the rest of the kingdom was con-
quered with marvelous facility. Alexander formed a formidable league with the Christian powers
against Charles VIII the courteous French King. Ferdinand the Catholic Republic of Venice.
Duke of Milan, Henry VII of England, Archduke Philip and his son Maximilian with past history
before them supported the Pope. Charles soon discovered the danger that menaced him. He decid-
ed to strike a blow to alarm his enemies and chastise the pope for poisoning Zmizim. Leaving part
of his troops in his new kingdom with 9000 picked troops he marched on Rome. The cowardly
pope ried with his family to Orvieto. The King remained three days in Rome and went on to Tus-
cany and to Parma where 40,000 of the confederates had assembled to dispute his passage. With
10,000 troops he, at Fornoua, cut to pieces and defeated and crushed 40,000 men. The pope sent am-
bassadors to Charles believing his arts triumphant. To inform Charles that his agreement was erased
and annulled.
181
^ ^
OILED AND BLOOD STAINED FROM HIS SLAUGHTERED FOES THAT
HE LED HIS INVINCIBLE TEN THOUSAND FRENCHMAN AGAINST—
OFTEN ENGAGED HAND TO HAND, CHARLES VIII THE COURTEOUS,
on the very day and time, received the Pope's delegates. The legates came "to summon
him to go to Rome to render an account of his conduct to the Sovereign Pontiff," the
adept in dupHcity who ran away. "I will accept the invitation of the holy father and I hope he will
await me, that I may have the honor of kissing his (dirty) feet, of which I was deprived, when I last
passed through Rome," was courteous Charles' reply.
iilpCbic 11, I thierhv
PLATE 1026
PLATE 1025
In his laudable attempt to reform the clergy, whose vices and ignorance made them contemptible
to the people, hi.s life was cut short by their constantly kept employed assassins of Vatican scattered
over the world affiliating with all. Even the French Consul was recalled, it was said, by seating that
Charles VIII came to his death by "foul play," which fact I announced in public on State House
Sacred Floor. But not that he was poisoned by X'atican, the curse of all nations, as historic truths
declare, and herein I acknowledge thirtv-six (now thirty-nine) attempts on my own life that belongs
to God'and my Countrv, and had I a thousand they are welcome to all. Notwithstanding my family
are killed by these foes here and before shown up to a Just God and Worid.
Charles VIll departed this life for Heaven 7 April, 1498, at 11 : 1 1 p. m., and his father, Lewis or
Louis, died 30 .August, 14S3, at 7:45 p. m. His body was taken from the tomb and insulted, 1562.
Charies VIII the Courteous fought the greatest battle of modern times at Firnoua, July 6th.
Let none; of the worthy ministers or professional gentlemen and worthy Christians of the Roman
Catholic Church, and I know verv many true noble persons among them, feel aggrieved at the mis-
deeds of the past which I have feaVlessly set forth, and suppres,sed the uorst. But use all your powers
to prevent the great evils that are a shame to all.
■a * ^ *
^^THAT THE GREAT EMPEROR NAPOLEON SAID: "WHAT IS HISTORY BUT
/"i] A FABLE AGREED UPON?" IS IT NOT. MY BELOVED RULERS OF 1,411,-
i I L 171.381 PEOPLE. AMPLE CONFESSION OF THE FALSITY OF FRENCH
^^^ History, that without bigotry, (Sir Thomas More was beheaded by the Protestants: Rev.
John Rogers burnt at the stake by the Roman Catholics; by King. Pope and Vatican,
both the writer's ancestors.) YOU MAY AS MOST WISE EXPERTS CONSIDER AND
JUDGE CORRECTLY FOR THE COMMON GOOD OF YOURSELVES AND OUR
ENEMIES THAT NOT ONLY WOULD DESTROY YOU BUT THEMSELVES FROM
DISOBEDIENCE TO THE COMMANDS OF OMNIPOTENT GOD BY WHOSE GRACE
TRUE HISTORY
TIMES IS BY HIS
FREELY GIVEN UN-
CULANIAN LABORS
ERRORS, TO GLOR-
ER AND HONOR YOU
ANCESTORS IN VER-
CHOICE BLESSINGS
EXCELLENT
CHAP. I. V. 17:
A^OAi «.n0V0l AO
Translation of Hebrew
and that into the modern
"I. God, Creator of the
Adam for Ava the Purcup-
to be the Temporal lords of
dominion and power as
First Emperor, Empress,
holy, pure, Lady, Gover-
I, God of Heaven anoint
marry, give authority, my
with power of hfe and
with Laws written and en-
Icts from which they shall
point their long line to
obeyed, respeaed down
time till I call them to dwell
verse. I, Omnipotent God,
children to in exactness
without change knowingly one
sword, disease shall kill, destroy
maliciously, or for unhallowed
ambition."
FROM PRIMITIVE
COMMANDS HEREIN
TO YOU WITH HER-
TO EXPUNGE ALL
IFY GOD OUR FATH-
ANDYOUR BELOVED
ITY. CONFER MOST
ON YOUR POSTERITY.
RULERS! GENESIS,
pi2D'n hn a ntt ] n^ :
Af/ano I i-AD^A-aOO
: f -I K - ^
^OtA I ■«.
into Primitive iflgj'ptian
English hath as follows: —
earth and waters line of
right line of Heaven; they
Land and Seas given first
Rulers of all Creation the
King, Queen, President,
nor and brilliant Star wife
with holy oil. appoint,
unconquerable sword, pike,
death; Commands I gave
graved on squares and tab-
have Dominion, Rule, ap-
Rule, be honored, loved,
through the ages of earthly
with me in celestial uni-
Command all them my
PLATE 1027. ciebrt,„ Honor. k^ep my Laws, Commands
iota for all shall be fulfilled as I, God, the Trinity, Decree. The
. punish with full righteous justice every one who disobeys me wilfully,
gain by aiding Satan whom I cast from heaven for evil unkingly
Respect, Love, Honor and Obey thy Rulers of Heaven and Earth appointed by thy Father God,
keeping my Commandments and thy reward shall be inconceivable great to you, my children line.
183
3
FATHER FRANCE, PR. OF DR. JEAN FERNELIUS, THE LAWFUL SON
OF CHARIi-ES VIII THE COURTEOUS AND ANNE OF BRITIANY, HAD
FROM THE YEAR 430 TO 75 1 THE FOLLOWING EMINENT AND
LEARNED MEN.
Pepin
W.raton
Gilimet
Eg,n
Ebroin
Bcrtair
Adel
Dreux
Hild
Flacchat
Nordtb.rt
e.m
Martin
Thfobald
GnmoM
Rainfroi
Jordandes
Malculsus
Mariusof ,
S. Eoli
S. Epi Fan
S. Boniface
Wolfrid
LEARNED MEN
A-chambai.d
T.ipin
S. Boniface, .fler 751
Turpin
Usuardua
S P.rmin
S. Aeobard
Alcuinus
S, Benedici
S. .Angilbert
Dodana, w
Anibert or Antpert
Dungal
Leidrade
Eginhard
Lndgei
Theodulfii!
S. Lull.
Paulus Diaconus
S PaulinuJ
Florus
WARRIORS
Bethetic
Wm. Rosir
Frederic
Bernard
Frederic
Waller
Gourdon
Gerard
MAGISTRATES
Luilberl
Ftidegise
Luitgard
WARRIORS -GENERALS
Walefridu
Lewis
184
'%
OME AND SEE THE WORKS OF GOD: HE IS TERRIBLE IN HIS DO-
INGS UNTO THE CHILDREN OF MEN: THOU HAST BROUGHT A
VINE OUT OF ^GYPT:- "AND DID CAUSE IT TO TAKE DEEP
ROOT, AND IT FILLED THE LAND." Psalms 66. V. 5:80 Vs. 8 and 9
\]|
MISTERS
W'liliaiii
Ger.aM
Sttph
Williim dc Garlande
Willi.m
Fred.r.c
StcKhal.
Stephen de C.rlindt
Rloul
Rob.n
rhlb,od 1
Bug.,
m^^ m^ii^s^^
'late 1030 p|a„ 1031
ALL THESE FACES ARK CHARACTER STUDIES KOR EXPERTS
Radulphuj
Joannes Sec
Suidas
UtKird
Foulk
Anschertc
Roger
Luitgard
Eble.
Adalgsre
Cldurc
Balholome
EMIN
ENT MEN
St^ Odilo Ad
ant
Petrus Dimi.nu
Ralph Ardenj
Raimbert
Bteneatius
Anslem
St Bruno
Stephen
D.ogo
Eude.
Wiih.ra
Gmtmund
Guibert
Lambert
Hlldehert
Marmus
Leo Osliensij
an Scolus
Odo
St, Norbet
WA
RRIORS
Arnoul
Baldwin
Roger
Alberic
Malhe» II
WARRIORS
-CONSTABLES
^;athe»of^
ontmorenci.
1160
MAGISTRATES
Anseg.w
Adalbeson
Er.c
Foulk Nerra
Hugh
Manaiseh
Artaud
Burchard
MAGISTRATES— CHANCELLORS
Simon, 1152
HughdeChami
Aldenc
Stephen of Senll
S.geberr
Abelard
St. Barnard
Arnold of Brescia
Petrus Lombardus
Peter
Richard
185
4^
?i
VERY PURPOSE IS ESTABLISHED BY COUNSEL: AND WITH GOOD-
ADVICE MAKE WAR AGAINST THY DESTROYERS: EVEN THERE
THY HAND SHALL LEAD ME. AND THY RIGHT HAND HOLD ME."
MINI8TKKS
William
Enguerrand de Marigni
Petei- Bemv handed 132H
Sectrvs
Kobeit Clement
Kaoul de I'erreau
.Macede Jiaehes and Iten.
'■• (ierai'd
Giles Clement
.\me.xof Oileans
de Sirnn, ditto
(iontier
Gueriii
John de Itehit
Peter
Nicholas
I'eter of Villebonne
Philip de Cangni
CharleB of Valois
William Klotte
Peter Wanchet
Mathew of Ventlome
Peter
Mag. Suson
William
I'eter de la Bropse hangec
1 Gerard de la Guette, died John
in 1276
under torture 1322
John
Philip
John
Peter
WAKinoHS
lt..liei't (le I'irnufs called
J.Si<Mon
lliimliert
Ifcfjand de Trie 1:1lM
Momui i;if<0
.N. Thiessart
(iiles •
Gaucher de ChatiHon
Bertrand
Henrv Boileau
Humbert
John des Barres
Aruoul
P. Simon
Henry Clemen
Matthew de Trie
John
Nic. Joey
Ferri Paste
James
John
John Dauvet
William
Arnold
John
J. Simon
Gautier
Charles
Lewis
N. Calepeau
Renaud de Sores d'Estrees
An eel
Atty. (ienl. William de St.
J. de St. Komain
Heric de Beanjeu, 1270
Lancelot de St. Maard
Charles
Hermant
.Michael
Robert Vaurin
Kmg's Ad-o Johns
"D sent to their deaths"
Ferri de Ferneuil, 1288
Bernard
Atty. rienls. 1421 to 1472
Peter Luillier, 8. J. L. kil.
William
Wnlrer
Jean Lullier, (da Magda-
. John
fiaoul de Clermont de Nesle Ronef
lene, m. Jean Fernel)
Robert
(iniicherde Ctatillon
Guv
r. Cunsinot
Kaoul
John de Haiconrt
Edward
John Simon
I)reux or Drew
Baoulle Klamene
Kobert de Fiennes
John Dauvet
.Matthew
John de Varrennes
John
J. Hapiout
J. Rabateau
Alberic Clement
Simon de Melun
-Mag. Peter
Giles
Xevelon d'Arras
Guv of Clermont
J. Jouvenel, Fouvenel or
■ Henry Clement
Foucaude de Merle
John
Fuvenal
John Clement
Miles de Novess
Simon
J. Morand
Simon of Mountfort 1218
Sacher de chatillon
.\ttv. Genl. James Dam
Irie
J. Barl.in
Kobert de Coury
John de Corbeil, 1318
K. .\. Gerard
Jas. Jouvenel
Amuri
John de Beaumont
William
Kenaut
Hugh
Guerin
John .\llegrin
John de la Cour d'.\uber-
genville
John de Vaissoigne
John Dubois
John Pastoureau in 1301
.\rnuhus, 1 is:
Guy D'Aties
.\verroes
Peter
St. Dominic
Stephen
Eudes
Fuulk
William
Godfrev
William of Tyi
Helinand
John
Joachim
.Maurice
Petrus Comest
Peter of Blois
Villcliardouin
M.\GISTRATES
Simon who was Pope Mar- William .le Cre])!
tin IV Peter Fioete
I'eter Barbet Stephen Snizi
Henry de Vezelai Peter de Moriiai
Peter Challon 1283 Peter Belle-Perchi
-lohn de Vassoigne Peter de(!rez
Peter de Corbeil
William de .Nogaret
Giles .\icelin de Montagu
Peter de Latilli
Ma.sters in Parliment
Hugh de Courci
William Bertrand
KI.VG'S ADVOCATES
[Vter DArablai Peter de Chappes William de la .Magdelaine
.Mag. Paul de Brayeres .Mag. John de Chercheraont Simon de Buci
K. A. Raoulde PresleslSlo Attorney CJeneral I'eter de Cugnieres
Peter de Villebreme .Matr. Peter Rodier
EMINE.VT LEAR.XED ME.N"
William de L,
William
Kigord 1224
.\ccursius
.\lbericu8
.\lexauder Halensis
Philip d'Aiitogny, (
Hugh Cardinal
.Mathew Paris
ignes
Robert of Sorbonr
Vincent of Beauvais
Albertus -Ma^iiins
St. Bonaventure
Raymond of Fennafort
Roger Bacon
St. Thomas
Stephen Tempier
de Gros-Parmy, John Cholet
William Durand
William de .Vangis
Henry of Gaunt
John de .Meun
Jonnes Dun Scotus 1808
Giles Colonne
186
St. Antony
Stephen Boileau
Feter de Fontaines
(iingisk
-Nicholei
C. ^
Kaoul de Gros-Parmy
Parmy de Piris
Wm. de St. .\mour
.\mour
William
Kaymundus Lullus
.\ntonv .\ndre"
riante;i321
•loliu, Lord of Joinville
Dr. Jean Fernel
Petrus Anreolus
Francis de .Maronis
Herve .Noel
John
.Alexander
.\.lvaru8 Fel Pelagiuf*
.\rnold
Peter
Durand
(ierard
Odo
Laura
Ludolfus
Ochani
d <^ ^4=" <4=» D^
1
NITED WITH GOD FOR REFORM,
PREVAIL AGAINST US.
N'O MAN NOR CLASS OF MEN CAN
Cbapter l^lflf
DR. JOANNES FERNEL WORSHIPED ONLY GOD AND LOVED HIS PROFESSION.
Generation CL.
FNR MAG-
L 1 E R, da.
Jean and wife,
1 fuly 1496;
m . F N A
Charles VIII,
b. at Cler-
d. 26 April,
hieau. Dr.
had Francis
1533: Joannes
(written over)
Magdalene, b.
Fernelius, b.
four children
scendants:one
although the
gives a differ-
sutficien t ly
Chart of the
which was
recovered lost
recordswhich
as to cause a
for writing to
"Though t h e
slowly, yet they grind
Though with pa-
waiting, Withexact-
They 1 i e, says
believe there is no
may profess this
ly in the day time,
company; yet in the
they have doubtful
loannis Impcrialis.
lOANNES FERNELIVS
PLATE 1032,
DALENE LUIL-
Jean, s. Peter, s. of
Anne Washington, b.
d. 30 March 1548;
JEAN FERN AL,s.
andAnneofBritiany,
mont, 26 Apr. 1497;
1558; at F on tain-
Jean Ferneland wife
Fernel, b. 3 Mar.
Fines or Funel — s.
b. 3 Feb. 1535:
1 May 1544: Maria
5 Sept. 1546: All
married and had de-
record claimed,
Convent of Visitation
ent version. This is
explained in the
F e r n a 1 d family
printed from the
concealed private
were so important
boycott in the U. S.
said Convent.
mills of God grind
exceeding small,
tience stands he
ness grinds he all."
Seneca, who say they
God. Though they
somewhat confident-
when they are in
night, and alone,
thoughts about it.
UNTO the 63,000 descendants in United States of America from Joannis Imperalis, Joannes Fernelius,
Jean Fernel (in English, John Fernald,) the son of Charles VIII and his lawful wife, Anne
of Britiany: we present a few of the plates of many in the seventeen books he wrote,
of which the writer has now thirteen. They contain an assertion in those
times of his Imperial descent. His Coat of Arms as Dauphin.
^ O
N
OT ALL THE BOOKS WRITTEN BY DR. JEAN FERNEL. THE MODERN
GALEN ARE RECORDED ON THIS PLATE. 1033, WITH HIS COAT OF
ARMS AS DAUPHIN OF FR/VNCE: PARTS ARE MONOGRAMMIC
o^
®
^ (4=* <4=. o
O THE COLLEGE OF HERALDRY PARIS, FRANCE, MOST COURT-
EOUS THANKS FOR PRESENT OF THIS PLATE OF MY ANCESTOR
DR. JEAN FERNEL THE MODERN GALEN, THAT FOUGHT FOR
FRANCE. THE PHYSICIAN OF KING HENRY II, OF THE LINES OF
USURPERS OF THE KINGDOM.
JEAN FERNEL.
Dr. Jean Fernel, greater than Galen, who was born 1497 at Clermont, and his life saved by
Marietta Fame, wife of Petrus Darius Fernel (called), the nurse of Anne of Britiany, who substitut-
ed a dead child for Jean, thus an Italian or Roman saved the honored progenitor, 63,000 Americans.
.1^=
CI <4=» -4^ <^ D=
(§
F THE UNITED STATES AND THE WASHINGTON FAMILIES REPAY
GRATEFUL THANKS TO GOD'S APPOINTED CHOICE OF A RIGHT-
EOUS WOMAN TO THWART EVIL VATICAN AND ALEXANDER SIXTUS
the infamous Rodcric Borgia, the holy father guilty of laison with a beautiful Spanish lady,
who was a widow with two daughters, who died, and then her daughters; the eldest put
in convent and by the youngest Rosa Vanozza, he had 5 children; Francis, Csesar, Lucretia, Godfrey,
and one d. young. The pope at the right hand of the Altar of St. Marie del Popolo caused to be
placed a magnificent
ozza for veneration
of the Virgin. The
but not the facts of
sition of capital crime
Popes and Vatican to
malpractice with
honor God and ben-
commands; tobcfol-
a few p r o t e s t a n t
them boasting of a
tainted money, form-
makers to do excel-
thing Roman Cath-
testant. True facts
IT is with regret
pelled in the cause
tial justice to record
protect the innocent
ian and worker that
ity, this plate, 103S,
Dr. Fernel'snumer-
not contain the work
erous foes that my
and Mss. did more
written several years
called to the Coat of
been of another, viz:
posed to a caricature
during whose epoch
abomi nations so
portrait of Rosa Van-
of the faithful instead
worst is suppressed,
theft of Mss. despo-
and refusal of last two
sign vs. alcoholic &
dreadful diseases, to
efit all people as God
lowed in that evil by
churches, o n e o f
desire to receive
er causing plate
lent work on every-
olic and slight Pro-
and data.
that author is com-
of right and impar-
many of the items to
forthcoming histor-
God chooses for pur-
taken from one of
ous books, may or
for evil of his num-
stolen Coun records
fully set forth, :i s
ago. Attention is
Arms, that may have
Count John F. trans-
of Dr. Jean Fernel
were the crimes and
great that the prin-
ces of Europe instructed their Embassadors to summon the pontiff to put an end to his evil deeds or
l>c (leiHKsed from the Hi)ly See.
The Embassadors of the EMPEROR of GERMANY, the KINCJS of FRANCE, ENGLAND.
CASTILE, and PORTUGAL on a day of solemn audience notified the Pope; Alexander took it in
bad part; and said for his unholy work as follows:— "Go, ye footmen, return to those who sent you,
and say to them that I have yet much to do before I can equal them in wickedness." Brother Jerome
Savonarola was kil. for saying:— "What should people think of their tyrants if an Alexander the Sixth
judges KINGS to be more infamous than himself". Jean Fernel and wife were poi.soncd to dcith by
Pope, Vatican, within about one month of each other. They said, "he died of grief."
=a %^ i>
A
T PARIS DR. JEAN FERNEL APPLIED HIMSELF TO STUDY WITH
THE MOST INDEFATIGABLE ZEAL, AND MADE SUCH PROGRESS
THAT HIS LECTURES ON PHILOSOPHICAL SUBJECTS WERE
greatly admired for eloquence and erudition. He was invited to become a professor in
the college where he was a student— entered and accepted. He studied medicine, and
to practice, he divided his time
when graduated and admitted
between his books and his
five hours to rest in twenty-four.
King, Henr>' II, "whose friend-
secured by curing one of his
(well knowing the fate of his
to accept honors and places of
and . preferred t h e retirement
every other pursuit. But on the
sician, he was obliged at last to
immense practice, making
death he was possessed o f
his murderers, the Roman
it, his destoyers used to fortify
as being pulled down, as he was
France, the lines of Kings of
the criminals, in part through
and partly because it was not
the Throne, a curse.
The mysterious signature of
seen below his plate, 1036, con-
tive language of his ancestors,
Queen of Palmyra, the grand-
Fnr Chia, and her writing the
to Ava and Adam, the children
Kircher was familiar with, and
William Warburton that plate
was conversant with languages
Syriac, Hebrew, Greek, i^gyp-
He in signature speaks of his
Waldsee-Muller, Emanuel of
much more of historical value
The history of my French
rigid examination by- histori-
further mutilated by the Roman
caricatures were made of the
as in Boston a n imitation of
Catholic Church, that ever have
and families, but never to honor
others without self aggrandize-
politics that ever has caused
Plates 1036 and 1037— Very
borders the emblems that are
history of his family, that this
others to contemplate, and
patients, allowing himself scarce
When invited to Court by the
ship and good opinion he had
favorites, he excused himself
ancestors,) and when solicited
emolument he modestly refused,
and studies of private life to
death of the King's first phy-
settle at Court where he- did an
12,000 livres a year, till at his
?20,000,000 that went to enrich
Catholic Church, and a part of
the walls of Rome now reported
the true heir to the crown of
France did nothing to punish
cowardly fear of the Church,
desirable to lose their claim to
Dr. Jean Fernel, which is to be
tains information in the primi-
also the relationship of Zenobia,
daughter of Fna Bahman and
line of their common ancestors
of God, which line the Jesuit,
in the Works of Cousin Rev.
keeps the exact number. He
of which a few were Arabic,
tian, Latin, Sanskrit, e t a 1 s.
cousin, Americus Vesputius, and
Portugal, (See Plate 1037,) and
continued in Second Edition.
ancestors not only went under a
ographers of the King, but was
Catholic Church, or Vatican:
features of Dr. Jean Fernel: and
same by our American Roman
and will meddle with politics
themselves, or. Christlike, aid
ment. They ever meddle with
bloodshed.
valuable. Plate 1037 has on its
indicative of the verj' remote
work shows much light upon for
complete for the good of all.
191
^D ^ ^ ^ CH
TX
ET US RECORD THE LIFE OF DR. JEAN FERNEL IN THE WORDS AND
LANGUAGE OF HIS STUDENT G. PLANTIO: WHOSE CYPHER SCROLL
WORK GIVES HIM AS BEGOT BY CHARLES VIII AND ANNE.
-lOHANNIS FERNELU
VITA.
Scriptore G. PLANTIO Cenomano D. Medico."
"lOHANNES FERNELIUS. CLAROMONTIO oppidulo (quod vigind duxtaxat mUliaribus
a Lutetia distat natus atque ingenue cducatus, Ambianum in opcribus idcirco se pra?dicat, quod patrcm
inde oriundum habuerit.
Hie natu jam grandis quum sub trivial! magistro Grammaricam didicissct, ctiansi mater rebus cum
curisque domesticis potius, quam Uteris tarn sero destinandum contenderet, maximo literarum amore
incensus, a patre ccepit postulare, ut Eloquenti^ ac Philosophiae oferam daturus Lutetiam commigraret,
acti temporis jacturam ac detrimentum incredibili studio summoque se sarciturum polliccns. Quod
non TEgre impetravit. Noverat enim multarum rerum usu peritus senex, ut in scgetibus fertilitas ac
graviditas fututuri frugis ubertatem significant, sic literarum studia untepore expitiu, and divini ingcnii
seminaria iam ab adolen scentia, totius vits ac seneclutis in viris ornamenta praesagire. Erant tunc
temporis Lutetia in gymnasio Barbarano, praster artium liberalium doaores, innumeri ctiam juvencs
non inediocriter (ut temporibus illis) eruditi, quorum diligentia and doarina, veluti calcaribus ad
artes, qua tum erant in pretio, alacrius amplectendas incitatius, tantos in arte differindi biennio pro-
gress'us fecit, ut quam de se concitaverat expectationem, longe lateque superarit. Magisterii laurea
publico eruditionis testimonio baud multo post donatus, a gymnasiarchis certarim ad pro-
fessionem Dialectices splendis muneribus invitatus est, quibus non ante parercvoluit, quam privatislec-
tionibus and studiis se in Ciceronis, AristoteUs, and Platonis doctrina [diligentius exercuisset. Qucd
cum esset aggressus, quantum olim in constituendis suis studiis aberasset, primum animadverrit.
Nihil enim ante prater ineptas qucstiones e barbaris praceptoribus hauserat: scd illud eo aquiorc
animo tulit, juod sibi cum pluribus gommene esse, nee uUo suo, scd atatis vitio imputandum intellex-
erat. Quippe tune temporis artium omnium barbarics Academiam Parisiensem, scholarum omnium,
quas ab orbe condito floruisse legimus, prastantissimam, ita etiamnum obsidcbat; ut Grammatiei and
Rhetorcs nihil nisi barbaros Alexandros. Theopagitas, Graeismos, Theodoletos, atque cjusdem farincc
reliquosauthoresin manibushabcrent: Dialectici vero non nisi Clichtovai terminos, Petri Hispani
summulas, Bricotii Logica, Aliaque id genus opera interpretarcntur.
Quum igitur in ipso vestibuloadituque impegissct, judieavit temporis jacturam assiduo laborc dili-
genter eompcnsandem Itaque ludos, jocos, compatationes, and comessationes, scrmones ctiam omnium
penc condiscipulorum. ac familiarium, fugerc statuit, non cihi, non somni, non corporis, non valctu-
dinis, non rei familiaris rationem habere, omnia perpcti, dum Hberalium artium cognitionem assequ-
cretu'r: omne in eis studium, diligentiam, curam, indistriam adliibere, nullum prxterquam ex disccndo
voluptatem capere: arbitratus omnem horam perire, qua in bonorum authorum lectione and studiis
non coUocaretur: tanta in illius animo insitarat discendi cupiditas, tantus cognitionis amor and
scientia. ...
Hanc porro habuit instituti rationem. ut primo quoque tempore barbariem, quam .-vratis vitio. sub
indoctis praceptoribus hauserat, Latinorum authorum, maximeque Ciceronis lectione repur-^iret: ejus
Academicas, caterasq; potissimum de Philosophia disputationcs, and de natura Deorum, ac de
^g^DEORUM, ac de "offiiciis in id selegit, in quarum lectione aliquot menses ad dicendi facul-
mI I tatem collocavit. Celsum quoque cum ob orationis puritatem, turn ob sentcntiarum pon-
Fj^J dus habuit quam charissimum: atque etiam Platonem, cujus opera M. Ficinus Latine
reddiderat.
Sed cum Mathcmatices indoctus, in exemplis, quae ab authoribus saepe proponunter, titubaret,
inhonestum esse duxit ea parte sapienti^ vacare, qua; certior quum sit, plus admirationis habet.
Itaque distinctis and divisis studiorum temporibus, coepit ita suum ingenium excolere, ut mane
Arithmethics, and Mathematics disciplinis, a prandio vero ei Philosophia' parti qux in natura versatur
operam daret; a coena Latinos authores, Latinique sermonis observationes diligenter excuteret.
In ha-c literarum studia dum insatiabili, and indefesso labore incumbit, febre quartana tandem
corripitur, qua crudeliter ac diu conHictatus, c<L*ptum studiorum cursum iiiterrumpcre utquc salubriorc
are frueretur, solum vertere cogitur.
Profligita tandem quartana, recreatisque ruri viribus, Lutetiam redire cogitat, de deiigendo vits
genere cum amicis deliberaturus. Horum alii Theologiam, alii Mathematicas disciplinas, alii ajiam
artem proponebant, in quam reliquum vite sue cursum conferret.
Jurisprudentiam plures contendebant, and ad opes maximas, an summos honores, dignitatisque
gradus; ceteris prestare: in qua etiam facile esse dicebant cum excellere, qui singularem artium liber-
alium cognitionem sibi comparasset. At vero ille, non minus prudenter quam acute officiorum
omnium momentum ad naturam suam revocari accommodariqiie debere, niliilq; tcmcre. nee invita,
quod aiunt, Minera, sibi aggredianduin esse, contendebat. (Juum igitur solitarium se, ac tacitunium,
neque ad dicendum fatis expeditum agnosceret, facile judicavit, ne jue clamoribus forensibus, neque
sacris concionibus satis se idoneum fore: idcirco Medicinam pre ceteris artibus ac disciplinis elegit, vcl
hoc nomine, quod non ita pridem in febre quartana ejus opem sensisset.
Sed ecce dum hec cogitat, a patre literas accipit, quibus graviter conquerebatur, in unius filii studia
nimium multa jam esse impensa, alios sibi sugeresse quce equa cura fovere de beat. Itaque aut domum
se recipiat. aut que ad honeste and liberaliter vivendum necessaria sunt, aliunde petat. Quibus min-
ime exterritus, retinuit etiam pristini consilii institutum, vel quod sibi nihil posse deesse speraret, vel
quod obsequio parentem tandem flecti posse persuasum haberet.
Primum igitur, quoniam nulla re eque ut exercitatione ingenium acuitur, confirmaturque mem-
oria, Philosophiam non intra privatos parietes, sed in gymnasio Barbarano publice profiteri decrevit,
and Philosophicum curriculum emctiri, quod rudi adhuc saeculo summa cum laude, omniumque
applausu, absolvit. Interim vero Mathematicis studiis plurimum capicbatur, in quibus quantum jam
profecisset, ostendunt ipsius de iisdem disiplinis scripta olim emissa, in quibus si minus tersus, aut poli-
tus, quam in Medicis operibus, sermo videatur, tempora accusanda. Turn quippe, ut supra com-
monefeci, personabant adhuc schols omnes vicibus imperitorum hominum and Barbarorum, nee
dum politioris doctrine splendor Gallis Philosophis illuxerat.
Quum satis superque in hisce artibus, quae ad Medicinam viam sternent, opers laborisque posu-
isset, omnes meditaiones suas, omnesque ingenii nervos integrum quadriennium ad ipsam in intendit,
ita proliciens, ut illus sacris initiatus, non disputationibus solum, sed etiam publicis pralectionibus,
egregium su» eruditionis specimen ediderit. Exantlatis per bienniu primis illis scholarum laboribus,
quum permulti primas doctoratus sedes certatim ambirent, totus celebrium hujus Academic Medico-
rum ccetus, secundus illi ultro detulit, primas profecto daturus, si quantas ad disputandum, tantas ad
O
sQ e4^ e4^ f4^ D=
(i
FECTO DATURUS. SI QUANTAS AD DISPUTANDUM, TANTAS AD IN-
SUMENDUM FACULTATES HABUISSET. DOCTOR JAM FACTUS,
LUTETIAM SEDEM SIBI DELEGIT, PROPTER EXIMIAM HOMINUM,
quibus familiariter utcbatur, eruditionem, and urbis frequentiam, quorum & scientia
augeri, & exemplis infinitis illustrari poterat.
Neque enim, quod pleriquc fere omnes facimus, postquam Laurea medics decoratus est, vana &
inani eruditionis persuasione ac opinione insolescens, otiandum jam & a seriis studiis feriandum sibi
putavit, sed magis ac magis evolvendis veterum scriptis scrutandisque eorum sententiis, invigilandum. Hoc
enim (quod res est)certo sciebat, e scholasticis dispeuationibus rudem duntaxat & inchoatam haberi re-
rum cognitionem, quae manca & inutilis omnino futura sit, nisi continuato labore assiduaque vigilantia
compleatur, Itaque Philosophicas ac medicas quaestiones missas fecit, utque intcrmissam insignium
authorum lectionem continuaret, domi se aliquot annos continult.
FLOREBAT turn temporis Lutetia.- insignis rhetor, optimarum artium studiis eruditissimus. Jaco-
bus Strebaeus qui se Joanni Fernelio, quem Mathematicas artes apprime callere noverat, conjungen-
dum curavit. Itaque dum Strebaeus a Fernelio, Mathematicarum disciplinarum, Fernelius, vicissim a
Strebaso politioris literaturae cognitionem & gravem plenumque orationis stylum accipit, integrum
biennium exigitur.
Interea quamplurima Mathematices instrumenta magno rei familiaris dispendio excogi Tavit, ac-
fabricanda curavit, ne uxoris quidem (quam non ita pridem duxerat) doti parcens. Tantum in sui
admirationem & amorem mentes hominum rapit atque allicit syderum coeiestrumque rerumcontem-
platio, ut animum semel illecebris suis captum perpetua grataq; servitute sibi posteaaddicuum ac divin-
ctu retineat. Uxoris pater, virperinde prudens ac eruditus, generum srepe invisebat, nonnunquam &
convivam advocabat; quumque inter epulas non raro in Medicas disputationes incideret, oblata occas-
ione apud generum querebatur, quod Medicinae, cui totum jampridem se dediderat, nimrum oblitus
Mathematicis disciplinis adeo inhaeresceret, ut inde hactenus ilium necuxoris amor, nee liberorum
blandimcnta, nee rei familiaris, cura revocare totuerit. Mathematicaru artium cognitionem homine
quide liberali dignam esse, & per se animi causa expetendam, si quis modum adhibeat, (Sc per atatem
attingat; sed in eatanquam in Sirenum scopulisvirum probum & Republicae ScacfamiliK Scstudiosum
obdormiscere, atque consenescere, indecorum. Non enim iljam esse ad Republicae conservationem
necessariam, ut qua; quam minimum usum, nullam autem aut certe exiguam actionem ad retinendam
civium societatem, si tamen Arithmetican & Geometriam exceperis, proferat. Medicinam, sive ad
ca oculos mentesque convertimus, quorum naturas praeclara acni bili contemplatione pervestigat. sive
ejus usum commoda, & utilitatcs djspicimus' omnium artium merito praestantissimam judicari, ad
cujus cognitionem parum Mathematics discipline conferunt.
Ha-c aliaque multa ad persuadcndum efTicacissima rerum plurimarum usu edoctus Senator Paris-
icn.sis gviiero proponcbat, quibus cum iiiinime flecti vidcrctur, illc (ili;u lacrymis pcrinotus atque in-
census, querelis cum genero paulo gravioribus egit, quas nihil refert hie adscribere. Qua admonitione
6c objurgatione tandem fractus, artem Medicam majori quam unquam studio persequi cit-pit, Math-
ematicis artibus intermissis itaq; & sculptores, quos non sine magnis sumptibus jamdiu domi allebat
remittere, 6c nobiles aliqot discipulos, quos in hac habebat disciplina, alium prsceptorem qujerere
jubet, &: e conspectu turn Mathematica omnium veterum opera, tum astrolabos, & innumera alia qua-
ille jam sibi cuderat instrumenta renea, abjecit, ut totum se Medicins devoveret. Quoniam autem. a.
^^\ yUONIAM AUTEM A PRIVATA MEDICORUM AUTHORUM LECTIONE
41a -"^ MEDITATIONE MULTUM SIBI SUPERESSE TEMPORIS VIDERET, ID NE
Tin SIBI PERIRET. INTERIM DUM AD ARTIS OPERA SE COMPARARET, AD
/^^^■^ explicanda Hippocratis & Galeni scripta. qui in publicis Medicorum scholis nondum doctor
designatus olim enarrare coeperat, animum contulit, quod tanto discipulorum concursu, tan-
tnq; frequentia pra-stitit, ut paucis annis fama eruditionis ejus extra Gallia' tines transiliens, in Ger-
maniam Italiam Hispaniam, creterasque exteras Europns regiones pervolarit.A hac fanta famw celeVin-
tate etiam absentibus innotuerit.
In hoc exercitii atque docendi labore dum annos sex totos summa cum laude versatur, sensim ita
Lutetia? increbuit nominis ipsius celebritas, ut curandis regris opem ab eo poscentibus vix satis esse
posset. Ad eum namque non elves modo Lutetian!, verum exteri quoque fere omnes confugielant,
qui graviore aliquo morbo tenebantur. Quod ilium susceptam docendi provinciam intermittere ccegit.
Sed ne sic quidem Theoreticen Medicinas partem neglexit, verum quidquid otii a gravioribus rebus,
curis & negotiis dabatur, id omne in ea Medicine parte, quam Physiologiam inscripsil, commentariis &
lucubrationibus suis ijlustranda consumpsit : in quo tam egregio Opere, qualem se prjestiterit, pcsteri-
tas iivoris expers apertius fortasse prsdicabit. Primus certe, quod sciam, rudi adhuc s^cujo, ineptas
illas qurestionariorum nugas, nihil praeter spurcam fctdamq : barbariem personantes & inextricablies
argutulorum sophistarum Labyrinthos, qui rebus per se Claris densas tenebras offunderent. e Medicis
scholis expulit naturalem Medicine partem Latino sermone luculenter adeo, ac nihilominus breviter ex-
plicans, ut si quis prjeceptis institutisque Philosophise instructus, opus de ea Medicinje parte ab ipso
conscriptum non ofcitanter semel atque iterum perlegerit, tenacique memoria longa Meditatione im-
presserit, eum nihil eorum latere possit, quas de eaveteres omnes cum Graci, turn Latini & Arabes, in-
finitis voluminibus, vix semel in vita homini legendis, observatione dignum prodiderunt.
Hoc Opus typis jam excusum, ut interpretaretur, a philiatris omnibus & precibus & muneribus so-
licitatus est, quod onus, (quae erat ejus humanitas, ut prodesse vellet quamplurimis, imprimisque do-
cendo) uxore, amicis omnibus, & a'grorum curis reclamantibus, vel magno rei domestica dispendio
suscepit. In hoc vero Opere explicando annos tres strenue adeo laboravit, ut Reip. Litterarias civem
se utilissimum praestiterit, & ex schola ejus plures docti Medici, quam ex equo Trojano milites, pro-
dierint, per omnes Europs regiones atque tractus diffusi.
Interea dum hoc docendi munere summa diligentia & fide perfungifur. Opus Aliud de venje se-
candre ratione. Medico perquam necessarium, nocturnis vigiliis elucubrat, non minus quam illud tersum
& elaboratum, quod in lucem emissum mox inteipretandum suscepit.
Nee absolverat ejus commendationis explicationem, cum in gravissimo mulieris nobilissimas casu
ad aulicos quasi edicto regio rapitur. Per vagabatur enim incredibilis ad hujus imperii proceres de Fer-
nelii eruditione fama & persuasio, quasi unus esset e Gallire Mediciscalamitosi illius morbi perstrenuus
oppugnator, & impendentis mortis fortissimus vindex, malorumque depulsor, quasi Hercules Alexica-
cus: quam ille opinionem de se strenue sustinuit, ut non tam sit creditus mulierem in vita retinuisse,
quam jam profligata salute ex inferorum faucibus revocasse. Prima haec cansa fuit cur in posterum
^^ PRIMA H/EC CAUSA FUIT CUR IN POSTERUM HENRICO, GALLIARUM
jL^ REGI DESIGNATO, CUI ILLA CHARISSIMA ERAT, MAGNO SEMPER IN
T[_ PRETIO FERNELIVS HABITUS SIT, QUEM JAM INDE PRIMARIUM MED-
^^^ icum sibi delegit annuo honorario proposito, si in aulico satellitio commoratus, sure valetud-
inis curam reciperet.
Sed C|iiia eruclitionis ciuam gloria' seinpcr fiiit aviilior, tanti principis munc'ra i5>: propositos niaximos
hoiiores contemnens, nee pollicitis deliniri, nee hortatu incitari, nee aliorum Principiim & amicoruin
frec|ucntium prccibiis in aula Regia diutius potuit retineri Itaque & infirmam \aletudincin simula\it,
i5c in artis Medicw operibus nondum se satis exereitatum & versatuna ingenue confessus est, cui Prin-
cipes valetudinis sua' curam committerent. Ideirco futuri Regis majestatem 6c sunimam humanitatem
obtestatus est, ut Lutetian! Parisiorum redire liceret, in qua urbe & Cd'pta studia absohere, ^c in artis
operibus diu ac multum sese exercere posset se enim postea ik Regi, ^: Principibus omnibus, suam in-
dustriam probaturum.
Noverat enim, .k sa-pe prredicabat, frequeniem niedendi usum Magistrorum pr^cepta superare:
ncque medicos, neque iniperatores, & oratores, neque jure consultus, neque ullos alios ■artitices, C|uani-
vis artis prxcepta perceperint, quicquam magna laude dignum, sine usu 6c exercitatione consequi
posse: quod nusquam commodius quam Parisiis, turn propter doctissimorum hominum freciucntiam,
turn morborum qui isthic grassantur varietatem se posse adipisci putavit.
Itaque eos ille Medici nomine indignos semper arbitratus est, qui Medicina- pra-ceptis institutisque
cognitis, antequam in ejus operibus diu multumque in frequenti & populosa urbe sese exercuissent; 6c
multa ad perfectam morborum curationem scitu dignissima (qua ut seniores veluti per manus a major-
ibussuis acjcp:;rurit, sic, pj-iterioribus tradere nsceise est) observassent, in oppidula facienda' medicina
causa se reciperent. Etenim si vel in morbi causa pervestiganda (quod srepe fiere verisimile esc) \el m
decerncndis remediis aliquando aberrant, a quo revocentur 6c castigentur? Neque enim dissimulan-
dum, sed ingenue confitendum, in iis qui artein, c|uam protitentur, jam diu feliciter & magna cum
laude cxercent, incs,se iiescio quid, quo ceteris 6^: excellerc 61: admiration! esse \ideantur, (|U()dc|; ut ab
omnibus summopere cxpetitur, sic nee facile Uteris mandari, nee verbis lueulcnter expliearipossit, sola
observatione 6c longo usu cognoscendum.
Ouoeirca tutissimam ac brevissimam discenda Medica artis viam eum sci|ui arbitrabatur, C|ui
postquam pra.'ceptis institutisq: Philosopbia abunde instructus,fuerat, statim e terso 6c polito quodam,
eoc|ue compendiario authore Medico, primum quidquid ad humani corporis naturam exquisite eog-
noscendam neeessarium esset hauriebat; mox siiuplicium 6c compositorum medicamentorum temper-
amentum, sapores, vires, 6c facultates omnes examinabat, tum demum morborum, symptomatum,
6c signorum omnium differentias & causas addiscebat, ac tenaci memoria compleetebatur:
postremo in artis operibus cum seniore aliquo, eoq; docto, & longo jam medendi usu
perito Medico, diu nudtumquc sese excrccbat 6c quod e liliris 6c vi\a pra'ceptoris voce diili-
cissct, in ipsis agrotis observabat. Multa in thcoretica Medicin;i' parte oceurrcre, qua nisi ab eo qui
longo artis usu 6c exercitatione valeat, nee recte explicari, nic intelligi possint; neminemquee solis libris
omnibus numeris absolutum evadere putabat. Medendi usum 6c exercitationem, tanquam optimos
Medicina' interpretes, quidquid in tota arte obscurum, vel dubium tyronum ingenia retardat ac remor-
atur, luculenter aperire 6c stabilire: at ideirco in theoria minime (c|uod tamen plerique faeiunt) eon-
senescendum sit. sed ad artis opera tanquam ad optimos docendi magistros, si quis judicio valeat, sed
medico seniore 6c exereitato duce, properandum.
196
MD <^ ^ (=^ UN
f CONTRA OPINIONEM, & H^RESIM, yUAM PLERly; OMNES MEDl-
CIN.E PROFESSORES HACTENUS DEFENDERUNT, CONTRAQUE
RECENTIORUM ERROREM, QUI IN SCHOLIS NIHIL FERE PR/ETER
simplicem verborum interpretationem & inanes XtTrroXoyi'a? suis auditoribus inculcant &
obtrudiint.
Damnabat etiam eos, qui politioris orationis st\ lum ^S: lingua? cognitionem ciiriosius consectantes
non tain modum, quam copiam in dicendo quaerunt, 6c verbis ornatiorem quam sementiis illustriorem
orationem contexunt, ipsarumque rerum speculationem &: contemplationem (quarum gratia linguarum
cognitio expetiur) in totum fere negligunt. Vt enim in nummis non spectatur elegantia scvilptura-,
sed pondiis. 6- materia; ita parum referequam sitelegans onitio, dum pura cv perspicua sit, sentcntiisque
abundans. Inde enim fieri, ut facundi & diserti qiiidem plurimi, Philnsnphi vero t*l- renim Medicanim
scientia. pr.i.stantcs pauci ad mcdicinain facieiulam accederent, c|U()d multo plus opera' in liene .^- ornate
dicendo, quam in recte, tuto & jocunde medendo collocarent.
Srepe etiam audivi, quum affirmaret eos falli, & judicio pra'postero, qui in evolvendis anatomicis
libris, & in cognoscendis simplicihus medicamentis, ad extremum usc|ue senium desudarent, nullum
interim nee a-grum inspicientes, nee qua' a veteribus prodita sunt in a-gris obsei^antes. lUe satius esse
ducebat, eorum aliquo, C|ui de re anatomica docte pariter, X: polite ac nihilominus brcviter perscripserunt
se'iiel at(|ue iterum pcrlccto, i^ accurate examinato, ad res ipsas in agrotis multis eognoscendas &;
explorandasdescendere, quam in conciliandis tot dissentientibus inter se scriptoribus (jam enim plures
fere anatomici libri, C|uam a'uroti reperiuntur, & plures herbarii scriptorcs, C|uam lierbc numcrando
recenseri queunt vix bomini in viti semel legcndis, tempus ..^ atate perdere.
Linguarum auteiii peritia c|uoniam ad rerum cognitionem aditum patefacit.futuro medico utilissima
censenda, si niodo ea recte utatur, at si ob eam ita ille insoleseat, ut nee a pharmacopeia componendorum
niisccndorum(|ue medicamentorimi modum, ncc a seniore medico facienda medicine rationem discere
sustineat, sed e libris vecta sead artis apera conferat perfectam medicina cognitionem arroganier sibi
vendicans, quanto in errore versatur quantoi.agrotantium atque adeo Reip. totius damno infanit?
Ille etiam, quemadmodum eam astronomia partem, c|ua coelestium orbium motus. con\ersiones
&■ siderum ortus, cursus, atque occasus, tradit, medico perutilem semper existimavit, &■ libras editis
illustravit: ita genethliacam divinatricemq; astrologiani, qua superstitiosa quadam obsen-atione ex astris
nescio qua portenta & mendaciorum plaustra comminiscitur, quaque coelestes domos, & nulla rarione
excogatatas sedes constituens,uniuscujusque secundam & adversam fortunam ex horoscopo auguratur.ad
darios siderum motus cogressiones, aspeetus & eonjunctiones, eertos characteres & imagines eonsingit
& de futuram rerum pmssensione sese venditat, omnino damnabat, eique seolim operam dedisseconquer-
ebatur, C|uad eani fallacem incertam, .S: a vera religione alienam comperisset. Ouinetiam dierum criti-
eorum rationem minime ex vanis astrologorum commentis, qui certissimam veterum Medicorum
observationem pervertunt, & dierum decretoriorum ordinem perturhant, ineundem esse contendebaf,
etiamsi olim variis divinatricis astrologia pollicitis deceptus &: nondum in artis medica opcribus satis
versatus aliter censuisset sed speetandum morbi impetum, progressionem, committentis morbum
humoris naturam, & morem, denique abditam, & oecultam motuum natura, & eorum dierum, in
quos hi motos incidunt, sympathiam & consensionem naturaque robur. Horum enim adimadversione
quibus diebus, ex eertamine natura & morbi, repentina ad salutem vel ad mortem ad melius vel deterius
mutationes excitentur non autem ex siderum lunaque intluxu, & aspectibus, qui neque in dies criticos
ineurrunt, neque humorum hyparxin constituunt, neque criseon inclinationes etticiunt, pravideri
pradicique potest.
m: ^ p^
3 EGO IGITUR TANTI VI R I DOCTRINAM IMITATUS, VAN OS ISTOS
DIVINATRICIS ASTROLOGI/E PROFESSORES, GRAVISSIMUM VETRIBIS
MEDICIS & CCELO BELLUM INDIXISSE, DUiM SUA APOTELESMATA
vana & incerta pertinacius defendunt, coniicio; ut qui vetrum Medicorum observationibus
posthabitis, quidquid in inferioribus corporibus materia; vitio accidit pra-ter natunt ordine.id
totum syderum aspectibus & congressionibus acceptum referat, neque medicis suam constan authori-
tatem and dignitatem opinentur, nisi clades, incendia, pestes, bella, alluviones, inorborum contagiones,
xrumnas denique & calamitates, quKcunque mortalium genus dixexant, ex syderum
motibus, aspectibus, & conjunctionibus prsnuntient, & quis eorum decursus, quis exitus futurus sit,
prffidixerint; quo quid absurdius, & vero magis contrarium, dici excogitarique possit, non video.
Ingenue quidem fateor, arcana prxpotentis Dei voluntate, atque consilio, pestilentes morbos, sa-vaque
contagionis semina, ad vindicanda sceleratorum tiagitia, &: revocandos ad bonam frugem ex morum
corruptela &: vitiorum inquinamentis homines, excitari, & hue non raro immitli: nee eo inlicias,
vi &: maleficio syderum sic sa-pe arem inhci, ut non solum nobis, sed etiam brutis animantibus
morbidus aut exitiahs sit. At id quidquid est, baud divinatricis illius astrologia, quam tantopere isti
predicant, ope, sed solo eventu hactenus cognosci deprehendique potuisse contendo. Sed ad rem redeo.
Cum a designate Rege dimissionem impetrare non posset Fernelius, simulata pleuritide, &
conheta ementitaque,a Chirurgo, qui principi familiaris erat, periculi magnitudine per eum nuntiari
jubet, tanti mali causam ab animi aigritudine & mcerore proticisei; quod studiis esset abductus, ab
uxore charisque liberis distractus, a lectione revoeatus, & e Philosophiea vita in inquietam & militarem
tranquilla in aetuosam, e sedentaria & litteraria m turbulentissimam pertractus: nee, nisi conjugi,
nisi litteris, nisi suis Kgrotis, nisi coUegis redderetur, posse servari. Quibus impulsus Princeps, no
modo eudomum remisit, sed etiam, ad studia quo magis inflammaret, nihil de annuo honorario, quod
sexcentas libras Gallieas efficiebat, demit. Verum assidendi onus molestum & grave, liberalissime
remittit, asseverans eum apud se a px^ "■''''! ov fore, qui in bene medendo & sapientar prsea-
vendo ceteris prxcelleret. Grata hsc tanti Principis verba non solum ementiti morbi curationem
statim attulerunt, sed magis ae magis ad diffieilia quxq; subeunda animum impulerut.
Itaque post biduum domum reversus, interruptam libri de vena secanda.- ratione interpretationem
ad calcem usque operis perduxit. Hoc perfunctus munere, alia qua;dam Hippoeratis & Galcni inter-
pretari scripta cogitabat, idque ab co quotidianis preeibus & acclamationibus contendebant philiatri-
tomnes: sedprx asgrorum qui undique ad eum opis causa quotidie eonfugiebant, tuba, id muneris aggredi
non potuit.
Et vero he quid illi etflueret temporis, quod in communem omnium utilitatem non cederet.nocturnis
lucubrationibus insigne opus de abditis rerum causis conscripsit, in quo de rerum omnium primordiis
deque multis valde obscuris Philosophiee & theorematis. tam docte tamque apposite in utramque partem
disserit, ut reeentiorcs in hoc scribtndi genere longe imiltumuque superasse videatur.
Hujus scribendi operis ha-c fuit oecasio. Quum in veterum Philosophonmi ac Medicorum scriptis
multa ille deprehendisset non parum obscura & dubia axiomata quK ineertis conjeeturis in suam quisque
opinionem facile traheret, atq:detorqueret, sine quorum tamen certa intelligentia Medicus in magnarum
rerum ignoratione versaretur, & in ipsis artis operibus non raro hallucinaretur, ad certam eorum qua
in Physiologieis & alliis libris suis haberentur, demonstrationem, putavit proprio opere exactam
controversoruni illorum problematum tractationem suscipiendam, ne, si singulorum explicatio illis inter-
jeeta fuisset, tot ac
NTAM LONGE PETITIS DISGRESSIONIBUS PERPETU.-E ORATIONIS
CURSUS, & DESCRIPTARUM RERUM ORDO INTERRUPTUS, REBUS
PER SE CLARIS VELL'TI DENSAS TENEBRAS OFFUNDERET. HIS
quasi fundamentis iiieclicina' positis, pra'claruni atciue illustre dt niorbis opus, cui Patlio-
logia.' nonien indidit, ante paucos annos perpolivit, tandenique in lucem emisit. In hoc
c|u,Tcunque a \eteribus bene scripta, ac rationibus firmis coniprobata extant, ille retinuit: t|ue \ero
oniissa videbantur, de suo addidit, dubia stabilivit, obscura illustravit, falsa subvertit, superHua rcsecnit,
nullius unc|uam in verba juravit, ne adsurdarum sa.'pe opinionum defensor esse cogeretur.
Proxinnini erat ut cognitorum certiscjue notis deprehensoruni morboruni profligandorum nietlioduni
trnderet \'eruni ne in singulorum niorborum curationilius eadcm identideni repetere cogeretur, \- sus-
cepta.' reicognitionemvariis medicamentorum forniisinturbare, tuni siniplicium, turn compositoruni nietli-
camentorum descriptionem praMnittere decrevit. Itaque pari fide, nee minori diligentia quam qua- dixi-
mus opera, librum de medicamentorum compositione succisivis horis exaravit. In quo prater nova multa
composita medicamenta, qure longo usu efficacissima compererat, eorumque utendi modum, ea etiam
qus ex veterum prcescripto ad cjuotidianos usus in offlcinis assen-antur, diligenter examinavit, & alienis-
sima, que vel numquam, vel non nisi cariosa ad nos perveniunt, expungens, nostratia illis suffecit,
magno omnium mortalium commodo.
Solebat lUe palam profiteri, nostratia pharmaca nescio quam habere nobiscum sympathiani, omnem-
c|ue orbis partem, & suis, iisc|ue pecuHaribus, maUs affligi, i!t propriis ac peculiaribus remediis a summo
rerum omnium opifice concessis abundare. Ideoque summo in errore illos versari C|ui non nisi
peregrina, >^ longe petita, atque idcirco cara medicamenta &' commendant, ■^"'^ omnibus pra-scribunt,
Gallos quidem, quoniam postremi medicina.- cognitionem amplexi sunt multa hactenus medicamenta,
qus adversus domesticos sues hostes, morbos inquam ipsos, in illorum tinibus natura produxit, latuisse,
que nostris sint laboribus non solum in invenienda, & in usum afferenda, sed etiam literarum monu-
mentis ad perpetuam rei memoriam committenda. Et idcirco nisi praniatura morte nobis fuisset
ereptus, de nobiscum natis medicamentis purgantibus paratu facillimis, quorum omnium diligentissimus
fuerat pervistigator, opus integrum alic|uondo edidisset.
Conscriptum de medicamentorum compositione librum semel atque iterum relegendo ahsolvit;
purgantium medicamentorum non solum quantitatem ad calcukmi re\ocans, sed etiam illorum \ires
in multis regris explorans, ne C|ui(l usquam in suis scriptis reperiretur, cujus vires in multis non essent
comprobata\
Quod duni illefac'it quidc|uid de simplicium medicamentorum temperatura, ac viribus in primis
scitu dignum veteres Uteris consignassent, id ego ipsius hortatu ex eorum monumentis excerpsi, & in
unum contuli. Quod dum ille postea accuratius examinaret atque relegeret, parentheseos (.)notam
post descriptum singulorum temperamentorum passim interseruit, suam de unoquoque sententiam
interjecturum, & quas in singulis deprehendisset singulares atque eximias vires a veteribus minime
animadversas, in omnium mortalium usum atque utilitatem aliquando se explicaturum conhdens. Et
sienim Reipublicae, literariffi& communis omnium utilitatisin primis erat studiousus, nolebat tamen qus
ad complures dificiles & pervicaces morbos multo labore, longoque medendi usu, sibi comparaverat
insignia & valde effacacia remedia, statim omnibus innotescere, sed ea veluti arcana & apprjra sibi
reservanda putabat, dum editis libris ea a se excogitata & in usum primum allata omnes intelligerent,
haberentque gratiam. Neque enim novum est, optimum quemque duci gloria & propaganda nominis sui.
d
D=
LORIA, & PROPAGAND.T. NOMINIS SUI MEMORI.T. DESIDERIO INFLAM-
MARI.
ITAQUE NE yUIS EAM SIBI ERIPERET LAUDIS & GLORL-E OCCASl-
onem, quam tot vigiliis ac laboribus quasierat, operi de medicamentis simplicibus, in quod
totus incumbebat, supremam manum admovendam non censuit, antequam curandorum
morborum rationem Uteris tradidisset, quam codeni tempore emittere dccreverat.
\'erum enimvero dum haec animo cogitabai, ecce Henricus Galliarum Rex salutares ejus cunatus
S; omnia consilia interturbat. Hie enim jam ante annos aliquot, mortuo Francisco patrc, iinperio po-
titus, lohannem Fernelium (quem ob singularem cruditionem & incredibilem medendi felicitatem ve-
hementer amabat, atc|ue in archiatrum sibi jampridem selegerat) ad se \enire, &: valetudinis su* curam
liabcre jusserat: sed hie tantos honores pra- literis, quarum amore tiagrabat, aspernatus, id muncris
quasi hereditario jure D. Burgensi, Francisci Regis vita perfuncti, primario Medico obtigisse, deber-
ique, multis rationibus vercunde contendens, veniam a Rege tantisper impetra\erat, dum certius in
multis a'gris ea experiretur, atque probaret, qua- jam inter medendum annota\erat cum \eterum scrip-
tis parum conscntanea, vel nova ad ditficiles quosquc morbos propulsandos cxcogitavcrat. Sed demor-
tuo Burgensi quum sufficeretur, causam dicere non potuit.
Annum tunc ille quidem agebat aitatis surt circiter sexagesimum, sed cui tamen corpus erat robus-
tuni, ^: laboribus assuetum. Qua- causa fuit, ut vita ilia aulica, etsi tumultuosa, illi tamen pra inex-
haustis laboribus, quos Lutetia- per annos jam multos superaverat, gratissimus iMusarum secessus vider-
etur: in quo se a Regis principumque negotiis plus otii ad suas lucubrationes, quam Lutetis a civium
curis h,ihiturum speraret. Neque profecto sua spe excidisset, nisi renovata sa-vissima bella, qua- jam-
diu Galli adversus Hispanos & Anglos contintnter gerebant, Rcgem, qui Fernelium a se nunquam
dimittcbat, sell quocunq: proticisceretur secum ileducebat, m )do castra sequi, modo in banc, \el in
illam regni partem, in quam maxime hostes arma sua converterent, prasidii in ea vel coUocandi, vel
contirmandi causa, commeare ca-gissent.
Setl ne in tot quidem tantisque i)CCupationbius diem ulkun absque linca sibi etfluerc aut elabi
pas.-^u^ est Fernelius Siquidem fcbrium curandarum rationem in peregrinatione ca-pit describcre,
eamq; fere jam delineaverat, quuni Rex Icium portum maritimum ( Calctuni dicunt ) nuinitissimum,
Anglis I qui eum ceiitum jam annos occupabant) sa-vissimo hyemis frigoribus armis ereptum, secum
pcrtraxit.
Inde re\ersus, uxorem ociosa- & sedentaria' vita- deditam, secum in fontis Belaii regiam sociam
pcrduxit, quam marentem se a suis avelli, paucos post dies febris continua, eaqi>e acutissinia corripit:
qua crudeliter jactata, die tandem morbi \icesimo pbrenetica convulsaque moritur.
Hie quam nemoomni ex parte sit beatus, facile fuit intelligere. Nam qui in calamitatibus, quas
non raro illi in vita prater animi sententiam accidisse memini, gravem, constantem, 6>; forteni viruni
hacteiuis se pra-stiterat, hoc uiio uxoris sua- casu ita repente perculsus ac prostratus est, ut ante duotle-
cinumi ab ejus funere diem ex summo animi ma-rore ^ angustia in febrim inciderit continuam.
Lutetia Parisiorum tum agebat Rex Henricus; ad quem quum renuntiatum est, Johannem Fernelium
febre continua discruciatum jam acdebilitatum jacere, ejus vicem sane quam graviter molesteque tulit,
& medicos alios sibi charos scdulo adhortatus est, ut ejus valetudinem curarent diligenter. Illud addi-
dit, se baud posse sine gravi animi md-rore ejus viri jacturam facere, quo \ivo \ix unquam se moritu-
rum credidisset. Itaque aulici, & celeberrimi quique medici, in eo in\isendo mutuas operas conferre
ccL-perunt. Hie interim minime malos Medicos
+
n~=
^^^IMITATUS EST, Oil IN ALIENIS MORBIS PROFITENTUR SETENERE MED-
14 ICIN.t SCIENTIAM IFSI AUTEM SIBI MEDERI NON SATAGUNT: SED
\f^ MOX UT FEBRE PREHEXSUM SE AMMADVERTIT, PRIMLM EJUS
^^^ causam pervestigare, ^: nioreni ohservare, i5c minima ciua>que syniptomata quid porrenderent
pra-videre, & ut semel dicam, qua' ad ejus cugnitionem aut curationem facere viderentur, e.\-
cutere; deinde remedia erficacissima comparare, medicoruni qui iiji c|iiotidie aderant, de his oninilnis
opiniones rationi consentaneas cogere cct pit.
Et me herclead septimum hujus morbi diem cum u— inclarescent, ^; febris symptomata omnia
multo leviora facta essent, qui illi opem ferebant medici, fcliceni exituni una cum agro fxpcctabant.
\'erum ad undecimum mirum in nitKlum e.xasperata sunt (imnia, ide(ic|ue a-ger u — cruditatc, atque ali-
oruin sympttiuiiituni s.vvitia pcrnuitus, ac mortis metu peroilsus, doctissiino-. Kcgi^ \ luijus urbiv Mttl-
icos aliquot in consilium adhibuit.
Hie, ut supra positum est, febre quartana aliquando contlictatus fuerat, & toto vita= curriculo non
solum \ino oligophoro ac|ua abunde diluto usus est, sed etiam extra pasius, astate frigida potu sitim ,so-
litus erat, unde lien non parum Ixsus videbatur. Inde enim acoris cujusdam sensus ori ac faucibus in-
tegrum jam bienniu inerat, C|ui nuUis remediis discuti potuerat. Quum ergo causa- quadam externa-,
haque graves ai.lmotluni, acerbissimum mn-rorem attulissent, superveniente uxoris obitu, quo cmnia
exasperata sunt, humor in liene coUectus tandem incalescens, atque putrescens, intlammationtm ejus
visceris pepcrit: unde <5c febris accensa est continua, qua scnsim intre^ccns, ita natuia \ ires i n.nes at-
trivit, ut eum decimo octavo die nobis immatura mors su^tulcrit anno atatis n a septuagesimo secundo,
Christi* 1557 ( "Natus ergo anno Christi 14S5." ) Nam causam interitus ex anatome pervestigantes, e
lienis intlaniniatione perniciem manasse judicavimus, quum 6c valde tumidum & prortus lividum ac
virescens id \iscus esset, & scalpello dissectum magnam saniei instarpicis rigerrirra- copiam profuderit.
Hie certe ad morbi diem decimum quartum C|uun-i salutis sua- spem in angusto esse pra\ideret, se
prapropera morte tarn celeriter rapi graviter indoluit, non quidem vita, ut dicebat, desiderio. i satis
enim natura, satis gloria\ satis etiam uxori demoriva, i-ati!C|ue liberis \i>trat) <«d Peifub. 'ittifiie,
atque adco Medicina causa; cui ut prcdesset, cmnes corporis vol u plates at que valet udinem nihil feet rat.
Hie dolor hominem pracipue angebat, hffic cvra sollicitabat, qucd thersptuiica pcsirena N!ecicira
parti, in c|ua multum diuque versatuserat, quan:que suisinventis pkirimum !rcup!etare pr lerat, exirtn tm
manum non addidisset. Nee veto (quod Plinius de Apelle, qui imperfectum \'eneris corpus ac rude
Cois reliquit, memoria- prodidit ) qui ineeptum, opus excoleret, prcpagaret, absolveret, inxenii s est. In-
choata ab eo opera Guillelmi Plantii tidei commissa sunt, de C|uibus alias.
loannis Fernelii nunciata mors gravem Regi, Regina, ac auHcis proceribus moerorem attulit.
Non enim potuit non graviter ferre tarn Celebris Medici jaeturam humanissimus Rex Henricus, cujus
opem toties persenserat, quern tot strenuos milites praclarosque duces a morte revocasse, tot hominum
millibus auxiliares manus porrexisse viderat: rec minus reliqui Prircipes, qui ejvs exf er:tr.iifm in
gravissimis suis domesticorumque suoruin morbis annos viginti perspexerant.
Hie ec|uidem non tam sibi, quam horninum saluti, ac posteritatis commodis natus, nullumremittens
tempus, nee se ipsum respiciens, quod interdiu pra- agrorum ad se confugientium multitudine scriptis
mandare non poterat, id ne brevissimis quidem noctibus parcens, vel magno valetudinis sua- dispendio
elucubrabat. In illustranda physiologia, & pathologia quum.
/^•V^UJUS S.-ECULI SCRIPTORES UMNES FACILE SUPERARIT, OUII) ILEUM FAC-
Ant '^^'^^^"^ FUISSE PUTETIS, SI QUAM ANNOS TRIGINTA TAN TA LAUDE,
i£Fl TANTO OMNIUM APPLAUSU, IN TANTA .EGRORUM TURHA LUTETL-I-:
J exercuerat, curutricem Medicina- partem inventis suis illustrare fata voluissent? Sed ea est
niiscriarum humanarum \icissitudo, Lit neminem ad summum asccndere, aut vt)tis omnibus su is satis-
facerc patiatur.
Quum Lutetia- medicinam facere ccepit, jampridem in summi) pretio hahebantur docti alic|U()t
medici. qui eum in ipsis principiis deterrere atque remorari conati sunt, quibus non multo post, fato
nescio quo, morte immatura de medio sublatis, superstes Fernelius, aliis paimam brevi praripuit.
\'nu,s Flexelius jam bene audientem & promeritum de civitate, vel obscurare, vel opprimere cogi-
tavit. Ouum enirn uterque arcanorum Medicince sacrorum summus princeps &; mystagogus esse &
haberi cuperet, in eaque arte excellere in primis prreclarum & illustre existimaret: in eo conatu tanta
facta est contentio, ut interillos benevolentia servari non potuerit. Flexelius namque gloria; avidissi-
mus, cujusdam ffimulationis stimulis impulsus, cum Fernelium, a quo nullum amoris, nullum studii,
nullum benevolentia- otRcium desiderare poterat, reliquorum hujus urbis medicorum, c|ui ilium atate
auteibant, 6c auram popularem jam ante ejus adventum consecuti fuerant, diligcntiam atque famam,
non solum adxquare, sed etiam longe lateque superare cerneret, ejus conatihus sese obiicere, atc|ue pro
virili provectam ejus famam & existiniationem extinguere constituit.
Arrepta inde ansa, quod Fernelius in cacochymia plenitudinisexpertce sanguinem abunde mitti non
pateretur, purgatione contentus, quae peccantem duntaxat cacochymiam detrahit, quum \ena sectio
non solum cacochymiam, sed omnes humores equabiliter magna sspe virium jactura cvacuet, atque
turn maxime incommodet, cum obstructione jecoris, 6c mesenterii, & caloris insiti, aut ventriculi imbc-
cillitatc, (quod fere tit) contrahitur cacochymia, ut in quodam ictero, in cachexia, 6c leucophlegmatia.
Flexelius enim 6c in omnibus febribus, quas putridus humor accendit, 6c in plerisque aliis morbis a ca-
cochymia ortis, sanguinem audentius ac sapius mittebat, etiamsi nulla inerat plenitudo.
In quo uterque sua sententie nimium inharere visas est. Fernelius quidem, quod parcius 6c reli-
giosius sanguinem detraheret, neque semper quum opus esset. Flexelius autem, quod sapius atque
ultra modum mitteret in omni fere morbo, frigido pariter ac calido, aliis medicis frustra obluctantibus:
unde vires in multis sic sape prosterni atque labefactari vidimus, sicque spiritus 6c nativum calorem dis-
sipari, ut vel repentina mors, vel gravis 6c periculosus alius affectus consequeretur.
Verum ciun Flexelius nee scriptis nee disputationibus publicis auderet Fernelium adoriri, convitiis
ingenuo 6c liberali homine indignis cum eo absente agere coepit. Que quum Fernelius nihili faceret,
it:i Flexelius exarsit, ut ilium, qui 6c praleetioiiibus publicis 6c editis libris singulareiii suani eruilitioneni
orbi jam universo patcfccerat, hominem ignarum, impostorem 6c circulatorem dicere non sit veritus.
Sed hie tamen nulla in Flexelium maledicta vel lacessitus retorquere unquam voluit, nee ei obtrectare,
6c de ejus fama detrahere. Si quando de Flexelio, ejusque in se maledictis, ab aliquo mentio tieret, me-
liorem ei mentem precari solebat: & ad egros curandos si quando cum illo vocaretur, negabat per sus-
peeta negotia, 6c occupationes serias, id sibi liccrc.
Non paucis Fernelius ejusdem ordinis parum gratus extitit, sed potius invisus, quod domestica re-
media, qua amicis periclitantibus exhibebat, non pateretur vulgo in otficinas abire, sed domi vel ipse
c] ■4=' '4=' '4=' D o
/•j^T "SED DOMI \'EL IPSE COMI'ARARET, \'EL AMICORUM FAUCORUM
JL^ FIDEI COXCREDERET. gUODTAMEN ANTE SE NEMINI VITIO DATUM
TJ^ ESSE COMPERIO.
Sed cie liis plus satis. lam quern teniierit studiorum niodiim, exquo Lutcti.T medicinam
facere cci'pit, paucis, perstrinf^enduni.
lampridem apud Gallos invaluit consuetudo, ut quando intima; sortis homines in morbum, inci-
dunt, u — confestim ad medicum deferendam curent, e qua ille non solum, quamdudum agerdecum-
hat, quo morbi genere teneatur, qua- pars in eo pra^cipue laboret, quaq; symptomata crudelius ilium
discrucieiit, sed ejus etiam sexuin iSc aTatem internoscat, ac nuntio referat. randeiiique accommndata
remedia decernat. Hoc jam olim vulgo persuaserunt scelerati quidam impostores empirici, qui medici
nomen ac dignitatem falso 6c impudenter sibi arrogantes, populo eruditionem suam ita venditabant, ut
eum dicerent medici nomine indignum, qui spectata u — , cum affectiones corporis pra.ter naturam
omnes, tum animi etiam perturbationes non posset assequi. Ex horum ofiicina prfficlari illi, & Rei-
publica- (si Diis placet) non parum utiles, de u — cautelis libri prodiere, quibus rudis adhuc medicus
instituitur,, acute excogitatis inanium verborum labyrinthis, eorum qui ad se u-deferrent, mentes 6c ju-
dicium ita eludere ut tametsi temere, confuse, & fortuito nulta symptomata proponat, & enumeret, si
forte tamen \el unicum, de quo a.'gcr conquerebatur, attigerit, illi statim recte eum conjectasse, & ex
u-totam morbi historiam intellexisse arbitrentur.
Recepta- igitur Medicorum consuetudini, licet iniqua- 6c depravat.v, morem gerens Fernelius, ab
u-inspectione medicinam facere cttpit. Mane siquidem ad quartam fere horam experrectus, e lecto
prosiliens m bibliothecam descendebat, ibique vel e veterum scriptis quidpiam de quo sibi non satisfa-
ceret, vel cujus non satis meminisset, percurrebat, vel ipsealiquid commentabatur, dum illucescens dies
ilium ad publicas prslectiones, vel ad invisendos a?gros prodire cogeret. Interimque adferebantur u-:
omnes ille inspiciebat, &; de lis quid sentiret paucis prxfatus, remedia instituebat morbi causrc, 6: a-gri
natura, quantum conjectura coUigere poterat, consentanea.
Domum ad cibum reversus, interea dum prandium apparabatur, in bibliothecam, atque rursus
sumpto prandio in eandem se abdebit, dum illi in urbem ad sua negotia esset redeundum. Non alio
ante ca'nam interim dum mensa instruehatur, nee denique alio post cfrnam se recipiebat, ad horam
noctis undecimam: quo fere tempore capitis gravitas somnum ilium capessere cogebat. Hanc quidem
tenuit studiorum ac vita rationem annos amplius trigiiita, 6c eas in studiius progressiones semper ha
buit; Omnia animi 6c corporis oblectamenta pra- litterarum studiis, & medica artis exercitatione, pro
nihilo ducens: ut nulla vite pars neque publicis, neque privatis, neque medicis, neque domesticis, in
rebus vacasse otficio videretur. Si quern forte ad cofnam vel prandium aliquando invitaret, ab eo neque
turpe, neque inhonestum ducebat, aliquanto post sumptum cibum studiorum causa se surripcre.
Uxoris hortatu pra-dium Pentinianum, annis aliquot antequam e vivis abierit,comparavit, ad quod
colligendi animi gratia e turbulentis urbis Huctibus tanquam in tranquillum ptirtum se aliquando recip-
eret. V'erum vix semel aut bis in anno eo proticisci voluit. Erat enim hoc robore animi, atque hac
indole virtutis, & conticentie, ut respucret omnes voluptates, omnemque \ite sue cursum in labore cor-
poris atque in animi contentione conficeret: quem non quies, non remissio, non aqualium studia. non
ludi, non convivia delectarent, nihil in vita expetendum putaret, nisi quod esset cum laude. &- honore"
II ■ g
/^^ & CUM DIGNITATE CONJUNCTUM. NIHIL QUE EX OMNIBUS REBUS
/ J HUMANIS PRyECLARIUS AUT PR^STANTIUS HABERET, QUAM DE
\j [^ REPUBLICA CHRISTIANA BENE MERERI, AFFLICTIS OPEM FERRE,
^^^ periculis aegrotos liberare, succurrcre omnium saluti, suamque salutem posteriorem salute
communi ducere, denique intercludere omnes morborum vias. Quippe tantus aegrorum
numerus ad eum confugiebat, ut per totam fere lestatem stans prandere cogeretur: neminem qusntum-
libet pauperem a se abire dimittebat morbi quo angeretur ignarum, remediisque ad eum profligandum
destitutum. Quod si ilium nonnunquam de curanda corporis sui valetudine, deque nocturnis studiis
intermittendis, commonefacerem, & ad quiescendum cohortarer; (erat enim somni parcissimus)
responsum in promptu habere solabat, Longa quiescendi tempora fata dabunt.
Quanquam autem vultum ille prae se ferebat Philosophicum, severum, ac tristem, quumtamen ad
aegros accederet, subridendo se hilarem prjebebat, blandeque ac comiter illos vel de minimis symptom-
atis interrogabat, dum & morbi causam, & afFeaam partem, perspectam habcret: atque baud scio an
uUus tarn obscurus morbus ei unquam occurrerit, cujus scaturiginem ac naturam statim non agnoverit;
an unquamtam implicita, tamque varia symptomata proposita sint.quae non statim ad peculiares morbos
tanquam ad suos fontes revocarit; tanto, tamque acuto, & perspicaci ingenio, judicioque praeditus erat.
Ille aegrum, vel moribundum, ac deploratum, deterrebat nunquam, sed semper in salutis spem
erigebat: occultorum necdum plane cognitorum morborum prsedictiones ambiguis & obscuris verbis
involvebat, que alii in aliam partem deflectere & interpretari possent: vixque initio quicquam de horum
eventu, nisi ex hypothesi asseveranter pronunciabat. In diuturnorum prassensione vix unquam falle-
batur: futurum exitium tristi vultu, moesta & clangosa voce laborantis amicis metuendum infinuabat:
praevisam salutem hilari fronte, & jucunda oratione, pronuntiabat. Aliorum medicorum calumnias
nunquam ridebat, recognoscens, sibi & bonis omnibus similes quotidie impendere.
Quemcunque aegrum ingenio prastantem curandum invisebat, siquidem morbi vehementia pateretur,
& per negotia liceret, post intellectam morbi causam, & descripta remedia, familiarem cum eo sermonem
aliquandiu conferebat, cum Philosophis Philosophica, cum Mathematicis Mathematica: cum ducibus,
ac militibus, de urbium situ, dc rtuviiseas alluentibus, deque instrumentis bellicis, & eorum inventoribus,
de arte militari: cum nautis, de navigandi ratione, & regionibus nuper repertis: cum Theologis, de
Deo, ac coelestibus: cum mercatoribus, de negotiiis: ut afflictos omnes consolaretur, Cc jacentes
extolleret, confabulationes iniens. Sermones, & colloquia plane Philosophica, & nimium severa,
salibus ita aspergebat, atquecondiebat, ut ab omnibus coleretur, i5c observaretur, 6c tamen urbanus
facetusque videretur.
Corpore erat satis procero, ac robusto, sed quod nephriticus dolor acerbissimus, quater aut
quinquies quotannis repetens, non parum debilitaverat, color faciei livescens, ac plumbeus, pilus
nigerrimus, isque multus.
Quod ad animi mores pertinet, si quando iracundiam exerceret, mox cohibebat: semper fere cogit-
abundus, subtristis, ac taciturnus erat: nemini sua confilia communicabat, suspecta habcbat omnia :
attentus quideni ad rem familiarem, sed in suos beneficus, & liberalis.
Quandiu cum eo vixi ( vixi autem integrum decennium) lucrum annuuni sa;pe duodecim librarum
Gallicarum millia excessit, vix unquam infra decem substitit.
204
w
N jEAX PER NFL
ANCIENT AND
WFIO WAS THE GREATEST
MODERN TIME EULOGIES.
AN D BEST MAN OF
SIMON PONCETIVS
Meloduncnfis Dodor Medicus ad
Lectorem.
laSlii Arabs Crajuf^Mt fnoi : FemeliM arter/t
Lampadt perluftrat fplindidiore tibi.
Abdiitt nam radians in apricum /insula proferi,
Et ijuicqHidfolidumpnUhrior ttfm habit.
Phabm erat. Sed mox qunm Gatlu imminct atro
Turbine feditio ,proh dolor ! eripitiir.
Anap. tot PIBATAHAIOT
Bi;8Auv, *ip»(>;iir «iittio l■m:oxfa^>l(,
Hllti ^' lucupamt TmXluii JjaeJc df/ttufof*
RENATI GERVASII IN PRIMO
Gallis Senatu Caufarum Pauoni . dc
Joanne Fetnelio Medico.
Hippocratem rtatura parens mor'taUhsu oiim
Edidit, ipfafiium ijuo retineret opM.
Hoc diice longafmi, magna ratione medtrtdi.
Vita hominKm. Tandem FerneltHmque dcdit.
QuojnedicoDoHore volat tua, Gallia gemes:
Tama per ignotM.Omnibiuille falm.
Jam vero ipfe Deiu, tangos ut carperet annos,
Ferne/inm (jr terns, tjitem dedtrat, rapmt.
(iA«tiqisitas iltiim Naturd laudibM: iifdem
Noflra celebrabum fecnU Ferneliiim.
EI2 iriAK. OEPNEAION
I»fj;9o»< itfilXin 'aiXot avxnt tiU/iit cuHiie
Kei>0J0ffs ?li5( afxio'^t't fia(n\ei.
Tiff ap uiiiitxnliint o, t»'c f> j^ajnnf itliQf
2i'« a'oiS'ottiyt friy ii x^"< >^'i'f' •o^J«.
IN lO. FERNELIVM.
l^aturam melius , morbos , mcdicamina, canfm
Nemo tKodocnit, <jalIia,Fernelio.
IN EVNDEM.
fujferat fatnici myfleria 'Deltus ariU
Scribere: Ferneliusfcripjit, & occuhnit.
IN EVNDEM.
Hippocrates moriens arcanum credidii artU,
Fernttto: hnicfama par fit & ingenio.
Efayas Fabius.
ITIS TCiN fATPIKflTATOM ♦EPN^AIOM.
ltme«/iaT»c ixtfiSf^fi^i , luj Twfi TaXtwof,
ToTt fiH *if»/>iiot V af/awaVS fife,.
latH Atturiv tit lapanLjui,
Inlo-pERNiLivM Mcdicum.
t/implii grande fophos buccps dr nomtna mde^
Tnrba frvercUo fUblato lurgida jaaei.
MifatU hoc, toto Medicus quod comprobor trhi^,
Anto.Fayvs.
EPITAPHIVM
lOANNIS FERNELII
Proiit lejjiter in Aede Divi Jacohi ad Lanieiiam Farisiis.
See Chart First & Srcnnrl Edifiou.'i
m
^=Mii
ANKIND'S CHILDREN AND THEIR POSTERITY ARE BLESSED BY
ANCESTORS' GOOD DEEDS.
VIRORVM CELEBRIVM -
DE FERNELIO IVDICIA
SCAEVOLA SAMMARTHANVS
ELOGIORUM LIB. I.
AMBIANUS ager unde Silvius & ejus' praeceptor Tagautius prodiere, tertium quoque Medicina;
lumen, & quidem caeteris limpidius, nobis extulit, Johannem Fernelium, virum singularem ac plane
divinum. Cujus admirabili genio id contigit, quod a multis saeculis nulli, quamlibet erudito, contigissc
memini, ut ipso vivo atque vidente, opera quae de Universa Medicina scipsit, in scholis publice
legerentur: ejusque auctoritas, veterum Scriptorum instar, apud optimum quemque rei mediae magistrum
gravissimi esset ponderis & momenti. Neque sane injuria: fuit enim in illo viro praeter summum
eloquentiae candorem non solum Medicina, sed & Mathematicarum artium totiusque naturae tanta vis
tantaque cognitio, ut prodigii cujusdam id fuerit simile. Neque vere fuit hoc minus mirandum, quod
& ejus virtuti fortuna ipsa bonis ut plurimuminiqua, non defuit. Nam & Lutetie sanandis aegris operam
priebens rem egregie fecit, & ab Henrico II in regiam accersitus principem inter ejus Archiatros locu
tenuit. Eo felicis operae proventu, ut quod a natura negatum esse videbatur, anis beneficio consecutus
invisamsterilitatem a domo Regia repelleret, Valesiumq; nomen optata generosae prolis accessione
propagandum curaret. Periit ex moerore, quern carissimte uxoris importuna mors aegro invalidoquc
scni attulit 6 Kal. Maias illius anni quern Poeta medicinae studiosis non insulse notavit his numeris.
ConlVge FerneLIVs rapta perCUI^Vs, Vt aVLre,
Ut LUCIs satVr, Vt noMInIs, Interllt.
JAC. AUG. THAUNUS Historiarum Lib. 2\.
FUit & hie annus (CIC IC LVIII) doctrina illustrium Virorum morte insignis, nam XII. Kal.
Aprilis &'c. Et sexto post die apud nos (obiit) Joannes Fernelius, Ambianensis, cum Lxxii. annos
exegisset, Regis Archiatros, Lutetiae ad B. JACOBI in macello sepultus. Qui cum plureis annos in
Philosophicis&mathematicisstudiissummacum laude exegisset, demum se Medicins totum mancipavit:
quam & feliciter fecit, & universam doctissimis & politissimis scriptis complexus est: qua- etsi morte
praeventus non edidit omnia, ut nee propriarum Observationum desideratissimos libros; tamen veram
gloriam iis quje publicata sunt Europa tota est adeptus, ut tanlo vito disciplira use alun no fchola
Medicinse Parisiensis aeternum sit jure gloriatura.
JOH. CRATO aKRAFTHEIM,Ioachimo Camerarioapud Scholt Zium, Epist. 110.
De Fernelio hoc dixisse Fallopium, Fernelio hoc tempore attribui palmam in re medica, ctiam
illius Eemuli non negare posse, & Italos, qui suo more magnos viros obtrectationibus volunt premere,
necessario agnoscere, Fernelium sumnium hujus a;tatis Philosophum & Medicuin: velle tamen minus
eum fuisse audacem in reprehendendis veteribus. Vide quam Fallopii judicium cum tuo consentiat."
m
JOH. CRATO. A KRAFTHEIM, C/ESARE.£ MAJESTATIS ARCHIATROS,
ANDREW VVECHELO TYPOGRAPHO DE FERNELIO RURSUS IN LUCEM
PROFERENDO, ETSI QUJE AD PRIORA NUNC FIAT ACCESSIO, IGN-
orem, tamen cum ipsum autorem ante annos XV publico scripto probaverim, studium quoq ;
tuum magnopere probo; & etiam nunc in ea sententia maneo, semperque mansurus sum,
prsclare Fernelium de universa Medicina esse meritum, nee me ab ea (licet hoc quidam facere con-
ati sint) dimoveri patiar. Nam cum ante anos octo Plantius publice scripsisset, Fernelii opera me in
meis scriptis adjutum: fuisse quosdam memini, qui parem hoc ad existimationem meam pertinere ex-
istimarent, verum tantum abest ut moleste hoc feram, ut Plantio etiam demortuo gratias agam, qui
mei honorifice hoc in loco mentionem fecerit. Nam si meum libellum integre legit, baud dubie,
a?quissimo animo tulit, in quibusdam me a Fernelio dissentire, atque abortum istum (sic enim vere
Isngogica nostra appello) non omnino improbavit: si epistolam saltern quam prsposui inspexit, nimium
bonam de me hahuisse opinionem necesse est. Cur igitur de illius facto male sentiam, aut quod re
ipsa verum esse statuam, verbo negem. Ego vero utilem mihi fuisse lectionem scriptorum Fernelii
ex animo profiteer, & hunc in Medicina profecisse, cui Ferneliana non displicent, statuo. Esse
quaedam .*>: a pervulgatis opinionibus, & usitatis magnorum autorum sententiis, in arte nostra dis-
crepantia, in itis non ignoro, & a doctis in disceptationem non pauca vocari intelligo. Verum quin
prsstantissimis viris, qui contra Fernelium disputarunt, idem quod mihi evenerit, ut cum in ea inquir.
erem (id quod ii fecisse me, qui nostra legerunt, sciunt) plurimum in disquisitione erudiar, non du-
bito. Vidi Victoris Trincavella; prs^clarissimi Medici doctrinas quasdam in quibus acriter, modeste
tamen, cum Fernelianis rationibus pugnat. Sunt & a Fallopio ingeniosissimoquadam vehementer, ut
hominis natura ferebat, dicta. Sed illos ipsos quos ingenio & magno artis usu excelluisse sciunt
omnes, utilissima scripta Fernelii censere manifestum est. Rondeletius parum sfquum se illi epistola
ad me prolixe scripta ostendit. Cum enimillius sententiam de mea Isagoge exquirerem, ut in Ferneli-
ana animadverteret, praecipue eum occupari, nemini est obscurum. Idem ab aliis Gallis factitatum
audio. Verum ista smulationis, qus rivalitati similis perhibetur, vis est. Evenire in Italia idem
summo viro lohanni Baptistae Montano prsceptori meo doleo, & nuper animi mei sensum Clarissimo
Medico Hieronymo Mercuriali patefeci. Verissimum autem est, scripta, ac potrus excepta (5c di-
vulgata, illius nomen minime illustrare: verum si recte reputare volumus, ad istum modum cogitata
esse, ut plurimos qui deinceps scripserunt, 6c nunc quoque docent, pneclare adjuvarent, licet hic
dissimulent, apparebit. Sed de Fernelianis agamus. Memini, cum ante viginti octo annos Physio-
logica Fernelii prodiissent, & Argenterius sua quoque proferret, Montanum vehementer Fernelii,
atque adeo omnium conatum, in dilucidandis scriptis veterum probasse, &: nimio Argenterii reprehen-
dendi morbo, quern ille prodit, graviter ofFensum esse. Bassianum vero Landum virum ingeniosum,
& philosophicis studiis atque elegantioribus litteris in primis politum, quem post meum ex Italia dis-
cessum atra dies abstulit, cum forte ad me venisset, & apud me Fernelii librum impulissct, totum
cupide domi sue perlegisse, mihique illius judicium exquirenti hoc respondisse; Gallus iste ingenii &
doctrine luce atque ordine nobis Avicennam veltotum obscurabit, vel ut multos illius errores videamus,
faciet. Vere Bassianum judicasse, nee minus Fernelium quam Avicennam de arte Medica bene
mereri voluisse, monumenta ingenii, volumtatis speculum sunt. Quanto autem illustrius & evidentius
omnia in Fernelio quam Avicenna appareant, qui non perspicit, ille sua quadam persuasione cacus
A
THOMAS jORDAWS .le Pestc. Cap. la.
lOHANNES FERNKLUS, AMIJIAM'S IN ARTK MKDICA X()N AI.I
gUAM HERCULES IN' AL-iW.KsrAIULo REIT RC AN DO, I NIXERSOV
tempure. Cx quidcm telici^Mmc occup.itus. Munumcnia sinyularcm raramquc i-ruditi-
tL-niliml, iiuaiii lungci intLivalln l.mlu^ .|iii humIu vcI oliiii scTil)Scrc a Uk^u rili'iuc-ri
EER
V[.h
nullus cquideni illi par, nedur
iupt
jur
jnqL
tanta dextentate,
elegantiaque dissipata, ne dicam confusa, dispersaquc hinc inde, vast;t artis volumma in cumpe
redegit, ut nee quud intermissum dcsideres, iicc quod supi-rlluum resects, vi.\ quod reprehendas
ipse. Ouaprupter nostri seculi phijtni.x non indecuru elogio quibustam appellatus fuit, cujus vi
tern utinam fata illi concessissent plur'mus utiquc relicturus fiitrat purissirra- limpidissimaque :
ginis suae perennes rivulos. quibus horti Medici saluberrima irrigatiime aspersi fructus non ab>
edidis-~ent. Attamen volumma c|Ua- e.\tant, lamam numenque illius a-ternitati perpctua janu
consecrarunt, (|uare prastitcrit. pede revocatu, nihil quam pauca de ejus laudibus dicere, v\- qui
maximus volitat per ora virum.
nons-
■acita-
c;Muri
iniiles
udum
a jam
JOH. HE\'RN1\S de Sudio Medico Cap. 5.
\'num ex hujus temporis Scriptoribus \'eteidius addo, dcctissimum Fcrnelium, -qui Arabum duciuni
non sine Gra.'Corum demonstrationbus secutus fuit. Ejus Itcticntm laudo: non modo cum jam dictis
auctoribus conleratur, locaque annotentur, ex quibus tuos ii\ulos liaxcnl: optima enim ex cunctis 'el-
igit, sed stare ejus aucteiitate non potis e-t nisi 1,1 i fiima dt n c nsiiafc ne '-ua slalili\it. r:uar( in iin-
tiquos suos fontes si lelundi possit, sane linipiLi.'-simam tiiman.i.,ue scicnliani paiciit. Scd ic.u:- cc
jbduci nequit. ut qui sponte interduni declinat \- abit. Cuid tunc agas' litem dirimit antiquoium de-
monstratio collate cum hujas rationibus; .S: usus, hn.c si \ icerint, excuiiantur nova tanquam anientata-
hastie. -in Eernelius qiiul melius, rclineai ur \ giatia illi ail-ci il .nil ui bl i|Ui |.onccii,i niedica ,iu.\eiit.
Sed gravis hie est auctcjr nee in primo medicina- limine pcnendus; sed a Galeno hoe potius utendum.
Qui tamcn compendiosam Medicinam nimium amat, l.i.ra Kgi.i 1 1 m |iti!cio: is tnim, ut \eiuni f.iitai.
Graeam ^- Barbaram medicinam fere uno in volumine conclusit, & incjriis locis Philosc phiam Mtdi-
cina- intulit: ut non sit necesse aliam pliysicam usibus medicis quaiere: cum ex latissimo natuia ambi-
tu fa-cunde medicum eampum irrigarit. RODERICUS a CASTRO, Lusitanus, Medici Politici Lib.
II Capi. IX quo de Medici Bibliotheca. I'einelius superioii saculo, ANerrhois ^ Avicenii.v iiicultam
dictionem aniniadvertens. eorum nomina obscurare deci cvit, edito igicgio atqiie eleganti opei e, quo
uni\ersam fere medicinam complexus est, absolute quidem, si de crisibus ,N diebus decretoriis tracta-
tiones ex Galeno aut aliunde suppleas: Ac morborum curationes ex Raza, vel Aviccnna, >.\; si no\as
aliquot opiniunes, quas interdum inserit diligenter examines.' Librum autem scripsisse videtur,
speraus fore, ut aliquando in Academiis loeo Avieenna- enarraretur, quod tandem post mortem in Ger-
mania obtinuit, nam —
Pascitur in vivis livor, post fata quiescit !
=0 %^ O
H
EVER WAS THIS ANCIENT METAL HISTORIC, MONOGRAMMIC SWORD
OF DR. fEAN FERNEL DRAWN IN A DISGRACEFUL CAUSE OR
SHEATHED IN DISHONOR. HILT 4% GOLD, MADE IN ITALY, AND
BLADE WAS MADE IN DAMASCUS. AUNT PARMELIA WAS NAMED
FOR PALM TREE ON ITS BLADE OTHER NU.MEROUS SYMBOLS ARE
A PICIURF HISTORY' O
FAM ILI KS TH US RE
SA.ME ANCESTORS AS
ON .^RD SWORD FROM
AND HISTORY CONTIN-
THAT, 2ND GEN. GEORGE
COL. TOBIAS FERNALD,
FERN ALD OF LOUISBERG
COUSIN, AND IT BEAR-
MONOG RAM S WI PH
COAT OF ARMS 711 K
S E R PENT, R APP L K
WHICH I HE UN I TED
AMERICAN REVOLU-
ERTY. See 2nd Edition for
graphs ol Ohio Mound Serpent
there engraved with the great
recording supposed lost history
■ The writer has refused the
Washington. The one helow
Alhanv, New Yoris..
THE ANCIENT FERNALD
(ORDER A FTE R P H E
OF PERSIAN ANCESTRY
THE RIGHT AS IS SHOWN
U ED ON THE SWORD
WASHINGTON GAVE TO
THE SON OF CAPT. JOHN
FAME, THAT HE CALLED
E'PH THE FERNALD
THEIR CRESTS OF THE
CROWN OF PERSIA AND
SNAKE FLAG UNDER
STATES TROOPS IN THE
TION FOUGHT FOR LIB-
full reading of them and photo-
w ith \ iews of some foremothers
mixtures of the ancient languages
of great value to all.
-um of S2,nflO for this sword of
and hi.s stafT are preser\ed at
PLATE 1043-FERNALD THREE SWORDS,
PLATE 1044-GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON'S FRENCH SWORD
209
i
ESCENDANTS OF THE FAMILY KEEP THEIR FACES AND RECORDS IN
A MOST CAREFUL MANNER TO PROTECT THEMSELVES AGAINST
CRIMINALS THAT ARE UNPUNISHED.
I. MAGDALENE LUIL-
( English for Jean) Fernel,
great expense i n making
ments by not only using all of
hers at the time became
cried and complained to her
of Paris. The good Attorney
peal to Jean to desist from the
astronomical, gynaecological,
till he acquired enough money
and then use the surplus to
benefitting mankind. This
appeal was granted.
II. MARIA COMMENUS,
FERNEL, son of Dr. (Jean)
III. Anietta de Coligny, da.
and widow of Dr. John, son
Fernel. Her mother's name,
Annietta.
IV. REBECCA, da. EMAN-
wife o f Francis J. Fernel,
Henry II, Kingof France,
went through with him, was
for saving the life of his lady
becoming aware of Jean's true
go to Court and act as his
unsuccessfully by Jean and
Tier, Wite of Dr. John
who, seeing her husband at
mathematical, surgical instru-
his vast income but part erf
alarmed. She murmured.
Father, who was Counsellor
General of Paris made an ap-
great expense o f making
surgical with other instruments
to provide well for his family,
make the instruments for
wi s e advice and courteous
wife of FRANCIS JUNIUS
John Fernel.
Admiral of France, Gasparde,
of Francis, son of Dr. Jean
I have a found Record, was
EUIL TREMELLIUS, 3rd
foreparents of Peter Faneuil.
whose wars Dr. Jean Fernel
much attached to Dr. Jean
before their marriage, and
parentage, compelled him to
physician, which was evaded
his wife, MagdalenejFernald.
n=
TROVE THE PRIN'CIPALS OF COLLEGES WHO SHOULD HA\E HIM
TO TEACH LOGIC FOR A CONSIDERABLE STIPEND. HE WOULD
NOT ACCEPT THEIR OFFERS. HE READ CICERO, PLATO, ARISTO-
tle and most wise knowledge of those times. Fourvears he studied medical literature,
graduated. Arose at 4 a. m., studied till time to read lectures or visit patients, returned to
his books, ate and returned to his studies, which he did not leave till a necessary interruption rcc|uired.
.\t night he would leave his books for supper and return to them and study to eleven o'clock. Re'urn-
F.ni;
n of Calai',,
for the future,
him at Fdntam-
was poisoned to
month after-
change made h\
forefathers, the
features, s a v -
altered e\en
of birth an d
strengthe n i n g
stroying these
and godly fami-
of Dr. Renald
Inch continuetli
ing from e.xpe-
hiswife, alarmed
went to live with
bleau where she
tieath, and he, a
wards with every
the foes of his
dates, names,
ings, writings
marriages, places
death, for
enemies and de-
most respectable
lies to the time p;»'= '0«' P!a'= ic
Fernald that left Europe from persecution, for Strawberrv Bank, Nt
to 190S-9.
Dr. Jean Fernel, while at court, was asked by King Henry to cure his u ife of barrenness and their
conversation was thus kept: "Master Physician, can you get my wife with child?" Jean verv prop-
erly answered; "Sire, I will be pleased to use all the skill God has given unto me by the proper vse of
medicines and appropriate measures indicated for the cure of her Majesty the Queen. "The rest I
leave to your Majesty, Sire, and the gracious blessings of God." And it is a fact of common history
that the Stork visited the King arid Queen frequently.
Twenty million dollars of Dr. Jean Fernel's vast estate went to enrich the Roman Catholic Church
and as it pleased them by Popes, \'atican, Bishop, Archbishops, and their protected in all crimes tools,
to continue their evil work, the writer of this made full claim for it. Cast interest on the same and
divided the bulk among the worthy nations of earth by proper Checks sent to them for universal
needed protection against all those who destroyed the families of Napoleon, my only child and wife
mother, four sisters, and 1511, 0(j(t, 000 of godly persons, the Martyrs: with 1546 and one attempt on a
christian physician's honor, 39 attempts on his life from March, 1870, to June 190S-9, and much of
this for attempting to prevent the slaughter of the 16 Roman Catholic builders of the secret passages
under Church of Bishop Williams; Boston, Mass., U. S. A., that the grip of the Vatican is upon; un-
less these works of God by his humble servant can arouses the brave and pure of all nations and
churches to prevent the deluge of ignorance, crime, hypocrisy, unrighteous and unlawful greed with
general and self destruction. The three Laws and enforcement of God's Commands is your safety.
THE HAGUE is appointed of GOD. Let every individual support it for common NATIONAL
Good transmit to posterity. In labors for papal representation at Hague it was found they desired it
from selfish and not godly purposes. I would have helped them, but they would not do the work as
God, Christ, commanded. Queen Mary per|Pope, Vatican, Jesuits, burned 5 Bishops, 21 Ministers,
129 Laymen, 55 Women, 4 Children to death. Is this Christianity which "never changes?
^^^
:<] <4=. f4=« (4="
AT THE CONVENT OF VISITATION WAS SENT MY LETTER A FEW
YEARS AGO, MAKING RESPECTFUL INQUIRIES CONCERNING THE
CHILDREN OF DR. JEAN FERNEL, RECEIVED A BOYCOTT IN U. S.
for it. Then the Records of relationship of Guy Patin with a deposition and court papers
were taken with injury from my Yale locked desk while at church. Plate 1051 shows re-
semblance. He mentions two daughters of Dr. Jean Fernel, viz; "There is in the convent of \'isita-
tion at Lyons a da. of M. de Riant, counsellor of state. Her mother is niece to M. de Narbonne:
her name is Mary des Prez. This beautiful nun, who has not yet made her vows, amongst other
eminent qualities she possesses, is considerable by her birth, being descended from our great Fernel,
who was really an incomparable physician. He left two daughters, the eldest of whom was married
to M. Barjot, president in the grand council, and master of the requests. Dr. Jean Fernel and family
were Protestants, also Dr. Ambrose Pare. The other was married to M. Giles de Riant, president au
Mortier, who died in 1597. Her name was Magdalen f>rncl and she died in 1642, aged 94 years.
Et generatio rectorum beneficitur. I am very sorry that I did not go formerly to \'illeroy, in the
earldom of Perch, where she died, on purpose of having the honor of seeing her and kissing her
hands. They make us kiss relics which are not worth these. So that your beautiful nun may boast
that she is descended from the greatest man that was ever of our profession since Galen, because the
great Fernel was her great-great-grandfather." In this extract from Biog. Diet. 1784 is when read in
primitive language and translated gives him, Guy Patin a descendant and the F. J. Francis Junius as son
of Jean. \'ide Edition Second for its reading. "Fernelii discipulus Jodoc. Lommivs (van Lom )
Burensis-Geldrus, Medicus Turnuiensis post Bruvellensis Ej
Generation C L I
MENUS, da. of John Amos
Phil Comenius of Savo) from
Cormenin the writer of the
the Popes of Rome, descend
Fnr Maria, b. 10 Oct. 1532
1555 FN A FRANCIS (L N
Fernel and Magdalen b
1602: m, 3rd Rebecca di
Rach-l: 4th m. Elizabeth di
from first u . no chn. I lie\
Kal. Id. March 1556 d
1559: d. 1596: m. Capt |ohn
1631:3 Anne, b. 20 Nov. 1560
ton whose nom de plume w i
cis, b. 1563-1603: 5, Magdi
as Fernalius: 8, Joannen Ft-
P'cnne: 10, Tobias Fennel
nual: 12, Alexander Furnus
called Prote.stantGoliah fi of
Granary Cemetery, Tremont
as Peter P'unal or Funcl cilled
ancient Bible name; Gene is
31, where points were mter
a deed to the City of Boston
Benjamin, Andrew, Benj. m.
3 Mar. 1743, he gave money 1742 to aid in Spanisii War. 14, J-Vancis F
16 and 17, Thomas Furnival and Joanna: 18, Josse or Justus \'ondel=
of Maurice «ho caused him to be fined 300 livres; Dutch Poet, Autho
John
FNR MARIA COM-
Commenius and Marie, s.
\\ horn descended Lquis Marie
Public and Private History of
Hits of the Comneni families:
d 29 March 1571: m. 2 Apr.
R S FERNEL, s. Dr. |ean
Mtrch 1533: d. 10 Sept.
h m meuil Tremellius & wife
M irquis Bertrand Fenelon:
hul Will chn. loannes. h.l5
b"^ 2. Maria, h. K) Jun.
Smith, ,b. Jan. 1579; d. 21 Jun.
1621 m. Samuel \Vashing-
W illiam Shakespere: 4 Fran-
len 6, Margaret: "^ . Nichol-
ineus FiUeien: 9, Otto
1 I Henrietta Catherine Fer-
Duiiel Furnieu, 13 had Peter,
iVter bur. in my Tomb Old
St Bu.ston, Mas's., U. 8. A.,
1 ineuil, one spelling of our
Chipter XXXli, \. 3(1 and
polated in tiie F for P, I ga\e
of the Hall, not Market. Had
had Peter, b. 20 Jun. TOO, d.
mis: 15, Bertrand 1-Vrnclion :
Fondel, m. .Mary, Jesuit niece
r, d. poor, with many chn.
NOT PLEASED WITH THE VIOLENT CONTESTS BETWEEN PAPISTS AND
PROTESTANTS, REV. FRANCIS JUNIUS KERNEL, WHO WAS B. AT BOUR-
GES, STUDIED AT GENEVA AND AT 32 MADE MINISTER OF WALLOON
church at Antwerp, left to become Chaplain to the Prince of Orange and attended him in
various expeditions. He studied Law and Medicine besides Military Tactics. After-
wards he read public lectures at Neustadt, and Heidelberg, and then visited France for the purpose of
recovering his inheritance from the enormous estate of the late Dr. Jean and Magdalen Fernel but
was thwarted by the convent of Visitation and Roman Catholic Church, although kindly received by
Henry IV, who, it was said, knew he was rightful heir to the throne of France but did not desire to
strengthen one who might be a claimant. Unsuccessful in obtaining justice he retired and settled at
Leyden. His sons John and Francis were both born at Heidleberg and both studied mathematics to
lead a military life, John choasing the sea. The conclusion of the war altered their plans. Dr. John
studied medicine and was surgeon of Roj'al Navy and Francis (whose hand in plate support the point
of Jean's sword and are arranged to make the letter F) altered his plans and devoted himself to litera-
ture, published some of his father's books, then travelled to France and England. He was thirty
years in the family of Arundel. Taking advantange of frequent visits to Oxford, he studied the an-
cient languages of the Cimbric, Goths, Franks, Frisons and other northern nations as did his gr.
fr. Both enjoyed a great flow of excellent spirits to their death. Francis was bur. in St. George
chapel, but before he died he visited his nephew Dr. Is. Vossius at Windsor where he died leaving
"by will" his MSS. and collections to public Librar\ of his favorite Oxford. His honored father's
publications were 64 volumes, and the best which on the title page keeps the cypher line of his ances-
try is on the Latin version of the Hebrew Bihle in im i i in which he was assisted by Emanu-
uel Tremellius his father-in-law
on whose tomb is cut by John
counted by six pointed Hebrew
in cypher of birth of J. P. Fer-
scription over Samuel Washing
Shakespeare ) remains counts the
Furnel, chn. and one for self
lines.
Generation
No
. CLII
FNR
Colign y
rtg
came t
M
%se>^^-
%
Hugue
"^Jjf^
ti 0 n was
S:
«
m. 1 Ian
^r%
^ N I U S
eldest son
Plalc 1054 Good Quten
Bess
M a r i a
who protscled Wm Ftr
andnarred h,swi(e E
aid
1556 d. 2';
phine, da
4th Jan
b. 14
June 157
2 m. S. S. T
birth.
Dr. lohn
an
d wife An
who w
as born at
■th
e Castle of
and ancestor of Peter Faneuil
Fernald his line of genealog)
stars to Lewis XI and the date
nalil my honored parent. In-
ton's (nom de plume \\'m.
no. in family of Francis Junius
and one for wife bv letter E in
^NNIETTA, da. Gaspardr de
the Admiral of France, who
■\merica to found a Colony of
nots to escape fanatical persecu-
h. i .^pr. 155U: d. 23 Mav 1623;
3 FNA DR. JOHN FUR-
FERNELin Royal Navy, the
and heir of F. J. F. and wife
Comnenusb. 15 Cal. Id. Mar.
'\ug. 1575 after 1st m. to Jose-
Margerine de \'igne,
571 by whom one da. Maria,
= »< s o3 a i^ ^4 f-ap '^ rkolsky : her mother d. at her
) Po^smouih'N''H " ^" letta, had only one son William,
Heidleberg and Baptized in "ye
Church of the Holy Ghost, Baden, Germany where Roman Catholic and Protestarit Services were
both held for the worship of one God as ought to be over the whole earth of God's children. On
the book of Henry is arch of Newport Tower.
^^ESIROUS OF FREEDOM TO WORSHIP THE SUPREME BEING IN
• k-| ACCORDANCE WITH DICTATES OF CONSCIENCE. HONORING GOD
TJ-| AND FEARLESS OF MANKIND; CONVERSANT WITH THE DISCOVERIES
>^* of his relatives, Gasparde dc Coligny and Captain John Smith, Captain William Fernald
went forth to New England 1630 to personally examine the land.
Generation No. CLIII.
FNR ELIZ-
Commander
Elizabeth
d.l Oct. 1648;
, Seal
Anne of Brltta
Charles VI
ABETH AMAND da. of
Girard Amand and his wife
Washington, b. 3 Apr. 1571;
m. 16 May 1594. CAPT'N
WILLIAM FERNALD,
son of Dr. John Furnuy=
Fernelius=:FerneI and wife
Anietta (da. Gasparde de
Coligny and wife Annietta)
b. 10 May 1575; d. 20 or 8
Apr. 1675: Had(l) Renald
Fernald: (2) Thomas, b. 13
Aug. 1597: (3) Henry, b.
5 Dec. 1599; poisoned in
first hotel built at New Cas-
tle or Strawberry Bank: .
(4) William, b. at Eastwick,
30 Dec. 1600: (5) Robert.
b. 20 Mar. 1604: (6) John,
b. 9 Apr. 1607: (7) Edward,
b. 4 Oct. 1611; m. Mar)':
(8) Strong Strangue, b. 16
Nov. 1614; m. Aellone and
admitted to Church, 1643;
a member of the Ancient
and Honorable Artillery
Company, 1651: (9) Joseph
G.was b. at Feursen Forez;
Professor of Anatomy in the
Royal Gardens; author of a
workon the Ear ; celebrated ;
and died in Paris, unable to recover his ancestors' stolen money.
In search of Captain Sir William Fernald presence here in United
States was found an item copied in the Genealogical Register of his
presence in Boston. Came over in the "King Philip" bringing Robert
Washington and wife, Anna, daughter of Robert Bruce Cotton, son John
and eldest child Temperance Washington, to Virginia, 1630. His name
was spelled in many ways: Fenner, Furnival,
Fernerl. He was knighted by Essex, 8 Oct.
15 97: Commander of "The Cadiz Expe-
dition," April 1596 with 1200 veterans, 70U0
soldiers, at Downs, England: Commander
Sir William Fernald gave to Dr. Renald
Fernald the Sword and Bible of Dr. Jean
Fernel with other important Relics, among
which I have the ancient teapot that was made
by the Grand Duke of Tuscany that "Good
Queen Bess drank tea from last and named
Elizabeth Amand for herself." Coin gift with
it of death 1575 of above Dr. John Fernelius
is lost to us.
214
>=3-
ino^ammjc Seal
Francis J. Fcrnei
non ^Qii lour vfY iST\
0nit)«sftLuc cowiMB\3mn>($
(loii^oll t^c -taw onS "
?j(il,!}tI&r£nanJ(Jittt tii maintain B\\Tit]^t5_a.t-]M. ^iM-jcmmanbrr Aman^ilg- ;
^, . iii fomijs to the hfftuir oLthf U^T'
1 CHAPT
XIII
QEN
CLIV
I
FNA JOANNA WARBURTON
of Sir John W'arburton ( 1575 ) & Ma
1603; d. 10 Mav 1660; m. 1 Jan. 16
RENALD FERNALD, s. of Com
William Fernald & wife Elizabeth
July 1595; d. 6 Oct. 1656: Had 1
Furnald, who signed his name in
Rockingham Records Vol. 9. Folio
Thorns. FFernald, b. 1 July 1620; d.
1699: 2, Elizabeth, b. 1630: 3, Mary,
4, Sarah, b. 1636: 5, John, b. 1640:
uel, b. 1642 : 7, William, b. 6 Mar.
Dr. Renald Fernald resigned his position in the English'
Navj' to come in the Warwick July 4th to AMERICA.,
whose most ancient found name was Omo and Oma, the land
215
m
'HIGH FROM DISCOVERED LOST HEBREW LANGUAGE IN H n-CN^a GENESIS IS
SPELT AMARICA (sec plate 9) HE SAILED IN THE BARQUE "WARWICK" FROM
DOWNS, OLD ENGLAND WITH HIS WIFE, JOANNA AND SON THOMAS AND
80 emigrants and they arrived -IJuly 1030 at Piscataqua, Strawberry Bank, that from his and others Peti-
tioners to the General Court at Boston, was chan;^ed to Portamoutli ; granted 2« "May 1(J53. He was New Hampshire's
first Surgeon ; iJept. Lt. in England ; Captam of Militia Co. ; Grand Juror, 1G43 ; Town" Ket-order, 1043 to 1656, and wrote,
aided by the Genealogist, his brother Henry that cut his initials in Newport Tower ("H. W. F.") at R. Island their ancestral
tree; Trial Justice of the Peace and punished the T)lavntiff for charging witchcraft ; Recorder of Deeds ; prominent in all good
work and popular among the Indians that he kindly treated, and by them much loved. He accompanied his father on hie
sea voyages and was a very strong, short, powerful, brave, just, wise man ; stricken down alter the death of Henry respected
Lines are Gens.
: 1064.
honored and loved by his in my friends and relatives. He was the
ship Chirurgeoa broiii^lit over many family relics, the swords of Dr.
Jean and Dr. .lohn F. that was given to him by his Fr. with seals,
two Chairs, one at Washington,!). C.
Plalc lO.
Sm, (Noi
gramniic
Genkkatio.n (LV. FNL TF.MPEll.VNCl': W.VSlilNGTdN, da.
Robert Washington and Anna, da. Sir Robert Bruce Cotton, the
antiquarian, b. at Chester, Old England, June 6 or 16, 1622 ; d. 15
July 1706; in. Tn. 16 Dec. Ki.'l!). FNA TIIO.MAS FFERNAM), s.
Dr.'Kenald Fernald and Joanna, b. Sun. 1 Julv 1620 ; d. Sun. 15
July 1699. Bust, PI. 1064, of Thom.TS Fernald; on V. S. Coin are '
the Features of his wife, Tein|>eraiice( WaHliiii;;ton) FFeriiald, 1798.
Vide and their signatures at Rockincliam Records. Vol. 9, Fol. 178
on a Deed ; Had John b. 12 Dec. 1640 ; d. 1 Sept. 1687 ; m. Mary,
da. Thomas and Margery Spinney, b. 16,50; d. 1700; 2, Anne ; 3,
Thomas, b. 1653. 4, Patience; 5, .\Iar\ ; 6. Samuel; 7. Joanna; 8,
Sarah; 9, Hercules. Sig. Jean F., plate 1065 in languages, giving
true History.
Plate 1080. Our Free and A. M. loved token. Plate 1081. Gold
.Egyptian vase from .Egyptgiving tliehietory of the Deluge of com-
mon fr. Noah and family: thus kept true records, (iod's Coininaiid.
Plate 1079 is our ancient -Egyptian Star Seal of the line and the
circle is found on the history of creation by Fnr Lamar, the wife of
Noah, most ancient .Map, Pyramid of .Egypt, down to the I'oweroU
Attv. given by gr. fr. to Father who used the same and others
family. Plat« 1069. A recording apparatus of Noal. and Hi
fleur de lis.) Ja])eth and sons and das. Plate 1070 explains itself. Captain John Fernald's .Es
iword. Plate 1072, itself explanatory. Plate 107S. Governor of .Enos that he betraved to Phil
I'.. 200, uhich in Thrace, owned by P. Philopater.
216
Good Qu
■ptianhilt mono-
p 11. king, Mace-
A ,..
c=yp «i=» □ill ■
w
N PLATES NOS. 1112, 1113 AND 1104 IS A CLUSTER OF POETRY, LOVE
AND HISTORY THAT THIS THE CURTAIN OF MYSTERY WITHDRAWS
GIVING BIRTH TO A NEW ERA. IN CENTRE OF SEAL OF 1112 IS OUR
most ancient O seal, which is respected by all nations, civilized. Cord like line has at
ends the nipple of the nursing bottle and the lines there inscribed by covering parts give
the names of Charles VIII, k. of France and wife Anne: (see heart shape cord § ''=C,,8 oFE-iyELCS
F E. Hebrew R=- and Greek v=N E L, thus is name Fernel, J=J. FRANCIS=F as before, R,
ditto A= part of W read upside down as A Gk. VV=N from W, as ^: C from Greek='"=C: 1:^1,
and S from the large S. By turning the monogram on the Ring upside down it is M. Initial of
Magdalen and sd. L, of Luillier also of Maria &Commenius is spelt from ring and these were the
foreparents of Samuel Washington who m. Mara Smith, but another Samuel Washington, nom de
plume, Wm. Shakespere, m. Anne (Hathaway) Junius Fernel, da. Francis Junius Fernel and wife
Maria Commenus, s. Dr. Jean Fernel, s. Charles VIII and Anne of Britiany. Thus when crime was
rampant was kept our Records. Do any skeptics, ii they exist, want more? Here it is on the wise
monogrammi cinscription over Samuel Washington, nom de plume, Wm. Shakespere, that for rnany
years lay forgotten till a legion of the family foes had gone to judgment, and the usurpers of rights
saw blood freely flow and one went to execution, as it was God's will. Sir Thomas More, 1535,
beheaded, another burnt Rev. John Rogers, 1555.
Plate 1104 counts by the E^Greek e, that in the ancient /Egyptian means man and woman: 20
of these are to be found and his relatives of the family of Francis were 18 children plus mother and
father =20. Further use of the philological scapel demonstrates one large B, it is the first letter of
Hebrew in Genesis of "BRASFT" and comes on the third line: pointing to ancestry who worshiped
God under the names of God the Father and God the Holy One, B. C. The first Fr. 2nd word is for
Francis his wife's Father and the First G is a Greek C, and Co are the first two letters of Commenus
and the o next means son Francis of John, see the big I=J in front of Jesus, which completes Trinity
union with mankind: etc., etc. For complete reading of this Monogram, see Edition 2nd. More
light was asked. It is given! Now the
TO THE IDOL PER NEL It oF
ANDTHE DELIGHT
ANNE HATH
:>l|21'
With love's svve
le old Poem! !
NE EYES
3.
NE HEART
"Talk nol of gems, the Orient list.
The diamond, topaz, an.etlivst,
Y.
The emerald mild, the rubv eiy:
TM of mv gem, Anne Hathaway!
She hath a way with her bright eye
The.r various lustre to defy ,^
The jewel she and the foil thev.
So SWeet to look Anne hath a way.
Sheliathawav.
Anne hath a «av.
To shame bright gems, Anne hath
4
But were it to mv fancy given
To rate her charms. Id call them t
For though a mortal made of clay,
Angels must love Anne Hathaway.
i breath and rancorous
oil and bite fair «
oothe the I
and copy it as it is part and pan
is printed in History and Po!
N. Y., 1855: Copv Righted b%
■God given genealogy. It
-inger-Rings by RedlielJ,
Edwards, 1854. Dedica-
Commence first stanza, 8, 9, 10th line, read top to bottom and you have U. S. A.: 2nd stanza,
and we have reading from bottom to top A. S. W., or America's Samuel Washington: 3rd stanza,
8th line — So S. W.=Samuel Washington, 9th line She, lOth line .^nne, 11th line Anne, hath a way;
4th, stanza; 3rd line F and our seal o, 3rd letter r, 4th line An, 5th line c and seal o, and thus Fr Anc
6th line 4th word i, 5th word s, thus Francis her father. 1 and 2 stanzas S. W.=Samuel Washington.
n^
JONIA, PL. 1074, IS THE PIKE NAME AND SYMBOL SHOWING AN INTER-
MARRIAGE WITH THE FURNIUS FAMILY. PL. 1075. CELTIC RING
MONEY MADE IN FORM OF G OR C, INITIALSOF GOD AND CHRIST PL.
1076; dated one centurj' before Christ of God, Zana & Ham line, and that he was one
with Trinity, God. PI. 1077 and 1l09 is a ring, in Bronze, of Rome, has on it forty-
seven generations from Marcus Agrippa to Fnr Baru & Fna Tachnatis of /Egypt that he the son,
Grjecianus, had been to the land of Omo, Lake Pyramid, serpent rfiound: PI. 1078: Seal of Thomas
Rogers of Suessa: initials give Cicero, Charles, Philip, Samuel, John, Peter and Daniel Rogers, and
clasped hands understood by experts: found in Sessa, red stone centre and Thos. name in Latin around
it. From description other descriptions on it are, Pike conquered: Pike reigns: Pike's Commands.
A coin was found of Pike. "The veritable signet of Cicero is the coral in centre of ring. PI. 1079.
Our ancient and modern family seal; see p. 214 PI. 1082 one of Pike family seal rings: PI. 1083 Fnr.
Vashatana seal. PI. 1084 and 1087 called the most valuable Ring and seal in the world in Dr. Ab-
bott's collection found at Ghizeh in a tomb: they call it the Suphis or Sufis ring, it is invaluable:
reading from right to left we have at top O which is 1st name of God=Fa 2nd. it is first letter of primi-
tive alphabet F, 3rd symbol of sun, seal, birth, son, etc. The second double cross symbol is com-
pound, the upright line over oval is I, J, H, F, L and egg shaped oval denotes creation of woman,
and 3rd symbol with the transverse lines of cross and jug shape man, n, m, cut off the two lines leav-
ing the projection and we have H O heavens God line, leave the projection on H both sides and we
have "God's line created woman and man, it spells, Ava^AFA as in catouche, Adm and line to Nh,
Hm, Sm, Jfth=Japeth and has the picture of Pyramid Lake Oregon, and U. S. A. and pictures of the
mounds, even the serpent is delineated of Serpent Mound Ohio, and the wine bottle Cain drank of
before killing his brother Abl, and Oratota, OMO, etc. It gives part of inscription on Dighton Rock
(a small vol. maybe written of) the.se hieroglyphics that claim it the "Ring and Seal of Queen AFA"
Eve. PI. 1088 represents the laws of God the father and God the holy One given to Ava mnd Adm,
the sacred Bird and Altar of JAO or Jehovah: 1089 religious symbol of Christ & God made into
j£gyptian money: PI. 1090 & 1091 Ring and signature of Thecla, and her portrait with C. Furnius
signatures — gold, at British Museum are both: this Thecla da. Mary, symbol on right hand and seal in
left hand. PI. 1092 hath Pike crest of coat of arms: when the tomb of Childerick was opened his
ring was found, crystal orb, more than 300 little gold ornaments resembling bees of purest gold, wings
inlaid with red stone-like cornelian. Napoleon adopted the fleurons or bees instead of fleur-de-lis.
Pis. 1093 & 4 two gold etruscan rings at British Museum, latter has a white stone on swivel. Pis.
. 1095-6-7, "brass heavy gilt ring of Pope Pius 2nd. arms, topaz lost surface polish." Part copied from
the ^Egyptians & Turkish Crescent. He was proclaimed 26 Aug. 1458, 218 Pope, son of an outlaw;
when a child he abandoned himself to the vilest practices." France, Scotland, Denmark, Poland and
Hungary, with the cities of Venice and Florence disapproved of his election: Germany, dukes of
Milan and Modena, Ferdinand of Sicily approved. He followed example of Borgias to replenish his
treasure. Sold investure of the King of Naples to an illegitimate son of King Alphonso, to prejudice
of Rene and son John, for 600,000 gold crowns. He convened a general council at Mantau, 1st
June, 1469, invited all kings, especially Charles VII, he called defenderof Christian religion. After
public session, the Embassadors of Charles VII demanded private audience,— granted. Baliff of Rouen
reminded his holiness that the Kings of France off services rendered his predecessors; bitterly com-
plained that the brother of St. Lewis had received Naples, that he was not permitted to sell what
Rome had given and threatened pius with King's vengeance. This cost Charles VII his after trouble
and afflictions continued. PI. 1098 our Roman C. Furni historic sword : Pis. 1099, 1 100-1, 2, 3,
Irish diamond rings; Furni Ring Chinese Coins: Pis. 1105-6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11— Ear drops and rings:
see Edition second, very interesting.
219
"®
HEN SPAKE FORTH THE WORDS OF SOBERNESS AND TRUTH."
HEN AGRIPPA SAID UNTO PAUL, ALMOST THOU PERSUADEST ME
TO BE A CHRISTIAN."
■D * * *
/^V^ERE UNDER THE LIGHTS OF MASSACHUSETTS STATE HOUSE AND
mm^ BEACON STREET HISTORICAL SOCIETY MORE RESPLENDENT SHIN-
JM ^" FORTH THE WHITE BUSTS OF THREE ANCESTORS OF THE LONG
^ttfr^ line as was prophcq? line of the ancient Femald Family, viz: Mr.John Feraald, m. Mary
I Spinney; Mr. John Fernald, m. Sarah Hincks and Col. Tobias Fernald in front row from
seal and three relics, one is Dr. Jean Fernel and Ambrose Pare at base of first: eleven Fernald seals
at base of the second, with relic Portrait of Joinville back of them; 26 seals and the historic corner-
pieces of panel at base of Col. Tobias Fernald, whose epaulet has been broken from his left shoulder
for daring to be true to God, Country, State and Family.
Whose blood from the ancient Fabi 300 to 1908, it has freely been shed on every battlefield for
the holy cause of right and liberty.
Generation CLVI. FNR MARY SPINNEY, da. Thomas and Margery Spinney, b. 19 Feb. 1650:
d. 7 Oct. 1700: married FNA JOHN FERNALD. son of Thomas and Tem-
perance Fernald. 9th. Feb. 1650. b. 12 Dec. 1640 and died Sept. 1st. 1687: Had:
John, b. 4th. March 1673: m Sarah, da. Judge John Hinck* and wife Eliza-
beth Frcyer, da. Judge Nathaniel and Christian Freyer of Portsmouth, N. H.
II-Jame«, b. 1676: m. Mary da. Judge John and Elizabeth Hincks: Ill-Thomas
b. 1678; m. Mary Thompson: IV-Lydia, b. 1680: m. Mose» Dennet 11 Feb.
1720: V-Margcry, b. 1684: m. John Marshall: VI-Amos. b. 16 Apr. 1686: m.
Mary Woodman.
Generation CLVII. FNR SARAH HINCKS. da. Judge John and Elizabeth, b. 26 July 1679: d.
m. 7 Aug. 1696: FNA JOHN FERNALD. b. 4 March 1673: d.
1754 from an assault in battle with the Indians he was made blind in saving the
life of his beloved wife Sarah: they Had: I, John, b. 15 March 1698: m. Eliza-
beth, da. Rev. John and Martha Rogers of Ipswich: II, Mary, 2 Mar., 1700:
m. Thomas Rogcrs:III, Samuel, b. 1 June 1702: m. Mary Johnson:IV, James
b. 4 Oct 1704; m. Hannah Rogers: V, Joseph, a twrin brother of James, m.
Anna More pub. 1742: Sarah, b. 13 April 1709: m. Rogers: VII, AbigaU, b.
10 Sept. 1710: m Joshua Staples: VIII. Benjamin, b. 1 Apr. 1717: m. Susan
Chadboume. 1743-4: IX. Lydia, b. 26 March 1719: m. James Johnson.
Generation CLVHI FNR ELIZABETH ROGERS, da. Rev. John and Martha Rogers, b. 10 Feb.
1705: d. m. FNA CAPTAIN JOHN FURNEL, at Kittery,
by Rev. John Rogers, 16 Jan. 1723-4: b. 15 March 1698: copied from
his iron tomb tablet, Ob. 21 Feb. 1788-9, at Boston, Mass. Had MR. JOHN
FERNALD, b. 23 Nov. 1742: m. Mary. da. Thomas John Savage and Mary
II. Mercy: III, (Poly=\ Mary, m. Wm. Cotton, 2nd.: IV, da.m. John Went-
worth Fcmaki, a cousin, V, da. m. Mr. Dennet, VI Col. Tobias
Fernald, Sr., b. 1742 at 6 a m., who had a coosin, Col. Tobias Fernald both
in American Revolution and both John Fumald and the father of Mary
Savage signed the Association Test.
THE ASSOCIATION TEST, J776.
"WE, the subscribers, do hereby solemnly engage, and promise that we will, to the utmost of
our power, at the Risque of our lives and fortunes, with Arms oppose the Hostile Proceedines of the
British Fleets, and Armies, against the United American Colonies." 497 signed and thirty one
were either absent or refused to sign 6 Cottons, 5 Dennets, 5 Fcrnalds, 8 Langdons, 4 Marshalls,
Luke Foster, 10 Hams, 11 Harts, 8 Langdons, 7 Moses, 2 Savages, 3 Pikes, 13Sherbume«, 7 Walk-
ers, 3 Waters et als. Refused: Parker. Rindgc, Freeze. Weeks. Hastings, Atkinson, Shcafe, Little.
Torrey, Hart, Hale, Palmer, Peirce, Noble, Eliot, Moore. Armet, Butler, Russell, Gardner, Jaf-
frey, Wentworth, 2 Warners. Sherburne. Waters, Jr.. Campbell, Tucker, Pickett. Rogers and
Pease were absent.
221
iE
PHESIANS, V. 16. "REDEEMING THE TIME, BECAUSE THE DAYS ARE
EVIL. 10. PROVING WHAT IS ACCEPTABLE UNTO THE LORD"
Generation CLIX
FNR MARY
Thos. , JohnSavagc,
7 Mar. 1804; m. 16
FURNALD;both
New Hampshire,
of fever at Porte-
1792, and his de-
on his grave stone
Portsmouth, N.H.,
FcrnaJd that had
papers stolen from
is recorded in Brew-
about Portsmouth
Old South Church
cord of his death in
at that time. Both
Secret Service of the
is called "Uncle
Washington, and
buried in said tomb
Mr. Graves of said
of Captain Graves,
that fought in the
dying leh to me the
Graves &Davis bur.
of said S.S., U.S.A.
are on Plate 1133.
SAVAGE, da.
b. 17 June 1752; d.
Nov. 1771, JOHN
of Portsmouth,
b. 23 Nov. 1742 ;d.
mouth. 2 3 Nov.
cease was chiseled
in North Cemetery,
while another John
U. S. Government
him at New York
ster's Rambles
and is buried in the
Tomb, with a re-
■ an old paper printed
Johns were in the
United States, that
Sam" for Samuel
Samuel Fernald,
at Old Granary
S. S., the ancestor
of New Hampshire,
Civil War, & when
gift of his sword,
in O. S. C. Tomb
Their signatures
^^^NNx-^».«>:-^ll■ll^l■,lll■llll,^lll.l |.|,| — _ Joho Bnd Mary Sav-
age) Furnald had ^^^^^^^^SS^^I^I^BSS^mm^^ John Wcntworth
Furnald, b. 24 Oct. „, , _ ^-^W*^ _ yjji; s. p. d. un-
.........„_ LIAMFIRNALD
b. 10 Mar. 1775 ; m. Fem.W, buned in New York. »nd wife on Coppi HIU. Boston. Mui. ELIZABETH
(Betsy) JOHNSON, da. Phineas, son of Col. Samuel; d. 20 April 1852: His wife b. 21 June 1778;
m. 1 Feb. 1797; d. Wolfboro Centre, 30 Sept. 1897: III. James, b. 24 June 1779; m. Betsey Brac-
kett; IV. Polly, b. 5 Sept. 1782; m. William Cotton: Moved to Maine.
222
i|LJ APRIL
\Zj/ TAIN
d. July
at Wolfboro Centre,
Mary and Betsey,
1787: Mary, m.: Bet-
Nute: VIII, Sarah,
Samuel Cotton, d.
Joseph P. Cotton;
Samuel C. Cotton:
Cotton; Sarah M.
1140, Cotton & Fer-
of arms; Col. VVil-
Josiah of Plymouth,
15 Aug. 1756; Col.
Clark; da. MaryCot-
whoseda. MaryCot-
ihan Poor Fernald.
IX, Debora h
b. at break of day, 27
ard Younge of Ro-
Samuel; John; and
son Smith. . These
by agreement at Portsmouth. New Hampshire, and agreed to spell their names Fir-
nald (the oldest line) Furnald, and Fernald, thus keeping trace of their descendants
from most remote ancestors and this Plate 1122 was one of those made for the Great
Seal of "Uncle Sam'' United States of America; bearing the profiles of Captain John
Fernald and his wife Elizabeth Rogers, da. Rev. John and Martha of Ipswich, "the
Cradle of American Liberty," whose Descendants Remember my Ancestors, Rev.
John Rogers, Burned to Death at the Stake, 4 Feb. 1555, After Beheadingmy Fore-
father, Sir Thomas More, 5 July 1535, head placed on London Bridge, buried at St.
Dunstan's in arms of da. Margaret, said to have m. Mr. Roper. Who among you
condemn fanatics? Let him Act well.
Generation CLX. FNR ELIZABETH (Betsy) JOHNSON, da. Phineas
& wife Hannah Poor, son of Col. Samuel, s. Captain Timothy, s. Timothy, s. John
of Ipswich, s. a Lieutenant, brought by Ca'ptain William Fernald to Charlestown,
Massachusetts Bay, 1630, in "King Phillip" from Hern Hill, Kent Co., Old Eng-
land. Penelope, da. Timothy and Rebecca, b. 25 March 1679, kil. by Indians,
March 4, 1698. Although Col. Samuel Johnson is claimed m. April 22, 1742 cor- e^
rectlv, another Samuel Johnson, m. Elizabeth Fernald, May 19, 1748. Attested S!&^
Records of Kittery, Maine, C. M. Prince, Town Clerk, Copy of Aug. 27, 1894.
V, ABIGAIL COF-
FURNALD, b. 2
1785: m. CAP-
JAMES NUTE.
18, 1856, both bur.
N. H., VI & VII.
(Geminse), b.2Aug.
sey, m. Richard
b. 11 June 1790; m.
15 June 1830; had
Wesley Cotton:
Brackett Fernald
Cotton; ^J*^ Plate
n a 1 d (»]^ coat
liam Cotton, son of
b. 8 Jan. 1680 and d.
W m . , m . Mary
ton, m. Robert Pike,
ton Pike, m. Joria-
Sherburn Furnald,
Feb. 1791, m. Rich-
chester, N. H., had
da. m. Wm. Addi-
three brothers met
GEN. 1S3- Appreciating prote
of Heidleberg. Baden, Germa
i. al Church of Holy Ghost wh
223
M
ANKIND, OBEDIENT TO MOST HIGH COMMANDf. TRACE THEIR GENEAL-
OGIES TO. "HONOR THY FATHER AND THY MOTHER THAT THY DAYS
MAY BE LONG UPON THE LAND WHICH THE LORD THY GOD GIVETH
THEE." THE FERNALD FAMILY COUNT THEIRS BY THE FIRST AND THE
last, the sun and the moon with the stars of heaven, and earth and waters, ridges of stones and slate.
marble mounds of Omo, world,
of sea, pyramids obelisks, statues,
bols, swords, tablets, balls, globes,
leaves, aegle and
them on plate
our generations
Fernald on rudder
again and Dr.
his VII children,
Puie 14SS. and jou have the
Temperance (Washington)Fernald
into letter of primitive M, the eye
F. A. M., count base of wing
count middle of 2nd row, wing,
Fernald: count tip of wing and
Elizabeth (Rogers) Fernald: count
children of William and Elizabeth
count outer surface of body side of
• drcn of
Fernald
Cotton
eleven. I
And
per and
Pl«te 10+4. , ^ ,
about fif-
soid from a museum and
my search over the world
left by the wise Fernald
their posterity in godly
It was photographed and
given that traces our true
yond Dr. Jean Fcrnel
given the same can be
all. The key was found
of a secret letter of my
father in Secret Service
at Portsmouth, N. H.
Iccted grave. Plate 1128.
waves of waters, surf
busts, letters, sym-
circlcs, squares, trees,
i t s feathers, count
1124 and you count
IX— Capt. WUliam
of aegle, and count it
Renald Fernald and
count it third time
children of Thomas and
and the .feet are arranged
is an F, the bird an A=
the family of John 6c Sarah :
family of John and Sarah
family of Captain John and
of base of rudder and twelve
(Betsy Johnson) Fernald:
wing and you have the chil-
Jonathan Poor
and wife Mary
(Pike)Fernald
the last,
the saucer cop-
metal was made
ty years ago,
discovered in
for evidence
family to aid
work for all.
true plateabove
genealogy be-
that with key
easily read by
by me in copy
great grand-
of United States
See his neg-
Platell42—
Therelicsword
of Dr. John
Fernald, killed
by Jesuit on
deck. 1575, it
counts his gen-
ealogy back to
Charies VIM
and Anne of
Britiany.
^I^^OW ON PLATE 223 OF ANCIENT PIKE FAMILY THAT WAS TAKEN OVER FOR
JVH a christian SYMBOL, IS TO BE SEEN NAMES OF TRINITY. PRIMITIVE
\-\\ ALPHABET; LAND OK OMA; RELIGIOUS MOUND OF ANTEDELUVIANS SUR-
^^ ^ mounted by Lamb typical of peace and Christ; four rivers flowing from Garden of Eden; arches
representing Newport, Rhode Island, Tower, etc.
Generation CLIX.
FNR (Betsy) ELIZA-
Junc 1778; m. FNA WIL-
1797; b. 10 Mar. 1775: He
mouth, and Wife d. 30 Sept.
both buried at Portsmouth,
children:
1. Jonathan Poor Fernald,
2. Mary Savage Fernald.
3. Samuel Fernald,
4. Elizabeth Fernald,
5. Hannah Fernald,
6. Deborah Fernald,
7. William Fernald,
8. Pamelia Fernald,
9. Maria Fernald,
10. Henry Hincks Fernald,
11. John Fernald,
12. Margaret A. Fernald,
Mr. William Fernald who
and afterward moved to Ports-
merchant and a very pious pcr-
his family up to be sincere care-
was taught the family history,
cate the same to his descendants,
of John Furnald, in Secret Ser-
brought over 6000 troops from
dence, R. L, that remained and
have read the letter many times
phics that in after years were
tian characteristics. From the
care of the Feuillants to Lafay-
branch of the Feuillants of the
1790. In 1630 the order in
in Italy. In the French Rcvo-
fayette and Sieyes was continued
Jacobines, that met in a convent
broken up by a mob in 1791.
papers that were stolen from
a letter mentioning the Feul-
in Secret Service, which I have
John Fernild'i DmR. jtven to
it Is owned by Brackett Ffrntld Cotton, of Wolfboro, N.
( Photo w(th doj Topsey under II hy C. F.)
BETH JOHNSON, b. 21
LIAM FERNALD, Feb. 1,
d. 20 Apr. I8S2. at Ports-
L867,atWolfborough Centre.
New Hampshire: Had twelve
b.l December 1797;
d. 23 April 1893.
b. 11 April 1800; d.
b. 22 August 1802; d.
b. 19 September 1804; d.
b. 27 January 1807; d.
b. 20 January 1809;
d. 30 July 1894
b. 20 March 1811;
d. 19 April 1862.
b. 3 July 1813; d.
b. 25 February 1816; d.
U. 26 January 1818; d.
b. 3 April 1820; d.
b. 19 January 1822; d.
located at Brookfield,, N. H.,
mouth, N. H., was a lumber
son that carefully brought all
ful Christians. His oldest son
with instructions to communi-
giving him the aforesaid letter
vice of United States, which
France in July 1780 to Provi-
fought for American libert}'. I
and it had numerous hierogly-
found to be in cypher of Mgyp-
writing thereon it was sent in
ette and Sieyes, who in this
order of Cistercians lasted to
France was separated from those
lution the club founded by La-
to a Co. in 1789 opposed to the
of the abolished order. It was
The United States Government
John Fernald in New York had
liants addressed to my ancestor
read, mentioned Jean Fernel.
Pl»tell27.
Plate 1127 — Governor John Wentworth, the last English Governor of New Hampshire before the American
Revolution, whose private secretary, John Fernald, rowed to take ship for England, never to return to N. H.
225
31
GENERATION CLXI.
FNR MARY COTTON PIKE. b. 12 Dec. 1800; d. 14 Feb.
JONATHAN
1 Dec. 1797;
eleven chil-
Firnald, b. atBrkfld.or
1822; m. Oran Dixon:
Dixon,b.24 Feb. 1850;
Post Master and Post
Center, N. H.; Wil-
8 Sept. 1856; d. 26 June
Parsons, da. George and
Had George O. and
d.y. 11. Mary Elizabeth
d. 4 Sept. 1895; m.
brother of Oran: Had
Frederick Page Dixon ;
ward E. D. m.no chn.
chn. Joseph L. D. d.,
Daniel Coleman, of
d. and Mrs. Mary Eli-
Sepi.l895,atWolfboro.
d. y. IV. Hannah Fir-
d. 22 July 1890; m.
their children were Ed-
garet A. Haines, d. y.
d.l893. V. Nancy H.
m. William T. Dorr;
was in HeavyArtillery,
Ella, m. Ellis Lindskog;
m. Everett Avery; 2
Mrs. Jennie Gilman,
West), & s. d. y. VI,
1834; d. 24 Oct. 1838:
nal, b. 30 Aug. 1837;
Prtvite S«ret»i7 of Gov. John Wentworth.
18S7; m. 13 Sept. 1821'
POOR FIRNALD,b-
d. 21 Apr. 1S93: Haii
dren: (1) Maria Renald
Wlfbr..N.H.,16 Dec.
Had Charles Oran
m. Lizzie Avery;
Mistress of Wolfboro-
liam Parker Dixon, b.
1903; m. Harriet E.
.Mercv,b.28 Aug. 1855:
Ray W.; Mary Abby
Firnald.b.l2Dec.l824;
Joseph Lord Dixon,
Edward Everett Dixon ;
and George, d. y. Exd-
Frederick P. D., m., 2
and widow m. 2nd Dr.
Wolfboro, N. H.,who
zabcth Coleman, d. 4
III. Hannah, b. 1826,
nald, b. 29 Nov. 1829;
Joshua B. Haines:
win Herbert, and Mar-
Mr. J. B. Haines,
Firnald,b.3 May 1835;
d. 19 Jan. 186S: He
Civil War: Had Mary
3 chn. 2, Inez Estella,
chn. W. T. D. m. 2d.
had Lulu, s. p. (d. in
Brackett, b. 24 Dec.
VII. Joan More Fir-
m. Samuel H. Buzzell,
Plate 1 129. The restored Governor John Wentworth MftnsJon and photo^ragh of Mr. John Fumald's t
graphed by Thomas Whlton. ei-represcntatfve of Wolfboro Centre, near Lake Wentworth. New h
of the beautiful lake may be seen beyond manston that Mr. Jonathan P. Fernald Jumped f
25 feet, and from there to p-ound. total 70 feet, when It was burning.
of Farmington, N. H. VIII. James W. Firnald, b. 24 July 1839; 3
m. Sarah Higgins of Cape Cod, Mass.; had Lyn H. Fernald;
Paul Fernald, m. Emma Rueckheim, 2 chn.: Lyn Marie: William
Paul: Rav Fernald, m. Ex-Governor's da. 1 ch. s. James W., IX,
Sophronia Chase Firnald, b. 10 Oct. 1841, d. 28 July 1896, poisoned;^^
at Alton Bay, N. H., d. at 1483 Washington St., Boston, Mass.,
U.S.A. s. p. unm. X, Jonathan B. Firnald, b. 11 Mar. 1 844 ; ^ s. Piate^J33. cipher^s^gn^^^^^^
d. East Boston, 23 June, 1867, s. p. unm. XI, Charles Augustus south church Tomb, eision. Mass
Firnald, b. 5 Dec. 1847 at Wolfboro Centre, m. Eliza A., da. of i^t John Fumai bur n cemetery. Portsmouth.
Mr. John Acres and wife E. A. Bellamy; had one da. Fronia Jose-
phine Fernald, b. 15 Jun. 1878, d. 11 Dec. 1886. Loved wife d. Oct. 23. 1880. Age, 37y. 6m. 3 d.
226 ■
f
IKE ANCESTRY WAS FOUND IN TWO LINES THAT MTH CHARITY FOR MISTAKEN RE-
CORDS WOULD CUT OFF THE BLOOD OF WASMINr.TON IN THE LINE, BEIN(J A DIRECT
BLOW AT THE STRENGTH OF STATE AND INlTEl' STATES IF THE ERROR SCKVIVKS
AS FIRST FOUND BE
TIAL SEARCH FOR ON
The second found line, true : —
1, ROBERT, b. 13 July 971-1031,
HI. CONSTANTINA.
2, ROBERT, brother Henry.
3, RICHARD.
4, HAMON.
5, GILBERT; d. 12G1 had Gil-
bert, Hugh, Haraon, Robert, Thomas
and William.
6, ROBERT, 1321.
7, ALEXANDER, 1329, m.; had
Nicholas, John.
8, NICHOLAS, 1332,
m. BEATRICE; had
Joanna, John.
9, JOHN.
10, REV. G. PYKE,
Seat, Bavthorn Park.
11, THOMAS, 1410,
sherifi, London. Have
Coat of Arms.
12, 1462,' London,
Eng., baron.
13, JOHN, m. gr. da.
Sir Thomas More, the
Martyr.
14, REV. WILLIAM,
1591, d. a martyr, by
Roman Catholics, m. da.
Wm. Washington (W).
15, ATTY. JOHN,
1635 came to Charles-
town, .\meriea, went
to Ipswich; m. SARAH
WASHINGTON. Sam-
uel Moore mentioned iu
his will.
10, MAJOR ROBE-
RT 1690 Commander-
in-Chief, vide archiveH
State House, liostun.
Mass.
17, REV. JOHN
1653, of Dover, N. H
Eklucated at Harvard
College.
18, MARINE R
JOHN 1G93, d., will
dated Ro.xbury, grave
in Dorchester, vide
instructive gravestone
Upham's Corner.
19, MIDSHIPMAN
JOHN e.xecutor of Fa-
ther's Will, vide Re-
cords, Boston.
20,CAPTAINJOHN
1755, gallant soldier
of New Jersey, at Kil-
bum Garrison with his
son, Kilbum and son
aided by women de-
Rtv. John Rogers, burned 4 Feb. 1555.
FOItE THE FULL AND I.Ml'AH
Y TRUTH THAT SHALL STAND.
feated 200 Indians : vide N. H. and
Uncle Henry Pikes' histories.
21, MAJORZEBULON PIKE,17r,l,
b. Simeon, k. at {not Bunker) Breeds
Hill, Charlestown, Col. Noyes a de-
scendant (See line chn. gene.ilopy.)
22, ROBERT, ra. MARY, da. Col.
Wm. Cotton in Fr. and Indian Wars.
Had 10 chn., m. 2 Joanna E. .Moore
or More: (Jacob his bro.)a8on, had
Harrison Pike. Zebulon fr. Robert
and of Brigadier General Zebulon
Montgomery Pike, after
whom was named Pikes'
Peak, was iironioted to
General, vide ' .\rchives.
State House, New Jersey.
23, MARY COTTON
PIKE m. JONATHAN
POORFERNALDhadll
chn. His. gr. fr. John
Femald, bro. John W.
Fernald, who was
named by Gov. John
Wentworth.
24, JAS.W. FERNALD
m. SARAH HIGGINS of
Cape Cod. Had Lyn,
Paul. Rnv, Howard, d. y.
25, PAUL FER-
NALD ra. EMMA da.
F. W.Rueckheimr:had
L\n .Murie, Wm. Paul
Fermi Id.
First line, viz :
1,J0HN m. SA-
RAH.
2, ROBERT m.
SARAH SAUNDEBS
Mild MARTHA GOLD-
\\\KR.
3, MOSES m. SUS-
ANNA WORCESTER.
4, JOSEPH, m.
SUSAN. KINGSBURY.
5, ROBERT, m.
SARAH QUIMBY.
G. R O B E R T m.
MARY COTTON.
I believe is not
correct from later re-
cords discovered.
This second epistle,
beloved, I now write
unto yon ; in both
wliich I stir up your
pure minds by way of
remembrance ; That
ye may be mindful of
the words which were
spoken before by the
holy prophets, and of
the commandment of
us the apostles of the
Lord and Saviour:
m^
mob. A meet-
CommonStreet,
patriots, who
the in selves a s
dians, boarded
ships, armed,
hours broke
of tea, vahied
ster 1 i n g d i s-
contcn t s into
No other prop-
tro) ed c X c ep t
low-tail slashed
Johnson with
chette, and the
scattered over
AMERICUS VESPUCCI- F.SPuc a Counu I™ u,
PI. 1137A. AM (er)ICUS VespU(U) US Monogram.
HE 16TH OF DECEMBER. 1773, TOWN MEETING ADJOURNED AFTER
hearing an ac-
count of "Tax
on Tea," dis-
solved itself
amid cries of a
mg was held on
Boston, by the
there disguised
Mohawk In-
the three te a-
;ind in about two
open 342 chests
at IKOUO pounds
charged their
the briny sea.
crty was des-
the coat swal-
open by Phineas
his sharp ma-
tea contents
the Wharf.
I have relics of house.
PI. 1134. Phineas John-
son with Machette in hand
throwing Tea overboard
in Boston Harbor: his da.
Elizabeth ("Betsey Far-
nel") m. Wm. "Firnald
^Furnald" Captain Timothy
Jr. d. at Louisberg in the
King's Services, 1746.
Place 1135. Ferdinando
Georges and Captain John
Tufton Mason, search the
Map-will of Dr. Renald Fer-
nald, d. 1656.
Plate 1135 A.- Autograph of
Ancestor de Colligny, Gt. Gr. Fr.
Dr. Renald Fernald. The letter .'PUjl^^i n{<I pCZcrrr''-"
2nd Edition purposed of 7000 JinUpn^%p B^kl'ln' TiLT °k.
pages, or more. \^- WW W K;se"!°VD''e"r.hh:
Plate 1137. AM(er)lCUS Ves- Jli/JlJIJCJ' ^^ l^.r?:, '"™^r°
pUtiUS. Monogrammic illustra- ')Jh)^'l^ CT^^/ "" '■.'""■•"-'of
tion. ^"^ "^'^
Plate 1136. Edition II for an-
other fulf translation, very valuable.
a I I B 1 3A I Von :c I & I I oAa@-
/Egyptian of Hebrew. I I I I &i^-^QO^
Plate 1138. Presentation of C. Furni
sword to a descendant Northman, Thor-
fin Karl Se Fne. Vide American His-
tory of the visit of Northmen to
America.
3
PLATE 1136.
PLATE 1138.
228
SI
"I ^^^^.9f, AMERICUS VESPUSIUS AT FLORENCE, 9 MARCH. 1451:
P- AT ISLAND OF TERCERA, 1514. TH^^ REMAINS OF HIS SHIP.
X ^J^'^^' ^^E'^E PRESERVED BY THE KING OF PORTUGAL IN THE
CHAPEL OF LISBON.
BLESSED ARE THE MARTYRS
PLATE 1139. Admiral Caspirde de Collgny:
dc Coligny, Admiral of
his wife, ) aid the pure
from the bigoted Fana-
protected assassins, was
formation of a Colony in
and obtained a Commis-
Charlcs IX. He gave
tion to John Ribault, who
Feb. 1562. Having ar-
ed the coast of Florida,
Carolina after Charles
priated honor of its name
promises of further aid
in France prevented send-
1564, when he sent Lau-
Commander. They
called it Carolina, which,
IX. They suffered the
When in great distress,
ed with provisions and
vessels to return. When
arrived with reinforce-
every kind. With a vis-
Spain claimed a prior
fitted out an expedition
who were foes of the
that upon the arrival of
all embarked and were
Ancestor Gaspard
France to, (by wish of
Protestants in escaping
tical Roman Catholics
decided to attempt the
America. He solicited
sion for this purpose from
command of the expedi-
sailed with the squadron
rived in May, he explor-
built a Fort and called it
VIII,k.Chas.(IX)appro-
26 persons were left with
that the civil bigots, war
ing till return of peace
donniere an able wise
erected a new Fort and
was said to please Charles
usual privations of settlers.
Sir John Hawkins arriv-
ofFered them one of his
about to embark, Ribault
ments and supplies of
ta of success before them.
right to the country and
under Pedro Melende^,,
French • and Protestants
their enemies! Nearly
shipwrecked. The rest massacred except a few Roman
Catholics. Those who escaped shipwreck, promised safety
by surrendering, were foully slain and bodies hung on gib-
bets with the inscription : — "Not as French but as Pro-
testa n ts."
As the gov-
ernment did
not take any
measures to
punishthem
as is to-day
adopted by
other n a -
tions, brave
Dominic de
Gourgues, a
French Off-
icer, fitted
out 3 ships
and 150men
at his own
cost, 1568,
a n instru-
m e n t ap-
pointed of
God, sur-
prized the
Forts, cap- pine i
tured many °' "
prisoners &
hung them upon the same trees with the inscription over their "heads: — "I do not this as unto
Spaniards, but as unto Traitors, Robbers and Murderers". THL'S as GOD saith:— "He that shed-
deth Men's Blood by Men, SHALL HIS BLOOD BE SHED". All men except the Son of God
hath committed evil. GREAT is to be the just punishment of the hypocrite, who knoweth well but
doeth not righteously.
Coligny
145. Pope Alexander
pels Frederic L' Emper-
7i
VK IS A CORRUPTION OF
CU)D CRliAlED WOMAN
MID LAKE LAND OF
AVA. WHICH MEANS LITERALLY:
IN HIS LIKENESS IN IIIE I'VRA-
ANONA. PURE HOLY.
Pla;c 1149. Medal from Socielyof Colon.il
Wars, honoring Capuin John FetnaM. and
givtn wnlcr. Made (rom
from botlom o( ihe sei. al Louisberg
e* Hax.pih.re. r.c'^ changed.
'OW THE GOOD SHIP IRONSIDES, CONSTITUTION. ON WHICH TOBIAS FER-
NALD. WOUNDED IN BATTLE, DID PULL HIS BLEEDING ARM FROM THE
AMPUTATING SURGEON AND WAVED THE STUMP IN THE AIR JOINED
loud cheers for victory won. He died from his wounds giving his life for Uncle Sam,
nonym for liberty, or honorable death, always preferable to the loss of honor and s]aver>-.
01
HE CA P-
N A L D ,
POINTED
ing awaiting
for a night
1 Nov. 1740,
planned a massacre at
prevented by a surprise
were killed and with
wounded and Capt. John
left side of mouth by an
.f nic k by the ch
he wrested from I
in p(
blade is recorded "1100
Turkish and Arab
which is a metal history
family custom that pro-
bring into the light for
when in the shadows of
previous massacre a t
TA IN JOHN FER-
FIRST AT THE AP-
PLACE FOR MEET-
the arrival of his soldiers
attack on Indian foes
the Indians who had
Oyster River, that was
of the Indians and 110
a loss of 14 slain, all were
Fernald's wounds were
arrow, left clieek and
tan's scalping knife tiiat
and slew him \\ ith it
i)f writer. On its ancient
Indians" in mixture of
primitive languages,
in conformit)- ^^■ith the
longed search ought to
universal good, at a time
obscured truth. The
Oyster River i- recorded
(§
N THIS MIS-
COUNT OF
LINE TO AVA
on pen, plume,
also the E^g of Prom
"^^v *^?\ ,/0^' ''■^^'^'^- ^''■^'^''- '•'^ "^^I
in Serpent Mr
E
L
ES
""" Pii*'- and leaves of ureath, crown
ind of American Antedehivians.
COMMONWEALTH
SETTS. Office of the
War Services of Zehulon
Appears as cornet in the
on March 1, 1777; Resr-
21). 1777; Lieutenant,
Dec. 25, 177S; ReKimen-
i78(J, and served to close
ies, 1791; Capt. in the
March 5, 1792; assigned
1796; Major. March 21,
Infantrv, April 1. 1S02;
nel, luiv 10, IS 12; hon-
15, rsi5. (Died July 27.
tinental Officers, Boston,
ed with original and
Wm. M. Olin, Secretary
Massachusetts, Office of
tral very valuable Records
courteously supplied by puh n65.
of Archives Dept. State f**" z m
O F M A S S A C H U -
Secretar)'. Revelutionary
Pike of New jersey.
4th Continental Dragoons
imental Adjutant. Nov.
March 15,177H; Captain,
tal l'a\ master, June I,
of war; Capt. in the Lev-
United States Infantry,
to 3rd. Infantrv, Nov. 1,
ISOO; transferred to 1st.
Urevet Lieutenant Colo-
:irably dischargeil, |une
S34. ) Heitman'sCon-
june 13, 1S95. Compar-
tound Correctly Copied.
From Commonwealth of
Secretary. These ances-
from my request, \\ere
I General Zebuion Pike. .Messrf. Brown and Ttacy
ry Cotton P,ke F- .■ Hcui^e, F. >,'(.n MaSSa-
Courl Squa
Spring;!,,
chusetts. .A line of Pikes ci
afHicteil with a cancer, the
chani,a-,l fn.n, the glorious
c religion and instructi
Bible of all denomina
H,
t off m. with Washington and has substituted a i
worse will befall if our countrv is in its almost
gift of (Jeneral C'eorge Washington. Command
)iis never warrantctl the removal of pure teaching;
ions. Maj. R. Pike, Commander-in-Chief by Cov.
II. to one of God's das.
perfect Constitution — is
iT-in-Cbief an.l Father,
in our schools from the
Simon Bradstreet, 1690.
ANY A LITTLE MAKE A MIKEL." RIGHTEOUSNESS THE FOUNT OF LIFE.
Plate 1168. Great Balllt of Kiibourne Gam:
wife and daughter defeated from 17C
retreated, carrying off their <
died 13 days after. J
1. <)lh and lOth September 17bo John PiKe
3 250 Indians (different numbers stated by d fferei
id. 'considerable and wounded John Pilie wa
Kilbourne. Jr.. shot and killed the
m and shot in shoulder. John Pike, killed, was grai
Dover, New Hampshire. Tlie Kilbournes
234
of the honest well
I have the pleasure of
thanking for their
Service, whose vast
voluminous work
highly appreciated by
nalds and descendants
of America, with the
the whole world, our
well cared for the
ancient name and
Too aust
wise men: too rigorous
jects; too hard a relig-
sons whose devotions
— St. Evremond.
There is no nobil-
heart: for it never
wantingin good offices,
able. Is but slight
Ham.
Who would not
Ageslliaus, King of
fined by the Ephori for
the hearts of the people
whom it was said, that
obeying it. T h a t is
It was a maxim of
to reckon we have done
anything remains to be
Plale 1 169. Uncle William Fern
RETURN TO
WILLIAM FER-
WHOSE PHOTO-
MYSTERIOUSLY
ed when sent by ex-
ered by great expense
known company that
complimenting and
American Express
amount of successful
thereon cannot be too
the whole 63000 Fer-
in the United States
legions scattered over
kinsmen, that have
honor of their most
families.
philosophy makes few
politics, few good sub-
ion, few religious per-
areof long continuance.
ity like that of a great
stoops to artifice, nor is
where they are season-
praise for Uncle Wil-
desire the honor that
Sparta had, who was
having stolen away all
to himself alone? Of
he ruled his country by
well copied by corrupt.
Caesar's that we ought
nothing so long as
done.
235
s
N THIS PLATE GIVE
ILY ANCESTRY. WHOSE
MEROUS THAT A
AT EAST WOLFBORO IS
THEY WERE A
CLASS OF MEN AND
^-r ^ /
1185. Self explanaioi]
OUR ENGLISH COTTON FAM-
DESCENDANTS ARE SO NU-
LARGE TRACT OF COUNTRY
NAMED TO HONOR I 11 EM.
STRONG, STALWART, BRAVE.
GODLY WOMEN.
Piatt 1174. ThtcU, m.
C. Furnius, da. Thfcia,
m. Asa Pike, an early
6. The Batlle, 27 April 1813 at Upper
.ri|t.-Gen. Zehulon Montgomery Pike, b
« Jersey, 5 Jin. 177V, hro. Kobert, I.. 17
Gen. Zebulon Pike, m. Anna Parker
Funel=Furnal=Faneuii, eldest ch.
OKAIKS TeiC A
^^
01
ONSIDER THE LILLIES, HOW THEY GROW: THEY TOIL NOT, THEY SPIN
NOT; BE YE THEREFORE READY ALSO: FOR THE SON OF MAN
COMETH AT AN HOUR WHEN YE THINK NOT"
Plate 1 182. See English Heraldry for these well honored.
c4o£^^^
1
M
R
''kd.
1
^^
XXVkV^^p
^^C
Plate 1185. Heraldry of our Mother Country. THEY HAVE REPEATEDLY FROM HONORABLE CONSULATE S
OUR THREE GREAT MORAL REFORM LAWS, AGAINST THE PRIME CAUSE OF THE DOWNFALL
OF NATIONS, EMPIRES, REPUBLICS, KINGS AND STATES. IN PURITY
44
3
SPEAK AS TO WISE MEN; JUDGE YE WHAT I SAY, FOR WHO
MAKETH THEE TO DIFFER FROM ONE ANOTHER? AND WHAT
HAST THOU, THAT THOU DIDST NOT RECEIVE? NOW IF THOU
didst receive it why dost thou glory, as if thou hadst not received it ? Now ye are
full, now ye are rich, ye have reigned as Kings without us, and I would to God ye did
reign, that we also might reign with you." "Now the God of patience and consolation grant you to be
like minded one toward another according to Christ Jesus." The Messiah. Honoring Nationalities.
Plate 1231. On this wise plate of cousin Dearbon at bottom of right is written by author, the
Primitive Alphabet, F. A. M. Keep the key, it is valuable. Plate 1229. WASHINGTON IN
HIS SIGNATURE ACKNOWLEDGED HIS DESCENT FROM FERNEL. England ofTered
to him the Crown if he would desert the holy cause of our freedom ? He properly refused. Let
every man and woman, War for God, Country, State and Family! Cease not ti 1 victory is won.
Teach thy children to ihus instruct posterity. Plate 1230. WITH RING OF 14th PRESIDENT
OF U. S. A., PRESENTED BY CALIFORNIA, CITIZENS OF SAN FRANSISCO.
Weight 1 lb., Value $2,000. Massive, superb and emblematic. Purely chaste and historic.
239
^V^LIZABETH, QUEEN
jL^ ED THE FER-
^ 1^ FANATICS,
^■^^ ten for three hundred
15 7 5, nor coin of
ance Washington's honored fea-
Thomas Fernald, buried at
inscription stolen from it. Two
daughter of James Wm. Fernald,
Pl»le 1232. -Good Queen BcM.'
OF ENGLAND, PROTECT-
NALD FAMILY AGAINST
WHICH IS NOT FORGOT-
and three years nor the coin
Uncle Sam that bears Temper-
tures, the beloved wife of
Lynn, Mass., in tomb with the
children arc named Lyn, viz:
and daughter of Paul Fernald.
"THE HERO OF TIPPECANOE'
Plate 1 2 3 8— H e
by the conspirators to
lack of enforced justice
been victims. The
court-martialled, and
over to God for punish-
crime comm itted
dent of United States
John Symmes Cleves
daughter ofZ. M.Pike,
pure breeze the United
Peak. There our na- f
servatory and its friends
the "Hero of Tippe- £f
who gave his life to _
SACRED HONOR. i£
Plate 1238.
8 i r Thomas More,
ancestor of writer, was born
son of Sir John, a descendant
riage of Wonhy Pike. They
Sir John was fined 100/. Sir
the oath of supremacy, 1534,
rested and sent a prisoner to
be hanged, drawn and quar-
that the Pope was Supreme,
SUPREME GOD. His
be beheaded, and he suffered
on London Bridge from
St- Dunstan's.
forgave those appointed
kill him, and for the
our presidents have
crim i n a 1 s captured,
condemned, turned
ment in proportion to
against the 9th presi-
of America. His son,
Harrison, married
who first threw to the
States flag from Pike's
tional and historic ob-
do not cease to honor
canoe," and a Pike
preserve h i s nation's
9th Presldenuof U. S.
Chancellor of England, and
1480 at London, and was a
of the St. Mauir's by mar-
were persecuted by the court.
Thomas was requested to take
and refused. He was ar-
the Tower — condemned to
tered, for the absurd belief
when there is only one
sentence was commute<l to
5 July, 1535. Head placed
Tower-hill and buried a t
■ 1234 Sir Thorr
^^OW AS A FEW RELICS MAY INTEREST US. THE TWO PAGES GIVE A PHOTO
JV-I PLATE OF PART OF MANY HUNDREDS IN POSSESSION OF VVRITER
^-\\ '• Sword of President Harrison. 5. FERNALD family ancient genealogy historic sxvord blade
-L ^ covered with inscriptions in mixture of languages: features of Persian foremothers. 3 Dr lean
^^ ^ Ferncl's battle sword. 3, Masonic sworJ. 4, Washington's sword given to Col. Tobias Fernald 6
and 7 back of it. Private Gen. Records giving data of Dr. John Fernel and his sword with a cypher
count to Ch.irles VIII. k. hrance. 8, U. S. flag, showing increase of States. 9, V. S. flag 13 stars, made bvMrs
E. A. Fernald, whose ancestor John Dacres was in .American Revolution and this lady gave her life for reportine
concealed firearms to use vs. State and U.S. 10, flag. Italy, Rome. 11, last autograph letter written by ancestor
G:isp;ir(lr dc Coligny,
Dr. Jean Fernel's one
have 13 containing his
Charles VI II with titles
wrote, on one of which
and one of the family
of Capt. William Fer-
1630, brt. over to Va.
da. Temperance Wash-
Femald. 14 Relic of
Fernel's book with ti-
ings. 16, 74, 75, 76,
Union : and gun of Ad-
Ccntcr gun owned by
gun saved and given to
with history, Rcgt.
lock and sights .shot to
placed in ambulance.
Potrait-Engraving prc-
Louis Joriaux, Arch-
o f the world for
Cabinet d. Hozicr ,
his courteous letters re-
Adminilof FniiKc. 12,
of 1-7 books I had and
coat of arms as son of
of many good books he
is a caricature of him
coat of arms, probably
nald of King Philip,
Robert and Anna witli
ington who m. Thorns.
Civil war. IS, Dr. Jean
ties of many of his writ-
Relics of Civil war for
miral John Paul Jones,
N. H. soldier, shot,
mc by Mass. soldier
Co.. N. H.. Vol. Its
pieces. Soldier w a s
18, Dr. Jean Fernel
sented to me by Hon.
ives (during the search
facts) de la Noblesse
Paris, France. 19,
plcte in information.
Pl«t« 1241. ImporUnt Historic FemiM Rellcj. Se« numbera on PL 1246.
20, Son of American Revolution Diploma: 21,22 Flag and captured Philippine Spear, etc. 23. Dr. Jean Fer-
nel's large book on medicine with many Roman coins on top of it. left two Horse Pistols used in the American
Revolution: with Dighton Rock, Plymouth Monument and Cannon Ball captured by Capt. Daniel Fernald. also,
31 Bunker Hill Monument, seen also, 107, on right corner of roll top desk the shell, surmounted by a loose ball,
that was fired at Moro Castle. Spanish War. Fig. 30, my diploma as descendent of Capt. John Furnald. of the
Abigail at scige of Louisburg. 36. Some of books written by Dr. Jean Fernel. on 4 shelves. Second row
relics. Third row relics, a hammer from Gov. John Wentworth's mansion used to open skylight forthe memor-
able leap of 60 feet by Jonathan Fernald to escape death when it was burning down at Wolfborough. N. H.,
Wm. Fernald and Gov. John Wentworth's Portraits on right. 82, Hilt of Jean Fernald's sword: 3 very valu-
able books: "Good Queen Bess' " teapot: revolver bought for Spanish war: relics of American historj'. Doc-
ument accepting my voluntary services for Spanish war. 84. Our Presidents. 80, Important books with top
covered by Roman Coins. 77, Plymouth Monument. 63, One of the Bibles translated by Francis Junius Fer-
nel with assistance of Emaneuil Tremellius, whose da. he married and their descendants, 2nd. Rev. Daniel,
3rd. Rev. Peter, 4th. Peter Faneuil is buried in Old Granary Cemetery. Si, Coliseum at Rome. 56, Dress
sword of Capt. John Furnald. 52, Part of the remains of the Warwick that brought over Dr. Renald Fernald
and 80 emigrants to Strawberry Bank, 1631. It was wrecked atSquantum about 185 years ago. Touching the
wreck is the coat of arms sent from College of Hcraldr>- Paris, France. Our family portraits are found scattered
around the base, with the erased face of one of Boston's Protestant Ministers, hy papists, who ever do all they can
to detract from the old and best Puritan stock that number 62,000,000 in the United States of America.
241
(H
-° * * *
HE FIG. 92 WAS TAKEN FROM THE ORIGINAL TIMBERS OF "IRONSIDE-
SHIP CONSTITUTION AT PORTSMOUTH. NEW HAMPSHIRE. IT WAS
POWDER AND FERNALD BLOOD STAINED, AND BEING WEAK IN
centre is now to be seen broken from an accident. The boarding swords (95) were cast
into the Sea after America's Civil War, that liberated.
Below is to be
signatures of Sam-
nald=Pharnc!i=
=Peniel^ Penuel
=Fancuil^Funcl
= Furnall = Fcr-
See Genesis 32, 30,
& Hebrew Bible.
Old Granary Cem-
Mass., U.S.A.
ent spellings have
most ancient name
FNA&FNR with
W. Fernald r e-
I have found 127
other modes of
covered by me.
The Syrians,
sians and Indians,
the rising of the
of the Athenians,
Jews day began at
cient Italians ■ be-
of sunset. The
by Pepin, King of
by history. There
uable for good '"-"^^.iT^p'p'.lfr^
acts, as the present
e o( Fern»ld FamlSei ReBca. From prolonfed »e»rch
«n found untnie to Sale uid rlghleoiu Covemment
IhrouEhout the iges.
found two of the
ucl Furnald=Fcr-
♦ e v<»^=''K' JP
=Faniel^ Fanuel
= Funal=: Furnal
nald as is now spelt
31 of Holy Bible
Faneuil Tomb,
etery, Boston,
Eighty-five difler-
bccn found of our
and the first i s
0-0=FNF. H.
ported 125 ways,
and there may be
spelling it undis-
Babylonians, Per-
bcgan their day at
^ sun. The civil day
•50 Arabs, Gauls, and
sunset. The an-
gin the first hour
first clock owned
France, recorded
is no time so val-
deeds, honorable
time, to do well.
^
- #.
TTHE^.^^*^^.
(\S,^7 THE.,g<rt^;#-
TURKISH TURKISH
Two signatures of Samuel Fernald, Autographs. He was Atty. for my ancestor John and won
his case in Boston Court after Attys. refused to aid him further. The sig. Turkish, Greek, Primitive,
Monogramic, Genealogical. The same refused 1896 was repeated, to protect a proved criminal!
O ^ D.
242
dbapter J'lTD
W
N
I'l.ATF. l:5^^— I'ART IN CIPHER AND TIIF. KF.V IS THKRKON. An intrr.srini; stu<l
J
^ ^ ^ ^ o
-a ^ n-
a
ECORDED IN CIPHER LANGUAGE IS THE LINE OF THOMAS
FERNALD. WHO MARRIED TEMPERANCE WASHINGTON, TO
CHARLES VIII, AND HER DEATH ON. SPOON. VESSEL OF
DR. JOHN FERNEL. TURKISH COIN.
Plate 12S7. Silver spoon
of Captain Sir William Fcrnald
and siiip, K i r. k Philip, on
wliicli, as did Peter Fancuil on
Tomb, lie counts his genealojjy
t,. Louis \I. Kin(; ..f France,
etc. A Turkish spoon piece of
monc\'. Ancestral faces and a
^eal monof^ram of Anne of Brit-
tany and C. S, etc. A Fernald
Kc> : It turns l.oth U'a> s and
urdockcd the safe of Dr. jean
Fcrncl: given hv William to
Dr. Ken.ild IVrnald. IT IS
\A1A ABLE AND HISTOR-
IC. The Persian ancestral head
is inlaitl in a Mauser RiHe with
364 pieces to keep as a \aluahle
war relic.
.Autographs o n deed of
Pialcs 1266 and 1267.
lohisoldest son. .S: in his Bihlc:
)iJl^TVl:g^,Cf'^4^ni/tl(J''^^
I
■I
1^
\
c £
^^
1^1:
ig ol
ishinf
Relics and a recent medal.
248
Washington,
Anne, da. Franci:
Junius Fernel.
?£
^ ^ ^ ,3.
J70. Fac-3lmUe of Aulopaph.
Plate 1271. Fac-slmlle of Aulogriph.
Plate 1269. Every loyal American delights to honor our Presidents who led us through the peril-
ous wars and many vicissitudes to the greater United States that its loyal men are in the broad strife
for benefiting the whole human race, unselfishly in purity, ONE. The sword borne in the hand of
Washington is the one presented to "Captn." Tobias Fernald.
Plate 1270. Following in the footsteps of illustrious predecessors, nobly he advanced right, not-
withstanding his foes attempted to destroy the brave noble GOVERNOR OF MASSACHUSETTS.
EALS. RINGS, A FEW OF
ARE DISPLAYED.
ANCIENT FERNALD FAMILIES ON PL. 1272
View from
left to right:
— bottom to
top: — 1 s t,
Thomas and
wife Temper-
ance Wash-
ington Fer-
nald. Right
Corner An-,
testral Seal of
Phineas, son
Col. Saml.
J o h n s o n
whose da. m.
Wm. Fer-
nald. It con-
tains the ini-
tial letters of
More etc. see
Poem.
11th Seal of
Alexander the
Grea t . 13,
14, 15, Capt.
John Furnald
and wife Eliz-
beth Rogers:
mourning an-
cestral ri n g,
Annie of Brit-
iany, and her
h u s b a n d
Charles VII
Rings. 22 &
25, Turkish
relatives Seals.
26, Tho mas
John Savage
Seal s;ii d t o
have been
given to Mary
Savage w h o
married Mr.
John Furnald
and buried in
North Ceme-
terj'. Ports-
mouth, New
Hampsh i r e,
U. S. A. His
Epitaph well
earned is as
follows :
.-*^jf i_ j^^y r^^^^^^i^y ?^^i\'-i^
11ST0RY OF CREATION WHICH THIS ONLY WIFE OF NOAH WROTE ON THE ARK
AT MOUNT ARAAT AND IS THE TRUTH PROVING THE HOLY BIBLE GENESIS
TRUE BEFORE IT WAS WILFULLY CHANGED FOR POWER THE TABLET
OF ABYDUS AT THE BRITISH MUSEUM BEARETH THE /EGYPTIAN
HISTORY IN PURITY.-
250
"Mr. JOHN
FURNALD.
Obt. Novem-
ber 23, 1792:
Ae. 50. "
"Thro' all
this large ex-
tend ed hal-
low groun d,
where the
rich, the poor
the humble
and the
BRAVE, not
ONE more
HONEST,
or Friend ly ,
E ' r e was
found: Than
H E w h o
sleeps within
this silent
grave." 2 7,
Fe r n a 1 d &
Cotton Coat
of Arms. 30,
TheclaotUrn
of C Fiirnias.
31, is the most
im port a n t
SEAL in the
priceless col-
lection here-
on shown,
that ought to
be preserved
in theNntioii-
al Museu m
and guarded.
For desc ri p-
tion, vide Ed.
Second. See
the d o c u-
ments in res-
ervation held
of all of these
and many
more of the
historic seals
with Oldest
of Fnr Lamr
on the
T£
^ ^ ^
'AST Con-
cca led
North
Corner
of the
Old resi-
dence of Mr. Jona-
than Poor F I R -
NALD (Fernald)
where all of his
children except
Maria Renald Fer-
n a 1 d were born.
Sister M a r ia was
born at Wolfboro
orBrookheld.N.H.
who married Oran
Dixon, born at Leb-
anon, Maine, Aug.
21, 1819, died at
Sanford, Me., Jan.
21, 1900, and his
wife Maria R. Fer-
nald, born 16 Dec.
1822; died at Wolf-
boro Centre, N.H.,
Dec. 14, 1892.
J. P. Fer-
nald's house was
built on top of a
hill over a ledge
of stone in pio-
neer times. The
ell first and large
part as related.
The old apple
orchard and
plum with cher-
ry trees came to
maturity, were
enjoyed then
passed away, to
be followed by
two of the best
parents on earth
and eight chil-
d re n, 1 eaving
I vlllafc of Wollborough Center.
can be perfect
enough to do justice
to my kind, firm,
loving, perfect.
Christian, generous
parents. The house
frame of large part
was const ructed
from ParsonAllen's
church. The pre-
sent church was
built by Mr. Jona-
than P. Fernald
aided by Hon.
ThomasL.Whitton
and Elijah .Home,
whose da. Bella
married Rev. John
Chamberlain who
now owns and oc-
cupies it, having
made many beauti-
ful improvements,
among which is the
establishing of a
summer resort on
the shores of
Lake VV e n t-
vvortii that a
road built from
Fernald' s Cross-
ing (Railroad)
leads thereto
unto health,
beauty, quietude,
pleasure, recre-
ation and happi-
ness that cannot
be too highly
praised b y the
\' titer who has
p.-iSied many en-
joyable years in
youth gleaning
bountiful bless-
ings from it a -tl
environment.
Plate 1274:
The village in
1869. On right
Reynolds, in dis-
at date but three
surviving. N o pu.e ,274.
eulogy of mine
of center J. P. Fernild's home. Show residences of Samuel Stevensorf and Samue
tance, with school house and near Oran Dixon's and son, Charles O. Dixon's, LT. S. Post Master, and
the large building is the hay and cattle building, where, when a boy, because the writer was afraid to
do it, he walked unsupported along the top until fear vanished. Opposite side shows the residence of
Mr. Thayer, and afterwards Joseph Nudd's and wife. The Blacksmith Shop, Uncle Henry Pike's and
Henry Stevenson's buildings do not show on this plate of the beloved scenery of boyhood home,
dreams, loves and ambitions that ever move the heart to quicker pulsation and the mind to -review its
deepest most hallowed recesses that are known only by God, and self
251
N
^ * * *
OW IN PLATE 1275 IS SEEN ON R
LIVING ONE AT THEIR RESID
Hampsh ire:
Mrs. Josic M.
Buz z c 11 and
Late Miss So -
phronia C. Fir-
nald, who was
at their Summer
Cottage poison-
ed July 26th,
1906 and died
at 1483 Wash-
ington St., Bos-
ton, Mass.. 28 Ju-
ly 1906 and the
infamouspiison-
er of three sisters
and a brother,
permitted to go
on in boasted
protection in all
crimes: vide,
Encycliae Amer-
icana with reports of our
President Mc K i n 1 e y
assassination. And the
intent to assassinate
President Theodore
Roosevelt, which cul-
minated in that of a
sister, and that of an ever
believed forged change
of her will, with express
joUificatiousat the death
of the most noble wom-
an on earth.
Nothing but religion
is capable of changing
pains into pleasures.
Where religion speaks,
reason has only a right
to hear. Hope makes
time very long, and en-
joyment very short.
The courage which
emulation inspires for
an enterprise soon finds
the means of succeeding.
IGHTTHELAST DECEASED SISTER AND
ENCE AND HOME: FARMINGTON, NEW
tion or nations
protect th£ i r
crim i na Is in
highest or low-
est classes: then,
martyrdom o f
the virtuous in
towns, cities and
the world's pure
isaccomplisned,
and the general
downfall is as-
su r e d . The
wise trace these
matters to their
own foes wh o
are ungodly
men in every
station of life,
whose deepsub-
tilities are used
to beguile the
unwary.
PUte 1275. Home of I
Moore BuueU k S. C. Fenuld
When a town, city, PUle 1276 Tomb ol From. Jo«pW
State, government, na- Femild. Firmlngton. New Himpjh
D
"Vengeance is mine
saith the LORD, I will
repay!" Go<l chooses
his own agents to ac-
complish his own de-
sires upon the depraved
wicked.
Nature cries aloud to
the most powerful, as
well as the most abject
of men, that they are
members of the same
body.
Must one cease to be
virtuous to escape being
exposed to the darts of
envy? What a calami-
ty would it be if the sun
ceased shining that
weak eyes might not be
offended !
252
E
HAT MR. EDWARD E. DIXON VOLUNTEERED FOR SPANISH WAR WITH HIS
UNCLE CHARLES DID NOT PLEASE THOSE WHO TWENTY YEARS PROTECTED
CAPITAL AND WORSE CRIMES FOR WHICH TWO JUDGES AND AN ATTORNEY
GENERAL RESIGN. AS BACK OF IT IS THE REPORT OF STORING FIREARMS
TO USE AGAINST STATE AND U. S. WITH A DEPOSITION OF CAPITAL CRIME
AGAINST A HIGH DIG-
NITARY OF THE RO-
MAN CATHOLIC
CHURCH. ALSO A RE-
PORT OF SIXTEEN
DEATHS OF ALL
THOSE WHO BUILT
SECRET PASSAGES UN-
DER HISSAID CHURCH. .
NATIONS I FEAR-
LESSLY SHOW YOU
FACTS AND YOUR
DANGER FROM THOSE,
AMONG MANY PURE,
FORMER NEITHER
SERVE GOD NOR RE-
SPECT THE LAWFUL
RULERS OF THE NA-
TIONS: MANY OF
WHICH THEY HAVE
MADE POOR BY EVER
MEDDLING WITH POL-
ITICS WITH EVER RE-
SULTANT WRONGS,
BLOODSHED. LET IT
CEASE!! GIVE FULL
JUSTICE.
Justice! unto the lawful
Rulers of this Earth which
the Lord thy God hath given
to you, appointed and
annointed, blessed you the
head of all his children for
your and their highest good
, that God so loved that he gave
for death his only highest
heavenly son who taught as
the primitive religion taught,
Plate 1273, Edw.rd Evercll Dli
notwithstanding the 170 reli-
gions have changed the only
one primitive found.
'Tis true, and sad, it is true,
that of tlie seventy w ho wrote
the Bible, when much was
lost of the primitive religion,
hundreds of years after Christ
died. These great translators
could not agree.
Careful studies for truth
only has shown that in the
Hebrew Bible and in the He-
brew New Testament, when
they are translated into the
/Egyptian primitive hierogly-
phics and symbols do clearly
show all the primitive religion
for all of earth made after the
keness of our Creator God
whose name has even been
found as spelt in 170 ways.
The papyrus, mounds, inscrip-
tions and coins give correct
aids that the wisdom of this
20th century ought to as a
sacred trust utilize confering
great honor on mankind by
obeying the Commandments
of God.
Plate 1278. Edward Ever-
ett Dixon and companion
with Topsy on Mound. One
looking to Fort, the other to-
ward Lovell's Brook the
scene of great Indian Battle.
Topsy watching my camera
work. Mr. Dixon on the
right. Persecuted for seeing
and testifying against pro-
tected Boston criminal.
"Behold, what manner of
love the Father hath bestowed
upon us, that we should be
called the sons of God : there-
fore the world knoweth us not,
because it knew him not."
253
(^
o ^ ^ ^ c
OING TO SyUANTUM TO ERECT A STATUE,
SOCIETY OF COLONIAL WARS.
It was
that brought
Strawberr)
185 years ago, and in a
tions of the ancient ves-
timbcrs on shore. It
fore iron was substituted
latter, the original and
for repairs. See plate of
Two English ladies de-
came over at the time of
from there to the Brit-
fought against the Amer-
When great men
overcome by the length
let us see that they only
the strength of their
that of their minds; and
of a good deal of vanity,
other men.
P h i I o sophy tri-
and over future evils, but
over philosophy.
We have all of us
bear the misfort-
The constancy
but the art of look-
tion in their minds
It r c q u ires
support good than
Tacticus com-
his elevation to the
"Nihil in vultu
turn: quasi imper-
quamvellet." Hist.
WAS THE CRY OF THE
here that the Warwick
over 80 Emigrants to
Bank was wrecked about
part of it I found indica-
sels and a portion of its
showed construction be-
for wooden pins, both,
former, an iron bolt used
relics for that portion,
clare that their ancestor
the wreck, and went
ish ■ P r o V i nces. H e
icans on Breed's Hill.
suffer themselves to be
of their misfortunes, they
supported them through
ambition, not through
that with the exception
heroes are|made just like
umphs easily over past
present evi I s triumph
sufficient fortitude to
unes of others.
of sages is nothing
ing up their agita-
and hearts.
greater virtues to
bad fortunes.
ments of Piso on
empire by Galba:
habituque m u t a -
are posset fnagis,
1. 17.
Plile 1281. In the American Rcvohjdon we (oufhl under the Ore
There is going on in the human mind and heart a perpetual generation of passions, so that the
overthrow of one is almost always the establishment of another. Self love is a flatterer.
The passions are the only orators that always persuade: they are, as it were, a natural art, the rules
of which are infallible: and the simplest man with passion is more persuasive than the most eloquent,
without it. Vide maxims of Francis Due de la Rochefoucauld — line — Fulk.
(§
UR POSTERITY ARE BLESSED BY THE NOBLE PURE GODLY ACTS AND
DEEDS OF ANCESTORS!
PLATE 1303.
JONATHAN POOR FIRNALD. b. 1797-1893. Photo il act. 93.
JEAN'FERNEL.b. 1497-1558. WILLIAM FIRNALD. b. 177E-1867. Cods Children.
PLATE 1304. J. P. FERNALD. at 65 yrs. PLATE 1305. Miry Cotton (Pike) FERNALD. at 62 yrj. of ijt.
Married: Jonathan Poor Firnald to Mary Cotton Pike, da. of Robert Pike and his wife Mary
Cotton, da. Col. William Cotton and his wife Mary Clark, 13 September 1821. 11 children.
255
^f^OWN FROM TOP LEFT HAND ARE THE CHILDREN AS FOLLOWS:
^hA ("NANCY FOR ANNETTA") NANCY HORNE FERNALD, SCHOOL
^hl TEACHER, m. W. T. DORR. AT CIVIL WAR: MARIA RENALD FERNALD,
^^M^ School Teacher, m. O. Dixon.
Bracken Fernald, 1st, d. y. Hannah Fernald, 2nd. m. J.
James William
Fernald, m. Sarah
Higgins. 3d wife.
Belle Matteson
Joan More Fernald,
School Teacher, m.
S. H. Buzzell.
Hannah Fernald.
1st. a. y.
Mary Elizab e t h
Fernald, m. J. L.
Dixon and D. Cole-
man.
In centre is Moth-
er Mary Cotton
(Pike) Fernald.
Plates made by C.
J. Peters, whose Ro-
man Catholic Secre-
tary kindly recom-
mends to restore old
plates those who do
excellent work on
everything that is
not Protestant, exe-
crable on Protestant.
Nearly all t h c i e
plates of my family
line and relatives arc
caricatures, readily
seen by comparison
of my bro. James,
and myself Phos.
and plates delineated
thus in this to stop
every untruth forced
upon a free Repub-
lic, now overrun by
bought up Vatican
worked against enactment: shown up for it they refused to sign after offering
work against State and U. S. for the. Roman Catholic Church," boasting "others will take it if you
will not" Other bribes were offered.
Honestly, earnestly laboring for the good of all, using every righteous effort to keep from this
book every radical statement, regretting that I am compelled to thus handle and demonstrate the dan-
gers, as is done to preserve true christian manhood for peace on earth and good will to all men. a very
humble servant of God, say: it hath been declared that any one who knows of a crime and will not
aid or abet its prevention, its punishment, is particeps criminis. Popes Leo XIII and Piux X with
Vatican refuse signatures against capiul and worse crimes. May God forgive them ! Confer Wisdom ! I
256
Pl»le 1306. Family o( J. P.
C. (P.) FenuJd.— Continued p. 2S5.
Haines.
press, spies, tools to
aggrandize papacy
and rob all the good
Nations.
Every conceivable
persecution has to
date been inaugu-
rated, put in full force
and continued from
1870 to 1909 inclu-
sive, after first mak-
ing exhaustive to
them as they be-
lieved, inquiries, that
has so clearly proved
the accuracy of our
long line of descent
from Charies VIII
with remote and de-
scendant ancestors, as
set forth, which,
oath can be taken
properly to its accur-
acy, well known,
that the Highest of
the Roman Catholic
Church have signed
in Boston repeatedly,
acknowledging same
and petitioning for
the enactment of our
three great moral re-
form laws against the
cause of'the downfall
of men, states, gov-
ernments and nations
from primeval time
to the end of the
world: signing, they
bribe of $250,000 "to
(§
N EARTH THERE ARE NONE SO NEAR AND DEAR AS WIFE, CHILD
FATHER AND MOTHER. SISTER AND BROTHER, WHO ARE "BORN
FOR ADVERSITY."
Seven of these, and t h e
family of Napoleon, General
More-au, Sir Thomas More,
Rev. John Rogers, Dr. John
Fernel, the husband of Annietta,
daughter Gasgarde de Coligny,
Admiral of France, the first
American Genealogist Henry
Washington Fernald were
crowned by martyrdom with
Francis Junius Fernel and his
parents Dr. Jean Fernel and
wife, after his father Charles
VIII, from 1497 to 1909.
Charles Augustus
Fernald, plates 1307 and 1308;
WIFE. ELIZA AN. ACRES
MORRIS FERNALD, da.
FRONIA JOSEPHINE FER-
NALD. BROTHER and SIS-
TER JONATHAN BRACK-
ETT FERNALD and S-O-
PHRONIA CHASE FER-
NALD.
"Behold, what manner of
love the Father hath bestowed
upon us, that we should be called
the sons of God: therefore the
world knoweth us not, because
it knew him not." "L i t t 1 e
children, let no man
deceive you: he that
doeth righteousness is
righteous, even as he
is righteous." "For
this is the message
that ye heard from
the beginning, that
we should love one
another." "Not as
Cain, who was of that
wicked one, and slew
h i s brother. And
wherefore he slew
him? Because h i s
own works were evil,
and his brother's
righteous." St. John
1.3.
"Marvel not, my
brethren, if the world
hate you."
Who loveth not
wife, child, father,
mother, sister and
brother knoweth not
God, for God is love.
These all I have
loved, and of the
■dearest, only God
remains.
•'""^^Hffil
^
'j'y^BB
p;
W.
s^
V
^p'
^
Charles Augustus Fernald.
Fronia Josephine Fernald.
good man out of the
good treasures of his
mind and heart
bringeth forth that
which is good; and
an evil man out of
the evil treasures of
his mind bringeth
forth that which i s
evil; for of the abun-
dance of the mind
and heart 'his mouth
speaketh,thus sowing
good or evil; as the
seed, like will be the
fruit.
"We know we
have passed from
death unto life,
because we love the
brethren. He that
loveth not his brother
abideth in death."
"Little children,
keep yourselves from
idols. Amen."
257
PON THE GENERATIONS OF THE RIGHTEOUS IS CONFERRED THE!
DUTY OF PRESERVING THE HONOR OF THE HOUSE.
WILLIAM FERNALI>
MATTESON. da. Joel
(Fish) Mattcson. Thisj
1 3 09, photo a. 1894. PL
(Vide.)
accused of pride merely
would be proud of them—
places."
some, opens the eyes of
much to diminish the
ourselves as to sec that we
what we approve at an-
Trl JAMES
M^\ m. BELLE
A. and Mary
photo unchanged. PI.
1310 is of his forefather.
"Men arc sometimes
because their accusers
selves if they were in their
"Interest, which blinds
others."
"Nothing ought so
good opinion we have of
disapprove at one time
other."
"It is not all that know
their hearts. *
"We give nothing so
"Here, my sagacious
this purse of gold, and
to be so great a fool as to
another." — Quentin
"We are sometimes as
"Nature creates merit
play."
Juvenal or Fuvenal, the
thorough appreciation of
"Respicit h sec pri-
servi
an post te sella, togati
ducta Paulus agebat,
vii. 141.
Quelle uicsintclhgcncc
Le philosophe vit mal
Ic pohtique rcinpli de
sait pas se gouverner."
"The head is always
"A determ i nation
poses us to deception."
PUle 1309. JAMES WILLIAM FERNALO. Flrit t
Flags over School Houses. Adapted by U. S. vid a
their heads who know-
liberally as advice."
friend," said Louis, "take
with it the advice^ never
think yourself wiser than
Durward.
different from ourselves."
and fortune brings it into
Roman lawyers, had a
this truth: —
mum, qui litigat, an tibi
Octo, decem comites.
Ante pedes. Ideo con-
Quam Basilius." — Sat-
cntrc I'csprit et Ic cd'ur!
avec tous ses preceptes, et
vucs ct (le reflexions iic
the dupe of the heart."
never to deceive often ex-
Twenty-one of Rev. p^,^ ,3,^ rev. john cotton, b. 4 d«: ,585: a. 23 J"*'" Cotton's descend-
ants, besides those of fe- Dec. i652 bur King s chapei Cemetery. Bosion. male branches graduated
_^ XT J y-> II »-» Ancestor of Mrs. Mary Cotton Pike Fernald. , •/ i_ /^ i
at Harvard College. By 1st wife no chn. : 2a
Sarah Story, Seaborn, b. on passage to N. E. : 2d Sarah: 3d John: 4th Roland, named for gr. fr. :
5th da. m. Mr. Eggington: 6th Maria m. Rev. I Mather: 14 have been clergyman.
258 . ^
s
^_i c^ a^ (=Q=> ■._!=
to commem-
orate by dedication, a
token of kinsmanship
honoring and love.
EVERING AND HONORING MV FOREFATHERS, WHO VNORSHIE'ED
GOD IN WORDS, DEEDS, ACTS, FAITHFULLY. FREELY BESTOWED,
GIVE WE THE WREATHS AND FLAGS OF GREATER UNITED STATES
of America,
SEABORN COT-
TON,son of Rev. John,
was b. August, 1633, 3rd
minister of Hampton,
d. 19 April, 16H6; m.
DOROTHY, daughter
GOVERNOR BRAD-
STREET. Had— 1,
Dorothy, m. a Smith of
Hampton; 2, John; 3,
Ann, b. 23 April, 1661;
4,Sarah,b. 2 July 1663;
5, Elizabeth, b. 13 Sept.
665;6,Mercy,b. 3Nov.
1666, m. Capt. Tho.
Tufts, father Rev. John
Tufts;7. Abia.d. infant;
H, Maria, b. 22 April,
1670,m.lst,Mr.Atwater,
Plalel311. Names o( those buritd In my ancestor's. Rtv. John Cotlons, 2nd, Samuel Partridge,
Tomb, at King's Chapel, Tre-noM Street, Boston, Ma«____ oneda^t. Mr. Richard
Pierce, another
JOHN, the brother
of Seaborn Cotton, a
minister of Plymouth,
b. 13 Mar. 1640; d. 18
Sept. 1699; m. JANE
ROSSETER, 7 Nov.
1660. Had— 1, John,
minister of Yarmouth;
2, Elizabeth, m. Rev.
James Arling, 2. Rev.
Caleb Gushing, of Plais-
tow, New Hampshire,
and mother o f Rev.
James C. and Rev. John
Gushing of Boxford; 3.
Sarah; 4, Roland, min-
ister of Sand-
wich; 5, Sarah;
6, Maria; 7, son
died infant; H,
Josiah; 9, Sam-
uel; 10, Josiah
2nd; 11, The-
ophilus, minis-
ter of Hampv
tonFalls.N.H.
grad.H.C. and
died 18 August
1726: Above
JOSIAH 2nd
was born 8 Jan.
1680, father of
COL. WIL-
LIAM COT-
TO N who
moved to
Portsmouth,
and then to
Wolfborough,
New Hamp-
shire.
- ''*''^'^S.v^>"
^^^^^B^S^^^^S^^Ci^^^^
&Ss!5=^i^i§
B^^
m^iff^i
^r-^^^^-Ay,,^S^^
W^^'-'^m^m^i^M
^^^^r-l
m. Mr. Carr.
William
Cotton, of
Boston, a
member of the
Ancient and
Honorable
Artillery Com-
pany 16 5 0:
Had William,
b. 1646; Wil-
liam2nd,1654;
William Cot-
ton in Ports-
mouth 1685;
John Cotton
in Concord in
1 667^3 nd 1679.
George in
Springfield, d.
1 7 December
1699.
Plate 1312. My Peter Faneuil^P. Furml=Funel^Funal Tomb Dedicated with prayer by
Pastor Graves, first of October, 1 p. m., one thousand eight hundred and ninety mne, at Old Granary
Cemetery, Tremont Street, Boston, Massachusetts, United States flag raised and it with Old South
Tomb sealed. Former unto God, Cwmtry, Stale and Family, and later unto same and families! In
the coat of arms on the Peter Faneuil Tomb are 256 lines of evidence and proof of same in monogram-
mic Newport Tower, also, in Dighton Rock inscription. Oldest .Map Chart of our true g;enealog\' and
national discovered long forgotten universal history extending to primeval time and primitive religion,
the lost now found, Hebrew language before points were introduced for obscurity.
-n ^ ^ ^
"FANEUIL, 1.2. 3, 14. 26. 36. 13. 186. Vol. 14. Town Meeting at FANEUIL HALL
1742, first time since the death of PETER FANEUIL, ESQR. 14 March." He d. 1743. Fore-
noon—Mourning. Sec Boston Report of the Record Commissioners: Note dates.
ORATION OF MR. JOHN LOVELL, MASTER OF THE SOUTH GRAMMAR
SCHOOL. RECORDED BY ORDER OF THE TOWN.
I Stand in this place, my Fellow Townsmen, and my worthy Patrons, at the Call of those to
whom you have committed the Directions of your Publick Affairs, to condole with you for the Loss
of your late generous Benefactor, The Founder of this House. Certain I am. there are -Numbers in
this great Assembly, who could upon this occasion have done more Justice to his Memory, and have
better Discharged the Office that is enjoin'd me. But the Commands of those (for such I must always
esteem their Desires) who have devolved this Charge upon 4ne. and the Veneration I have for the
Vertucs of the Deceas'd. oblige me to bear what little Part I can. in a grateful Acknowledgment of the
just Regard due to the Memory of a Man. whose Name I'm sure will never be forgotten among us.
How soon, alas! is oar joy for having found such a Benefactor, chang'd into Mourning for' the
Loss of him! But a few Months arc pass'd. since we were framing Votes, and consulting the best
Measures to express our Gratitude for his unexampled Favours; and this first Annual Meeting within
these Walls that were raised by his Bounty, iinds us Assembled in the Deepest Sorrow for his Decease.
Instances of Mortality are never more affecting than in those in whose Lives have been Publick
Blessings. Surely then every Breast must feel more than common Distress, for the Loss of One, whose
Largeness of Heart equal'd, great as it was, his Power to do Good. Honest Industry must mourn,
for which the Exercise of his Bounty found an almost constant Employment; and they that know how
to Pity the Calamities of human Nature themselves, will mourn for him that always relieved them.
So soon as he arriv'd to the possessions of his large and plentiful Elstate: instead of fruitlessly
hoarding up his Treasures, tho' no Man managed his Affairs with greater Prudence and Industry: in-
stead of wasting them in Luxury, tho' Plenty always crown'd his Board: instead of negleaing the
wants of his Fellow-Creatures, an unhappy Circumstance too often attending the Possessions of Riches,
he made it manifest that he understood the true Improvement of Wealth, and was determined to pur-
sue it. It was to him the highest Enjoyments of Riches, to relieve the Wants of the Needy, from
which he himself was exempted, to see Mankind rejoicing in the fruits of his Bounty, and to feel that
divine Satisfaction which results from Communicating Happiness to others. His Acts of Charity were
so secret (but few or none know besides the giver of his true line of genealogy, that he gave freely his
money to aid in the Spanish war of 1742) and unbounded, that none but they who were the Objects
of it can Compute the Sums which he annually Distributed among them. His Alms flowed like a
fruitful River, that diffuses its Streams through a whole Country He fed the Hungry, and he Clothed
the Naked, he comforted the Fatherless, and the Widows in their Affliction, and his Bounties visited
the Prisoner. So that Almighty God in giving Riches to this Man, seems to have Scattered Blessings
all abroad among the People.
But these private Charities were not the only Effects of his Publick Spirit which, not contented
with distributing his Benefactions to private Families, extended them to this whole Community. Let
this Stately Edifice which bears his Name Witness for him, what Sums he expended in Public Muni-
ficence, This Building Erected by him at an immense Charge, for the Convenience and Ornament of
the Town, is incomparably the greatest Benefaction ever yet known to Our Western Shoar.
260
s^^B^B I J II Q eyp p4i=> 'HF' D' -"r.-v. I M53
Yet this Effect of his Bounty, however great is but the first Fruits of his Generosity a Fledge of
what his Heart, always devising liberal Things, would have done for us, had his Life been Spared. It
is an unspeakable loss to the Town, that he was taken away in the midst of his days, and in so Sudden
a manner, as to prevent his making Provision for what his generous Heart might Design. For I am
well Assured from those who were Acquainted with his Purposes, that he had many more Blessings in
Store for us, had Heaven prolonged his Days.
But he has gone! The Town's Benefactor, the Comforter of the Distressed, and the poor Man's
Friend. He has gone! And all his Plans for future B<iunty with him, they are. Buried in the Grave
together. He shall be raised to Life again; and his intended Charities, though they are lost to us,
will not be lost to him. Designs of Goodness and Mercy, prevented as these were, will meet with the
Reward of Actions. He has gone! . . And must such Men Die! Die in the midst of their Days!
Must the Protectors and Fathers of the Distress'd be taken away, while their Oppressors are continued,
and increase in Power! ' ' ' Great God! How Unsearchable are Thy Ways! . . . We Confess
Our Sins, but just and righteous art Thou.
To express your Gratitude to your generous Benefactor, you have pass'd the most honorable Re-
solves, and to preserve his Memory you have called this House by his Name. But in vain, alas, would
you perpetuate his Memory by such frail Materials! These Walls, the present Monuments of his
Fame, shall Moulder into Dust: these Foundations however deeply laid, shall be forgotten.
But his Deeds, his Charities shall survive the Ruinsof Nature. And to have relieved the Miser-
ies of the Distress'd, to have Still'd the Cries of Orphans, and to have dried the Widow's Tears, are
Acts that shall embalm his Memory for many Generations on Earth, and shall follow him beyond the
Limits of Mortality, into those blissful Regions where endless Charity dwells.
What now remains but my ardent Wishes (in which I know you will all concur with me) That
this Hall may be ever Sacred to the Interest of Truth, of Justice, of Loyalty, of Honor, of I,iherty.
May no private Views nor party Broils ever enter within these Walls; but may the same Publick
Spirit that glowed in the Breast of the generous Founder, influence all your Debates, that Society may
reap the Benefit of them.
May Liberty always spread its joyful Wings over this Place: Liberty that opens Men's Hearts to
Beneficence and gives the Relish to those that enjoy the Effects of it. And may Loyalty to a King
under whom we enjoy this Liberty, ever remain our Character always justly due to this Land and of
which our Enemies have in vain Attempted to rob us.
May those who are the Inheritors of the large Estate of our Deeeased Benefactor, inherit likewi.sc
the Largeness of his Soul. May the Widow, the Orphan and the Helpless, find in them a Protector,
a Father and a Support. In a Word, to Sum up all. May FANEUIL live in them.
May Charity, that most excellent of Graces, that Beam from the Breast of the Father of Mercies,
which so soon as ever it enters our Bosoms begins our Happiness, Charity, the Joy of Men, ( f Angels,
of Almighty God, which completes the Felicity of Earth and Heaven; May Charity more abound
among us. May it warm the Hearts of those who arc like our departed Friend in their Fortunes, to
resemble him too in his Bounties; may there be raised uy some new Benefactors in the room of him
we have lost, who shall, if possible, rival FANEUIL'S Spirit. And may there always remain in this
Town the same grateful Sentiments, the same virtuous dispositions, to remember their Benefactors
with HONOR.
On pp. 36 and 37 Faneuil Arms Voted by Town to be purchased of Mr. Deshon and placed in
Hall. Aug. 10, 1742, Mr. Goldthwait to wait on Peter Faneuil, Esq., Voted by Town Vol. 15, p.
356. Vol. 16 "Faneuil Hall Lotteries." Vol. 17. Mar. 4, 1742 (d. 3 Mar. 1743). Offer of Faneuil
Hall for Funeral. Clerk of Town requests Guns Fired, Flags Lowered: — Capt. Genl. (Apprehended
only) "due to one of the Royal Family."
%g> □-
^D <^ ^ ^ o
(^
O OUT INTO THE WORLD AND DECLARE THESE THINGS FOR THE
GLORY OF GOD AND HONOR OF MANKIND. GIVE FULL JUSTICE.
Pl»le 1313. Old South Tomb. Therein ire buried Mr. John Furnild. b. 23 November 1742; d. 23
November. 1742: Act. SO years : Mr. Craves, ancestor of Captain Craves in Civil War for the Union.
Said Craves. Davis and Furnald in Secret Service of American RevohiUon. A cousin. Mr. John
Furoald, was buried In North Cemetery. Portsmouth. New Hampshire, and his son, William Femald,
at Hall Cemetery. North east from pate.
PLATE 1314. MOMENTOUS EVENTS BRING FORTH THE LOYAL AND TRUE PATRIOTS.
■a ^^ D-
262
TJI
ET YOUR UGHT SO SHINE THAT THE TRUTH SHALL ILLUMINATE
THE HOLY WORDS OF GOD.
Cbapter $V
COUNT lOANNES
FFINES FIRNEL Fund
Shakspereand wife MARY
ARDEN blessed the world
in giving birth to the im-
tnortal SAMUEL WASH-
INGTON, that from fana-
tic so-called "religious '
persecution was compelled
to change his name to
Wl Ll.IAM 811 A KS-
FERE, that the ignorant
world, as they will this, at-
tempted to destroy hut can
not and will not.
Their names are in the
HOLY HEBREW LAN-
Gl^ACiF BIBLE, that only
requires to be translated in-
to the /Egyptian primitive
Symbols to give the words
of GOD thatchangeth not,
but stand foaever declareth
Omnipotent FA = GOD
UNIVERSAL of ALL.
Thev are as follows: —
11 CHRONICA LS,
Chap. XXXVI, Vs. 21 and
22 of 25.
Hebrew Letters Trans-
lated into XXV Primitive
Symbols, Viz: — 0<?«AOn
0-?0^^»<S-Q> See Plate.
FERNEL- FERNALD— WASHINGTON- SHAKESPERE
PLATE 1815. SAMUEL WASHINGTON, bur. as (Norn d
Plume) William Shkkespere 1616? "The Two Noble
Kinsman" published by Wm. Shakespeare and
Laurence Fletcher. 1634
14 4, SAMUEL
WASHINGTON.
145. ADAM: 146, SAM-
UEL: 147, NOAH: 14S.
JOHN-: HAM: JOHN:
ADAM: m. T. Roosevelt.
15 0. S A M V E L
WASHINGTON (A FIR-
NAL). alias WILLIAM
SliAKSI'KKI': in. Anne,
adopted by the good Hath-
aways, da- F"rancis J. Fer-
nel.
151, JOHN: 152,
LARAUENC WASH-
INGTON FIRNEL: 15.^.
GEORGE: 154,
CHARLES:
155, ROBERT: 156,
JOHN: 157, LAW-
RENCE: 158, AUGUS-
TINE:
159, GENER A L
GEORGE WASHING-
TON WHO IN HIS
SIGNATURE SPELLS
HIS OWN NAME, FIR-
NEL & FERNTL, vide
this his Signature.
y(^v(eu^ &'lje^y-^^
'^^J^^Pt^.
THE BOND.
"Divested of useless formal contractions, runs thus:— Given dated 28 Nov. 1582 by Fulk Sandells
and John Richardson— penalty of 401 to be forfeited to Bishop of Worcester if any impediment of
matrimony existed. A base forgery, of 1580 to 1582, changed, see cypher Records proved by Holy
Bible.
"Noverint universi per. prcsentes, nos Fulconem Sandells de Stratford in comitatu Warwici, agri-
colam, et Johaneem Richardson ibidem agricolam, teneri et flrmiter obligari Ricardo Cosin, generoso,
et Roberto Warmstry. notario publico, in quadraginta libris bona: et legalis monetce Anglias solvendis
eisdem Ricardo et Roberto, heredibus, executoribus, vel assignatis suis, ad quam quidem solutionem
bene et fideliter faciendam obligamus nos, et utrumque nostrum, per se pro toto et in solido, heredes,
executorcs, et administratores nostros firmiter per presentes, sigillis nostris sigillatos. Datum 28 die
Novembris, anno Regini Diminae nostrae Elizabeths, bei gratia Anglise, Franciae, et Hibernice
Reginse, Fidei Defcnsoris, &-c. 25°.
"The condition of this obligation ys suchc, that if hereafter there shall not appere any lawfull lett
or impediment, by reason of any precontract, consanguinitie, atfinitie, or by any other lawful meanes
whatsoever, but that William Sliagspere ona thone partie, and Anne Hathwey, of Stratford in the
Dioces of Worcester, Maiden, may lawfully solemnize matrimony together, and in the same after-
wards remaine and continew like man and wifpe, according unto the laws in that behalf provided: and
moreover, if there be not at this present time any action, sute, quarrel, or demand, moved or depend-
ing before any judge, ecclesiastical
263
•:tt ok i.\iri;i)iMK.\T:
PHOCKEI) TO SULEM-
'1TH(^UT THE CONSENT
■ costs and expensfs, defend nrid
chop of Woiceeter, and hia ofTvifrn,
forlicenciog them the said William and Anne to be married together with once aeking of flie
baunes of matrimony betweeiie them, and for all other causee which ma.v ensue bv reason or occasion thereof,
that then the said obligation to be vovd and of none effect, or els to stand and abide in full force and vertue.''
The murks and seals of K. S Ac -1. K, the seiil II. U., initials of Henry (III) kinj^ of Kriiuce, Henri Itex. The
privacy desired is fully accounted for by her ancestral slaughters and killing of her uncle, 1575, bv Jesuit.
THE PATERNAL FAMILY OF SAMUEL WASHINGTON AND WIFE ANNE FERNEL, NEE SHAKES-
PEARE COUNT JOHN FIRNEL, (Finos Funel's, written over, John Shakespere) (Washington,) son of Dr. Jean
Fernel and wife, da. Atty. General of Paris, France, John Luiller, was bom 3 Feb. 1535 and die<l bur. 8 Sept.
1601 married at Antwerp MARY ARDEN, perhaps a previous m. bad Thomas, Mary, b. ' : d. Sept.
bur. 1608: Vide "Monuments & Sepulcralia, Antwerp." Had 1, Thomas 4 "Jone"=Joan twins. REGISTER
"BAI*TISMES, ANNO DO.\I. 15 .8" (Year of poisoning of Dr. Jean Fernel and wife Magdalene 1-uillier; Thomas
was living Avon near Warwick on High Pavement 1578. "BAPTISME, 1558 to 1580." "BORRIED :"
3. "1558, Septe(m)ber 15. Jone Shakspere daughter to John Shakspere" (THOM A:, protected) 1569, Ap.
15 Jon=John end Greek 6^in ancient language sou and daughter. Joan, m. Wm. Hart.
4. "1562, December 2. Margareta fllia Johannis Shakspere (bur) 1563. April aO Wargaieta f. J. S."
3. "1564, April 26. Gulielmus Alius Johannes Shakspere Obiit Anno Domini 1616 vEtatis 53 die 23 Apr."
6. "1.566. October 13. Gilbertus Alius Johannes Shakspere."
7. "1571. Septeb. 28. Anna Alia Magister Shukspere. 157'JApril4. Anne daughter of Mr. John S—"
.\nne was named for Anne of Britiany.
8. "1573. March 11 Richard Sonne to Mr. John Shakspere" : m.
'.I. ''ISHO. May 3. Edmund sonne to .Mr. John Shuksi^ere, bur. 1612-13. Feb. 4."
S.\.ML'EL WASHINGTON who nom de plume was William Shakspere as adopted by his Father to escape
"religeous and government persecution from usurpers of French crown, fallen," was born 23 April 1564 and
(lied 23 .\pril 1616 or 1634: .Married Anne da. Francis Junius Fernel and wife .Maria Commenius, b. 20 Nov.
1560 : ni. .30 Nov. 1580 or 1582 and d. "6 Augu. 1623, .\«t. 62 yrs. 8 m. 16 d. Their union was blessed by :—
1, 2. ••I.-.N.-t." JOHANNES FINICS FI'NEL, Funiel, "Susanna bapt. 26 .May" son & "daughter to Willh.ni
Shak.s|>ere." (Su8ana,fm. Dr. John Hall, 5 Jun. 1607.) To prevent crimes an<l evils, showinpireligeons ten-
dencief. 'A Document, in the State PaperOfHce, 15i)2" accounting for not Registering John with Susanna "the
names of all sutch Recusantes as have bene heartofore presented for not cominge monethlie to the church, ac-
cording to her Majesties lawes, and yet are thought to forbeare the church for debt, and for feare of processe,
or from some other worse faultes, or for age, sickness, or iropotencie of bodie. Signe<l by .Mr. John Wheeler,
John Wheeler, his son, Mr. John Shacksitere, Mr. Nicholas Bameshurste, Thomas James, alias Gyles, William
Biiintun, Kichiird Harrington, William Flulleu, George Itardolphe.
Sir Thomas Lucy, Sir Fulk Greville, Sir Henry Goodere, Sir John Harrington, and four others, having been
appointed Commissioners to° make inquiries touching all such persons as were Jesuits, seminary priests, fugi-
tives, or recusantes (honor is due to Mr. Ijemon tor soniedativ, his descendant living in Cambridge) in the county
of Warwick, sent to the Privy Council what they call their second certiAcate, on the 25 Sept. 1592." "The Arst
certiAcate, after diligent search was not found. Nor did Samuel Washington dare to write the name of his son
John in will, nor Dr. Renald Fernald's will, or IVter Fanenil's' nor the stolen sheet from Portsmouth, .New
Hampshires Town Records written by Renald, or his brother Henry Washington Fernald's genealogical Records
that were stolen after he was poisoned to death at sd. Portsmouth, nor theli. S. (ioverument pajHrs stolen from
Mr. John Fernald in S. S., at a N. Y. Hotel by a Konian Catholic with refusal to have this one of two cut on
Old South (Church Tomb, where he was burieil. Knghmti cut off fn>m genealogy tree those who emigrateil to
America: America. Washingtons. The name of Ji^lin Shakspere Seuior is mentioned to distinguish him from
his son. A contemporary copy of the Original Document has been placed into the hands of (John, Jr., m.- 25
Nov. Margery Rolwrts, 1584 : huH, Philip, I'rHiiln, and lluinplirey) the Shukew|K.'are Society for publication. In
thS document is his Autograph as Sr.
3,4. "1584. Feb. 2. HAM net A Judith Sonne & daughter to Willia Shakspere;" Judith, ni. Thomas
(ininey? 2 Feb. 1612-13.
"1589. March 6. Thomaa Green, alias Shakspere, (Declareth again in Ret. of Deaths, Strafford.) alias
Ffernnid, and son Thomas, emigrated to Strawlierry Hunk, called Portsmouth, .New Honipsliire."
"1596. August 11. HAM net Alius of William Shakspere," "William Shak8pere=rSan)uel Washington was
cut off in the prime of his years by the "religeous fanatis," who today, 1908, carry on their accursed avocation,
uncheckd by even free countries. The writer took a deposition against a high R.C. dignitary, unconstitutionally
protected. In Boston 16 Roman Otholics are sluuglitered that "dead men can tell no tales. Let it cease now
and forever: justice be administered.
264
0^y%. IGHT THE GREAT WRONG AND HONOR THOU THYSELVES AND ME IN VERITY
^1 1 AND HARMONY.
4im ^^^ ^^\^^ "SAMUEL WASHINGTON ALIAS SHAKSPERE ON THE KING:
^^^ "Crowns have their compass, length of days their date,
Triumphs their tomb, fchcity her fate:
Of not but earth can earth make us a partaker.
But knowledge makes a king most like his maker.
SAMUEL WASHINGTON'S ALIAS WILLIAM SHAKSPEARE'S WILL.
"From the Original in the Office of the Prerogative Court at Canterbury." Mother England.
"Vicesimo Quinto Die Martij (2) Anno Regini Domini nostri Jacobi nunc Rex Anglic &c. Decimo quarto
& Scotie xlix Annoq. 'Domini 1616.
T Wmj Shackspeare
In the name of god Amen I William Shackspeare of Stratford vpon Avon in the countie of warr gent in
perfect health iS: memorie god be pray.sed doe make & Ordayne this my last will & testament in manner ik forme
followeing That ys to saye First I Comend my Soule into the hands of god my Creator hoping & assuredlie be-
leeving through the onlie merites of Jesus Christe my Snvi(.ur to he made partaker of lyfe rvcrlastinge And my
boilye to the Earth whereof yt ys made Item I Gyve and bequeath vnto my Daughter (3) Judyth One hundred
and Fyftie poundes of lawful! English money to be paied vnto her in manner and forme followeing that ys to
saye (^ne hundred pounds in discharge of her marriage porcion (4) within one yeare after my deceas with con-
sideration after the Rate of twoe Shillinges in tlic pound soe long tyme as the same shal be vnpied vnto her after
my deceas and the Fyftie pounds Residewe thereof vpon her surrcndring of ( 5 ) or gyving of such sufficient Se-
curitie as the overseers of this my Will shall like of to Surrender or graunte All her estate and Right that; hall dis-
cend or come vnto her after my deceas or that shee (6) now hath of in to one Ccpiehold tenerr.enie u ith
thappurtenances lyeing & being in Stratford vpon Avon aforesaied in the saicd countie of warr being parccll or
holden of the yiannour of Rowington vnto my Daughter Susanna Hall & her heires forever Item I Gyve & be-
queath vnto my saied Daughter Judith One hundred and Fyftie Poundes more if shee or Anie is^ue of her bodie
be Lyvinge att thend of three yeares next ensueing tlie Daie of the Date of this my Will during which tyme my
e.xccutours to paie her consideracion from my deceas according to the Rate aforesaied And if fhe d\e within the
saied terme without issue of her bodye then my will ys & I Doe gyve & bequeath (3ne Hundred Poundes there-
of to my Neece Elizabeth Hal! & the Fiftie Poundes to be sett fourth by my executours during the lief of my
Sister Johane Harte & the vse and profFitt thereof Cominge shalbe payed to my saied Sister lone and after her
deceas tlie saied 1 shall Remaine Amongst thecliildren of my saied Sister Equallie to be Devided Amongst them
But if my saied Daughter Judith be lyving at' thend of the saied three Years or anie yssue of her bodye then my
will ys & soe I Devise & bequeath the saied Hundred and Fyftie Poundes to le sett out by my executours 6>: over-
seers (7) for the best benetitt of her & her issue &; the stock (8) not to be (9) paied unto her soe long as she
shalbe marryed iJc Covert Baron (10) but my will ys that she shall have the consideracion yearlie paied \nto her
during her hef & after her deceas the saied stock and consideracion to bee paied to her children if she have Anie
& if not to her executours or assignes she Ivving the saied terme after my deceas Provided that if such husband as
she shall att thend of the saied three yeares be married vnto or attaine after doe suthcientlie Assure vnto ^S: th issue
of her bodie landes Answer able to the porcion by this my will gyven vnto her & to be adjudged soe by my
executours \- overseers then my will ys that the saied CI" shalbe paied to such hufband as shall make .'uih assur-
ance to his own vse Item I give ^: bequeath vnto my saied sister lone xxli ^: all my wearing Apparrell ( 1 I ) to be
paied & deliucred within one veare after my deceas And I doe will & devise vnto her the house (12) \vith
thappurtenances in Stratford wherein she dewlcth for her natural lief vnder the yearlie Rent of xiid Item I g> ve
t'v: bequeath ( 13) vnto her three sonns William Harte Harte and Michrell Harte Fyve Poundes A peecc
to be paied within one Year after my deceas (14) her Item I gyve & bequeath unto the saied Elizabeth Hall ( 1 ."> '
All my Plate (except my brod silver & gilt bole (16) that I now have at the Date of this my will Item I sS; g\ve
bequeath vnto the Poore of Stratford aforesaied tenn poundes to Mr. Thomas Crmbe my Sword to 1 be mas Rus-
sell Esquier Fwe poundes & to Frauncis Ccdlins of the Borough of warr in the countie of warr gentltman ihir-
teene poundes Sixe shillinges & Eight pence to be paied within one Year after my Deceas Item I gyve &: bequeath
to Hamlet Sadler (16) xxvis vijid to buy him a Ringe to William Raynoldes gent xxvis vjid to buy him a Ringe
(17) to my god son William Walker xxs in gold to Anthony Nashe gent xxvis viijd & to Mr. John Nashe xxxjs
viijd (18) &: to my Fellowes John Hemynges Richard Burhage & Henry Cundell xxvjs \iijd Apeecetobtiy thtm
Ringes(!9)Item I Gyve will bequeath lS; devise vnto my Daughter Susanna Hall for better enabling of her to per-
form this my will & towards the performans thereof(2())All that Capital! messuage or tenemente w iih thappur-
tenances in Stratford aforesaied(21 )Called the new place wherein I nowe Dwell &: two Messuages or tenementes
vvitli thappurtenances scituat lyeing sv being in Henley Streete within the borough of Stratford aforesaied and
all my barns staliles orrhardes landes tenementes & hereditamentes w hatsoever scituat lyeing (.*c being or to lie
had Keceyved pcrce\ved or taken within the tovvnes Hainletes Villages Fieldes& groundes of Stralfofd vpon A\oii
Oldstratford Bushopton & Welcombe ar in anie of them in the said countie of warr And alsoe All that messuage or
tenementc with thappurtenances wherein One John Robinson dwelleth scituat lyeing & being in the black-friers
in London near the Wadrobe & all other my landes tenementes hereditamentes w hatsoeuer To have and to hold AH
& singuler the saied premisses w ith their appurtenances vnto the saied Susanna Hal! for &: during the Terne of
her natural! lief & after her deceas to the first sonne of her bodie lawfullie yssueing & to the heires Males of the
bodie of the saied first Sonne lawfullie yssueing & for default of such issue to the seconde Sonne of her bodie law-
fullie issueing & to the heires males of the body of the sa;ed Second Sonne lawfullie yssueinge and for default
of such heires to the third sonne of the botlie of the saied Susanna Lawfullie yssueing 6c of the heires males of the
body of the saied third sonne lawfullie yssueing And for defalt of such issue the same soe to be & Remaine
265
"3
C] ^ ^ ^ o
to the Fourth (22) Fyftb sixte & Seaventh sons of her bodie laivfuUie issueiag one after an-
other & to the heires(23) Males of the bodies of the saied Fourth Fifth Sixte and Seaventh
sonues lawfullie yssueing in such manner as yt ys before Lymitt«d to be & Remaine tu the
first second & third Sonns of her bodie lawfullie yssueing & for defalt of such issue to mv
Daughter Judith and the heires Males of her body lawfullie issueinge And for defalt of sucli
issue to the Right heires of rae the saied William Shackspere for ever Item I g.vve vnto mv
Wief my second best bed with the furniture (24) Item I gyve & bequeath to mr saied
my broad sflver gilt bole All the rest of luy goodes Chattel Leases plate Jewels & boueehold
stuBe whatsoeuer after my Dettet and I^egaflies paid & my funeral expences discharged I gyve devise and be-
queath to my Sonne in Lawe John Hall gent & 1113- Daughter Susanna his wief whom 1 ordaine & make ex
ecutors of this my Last will and testameqt And I doe intreat & Appoint the. saied (25; Thomas Kusrell, e»-
quier & Frauncis Collins gent to be overseers hereof And doe RevoVe A:)l former wills ^S publishe this to be
myjast will & testament In Witness whereof I have herevnto put my hand (26) the Daie ancl Yeare flrst aboue
written By me .
Witnes to the publishing Probatura cora Magr. Willim Byrde
hereof Fra ; CoUvns /a/!»J?p - r^ /' /Ol^.^*»C<^' Dcore Comiss. iVic. xx die mensis
JulyusShawe " AY^VVC\Ay^ ^7 J*^f^ Junij Anno Dni IGIG Juram
John Robinson / i^ Jobnnis Hall vnius ex &c Cui *c
Hamnet Sadler ' De bene «!cc Jurat Resvat ptate
Robert Whattcott WILLIAM SHACKSPEARE. &c. Susanne Halhalt ex &c cu venit
&c petitur.
The "copy is carefully made including errata in punctuation and use of capitals" etc. 2, The word
"Martij" is interlined above "Jnnuarij," which is struck through with pen. 3, Before Daughter SONNE was
originally written. Here was the intent to write Johannes Fmes Funel. 4, "in discharge of her marriage
porcion," are interlined. 5, "of" interlined. 6, "that shee," interlined. 7. "by my executors and overseers"
mterlined. 8, "the stock and 9, to be" are interlined. 10, "After Baron the words by my executors * over-
seers," are erased with the quill or pen. 11, "the house" interlined. 12. The first sheet ends with "bequeth,"
and testators' signature is in the margin opposite. 13, After "deceas" these words struck through with pen or
quill "to be sett out for her within one year after my deceas by my executors with thadvise ana direccions of
my overseers for her best profillvutill her marriage and then the same with the increase thereof to be paid
viito" erased. 14, The words "the saied Elizabeth Hall" are interlined above "her" erased. 15, Parenthesis,
an interlineation above Mr. Richard Tyler thelder, which is erased. 16, "to William Raynoldes gentleman
XXV js to buy him A Rin^" are interliued. 17, Erased, "xxv js viijd in gold." 18, Interlined "& to my fel-
lowes John Ilemynges Richard Rurbage and Henry Cundell xxvjsviijd to buy them Ringes." 18, Interlined,
•for better enabling of her to performs this my will & towardes the performans thereof. 19, Interlined, "in
Stratford aforesaid!" 20, After "Fourth,' the wortl "sonne" was first written, and erased with quill or pen.
21, 2nd sheet ends with "heires," and sig. at bottom. 22, The words "Item I gyve vnto my wief my second
best bed with the furniture" are interlined, showing his desire to throw off the foes of bis wife's paternal family,
also to protect her and his oldest sou. 23, The words "the saied" are interlined. 24, The word "hand" is in-
terlined above SEALE, which is erased with the pen."
NON, SANZ DROICT.
(Motto.) NOT WITHOUT RIGHT.
SAMUEL WASHI.^GTON COAT OF ARMS (Wm. Shakspeare.)
The confirmation and the e-xemplification differ slightly as to the mode in which the Arras are set out : in
former, thus: John (Shakespeare) Fines Fimel : — "Showeth a patent under Clarence Cooke's hand (showeth
written over sent) to the Herald's College, 1596." "I have therefore assigned, graunted, and by these have
confirmed, this shield or cote of arms, vii : gould, on a bent sable and a speare of the first, the point steeled
proper: and for his crest or cognizance a fiiulcon, his wings displayed, argent, standing on a wrethe of his
coullors, supporting a speare gould Steele as aforesaid, set upon a helmet with mantelles and tasselles as hath
been accustomed." In exemplification :— "In a field of gould upon a bend sable a speare of the first, the poynt
upward, bedded argent ; and for his crest or cognizance a falcon with his wings displayed, standing on a wrethe
of his couUers, supporting a spere armed hedded or steeled sylver, fyxed upon a helmet, with mantelles and
tasselles." In both the arms are depicted on the margin, also reference to impaling with "auiicyent arms of
Arden." The courteous reader's attention is recalled to plate of ancestor Francis Junius Fernel and a descend-
ant of Dr. Jean Fernel. One of which was kept in an American Spelling Book with wood covers, I have. "Thus
Uncle Sam" cared for one of his many children of all nations, and colors, and creeds, religions, or none at all :
HE the lawful Father:
MILTON, 1645, offered another testimony to Samuel Washington's line descent in his L'.^llegro ■—
"Then to the well-trod stage anon:
If Jonson's learned sock be on.
Or sweetest Shakespeare, Fancy's child.
Warble his native wood-notes wild."
True translation :— 2nd line, I. F.=J. F.. the initials of John Fimel, Jon. Son Ist line,— trod=Dr. (k to
Hen.) : (2nd 1, 3 words find) Jean Fernel and son Jon=John Fernel or Firuel, who took name of Shakspere.
2 & 3 lines hatn :— "Jon, son of Jean Fernel, s. Anne and Charles MII=count of eight words to "learned" truth,
in "sweetest" the initials of "S. W." is "Shakesjieare Fernel's child." All four lines as ancient .Epvptiaii is
read : WA (from warble" "Sh ' from Shakespeare "i" from "child" n from "on" g from "stage" t from'"riativ»-"
on from "notes" and woo from "wood" and General George Washington kept his Fernald O seal in writing
his autot^raph "Go Washington.") It may interest the student to know that in all Skakesiieare's works he kept
the family history, that posterity, as in this may and will profit by if wisely read in verity.
■a
266
(i
N PAGE 11, AVON EDI-
TION OF SHAKES-
PEARE, STEEVENS,
tlie most famous editor,
said, (not knowing the
facts set forth in this) "In
1773" "All that is known with any de-
gree of certainty of Shakespeare is that
he was born at Stratford-upon-Avon,
married, and had children there, went
to London where he commenced actor:
wrote poems and plays; returned
Stratford, made his will, died, and was
buried."
This statement at the time was!
substantially true. After 139 years our|
beloved, brave English nation knew
less of its greatest author than we know
now of Homer, after the elapse of I
nearly thirty centuries, or of the great I
PL^^^ '"' Josephus Fiavius, who died A. D. 93,
aet. 56. Thrice marriel and his father of the highest sacradotal family, plate 1317
and mother was descended from the Asmonean princes. The signa-
tures of Samuel Washington alias William Shakespeare (vide) bear a picture of quill (pen) and the
flag hieroglyphic on Dighton Rock with the last letter a W and the last part of his name is read as
is .■Egyptian primitive language, "Fernel"
Plate 1316— Ge
151, Washington: 153
Fernel viz. "Sonne"
JOANNES SHAKES-
PEARE FINES FU-
NEL, grand son of Dr.
Jean Fernel, the "mod-
ern Galen." And the
lawful fr. of "William
Shakespere," Samuel
Washington, the an-
cestor of GENERAL
GEORGE WASH-
INGTON,the immor-
tal father of the United
States of America.
Ana,\imander of
Miletus introduced a
sun dial in Greece in
the time of Cyrus.
The prophetic lin-
ger of Count John Fir-
nel points out his grand
children the tirst twins
born to Wm. Shakes-
peare no longer, but
Samuel Washington
Fernel. In this mono-
grammic statue is the
name of John Fernald
by using the mixtures
of Greek, Latin and
Hebrew languages, the
R of Hebrew is over
the tomb entrance and „, ,,,„ ^ „ ,.0 u;,.hi „„„ ,^1 ir.,„.. „i, rn„„, i„h„ •
D, r 1 Plate 1318 Generation 149 Washington 151 Fernel, viz Count Jotin .
at butt of the can- peare-Washlniton-Femel-Fmes-Funel Flmel-Fumel 2nd son
non, with J in sword. jean and Magdalene Femel
Papirus Cursor placed a sun-dial in the Capitol of Rome, A. C. 306.
water clock, called Clepsydra, adopted at Rome by Scripto Nasica.
267
Plate 1317— Gen.
152 Washington, 154
Fennel. Half Brother
of "William Shakes-
peare," Samuel Wash-
ington Fernel by mar-
riage with Miss Sarah
Taft, proved by Holy
Bible i n its inviolate
purity, II Chronicles,
chapter 36, verse 22.
This Sarah and hus-
band, John, had Lara-
uenc Washington Fir-
nel, m. Irene Junius:
Had George, m. Elsie
01in:HadGeorge01in
Washington, sons and
daughters, whose r e-
cords were burnt by the
I e suits at Stratford,
1614 by order Leo XI,
to Alexander, (natural
son Henri IV) by order
of Duke of Guise and
set on fire the Palais
1618. Will Shakspere
is mentioned in 1661
among t h e learned
and eminent of France.
Vide History of France
by M. Henault and
Mr. Nugent 1762, p.
37. Mrs. Sarah (Taft)
Firnel died at the birth
of Larauenc and Joan-
1^^^ nes or John m. Sarah
Savage: Had Thomce
et als.
The Egyptians invented a
1
ERILY IT IS QUITE TIME THE BAR SINISTER BY USURPERS OF TRUTH
BE REMOVED. THAT FAIR FAMED JUSTICE WITH RIGHTEOUS LAW
BE PROPERLY ENFORCED BY CHURCH AND STAl E. THE FORMER
TEACH AND PRACTICE PURITY: THE LATTER PROTECT THE PURE.
GENERATIONS OF WASHINGTONS.
)44. SAMUEL.m.ANA.da. Robert
de Ficnnes: had
145, ADAM.m. MARIA, da. John
Dcsmares,whowas beheaded from
encmity of Dukes of Anjou and
Berry for bold speech concerning
majority of the King. They had
146, SAMUEL,m.MARY.da.John
de Villi<-rs. de 1 'Isle Adam. Had
daughters and
147, NOAH, m.AGNES.da.J. John
Jouvenel or Juvenal. Had John,
Ham, Ana, Mar\', Sarah and UscL.
148, JOHN. m. CHARLOTTE, da.
Marsilus Ficinus. Had daughter
m. Robert Arden.
148, HAM, m. SUSAN, da. Helie
de Torrettes.
149. Had Adam. m. Th. Roosevelt,
and their son,
PL l320.Ch»rlM Waihlngton Cer. 154 F.15.
SMITH, ; also spelt SMYTH. The aforesaid Robert Wash-
Pl. 1319, George Wajhli
Fernel 1S5
9 July, 1614, 54
buildings burnt
by fire. Saved
'W Shakespeare'
149, COU Nl
JOHN FINES
FUN EL, (n-.
MARY, da. Rob-
en Arden. Had
150, WILLIAM
SHAKESPERK
was the name of
Samuel Wash-
ington, m.
ANNE,da. Fran-
cis J. Fernel. Had
chn.v.an. et po.st
151,JOANNESFI-
ENNES.m. SA-
RAH SAVAGE.
Had Larauencc
and Thomae.
152. I. A R A U-
KNC.m. IRENE
JUNIUS. Had
153. GEORGE.m.
HLSIE OLIN.
Had;
154. CHARLES,
m . CLARA
CRANIUS.Had
155. ROBERT,
:^ ASHING- ^ : During Civil War
1 ui\i,t,migrated plate mi oen is6. john Washington for freedom and
toV,rgmia,1630. union. General
Butler cut ofl him and descendants. Gen. 157. JOHN m. ANNA PC>PE: Had (158) LAWER-
ANCE, m. MILDRED WARNER: Had (159) AUGUSTUS. (French) m. MARY B\LL-
Had (160) GEORGE, m MARTHA DANDRIDGE, and thev arc united in the cause of ties of
love and blood with 500,000 descendants from Washington's ancestors in U. S. A of 83 000 000
Page 244. ROBERT WASHINGTON, Gen. 155: m. ANNA, da; SIR ROBERt'bRUCE
COTTON, the antiquarian, and removed to \'irginia. 1630.
268
ingtoii. ancestor
of our bclovcdGcn-
eral George Wash-
ington was brought
over in the King
Phillip from Ches-
hire, England, by
Captain William
Fernaid in a desire
lo escape with his
family t h e papal
persecution, that
not only continued
to the poi.soning to
death of Hcnrj-
Washingtt)n F c r -
nald but the world
wide known P E^
TER FANEUIL
who was poisoned
to death in 1743.
ROBERT came
with his wife AN-
NA, da. Sir Ri.ben
Bruce Cotton, tile
Antiquarian, that
ilid not esciipc per-
secution, and two
c h i Idren, viz. —
Temperance that
married T h o mas
FFcrnald , and s<m
lohn.and settled in
irginia.
U. S. A.
ACRED IN OUR MEMORY FROM WHICH FROM OUR MIGHTY PENS AND
ELOQUENT PATRIOTIC TONGUES WILL COME JOYS FOR THE WORLD WITH
POTENT POWER AND HARMONIOUS SOUND, IN PEACE A LAMB AND IN
WAR A LION FROM THE WHOLE WHEREOF EQUAL IMPARTIAL JUSTICE.
••^"Ifr
|()HN WASHINGTON,
Gen; 156: 15S F. m. ANNA
FOOTE, 1652: ANNA POPE,
1660: Former m. proved by the
Holv True Bible. JOHN and
ANNA WASHINGTON:
Had :
Lawrence, b. 1661.
John, b. 1663.
Elizabeth, b. 1663.
Anne (named for Anne of
Britiany,) m. Francis Wright:
had Anne, b. 1690.
John Washington was a
Lieuenant Colonel. He died in
1677 at Virginia.
If
_.JlI©pSiI[IM
SI,,
'0.
AUGUSTINE WASH-
INGTON, Gen. 15K: 160 F.
m. MARY BALL, 6 March,
1730orl73L Augustus or Au-
gustine and Mary, Their chil-
dren were:
George, b. Feb. 1 1 or 22,
1731 or 1732.
Elizabeth.b. 20 June 1734;
m. F. Lewis.
Samuel, b. 16 Nov. 1734.
John Augustine, b. 13 Ian.
1735-1736.
Charles, b. 1 May, 1738.
It was said he "m. 1st, Jane
Butler: Had:
Lawerance, b. 1718.
Augustine, b. 1720.
Jane, b. 1722."
Their father Augustus b.
1694; d. 12 Apr. 1743: His wife
Plate 1323 G.n 157 159 F Mary b. 1706: d.
LAWERANCE WASHINGTON, Gen. 157:
59 F. m. MILDRED WARNER in 1690: Had:
John b. 1692
Augustine, b. 1694.
Mildred, b. 1696. m.
Plate 1332. C. FURNIUS, THE FACE AND
SWORD COPY OF THE GREAT ONE
ANCESTOR OF GENERAL GEORGE
WASHINGTON, UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA.
This Monument is at Washington, District of
Columbia.
Fleur-de-lls on Washington's Arms proof descent from Charles VMl.
A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of
war, and a time of peace. Eccl. 3, 8.
269
AITH WITHOUT WORKS IS MORIBUND:
IS NOT THE JOY OF HEAVEN
WORK WITHOUT FAITH
Pl«l« 132^ Toe Altxtodriln Librat)r coll»ct«i hy Piolomv I
' II. Otmilriui. Supt. 100,000 >olu nn incriittd to 700.000
Cootiined the literature of all n»- j. LarfEe pan burnt at liefie vs
Guar. Mirk ATOif p-ei; a new one to Cleopatra. Disp«r«e.|
Pbte 1326. The Treasure Che« of General George Waihinglon,
"AMERICA S FATHER. ■
by Theophilm, a., 390 A. D. ReestablUhed. Destroyed by Araba 640, by '
cajiph Omar," la recorded on doubtful authenticity. From aock coropaniona Co
John (Shakespeare) Finxl got knowledge he uught to ("William Shaketpeart
Samuel Washington.
1^^^^
^^ 'V^'^
^^^
W~^^M
I^^ps^-W
t". ^'"'^
^^^m
^'X-^^jfe'
^
ffl%-'-i^
M
il^
4S'^m
\y-:sx^f.
^.-f-i^^- V
^^^t!' ." ;y '^:
^>'-' wEs
Li^^V<l;'<-
^kjuSSi
■HKHk <-^
^^
^Sb
1330 FATE.
270
OLD GLOBE THEATRE IN 1595.
PUie 1327. "Shakespeare Theatre "The Two Noble
Kinsmen," published in 163-1 as by Fletcher and Shakes-
peare," throws some light on the preceedin); historic facts
and data. Not only was n declared that important records
were changed but even the sacred remains of his ancestry
on wife and Couni John Tampered wiih Continued to July
1908-9 at tomb o( Pelec Faneuil the Hugenou United
Slates Flag repeatedly insulted by Papists per Pope.
AT OUR LEG-
ISLATIVE
HALLS IS
A C C U M U -
LATED THE
WISDOM OF AGES:
FACTS: DATA THAT
THE GREAT MASS
CANNOT BE FULLY
CONVERSANT WITH,
BUT CAN USE ALL
LEGiriMAIE POWER
TO AID, RENDER,
CAUSE POLITIC PUR-
ITY AND STRENGTH
OF NATIONS.
HONORABLE FOR-
EIGN CONSUL RE-
LATED TO AUTHOR
THAT HE "READ A
RECORD OFGENERAL
GEORGE WASHING-
TON'S RELATIONSHIP
TO TH E DUKES O F
BUCKINGHAM."
A cycle is a perpetua
circulation and recurrence of
the same parts of time.
The cycle of the moon
is a revolution of nineteen
years.
The cycle of the sun is
a revolution of twenty-eight
years.
The walls of Babylon
were 87 feet broad, 350 feet
high, and 60 miles in [cir-
cumference. Although sup-
posed to be impregnable, it
fell to the victorious arms
of Cyrus the Great in 53K.
mi JL JL ^ Dr
VERILY! VERILY!! I SAY UNTO YOU, HAPPY IS THE PEOPLE WHOSE
GOD IS THE LORD.
canh that had given unto Ava and Adam the laws, commandments, symbols for writing,
blessed labor; to Lamar and Noah, our common foreparcnts, the same transmitted in accuracy, that
the facts with the ancient map chart history and foretold events, which were possessed by the ancient
itgyptians that kept them in their integrity, descended into mysteries that Moses was conversant with
and truthfully wrote; and untruthfully translated and deformed by the interpolation of points,revcaling
corrupt priestcraft, not a blessing to the pure Jews: no more a blessing to Mahommed, for the Ma-
hometans, that with the aid of practical faith have spread the worship of God unto many millions' of
men that had worse beliefs.
HIPOCRATES HIRACLID.€, FUR-
NIUS, CONS=COVS., son of Heraclides
and wife etc. Fa?nar, da. of Gen, 76, Arta=
Anti Fonou=Conou=Fernes=in ^Egyptian,
A-«k I OO — Ow and Fnr Furina, born 26
Agrianes=Oct. 460, B. C, at Island of Cos;
died July 1st 356: he was brother of So-
sandcr, s. Heracleides=Hiracld£e, s. of Hip-
picrates.I, brother of Podalerrius: Acneius,
sons of Gnosidicus, bro. Chrysus, sons of Ne-
brus, son of Cyrus the Great and wife Anar
Mandan (c) HIPOCRATES II, m. Uxor:
had Thcssalaus: da. Filia=Polycus: and Dra-
con I, who m. had Hippocrates; Thcssalaus
son of Hipocrates m. Sara U. S. : had Gor-
gias: Hippocrates III: Dracon II, who m.
Raco of line of Darius from whom descended
Petrus Darius Faerno the adopting father of
Dr. Jean Fernel the lawful son of Charles
VIII & Anne of Britiany.
These and next two plates were copied
from an ancient one, said to be over 250 yrs.
old. It had on each the following: — ^
Plate 1332. "Hipocrates Hieraclida. Furnius COVS. (P. P. Ruben.s Del.) J. Faber Fecit.
He grounded his Preceps upon yEsculapius. He was by some stiled ye Prince of Physicians, & by
others honored as a God, and his works are to this day greatly esteemed in most parts of Europe.
D. Aet 104 yrs."
"PLATO ARISTONIS F. ATHENIENSIS." Son of FNR Ferion=Perictione=Potone and
husband Ariston, s. of Arta Femes & Furina, who claimed his descent from Cordus on paternal side
maternal side from ancestral relationship with Solon. Plato, b. 21 May 430 at Island of /Egina: He
died an. his binhday, 21 May 348: m. i.A'a I 0=Latio, da. Aristo FerncD^Aristophernes and died at
Athens, 21 May 344, Aet 100 yrs. The above PLATO was originally named for his gr. fr. Aristocles
and changed upon his m. to Latio, the gr. fr. on maternal side. "Chief of the Academicks, he com-
prised all his Doc-trine into Dialogues and from the excellency of it was called Divine Plato. In l)is
Doctrine he, proper, one of 3 of the finest Witts of Greece, in natural Philosophy he followed Hcrac-
litus, in Logick Pathagoras: and in his moral Philosophy he confined himself to his Ma.stcr Socrates.
When an Infant & asleep in his Cradle a swarm of Bees Came and settled on his Lips as an Omen of
his Future Eloquence."
After the death of his Instructor Socrates, he travelled into various countries ever devoting his
life to Virtue and Philosophy, thus his writings were very valuable, as not only his language is very
beautiful and correct, but his philosophy sublime. He drew many of his opinions from not only the
writing of Moses but the ^Egyptian Priests who were conversant with the Primitive Religion and
more perfect knowledge of the SUPREME BEING, Our Universal Father, which truths he brought
back with him to Athens, his birth and death place.
Plite 133Z Hlpocriiu, H. F. C.
Plale iXa Plate.
"OSEA; IV,
XIV. 9."
11; V. 1, 2; VI. 3, 6. 9; VII, 12, 13; VIII, 7; IX. 7. 12; X, 10;
Plale 1334. SOCRATES,
THE CELEBRATED SOCRATES was
the son of SOPHRONI S. C. US an expert
maker of statuary, and Fasnar-ete a celebrated
obstetritician, s. of Gen. 74. F. Arta Ba Zanas and
Amastris, s. F. Darius and Attosa, s. CYRUS the
Great and F. Anar Mandan.Sophroni m.Sofhro-
nia, a descendant of Dcedalaus, as per Xenophon.
It is observed that in their names they keep the
initials and many letters of ancestral names.
SOCRATES, the Patriot of Athens, War-
rior, Philosopher, Statue Maker after his father's
instruction, became a Teacher of the Athenians:
born 468 B. C. ; Martyr of Athens 400 B. C.
"He followed the profession of his father for
some time till philosophy more fully engaged
his attention. After distinguishing himself on
the field of battle for his Country. He com-
menced public instruction of the youth, and his
lectures were attended by large, respectable and
admiring audiences. The simplicity of his dress,
virtue of his life, refusal to join or aid the corrupt,
as is usual to-day in the most free nation on earth,
soon aroused the jealous inhabitants, whose cabals
and conspiracies ever threaten all good govern-
ments, soon procured him murderous enemies,
successful; 401). Xanthippe, his wife had three
sons. Galen's mother had a worse temper than
Xanthippe.
Plate 1335. GALEN. From Rubens.
GALEN CLAUDIVS, son of NICHON
or NICON and L/ELIA, da. Gen. 101, was b.
130 A. D. and d. 201 A. D. "A most excellent
PHYSICIAN, b. at Permagas at Mysia in Asia.
He was a great improver of Hypocratic System of
Physic and his superior Method of Prognosis has
been used in his time and lately, and from him
called Galenick. He is said to have been author
of 208 volumes." By every "one he was consid-
ered among ye 12 most subtil wits of ye World."
"He was of a great" ( 10 words are found obliter-
erated in the valuable colored ancient engraving,
and continues — ) "about the middle of the second
century." "He m. at Rome: had chn. Descend-
ants: Christoph Bernard von Solen, Jesuit, b. 1600."
"Printed and sold by Thos Bowles Neare
the Chapter House in st. Paul's Church yard and
John Bowles at the Black House in Cornhill."
Many words are found obliterated and others in-
distinct. These three are copied faithfully. Ga-
len's Arabian biographer, Abu L-Fara J, alleges
he died in Sicily. His personal character places
him among the brightest objects of the world.
He was one of the most learned men of his age.
He praised the temperance and chastity of the
earliest Christians, and admired their iilanieless
lives, and love of virtue in which they equalled or
surpassed the greatest Philosophers of that epoch.
<2%^ U^
?i
ARTH HAS NO GREATER TREASURE THAN THE PURE IMMORTAL
FATHER OF HIS COLNTRV, GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON.
late 1136. HONORING GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON and his worthy Successor
THE PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA in verity THE
PRESIDENT. GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON. AND FATHER OF HIS
COUNTRY, COMMANDER IN CHIEF. MARCH 1st. 1790. lAKETH THE
FIRST CENSUS OF HIS CHILDREN IN UNITED STAIES. IN MY
NATIVE GRANITE STATE, NEW HAMPSHIRE. PASSED BY FIRST
C0NC;RESS. 2nd SESSION. 3.929.214. COST 544.377 NAMES
OF FIRNAL, FURNEL FIRNALD, NOW FERNALDS.
THE SWORD IN RIGHT HAND OF GEN'L GEORGE
WASHINGTON FERNEL, IN ABOVE PHOTO. IS
THE ONE GIVEN TO HIS COUSIN. COLONEL
TOBIAS FERNALD. SON CAPTAIN lOHN
FERNALD. FOR BRAVE, GALL.ANT
CONDUCT ON THE B.ATTLE-FIELD.
I
NFW HAMPSHIRE.
FCORDETH. U. S. A., MARSHALS!
wards Head
Slave> of.
State & Count
Corni'h Town, Rockingham Co.
Chester Town. Rockingham Co.
Middleton Town. Rockingham Co.
.Portsmouth Town, Rockmgham Co.
Lee Town Stratford Co.
New Castle Town, Rockingham Co.
.Nottingham Town, Rockingham Co
Portsmouth Town, Rockingham Co
Lonaon Town, Rockingham Co.
Portsmouth Town, Kockmgham
t cj
Portsmouth Town. Rockingham
Co
Portsmouth Town, Rockingham
Co
Portsmouth Town, Rockingham
Co
Middleton Town, Stratford Co.
Portsmouth Town, Rockingham
Co
Nottingham Town, Rockingham
Co
Portsmouth Town. Rockingham
Co
Portsmouth Town. Rockingham
Co
Newmarket Town, R..ckingham
(V.
Middleton Town. Stratford Co.
WILLIAM 1-URNAL. p. 7:i,
THU.\i.\S FURNLL. p. 76, U. S. C.
(Thos. Kurnel)
ABJGAL KURNALD, p. i)3,
AMOS 1-X"RNALD, p. 79,
AMOS FURNALD, p. 'J2.
ARCHELAUS FURNALD, p 73,
CH.VRLLS FURNALD, p. 76, -
UANll'.l. 1-URNALD, p. 79,
DEMLXU (Diamond) FURNALD,
ED.MUND l-URNALD, p. 7;»,
GILBERT FURNALD, p. 79,
HUMPHERY FURNALD, p. 79,
JOHN FURNALD, p. 79,
JOHN I'URXALD, p. M,
MARGERY FUR^fALD, p. 81,
^LARY FURNALD, p. 76,
RANDALL FURN^LD, p. 79,
SAMUEL FURNALD, p. 79,
ROBERT PIKE, p. 74,
I'HINIAS JOHNSON, p. 93,
-MARY SAVAGE, p. 81,
(THOMAS) JOHN SAVAGE, p. 81
BENJN. FARNEL, p. 21, l Ma
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES OF SAILORS AND SOLDIERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
WAR! FERNALD!! THE FERNALDS NAMES ARE SPELT IN PRECEEDING AS BY THE
UNITED STATES MARSHALS AND SECRETARY OF THE COM.MONWEALTH : 85 WAYS
OF SPELLING THE NAME OF ALL THOSE DESCENDED FROM DR. JEAN FERNEL
LAWFUL SON OF KING CHARLES VIII AND ANNE OF BRITIANY ANCESTORS OF
Genl. GEORGE WASHINGTON, AMERICA'S FATHER.
Captain TOBIAS FARNELD, Jan. 8, 1776: Lt. Col. TOBIAS FERNALD, Kittery: (also, Lt. Col.
TOBIAS FERNALD, in" Society, Cincinnati of Go. Washington) TOBIAS FERNALD, Kittery: ANDREW
PEPPERELL FERNALD, Kittery: ARCHELAUS FERNALD, Pepperellborough : BENJAMIN FER-
NALD, Kittery: CHARLES FERNALD. Kittery, (he was named from descent of Thomas Fernald and wife
Temperance Washington, Charles Washmgton Fernald): CLEMENT FERNAL: DENNIS FERN.ALD:
DENNIS FERNALD. Jr: EDMUND FERNALD : GEORGE FERNALD: Kittery: JAMES FERNALD,
Kittery: JOHN FERNALD: JOHN FERNALL, (in U. S. S. S.) : he after discharge Enlisted as Jean Francois
Fourniel. taking names of Dr. Jean and his son Francis) JOSEPH WEEKS FERNALD. KItterv : JOSHUA
FERNALD. Kittery: JOSHUA FERNAL, Kittery, Ensign : & Sergeant: ROBERT FERNALD. Kitterv:
CLEMENT FURNALD. Township No. 4: CLEMENT FURNALD. Gouldsborough : CLEMENT FUR-
NELD. Gouldsborough: JOHN FURNAL: JOHN FURNELL, Corporal : JOHN FURNELL, Hampshire Co. :
JOEL FURNALD, 2nd Lieutenant: JOSHUA FURNALD. Kittery, Corporal: NICHOLAS FURNALD,
York: TOBIAS FURNALD, Lt. Colonel: William Furnald. Kittery, Lieutenant: WILLIAM FURNALd!
Kittery, Private: JAMES FURNIVALL. Captain Lieutenant: Roll dated North Castle: WILLIAM FUR-
NEL, Lieutenant: ANDREW PEPPERRELL FIRNALD, Adjutant 2d York Co. Regt. DENNIS FOUR-
NAL, Kittery: JEAN FRANCOIS FOURNIER (L) my honored ancestor in U. S. S. S.. buried in North
Cemetery Portsmouth, New Hampshire. U. S. A.
1 Portsmouth Town. Rockingham Co
1 1 Portsmouth Town. Rockingham Co.
chusetts U.S.C. 3 17nn A.D. Yarmouth Town. Barnstable Co.
_ HE WILL OK DR. RENALU KHRNALU REFERED TO IN A DEED l-ROM HIS
^^■r UAUL.11 lEU ELIZAUETU TO CAI'T. JOHN SEELV Ol' A I'lECE Ul' LANU. ;SUih
/■i October 16t)U, WAS STOLEN BY THE PAPAL POISONERS TO DEATH OF HIS
I I BROTHER HENRY WASHINGTON I-ERNALD AT HOTEL NORTH CASTLE AT
m. " V NEW CASTLE, NEW HAMPSHIRE, THE "H. W. E." (Hence the passage of the Law in
%l^ \ H that no Roman Catholic shall hold Office), CUT IN NEWPORT TOW ER. R. ISLAND.
Dr. RENALD FERNALD WAS A COMMISSIONER, SUVEYOR. CHIRURGEON.
DEPTV. LT.. CAI-TAIN, TOWN CLERK, etc. Ye Will and Inventory of Mrs. Johanna I'ernald, brought into
Court and proved by Elias Stillman and Anthony Ellis, 1060" Inventory not copied.
•The last will and testament of Johanna Fernald, widow, made the twenty-third day of April. One
thousand >i.x hundred and sixty. I Johanna Fernald weak of body but in perfect mcinory do make and ordaiii
this my last will and testament. , , , , j , jj u i
Imps. I give and bequeath unto my daughter Elizabeth my best feather b<d, bolster, and bedding belong-
Imps. I give and bequeath unto my daughter Mary my second best feather bed, bolster, and bedding be-
longmg unt
Imps
I give and bequeath unto my said daughters Elizabeth and Mary, my new dwelling house between
them, and it is my will that Elizabeth my daughter shall have first choice of which part she shall like best of
the said house, and if it shall happen that my daughter Mary shall marry first that the husband of my said
daughter shall build for my said daughter Elizabeth, as good a house on the Island her father gave her or allow
the value thereof as shall he appraised by two different men and she like. It is my will concerning lU);
daughter Elizabeth if she marry first and that they shall not molest or disturb her in the before mentioned
premises till formally surrendered but shall live quietly together.
Imps. I give and hequeth unto my son Samuel and my son John the third feather bed and bedding be-
longing to it between them. ..,,_,
Imps. I give and bequeth unto my son John all the Surgery books and Instruments that were his fathers
with his chest.
Imps. I give and bequeth unto my son William fortie shillings.
Imps. I give and bequeath unto my son Thomas one musket and a barrel of a fowling piece and all the
carpenter .ind joiners tools. . ^ „
Imps. I give and bequeath unto my three daughters all my wearing cloths woolen and linen with all ray
household stuflF. equally to be divided between them my daughter Sarah to have the first choice. And lor the
better performance of this my will I make my so.i Thomas and my daughter Elizabeth my e.secutors and ap-
point Mr. Richard Cutt and Elias Stillman my overseers.
In witness whereof have hereunto put my hand the day and year first above written.
Witness Johannt Fernald.
.Anthony Ellis,
John Dermott.
Elias Stillman proved in Court at Portsmouth the 28th., June. 1(160."
Copy of Deed. Elizabeth Fernald to John Sealey. Rockingham Rec. Lib. 2. Fol. 48.
•'Be it known unto all men by these present that I Elizabeth Fernald .Maden; for and in consideration
of the sum of Ten Pounds in hand paid unto my father Renald Fernald, deceased, as to myself before these
presents wherewith I do acknowledge myself fully satisfied to confirm, bargain Sell alieane assign and set over
unto Capt. John Scalev. a piece of I^nd containing one hundred feet square situate and bcinR in the Island
Tuy said fatiicr gave me by his last will and testament near unto the point of land andwarehouse of .Mr. Thomas
Broughton which said hundred feet o fland faceth towards the pool called by the name of Hinck sons Pool, to-
gether with all the land before it to low water mark with the privileges and appurtenances thereunto belonging
and appurtaining all which premises. I the said Elizabeth do acknowledge to be bargained and sold to the
said Capt. John Sealey his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns forever, and I do hereby promise to de-
fend the title thereof against all manner of persons from my or under me laying clarni to the same, and here-
unto I bind me mine heirs and executors.
In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and Seal the 29th of October, 1660.
In presence of Signa. of
Edward Clarke. Elizabeth Fernald. (0)
Thomas fTernald.
This Instrument aliovc was .nrknnwlcdge to he to he the free act and deed of Elizabeth Ferii.ild Before
inc Flias Stillman Commissioner Recorded, according t" the original the l.'ith November. 1660.
pr. Elias Stillman, Recorder.
fin \nl. 2 page 4R. \erified l>v I. M. Heath. Regr. Per I .M. Heath. Regr. Exeter. N. H.. dated Sept.
.•?rd.)
Examined and found Correct, '•(Elizabeth Fernald. da. Dr. Ronald Fernald. m. IGTO.
C. A. Fernald, Ja" '■ and died in child birth of Henry, born. 1674.)"
L. A. Parker.'
Kittcrv Town Record Index refers to pages 3 and .5 and this Record was commenced in 16.50, these two
leaves were stolen and had thereon the names of Thomas Fernald that married. Temperance, da of Robert
Washington & wife Anne. da. Sir Robert Bruce Cotton, the Antiquarian During the Civil War in America,
Genl. Benjamin P.utlcr attempted to write up the Washington Genealogy, cutting off Robert Washington of Va.,
who came over in Ifi.'?" in King Phillip Master or Captain Sir William Fernald father of Dr. Renald Fernald,
thereby cut off the true .100, (inn descendants from the ancestors of General George Washington in United States
of America. And in August 1008. the Globe, prints an untrue history of Charles VIII, carrying out the same un-
holy programme vs. state & U. S. Cause: Charles VIII. quarrels with Pope for poisoning a Sultan of Turkey.
Pope poi.soned him and accepted ransom from Charles to save, and a bribe from hro. of Sultan to kill his
brother He died about 8 days after deliven,- to King Charles.
276
"h* "fC "^
g^jt^. il<i;i-U()M 1<0(. KI.\(,IIA\I RE((JRL)- \ ^1 :i. lulu, !>. ilXD LUl'V Ul DI-.I^U U(-
^m^^ rilDMAS l'l£R.\ALU AXIJ UUE l ...Mi'tKAXtt W ASHINCTUN F li K .\ A L D 1 U
^ll^ SARAH WATERHOUSE.
^■Ir-I Know all men by these present. 1 liat I Thomas flfcrnald ul Kittery in the I'ruvmce of
W^SM Maine in New England. Shipwrij^ht, heing the Eldest lawful begotten son of Reginald ticr-
•^^» ^ nald. Doctor, deceased, many good considerations and causes me thereunto moving and e-pcci-
I .nlly Ml oliedicncc to ye coirn'ands of my Iw iiourcd father and iiiotiur at their decease -everally
and the j,'re.il and ardent I.ove and Natural affectit ii: and respects, wen. I have and bore unto my Dearly belo
vcd and (...viiii; Mst.-r Sarah soiiietiiiu- the w,(e of Mr .Mien l.yde. manner, dec.a-ed, and now llie wife of .Mr.
Richard W aurhouse of rort.-moulh m ye IVovinci of ,\cw Hainpsliire in .New England, Tanner . Iiu\e ^'i^eii
granted alleinated Bargained and enfeoffed I.ike as their i'resent with good and deliberate consideration, 1 iloe
hereby give grant alliene bargain and enfeofTc unto my said Sister Sarah: all and whole that, part of ye Nland
commonly known by the terms or name of the Doctors Island whereon the now dwelling house of the said
Watcrhoiise standcth. tcgether with a little Uland near thereunto and ye land bounded together witli ye said
little NIand a': bdlnweth viz: On ye one end wth some pan of the same Island being at the narrowest part or
place there and comironly known by the name or term of \e Mast Cove or liass rock Cove, and on the oilier end
near unto wch. is the atore-aid Tittle Island bounded oiilv wtli. the water Leading to that part oi I'nrt .iioiiih
fomm.nlv called Strnwberrv Hank, .nnd on side lo.,.rllier\Mh. ve sd. Tittle Island bounded willi ve ( li;inii. 1 oi
the River Tiscalt.'ima and on Ihe oilier side wlh a branch of ye said River Leading unto and from thai p.iri of
^d. P'lrlsmn called T.ittle Harbour which ■ aid tract of Land or ground together with all the Priveledges.
Properties, convenience* and appurtenance'^ therein theiron or thereto belonging, coiiveneing or in any inanur.
of ways appertaining, as woods, underwood^. Rivers r'lls or waters Earth, stones, gravel and sands, and fishing,
fowling, hnnling and lipwkmg and whatever else is will or may be Proffits able > r Pleasant in or uij.n ilie
Preiri-e-= unto my said ."^i-ter '^irah her heT< ex»-utors adii.mi iratirs or as.-;gns f( rever. and I the af-. re-aid
Thoma- fprn.nld d'c herelv Promis to and w'th my saauv they the afi resand. Prcnres as aforcsaide shall f
niiv iroi'li. binderimce. Lett or molle.station whalsoevr-'ver Demanding any Riglil. ( hallcnge. Chun iiilic or a
wrightMic. or verball promiss whats^^ever Pressedaiit tid Sister her heirs execs, adininistralor- and as-ign- sliee
reely ^ind Quietly Inheritt and Poises forever withoutr by any person whatsoever, or verball pr mi's uhat-o-
ny Deed Gife. Grant, mort.gage or .Sale whatsoever inhe Date hereof.
In witness nf the true meaning and for the true Performance of every an<l all what is above written acccrd-
iiig to the true Intent and meaning there; f I the -aid Thoma- fTernald have hereunto sett my han<l and affixed
niv Seal Ibis Jl-i dav of lanuarv anno Dnminij If.RR-Sn. And in the fourth year of the reign of our Sovereing
Lord laircs the -econd bv the grace of Cod < f Tjitland. .Scotland. Trance and Ireland. King Defender of tlie
faith. &-C,
The word fthc'l between the fourteenth and fifteenth line and (in) belonging to the word appurtaining
between the seventeenth and eiehtcenth line was underlined before the sign ng and Sealing hereof.
Witne-^s * Thorn-. fTernald (I. S)
Richard Cain. -Tliemprance ffernald (L Si
fosseph .Mlexander, Concents.
Mrs" Temperniup tfernald above named apnea-eil before me ye subscriber one of her Majesties Conncell
and .Tcknowledged the above Instrument to be her husbands deceased and her act and deed this .Sixth day of
-Augii-t One thousand .Seven hundred and fourteen.
Tnhn Plaisted.
Filtered and Recorded a'-conHne to the Original the Hth .\ug KM signed pr. Wm \aiighan. Recorder.
This remarkable familv =prrpt history Deed from reading in accordance with the discovered, never lost
fullv. but hid. TTebrew and Aee>'rvtian with Greek and Roman with star and line united with <nher languages
give the family and Nations imrortant fact'^ and dat^i : \\7—M a time when a claim as descendant from ancien
t kings meant war. if powerful enouch. or death if lacking supporters. Thomas affixed his signature in first
name. "Thoms" when inverted five his ancestors initial."- "s. w." Samuel Washington and our old seal o. which
is found on the history of Creation bv Fnr Lamr: on the most ancient Map of Earth and in the pyramid of
,\eTr>t and the \'o of Ietter= are a count of the points of the .\egyptian Star, which, to make more clear has
the "-" rni^ed and the next count of letters give the point- in our Roman S nointed star: take la- 1 six letters
and 't snelt Renald that the Deed claip'ed him the Eldest son of and one of the f' the family name the other,
"f n de-cendant o' TTrinc's- the "^h in both- names is a Greek O which Is employed to show the name of
God— Theos in Gk re-ervinir one of the lines in the letter that are found in aforesaid history of Creation, etc.
Temperance f^^•ashington1 FFernald not only keeps a ci'unt of the 1« children of Francis but his initial f also,
the two c'- are the initials of rommeniu- and Cotton the wives of Francis and Robert Washington of \'a..
lR:tn. her mother and father On aforesaid Map. historic and prophetic, that foretold events, as they have
occured and Proved Tn the word Re ("c i"1 nald are kept the initials of Gasparde and the i also in the i of
Fiominij nnd lohn. futher kept in the word "Concents, viz Ga^parde Coligny and I'hm Feme!, son of Francis,
■who married .Annietta de Colig-nv
Thus if with the kev T have freely triven to the world for the good of all. von can find a laree mass
of TTlstoric farts and best of all the primitive laws of God with His Commandments that he gave to all his
children mankind for their wellfare and happiness, that ought be first labored for therefrom giving the greatest
ble'sinc-s unto all made in the likeness of our glorious Creator the Supreme Being. God in his 170 different spelt
277
7i
AKTH PASSKTH AWiV INTO NEW ELEMENTS I GOD, HEAVEN ENDl'UKTII l-OIUVFU
DATE OF CREATION OK MIINDI OR WORLD: 5810; WOMAN AND MAN 4 37(i |{ i
AS IS. WAS AND WILL ItE KOUKVERMOUE : HE AU>NE IS rEUKI-:<T. UNCII A.\(iKA HI.
This most remarka-
ble and wonderful plate,
.map, generations chart,
history ancient and mod-
ern, foretelling events
that are proved even to
1906; is when carefully
read in primitive line,
cipher, and other lan-
guages, fills many gaps
in world's history which
is full of absurdities that
do no honor to 2 0tb
Centurv experts. 25 6
lines o\ by proof is dupli-
cated bv Dighton Rock
inscription, also by New-
port, R. I., Tower, also
on Peter Faneuil Tomb.
The scope of this work
will only enable us to call
attention to a few points
and the interesting rest I
leave for the diligent to
transcribe honoring thou
thyself and me.
THE PRIMITIVE
ALPHABET
0=F. 000=TRINITV.
A=A=PYRAM1D.
D=M=DOCUME.\T=
LAND=FA.
6 O8=50<)0, 8 8tar»=800
and 0=10=5810 Crea-
tion of World.
C=Mankind, here defined
us women and man.
The third from top is in
form of C which is the ini-
tial of Christ, 0=8on of
God, OO = G od the
Father and God the holy
One. The 5 pointed stars
are oionograraic letters
e<iual N or M= I, J, H,
F. The white in stars
indicate women pure.
Dark stars^sinful men.
Largedark round circles
the angry face of God for
sins of men. The heavy
top line=deluge and in
some situations the
PUle 1337. Formeth Shape of HabrtrvTermlul M.
Earth it is with part of upright lines the name Fa=6od. Also it is I — =Ham- I =Nh=Noah, as 8|)elt in He-
brew and English. The predominance of women in this plate is an honor God gave to true women for her purity
and did honor her by creation before Adam. 4 OOOO on wings indicate the date 4000, 3 000=300 & 7 + =70
^ heads and 3 feet=6. All=the date of creation of AVA & ADAM, our Common Foreparents. 4376.
GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON, PRESIDENT. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA CENSUS OF
MAINE: 1790, FIRST.
EERNALD
All (Xli«< FrM.
n
FERNALD, PELTIAH 23
FF.KNALD, CLEMENT »
FERNALD, NATHANIEL 32
FRUNALD, JOEL bl
■FURNAL. JOHN 3<i 62
FURNALD, COL. ANDW. P. 60
FURNALD, ARCULS 61
FURNALD. BENJS. 61
FURNALD, BENJS. 61
FURNALD, DAVID 61
FURNALD, DAVID 62
TURNALD, DAVID 62
FURNALD, CAPN. DENNES 60
FURNALD. DENNIS, Jr. 61
FURNALD, DORITY 61
FURNALD, EBNE2ER 61
FURNALD, ELIHU 61
FURNALD. ELEAZER 57
rURNALD. HERCELUS 57
FURNALD, DEACON JAMES 61
FURNALD, JOHN 61
FURNALD, JNO 62
FURNALD, JOSEPH 61
FURNALD. JOSHA 61
FURNALD, JOSHUA
FURNALD,
FURNALD, MARK
FURNALD, MARY
FURNALD, MOSES
FURNALD, NATH
FURNALD, NATHEL
FURNALD, SARAH
FURNALD, TOBIAS
FURNALD, THOS.
FU'<NALD, WM.
FURNALD. WM.
FURNALD. WM.
FURNALD, WM.
FURNALD, WM. Jr.
FURNALD, WILLM. W.
DUNNELL, JOSEPH (?)
DURNEL, DAVID (?)
62
CumbtrUnd Co. Bak*r<town
York •' P«pp«rcllborougli
CumbtrluMJ " Portliod Town
HuKock " GouUiboraunh
" " VinaUiivtn
York •• Kitterj
(Ntnit (Itm br U. S. Cm.us 1790)
B«rwick Town
KitUr,
iimess, 101; Members
Limerick *'
Ficii and Irtditioni declared ite
^ D=
3fuvnal6, lino., maill.
In the name of God Amen, the fourteenth day of March one thousand and ^even hundred and fitly-(our
1, John Fernald of Kittcry in the County of York m the I'rovence of Mass. Bay in New lingland, yeo-
man being sick and weak in body but of perfect mind and memory thanks be given to God, therefore calling
unto mind the morlallity of my body and knowing thai it is appointed for all once to dye. do make and ordain
this my last will and testament that is to say principally and first of all 1 give and rcccommend my soul unto
the hands of God that ga\e it and my body I reccomiiiend to the earth to be buried in a christian like and decent
manner at yr discretion of my executors hereafter naniccl and as touching such worldly estate wherewilli il
has pleased God to bless me with in this life. I give devise and dispose of the same in the following manner
and form.
Imprims. I give .ind iHipiclli uiilo my well l.cl..v.-,l sons J.inu-s l-crnal.l and Joseph l-ernald ,ill my
wearing npparrcl lu be c<|ii:illy duided bilwi.M lliciii. I .iKo guc iiiUo my said sons, and llieir luirs f,,r<v.r a
conhrmalion of the tracts of land whereon they now dwell which I formally gave them by deed of gilt, wnicli
on Record now at large may appear. •
Item. I give and bequeth unto my well beloved son Samuel I'ernald my gun, and also I give my son a
confirmation of a tract of land whereon he now dwells, and to his heir.^ forever which I formaly gave him by
a deed of gift which on record more at large may appear.
Item. I give and bequeth unto my beloved son Benja Fernald all my cyder cask and all my husban
dry utensels. I also give unto my said son and his heirs lawfiillv begotten by his body forever a confirniatioii
of a lr.ict of land whereon I now dwell with two other tracts of l.uni which I formerly gave to him by a deed of
gift bearing date Hi day of December Anno Domini one thousand seven hundred and forty which on recrd
ma V more at large appear. Be it known and under stood that my will is that my said son Benjamin I'ernald
should dye and leave no heirs lawfully begotten by his body that he the said Benj. shall dispose of the afore-
said tracts of land to any of my grandson of the name of the Fernald or to as many or to any of them as he
shall see meet.
Item. I give and bequeth to my well beloved daughters .Mary Rogers. Sarah Rogers. .Abigail Staple
Lydia Johnson to each of them F,ight Pounds to be paid to them by my I"..yeciitors in neat cattle at the customary
price. My will is that the said cattle shall be valued by indifferent men. each person to whom ye legacy is.
is to choose one man and my said Executors to choose the other and if it now happen them two men cannot
agree on the price of the said cattle that the sairl two men so chosen, shall choose the third man and so shall
abide by the price that each two of them shall set them at.
Item. 1 give and bequeth unto my beloved grand children the children of my son John Fernald late of
kittery deceased viz: to John I'ernald and .Mary F'ernalil to each of them Five Shillings in lawful money. My
will is that all the legacies herein mentioned and my funeral charges be paid out of my personal Estate.
Item. I give and bequeth to my well beloved wife Sarah Fernald all the remainder of my personal estate
to be to her own proper use benefit and behoof forever.
Item. I give and bequeth to my bel.ived son Samuel Fernald and his heirs forever all my right title and
interest I have in or unto a Grant of land I bought of John Gilden late of Kittery deceased as by this deed on
record more at large appear. Lastly. I constitute make and ordain my beloved son Samuel Fernald my only
and sole Executor of this mv last Will and testament and I do hereby utterly disalow revoke and disanul all
and every other former testament wills legacies as executed by me in any ways before this time named willed
oi bequethed Ratifying and confirming this and no other to be mv last «ill and testament.
In Witness Whereof
I here unto Set my Hand and Seal in these his
presence first writen Signed Sealed Published Pro- John I. F. Fernald "3)
nonnced and declared as his last will and testament. mark
In the presence of ns the subscribers
lames Fernald. Inr..
Sarah Leighton.
Thomas Dcnnot,
Mr. lohn Fernalds Will,
YORK O S
-\t a Court of Probate held at York July 8 U."; 1 the foregoing Instrument was presented by Samuel
Fernald sole Execntor therein named and Thomas Den net. James Fernald. Inr. and Sarah Leighton appeared
and made oath that they were present and did see ye within named John Fernald Dec. sign and seal and heard
him declare the said Tnstniment to be his last will and testament and that he was then of sound disposing
mind to their best discerning and that they subscribed their names as Witnesses thereto in the testators presence
and I do hereby allow and approve of the same accordingly.
ler: Moulton, Judge. Recorded Lib. 9 Fol. 2S &c.
pr Simon Frost. Reg.
279
^ ° * * *
LIVER PEABODY, ESQ., JUDGE A. D. 1792 And at said Court held at Exettr on the Stvemh
Day of the same December by the said Judge Administration of the Estate of John Furnald
late of said Portmouth, Brazier, deceased was granted Mary Furnald his -widow who with
Samuel Bowles merchnt and John Davenport Goldsmith both of sd. Portsmouth gave bond
according to law.
A tnie Copy of Record Attest: Irving M. Heath, Register. Rec. Vol. 30. Page 326.
THE DEED OF AFORESAID JOHN AND MARY FURNALDS SON WILLIAM
FIRNALD AND WIFE BETSY FARNEL to theFldest child and son JONATHAN POORE FIRNALD
Know all Men by these presents That I William Firnald of Wolfborough in the County of Strafford and State
of New Hampshire Husbandman — For in consideration of the sum of Two hundred and fifty dollars to me in
hand before the delivery hereof well and truly paid by Jonathan P. Firnald of the same \\ olflxirouK'h Yeoman —
The receipt whereof I do hereby acknowledge, have remised released and quited claim, and by the.se presents
do remise release and quit claim unto* the said Jonathan P. Firnald his heirs and assigns forever a certain tract
or parcel of Land Situate in saTd Wolfborough. Containing one hundred Acres of Land And Bounded as fol-
lows do wit) Beginning at the southernly corner of Land owned by the heirs of the Late revd. F.benezar Allen
at Smiths Pond (so called) and running Northwesterly by said heirs I^nd to the Road leading from the Meet-
ing lliMise to Ossipcc. Ilu-nce Norllica-stcrly by said Uo.nd to the Road Leading fnnu llio .\l:i>oiii;iii Pniprictors
quarter to Brookfield thence southeasterly by said road last mentioned and William Triggs land so far as that
a line turning and running southwest to said Smiths Pond and thence by the shore of .said i)ond to the- Bounds
first mentioned and shall contain the aforesaid quantity of one hundred Acres Being the Cook Farm (so
called)—
To have and to hold the said granted premises with all the privileges and Appurtances to the same belonging
to him The said Jonathan P. Firnald his heirs and Assigns to his and their only proper use and benefit forever
hereby engaging to warrant and defend the said granted premises against all claims or demands of any person
or persons claiming by from or under me And I Betsey Firnald wife of the said William Surrender up all my
right of dower or third part of that I have of in or unto .said granted premises.
In Witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands and Seals this Ninth day of February in the year of
our Lord one Thousand eight hundred and twenty five.
Signed Sealed and delivered in presence of William Firnald C^'J^'^i^'ayrrSi^^t^na -^ ©
Thomas Stevenson .^^ y ^
Joseph Stevenson Betsy Farnel \/^^ jU^'^ ^
StrafTord SS The Ninth day of February in the year of our Lord one Thousand eight hundred and twenty
five.
Then Perxinally Appeared William Firnald and Acknowledged llic foregoing wrilen instrument to be his
Voluntary act and Deed before me.
StraflTord Record-Reed August 9thl825. Thomas Steven.son Justice of the Peace.
Recorded Lib. 125 Folo. 129 Ex8. by M. L. Neal, R. D. R. (Spelling and Capitals copy of original.)
Smiths Pond is now called Lake Wentwortli. The "Parson AJlen Meeting House" was constructed into
the hrge part of Jonathan P. Firnald house now owned by Rev. John Chamberlain.
Mr. Jonathan P. Fernald, as we now spell the name, built the First Baptist Church at Wolfboro. Centre,
where (nearly) all his eleven children were born. The 12 chn. of his Father Wm. and Elizabeth, called
"Betsey" were born at Brookfield that was taken oflF Middletown, 1795.
o ^ t>
>ftV4 E-EXAMINING OLD LETTERS AND PAPERS THERE ARE FOUND THE
diW FOLLOWING THAT ESCAPED THE GENERAL BURNING EPISODE UPON
Tim '^^^ DEATH OF AGED PERSONS IN U. S.
F^jl To Mr. Joseph Fernald, Kittery. Camp at Number one Dept. 1776.
I take this Opportunity to acquaint you that I am at Present in very good health
and hope these will find you and yours and all friends in the same situation. I would acquaint you
that your Brother, Capt. Mark Fcrnald was taken a fev^- days ago by the lively man of war and is now
in Boston Harbour, one of his men who has run away, has been at our camp Fernald dow n to my
tent and he told me that he run away in a Boat, and that your son Edward was uell but would not
leave his uncle, and he told me likewise that your Brother had liberty to go on shore when he
Pleased. I would not have you be very much concerned about them. I believe there is no danger
but when they will be released; as to the vessel and cargoe, I can't say how that will turn — wc arc
somewhat Peaceable at Present, how long it will last 1 can't say. I have enjoyed my health this sum-
mer much better than I did at home though we all have had a seasoning to the Place: my Company
are well in General. My compliments to all your family, to your son Benj. & wife, to Capt. Gunni-
son (Jc wife, Mark & wife, to your Brother Benj. i^ wife, & family, to Uncle F.benezer Fernald &
family, young Ebenezar & Jonathan, Sam'l Pray, Eben, Joshua & their wives & Families; excuse
haste and want of Paper. I remain Your sincere friend and Kinsman —
Tobias Fernald, Capt.
To Mr.Joseph Fernald at Kittery
State of New I Pr Committee of Safety August 26th 1779
Hampshire ) To the Board of Wars
Jn. (part erased)
Firnel ( ? ) Let the Clerk, men of Rye have out of the Magazine one Barrele of good Gun powder
taking their Receipt setu i s return the same on demand unless Expended on an Invassion of the
Enemy
M Weare, Prest." (On back of instrument)
"Reed an ord. on Sam. Hobbart, Esq for the within mentd. barrel of Powder, Aug. 26, 1779 —
David Lord
. er from mass dilver S'elict Me J. Rye on bbl. Powder-A the Re
th 26tt 1779"
Richard Crown f
'Navy departnt.
6th Aug. U
Sir
I have received your letter of the 28th Ulto — Lieutenant John H. Jones is appointed to succeed
you in the command of the Scammel, You will be pleased to give him any information in Your power
respecting the present state & wants, furnish him with complete Inventories of all the Stores of every
kind on board, and deliver to him all the circular instructions, your authority to capture French armed
vessels, private signals Sec. which you have received from this office & after which and having a settle-
ment of your (b & t p) your accounts, you have permission to visit your family in New Hampshire.
I remain till futher orders.
I am sir .Wa.h Citv I (Writing & Printing on back)
Lieut. Mark Fernald Your mo ob Scrv vvasn L.ity ^^^^ Deptmt
Ben Stoddard ' ^Mi_2_l Ben Stoddard
Lieut. Mark Fernald
Brig Scammel
New castle
Delaware
Power of Attorney Wm. Fernald to Jonathan P. Firnald. Reed. Carrol County. Reed. March 12,
1853. Recorded Book 21 Page 498 Loammi Hardy, Recorder.
Know all men by these presents that I William Fernald of Portsmouth in the County of Rockingham
and state of New Hampshire trader, have made and constitute, and appointed and by these presence
do make and constitute and appoint Jonathan P. Fernald of Wolfborough in the Count>' of Carrol
and state of New Hampshire, Yeoman my true and lawful attorney for me and in my name to grant
sell, bargain and convey in fee simple for such price as he may, or sum of money and to such person
or persons as he shall think, ht and convenient the mills and priveleges which I own in the town of
Moultonborough in said county of Carrol and state of New Hampshire and being the same mills and
priyileges that I bought of N. B. Shannon, Esq. And tho for me and in my name to
281
?i
SEAI-. KXKCITTK, DKLIVKK AND ACKNOWLErWE SUCH DEED OK DEEDS AND CONVEY
ANPia I'OIt THE SAI-E AND DISI'OSAI, TllEUE OK OK ANY I'AIIT TIIEItEOK AS MY
SAID ATTOUNEY SHALL THINK KIT AND EXPEDIENT. HEREUY UATIFYINU AND
conHrmiDg all euch deed and convej-ances as shall at any time hereafter be 8eule<] and executed by
ray said attorney concerning the premisesses. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my band
and seal this 11th day of Septennber, l«4(i.
Signed, Sealed and delivered
in prenenceof us Win. Fernald, Jr.
Oiiniel Martin ON State of New Hampshire Carroll ss. September 11th, 184C, Personally
appearing the above named William ^ernald, Jr. and acknowledged
({eorgre W. Fernald foregoing instrument to be his free act and deed.
Before me, Daniel Martin, Justice of Peace.
STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, OFFICE OF THE SFXIRETAKY OF STATE, CONCORD, Nov. 17th, 1894.
"I certify that the foregoing are true copies of extracts of the Journal of the Province of New Humpehir*,
and a true copy of a petition of Spencer Colby from the Records and Files of this Office.
JTheS<«i| " In testimony whereof I hereunto subscribe my Ottlciul Signature and offlx the seal of the state
n',,7,', C I'-zra S. Sterns, Secretary of State.
Sf.e. J
(These "Extracts and Petition'" have been stolen from my office August 1908.— Author. They concerned
the division of property captured by Captain John Fernald, gt. gr. fr. of Jonathan P. Fernald, at Louisberg
in which the Captain convoyed the troops, and he is buried on Boston Conimop, in itsCemetery, where I found
part of his grave tablet. On iron Washington tablet, nearly erased, I found "Cap. John Abram Furoal Orbit
Feby 21, 1778."
WILL OF MRS. ELIZABCTH FERNALD OF PORTSMOUTH, NEW IIAMI'SHIRE.
In the name of (lod Amen the Twenty-ninth Day of .May Anno Domini 175(i. I Elizabeth Fumala of Ports-
mouth ill the Province of New Hampshire in New England Widow of William Fernald late of Kittery in the
county of York Shipwright Deceased being and of perfect mind and memory tlianks be to .\lmightv God
and Calling to remembrance the uncertain state of this Transient Life and that'al) flesh must vield to "Death
when it shall please God to Call Do make and ordain this my last Will and Testament in manner and form fol-
lowing And first of all being penitent and Sorry for my Sins past Most humbly desiring forgiveness for the
same Give and Commit my, Soul unto Almighty (iod that gave it and thro the meri"t of Christ's Death and pas-
sions do hope to inherit the Kingdom of Heaven prepared for His f<lect and Chosen. And my body to be buried
ill Christian and Decent manner at the Discretion of my Executor hereafter named.
First I will that all my just Debts and funeral Charges be paid out of my F-state by my Executor.
Item. I give and bequeath unto my son William Fernald and his Heirs" the sum of five shillings to be paid
him or them by my E.xecutor out of my Estate within three years after my Decease.
Item 1 give and bequeath unto my son, John Fernald his heirs and assigns forever the Eastermost half of
ray Dwelling House and the Eastermost half of my I And whereon and whereabout ray said house Stands Situate
in Portsmouth aforesaid fronting on the highway that I-eads from Pickerings Mills (so called) to the North
.Meeting house in I'ortsmouth aforesaid thirty feet or thereabouts Carrying that same breadth of thirty feet or
near thereabouts back towards the South Westerly to the .Mill Pond. It being the one half of that piece or
parcel of Land Given and grante<l unto me by my Father William Cotton I^te of Portsmouth, aforesaid De-
ceased.
Item 1 give and bequeath unto the Children of my Daughter Mary Mendura Deceased the Sum of five Shil-
lings E(|ually Hiuoiig them to l)e paid out of ray Estate by my Executor within three vears after my Decease.
Item I give and bequeath unto my Daughter Elizabeth fxjrd the wife of Joseph Ix)rd and to"her own dis-
posing the Sum of fifty Pounds .New Tenor to be paid her out of my Estate within three years after My Decease
by my Executor hereafter named.
Item I give and be<|ueath unto m^ Son George Fernald his Heirs and assigns forever the Westermost
half of my Dwelling HouEse and the \\ estermoet half of my 1-and on and near where my said house Stjinds Situ-
ate III PorlMiiioutli aforesaid mid fronting on the lligliway that I^sads from Pickerings .Mills to the .North .Meet-
ing House thirty feet or thereabouts Carrying that same breadth of thirty feet or thereabouts buck South or
South Westerly to the Mill pond and whereas I have l-et part of the said I^nd to Renjamin Eaton bv I^ase for
a Certain Tenii my Will is that the said Benjamin Eaton shall have the Liberty of moving of his house from said
Land when his l^ease is out or to take another I<eii8e from my son (ieoroe uforesaid if my l>eceu8»» happens be-
fore the lease 1 gave is out, I also give unto my wiid son George Feriialdhis heirs and assigns forever My .Negro
Man called by tTie .Name of Dick also all my personal 1-^tate that shall be left by me undisposed of at the tune
of my Decease .My said Son George paying the said legacies. And I do hereby .Nominate Constitute and appoint
my saiil Son Goorgo Funiald of Portsmouth aforesiiid r<>(i|ier to be my Sole Executor of this iiiv Uiat Willand
Testament.
In Witness svhereof I have hereunto Set my hand & Seal the Day and Year first above .Mentioned.
Signed, Sealed declared and pronounced Meraoruiidiim. There was thirteen woi-ds luterlined
by the said Elizabeth Fernald to be her before Signing also the said George Fernald shall
last Will it Testament in the presence take Care of his .Mother's Negro Woman During her
of us Witnesses in the Testator's pres- Life and be at the Charge of burying her if she Sur-
ence Subscribing our names. vive his said Mother.
Luke Mills George Huntress ELIZABETH FERNALD (L. S.)
William Kennedy
( Province ) July 20th. 17G1 this Will was proved by the oaths of all the above named Wituesses
1 °^ C
i .New Hampshire ) Irving M. Heath, Register.
.\ true copy Attest.
282
©
HK COMMONWKAI.TH OF MASSA(;HUSETT.S IN COUNTII,, AVH. 2.M, \7>-
177, p. 419, iulviaefi that Capt. James Nivetip. Coninmnder of the Ship MaiH be
to discharge the Men beloiifring to the Dean Frigate impressed the last Fveiiii
pies and John Fernall belonging to the Schr.
Henry Tresethen, Master.
Attest, John Avery, Sec.
ALSO KRO.M SAID AUCHIVKS
Keceived of Capt. Noves, (,'hairman of Class .No. 1
For the Town of Siicfbury— the Sura of thirty three Shillings
I>. moiiy .OS ve bounty to Serve in the Continental ,\rmy
For the Term of three Vearw
Springfield I JKAN FRANCOIS FOnUNlEri/'
May 1.".. 17S1.' T Witne.'is my hand= \. u. ['lioto sliows I,. K. U.
TIMS JOHN Fi;UNAI,D, as llecorde<l in Cenl. (iKOlUiK \VASHIN(;T0NS FIRST CF.NSIS OF 1790 l.N
MIDDLKTON, the liranite STATK OF MOW HAMPSHIRE, that was North of .Moose Monntain bv Act of Leg-
islature 179."i divide<l from .Middleton and called BROOK FIF;i,I), p. 93, is the same person, ivlro'was I'rivnte
Secretary of (iov. .lolin Wentworth in S. S., signed the Association Test, eidisted, was discharged as above:
then reinlisted as above under the name of his foreparents Jean, son of Charles \lll, king of France, who was
the ihodern (lalen, also look the name of h'rancis s. of Dr. .lean IVrnel, and his l.ist name is spelt that his de-
scendants may count with him the 4 .lohn.-i of the Fnitpil States descendant fi-om TIIO.MAS 1"F,RN.\U) that
niarrieil 'I'lOM l'Fdt.\.N('l'; WASH INdTON also, it has a reference to our relative I'eter I'aneuil and our.relatives
Furneaux I'amily tliat was further kept in the names of Fernnlds from Soldiers and Sailors, .Mass., .Vrchives, viz:
"Fernnld" Synonms : "This name appears under the form of Fanelle, Farnard, I'arneld, Furnold, Fernal
Fernall, Firnald, I'ournal, Fiiriml, Vi
(named for St. Dennis, where many of our forefathers, tli
".lean Francois Foiirnier," that above carefully traced with
the same negative print is the following, to wit :
MayUthl782._ ,-)0
Received of Capt.'.Iacob Rrown, Chairman of Class
No. '2 for the Town of Concord the Sum of Sixty
one pound ten Shillings L. Money as a bounty to
Serve in the Continental Army for the Term of
Three Years.
Witness niv hand, Nathan Conant.
Furnard, I'urnel, Furneld, Furnell." Vol. V, p. 021, p. 941 Dennii
' •' " " ench kings are hurried) Fournal of Kiltery, \. H.
a magnifying glass gives Fournieul,us above. On
Springfield. May 21st 1782 ,'-,2
Received of Capt. lOames Chairman of Class No. 2
Fast Sudbury, Sixty pounds as a bounty to go in
to the Continental Array three years.
Fames, June Gth
Heceived of ('apt. I,aiie, Chairman of Class No. 4 for the Tow
a bounty to Serve in the Continental for the term of three year.
Witness my hand
Springfield
May 31st, 1782.
1 of Fast Sudbury the Sum of Sixty Pound
his
Wm. OOloo Campbell
mark
53
CENTRE WOLFBORO. Sec PI. 1340. SOUTH WOLFBORO.
^LD ~ilh Collon Coil of Arms. WOLFBORO FALL.S.
; Anne Collon. i GENERAL GEORGE WASHING-
1 Valley. NORTH
283
(§
DURING THE WAR OF 1812, 1813 WHEN WAS KNOWN THE FERNALD MOTTO.
"TRUE TO GOD. COUNTRY. STATE AND FAMILY," AND MY GREAT GRAND-
FATHER'S GENERAL ZEBULON PIKES SON BRIG. GENL. Z. MONTGOMERY PIKE
motto: "1. Preserve your Honor free from blemish. 2, Be always ready todie for your Country."
That was no idle boast, as General Pike led his men to victory 27 April 1813 and gave his life for coun-
try's honor. Fell. My honored father JONATHAN POOR FERNALE, 1812 went to Rochester to
serve with arms his country. His brother SAMUEL FERNALD, enlisted. Former to short, like King Pepin
and his brother. Uncle Sam. sent substitute to protect his loved country, being ill. New Hampshire Adj't. Gcnl's
Report for 1868 Wolfborough Soldiers in War of 1812.
SHANNON, NATHANIEL H. Lieut. in Cap
CLARK, TIMOTHY Corpl.
GLINES. MOSESJ. P
GLINES, NATHANIEL P
HOLMES, JOHN P
ROGERS, JOHN P
WALLACE, JACOB P
FULLERTON, JOHN Sergt.
DREW. JOHN
LUCAS, MARK Musician "
AVERY, WALTER P
COOK, ICHABORD P
EVINS, THEODORE P
HARVEY, JACOB P
JUDKINS, JOSEPH L. P
LUCAS, ANDREW (missing) P
RICHARDSON, DANIEL D. P
TEIHE, WILLIAM P
HOIT, JOSEPH P
SHEPHERD, JOHN P
EPMUNDS, STEPHEN P
GRAY, JOSEPH P Sick
WIGGINS, JOHN A. P Deserted
ROGERS. JAMES P in
HAWKINS. STEPHEN P
TRIGS, THOMAS P
WILLEY, JOHN P
DREW. DANIEL P
HALL. JESSE P
Stories Co.. Page 139
140
145
Willcy's
146
182
And probably others,
as the Residence is not giv-
en in more than one half of
the Companies.
COLONEL
GEORGE C.GILMORE
P. S. Where mentioned
not given Gil.
Nov. 17th.. 1904
Hon. Ezra S. Stearns.
Sec. of State of N. H.
Dear Sir:—
Your courteous
favor, containing Official
Document of my gt- gt. gr.
father's Miliury Services,
with Memoranda were re-
ceived this a. m.
Enclosed please find a
Ck. 12.00 for the small a-
mount due for same.
With sincere grateful
thanks, I remain.
Faithfully yours,
Charles A. Fernald
Mr. JONATHAN POOR FERNALD, armed an equiped went to Manchester or Rochester to be mustered
in as a substitute for Uncle Thomas Stevenson, Justice of the Peace, and was retused on account of his statue al-
though he had been a Moderator of the Town of Wolfboro, Tax Collector, Highway Surveyor and many years
had charge of the highway; notwithsunding at a Town Meeting, where it was customary for the athcletes to
wrestle as part of the physical training to provide soldiers for .their country's protection, he vanquished the champ-
ion town wrestler. Gave with approval consent for two of his sons to enlist for Civil War, prevented by mother.
Built the First Baptist Church at Wolfboro Ccntce, aided by Hon. Thomas L. Whitton, Home & Chamberlain. Held
open and hospitable house for the clergy at quarterly meetings and regular services, of which he was a prominent
member over three generations. Possessed of a wonderful memory of most ancient and more recent family his-
tory that has without a single exception been verified as he recalled it for over 1800 years, by writer that never
knew him to tell or act an untruth: ever just, generous, stern, brave, firm, very kind hearted, strong in noble true
manhood. Deep great love for his family and godly persons, scorning every impurity in act, thought and deed.
Giving to his two sons a part of his land to cultivate for their personal use, with the lesson that is was better to
earn than accept. Gave to each son generously to start in life. Cared for his widowed daughter most tenderly and
nobly. Was a most perfect true noble father that pen or words can never fully give the great honot or love
merit this great MAN OF GOD, EVER LOYALLY PATRIOTIC. George Washington his ideal of religious
incorruptabic manhood. United States Father taught to his children as an example. Aided in this and in the
history of Wolfborough, New Hampshire. Courteously acknowledged by Author, Mr. Benjamin F. Parker.
^ ^ ^ D.
"FOR A DAY IN THY COURIS IS BETTER THAN A THOUSAND. I HAD
RATHER BE A DOORKEEPER IN THE HOUSE OF MY GOD THAN TO DWELL
IN THE TENTS OF WICKEDNESS. FOR THE LORD GOD IS A SUN AND SHIELD:
the Lord will give grace and glory: no good thing will he withhold from them who walk uprightly.
O Lord of hosts, blessed is the man that trusteth in thee." — Psalms 84:10-12.
PLATt 1411.
5. South WoWboro Church
North Wolfhoro Church.
4, Advent Chaptl. Wolfboro Vill.ge.
Ftee Baptist Church, Wolfboro. N. H.
Conerce»tional Church, Wolfboro, N. H.
Unitarian Church
%P^
TX
ETTHE RISING GENERATIONS STRIVE TO EMULATE THESE GREATEST
AND BEST OF MEN. MR. |ONAIIIAN F'OOR EERNALD AND GENERAL
GEORGE WASHINGTON, DESCENDANTS OF ROBERT \VASHIN(;TON OF
Virginia! These tliey can never excel! Comely in features, fatlier in form was like that
of his ancestor. King Pepin of France typically ucll shown when he waU his short Roman
sword fought and slew unaided the lion in the ampitheatre, that all France's bravest refused
His face at his death xvas typical of with excess of beauty of his relative King Francis
Pe^^ians.
■in-chief.
of PVancel Slow to anger, patient, firm, stern, unchangeable as la\\s of Medcs am
godlike. Over seventy \ears he was a faithful st)ldier of God, the uni\ersal our Cominandt
^'jr
'.MM ■
lilt, i ) I h)ti^nphe(l from the \rchi .. f \1 i iluiut per courte>.\ of Mt >->.- jiiTesI,
Tru\ Hid li un Chief tthe\rch.\t Dcpirtm nt St it Hi u e B( ston. Mas;, I\| MR [)1I-,I)J:
A\l)\OliS \ h.m ll_ i(lio44- 16Sc-[t 17~S John I urn ild, Jr., of Middkton \Mmnn,
man and vvifc, Mary. da lighter of and one of the heirs to the estate of John Savige 1 ite of PorlMiioiith,
N. H., yeoman, interstate, deceased. We hereby acknowledge receipt from Mit\ Si\ ige tht \\ ulow
of lolin S.ivagc, and |ohn Savage, the son of .said decca.sed, admmistnitors of estate of Mid dm i id I 111/
in full of said .Vlarv's share. Acknowledged 23 Oct. 177H. Recorded 30 Sept TSI)
Signed, lOHN I-ORNFL
This ancestor reenlisted as per above "Jean MARY (\) FORNM
Francois Fournel," or neuil, or r.
:S6
i
lEU MADE WOMAN AND MAN IN HIS IMAGE AND GAVE THEM DOMINION.
LAND AND SEAS.
A CERTIFIED COPY OF CONVEYANCE OF REAL ESTATE. 1841 TO 1896, PARTS
omitted to save repetition, to and by FERNALDS, Carrol County, New Hampshire, by H. F. Abbott,
Register.
■ ---b
Book
p.g.
Book
Pag.
Jonathan P. Fernald,
to Ambrose,
10
540
Frost to Mark Fernald
6
372
William
Jr. from Shannon,
6
119
Daniel Furnald from Copp
31
510
Joseph
to Stevens,
12
373
Stephen Fernald ;
and Libbey 24 Agmt.
118
Simeon
to C. and S. E. Fnid,
24
386
John W. and Lucinda Fernald to Drew
34
221
Mark
" Jenness,
36
576
Henry C. Fernald to Foss
39
3
John W.
" Stillings.
41
171
Nathaniel
..
" Pitman
" Dodge
41
43
226
287
" Willcy,
42
5
Mark
" Avery
278
Simeon
" Henson,
44
524
Daniel
" Stockbridge
144
Calvin
from Davis
44
411
Daniel
Jr. from Home
44
139
" Hooper
44
350
John W.
"
Agt. Warner
45
1K9
Mark
to Varney, et al.
45
554
" "
to Warner
45
504
Olive
" E. Fernald
46
63
from Stillings
598
Edmund W.
" Sargent
46
65
Mark
'■ Patrick
46
542
Daniel
from Brown
307
"
' " Brock
544
Brackett M.
to Trickey
47
169
Nathaniel
" D. H. Wood
43
"
Mason
47
171
Lucinda
"
" Rogers
358
.,
from
47
181
Henry C.
" Cook
374
David
Jr. to Bryant
49
298
Daniel
"
Streeter
301
Jonathan P.
to WiUey
50
94
"
" Ladd
273
John Y.
from Garland
143
Henr>' C.
" Gray
405
Nathaniel
to Roles
51
98
128
John W.
Simeon
" Trickey
Campbell
181
55
John B.
to J. M. Brackett
52
127
Mark
"
to Gale
282
Henry
from Wentworth
115
"
from Hanson
287
Henry C.
Rogers
"
123
Daniel
to Durgin
110
Daniel " Ji
r. " Bean
54
234
Samuel
"
from Bean
292
Oliver G.
'• BuUard
54
200
George W.
" Packard
587
Jonathan P.
to Chas. A. Fernald
297
Mark
Johnson
173
Joseph
" Joseph A.
55
443
George W.
"
to John W. F.
"
Henry C.
•' J. W. Fernald
57
320
Mark
"
" J. W. F.
311
John Y.
from White
59
326
Simeon
"
et als. to Brown 60
535;
and 511
Jonathan P.
to Railroad
60
450
Daniel
to Canney
60
1
" SophroniaC. Fernald
367-8
M. P. P. w
., H.
Fernald from Cook
60
47
Charles A.
" Jonathan P. Fernald 60
353
Daniel Fernald from Durgin et al.
344
Joseph A.
" Chamberlain
61
455
Mark
to R. R.
61
445
Samuel "
"
299
Henry C. "
'
' Emery
193
Charles F.
" Langley
"
173
James A. "
*
' Chamberlain
61
455
Samuel
from
308
Charles F.
Fernald from Langley
61
173
Henry C.
" Emery
"
191
James A.
to Nichols
62
553-4
Joseph A.
to Moulton
63
26
John Y.
'• J. W. Fernald
63
154
George W.
" Drew
184
Albert F.
" Avery
195
Mark
" Albert F. Fernald
196
George W.
" Drew
"
192
John Y.
from Roberts
"
130
John Y.
" Smith
153
Mark
" Johnson
284-7
Tobias M.
" S. B.
64
486
Simon
to Campbell
64
516
Henry C.
from Nute
317
Henry C.
from Stephen
310
Mark
to Brown
65
522-2
Joseph A.
to Dore
65
220
Henry C.
"
from Hall
"
56
Mark
" Meserve
66
383
Mark
to Henry C.
66
297
John Y. Fernald et
als F. to John W. Fernald "
152
John W.
"
" McMellan Scvy
67
172
Henry C. Fernald to Dame
67
311
Simon and
wife
" Wentworth
67
266
■ Blake
"
193
Charles F
" Perkins
68
186
287
Oliver C. FcrnaUl from Canny (109 and 6K 5K7
to Joel Fcrnald 69 4S9
Albert F. " from Na.son •• 509
Hcntv C. •• and w. to Black S. B. 157 7(1 245
from hJalcl67Hall '• 1H7
John W. " from Mclorn " 572
Simon " andw. to Hanson, D.E. 193 71 366
Jonathan P. " to Sophronia C. Fcrnald " 525
J. P. " " Sophronia Chase Fcrnald " 525
Mrs. J. M. " B. to Jonathan P.
Henry C. " from Hanson " H
Simon " " D. " 16S
Mark " " Chas. E. P. 72 240
Simon(5H3) " " Merservc Weeks " 388
Chas. E. P. '■ " Mark Fernald " 240
Mark " to J. " 409
Chas. E. F. " " Mark Fernald 74 374
George M. " from Hastings " 100
Jonathan P. and Sophronia C. and
Mary Cotton Fernald to Josie M. Buzzell 7S 506
Oliver G. Fernald from Caverly 77 88
Henrv C. " 78 to Hall, Thompson. 163-5-7
Helen G. " Dearborn 79 517
Daniel " Jr. from M.
Samuel C " from Oliver G. Fernald
Sophronia " to H. 80
Henry C. " from N.,M.,M., 136.163, "
Simon " to D. 81
E.W. Fernald 82
G.M.andM.E.FernaldtoG.S.
Daniel Fernald. Jr. from C.
John W. •' to McK.
Henry C. " " 82. 415. 420. 465
Charles A. " from S. C. Fernald
Oliver G " "' J. Varney
Calvin " " S. Fernald
Edward W. Fernald to Willcy
Osborn " '' Grant
Frank exux " " "
George S. " from H. O. F.
Daniel " Jr. to P.
Byron W. " from Stillings
Tobias M. " " Hodge
H.C.andB.M." " Gr.
Frank " to
F. and O.F.and L.A. and A. Fcrnald from Gra
Osborn F. Fcrnald from Gray
Henry C. " 325 "
Nancy J. Y " Widow from Seas
Mary P. " to E.
Daniel " from B.
Brackett N. " " M.
Henry C. and wife and E. F. to B.
Charles T. Fernald from P.
Osborn " to Wm. H. Fcrnald
Edward H. " " B.
Hollis F. " " D.
84
492
524
388
235
147
128
327
136
89
495
66
258
315
317
449
85
195
570
198
113
40
571
338
54
306
234
196
451
282
480
386
311
288
Henry C. " from Roles •' )H5
Joel •• to Oliver G. 69 519
John W. " from I.arabee " 494
Mary P. - •' Black 224
George M. " " Davis 7(1 217
HenryC.w. " to Hanson 71 7
Mark " " B. 6«:G.W.F. 71 371-499
Chas. A. & wife " Jonathan P. F. 71 525
Sophronia C. " " " " " " 523
Nancy H. " " Nicholas 72 97
Mark " from Peirce 71 189 M. 167
Geo. W. " " Mark F. 71 499
Albert F. " " Nason 72 338
Nancy Fcrnald to Nichols & B. 133 380
Oliver G. " " R. 2K'
Oliver G. " " R. 74 75
B. M. Fcrnald " Nason " 443
H.C. F. & M.P. F. to Meserve 76 122 126
Henry C. & Mary P. " Mascn 76 53
" ' " " Eastman " 205
Simon Fcrnald to Weeks 77 583
Calvin " " Samuel C. F. 78 411
Oliver G. " " D. 79 517
from Joel F. & C. 56 5S
Helen G. " '• J. Clay Dearborn 516-17-520
Albcn " " N. 80 413
Samuel " to Orland, M. F. 81 28
B. M. ■' " Hatch " 2S3
Horace E. " from Caverly 82 328
Henry C. Fernald to Henr)' P. Fnld 83 162
John W. " from D. 84 215
Hollis E. '• " C. 85 48 50
Geo. S. &E. W. F. ■' H. 491
Samuel C " to Calvin • 86 44
Ceo. S. " " Willcy 87 25S
Byron W. " " H. •" 3(l8
Leonard A. " " Grant " 315
Adelbcrt " 318
F. & O. F. & L. A. from D. " 223
Aris M. Fernald to Danl. Fcrnald 88 405
Brackett M. " from Stillings " 418
Olando M. " to S. 89 3S8
Osborn F. " " Gr. ... " 107
Chas. F. " from " '• 199
Daniel "Jr. " Trustees Stone Col., 1-4
Osborn F. " to Gray 9(1 205-6
George S. " " " " 326
Danl. F. and Mary Fernald to H. 91 42
Hollis E. Fcrnald from B. 91 214
Byron W. " " M. " 242
Henry C. " " S. '• 2>ii
P. 92 181
Mark & Payson Fernald to H. 93 544
John W. Fernald from B. "197
William H. " to Osborn E. Fnld. 94 74
Edward " " from B. ■' 386-7
Bracket! M
Samuel C.
jan,es F.
Albert C.
Bvron
Edward
OslM.rn
lol.n \V.
"Holli^ E.
Elmer E.
Calvin
Brackctt M
Bvron \V.
Elmer E.
Oliver G.
Bvron \V.
<)li\crG.
Calvin
lerome K.
Tobias M.
Mollis E
Oliver
Simon
lerome K.
Osborn F.
Mark
Oliver G
to R.
" (Jeorgc S.
" Jerome K.
from K. F.
to J. K. F.
'• Weeks
■• C.
from C.
" A. C A.
to I.
from J.
v/iKi-i vj. 77 from |.
Bracket! and Mar>' C. w. froin Geo. S.
lalnc^ I'. Fernaid 2 from Geo. S. F.
444
Marin A.
from F^ipcr
94
315
193
(hborn F.
74
S7 ■
Helen G.
to l.eona
rd A.
95
392
95
8
Mark
R.
45
225
H. E. & G. S. ••
from X.
95
ISI
1 & 225
96
bW
Mark&S.
to j. K.
F.
97 ■
250
97
311)
Bmckett M.
312
17
John VV.
F.
inn
49
9S
154
Martraret M. Fernaid
1 to j. K. F.
9S
157
99
S3
119
EbzaJ.
W. H.
•• C.
99
119
466
476
Calvin
from C.
441)
4S3
• El.za
1. F.
KM)
16
G. S. et u,\
to F.dwd.W.F.
IIMI
563
lull
5S3
L.A.andEvaM.'
from C.
102
mi
Simon •
to C.
Kll
12?
176
F.lr/.a |.
• Cabin F
crnald
204
25S
Alzada M.
340
564
Oliver G.
102
206
\"2
221
Simon
"
'•
353
125
O. G.
from C.
13S
315
Simon
■• I.
371
443
Mark
to
1113
360
1 ".■?
555
\Vm. H.
1(14
1S4
1(14
5SS
from ••
17S
178
Tobias M.
1(16
309
li'b
175
Simon
to
105
345
1'15
55i>
l^cnard
from '■
593
336
A few of last initials ei
inployed to fill blanks.
Tiij writer regrets to tind when too late to rectify the omission that evidently Mr. .Abbott was so weary that
he could not write the full names of the good Towns people that had business dealings with the numerous Fernaid
families, in Real Estate, many united by ties of blood.
JOHN FURNELL'S WILL. In the Name of God Amen.
I John Furnell of Portsmouth in the Province of New Hampshire Mariner being in good health & of Sound
mind & memory but knowmg I must Dye & not knowing how soon. Do make & ordain this to be my Last Con-
cerning Such Worldly Estate as God has been pleased to Give me. .'Vnd first my will is that all my Debts & fu-
neral Charges should be first paid. And the residue of my Estate, Real &: Personal I Give Devise & Bequeath in
m inner and form following thit is to say the One half part thereof unto Katherinc my well beloved Wife & to her
Heirs & assigns. .And the Use Improvement of the other half during the time that she shall be & Remain my wi-
dow. But upon her Death or marriage again the said other half to go to & become the Right & property
in Fee Simple of my Child or Children that shall survive me in equal parts or shares. .-Xnd I make my said Wife
Sole Execx. of this my last Will and Testament, and Revoke all other Wills by me in any manner heretofore
made Ratifying & confirming this alone to be my Last Will & Testament.
In Witness whereof 1 have hereunto set my Hand & Seal the Twelfth day of January One Thousand Seven
Hundred 6: Forty & in the Fourteenth year of His Majesty's Reign.
Signed Sealed & Declared by the said John Furney to be his last Will JOHN FCRNELL ( g^, )
& Testament. In Presence of us ' '
William Parker, George Libbev, Elizabeth Parker
Rec. Vol. 11. Page 522. Proved Apr. 25. 1750.-
A true copy of record, .Attest: Irving M. Heath, Reginer.
B. 11. L. 26. Lieut. John Jonson's, Oct. 5. 1695, aged 63 yrs. of Haverill in New England gift upon
mirriage of son Timothy Johnson of thirty acres of land. Two cows. Two young oxen. Ten sheep. Two swine,
a young horse. Twenty Bushells of corn
Witness Josiah Gage John Johnson. .My honored fore Fr.
Cutter Noves Acknowledged — 5 Oct. 1695 — endorsed on deed — NathnI Saltonstall, J. P.
Lib. 10. f. 14. E. pr Ste'ple-Sewall. Regr. Elssex Rcgr. Deeds, So. Dist. Salem 9 July 1S95 V. C. A. C. Osgood,
Reg.
289
^ * * *
NCOTTONIAN PAPERS AND THE HOLY BIBLE RECORDS FROM BRACK-
ETT FERNALD COTTON. COL. WILLIAM COTTON MOVED FROM
PORTSMOUTH TO WOLFBOROUGH IN 1781 AND SETTLED ON THE
Farm now owned by Dca. Thomas Cotton-being then forty-three years old he lived
until Sept. 8th. 1821. He had twelve children, four of whom died in infancy. William his eldest
child at first settled in Wolfboro. but afterwards moved to Castine, Maine. A son of this William.
William (3) the third returned to Wolfboro. and made that town his home. He was a man of con-
siderable influence: serving seven years as one of the Board of Selectmen. A son of his Dudley P.
Cotton is now a wealthy merchant in the West Indies, he still retains a kindly interest for the home of
his childhood and has given the neighborhood substantial proofs of his regards. The elder next of
Col. Wm. John Pickering. Thomas, then James. Isaac. George. Mary and Samuel. The six sons
last named settled in Wolfboro. Isaac however moved to Lancaster. Wm. 2nd marned Polly Per-
nald of Brookfield by whom he had four children. He died in Castine. Me., at the age of 64 years.
John married Bessie Allen of Ossipee by whom he had nine children. Thomas married Martha
Furbcr of Wolfboro. by whom he had six children, he died at the age of 81 years. James married
Betsey Robinson of Brookfield by whom he had four children, he died at the age of 87 yrs- Isaac
married Eliza Martin of Wolfboro. by whom he had eight children, he died at the age of 72. George
married Sally Wiggin of Wolfboro. by whom he had four children, he died at the age of 63. Samu-
el married Salley Fcrnald of Brookfield by whom he had five children; he died Feb. 8th 1892. aged
72. MARY married ROBERT PIKE of Middleton. she was the mother of ten children, she died
at the age of 55.
The eight children of Col. William Cotton that survived the infantile period reached an average
age of 71 yrs. and were the parents of fifty-six children; six of whom died in infancy. The most of
the others reached maturity and became the heads of families. Quite a large proportion of their des-
cendants still remain on the farm occupied by their ancestors. So numerous are they, that they have
given name to a locality of the town which is called Cottonborough. They now possess 1600 acres
of land, the most of it adjoining. The original stock (see plate & coat of arms ante) were strong
athletic fellows. John P. Cotton, a grandson of the Col. has served six years as Selectman and (2)
two years as Representative. A brother of John P.. Eliott Cotton has served two years as Representa-
tive and on the board of Selectmen (2) two years. Another. Thomas has been twice in the State
Legislature of which he was a member.
Mrs. Sally Cotton, the wife of Geo. O.. d. June 25th. 1864 aged 90 years. Mrs. Nancy Cotton
wife of Dca. Thomas died in the 45th year of her age. Mr. John F. Cotton. Son of Thomas. Sen.
d. Aug. 30th 1855 aged 55 yrs. Alizora. daughter of John F., aged 17 yrs. Aug. 29. 1855. Copy
from Cottonian documents loaned to writer by Mr. Brackett Fcrnald Cotton of Cotton Valley July 12
1894. His P. O. Address East Wolfboro. N. H. that show that gt. gr. fr. Col. Wm. Cotton in
French Wars was with his wife Mary Clark were the parents of Mary Cotton who married my gr.
fr. Robert Pike, whose daughter Mary Conon Pike married Jonathan Poor Fcrnald, the father of my
brothers and sisters. Obituary, "Died in Wolfborough, Sept. 8th, 1821. Mr. William Cotton, aged
84. He was a Soldier in the old French War, and Colonel in the Militia several years. A useful
member of the Methodist Church for about 13 years of the latter part of his life. Funeral was attend-
ed by Elders Ashchoft and ' Townscnd. He has left afflicted Widow, eight children, forty-seven
grand children, several great grand children." From preponderance of evidence. The above Col.
William was the "adopted" son of William Cotton of Portsmouth who had five sisters one married
^ ^ ^ t>=-
JOHN SNELL, ONE WITH A HUTCHINGS. ONE WITH A MARDEN, ONE WITH
A DAVIS. AND ONE WITH A LEWIS. MR. ALVIN COTTON. SON OF JOHN F..
JAN. 25. 1861. AGED 36 YEARS. MR. DANIEL COTTON, OCT. 20. 186S, Aged 62
years. Samuel Cotton, born May 29. 1780: married Sarah (called Salley) Fernal. April 26, 1809;
born June II. 1790; died June 15, 1830; and he died February 8, 18S2: married 2nd. Abigail Hobbs,
born September 1, 1797; died 22 February, 1864; married March 16, 1831— The Bible Record in
conformity with Cottonian Records: Samuel Cotton, born May 29, 1780; died February 8th, 1852;
married April 25, 1809, Sarah Fernald. born June 1 1th. 1790; died June 15, 1830:- Had Joseph P.
Cotton, born February 12, 1812; died August 6, 1883. Wesley Cotton, born February 5, 1815; died
in the State of Iowa. Samuel Clark Cotton, born July 27. 1820; died March 12, 1839. BRACKETT
FERNALD COTTON, born September 30, 1826. Sarah Maria Cotton, born December 6. 1829;
died August 1, 1845.
Brackett Fernald Cotton has in his possession Mariner Chest of Captain John Fernald, father of
John Fernald. whose Writing Desk (see plate before) or Secretary he owns, and promised it to the
writer at his decease.
Sunday. July 28, 1895, I visited the graves of Colonel William Cotton, my great grandfather
aforesaid. Also that of grandfather Robert Pike and wives: viz. my grandmothers, MaryCotton Pike
and Joanna E. More; John Wentworth Fernald's on Cottle Place. July 29, 1895, visited and copied
from John Isaac Daniel Martin Monument: — front, north west side: Sophia W., wife of Daniel
Martin, born February 25, 1810; died February 24, 1849: Daniel Martin, born March 26, 1802;
died June 7, 1874: 'Loise, wife of Isaac Martin, born May 14, 1779; died October 26, 1832: Hannah,
wife of John Martin and mother of Isaac Martin, died April 25, 1814; Aet. 82 years: Maria M., born
January 25, 1810; died October 14, 1811: George, born February 12. 1805; died February 12, 1817:
Children of Isaac and Lois Martin: — South West of same Monument: — Edgar I., born December
19, 1835; died March 23, 1839: Leander, born May 1, 1839; died October 25. 1842: Almena A.,
born September 15. 1833; died March 21, 1852. Daniel and Sophia Martin Children, George B.
Martin, born September 15. 1830: died October 8, 1873, in Brewster, Mass. South east chiseled
record: — James Fernal, born June 24, 1779; died June 4, 1861, and Betsey Brackett, his wife, born
January 8, 1774; died J-une 6, 1861, the parents of Sophia W., wife of Daniel Martin. Deacon James
Fernal, died September 1823, and Mary, his wife, died December 2, 1831. Aged persons and parents
of Lois, wife of Isaac Martin.
To all People to whom these Presents shall Come Greeting &c. know ye that we John Fernald
Shipwright George Fernald Cooper & Elizabeth Fernald Spinster of Portsmouth in the Province of
New Hampshire in New England for & in Consideration of that Love good will and affection which
we bear toward our loving Brother-in-Law Jonathan Mendum of Kittery in the County of York in the
Province of the Massachusetts Bay in New England aforesaid Shipwright has given and granted by
these presents do freely Clearly and absolutely give and grant unto this Jonathan Mendum his heirs
and assigns forever all the Estate Right Title Interest Revcrsum Claim Demand whatsoever which we
the sd. John Fernald George Fernald Elizabeth Fernald now have may right or ought to have or
which we or our heirs at any time hereafter shall or may have might or ought to have or claim of in
or to any Part of that Land Scituate & being in the Township of Berwick and Kittery afore sd. that
was drawn by Lott and laid out to our Hond. Grandfather William Fernald formerly of Kittery dec'ed.
for his part or Potion in the Common undi. etc.
John Fernald , ,
Apr. 3, 1760 George Fernald j Seal, i Daniel Moulton, Regr.
True Copy Elizabeth Fernald '
^mmf VALUABLE ENULUSUKE FKOM -PAPKUS uK UAVIU A. HINCKS, ATTi. AND COUNStLOlt
/-dl AT LAW, 39 COURT ST., BOOM B, HOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, JULY 5th, 1895." HIS-
/ -J TORIC : VIZ.
AIL "John -Hinckes came from England about 1670 or 1672, and settled in Great Island in that part
^^^r of I'ortBmouth now called New Caatle in New Hampshire, was Councilor for Province of New Hauip.
^^^ shire and Assistant in the Court of Chancery from 1688 to May 25, 1686, when he became a Council-
or in the New England government of President Joseph Dudley having been named for the office in
the commission of James II, dat«dOct. 8, 1685: was appointed Chief Justice of the Court of Pleas and Sessions
in N. H., June 10, 1686 and July of the same year was commissioned to be "Captain of the Fort and band of
trained soldiers" in Great Island. He continued in office aa Councilor, Judge and Captain of the Fort until
the overthrow of the Colonial Government in April, 1689, and was again named as Councilor March 1st, 1692,
in the commission of William and Mary creating a new govemmentfor N. H., and was President of the rx)uncil,
January 19, 1696, he was a second time appointed Captain of the King's Fort, then called Fort William &
Mary, "and band of trained soldiers" at New Caatle with Theodore Atkinson as his Lieutenant. In 1699 he
was appointed Chief Justice of the Superior Court and remained in office as president of the Council, Judge,
Chief Justice and Captain of the Fort until 1707. He was living at New Castle, New Hampshire, date unknown,
Elizabeth Frever, born in Boston, Mass., November 1, 1657, daughter of Judge Nathaniel and Christian Freyer
of Portsmouth, N. H. He had , daughter, married Thomas Gross ; Samuel, son, married Elizabeth Winslow
Scott; Christian, daughter, married Richard Jordan of Newcastle; Barbara, daughter, married John Perace
of New Castle. Sarah m. JOHN FERNALD of Kitt«ry, Hizabeth m. Wm. Pitman, Boston. Said John Femald
and wife SARAH were writer's foreparents.
The Cradle of American Liberty Left Us in Trust Ipswich, Mass., Aug. 9, 1895.
I Charles W. Bamford do hereby certify that the following are correct copies from the records of births in
the Office of the Town Clerk of Ipswich. Page 11, Book 1, John son to Mr. John Rogers, minister, and Mrs.
Martha his wife was bom January 27th, 1692. Page 29, Book 1, William son to Mr. John and Martha Rogers
born June 19, 1699. Page 33, Book 1, Nathaniel son to Mr. John k Martha Rogers, was born Sent. 22, 1 foi.
Page 37. Book 1, Richard, son of Mr. John & Martha Rogers was bom Dec'r. 2d, 1703. Page 43,
Book 1, Eliza„da. of Mr. Jno. and Martha Rogers bom Feb. 10, 1705. Page 46. Book 1, Daniel and Elizabeth
Rogers, twine, children of Mr. John and Mrs. Martha Rogers, born July 28, 1707 ; Pagu 49, Book 1, Samuel,
' , son of Mr. John and Martha Rogers, bom Aug't. 31 , 1709.
( Seal of the Town of ) Witness my hand with the Seal of the Town affixed.
} Ipswich, Mass. ( " Charles W. Bamford, Town Clerk.
Mr. John Femald the son of Mr. John Fernald and wife Elizabeth Hinckes was married, to Elizabeth Rogers,
da. Rev. Jno. and Martha Uogers of Ipswich by Rev. John Rogers atKittery, November 25th, 1723. Their son
Col. Tobias Fernald married Elizabeth Mitchel of Kittery, April 28, 1776. Rev. Benjamin Stephens at Kittery
officiated. See the letter above of this Tobias Fernald. I hold the Records of Mrs. Elizabeth (Rogers) wife of
said John Fernald, a Captyne, mentioning their son Mr. John Furnald with said letter of Tobiaa who mentions
bis relatives in part therein. Relics I have mentioned bv his mother and his autograph signature that was, the
same when he Enlisted as Jean Francois Foumieul or t oumior and the copy in my father s old papers had his
name as same FOURNIEL and he was the 4th or IV John from Dr. Remald Fernald and Col. Tobias Sword
pictured in hand of General George Washington above with a record of its gift to Capt. Tobias Femald his
cou9in. Before me in "FAC SIMILE OF AUTOGRAPHS OF THE ORIGINAL MEMBERS OF THE SOCI-
ETY OF CINCINNATI for the State of Massachusetta. Formed at the contonnientof the AMERICAN ARMY,
on the banks of the Hudson River. June Uth, 1783. TlieGENERAL SOCI LTY, consisting of ALL the officers
of the CONTINENTAL ARMY was formed at the same place May 10th, 1783, of which the first President was
Go: Washington."
The objects of the Society are stated in the original compact "to commemorate the establishment of the
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, as Fr»e, SOVEREIGN and INDEPENDENT. To cherish between the several
states that Union and national honor so essential to their welfare, prosperitv and dignity : to preserve a just
regard for those exalted rights of human nature, without which the high rank of rational beings would scarcely
be a blessing; to perpetuate the mutual friendships formed in a time of common danger, to effectuate acts of
benevolence toward tnose of officers or their families which might heed assistance ; and to inculcate to the latest
ages the duty of laying do»-n, in peace, arras taken up for the public defence. Hereon Tobias Femald, Lt.-Col.
2nd Column : Tobias Fumald, Lt.-Col. 5th column, last 26th name from my ancestor John Fumald of Portsmo.,
Wolfboro, Brookfleld and Middleton : 2 d. E. Davis, p. 11 U. S. 1st Census Bakertown Plantation : 5 sons 3 das.
at Me., 1790. Crispus Graves, p. 14, 1 son, 2 das. Brother of Elias of Dnl. Sunderland Town, Mass. bur. in Old
Granary Cemetery, Boston Ancestor of Capt. Graves. Asa Underwood, p. 156. U. S. 1st C. Tyngsboro, Mass.
John Sherbume, 3 das. at Portsmo. Town, N. H. See pi. Two John F's, & C. G. & A. U. & J. S. aforesaid did
their best to establish equal rights in USSS. The Immortal 322
Autograph signatures from above important document are subject to order of all descendants.
"DIOCESAN REGISTRY. Chester 29th Sept. 1894." REIGN GOOD QUEEN VICTORIA.
C. A. Fernald, Esqr,, M.D.
Boston, Mass., From the courtesy of RICHARD FARMER, Dep. Registrar
U. S. A. Memoranda from the Parish Registers of Runcorn. OLD ENGLAND.
"Elizabeth Savage bapt. erat ii Aprilis, 1670. EUenaSavage bapt. erat iii Ang^sti, 1572 ; Johannes& Margeria
Savage bapt. V Junij 1575 ;Edward Savage bapt. xxx July, 1577 ; Thoms Savage, xxi bapt. XVo Januarij,
1580 ; (J)onani S(avft)ge, bapt. prao, Septembris, 1584 to 6 ; Eleana Savage als Runcome Xij Feburarii 7 1605;
Thomas Savage als Roaston, Xvi Julij ? 1605; Alicia Savage fllia Edw. Augusti ? 1605; Tho. Savage filio
Edw : 25 Apris 1608 ; Maria Savage fllia Tho : 16 Maij 1609 ; Elena Savage fllia Johis 18 Septembris 1609 :
Henrico Savage flli, Edw : 7 Decembris 1610 ; Elena Savage, fllia Tho: 17 Maij 1612." Due to a "natural de-
cay of the parchment skins the fading of the ink" some portions are indistinct which the kind Mr. Richard
Farmer has marked 7 For a large amount of labor and care that was perfect, the small sum of " £2 1-1" only
was charged and "recpt. acknowledged" for search and labor "in looking over Registers from 1558 to 1612.''
Our numerous Savage families in U. S. graciously appreciate the valuable data and historic copy for the good
of ALL.
292
Plate 1340— At
Old Castle Hotel
the brother of Dr.
Ren a Id Fernald.
viz.: Henry Wash-
ington Fernald, our
family genealogist,
was poisoned t o
death at Kittcry,
said a most reliable
person, who lived
to nearly a hundred
years, and was
never known to tell
a n untruth. A n-
other younger Fer-
nald of the same
family said he was
poisoned in the
town of Ports-
mouth or at Kittery
and died at the first
hotel built that was
at New Castle or
Portsmouth or Kit-
tery, and both gave
the name o f first
hotel built as Old
Castle, and I have
recently found U.S.
keeps the name of
Old Castle. No
pun ishment was
meted out to his as-
sassin, although an
attempt was made
before 1652 when
— "It appears that
the inhabitants of
K i t tery generally
signed a Submission
to Massachusetts in
1652. There is no
one by the NAME
OF FERNALD
ON THAT LIST,
hence it is probable
that there was then
none by that name
in town, but that
however is not cer-
tain.
HENRY
WASHINGTON
FERNALD 'S
name, initials, are
cu t i n Newport,
Rhode Island,
Tower.
Plate 13 4 1
shows the names of
some of the owners
the land. See old
Kittery, N. H., re-
cords for more.
A n c e s t o r
JOHN FER-
NALD, son of
Thomas, the son of
Dr. Rcnald Fernald,
bought of widow
Elizabeth Edwards,
1 March, 1669, 12
acres, near the
Boiling Rock,
which her husband,
Stephen Edwards,
purchased of James
Johnson.Apr. 1664.
The Fernald
families are united
t o t h c Rcmick,
Adams, Amand,
Burdeen, Eigne,
Cottjn, Clark,
Cutts, Deering,
Allen, Coiigny,
Com mcnius, Eaton,
Frost. Foster.
Dennet, Hinckcs.
Johnsons, Keens,
Lewis, Lcighton,
Holmes, Horns,
Mills, Mclntire,
Mendum, Nutc,
Pike, Paul, Pills-
bury. SAVAGE.
Sherburne, Coffin.
Lindskog, Dorr,
Sea vey, Kelly,
Dixon, Tucker,
Tricky, Vigne,
Spinney, WASH-
INGTON, and
many other fami-
lies, by the holy
sacred bonds of
matrimony, which
reach i n to Ger-
many, England,
Italy.Spain, Ireland,
Scotland, France,
Greece, Russia,
China, from Fnr
Chia, Persia, Arabia,
Turkey, from mar-
riage of King Pepin
that Lake Pepin
was named for.
293
IX DAYS SHALL WORK BE DONE. BUT ON THE SEVENTH DAY THftkE
SHALL BE TO YOU AN HOLY DAY A SABBATH OF REST TO THE
LORD: THEN SHALT THOU DELIGHT THYSELF IN THE LORD; AND
I WILL CAUSE THEE TO RIDE UPON THE HIGH PLACES OF THE
EARTH. —Exodus 35:2; Isaiah 58:13.
PLATE 1342. Histonc. John ind Mary Furnild (»nd Governoi John Wenlworth) HouiM. Bitlh pltc«
of ihcir son William Firnald and gnnd son Jonathan Poor Fimaldrat Wolfboro-Cenlrr. Birlh place of great grand
children; 100 acrea that extended from highway croating Rattle Snake Brook or Rivulet to Lake Wentoorth, to
a fen rods below Fcrnald and Willey Brook, about 1 mile long and 1-4 wide. Tracings of hii houu ahown ai
photographed from Manin's and Cook'i Hills. Smith'a Pood was named for Captam John Smith, son of George
and daughter of Francis Junius Feme], and ion, Captain John Smith, Jr. , located there and built a log house on
Stamp Act Island that was thus named for a deserter in American Revolution that lived as Hunter (2nd) John
Smith's log cabin that writer has repeatedly visited when from 15 to 19 years of age. Captain departed and Cook
purchased, and then by consent it was named for Cook the navif^ator, whose descendant married Miss Pike, my
cousin. _ Dr. Cook, discoverer of the North Pole, is a descendant, and Captain Furneaux (which was the Frencn
mode of spelling Fernel, they changing "e!" or "aP" into '*e*ux."") A lady of the Haines family was chased by
evolves, and by her great wisdom and bravery escaped death by feeding them with beef, carried on back of her
horse, until she reached home, nhen some were slain and othen fled- Good Dog Oma that saved my lite.
294
* D=
01
FROM DEBRETT'S PEERAGE SUPPLEMENTS FROM MAY, 1834.
TO APRIL, 183S-ADDITIONS: —
Pages 2H and 207— "THOMAS BRAND. BARON DACRE. born 1(1 March, 1774,
succeeded his mother, Gertrude, the late Baroness, 3 October, 1S19; married December,
1HI9, Barbarina, one of the daughters of Admiral Sir Chaloner Ogle, hart., and relict of Valentine
VViimot, of Farnboro, co. Southampton, esq. Collins Peerage record the Acres as being always held
in reserve to win battle.
RANULP-H DE DACRE (descended from William de Dacre, sheriff co. Cumberland, temp.
Henry III) was summoned to Parliament, 1321. From him descended THOMAS, 6th Baron, who
died 1457, leaving granddaughter and heiress, Joan, married Richard Fiennes, who was summoned to
Parliament, 1459, as Baron Dacre. He was ancestor of GREGORY FIENNES, 9th Baron, who died
1594, leaving an only sister and heiress, MARGARET, wife of Sampson Lennard, esq: she claimed
and was allowed the barony 1604: son emigrated to America, Boston. THOMAS LENNARD, 14th
Lord Dacre, great-great-grandson of the above named Margaret, was created Earl of Sussex, 1674, and
died 1715, leaving two daughters and co-heiresses, Barbara and Anne, between whom the barony of
Dacre fell into abeyance. The former of these ladies married Lieutenant General Charles Skelton,
but died without issue, 1741, when the title devolved on her sister, ANNE, Baroness Dacre, married,
1st, Richard Barrett Lennard, by whom she had one son, THOMAS, 15th baron; she married 2nd,
Henry Roper, 8th Lord Teynham, to whom she was 3rd wife, and by whom she had (besides other
issue) Charles, eldest son, married Gertrude, sister and co-heiress of John Trevor, of Glynd, co.
Sussex, esq., and had issue, CHARLES, 16th Baron, and GERTRUDE, late Baroness. The Baroness
married 3rd. Robert, son of Henry Moore, 3rd Earl of Drogheda, by whom she also had issue; she
died 1755 when the barony descended to her eldest son, THOMAS- BARRETT LENNARD, 15th
Baron, who also died without issue, 12 January, 1786, and was succeeded by his nephew, Charles-
Trevor Roper, I6th Baron, who also died without issue, 4 July, 1794, and was succeeded by his only
sister and heiress, Gertrude, married, 20 April, 1771, Thomas Brand, of the Hoo, co. Herts, esq.
who died 21 February, 1794 and had issue, 1, THOMAS, present Lord; 2, Henry-Otway, C. B.,
major-general in the army, late lieutenant-colonel in the Coldstream regiment of foot-guards, took the
surname of Trevor only by sign manual, 1824, married, 21 July, 1806, Pyne, eldest daughter of the
late honorable and reverend Maurice Crosbie, D. D., Dean of Limerick, and only brother of William,
Earl of Glandore, whose former marriage with Sir John Gordon, of Park, bart , was dissolved by act
of Parliament in 1806, and had issue, Pyne-Jessie, married, 12 August, 1828, John Henry Cotterell,
esq., eldest son of Sir John-Geeres Cotterell, bart., who died 3 January, 1834. 2, Julia, married, 28
June, 1824, Samuel Charles Whitbread, of Arlington, co. Bedford, esq. 3, Henry, died 27 February,
1814. 4, Thomas. 5. Gertrude, married 21 July, 1831, Sir George Hamlinton Seymour, cousin of
the Marquess of Hertford. 6, Henry, in the army. 3, Gertrude, born 25 October, 1772. The
Baroness died 3 October, 1819, and was succeeded by her eldest son, THOMAS, present and 2Sth
Baron. Heir Presumptive, Major-general Henry Trevor, only brother of his Lordship."
CREATION, 5 November, 1321. Arms— see plate 28. Quarterly of 6. 1st, Azure within a
bordure engrailed, or two swords in saltire argent, pomels and hilts, gold — BRAND. 2nd. Per fess
azure and or a pale counterchanged and three stags' heads erased of the Second — ROPER. 3rd. Or
on a fess gules, three Heurs-de-iis of the field — Lennard. 4th, Azure, three lions rampant or
FIENNES. 5th, Gules, three escallops argent— DACRE. 6th, as 1st. CREST— Out of a ducal
coronet, or a leopard's head couped at the neck and affronte argent, semee of hurts, pellets, and
d ^ ^ ^
TORTEAUX, ALTERNATELY. SUPPORTERS— D EXT E R. A WOLF ARGENT,
GORGED WITH A SPIKED COLLAR AND CHAIN REFLEXED OVER THE BACK
OR. SINISTER. A BULL GULES. ARMED, DUCALLY GORGED AND CHAINED
OR. MOTTO— POUR BIEN DESIRER. TO DESIRE GOOD.
ACRES RECORDS— JOHN D. ACRES came to Boston, Massachusetts, in 1656, and was the
ancestor of Acres. His brother George arrived 8 July, 1666. Their father, Francis, aged, died 8
Carolus I, was the son of Rande), brother eldest of Ralph, buried at Greystone. Synonyms— Akers,
Accres, Acker, Ackus. George was an officer in American Revolution, and was ancestor of Miss
Eliza Ann Acres, born 20 April, 1843, the eldest daughter of John Acres and his wife, Eliza Ann
Bellamy, who were bora 21 August, 1825, and 28 July, 1824; married March 30, 1842, 2nd Gener-
ation. Had 15 children.
I, MRS. ELIZA A. (ACRES)(MORRIS) FERNALD had three daughters: Lida, died s. p.
unm. k. Mamie, married Mr. Hale, one child by 1st marriage. From 2nd m. was born FRONIA
JOSEPHINE FERNALD, who with loyal, true, brave, noble mother, was killed by the Roman
Catholic Church for reporting Fire Arms stored under their Church, corner Maiden Street, to use
against United States Government, succeeded by the Jesuit Col. educated politicians' in stealing over
$108,000,000 from the City of Boston with repeatedly offered bribes to writer, one amount $250,000
for work against state and government, to which add 39 attempts on my life, and 38 witnesses killed.
And 16 who built the secret passages under the said church on Maiden Street. 37 insults to U. S. Flag!
Inspect Arms! ! Evidence was reported to Boston Police, who protected and aided the criminal Roman
Catholic Church, that refused from Vatican and two Popes their signatures against crimes, being par-
ticeps criminis, claiming immunity from crimes that have laid 150,000,000 martyrs beneath the sod.
Report of a United States Of)erator: "Last night a plank was part sawn through, at the Roman
Catholic Church, this morning one of the men who built the secret passages under it was sent to get
a hammer on the further end of the plank placed on top of the Church: He refused, and was driven
by a Priest, went, pale as death, the plank broke: He fell to the ground and dashed his brains out; a
sickening sight; I shall tell other good citizens about it; when the time comes tell about it." This
was on or about 1873-4.
II, JOHN W. ACRES, born 21 Oaober. 1844; died 5 August, 1888; married; has descendants.
Ill, Hannah M., born 29 June, 1846; died 3 July. IV, George Henry, born 25 July, 1847; died 15
May, 1852. V, Sarah Eliza, born 18 February, 1850; died 4 March, 1852. VI, Charles Bellamy
born 27 June, 1851; married. VII, William Trench, born 12 March, 1853; married; children.
VIII, Eben Lincoln, born 28 February. 1855; died October 28. IX. born 12 March. 1856; married.
X. Benjamin Collier, iiorn 12 May, 1858. XI. George Henry, born 4 July. 1860; died 9 September,
1861. XII, Arthur Porter, born 24 March, 1862, and died 30 October. XIII. Maria Bellamy, born
2 November, 1863; married Capt. D. W. Sullivan; children. XIV, George, born 7 November, 1865.
XV, Etta, born 25 November. 1867. THIRD GENERATION: George Acres or Ackus, born 1790;
married in 1818, Hannah, daughter of Othcniel and Hannah Trench (nee Carey) who was born in
November, 1800: Had GEORGE WASHINGTON ACRES, born 22 February, 1819. II, John
William, aforesaid. III. Hanah Maria: Martha Ann: William. UNITED STATES FIRST CEN-
SUS gives George, 2 heads of Family, three sons; five females who was ancestor of George, viz: —
FOURTH GENERATION: GEORGE ACKUS, born; married; had: George, born 1790. John,
married Rachel, and he died 15 February, 1809; Rachel died 17 September, 1803. Richard or Wil-
liam? Joan: Margaret: Anne: Gertrude and Barbara: GEORGE ACRES, the father of the said
children, was an officer in American Revolution, and his FATHER JOHN ACRES, married
DESIRETRUTH, daughter William Thorn, both of Boston, and FIFTH GENERATION, had
George et als. Joseph Acker, in Bristol County, Westport Town, had 3 in family. Children Henry
and Hannah: Catherine: Mary: John. SIXTH GENERATION: WILLIAM AKERS, married;
had John and five daughters. He was of Brookline Town, Suffolk County. SEVENTH GENER-
ATION: MOSES ACCRES, at Newbury Town, had with him his father, John, and besides the two
daughters, was the parent of William, and had with him his father, John, the son of John of 1656,
whose father was attainted 8 Carolus I. See Baronia Angelica Concentrata, et U. S. Records cut off
after A. R. that gave nine generations to Gregory Fiennes, 9th Baron, who died leaving an only sister
an heiress. Margaret married Sampson Lcnnard. THE BELLAMY LINE IS FROM PREPON-
DERANCE OF EVIDENCE, viz.; Miss Eliza Ann Bellamy, married John Acres. II, CHARLES
BELLAMY, married COLYER. Ill, JACOBUS, born 1757; died 86. IV. Joseph Bellamy, D. D.,
born 1719; died 6 March, 1790. JACOBUS, born 1757; died 6 March, 1786: a Dutch poet.
^ ^ ^ D^
CALEB HOLl.IS MARRIKI) EI.IZABEIH MARTIN: HAD KLl/A-
BETH; CALEB; HEZEKIAH; JOSEPH, MARRIED ACENIA WESTOiN;
CHARLES; GEORGE; JOHN; THOMAS. 1. CALEB; 2, HEZEKIAH;
OIHNEIL. 3rd; I JOHN; 4. THOMAS. HOLLIS IN CIVIL WAR, 1ST MASS.
• IRUE BLUES." THOMAS HOLLIS. JR., MARRIED MARY BRITNELL.
ELIZA TRENCH, (laughter Othnicl and Hannah (Carey) Trench, married Thomas Hollis.
Their .m)|i, John O. Hollis, Druggist, married Elizabeth Jones; 2nd, Lara Keys. "Micha 1 rench in
Revolutionary War, and gr. fr. George in War of 1H12; father J. W. Acres." Nancy Trench married 2
John Hollis. The children of Thomas Hollis and wile, Eliza Trench, were: Parmelia, married Asa
Fisk; Eliza Ann, died young; Maria, married James Stearns; Francis, married Lona ;Joseph
Edward Hollis, married Parmelia Fisk: he was a Soldier and a Representative. TRENCH LI'TCH-
FIELD PR.A'TTetals. Joshua Staples Mott, married Salonna Litchfield, born and married in Scituate:
Il.id Jk-njamui Litchlield Mott, born ID August, 1SI6; married Rebecca 'Trench, daughter Othniel
and Hannah ( Carey) 'Trench, son of Othniel, son of Micha Trench, born in England and died therein,
married Aclianor Calhoune, who died in Bo.ston while he was in lingland, who had Micah Trench
(said to be a descendant of Baron Trenck) went away and not heard from: 2nd, Othniel, born in
Boston: 3rd, Hannah Trench : Othniel, married Hannah Care\, both of Boston, January Ist, 1790.
Had 18 children: Othniel, born 12 July, 1794; died 21 January, 1H26: Samuel, born 16 September,
17%; died: Hannah, born 2 September, 1797; died s. p.: Hannah, born November, ; mar-
ried George Acres; fr. |ohn, died in East Boston: Samuel, Znd, born ISOl; died in Ha\ana, 1822:
Nantv, born 2 Mav, 1806: William, born 1808: Martha, born 1810; married Phineas Collver:
Henry, horn 1812: Rebecca, horn 16 December, 1814 or 16: Samuel, 3rd, born, and Micah 2nd.
The aforesaid Rebecca, born 1814, married Benjamin Litchfield Mott, son Joshua S. and Salomia
Mott, born 10 August, 1816, March 17, 1836, and he died August 10, 1877, and brother of Eliza
Belknap Mott, born 1822, and married John H. Litchfield. J. S. Mott married, 2nd, Angeline Pratt
and had Angeline: Joshua, (drowned in California): Caroline Augusta: Isaac: Charles and Lucinda
Mott. The children of said Benjamin L. and Rebecca (Trench or Trenck) Mott were: Eliza, born,
and died xt 21 years: Rebecca Frances Mott, born. August, 1839; married Mr. Lyman Preston,
most excellent persons with whom the writer lived during first years of medical and surgical practice
in Boston: Benjamin LMott, Jr., born 10 December, 1841; married Miss Emily Jones, August,
1S67; child died in infancy; Emily, died aet 7 months: William Henry Mott, born in 1845: Emily,
born, died, xt 10 years, in 1859: Joshua, born 1850; died at 3 years: Saloma born ; died Jet 18 months:
Benjamin L. Mott, Sr., went to California during gold fever. Benjamin L. Mott, Jr., enlisted in
Co. G, 44 Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. Was at Kingston, Whitehall, Goldsboro, Mill Creek,
Siege Little Washington, North Carolina. Served nine mos. Mr. Lyinan Preston died; had chn.
MR. OTHNIEL TRENCH, born at Boston, 12 July, 1793; married SARAH N. BREEDEN,
horn at Maiden, Mas.sachusetts, 5 August, 1793, and married 19 September, 1817. He died Septem-
ber 19, 1828, ret. 35 years, and his wife, Mrs. Sarah N. (Breeden) died 11 January, 186.4.
BARONIA ANGELICA CONCENTRATA. JOHN SAVAGE, THE EARL OF RIVERS.
See pages 326, 327 and 286.
JOHN SAVAGE, Earl of Rivers, married CATHERINE, daughter of VVilliam Parker (died
1622) married Elizabeth, daughter Sir Thomas Tresham, knight, and said William was son Edward
Parker, Lord Morelv, (died 1618) who married ELIZABETH, daughter and heiress of WILLIAM
STANLEY, Lord MONTEAGLE. Said John and Catherine Savage (he died 1654) had Thomas,
oh. 1694) |ohn Richard, who married, and had John, the last Earl of Rivers, ob. 1728, coalebs: P'lve
daughters were born to John and Calherine: ihey were Elizabeth, married Lord Peire; Jrne, married
Lord George Chandos, 2nd, married Sir William Sidley, 3rd. George Pitt, Esq., whose grandson,
George, was father of George Pitt, created Baron Ri\ers of Stratfield, 1776, who hatl George and 3
daughters, viz.: Penelope, who was Countess of Ligonier; Louisa, married Peter Beekford, who was
the ancestor of many U. S. Bickfords, well known and highly respected, and Marcia married James
Fox Lane, from whom many U. S. Lanes are descended; 3rd daughter, Catherine, married Charles
Sidley, brother Sir William, had daughter, Catherine, who was not married to Charles II, but was
created by him. Countess of Dorchester, from which Dorchester, Massachusetts, is named: She after
married David Colyear. 1st Earl of Portmore; had issue whose descendants came to Massachusetts.
Also coheirs of Bironies of Morely and Monteagle: 4th, Lady Mary Savage married Henry Killgrew,
Esq., and 5th died young or came to America. No account of i.ssue of Elizabeth, m. Edwsrd Cranfield.
The son of Thomas Savage, ob. 1694, viz. Thomas, married "ob. vi. pat. s. p. m." had John, who
married Mary, had John; and Mary, who married my honored Forefather, MR. JOHN FERNALD,
OF MIDDLETON, NEW HAMPSHIRE, U. S. A. The desired truth.
n
d ^ ^ ^ D=
Bcree
"JOHN ACRES, of Boston. 1656. and wife. DESl RET RUTH,
daughter William Thornc. Had. 1 and 2, Eliza and Desire Truth, twins,
baptized 8 July, 1666; 3 and 4, Henry, a twin, born IS July. 1667. one died
at birth; 5. Eliza, born 22 November. 1669; 6.. Deborah, born 26 February.
1671; 7, John, born 10 August, 1673; 8. William, born 29 June. 1679; 9,
Mary, born 26 May. 1682, and died; 10, Mary, born 20 May. 1683, in
Dunstable; 11. Joanna, born 10 June, 1684, at Dunstable.
HENRY, brother of John and liis wife, Dcsirctrutli( Thornc) Acres,
born 22 November, 1669; married 13 March, 1674.HANNAH SILVA: both
lived in Newbury: They had Catherine, born 17 March, 1675; John, born 2 October, , d. y. ch. ;
Mary, born 8 October. 1680; John. 2nd. born 20 January. 1694. married about 1714. it was claimed
in England was executed two of the Acres family by malignancy of powerful enemies. That the
Castle of Norse was captured, burnt, razed. One execution 33 Henry VIII for defending his wife
and life: 2nd temp. Car. 1 for the defence of that king who was unrighteously executed. Hence the
name, Desiretruth. As in case of Lord Cromwell, temp. Henry VIII, he was attainted in Parliament,
condemned, executed, without being allowed to make any defence. In Boston, taking a deposition
of capital crime caused defeat of case, six saw crime, on trial for divorce 1896 protecting criminal.
"JOHN ACRES.son George.dicd 15 February, 1809, and RACHEL, his wife.dicd 17 September.
1803: Their children were Rachel, born 1784; John, born 1786, died s. ; John, 2nd, born 9 October.
1788; Samuel, born 1790; George, born 1792; Thomas, born 1794; Martha, born 1796; Mary, born
1798; Eliza, born 1801; Charles, born 1803. John, born 1788. married Eliza Carey. 3 May, 1812:
Their children: Elizabeth Earl Acres, born at Boston. 26 August. 1814. is grandmother to William A.
Miles, 57 Chrystic Street, New York. Mr. John W. Acres, Jr., was in Civil War. and had descend-
ants. Both he and parents arc deceased. These records were copied by me at 20 Henchman Street,
Boston, and the True Copy attested to by Rebecca Mott, Benjamin L. Mott. and Lyman P. Mott.
6 December. 1894.
"Giles D. Acre bought Houghton (?) House and Lady Anne founded a Hospital for twenty chil-
dren to be brought up there at one hundred pounds per annum. Within the Diocese of London
Hospital of St. Thomas of Acars called Aeon in the Holy Land, called Mercer's Chappel, dedicated
to St. Thomas of Acres, etc. Lord D. Akersand Dame Anne Grystock, daughter Elizabeth, married
Sir Thomas Nevil.
EPITAPH RHYME ENGRAVED
O Lord my Saviour and heavenly Maker
Have mercy of Elizabeth Graistock and D AKER."
CAPTAIN DANIEL WILLIAM SULLIVAN, S. S., son of John L. 6c Margaret Jane
(Splaine) Sullivan, born Aprir 30. 1848, married MARIA BELLAMY ACRES, 11 June. 1881,
who was born 2 November, 1863: Had Daniel William Sullivan, Jr., born 24 December, 1883;
Margaret Elizabeth, born 6 October. 1885; Robert Augustus, born 26 February, 1888. 1865,
Youngest non-Commissioned Officer in U. S. Army, First U. S. Calvary; Co. M, Genl. Crook's
Indian Scout, at Cahfornia, Nevada, Oregon, wounded 1869 by Indians, shot through arm. See
Army Records. Captain of Militia, Maiden Police Department and Fire Department. Brother-in
law now actively engaged in Secret Service, at Pemberton Square, Boston.
3
-^ ^ ^ ^
Chapter f IPl
Generations CLV and CLVI.
2. ELIZABETH FERNALD. daughter Dr. Rcnald and wife. Joanna Warburton.
born 4 March. 1630; married I 1670. Eastwick, after the document recorded
her as "Maden" "gcss unmard." Died in childbirth of Henry. 1674:
3. MARY FERNALD. May S, 1634. daughter CLIV; married JOHN PART-
RIDGE. 11 December. 1660; died 16 August. 1722: Had 7 or "8" children.
Vide Partridge Genealogy for facts and data. Repetitions due to many genea-
logical record.";.
4. SARAH FERNALD. daughter 154. born April 3, 1636; married 3 December.
1660 ALLEN LYDE: Had Allen, bom 29 July. 1666. who married had Eliza-
beth, born IS November, 1692; Francis, born 28 September, 1695: Mrs. Sarah
Lydc married. 2nd. Richard Watcrhouse. 19 June. 1672: Had Richard Water-
house, born 19 April 1674 or 5; Samuel, bom 9 May, 1676; married: Timothy,
born ; Ruth, born , married John Gains;
Sarah, born ; Lydia. born . married
1, Captain Colby; 2. Elisha Dennet; 3, John Plummer, Judge.
5. JOHN FERNALD, born 1640 and d. a. s. p. unm. 1697. I have record of his
name interpolated.
SAMUEL FERNALD, born 4 March, 1642; married Hannah, sister of Mary,
and daughter of Thomas and Margery Spinney: Mr. Thomas Spynic, the first
schoolmaster of Maine, was a lineal descendant of Baron Spynie. of Scotland.
The barony was claimed by Colonel Fullanon, but was properly rejected by the
House of Lords, who resolved, 18 April, 1785, that the petitioner had no right to
the Barony of Spynie" The House of Lords and Colonel Fullarton had many of
the Fcrnald Records. Where are they now? Some records were found changed
four times.
7. WILLIAM FERNALD. born 5 March. 1646. married ELIZABETH LANG-
DON. 16 November. 1671. bora September, 1656, died 11 May, 1740: Captain
William Fernald died July 5, 1728.
Generations 155-6.
SAMUEL FERNALD, son of Dr. Renald and Joanna, bora 1642; died 1 De-
cember. 1698; married HANNAH SPINNEY, daughter Thomas and Margery:
Had:
1. Sarah, born 17 June. 1678.
2, Nathaniel, born 28 May. 1681. married Anne Allen. 10 September. 1702.
daughter Robcn Allen and his lawful wife.
=a ^^ D
■° * * *
3.
4.
5.
Generation'ISS.
10.
Generation 154.
Generations 155-6.
HANNAH. BORN 16 OCTOBER. 1684.
JOSEPH. BORN 21 DECEMBER. 1688.
MARTHA. BORN 18 FEBRUARY. 1692.
Captain WILLIAM FERNALD, son of Generation 154, born 1646: married
ELIZABETH (SHERBURNE) LANGDON: Had:
Elizabeth, born 17 August. 1674; married Clement Dcering, 25 September,
1701; died 2 June 1745: son Roger.
William, born 31 October. 1676; died 6 December. 1683. (Deering said to
be a descendant of Roger Wiliams.
Tobias, born 26 December. 1678; married Mary Dcering June 12. 1701.
Margarctt. born 27 March, 1681: married Solomon Cotton 14 May. 1702: son
William Cotton. Portsmouth.
Temperance, born 17 September 1683: married John Deering 12 December.
1705: 2, Ebeneezer Moore; 6 children.
William L., born 11 May 1686: married died January
12, 1727.
Joseph, born 21 December 1688.
Sarah, born 24 April, 1691; married Jonathan Dane 28 October, 1711; died
15 November, 1748.
Lydia, born 19 April 1693; married John Clark, 27 May, 1725; died 17 April,
1743: Had Mary: Elizabeth: Edward.
Benjamin, born 11 July 1695; married and died
19 April, 1738.
Nathaniel, born 12 May 1698; married Margaret Triper April 7, 1720 and
died 9 1 September, 1771.
Ebenczcr, born 7 Oaober 1699; m. Patience Mendum. 22 December. 1724
and died 29 January, 1787.
Tobias, born 3 December, 1702; married Mary Mendum, December 22.
1724 and died November 11. 1761; five of these children belong to another
family or families.
THOMAS FERNALD, brother Dr. Renald and son of Captain, Commander
Sir William Fernald, also was found spelt Fenner, Furnival, Fernerl, Furncl,
etc., and his autograph was found in Boston on a receipt for payment of money
recorded in (to the best of my remembrance) Mass. Hi.storical Society Pro-
ceedings and wife Mrs. Elizabeth Amand, was born 13 Augu.st, 1597; married
Had descendants that in three or four generations
died out and that line became extinct" declared to writer Rev. O. H. Fernald,
who was actively engaged in genealogical work to aid his Nephew, Prof. H.
T. Fernald, State Col. Penn., to whom my most courteous thanks for kind
gift, ofithe American parts of my line of ancestry proved.
Said Thomas and wife had Ehzabeth. born 6 January, 1683, married Captain
Stephen Eastwick and died 26 April, 1741, aet. 31 years 2 months 20 days, bur-
ied in Navy Yard, Portsmouth, N. H.
THOMAS FERNALD, son of Dr. Renald and Joanna Warburton, his wife,
married "THEMPRANCE," daughter of ROBERT WASHINGTON and
ANNA COTTON, his wife, residing in Virginia, 1630. (See Plate 1252)
Had JOHN, born 12 December, 1640; married Mary, daughter Thomas and
Margery Spinney or de Spynie.
ANNE, born 1651; mar/ied ROBERT ATKINS, 9 November, 1686, and
died. Had children.
THOMAS, born 2 July, 1653; married Elizabeth Hunkins, born 15 May,
1658; 2nd, married Mary about 1675.
PATIENCE, born 3 March, 1655; married Captain Steven Eastwick.
MARY, born 16 June, 1657; married Samuel Pray; 2nd, Thomas Parker, born
15 May, 1658.
300
(§
I-
^•- ?'^^lVx^^' ^°"' ' J=>"""y, 1659; married SUSANNA PAUL, 12 October, 1699.
7. JOANNA, born 13 February, 1663; married CHARLES KELLEY, 25 May 1699 and
had issue. •' "
S. SARAH, born 2 March, 1668; married WILLIAM HENDERSON, 16 [uiy, 170()- 2
children. Elizabeth married.
9. HERCULES, born 29 September, 16SS; married MARY. FUNAL, daughter Rev Peter
Funal and w,fe Sarah, son of Darnel and w,fe Mary Moulin, who were the ancestors of
Peter Paneuil who IS buried as Peter Faneui! and Peter Funal in Old Granary Cemetery
Boston: Daniel Funeu was the 13th son of Francis, son of Dr. Jean Fernel, the son of
Charles Vlll and Anne. Hercules married, 2nd, Sarah that was not Sarah Hinckes daugh-
ter of udge John and wife, but Hickes. Elizabeth was daughter of Thomas, brother of Dr.
Renald hernald. Hercules son
1. JOHN, born 2 August, 1718; married Margaret Fernald, 7 September, 1739; died 20 Janu-
ary, 1790.
2. JANE married SAMUEL GUNNISON. 6 February, 1745 or 6;died 20 lanuary, 1750; 2nd,
he married ALICE FERNALD. J J-. . .
f ?.').^^^' "'■■""*"'' 'rH<->>lAS FERNALD. published 1 December. 1744. and his 2nd wife.
1. CHARLES, son of Roger KELLY and brother of Sarah. Ruth, Abraham. Ellsha, Roger,
married JOANNA, daughter Thomas Fernald. and had Mary, born 27 December, 1699,
married after 1721, Roger, Deputy General Court.
Plate 1345. ANCESTOR MR. THOMAS FERNALD AND TEMPERANCE WASHINGTON. HIS
WIFE. ISLAND. THE SEAL OF SAMUEL WASHINGTON FERNALD COAT OF ARMS AND
UNIVERSAL SHOULD BE MOTTO: U. S. BATTLE SHIP. Copy: A Plot of Mr. Thomas fTernald Island
taken Nov. 20, 1702, By order of Mistris Temperance (Washington da. of Robt. and wife Anna. da. Sir Robert
Cotton, of Va. ) fernald Relict and Administratrix of the Deceased and the several Divisions made thereon By
order and Consent of children surviving the sd. Thomas Fernald Deceased above sd. the sd. were taken By Elec-
tion and By Lott To The Consent of Each person as their part or portion of sd. Island and are Distinguished by
Town names Being Sett in each Division or part By tirst Consent of sd. administratrix and children of the De-
ceased after Surveys for the Town of Kittery. Attest; William Godsoe." The cardinal points are indicated by a
symbol of Fleur-de-lis of Fernald coat of arms arranged as Handle and hilt of our ancient C. Furnius Roman Sword.
301
■° * * *
I
OBERT FERNALD, BROTHER DR. RENALD FERNALD, WAS BORN 20
MARCH, 1604, LIVING IN VIRGINIA, 1623-4, AND NAME SPELT FENNELL
IN MUSTER ROLL OF THE INHABITANTS OF VIRGINIA, CAME OVER
IN THE CHARLES, 1624. AGED 20 YEARS. MARRIED
HAD CHILDREN.
Generations 154-3.
ROBERT FERNALL, son Francis, born 1563, son Francis, born 1533, came
to America in London Merchant. Va. 1619, aet. Jl years, born 1588; married
(Sec Plate No. 1059) Had children.
Generation 151or3. COUNT JOHN FERNEL, brother-in-law of Henrietta and Louise dcColigny,
was thus written to by Louise: "I hardly know how the children and I are to
maintain ourselves according to the honor of the house — MAY GOD PRO-
VIDE FOR US." Thus wrote and prayed the sister of beautiful Annietta to
her brother-in-law. Count John," as she was bereft of two good husbands. Fr.
2, Francis m. c. Anthony Bonall, born 1579, La Guard, James Bonall, twins;
John Vennell, born 1581. These three went to Virginia, and were living there
16 February, 1623. Anthony came over in the Abigail, 1621.
Generation 152. MARIA, 2nd child Francis, 1, and wife, Maria Commcnius, and of same family
as Louise Marie dc Cormenins, who gave his great and true work on history of
the Popes, a great work tha.t has been translated from the French. Said MARIA
FERNEL, married Captain George Fulton Smit|i, born 10 June, 1559: Captain
John Smith, born at Willoughby, Lincolnshire, England, January, 1579, and died
at London, 21 June, 163 1 ■ and grandson of Thomas, probably Sir Thomas, who was
born 1514, and died 1577, that was employed to negotiate an alliance in France,
1572. Somersett was his patron, and during reign of Mary he was deprived of all
offices, but reinstated temp. Queen Elizabeth. George and Maria Smith had
children, viz., Capt. John, married; Had 1 John Smith, born 1608; died 1652,
August 7. Had descendants, Thomas, born 1638; married; had Edmund, ^bom
1668. 2, Jo. Miles Smith, born 9 November, 1579; died 1624; married: 'Had
James and Edward: one went to Ireland: married: had James who married and
James, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, that was born about 1719:
From Monmouth Rebellion 1682 out of Bridgwater Prison that came from Taun-
ton were, John and William Smyth. 62 by the name of Smith and 4 are re-
corded in "Lists from 1600-1700" by James W. Bouton of those that came to
America. It is interesting to find the names of Francis, Frances, Maria, Anne,
Ann, Joan, Elizabeth, Margaret, Margerie, Robert, John, Richard and Samuel;
giving a great field for search into the history of these numerous and worthy
families.
Generation 152. ANNE, 3rd child, born 20 November, 1560; married SAMUEL WASHING-
TON, whose nom de plume was William Shakespere; vide ante.
Generation 151. JOHN, son of Dr. Jean Fernel, born 3 February 1535; married Francis, daugh-
ter Sir James Foljambe and Alice, daughter Thomas Fitzwilliam and Anne,
daughter Sir Nicholas Pagenham, Knight, said Thomas, slain at Flodon; also a
brother, John Fitz WilUams, died. Thomas was son of Sir Thomas Fitz
William and Lucy, daughter and co-heirs of John Nevill. Their descendants
were numerous: — JOHN & FRANCES, married 1553 and had: Prosper Farin-
accio an Italian Attorney, born 1554 at Rome; died at Louvcne 1631: Calo Far-
ina, born at Andria, 1556; and died 1640: married; had Carlo: John: William
and Thomas: Francisco, born at Milan, 1577; died 1669 at Milan.
^ ^ * *
Generation 152.
Generation 153.
Generation 156.
Generation 156.
Generation 157-8.
WILLIAM FABRICUS, b. 1560; d. 1634, AET. 74, AND WAS A SUR-
GEON. THOMAS FIENUS, b. AT ANTWERP, 1566: d. AT LOU-
VENE, 1631.
PROSPER FARANACCIOm. OCTAVIA FERRARI, da. Omvian, b. 1518:
d. 1586. She was b. 1555. d. 1625. m. 1576: had Emanuel, b. 1590, d. at Mad-
rid, 1650: Paul Ferri. b. 1591. d. 1669: the Reverend Charles Frelincourt
or Delincourtb. at Sidon-, 1595, d. 3 Nov. 1669. m. 1625 Sarah, da. of Comenin
& Cicely, b. 1600: had 16 chn.. Lawerance and Henry, both ministers: Charles
b. at Paris, 1633. a Dr. d. at Leyden. May. 1692. m. had Charles: Anthony, b.
at Orbes, Switzerland, a Dr. A son, d. at Geneva studying Divinity: Peter,
Dean of Armagh, 7th Son, Frelincourt: six more sons and 2 das. d. y. another
da. m. Malnoc, Advocate parliament of Paris and his influence was not great
enough to regain from the Roman Catholic Church the money of Dr. Jean Fer-
nel that now amounts with the interest to several times more than the wealth of
the World, which a large mass of it was sent by check for great good to the law-
ful Nations of Earth which amount is so large that it can never be paid by R. C. C.
/•y*^ SAMUEL FERNALD, b. 1 Jan. 1659, s. of Thomas & Temperance
4\ (Washington) Eldest s. Dr. Renald & Joanna (Warburton) in. Sus-
m)^ anna, da. Stephen & Katherine Paul, 12 Oct. 1699, d. 13 Feb. ]746:
i[_ had Temperance, b. 25 Oct. 1702: Samuel, b. 1 Mar. 1704; m. Jo-
>^^' anna Furbish, 20 Feb. 1731, d. 1775: Susanna, b. 1706, m. William
Lawry.l2 Nov.1727: Hannah,b.l708:Thos.,b.l71 1, m. Hannah Whit-
ney 16 Nov. 1733: Hercules, b. 8 Sept. 1713. m. Mary Tucker, pub. 18 Mar.
1735-6, Elizabeth, b. 5 May 1715, m. Ann, b. 1717,
m Moses Fowler of Durham, N. H. pub. 29 Apr. 1743.
HERCULES FERNALD, brother of Samuel, b. 29 Sept. 1688, m. MARIA
da. Rev. Peter Funal the "Protestant Goliah" and father of Peter Faneuil bur. in
Old Granary Cemetery, b. July 1, 1696, m. 4 Apr. 1705. Had John, Francis,
Daniel and Peter. Mrs. M. MARIA FERNALD d. 1717, Jan. 31 and then he m.
SARAH HICKES, da. of George Hickes, an eminent English divine, b. 20 Jun.
1642, d. 15 Dec. 1715. At Paris he was a friend of Justell, Henry, who gave him
MSS. to present to Oxford. Born at Newsham, Yorkshire. His bro. John
1685 joined the duke of Monmouth's Rebellion, captured, exiled. Children by
2nd wife:— John, b. 25 August, 1718, m. Margar« Fernald, 7 Sept. 1739, d.
1790- Jane, b. 1719, m. Samuel Gunnison, 6 Feb. 1745 orb, d. 20 Jan. 1750:
Sarah, b. 1721. m. Thomas or Benjamin Fernald. pub. 1744 or 5.
DEACON JOHN FERNALD and his wife, SARAH, da, Judge John and
ELIZABETH HINCKS, had nine children. 1st, John, b. 1698, iiad six children:
John. Mercy, Polly, Ann, m. a cousin, Mr. John W. Fernald, V,m. Mr. Dennet,
Lt. Col. Tobias Fernald, (see Letter) Polly m. Wm. Cotton, had children:
Mary da. Dea. John, m. Thomas Rogers, had 8 children: Brother Joseph, m.
AnnaMore, pub. 1742, had William, b. 1757, baptized July 24, 1757, 1st church,
m Molly, b. 1759, d. 13 Sept. 1822. He d. 1816. Had John, b. 2 Dec. i:^81,
d '22 Ian 1860. William, Jr., b. 1783, d. Jan. 1784. Daniel, b. 10 Nov.
d Sept 1812. William Fernald. 2nd, s. b. 27 July 1786, d. 21 March, 1863.
Samuel' Fernald, b. 15 June 1788, d. 19 July 1855. Joseph, b. 21 Apr. 1790, d. 8
M^v 183^ Thomas, b. 19 Mar. 1792, d. 20 May 1849. Benjamin, b. 15 Dec.
1793 d 19 July 1825. Marv. b. 22 Apr. 1796, d. 1 July 1841. James, b. 25 Feb.
1798' d 1804. ■ Sallv, b. 1802, d. • Betsey, b. 5 Jan. 1806, d. 23
Aor 1823 Molly (Clements) Fernald. WILLIAM FERNALD, b. 1786. m.
Lvdia Clements, b. 21 Feb. 1786, d. Oct. 9, 1869: Had Elsie Ann Fernald, b.
Vtnr 2 1814 Lvdia, b. 31 May 1816, d. . Wm. Henry b. 17 Oct.
1818 d. 1821'. Martha, b. 16 Feb. 1821, d. 8 Jan. 1890. William, b. 8 March
1823: Soldier in Second New Hampshire Regiment: d. 1876.
303
■° * * *
DANIEL, BORN IS FEBRUARY. 1825; DIED 15 OCTOBER 1826: JOSEPH
FERNALD. BORN 4 SEPTEMBER. 1830; MARRIED MISS LOUISA STOD-
DARD CROCKER. DAUGHTER DANIEL S. CROCKER AND WIFE DEB-
orah Prior, married 25 December 1861, had children. Charles Pierce Fcrnald brother
Joseph was born 3 August, 1832 and died from accidental poisoning with "Water Hem-
lock Socrates poison'-' 10 June, 1838. Joseph was in thirteen battles in the Civil War and wore the
Oak Leaf of Fort Fisher. He died in Mcdford. Mass.. killed by a fractured skull, although foot-
prints were seen beside his dead body, there were no police investigations. His beloved wife did not
long survive him. Nor the sudden death of Captain Martin L. White at Charlestown that was said to
have been shot by a needle gun, and face showed it.
Generation 156-7. EBENEZAR FERNALD, son Captain William, son Dr. Renald.born 7 Oc-
tober, 1699 married 22 December, 1724, Patience, da. Jonathan and Sarah
(Downing) Mendum and died 29 January, 1787. Wife died 5 January, 1775.
act. 74: Had Alice, bom 21 January, 1726, married Samuel Gunnison, 3 May,
1752: Sarah born a twin, married Benjamin Fernald 6 March. 1746; died 13
May. 1801: Joanna, born 17 February, 1728: married Simeon Dane, 11 May,
1749; 4 children: Ebenezcr, bom 27 March, 1729: married Sarah Lewis;
died 9 June. 1807; Jonathan, born 31 August, 1731, married Sarah Weeks, 21
August, 1755; Olive, bora 25 February. 1733; married Relickcr Weeks and
died 25 July. 1774: Dorothy, born 25 February. 1733: died 29 May, 1791:
Elizabeth, bom 4 February, 1736, married Benj. Underwood, 7 September,
1762, 2d 4 May, 1780 married William Holbrook: died 14 May, 1844: 5 chil-
dren: Simeon, bom 28 September, 1738. married Margery Gunnison, 14 No-
vember, 1763: Miriam, born 13 April, 1741, married Timothy Femald, 10
May, 1764: died 6 March. 1766: Patience, born 16 December. 1743, died 7.
August. 1749: Joshua Downing, born 22 July, 1748. died 5 August. 1749.
Generation 157-8. JONATHAN FERNALD, son of above, married 21 August, 1752 Sarah,
daughter Joseph aud Sarah (Haley) Weeks and died 26 December. 1789: Had
Joseph Weeks, bom 4June, 1756, married Catherine Chandler, bora 15 March,
1758, married Daniel Crosby of York, 17 April. 1791: Sarah, born 5 August.
1760, married Capt. James Brown 9 March. 1783 and died 3 February, 1822:
Daniel, born 19 June, 1762, married Hannah Manson 8 August, 1791 : Elihu,
bora 3 Oaober, 1763. married Hannah Chandler 18 January, 1787: Maiy,
born 17 November, 1765, died 26 January. 1803: Samuel, born 20 December,
1767, married Elizabeth Chandler, 2d Mrs. Catherine (Fernald) Keen; Lucy,
bora 28 May. 1771, married WilUam Fcraald, 14 April. 1793 and died 2 July.
1867: Jonathan, bora and died 1773: Hannah Moore, bora 14 July, 1774,
married Joseph Keen. November, 1794: Jonathan, born 3 July, 1776. Died.
Generation 158-9. DANIEL FERNALD, son of Jonathan above, bora 1762, married Hannah
Manson, daughter Joseph and , born 27 July. 1767 and died 24
June. 1846. He died 9 May, 1838: Had descendants:— Lucy, born 23 Novem-
ber, 1791, married Capt. Samuel Pray 5 November, 1808, died 23 October,
1826: William Manson. born 7 April, 1796, married Abigail W. Barry of Bos-
ton, 3 December, 1820, died 8 May, 1875. Lived in Portsmouth. In War.
1812. 5 children: Appia Mar]ia. b. 2 June 1798. married Capt. Samuel Bad-
ger 19 July, 1817, d. 3 April, 1848, 7 children: Daniel, born 1800 and died
1800: Lavina Lyman, bora 24 September. 1802. married Benjamin C. Fernald
27 October. 1824 and died 15 October, 1857: Albert, born 17 February, 1806,
died 29 September, 1819: Chariot Martin, born 3 March. 1808. married Jo-
seph Cox. 8 Febraary. 1829. died 24 July. 1870: Frederick Waterman, born 8
304
■° "fr -s- *
September, 1810, married Harriet Rockwell Gate 29 December, 1834, 2d Mrs.
Phebe (Abrams) Chamberlain 19 September, 1850, died 30 A^ril, 1855.
Lived at Portsmouth, N. H. 5 children: Appia Maria Fernald, wife of Capt.
Samuel Badger were the parents of MR. SAMUEL AUGUSTUS BADGER
of Boston, who was a most estimable religious -gentleman very prominent at
Union Congregational Church, Columbus Avenue, gave me some notes of his
descent from the Bellamy family and died 1908.
Generation 154. STRONG STRANGE FERNALD, brother Dr. Renald. ship carpenter, born
1614, married AELLONE 1641. had: Elizabeth, born 7 and baptized 14 May,
1643: Mary, baptized 10 August, 1645: Joanna, baptized 26 February 1647:'
Susan, born 14 September. 1652: died 1652: John, baptized 28 January, 1654:
William, baptized 1655: he died and his widow married 1659 Michael Lam-
bert. Children: WILLIAM of BOSTON, a Butcher, and son of Rev. Dan-
iel, son of Francis, son Dr. Jean, married Ellen and had: Joanna, b. 9 De-
cember, 1652: William, born 29 July, 1654: Joseph, born 19 January 1657.
I do not find their descendants, if any.
Generation 157-8. DEACON JAMES FERNALD, son of John and Mary Spinney Fernald, was
born 1676, married Mary Hincks, and died 1740 (per Rev. O. H. F. ) daugh-
ter Judge John and Elizabeth Hincks, daughter Judge Nathaniel and Christian
Freyer, of Portsmouth, although in the Hincks Genealogy, the daughters
named are fhreeand one not named may have been Mary that may have mar-
ried Thomas Gross. Had Elizabeth, born 8 September, 1706, married James
son Daniel and Hannah (Libby) Fogg, 23 October, 1728; died 1766: Mary!
born 14 May, 1712; married John, son John and Amy (Dennet) Adams, 15
October, 1734; 7 children: Joanna, born 19 January, 1713 or 14; married
George Rogers, published 25 December, 1736: Anna, born 28 October, 1716;
marned Joseph Fernald, published 14 June, 1737: Margarett, born 13 January',
1719 or 20; married William Hammett, published 26 September, 1741:
Dorcas, born 14 September, 1722; married John Seavey, published 8 December,
1744: Eunice, born 13 March, 1725; married John Gunnison, published 18
September, 1742; 1 child; He married Rebecca Norton, 10 February, 1747;
6 children: James, born 24 May, 1728; married Mary Fernald, 7 April', 1748;
Deacon James had a grant of 30 acres of land, 1699, and he or his son James
purchased 580 acres and 19 rods, November, 1818, Strafford Co.; died 1740-
wife died between 1740 and 1742. See Plate 1342.
Generation 157-8. THOMAS FERNALD, son John and Mary Spinney, his wife, was born 1678-
married 28 November, , MARY, daughter JOHN AND SARAH(Remicki
THOMPSON: Had: William, born 1 November, 1701; married Hannah
Seavy, 24 June, 1724: Lydia, born 11 February, 1703; married Moses, son
Alexander Dennet, of Portsmouth, 11 February, 1723 or 4; died 15 July, 1749:
Mary, born 22 April 1708: Hannah, born 22 February, 1710 or 11; married
Benjamin Welch, of Ipswich, 9 November, 1736: Margery, born 10 December,
1713: Thomas, born 3 March 1716; married daughter Hercules Fernald; 2nd!
Grace Remick, 4 November, 1755; 3rd Eunice Lewis: Abraham, born 14 No-
vember, 1719; married Mary Trickey, 16 May, 1742: Benoni, born 17
February, 1723.
Generation 156-7 NATHANIEL FERNALD, born 1681, son Samuel and Hannah son Dr.
Renald; married ANN ALLEN, daughter Robert and Hannah( White)Allen,
10 September, 1702, at Dover, New Hampshire. Rev. John Pike officiated'.
He was a Shipwright. Will probated 4 April, 1748: Had: Tobias, born 25
August, 1703; married Abigail Smith: Nathaniel, born 19 February, 1707;
married Mary Weeks, 10 October, 1734: Elizabeth, born 17 July 1710, not
in will: Hannah, born 19 February, 1712; married Bryant Bradeen, 27 Decem-
ber, 1733: Ruth, born 22 May, 1717 (two Timothy names may or not belong
here). Ruth is recorded as married Mr. Knight.
305
C] ^ ^ ^ D.
A WILLIAM FERNALD OF PORTSMOUTH. MARRIED 31 JULY. 1707.
ELIZABETH, DAUGHTER WILLIAM AND ABIGAIL (GREENLEAF) COT-
TON. HE DIED 12 JANUARY, 1728, AND HIS WIDOW'S WILL PROVED
1761 (Sec Ante) Aforesaid William, son of William of Boston and wife Ellen, born 29
July, 1654; moved to Portsmouth, N. H., and brother; Joanna, born 9 December, 1652,
Generation 155-6. and Joseph , born 19 January, 1659. Had Mary, born 13 March, 1711; mar-
ried Mr. Mendum: William, born 10 February, 1713: Abigail, baptized 10 April,
1715: JOHN, baptized 31 May, 1719;m. AbigaU Coffin; moved to New Hamp-
shire, (A cousin, of John married Mary Savage,) and was buried in Mr. Young's
cemetery at Wolfboro: Elizabeth, baptized 15 October, 1721: George, baptized
27 October, 1723; married Elizabeth Lang, 2d Anna Leach: Abigail, baptized 15
May, 1726:
Generation 155-6. BENJAMIN FERNALD, son William, son Dr. Renald, born 1695; married
Catherine Hammond; died April, 1743: Had Joseph, born 5 May, 1719; married
Anna Moore, of York: Benjamin, born 27 June, 1721 ; married Sarah Fernald, 6
March. 1746: Josiah, born 29 June, 1724; married Mary Pierce, 26 November,
1748; resided in New Castle, N. H. : Mark, born 19 August, 1726; married Mary
Simpson, 3 May, 1752; died 14 May, 1779; lived in New Castle: Catherine,
born 8 July, 1735: And Edward, baptized 7 December 1729.
Generation 155-6. NATHANIEL FERNALD, son Captain William, son Dr. Renald, bom 1697;
married 7 April, 1720, MARGARET, daughter Sylvanus and (Diamond) Tripe;
He died 18 September, 1771, and wife the same month: Had MARGERET,
born 6 January, 1721; married John Fernald, 16 September, 1739; died April,
, 1791: Tobias, born 27 March, 1723; married Lucy Lewis, 19 May, 1748: Eliza-
beth, born 2 October. 1725; married Samuel Johnson. 19 May. 1748. and Rev.
Wm. W. Johnson wrote that they went or belonged to the British Provinces or
Canada; married 2d. or published to Edward Ingraham, 2 June, 1766; died 6
April, 1818: Abigail, bom 30 November, 1727; married James Caswell, 17 No-
vember, 1748; died 28 January, 1776; Joshua, born 29 June 1730; died 18 Sep-
tember, 1748: Mary, bora 5 August, 1732; died 10 September, 1749: William,
born 16 September, 1739; married Abigail Dennet, 28 June, 1763:
Generation 156-7. CAPTAIN TOBIAS FERNALD. born 1702; son Captain William, son Dr.
Renald; married MARY MENDUM. daughter Jonathan and Sarah (Downing)
Mendum; died 11 May. 1761. and wife. Mary, died 16 Oaobcr, 1767: Had
Dennis, bora 7 December, 1725; married Sarah Frost, 9 October, 1750: Mary,
born 5 August, 1728; married James Fernald, 7 April, 1748; died 25 May, 1761:
Miriam, bora 26 March, 1733; died 8 April, 1739: Robert, born 11 December,
1736; died 7 March, 1741; Robert, bora 2 March. 1741; died 1764. in London.
England: Tobias, bora 1 February, 1743 or 4; married Dorcas Mclntirc; 2d, his
widow married Richard Rogers, 18 December, 1786: Elcazar, born 23 Septem-
ber, 1746; married Margery Staples, 31 January, 1771:
Generation 158-9. LIEUTENANT COLONEL TOBIAS FURNALD, son of Captain John and
Elizabeth (Rogers, daughter Rev. John, of Ipswich.) son Deacon John and Sarah
(Hinckes, daughter Judge John and Elizabeth,) son of Dr. John and Mary
(Spynie, daughter Thomas and Margery,) pon of Thomas and Temperance
(Washington, daughter Robert and Anna, of Virginia, 1630,) eldest son of Dr.
Renald and Joanna (Warbunon) Fernald, was born 3 December, 1743; (married
MARY, daughter NATHANIEL FERNALD. Gentleman, and MARY, his
wife.) born 22 August, 1741; married 27 November, 1759: Had Miriam, born 1
306
^ * * *
^i^ JANUARY, 1761; MARRIED WILLIAM LEIGHTON; MARRIAGE INTEN-
■ hj TIONS PUBLISHED 23 NOVEMBER, 1777; 12 CHILDREN. HANNAH,
JJj BORN 2 JANUARY, 1761, AT 1 A. M.. AND SISTER AT 12 P. M.; MARRIED
^r^ 17 MARCH, 1780, MR. ELISHA GURNEY: NANCY, BORN 6 FEBRUARY,
1763; MARRIED JOHN ROGERS, 26 DECEMBER, 1790, NEWPORT. MASS.
8 children: Eicazcr, born 23 September, 1765; married Margery Staples, 31 Jan-
uary', 1771, born 18 November, 1747, daughter Nathaniel and Margery, who died
in 1826, and he died at Ossipee, N. H., 1823; had 6 children: Mary Washing-
ton White, born 25 April, 1766; married Mr. Samuel Fletcher, 11 October, 1812;
died 26 April, 1860: Archelaus, born 16March, 1769; married Eunice Trefeathern:
Peletiah, born 2 August, 1771, went to England, and married Anne, daughter
Rev. Isaac Barrows; Had 8 sons: Charies; John; Francois, that went to and
settled in France: William went to and married in Italy, Rome: David went to
Scotland: Tobias to Germany, and Thomas that lived and died, married with
children in London that a descendant called on the writer, 1895, and gave to me
^^^^ some same of these last facts with the names of his father, Nathaniel, and grand-
d\ father, Josiah, the son of Thomas, which to interest after searchers I will here give
^ ^^ the following brief connection of that illustrious family that had many descendants
^j^^ in United States the First Census by General George Washington of 1790, and are
all the Fcmald relatives. It grieves me much more, for what I cannot do for you.
TWELFTH NIGHT.
DR. ISAAC BARROW was the son of Mr. Thomas Barrow (A Citizen of London of good
Reputation yet living, "1722" Brother to Isaac Barrow, Esq., of Spiny Abby in Cambrideshire(wherc
he was a Justice of the Peace for 40 Years) Son of Pfiilip Barrow who has in Print a Method of Physic,
and had a Brother Isaac Barrow Doctor of Physic, a Benefactor to Trinity College, and there Tutor to
Robert Cecil Earl of Salisbury and Lord Treasurer." 1st sd. Dr. Isaac Barrow "was born in London,
October, 1630.* His mother was Anne, Daughter of WILLIAM Buggin of North Gray in Kent,
Esq. ; whose Tenderness he did not long enjoy, she dying when he was about four Years old." Vide
Life- of. Dr. Isaac Barrow, M. D. p. And footnote — "Dr. Pope in the Life of Bishop Ward, p. 129, says
this is a mistake; but it w^ not, as appears from Dr. Barrows Epitaph from his Father's information,
and mentioned by Dr. Pope himself, page 169." The name William Buggin was in fact one of the
changes from the persecutions necessary for the descendants of Dr. Jean Fernel, therefore William
Fernel alias Buggin, a descendant from second son Count John Firnel, nor does this remarkable proof
all rest here for in the Works of the Learned Isaac Barrow, D. D., in three Volumes Large is his Por-
trait that has the Coat of Arms of our Ancient Family : viz: — On shield four "fleur-de-lis," two cross X
swords (ours three) Helmet top of shield and the Crest a squirrel eating a savory nut with great enjoy-
ment. His portrait is a well marked typical Fcrnald face. He died the 4th of May, 1677. "In the
Epitaph, Dr. Mapletoft, his much esteemed friend, doth truly describe him: his picture was never
made from life, and the effigies on his tomb doth little resemble him. He was in person of the lesser
size and lean, of extraordinary Strength, of a fair and clear Complexion, a thin Skin, very sensible of
the Cold; his Eyes grey, clear and somewhat short sighted; his Hair of light auburn very fine Curling.
He is well represented by the Figure of Marcus Brutus on his Denarii, and I will transfer hither what
was said of that great Man. Virtue was thy Life's great Centre and from thence Did silently and con-
stantly dispense The gentle vigorous Influence To all the wide and said Circumference."
D %^ g I
307
N
O W TO HONOR A WORTHY DESCENDANT OF DR. JEAN KERNEL'S
SECOND SON. AND BROTHER OF FRANCIS WHO KEPT ACCOUNT OF
2ND SON BY CROSSED TWO SWORDS FORMING V AND a. ALSO TO
call attention to the many small and beautiful faces to be seen by a magnifying glass on the
stick like frame, title page etc. around the EPITAPH it is given verbatim and viz. :
VI R prope Divinus & vere Magnus, si quid magni habent
Pietas, Probitas, Fides, summa Eruditio, par Modestia, Mores sanctissimi undequaque, & suavissimi.
Geometriae Professor Londoni Grcshamensis, Gracae Linmuae, & Mathesos apud Cantabrigienscs suos,
Cathcdras omnes Ecclesiam, Gentem, ornavit. Collegium S. S. Trinitatis Praeses Illustravit, Jactis
Bibliothecae vere Rcgiae Fundamentis auxit. Opes, Honores, & universum vitae Ambitum, Ad majora
natus, non contempwit, scd reliquit seculo. Deum quern a tencris coluit, cum primis imitatus est.
Faucissimisegendo, benefaciendo quam plurimis, Etiam posteris, quibus vel mortuus concionari non
destinit. Caetera, & pene Majora ex scriptis peti possuit. Abi, Lector, & aemularc. Obiit IV, Die
Maii, Ann. Dom MDCLXXVII. ^tat XLVII. Monumentam hoc Amici posuerc.
Generations 158-9 THOMAS FERNALD, son of Samuel, born 1659, and Susanna Paul son
THOMAS and TEMPERANCE WASHINGTON, s. Dr. Renald and Joanna
Warburton, their wives, was born 5 July. 1711; m. HANNAH WHITNEY, 16
November, 1733, daughter John and Lettice Whitney. He died 1794; will pro-
bated October. Their descendants recorded: Henry, baptized 2 November, 1735:
Thomas, baptized 23 January, 1737: Margery, baptized 16 December, 1739: Wil-
liam, baptized 19 April, 1741. Said Thomas was given as married Pamelia Jones,
13 September, 1787, and John, born 1738; died at Sea on Brig Sally, 8 August,
1767: Hannah, born 17 January, 1744: Eunice, born 3 February, 1746; married
Andrew Grace: Susanna, born 7 January, 1751; married Samuel Fowler; 2nd, Mr.
Todd: died 15 May, 1841: Lettice, born 7 December, 1854; married Andrew
Phillips, 19 March, 1843. He was Sergeant in the Revolution. Had five children.
HERCULES, son Samuel, son Thomas and Temperance Washington Fernald, son Dr. Renald,
and said
Generations 157-8. HERCULES, born 8 September, 1713; married MARY TUCKER, born 23
March, 1719; marriage intentions published 18 March, 1735 or 6: Had: Alice,
born 24 May, 1737: Susanna, born 29 July, 1740; married David Duncan:
^O
=Q <=&=> i^*^ e^ Qs
MARY, BORN 29 OCTOBER, 1742: JOEL, BORN 13 FEBRUARY, 1745;
MARRIED ELIZABETH PETERS: JOSIAH. BORN 11 MARCH, 1746
OR 7; DIED YOUNG: HERCULES, BORN 4 DECEMBER, 1749; MAR-
RIED MIRIAM PERCY, OF YORK, 30 JANUARY. 1772; DIED 27 Oc-
tober, 1833, in American Revolution of North Berwick: Josiah, born 19September,
1751: Stephen, born 21 August, 1754; resided in Rochester, N. H.: Sarah, born
1756: Esther, born 5 September, 1759; married.
Generaions 157-8. JOHN FERNALD, born 25 August, 1718, son Hercules and Sarah (Hicks)
son Thomas and Temperance (Washington), son Dr. Renald Fernald and Joanna
(Warburton), married 7 September, 1739, MARGARET, daughter Nathaniel and
Margaret, born 6 January, 1721 : died 1791 ; He died 1790, at Kittery: Had: Sarah,
born 5 April. 1740; died small pox: Archclaus, born 25 September, 1741; died 1
January, 1760, at Sea: Joshua, born 7 August, 1743; married Elizabeth White, 18
November, 1764: Margaret, born 8 April, 1745- married Mr. Moore, of Sanford,
Me.; died November, 1843: Pelatiah, born 22 April. 1747 (See above) married and
settled in England: John, born 20 February, 1750; married Mary Fernald, daughter
Tobias and Lucy; Jane, born 30 April, 1752; married Captain John Seavey, 1 Octo-
ber, 1776; 2nd, John Stevens; died 17 February, 1836: Mary, born 10 April, 1754;
married William Pierce, of New Castle, 16 November. 1783; d. 30 June, 1845:
Abigail, born 29 April. 1758; married Benjamin Remick. 15 January. 1777; died
22 October. 1825: Betsey, born 2 September, 1758; married Weiitworth Ricker, of
Somersworth, N. H., 21 June, 1778: Miriam, born 20 April, 1762; married Samuel
F'letcher; died November, 1812: Archelaus, born 16 March, 1769; married Eunice
Trefethen, 10 June, 1790; died 24 November. 1853.
Generations 156-7 JOHN FERNALD. son of William and Ehzabeth (Cotton), son Captain
William and Elizabeth (Langdon). son Dr. Renald and Joanna (Warburton). bap-
tized 31 May 1719; married Abigail Coffin.
Generations 157-8. JOHN FERNALD, son of Joseph, born 19 January, 1659. son of William the
Butcher and wife Ellen, said William a brother (twins) of STRONG STRANGE,
born 16 November, 1614, "if the record be true which the preponderance of evi-
dence of 1895 — caused me to throw out and now to bring back from like work in
Old Kittery, written by E. S. Stackpole and by Prof. H. T. Fernald, prepared to
honor which the data said Mr. John Fernald, born about 1696, son Joseph Fernald
and Mary, daughter Samuel Fairbanks, a reputable and well represented United
States Family, married "Elizabeth, daughter of Richard and (Eleanor Heard)
Rogers, 16 January, 1723 or 4. He married (2) Dorothy Main of York. 19 January,
1730 — 31- He was a farmerand died before 18 April, 1738. at which date the widow
was appointed administratrix. Children: John, born ; married , and had
a son James: Mercy, born : Elizabeth, born 2 December. 1731: Child, born
posthumously. This John is one other of "14 John Fernalds" reported by Rev.
O. H. Fernald mistaken from a proved line.
Generations 157-8. SAMUEL EERNALD. son Deacon John Fernald and his wife Sarah ( Hinckes)
son John and Mary (Spinney), son Thomasand Temperance (Washington), son Dr.
Renald and Joanna (Warburton) was bornl June. 1702; married MARY, daughter
Samuel and Eizabeth (Haskins) JOHNSON, 26 Februar>', 1729-30: Had Sam-
uel, born 1732: Noah, born 1735: Mary, born 1740. As all of these children died
single persons, unmarried, they will the Farm to their cousin, Mr. Nathaniel
Staples. Will probated 1798.
309
* *
^^ DEACON JAMES FERNALD, BORN 1704. SON DEACON JOHN AND
jL^ SARAH HINCKES FERNALD. M. PUBLISHED 30 OCTOBER. 1730. TO
Tfj HENNAH. DAUGHTER REV. JOHN AND HANNAH (FOGG) ROGERS,
^^ BORN 11 JUNE. 1710: HAD DESCENDANTS: KEZIAH. BORN 3 APRIL.
173 4; MARRIED MR. RICHARD GOWELL. 9 JANUARY, 175 2; 2ND.
Timothy Hanscom: John, born 3 July. 1737; married Sarah Wcntworth, 17 April, 1759: Hannah,
born 7 May. 1740; m. Capt. John Wcntworth. 1758; 2 children; married 2nd, Sarah Bartlctt. 17
September, 1762: James, born 20 September. 1744; married Abigail Wentworth. 1762. The writer
has been unable to find other than the above ancestry of said Deacon James, s. of Deacon John and
Sarah Hinckes F. The above record is given from "OLD KITTERY" printed 1903. The next is true.
Generations 157-8. DEACON JAMES FERNALD, brother Captain John Fcrnald that married
Elizabeth, daughter Reverend John and Martha Rogers of Ipswich, as is declared
with Seal of the Town which I have before me, married Mary, daughter Judge
John and Elizabeth Hinks; he was born 1676, and record from Rev. O. H.
Fernald gives her as the sister of Sarah Hincks who married John Femald,
therefore as the first daughter's name of the family is not mentioned, probably
she was the lady. Aforesaid Deacon James, son of Dr. John, married Mary
Spinney, son Thomas married Temperance Washington: Their descendants
were: Elizabeth, bom 8 September, 1706 (See previous record) Deacon James,
son James, 8th child born 24 May, 1728, married Mary, daughter Lieutenant
Colonel Tobias and Mary (Mendum) Fernald, 7 April, 1748. He died 17
March, 1757, and wife died 26 May, 1761. Said Lieutenant Colonel Tobias
Fernald, son Captain John and Elizabeth (Rogers, Ipswich) (See his letter)
JAMES F. had descendants. Said Lieutenant Colonel Tobias was living at
Middleton with Uncle John in 1790. Deacon JAMES, born 16 February.
1749: married MARY STACEY. 30 November, 1769: Mark, bom 26 May,
1751: Mary, born 20 June, 1753: Benjamin, born 17 January, 1756. Sunday,
July 28th, 1895. I visited the Tomb, and on Martin Monument found: — Deacon
James Fcmal Died September, 1823, and Mary his Wife Died December 2d,
1831. Aged Persons, parents of Lois, Wife of Isaac Martin. Lois, descent from
Colonel Tobias, but not his. Uncle John Furnald of Middleton. Brookfield.
Wolfboro. that married Mary Savage, daughter John and Mary, son JAMES
and MARY, daughter of WILLIAM STACEY. He was a Farmer. Deacon
of 2d Parish. 1781, and moved to Wolfboro. N. H., about 1793. Purchased
Corbit, 580 Acres and 19 Rods Farm. Died 1823. Had: Mary(Molly) baptized
4 April, 1773 ; married John W. Fernald. of Wolfboro. 4 June, 1795. 8 children.
Fanny, baptized 7 May, 1774: James, baptized 1775? died young: Betsey Ann.
baptized 6 July, 1777; married Rev. Ebenezer Allen, of Wolfboro. New
Hampshire,: Lois, baptized 20 June, 1779; married Isaac Martin, of Wolfboro.
New Hampshire, 26 Nov., 1800: James, baptized Sept., 1781, unmarried;
lost at sea: Randall, baptized 30 July, 1785: Diademia. baptized 1 November,
1787; married Joseph Frost, of Wolfboro. New Hampshire. 4 September,
1803: Susan (Sukey) Sparhawk. baptized April. 1792; married Jacob Stanton.
310
* * * D- .
So ^'i^^'^'"'^'-^' N- H.,28 MARCH. 1811. (I OWN) THE SWORD
? T,?? TOBIAS FERNALD AND A LETTER STATING IT WAS
CrIVEN TO HIM AS CAPTAIN TOBIAS AND A COUSIN OF
Ocncral George Washington, which I find from search and research bears the
Jernald Crest Persian coat of arms, the Crown surmounted with the Rattle
ftnake from which the banner fought under in American Revolution: $2000
has been refused oflcr for it. which is invaluable as the sword of the Father of
Our Country. There is much more about this historic sword given for gallant
conduct, etc.
Generation 159-160 LIEUTENANT-COLONEL TOBIAS FERNALD. son of Captain John
Fernald and wife Elizabeth Rogers, son John, married -Sarah Hinckes, son
John, mamed Mary Spiny, son Thomas, married Temperance Washington,
son Dr. Renald. married Joanna Warburton. son Captain William, married
Elizabeth Amand, son Dr. John, married Annietta de Coligny, son Francis,
married Maria Commenus, son Dr. Jean, married Magadelene Luillier, son
of Charles VIII. king of France and Anne of Brittiany, was born at 6 o'clock,
two hours after his brother John, the 23rd of November, 1742, married Mary
the daughter Mr. Jonathan Andrews, Sr.. and Elizabeth, (4 chn.) daughter
Rev. William Thomas and wife, 30th March, 1740, and united in holy wed-
lock 27 April, 1758, and Mr. Jonathan Andrews, Jr., married Mary, daughter
Peter Fournier and Anne, daughter Edward Thompson, born 1710, died 1758:
son Peter, bom 1670, died 1738: son Joseph, born 1630, died 1690: son
Tobias, born 1604, died 1676; s- Peter, b- 1575, died 1664: brother Uncelot,
born 1565, was Chaplin of Queen, by Walsingham, Secretary of Queen Eliza-
beth, and died 1626: son James, b. 1528, died 1654: gr. son Del Sarto Andrew,
born 1417, died 1493: son Andaomicus, born a. 1397, died 1478. The chil-
dren of Mr. Jonathan Andrews and his wife Elizabeth, daughter Rev. William
Thomas— Were: Elizabeth, born 1735, died 1773: John, born 1737: James,
born 1738: Mary, bom 30 March, 1740: married Lieutenant-Colonel Tobias
Fumald,. 1758: Peter, born 1742: Francis, born 1744: Jacob, born 1746;
William, bom 1749: Mercy, born 1752: Thomas, born 1752: Blanche, bora
1754. (Were there more than two Lieutenant-Colonel Tobias Fernalds in
American Revolution? By clerical error given as children of same Father?
(I found cousins.) THE FAMILIES THOMAS LINE:
Rev. William Thomas, born at Bristol. 2 February, 1613 and baptized Friday,
3 February, died 25 June, 1689: by Blanch, daughter Mr. Peter Samyne and
wife, he was a Dutch merchant; had William, died young, Peter, John,
Blanch, Bridget, William, Sarah, and Elizabeth: John Thomas married Mary,
daughter Mr. William Bagnal: Elizabeth m. Mr. Jonathan Andrews. Sr.
First said Rev. William Thomas, bishop of Worcester, was of very ancient and
noble family, as appears in a pedigree taken out of the Heralds Office by
William Thomas, lord Bishop of Worcester in 1688, to prove his right to the
Herbert Arms- His Father was John Thomas and wife Elizabeth Blount, son
of James Thomas, native of Hagelstein, died 1653, son of Mr. William
Thomas, a recorder of Caermarthen : the Earl of Northampton, then President
of Wales, said, "That he was the wisest and most prudent person he ever knew
of a corporation." Alfred the Great wisely hung 41 corrupt judges for reform.
— ■^— — n %^ g I
311
<: 4^ ^ ^
^^^HE ANCESTRY OF COLONEL TOBIAS FERNALD'S LOVED WIFE, MARY,
/'i DAUGHTER JONATHAN ANDREWS, JR. AND WIFE. MARY (ELIZABETH
\Wl FELIBIEN FELLEIN) (PETER ANDREW MARRIED MARY FELLIEN; 3RD,
^i^ Joseph Andrews married Elizabeth Felibicn) ANDREWS LINE: 1, JONATHAN
ANDREWS, SR.. 1790 Census, and Jonathan Andrews, Jr. 3rd John Gerhard Bcinhard
Andrea', b. 1724; d. 1793: 4, Ives Mary. (male) Andrew, b. 1675; d. 26 Feb. 1764: 5, John Andrea
des Rochers, born 1650; d- 1741 : 6, Tobias, Andredo, b. a. 1626; d. 1766: 7, Thomas Andrada, b. a.
1606; d. 1682: 8, Valerius Andrew, b. 1588; d. ; living 1652: 9,Anthony d' Andrada, b. a. 1560;
d. 1634, at Portugal: 19. James Andreas, b. 1528; d. 7 Jan. 1590: 11, Sarto del Andreas, b. a. 1483;d.
1530: 12, Publ. Faustus Andrclinus. b. a. 1458; d. 1518: 13, John Andrew, Secrctarj' at Vatican, b. a
1438; d. 1493: 14, Andrew of Ratisbon, b. a. 1413; d. a. 1462: 15, Peter Ancharano, b. a. 1350; d.
1417: 16, John Andreas, b. a. 1278; d. 1348. His beautiful daughter Novella m. (17) John Calder-
inus. The motto of Andrew Felibicn, b. at Chartres, 1619 and d. 11 Jun. 1695, was "Bene Faccrc,
Et Vere Dicere."— "To do Good and Speak the Truth." From a written record I give: — Lord
Francis de la Force, the father of Duke James dc la Force, born 1563; died 1652, witii his
brother, Armand dc la Force, on Sunday, 24 August, at night, 1572, these three were in bed
together, the feast of St. Birtholomew Missacre, at the ringing of the bells of St. Germain
for martins, the slaughter began by the murder of Admiral Gasparde de Coligny by a domestic of the
Duke dc Guise, Besme, who entered his room with a horde of assassins, sword in hand, and found him
sitting in an elbow chair. "Young man," said he to their leader in a calm and tranquil manner,
"thou shouldst have rcspeaed my grey hairs: but do what thou wilt: thou canst only shonen my life
by a few days." Besme stabbed him repeatedly and threw him out of the window at the feet of the
Duke of Guise, who proceeded to mutilate him. Besme trampled on the corpse, body exposed three
days to fury of fanatics and then hung by the feet on gallows of Montfaucon. His cousin Montmorenci
had it taken down to bury secretly in chateau dc Chantilli. An Italian cut off head and carried it to
Catiicrinc de Medicis who caused it to be embalmed and sent to Pof)e Gregory XIII, the 234 Pope,
who sent Charles IX a magnificent sword with the exterminating angel thereon. Gregory received
head with transports of ferocious joy, called in the most skillful painters, and to perpetuate the memorj'
of the murders, ordered several pictures representing the episodes of the St. Banholomew. Among
other things there was represented in the Hall, called the Hail of the Kings, in the Vatican, three
frescoes: 1st, Assault on Admiral Coligny on leaving Louvre. 2nd, Scene of carnage by tor.ch light.
3rd, Charles IX (It was reported after murder of good King Humbert the intent to substitute a Vatican
tool for the present good lawful King) seated over Parliament, and glorifying himself for exterminating
100,000 loyal good French subjects. I have before me the colored picture of the presentation of my
forefather Coligny's head to Gregory, and I saw a plate of Duke of Guise cutting off other members
of the body of the noble Gasparde dc Coligny, one of alleged 250,000,000 nurtyrs that from search and
research I have reduced to 150,000,000, and saw a plate of the medal struck to glorify the fanatics of
St. Bartholomew. Often heard boasted that martys are the seed of the churches by ministers and
authors. If this is the height of any religion, then the quicker that and all like religions die the better
for all mankind whose common forefathers were the children of God who commanded "THOU
SHALT NOT KILL." LOVE ONE ANOTHER AS GOD LOVES YOU.": as declareth the
primitive commandments of primitive times recorded by ancient ./Egyptians, the most religious class of
men and women on earth since Adam and Eve, or Ava and Seth. Lord Francis de la Force and son
Armand de la Force were slain, and the brother Duke James de la Force was overlooked and escaped
from the assassins that will be punished by God and their superiors in a greater degree in exact pro-
portion to the deeds done in and by their bodies, aiders and abbetors. For God is Omnipresent,
Omniscient and Omnipotent, the Glorious Father of All Creation. By marriage aforesaid Duke
James de la Force is related to Fernald family of Colonel Tobias and Mary, his wife.
-•V^AVING MADE CLEAR TO THE WISE MANY THINGS HIDDEN WE MAY
Am^ NOW GIVE CHN. TOBIAS FURNALD AND HIS BELOVED WIFE, MARY
IIB ANDREWS: HE b. 1742. WIFE b. 1740. m. 27 APR.. 1758. MERCY, b. 15 FEB.,
^Wr 1759; m. Mr. Joseph Billings 3 Jan., 1782: d. at Lebanon. Maine. U. S. A. Nathaniel.
> b. 9 July, 1760, m. Hannah, da. Nathaniel and Mary Fernald. b. 26 Jan.^ 1761, m. 4
Aug., 1788, Rev. Joseph Lichfield. Officiated. Elizabeth, b. 25 July, 1765, m. Mr. William Berry,
d. 12 Mar., 1842: Tobias, b. 31 Dec, 1768: m. Abigail Chambers, (5 chn., Sophia Ann, Lydia,
John, Peletiah, M. C, William H.,) Lydia, bapt. 28 July, 1772: m. Capt. John Williams, pub. 17
Oct., 1801 and d. 30 Apr. 1859: Sarah, b. m. William Wells of Boston, Jan. 9th, 1805. But was
given as m. Wm. Boston of Wells, both names are in Census 1790 and for her birth probably the
Wells and Bostons can give dates that may reveal two of like names of two families, data.
"Die Evangelische Bokschraft
In a book "Der Herrlichkeif Bokkes in Jesu Christo," etc. Pub. Leipsic }735, is to be found the
following:— "Georg Philippi Brchin, sailed from Germany the 12 day of April 1752 Arrived in Hal-
ifax: New Scotland the 1st day of August 1755. The 12 day of February, 1753 I married my wife
Elizabeth Fellein. On the 8 day of June 1753 we stormed the 11 ? Castle. The 3 day of July 1753
we commenced to build our House. The 30 day of October gave us the Lord a Son which we named
John Giorg. The 2 day of November we took him to the holy baptism." Top of title page written
by script "Christian Felibien" and other many written words, part not distinct. With Brechin or
Breckein appears written over-the word Filibien.
Jacobus Augustus Thuanus (Dc Thou) or Fuanus, b. 9 Oct., 1553 at Paris, (his bro. d. 1579,)
wife 1601 : m. 2d and had three «ons and d. 17 May, 1617. His father was First President of Parlia-
ment and Faunus a celebrated historian. He was Master of Requests, 1584. Attached himself to
king Henry II He was bur. in chapel St.' Andrew of the Archer. The eldest of
his three sons was Francis Augustus Faunus, b. from 2d wife and Librarian to the King but as he did
not reveal a conspiracy by Marquise d'Effiat against Richelieu; and the Cardinal, resenting the levity
and contemptuous manner in which he had been mentioned in the pages of the historian, most in-
humanly sacrificed the son to his mean revenge, and caused him to be beheaded at Lyons, 1642. His
honorable ancestry were connected with the long line of proved genealogy by marriages.
Generation 158-9. JOSEPH FERNALD, b. 1704, s. of Deacon John Fernald and wife Sarah
Hincks, m. Anna More, da. , b. m. 1736-7, d.
He d. . Had descendants: Joseph, b. 25 May, 1738; m. Lydia. b.
1 Jan. 1740; m. Robert, s. Thomas and Dorcas (Hammond) Cutt, 18 Nov., 1758:
Benjamin, b. 1 July, 1742, m. Hannah Spinney, Dec, 1764.
Generation 158-9. WILLIAM FERNALD, s. Thomas and Mary, b. I7OI, m. Hannah Seavey
24 June 1724. She was da. Benjamin and (Wallis) Seavey of N. H- Had:
Hannah, b. d. m. Capt. Gowell : William, b. 22 Feb.,
1732: m. Abigail Tobey, 2d Mary Staples: Dimon, b. 1734: killed by the Indians
near Halifax, N. S., 1753 a.
Generation 1-58-9. THOMAS FERNALD, b. 1717, s. Thomas and wife Mary, da. John and
Sarah (Remick) Thompson, m. Sarah, da. Hercules and Sarah (Hicks) Fernald,
pub. Dec. 1, 1744: Had: Mary, b. 1746; m. Mr. George Rogers of Berwick, 30
Aug., 1770: (2 chn.) Archelaus, b. 1748: m. Hannah Trefethen: b. 1798;d. 1805.
He resided in Newcastle, N. H. (7 chn.,) Dimon, b. 2 April, 1750: m. Mar-
garet, da. Abraham and Mary (Trickey) Fernald: d. 28 Dec, 1806, Loudon, N.
H. (15 chn.,) Renald, b. 13 Apr., 1752, m. Elizabeth Viner or Vennard, 2 Sept.,
1781; 2d Mrs. Pricilla Davis, 29 July, 1792; 3d Mar>', da. Andrew Sherbourne, 6
Sept.', 1801.
D^^
^ ^ ^ ^ o
A FOURTH WIFE MRS. JANE LARKIN? 4 NOV. 1810: HE WAS CALLED
DR. LIVED AND DIED IN PORTSMOUTH. N. H. 10 APRIL. 1844.
HAD FIVE CHILDREN. ONE OF WHOM WAS THE EXCELLENT GENE-
alogist, Mr. AMMI R. HALL FERNALD. Mr. Thomas Fernald wife died and he
m. Grace, da. Joshua and Dorcas (Hill) Remick 4 Nov., 1755: Had Robert, b. 1756-7
"that was impressed into the English Navy?" This is in Archives, State House. Boston,
Mass. Muster Pay Roll. Services in New York. He Enlisted 13 Dec, 1776, in Capt. Wm. Hol-
brook Co., Col. John Frost. As a Privateers man. It was said he was captured and imprisoned in
England. during last part of the Revolution, Discharged at its close, married and settled in England
where was recorded as Robert Fcrnell, which docs not seem to show that all the prisoners captured in
the American Revolution were harshly used. Hannah, b. 1761 : m. Elisha Gurncy of Newport.
Mass., 17 Mar.. 1780: d. 1833 (8 chn.) Nancy, b. 6 Feb., 1764. m. John Roges. 26 Dec, 1790: d.
19 Jan., 1852: (2 chn.) Sarah, b. 1766. m. Samuel Pray of Berwick, d. 1848 at TophamorTopsham,
Me. (3 chn.)
Generation 158-9. ABRAHAM FERNALD, b. 1719. s. Thomas and wife Mary Thompson, m.
MARY TRICKEY at Newington, N. H., 1742, May 16, probably a sister of Jon-
athan, son of Jonathan Trickey; Had: Abraham and Isaac, bapt. 5 May. 1744, m.
Judith Hill and d. Sept., 1815. Barrington, N. H.. (13 chn.) Clement, bapt. 11
May. 1746: m. Dorcas Tucker 29 Sept. 1768 at Dover, N. H. Resided in Golds-
boro. Me. In American Revolution. (8 chn.) Thomas, bapt. 1 May. 1747, m.
Anna Kcnnison: Resided at Nottingham. N. H. (14 chn.) Jcdediah or Jeremiah,
b. a. 1749: Charles, b. 12 Mar.. 1752: m. Abigail Tricky and d. Apr. 8. 1828:
Residence. Northwood. N. H. (6 chn.): John, b. a. 1755: Mary, bapt. 21 Aug.
1757: m. John Sporfield of London Town: Margaret, b. 28 June, 1758, m. Dimon
Fernald: d. 21 Jan. 1833 at London, N. H.: daughter (Sarah) m. Mr. Huckins:
Keziah, b. Feb. 1767: m. Mr. Samuel Buzzcll 1790: d. 30 Nov. 1814 at Wayne, Me.
/^l,^ Generation 157-8. NATHANIEL FERNALD, b. 1707, s. of Nathaniel and Ann Fcr-
'ffj nald. m. MARY, da. Nicholas and PRICILLA (GUNNISON) WEEKS. 10
|r| Oct., 1734: Had: Mary. b. 5 May 1735: Tobias, born 7 Nov. 1736, m. Mary
I !■ Hammet 27 Nov., 1760; he d. at Poughkccpsie, N. Y., and his widow m. Thomas
>%-* Jackson. 27 Feb., 1780; (3 chn.) Timothy, b. 18 Sept., 1738, m. d. 11 Apr., 1775:
Nathaniel, b. 6 Apr.. 174<): m. Marv Gunnison 5 May. 1763: Mary. b. 22 Aug..
1741 : Pelatiah. b. 3 Aug.. 1743: m.' Mrs. Abigail (Strout) Eldridge 4 June, 1768;
d. 22 Feb. 1816: resided in Falmouth, Me., and had: Nathaniel. Anthony.
Joshua. Joseph, and Mary: Elizabeth, b. 20 Dec, 1744; m. [oshua Mcndum Jan.,
1764: Nicholas, b. 22 May, 1747; m. Esther Thompson of Vork 1 Nov. 1772; 2d
Mary (Molly) Furbish 12 Oct., 1779. Resided in York, Me. In Am. Rev. and
had Mary, John, Timothy, Samuel and Catherine: Joseph, b. 11 June, 1749:
b. 3 Nov., 1752: Anna, b. 12 Nov., 1759;m.Samuel Remick. 26
Dec. 1780: Hannah, b. 26 Jan., 1761; m. 4 Aug. 1788 Nathaniel Fernald, Rev.
Joseph Litchfield officiated.
Generation 15-8 TOBIAS FERNALD, s. Nathaniel and Anna, b. 25 Aug., 1703, m. ABIGAIL
SMITH, pub. 22 Feb., 1728-9. She was da. of John Smith, s. Capt. John Smith
who was at Portsmo., moved to Wolfboro. and Holdness, N. H., had 5 or 6 chn.
Smith's Pond was named for him. Now called Lake Wentworth. Had: George.
b.SFcb., 1730; m. Eunice Knight: Abigail, b. 1 Jan., 1731: John, b. 23 Feb., 1732-
Mary. b. 27 Jan., 1733: Thomas, b. 9 Jan., 1734: Nathaniel, b. 7 Jan.. 1735:
Renald. b. 19 Jan., 1736: Samuel, b. 11 March, 1737. Mr. Tobias Fernald, d.
1 Oct.. 1737.
Generation 156-7. GEORGE FERNALD, son William and Elizabeth (Cotton) born 1723,
married ELIZABETH LANG, 5 Dec. 1754: married ANNA LEACH, i Jan..
1767 and d. 1774: Had Daniel, b. 19 Nov., 1767: m. Beulah Nichols, 2 Sept., 1780:
2d Mrs. Jane (Marden or Martin) Otis, 3 July, 1822: d. 7 Mar., 1866: Sea Capt.,
12 chn., George, b. 7 June, '77°: Simeon, b. 20 June, 1772: Betsey, b. m. Moses
Griffin, Deny, Anna, b. m. George Griffin Sandown. All resided in N. H. and
chn. b. in Kittery, hence grave doubts of its correctness.
■] g ^ D-
=»a
* * *
^^ JOSEPH FERNALD. S. BENJAMIN AND CATHERINE. B. 1719. M
A\j^ ANNA MOORE. OF YORK, PUB. 1 JAN. 1742 OR 3. A SHIPWRIGHT AND
Tp MEMBER OF "BLUE TRUPE OF HORS" AT BERWICK. 1757. WILL 5
^t^ Apr. 1792, prob. 13 July, 1792: Had: Benjamin, b. 12 Apr. 1744. m. perhaps Sarah
Beaver and Lucy Lewis, a descendant gave records (stolen) to writer of Sarah Beaver m.
Generation 156-7. to Benjamin, son of Deacon John and his wife Sarah Hinckes, b. 1717, that m.
Susie Chadbourne after too late to print. Mary, born 16 May, 1746; m. Bcnj.
Gunnison, 9 Aug. 1770; d. 22 May, 1802: Mark, b. 7 June, 1749; m. Martha
Rackley; 2nd, Eunice Leach: Edward, baptized in Feb. 1755. In Am. Rev. An
Edward of the Brig Venus was captured by British. 1 Jun. 1781. and committed to
Old Mill Prison November, 1781. Edmund Fernald Enlisted in Capt. Tobias' Co.
and Col. Edward Phinney's Reg. in Garrison Fort George, Dec. 8, 1776. Enlisted
May 18. 1776. Discharged Nov. 8. 1776. Served 5 Mos. 20 days. Probably an-
other Fernald. No later record of Edward. Eleanor, b- 5 June 1759; m. Benjamin
Gunnison. 8 June, 1803; d. 18 June, 1820. He was Lieut, in United States Revenue
Service. Joseph, baptized 10 June, 1764.
Generations 156-7. BENJAMIN FERNALD. b.l72l, s. Benjamin that m. Catherine Hammond,
m. SARAH, da. Ebcnczer and Patience (Mendum) FERNALD. 6 March. 1746;
Shipwright; d. 4 Mar. 1798; will probated Mar.: Had: Lucy, b. 25 Mar. 1747;m.
Mr. Holbrook: Josiah, b. 13 July, 1749: Joshua, b. 11 Nov. 1751: Joseph, b- 10
Jan. 1753: Alice, b. 13 Dec. 1754: Robert, b. 16 Aug. 1757: Noah. b. 23 Sept.
1759: 5 of these are not mentioned in father's will. Miriam, b. 12 July, 1762; m.
George Phipps, 20 Dec 1781: Elizabeth, b. 25 Sept. 1764; m. Mr. Crosby ? or
Crosbie: Catherine, b. 2 July, 1769; m.: William Fernald, b. 6 May, 1796; m.
Lucy Fernald. 14 Apr. 1793 : Benjamin, b. 7 Apr. ; m. Eunice Place. 2 Dec 1795.
Generations 159-160. OPPOSITE SOUTH WEST CORNER OF OLD STATE HOUSE AT
BOSTON. MASSACHUSETTS. COPY FROM BIBLE. Printed at 2 Cornhill
Square, 1818. "COPIED FROM TOBIAS FERNALD'S. son of Capt. John Fer-
nald. BIBLE written Records by his Wvfe Elizabeth, da. Mr. John and Martha
Rogers of Ipswich, written by Molly (Mary) Hammond ye wyfe of Mr. William
Furnal, 1820. at ye Towne of Cornish. N. H. Col. TOBIAS FERNALD. twin
brother Captyne John and Elyzabeth Fernald's son Mr. John Fernald was bom at
six o'clock, two hours after John ye 23 Nov. 1742; m. Mary Andrews, da. Jonathan
Jr. and wife Mary. da. Peter Fournier and Anne. da. Mr. Edw. Thompson, b. 30
Mar. 1740; m. 27 Apr. 1756; Chn.: bapt. 24 July, 1757; m. Mary Hammond
(Molly) b. 1759: d. 13 Sept. 1822; he d. 1 SepL 1816; their chn.: John. William.
Daniel. Wm. 2nd. Samuel, Joseph. Thomas. Benjamin, Mary, James, Sarah. (Sally)
(Betsey) Elizabeth. (See ante): Mercy, b. 15 Feb. 1759; m. Mr. Joseph Billings. 3
Jan. 1782: d. Me.: Nathaniel, b. 9 July, 1760; m. Hannah Fernald. 4 Aug. 1788:
Miriam, b. 1 June. 1761; m. Wilham Leighton, 23 Nov. 1777 (12 chn.): Lydia
b. 11 Mar. 1762; m. John Williams, 3 Dec- 1801. Rev. William Briggs officiated.
Nancv. b. 6 Feb. 1763 or 4; m. Mr. John Rogers. 26 Dec. 1790: Lydia Sally, b. 4
Jun. 1764; m. William Mugridge of Newbury. 3 Sept. 1792; [5 chn.] d. 26 Apr.
1848: Elizabeth, b. 25 July. 1765 or 6; m. Mr. William Berry. 12 May.
1842; d. 18 Jan. 1852: Mary Washington White, b. 25 Apr. 1766 or 7; m. Joseph
Hammond 7 Nov. 1784; d. 1857; had Wm. and chn.: Tobias, b. 31 Apr. 1767 or
8; m. Abigail Chambers (and had Sophia Ann. b. 20 Feb. 1807; Lydia. b. 8 Aug.
1808; John. 7 July. 1810; Pelitiah. (M. C.) b. 16 Mar. 1812; Wm. Hinckes. b.
29 July. 1815); both of Portsmo.: SARAH, b. 13 Mar. 1768 or9; m. Samuel Pray,
of Berwick; d. 1848: Archelaus. b. 16 Mar. 1769 or 70; m. Eunice Trefethcn. 24
Jan. 1804; d. 1851: Mark. b. 3 Feb. 1770; m. Mary, da. Bartholomew Berry, of
Portsmouth, 30 Oct. I796,or 7; vn% born Mark, 8 Jun. 1798: m. Ruth, b. July 16,
1805;" He d. 8 Jun. 1880, and Ruth Fernald d. 8 Oct. 1889. aet. 82 and 84 yrs. as
pr. tomb Stone at Cornish. N. H. Peletiah. b. 2 Aug. bapt. 5. 1771 ; m. Sarah, b.
11 Dec. 1774. da John and Mary Fernald; m. 10 Dec. 1797. and had Joanna, b. 11
Dec. 1798: John b. 2 Apr. 1802: Peletiah. b. 19 Aug. 1804: Samuel and Mark, b.
19 Sept. 1806." This Bible Record from preponderance of evidence author accepts.
■a ^ D-
* *
/O^HOOSE AS WE MAY GOOD OR EVIL, RIGHT OR WRONG, HAPPINESS
/ J OR MISERY. TRUTH CAN NEVER DIE. MY CHOICE IS THAT BIBLE
1 I IN ITS ANCIENT iflGYPTIAN THAT THE CO-EXISTANT HEBREWS DID
^^^^ faithfully copy and will stand forever, notwithstanding the craft have erroneously trans-
lated it to suit their desires and forget to
"Remember the days of old, "Tell ye your children of it.
Consider the years of many generations: And let your children tell their children.
Ask thy father, and he will show thee: And their children another generation."
Thy elders, and they will teach thee." — Joel 1. 3.
— Deut. xxxii. 7.
I have given all these three records of my ancestor's son. Col. Tobias Fcrnald to teach children
to carefully scan and reflect on all writings, appreciate the arduous duty of the faithful genealogist,
especially when there has been a threat, I heard it to injure the family as much as possible for attempt-
ing to bring criminals of high degrees (the boasted foes of, gcdly nations that I will aid, for the good
of all) to justice. The Bible unchanged is right. Our long line of Genealogy is CORRECT to the
best of my knowledge and belief. Without any aspersions on the officials of Towns ajid Cities, but
direct charges vs. those well known who boasted of winning an unjust against a just cause, threatened
to involve America and England in war, succeeded in Russia, Spain, and tried it in wise poHte France,
Italy, and were defeated. Yet still threatened, hoping to involve Japan to their injury, from subtile
cabals and conspiracy by their tools reaching forth over earth to be understood by wise Germany, the
brave and honest learned nation who proteaed my foremother Annietta de Coligny wife of slain Dr.
John Femel, made Martyrs of our Presidents, good king Humbert of Italy, Wife, P. D. Fernel saved
life of Dr. Jean Fernel that has 63,000 descendants in U. S. alone and ten times as large or more in
number at Europe all from Ava and Adam, whose descendants people China the peaceable. Turkey
the warriors that practice all they preach; Portugal the friendly, and Austria, who by some wise laws
teach wisdom we do well to copy: dispensing full impartial justice to men, thus preventing continued
slaughter of those God has placed in authority. GOD the Creator who made AVA and ADAM after
his image and pronounced his work "very good" made the most perfect specimens of mankind for
Not out of weakness rose their gradual frame. As in forms excelling, so in mind
Perfect from their Creator's hands they came. The parents of men transcended all mankind.
Generation 1S6-7. TOBIAS FERNALD m. LUCY (Lewis?) Atkinson, da. Samuel Sr., and sister
Samuel Jr., who had 3 sons and 3 das. (1790, at Boscewen Town, N. H.,) 19 May,
1748. He was son of Nathaniel and b. 1723 and d. 4 Mar., 1777; had: Lucy, b.
9 Apr., 1749: m. Joel Haley 29 May, 1768; d. 16 Aug., 1821; Joshua.b. 9 Mar.
1753; m. Lucy Wingate, 2d Mrs. Hannah Snow; d. 11 Jan. 1830. Resided in
Eaton, N. H., and Limerick, Me. Ensign in American Revolution: Chn. Pen-
inah, Elizabeth, Lydia, Edmund, Diadema and Simeon: Joel, bapt. 13 Apr., 1755;
d. y. Eunice, b. 10? Mar., 1756, m. James Hutchings 2 June, 1774, 2d Joseph
Wilson 15 Dec., 1784; d. 25 Mai., 1830: Edmund, b. 5 Sept., 1757, m. Polly
29 May, 1787. At American Revolution:
Generation 154-5-6-7-8. JOEL (FRUNALD, Census, 1790) FURNALD. s. Hercules, m. Sarah
Hicks, 2, m. Susanna; s. Samuel, s. THOMAS and wife TEMPERANCE WASH-
INGTON, s. Dr. Renald and Wife Joanna Warburton, b. 13 Feb., 1745. m.
ELIZABETH PETERS, da. 1st Amos Peters of Warren Town deceased before
1790 and had 5 or 6 das. He was Blacksmith in Am. Rev. and m. on or about
1767: had:
Simon, b. 13 Aug., 1768: m. Elizabeth Lowe of York, pub. 8 Nov., 1794. He
resided in York. Hannah, b. 16 Jan., 1770: Sally, b. 20 Oa., 1771: d. 3 Aug.,
1793: Lydia, b. 14 Jun. 1774: Ruth, b. 23 Feb. 1776: m. Daniel Farely of
Chariestown. Mass., 21 Nov., 1805: Susanna, b. 9 Feb., 1777: m. William Litch-
field 27 Sept., 1799, d. a. 1856 at Lowell, Mass.; 9 chn., Joel, h. 27 June, 1782,
m. Eleanor Blaisdell, 17 June, 1805. Residence Frankfort, Me.: 5 chn. Stephen
Fernald was born on the eighteenth of
w
^CTOBER, 1784; MARRIED ALICE CARTER, 27 NOVEMBER, 1806: JOSIAH,
BORN 20 OCTOBER. 1786; MARRIED PENELOPE OAKMAN, 18 JUNE, 1809;
DIED 13 SEPTEMBER, 1865; RESIDED IN FRANKFORT, NOW CALLED
Winterport, Maine; 12 children: Dorcas, b. 18 Aug. 1788; m. Francis Brewer, lS__Jun.
1817; 2nd, Elihu Dole, about 1822.
Generations 1S6-7. WILLIAM FERNALD, s. Nathaniel and Margaret, b. 1739; m. ABIGAIL,
da. Thomas and Mary (Bartlett) DENNET, 28 Jun. 1763; Farmer; d. 29 Sept. 1823,
and Wife, b. 28 Apr. 1741; d. 5 Apr. 1818; Had— Thomas Dennett Fernald, b. 29 Feb.
1764; m.Pamelia Jones, 13 Sept. 1787; 2nd, Hannah Goodrich, 16 Oct. 1794; d. 8 Jun.
1834; resided in Berwick, Me-; Had — Dorothy, Thomas, John, Hannah, Sally, Nath-
aniel, Daniel, Permelia, Abigail, William: Mary, b. Aug. 1766; m. Richard Wilson, 16
July, 1791: Abigail, b. 24 May, 1769; d. 16 Dec 1800: Margaret, b. 14 Nov. 1771; m.
Tappan Hurd of Berwick, and d. 27 July, 1844: Sarah, b. 12 Feb. 1774: Eleana, b. 16
Oct. 1776; d. y. and Eleana, b. 13 Nov. 1779; m. Robert Fernald of Shapleigh, Me., 2
Jun. 1822: William, b. 3 Feb. 1784; m. Mary Souther, of Haverhill; pub. 19 Aug. 1804,
at Charlestown, Mass. ; 2nd, Sarah Carlton, 29 |ulv, 1806, and resided in Chariestown,
Mass.; Had— William B., Marv A., Guv C, Sarah C, and Abigail D. : Elizabeth, b.
Jan. 1786; m. Rev. George Hurd of North Berwick, 30 Nov. 1820. Census, 1790, no
Fernalds in Massachusetts Recorded: and onlv two states, Maine and New Hampshire.
Generations 157-8. EBENEZER FERNALD, s. Ebenezer and Patience, his wife. b. 27 Mar.
1729; m. SARAH LEWIS, 4 Oct. 1753, b. 3 lun". 1730; He d. 9 (un. 1807; Had-
John, b. and d 1754: Ebenezer, b. 19 Aug. 1757; d. 4 July, 1781 : David, b. 2 Jan. 1760;
m. Esther Tucker Leach: Eunice, b. 2 Apr. 1764; m. Thomas Brown, 3 Sept. 17S8:
Miriam, b. 2 |an. 1767; m. Simeon Fernald, 6 )uly, 1794; d. 8 Apr. 184^): William, b.
15 Mav. 1771; d. 20 Oct. 1794: Sarah, b. 22 July, 1774; m. John Brown. 21 June, 1795:
Peter, b. 8 Nov. 1777; d. 26 Sept. 1786.
Generations 157-8. SIMEON FERNALD, b. 28 Sept. i738; brother of above; m. MARGERY
GUNNISON.da. Elihu and wife, (Emerson) b. 4 Nov. 1763. He d. 6 Feb. 1780: Had—
Amos, bapt. 2 Dec. 1764; m. Lvdia Treadwell, 25 Dec. 1791; d. 9 May, 1830. Resided
at Portsmouth. Had— Amos, Lvdia, Isabella: Mary, m. William Blunt, Sept. 1786;d.
4 Sept. 1859, at Portland, Me.: Dorothv, bapt. 17 Sept. 1769; m. ? Nathaniel Melcher,
Nov. 1792: Miriam, b. 28 July, 1772; m. Henr>' Elkins Cotton, 27 Oct. 1798; d. 15 Dec.
1828: Elizabeth, b. ; m. Woodbury Tucker. 4 Nov. 1797: Margery, b. 8 Apr.
1779; d. 11 Mar. 1847.
Generations 157-8. DENNIS FERNALD, s. Capt. Tobias and Marv, b. 1725; m. 9 Oct. 1750,
SARAH, da. CHARLES and SARAH FROST; Farmer; d. 2 Aug. 1805, and wife d.
20 Aug. 1804, St. 74: Had— Dennis, b. 24 Jun. 1752; d. 5 Apr. 1755: ANDREW
PEPPERELL, b. 26 Feb. 1758; m. Martha Shapleigh: Charles, b. 1 Feb. 1755; d. 4
Feb. 1778: Dennis, b. 29 Sept. 1757; m. Elizabeth Stacy, 24 Aug. 1780: Miriam, b. 12
Dec. 1760?: Sarah, b. 24 Dec. 1763; m. James Johnson, 10 Oct. 1784: Molly, b. 26
Jan. 1766; m. Ralph Tristram Jordan, Esq., Pepperelboro Town, 1790, with 6chn., m.
Octl, 1789, Tristram, Jr. s preceeding and had — Tristram, Abigail; shed. 18 Sept. 1863:
Robert, b. 6 Mar. 1768; m. Betsey Ferguson, 13 Nov. 1791; Robert, Frederick, Bell,
James, Sally, Benjamin Johnson and Betsey: Margerv', b. 24 Jun. 1770: U. S. Census,
1790, gives Capt. Dennis Fernald, Sr., 1 son, 1 da. and slave; Dennis Fernald, Jr., 2
sons and 2 das., the sons under 16 years of age
Generations 157-8. LIEUT. COL. TOBIAS' FERNALD, s. Capt. Tobias Fernald, b. 1 Feb.1743;
m. DORCAS, da. Capt. lohn and Harriet McINTIRE, and d. 15 Aug. 1784: Had—
Harriet, b. 22 Nov. 1781; d. 1829: Juliet, b. 12 May, 1783; m. Col. Daniel Lane, 21
Jan. 1808; d, 27 Feb. 1829; 4 children.
Generations 157-8. ELEAZAR. bro. of above, b. 1746; m. 31 Jan. 1771, MARGERY, oldest da.
of Nathaniel STAPLES, of Cape Elizabeth, and his wife, Margery; Farmer; d. 1823, at
Ossipee, N. H. His wife, b. 18 Nov. 1747; d. 1826. Had— Tobias, b. 8 Nov. 1771;
§
m. Sally Pray, Lebanon, N. H., 2 Aug. 1792; d. 3 July, 1849: Had— Joanna, Dorothy,
Joseph, Mark, Charles, Nathaniel, John Ycaton, Abigail and Samuel Pray Fernald. He
resided at North Berwick, Me. and Ossipee, N. H.: Nathaniel, b. 20 Oa. 1773; m.
Pollv : Mary, b. 20 Feb. 1775; d. 28 Jan. 1776: Elliott, b. 2 Mar- 1778; m. Sally
Mudget, 31 Jan. 1811; d. 16 Jun. 1858: Had— Judith, Dorothy, Sarah and Eliott: He
resided and Nathaniel at Parsonfield, Me.: Margery, b. 6 Jun. 1780; m. Levi Pray, of
Lebanon; d. in Paris, Me.: Joanna, b. 25 Sept. 1782; m. Pclatiah Pray, 2 Dec. 1800.
317
« ^ ^ ^ -D-
0^/^ JOSIAH OR JOSHUA FERNALD, S. JOHN AND MARGARET. S. AR-
^M CHELAUS AND SARAH (DA. REV. GEORGE HICKS.) S. THOMAS AND
^1 I WIFE. TEMPERANCE WASHINGTON. M. ELIZABETH WHITE. DA.
^m^ Dca. Joshua White, b. 16 Apr. 1740; m. 18 Nov. 1764. and d. 2 Nov. 1816: He d. 6
Dec. 1816. as from Records of Elder Mark Fcmald: Had: Mary White, b. 25 Apr.
Generations 157-8. 1766: John. b. 7 Feb. 1769; m. M. B. G. Mitchel; d. Nov. 12. 1793: Peletiah.
b. 5 Aug. 1771; m. Sarah Fernald. 1798; d. 12 Oct. 1849: m. is again given as 10
Dec. 1797: Elizabeth, b. 19 Jan. 1777; d. 1854, s. p.: Joshua, b. 16 May. 1781; d.
27 Sept. 1849. s. p.: Mark. b. 9 Mar. 1784; m. Miss Jane Stevens. 16 Oct. 1825;
2nd, Mrs. Emily St. A. Shcpard. widow of Elder Mark Shepard. and da. of
Mr. Samuel Badger, of Decrfield, N. H. Elder Mark Fernald was Ordained To
the Sacred Ministry, Sept. 20. 1809. The three last children were boro in the
Manor House of Sir William Pepperrill and Rev. Mark Fernald was chosen Pastor of
Kittery Church in 1815 and continued to 1850. By first wife he had four sons d.y.,
and a da. Elizabeth lane. b. 21 Mar. 1830.. His first wife d. 19 Nov. 1848. He
d. 30 Dec. 1851. beloved by all his good friends and relatives. He also was a Fer-
nald Family Genealogist and he gave the name of Mrs. "Elizabeth Easnvick."
Copied from Tomb Stone in Portsmouth Navy Yard. "Here lyes the body of Eliz-
abeth Eastwick wife to Stephen Eastwick Age 31, 2 Mos. & 20 Days." That I
visited and read on it.
Generations 157-8. JOHN FERNALD. the Mariner, b. 20 Feb. 1750. s. of John and Margaret
Fernald. eldest da. of Nathaniel and Lucy Atkinson, da. Samuel, m. Mary, da.
Tobias and Lucy Fernald, 25 Nov. 1772: Had: Sarah, b. 15 May, 1774; m. Pele-
tiah Fernald. 10 Dec. 1797; d. 20 Jun. 1855: Abigail, b. 1778; d. 14 Aug. 1852:
Mary, b. 1779; d. 21 Aug. 1863: Samuel, b. : Margaret, b. 1783;
d. 6 Sept. 1854: Edmund, b. ; Mark. b. ; m. - ;
d. 1841: John. b. ; m. Rhoda Maria Bunker, of York. pub. 5 Apr. 1825:
Had: Mark Harris. Nancy Maria. Mary: his relict m. Henry Abbott. 8 Nov. 1835.
Generation 159. JOHN FERNALD. b. 1737, s. Tames and Hannah, da. John and Hannah(Fogg)
Rogers) s. of Deacon John Fernald and wife Sarah Hinckes, s. John and wife Mary
Spinney, s. Thomas and wife Temperance Washington, s. Dr. Renald Fernald and
wife Joanna Warburton; married 17 Apr. 1759, Sarah, da. Capt. William and Mar-
gery (Pepperell) Wentworth. He was a soldier in the French and Indian Wars as
was his forefather Thomas on whose knife with Turkish Hieroglyphics on blade and
bone handle is cut the genealogical line down to John Fernald who m. Mary Savage.
He d. 16 May 1835 and wife b. 24 Oct. 1740. d. 24 May 1784. after the death of
Sarah he may have been the John Fernald who m. a da. of Capt. John Fernald and
wife Elizabeth Rogers of Ipswich, or even the John W. Fernald. which last is not
probable, but that two das. m. two cousins, he is probably the "Old John Fernald"
referred to in some Cotton records. Mr. John Fernald d. 14 Oct. 1836, aet. 87, in
Wolfborough. N. H. Christian Register Oct. 29. 1836. Henry W. Fernald, B. P.O.
Their descendants were: William Wentworth, b. 13 Oct. 1760; m. Waite Salisbury :
Samuel, b. 12 May 1762; m. Betsey Fernald. 11 Apr. 1825: Sally, b. 4 Jun. 1764.
was probably the da. of Lt. Col. Tobias Fernald. s. Capt. John and Elizabeth (See
Bible Records and U. S. Census of 1790.): Betsey, b. 13 Dec. 1765; d. 18 Sept.
1820: Mary. b. 30 Mar. 1767; m. Theodore A. Cutts, 25 Nov. 1804; d. 14 Apr.
1853; had chn.: James, b. 1. Aug. 1770; m. Mchitable York of Shaplcigh. 29 Dec
1799; d. 9 Feb. 1819. Resided at West Newfield. Me. Had: Sarah W. ("Wash-
ington") Martha, Mary. Keziah, Mehitable and Betsey. She was sd. to m. 2nd
Joseph Burbank. 15 July. 1821: John. b. 14 Jun. 1776; m. Olive Moore, 17 Jun.
1799; d. 20 May 1837. Resided in Norwich, Conn. Had: Benjamin M-, John
and Olive: Hannah, b. 11 Aug. 1777; m. Benjamin Fernald. 12 Feb. 1800; d- 11
Nov. 1815.
Generations 159-160. JAMES FERNALD. pub. m. 2 Oct. 1762. ABIGAIL, da. William and Mar-
gery (Pepperell) Wentworth. b. 1744; d. 1763 and was s. of James and Hannah
(Rogers), s- Dea. John and Sarah (Hinckes). s. John and Mary (Spynie or Spinney
as now spelt) s- Thomas and Temperance (Washington): Had: Hannah, b. 1763;
m. Nathaniel Fernald. 1788; d. 1834.
ij o ^^ n-
318
■° * * *
Generation 157-8.
CAPTAIN MARK FERNALD. B. 6 MAY, 1751; S. JAMES AND MARY
tI (MENDUM) M. MARY. DA. CAPT. JOHN SHAPLE'iGH AND DORCAS
^^^ (LITTLEFIELD): HE D. 1 JULY. 1818. AND WIFE DIED 27 AUGUST,
1820. AGED 70 YRS.: HAD JAMES, B. 17 DEC. 1774; D. 18 JAN. 1775:
Dorcas, b. 17 Oct. 1777; m. Capt. John Dcnnet. 19 Nov., 1807: Mary, b. 11
Sept. 1779; m. Ebcnezcr Goodwin. 17 Feb. 1807: Mark. b. 22 July. 1782; m.
Margery Cutis. 6 March, 1807: Alice, b. 12 Apr.. 1785; m. Moses Goodwin, 19
Apr. 1809; 5 chn.: Isabella b. 23 Apr. 1788; m. Richard Rogers. 28 Jan. 1813:
Betsey, b. 13 June, 1792; m. John Wcntworth, 13 Nov., 1819; 2nd. James
Wilson; d. Apr. 1868. Occupation Blacksmith, sd. to have m. Dorcas.
Generations 157-8. BENJAMIN FERNALD. b. 1756; m. LUCY COTTLE, 4 Nov. 1777. (2nd
or another Benjamin, )m. Mary Mellen, of Portsmouth. He d. 3 Dec. 1812:
Had: Charles, b. d. 1778: Samuel, bom 9 Dec. 1779. m. Mercy Rogers, of York,
pub. I Nov. 1810: Mary. b. 9 Sept. 1781; m. John Hammond, 29 Dec. 1802;d.
19 Sept. 1856: Ann Maria, b. 20 Mar. 1809: Sarah Mellen or Marion, b. 16 Aug.
1810; m. Reuben WincheU, of Limerick. Me.; 10 chn.: GEORGE WASH-
INGTON FERNALD. b. 29 Scot. 1811; m. Elizabeth W. Shapleigh, 28 Nov.
1847: Another record gives 5 chn. and Washington Fernald. Benjamin the
father, s. James, «. James, «. John and wife. Sarah (Hinckes; Fernald.
Generations 160-1. WILLIAM FERNALD, b. 1732; s. William, s. Thomas, s. John and Mary
(Spinnev) ». THOMAS and TEMPERANCE WASHINGTON FERNALD
m. Abigail, da. of Samuel and Mary (Spinney)(?Toby) 19 Apr. 1752; 2d, MARY
da. ROBERT STAPLES. 10 Dec. 1761; Carpenter; Had: Eleanor, b. 25 May,
1752 or 3; m. Mark Hanscom. 6 Feb. 1773; 2nd, William Wooster. b. of Sullivan
Town, Hancock Town, Hancock Co., eldest «. of Wm. W.. 27 Sept. 1802; d.
1853: William, b. 28 April, 17S5. m. probably the Mary Hammond recorded in
Old Kittery, unless of same name as m. Son of Lt. Col. Tobias Fernald's, William,
b. 1757; m. Molly, b. 1759 from preponderance of evidence in writer's possession
this gives the Col. Tobias William that Mr. Joseph Fernald declared was in the
Revolution with grave doubt of first da. data and family that throughout the whole
of Old Kittery Fernald families should be only accepted as proved by unchanged
wills (and records that from writer have been repeatedly stolen) and Mr. Henry
Fernald conforms in declaring incorrect — for truth only we labor. Susanna, b.
29 June, 1756; m. Miles Ford, of Clinton, Me., who as "Mils ford" with wife
and da. appears in Waterborough, York Co. in U. S. Census, 1790. Chn. by
MARY, da. ROBERT STAPLES who has four sons and 3 das. at Little Ossi-
pee Town, U. S. C. 1790, and wife: Had Abigail, b. 1762; m. John Tcthly about
1785; 1 da. 1790: Mary, b. 13 Mar. 1765; m. Joseph Hammond, Kittery. (3 das.
1790) 7 Nov. 1784; 6 chn.: James, b. 24 Apr. 1769; m. Susan Remick, 16 Jan.
1792 (only one Deacon James Fernald is found 1790 U. 8. C. in Maine, none in
N. H.) Znd. Mrs. Nanqr C (Goodwin) Wakcham. 24 Dec. 1817; d. 11 Aug.
1854; 14 chn.: Hannah, b. 24 Apr. -1769; d. 18 Oct. 1779: Sarah, b. 25 Apr.
1774. m. Nchcmiah Green. 12 Apr. 1807; d. 9 July, 1860: Lydia.b. 23 Jun.1778;
m. Josiah Remick. 6 Sept. 1801; d. 26 Nov. 1866.
Generation 157. TOBIAS FERNALD. s. Nathaniel, s. Samuel, s. Dr. Renald. m. ABIGAIL
SMITH, pub. 22 Feb. 1728. da. John Smith 3 of Durham Town, Strafford Co.
N. H. (The line of Smiths are to 1790 from Sir Clement Smith, m. Dorothy, da.
Sir John Seymour and Margery, da. Sir Henry Wentworth, who was an Ambas-
sador to Spain, s. Sir John Smythe, m. Agnes Charnock. and had Thomas, John,
George and others. Sd. George, b : d. 1597; m. Maria, da. Francis J.
Fcrnel, s. Dr. Jean Fernel. Sd. Maria, b. 10 Jun. 1559; m. 1 January, 1578, Sir
Thomas John George Smith, and had Capt. John Smith, b. at Willoughby. Co.
V. Lincolnshire. Eng. ; d. at London, 21 Jun. 1631, neglected, drew a map of New
Eng., went to Me. 1607, ret., and came over in 1614, he m. had William d. in
Eng. buts. Joseph is recorded as of Hampton who had s. John, b. 9 Jan. 1669;
married 1694. Susana. daughter Benjamin. Jr. of Dover; had John, Jr. bom 1695.
] g ^^ g
Q» -^ D pQp e^ f4=.
M
HAD JOHN 3D WHO MARRIED AND HAD JOHN 4TH THE FATHER
OF ABIGAIL. THE WIFE OF TOBIAS IFERNALD. A COLONEL. AFORE-
SAID DIED ^T. 80 YEARS: M. DA. JOHN SMITH JR.: JOSEPH. BORN 1701:
Samuel. Ebcnezcr a younger brother of Benjamin and Winthrope. Elijah Home said
that Captain John Smith, who was probably either John Jr. or 3rd, built a Log Cabin
on Stamp Act Island and hunted from there and its vicinity for beaver and other
game. The Log Cabin was utilized as the residence of a deserter in the American
Revolution. I have repeatedly seen its ruins. Lake Wentworth was first named
Smith's Pond in honor of Captain John Smith, as was the Isle of Shoals, both names
taken from them (thus the neglected to be righteously honored Smiths): above
TOBIAS and ABIGAIL (SMITH) FERNALD had George, b. 8 Feb 1729 or 30;
m. Eunice Knight, 6 Dec. 1753, by Rev. John Ncwmarch, and I find nine chil-
dren in a record given to him, viz.: George, Abigail, John, Msfry, 1 homas,
Nathaniel. Rcnald, Samuel and Tobias, who, after Dugdale, I "ghess" if data is
discovered destroyed by vandals, will reduce some of the numerous marriages to a
single person, unnecessary, to prove our ancient family of Turkish honorable descent.
Three colored inks have been found in one family record. Tobias, above, born 13
April, 1754; married Elizabeth Mitchcl, 28 April, 1776. Rev. Benjamin Stephens
officiated.
Generation 158. GEORGE FERNALD, son of above, born in lawful wedlock, 1729, married
EUNICE KNIGHT, 6 December, 1753; had George, born 3 November, 1755;
married : Abigail, born 26 July, 1759; married Joseph Brooks, 8 December,
1776. and died: William, born 1761; married : Tobias, born 1 April, 1757;
died small pox. unmarried.
Generation 158. TOBIAS FERNALD. born 1754; married ELIZABETH MITCHEL. 28 April,
1776. Rev. Benjamin Stephens officiated. In American Revolution son Tobias
killed on Constitution; married Abigail Chambers: Had : Sophia Ann: Lydia Frances:
John: Pelatiah (M. C.): William: Had descendants: George, bom 30 January,
1777 or 8: Richard More, born 24 March, 1780 or 1: Tobias, born 8 September.
1782 or 3 : John, born 1 1 November, 1785 : James M., born 22 August, 1788 : Eunice,
born 1 December, 1791. He is credited with 5 sons by United States First Census,
1790. What has become of the Records sent to Rev. O. H. Fcrnald for Professor
H. T. Fcrnald with those of Attorney Fernald that I requested a loan of to copy
after their refusal to print to honor state and government and the breaking of his
promise to enlist with me in the next war. which arc always righteous of "Uncle
Sam." Attempts were made from tools that aided the miscarriage of justice in the
court of Judge Charles S. Lilley, notwithstanding six saw crime, and one honorable
gentleman interrupted the court by a charge of then "perjury" that was reported to
me as bought up for $50,000: subornation of perjury: attempted to get me on the
"Maine" before it was to be blown up, well known in Boston, and to make war
by the fanatics, I fought. How my promise was kept the following shows; —
"Address Bureau of Navigation Navy Department,
and Refer to No. ( „ , I WASHINGTON. D. C.
L. D. 1 ^*^'- ] Fcbraary 24, 1898.
91165
SIR: — The Bureau acknowledges the receipt of your letter of the 1 8th instant, vol-
unteering your services as Surgeon in the Navy in case of war with a foreign country,
and informs you that the same has been placed on file and will receive due consider-
ation. Respectfully,
Dr. C. A. Fernald, S. W. Dickins,
1483 Washington Street, Acting Chief of Bureau.
Boston, Massachusetts.
Tobias Fcrnald, wounded, withdrew his amputated arm from surgeon, waved
it in air, joining his comrades shouts for victory in the War of 1812.
320
m
t * *
1
ORE OF 7 ATTEMPTS TO GET TO THE FRONT, ONE SENT TO
CHARLESTOWN NAVY YARD WITH NEPHEWS EDWARD EVERITT I
DIXON'S ACCOMPANYING NAME THAT WAS PERSECUTED FOR
seeing and testifying to crime that a high djgniury of church might escape an ante-
mortem deposition of capital crime, that Boston PoHce were too cowardly to arrest, pre-
venting sixteen plus 38 more slain, and with a righteous claim paid, gives debt of
f 126,000,000 city of Boston, that boasted of having "the power and" would "soon
the money"! Dupes? 62,000,000 people being enslaved.
My native state protects its children.
"STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE"
"Adjutant General's Office."
"Concord. May 31, 1908."
"Dr. C. A. Fcrnald. 1483 Washington St.,
Boston, Mass.
Dear Sir:
By direction of Governor Ramsdell I have the lionor to acknowledge
receipt of your letter of May 26th to him, and to express his thanks and apprecia-
tion of your patriotic offer, which has-been placed on 61e.
A. D. Ayling.
Adjutant General.
A. D. A. F."
When any well bodied man refuses after or before promise to fight for his
Country and deliberately forces his attenuated blood other relatives into a line cut-
ting out a loyal class, denying "authenticity" in print of facts that he was at cost of
writer requested to come and investigate the old true documents in my safe and
Bible Records, which are acknowledged by officials representing 1, 411, 171, 381
people and the descendants of 500,000 of the ancestors of General George Washing-
ton's ancestors in America, is it not time that he should select a country where the
belief is taught to "do evil" which I leave to the experts of all nations trustingly to
determine and settle truly.
OUR LINE IS CORRECT DESPITE THE MACHINATIONS BRIB-
ERY, FORGERIES NUMEROUS I HAVE SEEN. PERJURIES, CRIMES
OF QUADRUPLE ALCOHOLIC, SOCIAL MALPRACTICE RING
HERETOFORE SET FORTH FOR NATION'S SAFETY.
Generation 159. TIMOTHY FERNALD. b. 1738, s. of Nathaniel and Mary, m. ELEANOR
ADAMS 10 May 1764, da- John, s. John, s. of Christopher, die Emigrant, and peti-
tioned for land 1644 in Mass. widi Henry, Sr. & Jr. & Thomas with Samuel
Adams. Had Nathaniel Femald, m- Hannah Spinney and had Wm. D. Femald.
Generation 154-5-6-7-8. Renald, s. Samuel, s. Nathaniel, s. TIMOTHY FERNALD, b. a. 1745.
m. MIRIAM, da. Ebenezar and Patience <Mendum) Femald, 17 Oct., 1762-3;
Had: Sally, b. 13 Dec.. 1764, m. Nathaniel Hanscom: 12 June. 1791. Had chn.
Meriam. b- 28 Feb.. 1766, m. Joshua Small of Limington. Me , 30 Oct., 1800.
probably moved from Little Ossipee: Polly, b. 8 Apr.. 1771. d. 19 May. 1796 and
may or may not have been the Margeret of Kittery. widow, with one son and two
das. from a m. to another Fernald.
TIMOTHY FERNALD m. PATIENCE, da. Jonathan and Rachel (Powers)
MENDUM 17 Oct.. 1770; Had Susanna, b. 14 July, 1772; d. 14 Dec., 1798; m.
Tryon who d. credited with two sons and 1 daughter and d. 1798; Hannah, b. 11
Jiin., 1774. m. Henry or Joshua Small of Me.. 15 Feb.. 1819. probably son of
Henry of Little Ossipee.
■Q ^ D-
321
IE'
Generation 158.
Generation 159.
NATHANIEL FERNALD, B. 1740, S. NATHANIEL. S. NATHANIEL,
MAR. ANNA ALLEN; SON OF CAPTAIN WILLIAM OR SAMUEL
THE SHIPWRIGHT. SON DR RENALD AND WIFE JOANNA
Warburton; married 5 May, 1763 MARY GUNNISON. Dealer in Shoes.
Did not live in Kittcry or Berwick, proof U. S. C. 1790, pp. 57 and 61 nor can I
find him recorded in either Maine, New Hampshire or Mass. Census. The de-
scendants ascribed to them: Nathaniel, born ; died February,
1806; married "Sarah Googin," children, Mark, David, Samuel, Nathaniel and
two "perhaps" Sarah and Mary: John, born , married Betsey
Carvill, 2nd Betsey Rich, pub. to him or another John, 9 December, 1810, said
to reside in Saco and "Poland, Me.," children Hannah, Mary, Joseph, Eunice,
Nathaniel, Hope and Sarah (Sally): Joseph Gunnison, born 22 Scpiembcr, 1770,
married Hope Cobb, died 3 March. 1849. Resided in Portland, children, Mary,
Benjamin Cobb, Ann, Samuel Rand and James Edward. Timothy, born 5
May, 1777, married Betsey Whiting Ray 1799, died 14 August, 1834, resided in
Otisficld, Me. Children, Miriam, Otis, Betsey, Eli, Mary, Emily, John Colby
and Albert Lewis. Another child is given, that belongs to Col. Tobias Fcrnald
and his name is MARK, grandson Captain John Fernald and his Wife Elizabeth
(Rogers of Ipswich.) Cup found in Eng. declares Christianity taught 69 A. D.
BENJAMIN FERNALD, son Deacon John Fernald and wife Sarah (Hinckcs),
son Dr. John and wife Mary (Spinney), son Thomas and wife TEMPERANCE
WASHINGTON FERNALD was born 2 April, 1717, married SUSAN (Susie)
LUCINDA (Lucy) CHADBOURNE 21 November, 1743. Had: MARK,
born 1 January, 1745; married ; had children born at
Portsmouth. Shot accidentally or intentionally on Hancock Wharf at Boston,
May 7 and died 14 May, 1779. In American Revolution.
Annulus, b. 10 Feb. 174^, married. In American Revolution. Died.
Benjamin, born 29 April, 1748, married "probably Sarah Beaver." In American
Revolution. Died 12 November, 1812.
Sarah Hinckes Fernald, born 12 March, 1750, married ; died
From courtesy of Recorder at Old Court House and Officials at Historical Rooms,
Beacon Street, I am indebted for replacement of stolen Records relative to Cap-
tain MARK FERNALD, givcth.
CONTINENTAL JOURNAL, May 7, 1779: Item as follows: —
"The following melancholy accident happened on Saturday afternoon last: As
Captain Mark Fernald of Portsmouth was standing on Hancock Wharf, he re-
ceived a musket-ball in his shoulder which broke his collar-bone and otherwise
wounded him in such a manner that it is said his life is despaired of. The ball
was from the Warren Frigate, and was aimed at a boat that was coming up the
river, under pretence of her not showing proper respect for the Continental flag
then displayed on board of the Commodore. The shot was fired by the boat-
swain, who was said to be the principal officer then on board."
20 May, 1779 Continental Journal "On Friday Evening last, died here of the
wound he received as mentioned in this paper of the 7th inst., CAPTAIN
MARK FERNALD of Portsmouth. A worthy, honest man."
BENJAMIN FERNALD if "Old Kittery" (book of Mr. Stackpolc) be true,
the son of above Deacon John and Sarah, born 1748, married Sarah, daughter
John and Sarah BEAVER, 1765-6, born 28 February, 1745 at Boston, died 12
May, 1801. He died 12 November, 1812. Served in American Revolution.
Had descendants. Catherine, baptized 4 January, 1767, married Captain
Ephr^im Keen 19 February, 1800, 2d, Samuel Fernald, 5 February, 1821; died
August, 1828: Sarah, baptized 3 February, 1771: Simon, baptized 22 September,
1771, married Miriam Fernald 6 July. 1794: Benjamin, baptized 6 August, 1775:
married Hannah Fernald, 12 February, 1800: Mark, married New York Lady
and died at New York. Anna, baptized 8 March, 1780; married Thomas
Dennet 4 April, 1805: Edward, baptized 3 March, 1782: Joseph baptized 8
March, 1784, died young. Joanna Beaver, baptized 20 October, 1785, d. of small-
pox. Fanny, baptized 24 May, 1788, married John Shute of Portsmouth, 1811.
"Ghcss" s. John of Concord, N.H.,1790:Mehitable, m.Iosiali Keen, 2d Ebcnezar
Spinney. Milton says in Alfred's time Justice not only flourished but triumphed.
322
=° ♦ + *
m
w
ARK FERNALD, B. 7 |UN. 1749. S. JOSEPH AND ANNA. S. BENJAMIN
AND CATHERINE. S. CAPT. WILLIAM. S. DR. RENALD AND WIFE
JOANNA WARBURTON. M. MARTHA RACKLEY. 2 JAN. 1773; 2ND.
Eunice Leach. 7 Oct. 1804. He was Sea Capt.. d. 9 Oct. 1824: Martha, b. S Feb.l7S3;
d. 18 Mar. 1803: Eunice, b. 28 Oct. 1761; d. S Feb. 1844. Descendants— Temperance,
b. 28 Mar. 1774; m. Eastwick Pray: Mark, b. 1779; d. y.: William, b. 3 Dec. 1780;
Generation 159. d. lOJun. 1815, in Danmoor Prison, Eng. I have his or another William Fcrnald's
canteen that he used in the War of 1812-13: Martha, b. 24 Nov. 1783; m. Benj. Jenkins.
4 Jan. 1804: Joseph, b. 27 Mar. 1786; d. 20 Aug. 1805. at Damarara: Molly, b. 25 Mar.
1788; m. Samuel Laighton, of Portsmouth; d. 1 Mar. 1834: Phebe, b. 18 Sept. 1790;
d. 8 July, 1855.
Generation 159. WILLIAM FERNALD, b. : m. 14 Apr. 1793. LUCY, b. 1771, da. JON-
ATHAN and SARAH FERNALD, s. Ebenezcr. s. Capt. William, s. Dr. Rcnald; he
d. 17 Apr. 1828. A Fisherman. Further and date of birth, I cannot find to present time.
Prob. s. George and Eunice (Knight) b. a. 1761; Had— Noah, b. 23 May, 1794; m.
Lydia S. Brown, 15 Apr. 1831. Resided in Saugus, Mass. Had — Albert H., Angelinc
and Ammi C. : Robert Phipps, b. 23 July, 1796; m. Mrs. Eunice (Brown) Sullivan:
Benjamin, b. 23 Aug. 1798; m. Julia Clark. 17 July. 1825: Mariam. b. 18 Jan. 1801:
Henry Brown, b. 6 June, 1803: Lucif, h. 25 Mar. 1809; m. Joseph Fernald, 24 Dec.
1835: d. 16 Dec. 1875.
Generation 158. BENJAMIN FERNALD. b. 1774, s. Benjamin and Sarah, s. Ebcnczer and Pa-
tience, s. Capt. William, s. Dr. Renald; m. EUNICE PLACE, 2 Dec. 1795. da. Annas
^^^\ Place of Pownalborough Town. Lincoln County, Me.: Catherine, b. 30 Apr. 1796 ;m.
4\y Noah Manson, 16 July, 1817; d. 23 Dec. 1847: 10 chn. 4th changed his name to
T Wm Benjamin Fernald and his descendants retain the name.
'^\ NATHANIEL FERNALD, m. 14 Aug. 1788, HANNAH, da. James and Abigail
' ^ ^ (WENTWORTH) FERNALD. He d. 2 May, 1824; farmer; Had-Hannah, b. 1
Jun. 1789; m. Robert Manson, 27 Nov. 1806; d. 20 Oct. 1871: James, b. 1792; m.
Olive Pettigrew, pub. 18 Jan. 1817- d. 30 May, 1855; 5 chn.; York, Me.: Oliver, b.
Generations 158-9. 1795; m. Maria Hichborn. 31 Dec. 1820; d. 11 Dec. 1842, Boston, Mass.; 7
chn. : Susan, b. 1799; d. 1841 : Renald. b. 23 May, 1800: m. Rachel Frost, 23 Mar. 1841.
Generations 158-9. DAVID FERNALD, m. ESTHER TUCKER, 13 Jan. 1791. da. Samuel and
Esther (Tucker) LEACH, Farmer, in American Revolution; d. 27 Dec. 1846; Wife d.
/^j IS Mar. 1839: Had— Samuel L., b. 6 Dec. 1791; m. Rebecca Harris, of Eastport; d.
gg 1827 or 8: Unice L., b. 25 Sept. 1793; m. Stephen Young, 12 June, 1833; d. 1 Nov.
«|l 1888; 3 chn.: Ebcnczer, b. 4 Oa. 1795; m. Mary Ann Manson, 6 July, 1820: Theodore,
T| b. 31 Aug. 1797; m. Lydia Adams, 6 Jan. 1828: William, b. 16 Dec. 1799; m. Miriam
/^l/ Spinney, of Eliot, b. 31 Mar. 1836; d. 1856, at Eliot; 6 chn.: Esther, b. 20 July. 1802:
m. William H. Brown, 8 Dec. 1829; d. 4 March. 1881.
Generations 158-9. JOSEPH WEEKS FERNALD, b. ; m. CATHERINE, daughter
Thomas and Jane Marr CHANDLER, 13 Februarj', 1787; in American Revolution; d.
A 22 November, 1822; Wife, born 15 July. 1755; died 17 November, 1815: Had— Jane
Chandler, born 30 December. 1787; married Thomas Trefethen, ; died 28 July, 1869:
Daniel, born 30 October, 1789; m. Phebe Trefethen, April. 1812; died at Ponsmo.
Catherine, born 13 July, 1792; married Timothy Parker, of Saugus. Mass., 4 May, 181 5;
died 15 February, 1855. at Saugus: Sarah Weeks, born 28 February. 1795; married John
Chandler, of Saco, 5 Apr. 1813; died 20 April. 1814.
Generations 158-9. ELIHU FERNALD. married 18 January, HANNAH, daughter Thomas and
Jane (Marr) CHANDLER, born 23 September, 1765; died 20 September, 1836;
he was a Carpenter; died 4 December, 1851: Had descendants — James Brown,
born 11 July, 1787; married Ann Card. 30 November. 1S09; died 25 May. 1822;
resided in Portsmouth. New Hampshire, and had 4 children.
=a
%
=a ^ ^ ^
^d MARY. B. 9 MAY, 1789; D. 10 JULY. 1790: MARY. B. 9 JULY. 1791;
i\ M. ROBERT NEWSON: HANNAH C. B. 14 JUNE. 1793; M. WILLIAM
^1 PARKER. OF SAUGUS: ELIZABETH, B. 16 SEPTEMBER. 1796; M. JOHN
f^ P Aldcn, of Boston. Mass.; S chn. : Benjamin Chandler, b. 1 June, 1798; m. Lavina L.
P'crnald, 27 Oa. 1824; d. 11 Sept. 1878; resided in Portsmouth; 8 chn.: Sarah, b. 23
March. 1800; m. Thomas Jones. Portsmouth: Elihu. b. 6 May. 1802; m. Margaret T.
Hoibrook, 27 May. 1838; d. 25 Aug. 1847; 3 chn.: Jane Chandler, b. 9 May. 1804; m.
Elihu D. Brown, 17 May. 1838; d. 16 June, 1882: Pamelia, b. 14 Oa. 1806; m. Samuel
Parker, of Saugus, Mass.: Olive C, b. 30 Jan. 1808; m. William B. A. Locke, 10 April,
1831; d. 30 Nov. 1874: Thomas, b. 28 Oct. 1809; lost at Sea about 1829; Martha, b. 18
Jan. 1811;; d. 10 Sept. 1814.
Generations 158-9. SAMUEL FERNALD. m. 19 July. 1791, ELIZABETH CHANDLER, b.
17 April. 1773; d. 20 Nov. 1815: Hem. 2nd. Mrs. Catherine (Fernald) Keen, da. Benj.
and Sarah (Beaver) Fernald; He was a Sea Captain and Carpenter; d. 10 July, 1821: Had
—Martha C. b. 1791 or 2; m. Elihu D. Brown, 29 April, 1824; d. 22 Oct. 1837. Proof
wanted of second marriage, and the names of his other children, if any.
Generations 158-9. ANDREW PEPPERRILL FERNALD, s. Dennis, s. Tobias, s. Capt. William,
s. Dr. Renald, b. 1753; m. 24 Dec, 1778, MARTHA, da. John and Abigail (Bartlett)
SHAPLEIGH. b. 16 April. 1760; d. 26 Nov. 1819. He d. 18 May. 1821. Officer in
American Revolution. Captain, Major, Adjutant, was ever prominent in all civil and mili-
tary matters concerning the common good. He was more ntarly related to the writer than
has been heretofore shown for three brothers met at Portsmouth, N. H., and agreed to
spell their descendants names as — "Fernald, Firnald, Furnald taking first part Fur of Ro-
man ancestors; 2nd, Fir for Persian and oldest line and Fcr for ancestor, Dr, Jean Fernel,
they might know each the other descendants;" this compact and agreement was sacredly
kept by an honored father and grandfather, as may be seen by their Bible Records, deeds,
etc. Andrew P. spelt his name "Firnald," my brother changed ours to Dr. Renald
Fernald's ancestral signature. (See autograph signature at State House, Boston, on petition
to change Strawberry Bank to its present — Portsmouth.) Spelt his name "Firnald." Had
descendants — Charles (named for Charles VIII, King of France) b. 22 Nov. 1799; m.
Statira Ayers, of Canterbury. N. H., 1807; d. Sept. 1823; Had— Martha (named for Mar-
tha Washington keeping in memory right descent from RobcrtWashington of Va. through
Thomas and Temperance Washington Fernald) b, 21 Dec. 1781; m. Elisha Shaplcigh, 9
Nov. 1801: Andrew (named for father and to memorize descent from the great Sir An-
drews family) b. 26 May, 1785; d. 30 Nov. 1787: Sarah, (named for his foremother SARAH
da. of Judge John Hinckes, and wife of John Fernald. To this given family is to be added
two sons and one da. before 1790, "AUTHENTIC" proof United States Ccnsu*) b. 13
Sept. 1788; d. 13 Apr. 1791: AbigaU, b. 7 Mar. 1792; m. Nathaniel Hanscom, 18 Feb.
1819; d. Oct 1849: Andrew, b. 16 July. 1794; m. Mary Ann Lord, of South Berwick, 19
Feb. 1819; d. 11 Jun. 1826; resided in Eliot; children— Martha, b. 28 Mar. 1820: Owen,
b. 24 Aug. 1821: Mary E.. b. 11 May. 1823: Andrew P.. b. 26 Mar. 1825: John Shap-
leigh (named for Dr. John, grandson of Dr. Jean Fernel, both of whom were killed by
religious fanatics) (see my past and present history of same) b. 1 May. 1800; m. Sarah Ann
Paul. 26 Dec. 1826; 2nd. Mary Ann Meserve. of Barrington. N. H.. 19 July. 1840; d. 4
Jan. 1863:
GENEALOGICAL REGISTER OF THE FIRST SETTLERS OF NEW
ENGLAND, 1829. Presented to Charles A. Fernald by Mary A. Fernald, aet. 84 years,
Nov. 19, 1895, Widow of Dr. J. S. Fernald, July 12, 1895. 46 Dudley Street. Roxbury."
f "Among all my husband's books there was this one, besides the Bible, he most highly
prized, and I want to make a present of this and his door plate of silver as a keep/Sake and
token of esteem". The former is before me with the beautiful handwriting of one of the
noblest and best aged ladies, that I ever was blest by knowing the most glorious work of God.
□ ■ D
* * «*«
Now IN POSSESSION OF EVERY GENEALOGIST OF AMERICA SHOULD
BE THIS EXCELLENT AMERICAN BOOK. PUBLISHED BY JOHN FAR-
MER. AT LANCASTER. MASS.. BY CARTER, ANDREWS & CO. DR. JOHN
S. Fernaid was a very skillful physician, faithful and unsparing of himself to alleviate the
sufTerings of his numerous patients; a good genealogist; an euridite scholar; friend of
the poor, even when they were not called God's poor; a good and deeply-loved husband;
wise, affectionate father; an honest man. the noblest work of God. His widow frequently called upon
me and related many parts of very interesting history concerning his labors that aid in this work, to
1^ left for other generations to perfect, so far as possible. I was informed that about two years ago
she had gone to join her beloved husband. He was not the first, by many, genealogist of the Fernaid
family. His writings, unchanged, would be a great aid, if in the hands of trustworthy persons. Far
more valuable would be those of Henry, bro. of Dr. Rcnald Fernaid, who also, I am informed, wrote
some at Portsmo., N. H.; Hon. Mark Dennett, Mr. A. R. H. Fernaid, Rev. Mark Fernaid, Fran-
cis Junius Fcrnel, Vossius, Dr. Jean Ferncl, which the Vatican could have supplied in 1870 entire;
Guy Patin, partly changed; those who wrote up for kings of France — changed and changing as new
lines occupied throne and as new popes came into office — et als. including Henry W. Fernaid, Prof.
H. T. Fernaid and Uncle Rev. O. H. Fernaid, with innumerable persons since my first Encyclia was
sent forth to all the world, our beloved relatives. Some further corrections of above — Col. Andw.
Pcpl. Furnald family, viz.: He d. 20, not 18th; Statira, eldest da. Mr. Joseph Ayers and wife
Miriam; Mr. Elisha Shapleigh, 3rd s. Capt. Elisha and wife Elizabeth; m. Sth, not 9th, Nov. ;
Nabby, not Abigail (named for ); m. Capt. Nathaniel Hanscom, eldest s. Mr. Nathaniel
and wife Sarah (Sally) Fernaid; John Shapleigh Fimald m. 17, not 26, Mrs. Sarah A., his wife; d.
16 April, 1838, and da. Mr. James Paul of Eliot and wife Mary; Mrs. Mary A. (Mcrserve) Fernaid,
wife of and widow Dr, John S. Fernaid, was da. Mr. Andrew Mcrserve and wife Patience. I have
4, not S, chn., to wit: Ann Martha (named for Annie of Britainy and Martha Washington, wife of
Genl. George Washington), b. 30 Jan., 1828; Mary Caroline, named for mother of Washington,
Mary (Ball), as also, reading double, aforesaid Ann for his fofemt thcr, Anna (Cotton), wife of
Robert Washington of Va., 1630) Caroline for bro. of Augustine, viz; Charles Washington, also
double the four namcs=VIII and Carol-from Latin Carolus^in English Charles, to wit. Charles
VIII, k. France his ancestor. Sd Mary Caroline, b. 24 Dec, 1831, d. 30 Apr., 1832: Clara. Jane,
b. 5 Sept., 1835 (name from Latin, clarus, clear: Old French, cleir, N. Fr. clair, Pr. clar, Sp. & Pg.
claro, Ger. klar meaning here clear, bright ancestral line. The 5 . . .s after "Ann. Clara. Jane.
Sarah. Ann. theirs not mine" significant! Mary, also, named for the excellent wife of Charles VII,
& Jane from 2d wife of king John, fr- Charles V, her name in History of France is also spelt Jane &
Joan) (k. John's wife had Jane, m. Charles the Bad, king of Navarre) "Sarah. Ann. Paul their dau..
b. 2 Apr.. 1838". Will the writers of Old Kittery Families give authentic records of a fifth child?
Generation 159. DENNIS FERNALD. s. of Dennis & bro. of Col. Andrew Pepperill. b. 1757,
m. 24 Aug. 1780 ELIZABETH STACY, b. 9 Jun. 1761. d. 14 Oa. 1842. He d. 1 Jan.
1836-7: Had descendants— Dennis, b. 24 Apr., 1781 Moved South and d. in South Caro-
lina, Charlestown, U. S. A.: Charles, b. 7 Apr., 1783, m. Mary Libby 1 Aug., 1817. d.
12 Jun.. 1841. 2 chn.: Elizabeth, b. 24 Apr.. 1785. m. Samuel Fernaid 11 Apr.. 1825, d.
Sept. 18—.: Sarah, b. 7 Feb., 1788, d. 5 or 6 Feb., 1852: William Stacy, b. 21 Jun.,
1790, m. Elizabeth Batson (or Haydcn) of Quincy, Mass., d. 1854; 5 chn.: Margery, b.
9 Mar., 1793, d. 12 Apr., 1823: Martha, b. 29 Jun., 1795, m. Charles Parsons of York,
pub. 8 Dec, 1817, d. at Spata, Ohio, 1840. 5 chn..: Robert, b. 10 Aug., 1797, d. y.,
Hiram, b. 5 Mar. 1801, d. 12 Apr, 1852: Miriam, b. 29 Dec, 1823: Samuel, b. 18 Dec.
1808, m. Laura Graham Cooper of Maiden, Mass., d. 20 Feb., 1896 at Eliot, Me., 7 chn.
325
^ ^ ^ ^ L>
^J^OL. 18. pp. 36. 144, 145. 146. 148. GRAND JURY. BENJAMIN FANEUIL. ES^R.
I -J NO TAX DUTY ON TEA. 8D. BENJAMIN. WAITED UPON WITH
■ Jl CLARK & SONS. SAID TO BE FACTORS OF EAST INDIA CO.. RE-
^ quested by Town Committee to resign their Appointment. Refused to resign. Letter
Daringly AfFrontive to Town. Voted. Nov. 18, 1774 "Friends in England have entered
into penal engagements in our behalf, merely of a Commercial nature;" not "to comply with request
of Town." Signed by "Bcnja. Fancuil Junr., for self and Joshua Winslow. Esq., Richard Clark &
Sons, Elisha Hutchinson for my brother and Self— "Letter read— satisfactory — Passed in the Negative
Nemc Cont." "Vol. 23. p. 203. Boston Ss: At Meeting of Selectmen. Nov. 28. 1773. Sabbath
Day, Present." "Mr. Clark" and "Mr. Benjamin Fancuil another Consignee" of TEA,
"—out of Town" "—not in Town". Vol. 25, pp. 11, 15, 33, 38. 49. 50. 51. 54, 55, 134,
171. 182. 184, 185, 189, 204, 205, 217, 220. 221, 224. 227. 236, 241, 251, 257, 267, 268, 275, 280, 285.
288,295,317, 323. 324. Faneuil Index. Mentions Hall, Market, etc. Lottery 1780. And 1783
Hall granted to Deacons for disposal of Quarterly Charities. Lottery 3d time in Hall, 1783. Re-
pairs. Repairs. Arsenal for Arm's in upper chamber of Hall, 1783. Before and since President
McKinley's death in Roman Catholic Churches. Lectures in Hall, 1785. No abatement of rents,
F. Hall Market "Instructn. in Military Arts" at Hall, 1785. Compy. Cadets for use of Hall. "Lec-
tures on Philosophy of Natural History— " "Repairs". "Inspectors." Cadet Co. firearms deposited
Faneuil at "Hall." Vol. 29. p. 306. "Mr. Peter Fanieuel a Mercht." Vol. 30. Index, pp. 7,
393. Faneuil (Fannell, Fannil). Benjamin, Marriage Intentions, 1752-61. Benjamin Faneuil, Jr.,
& Jane Davenport 9 June, 1753 m. Maguam Ebcrt and Flora Fannil, m. 3 Sept., 1790 (Int. reads
Magguam Eben, Funnell George Bethune & Mary Faneuil. m. Int. 15 July. 1754, m. 13 Oa."
"Willson Fannell m. Sarah W. Williston, 22 May 1760. Int. reads Fennel" "Bcnjn Farnald &
Elizabeth Willson. 19 Aug., 1798. John Frecland m. Elvina Larkin, 28 Feb., 1801." Vol. 31
Faneuil mentioned 116 times. "Vol. 32 Strong Furnell, pp. 85, 121. fPurnell, bill. 14f. 6s. Power
Atty." to col. /14 6s. Vol. p. 325, Peter Faneuil $350 for Picture of him to be put in Hall Mr.
William Fennelly (Fcrneley) Dr. Renald Fernald chair sd. to bear Ferneley Arms "Appointed
Auctioneer 182-3" Vol. 34. pp. 412-13. House owned by Benjamin, Nephew Peter Faneuil."
There is great probability of Benjamin Sr. & Jr. being Fernely and Fernald and ancestors of present
Banker, Ceo. A., and Henry W. Fernald — I leave for future searchers. "Vol. 35. 117" times
Faneuil Hall is mentioned. "Vol. 37. 66" times Faneuil Hall is mentioned. Robert Fennelly, or
Fernel cy one of the Select Men, 1820: mentioned 7 times. Vol. 38, 1811, Robert "Fennelly"
mentioned twice: Vol. printed 1908 and "Faneuil Hall" about 28 times. Robt. Fernel cy paid City
for Drains with others, while since the religious and political changes. Boston stops up good ones
forces in bad, knocks underpinning from property and revels in 124,000,000 dollars unholy frauds to
benefit those that should be brought to the bars of Justice. And be taught the Ten Commandments
from the Bible Taken unwisely from our Schools. "In Vol. 28, p. 177 William PVceiand m. Jane
Miller. 26 Sept.. 1732. JOHN FREELAND & ANNA MALLET m. Int. 15 Jan., 1736.
THOMAS FORELONG m. ELIZABETH HAMLIN. 1 Apr.. 1726" Int. read Forlong &
Elizabeth Hamling." These copied give a pretty full index of names and matters concerning
Faneuils as kept by the City of Boston as printed." Alfred the Great made additions to the good
laws of KING INA=FNA whose valuable laws in a large book of great interest is owned by writer.
^ ^ D=
IMON FERNALD, B. 1771. M. 6 JULY, 1794 MIRIAM. DA. EBENEZER AND
_ _ SARAH (LEWIS) FERNALD & D. 19 JAN., 1827. SHIPWRIGHT AND
%hS1 mariner, had— WILLIAM, B. 29 MAY. 1796, D. 27 SEPT., 1798: SIMON,
•<— V b. 6 Dec. 1799, m. Joanna F. Williams 11 Dec, 1834: Sally Ann, b. 18 July, 1802: Jo-
seph, b. 8 Nov., 1804, m. Eliza Rice of Portsmouth: Charles W., b. 7 May, 1807, m.
Abigail Duley of Gloucester, Ma.ss., 16 Dec, 1832, d. 24 May, 1867: Cooper: 5 chn.:
Generation 160. Harriet, b. 20 Jun.. 1809, m. Oliver Adams:
Generation 161. NATHANIEL FERNALD, s. Tobias and Abigail (Chambers) Fernald, m.
HANNAH SPINNEY, 29 Oct., 1791: Mariner and died at sea: Had— Olive, b.
m. [oseph Dame 4 Jan., 1818: Mary. b. m. William Marden of Portsmouth:
Patience, b. m. Lyman Parker March 1826: William Dennet, b. 4 Jan., 1H()7,
m. Mehitable Odiorne [an., 1828, d. 5 Dec, 1893. Spar maker. Portsmouth: 7 chn.
Generation 160-1. BENIAMIN FERNALD, s. Benj., s. Dea. lohn and Sarah, m. 12 Feb., ISOO
HANNAH, da.lohn and Sarah (W.) Fernald and d. 1818 at Sea: Had— William Wcnt-
vvorth, b. 6 Feb., 1802, m. Elizabeth Make Peace Weeks, 19 Mar., 1823: d. 12- Nov.,
1871. York Farmer: 9 chn.: Benjamin, b. IS July, 1804, d. 1820: John Beaver, b. 19
Feb., 1807, m. Prudence Lord 20 Nov. 1828, 2d. Abbie S. Langdon 17 Feb., 1859, d. 27
Feb., 1891: Ship Master: Resided at York. 2 chn.: Elizabeth, b. 28 Oct., 1808, m.
Jonathan Lancton. pub. 11 Feb. 1827: Eliza, b. 22 Apr.. 1811. m. Ezekiel Prescott. 25
Oct., 1830, d. 1868 at Brookfield, N. H., 7 chn.: Ann Wentworth, b. 24 Apr., 1813. m.
Henr\' Thompson 30 Sept., 1835, d. 24 Dec, 1893 at York: 2 chn.: Sarah, b. 1815, d. y.
Generation 160-1. ROBERT PHIPPS FERNALD m. EUNICE (Brown) SULLIVAN 13 Jan..
0^^ 1828: Had descendants— Sarah Catherine, b. 26 Oct., 1828, m. Alfred Jones of Saugus,
im Mass.: William Henry b. 14 Dec, 1829, m. Eliza Downing 14 Oct., 1851: Ship car-
^1 j penter, Kittery: Lvdia Maria, b. 30 Oct. 1831, m. Noah Manson 16 Mar.. 1855: 3
•^^mm chn.: Marv Eleaneor. b. 17 Oct., 1833, m. Charles Clough 12 Dec, 1853: 9 chn.:
Elizabeth Crosby, h. 23 Nov.. 1835, m. Joseph Jenkins I Nov., 1859: d. Jun., 1883:
Generation 161-2. REGINALD (called Renald) FERNALD, m. RACHEL, da. ELLIOT
FROST, 23 March 1841 : Kittery Farmer: His wife was b. 18 Jun., 18]2and a Daughter
of the Revolution:
Hannah C, b. 27 July, 1842, m. Frank B. Bartlett, 18 Dec. 1867: Calvin, b. 18 Dec,
1847: d. 14 Sept., 1852; Rachel, b. 18 Dec, 1851. d. 10 Jan.. 1852:
Generation 159-60. EBENEZAR FERNALD. s. David, b. 1795, m. 6 July. 1820 MARY ANN
da Thomas MANSON, Ship Carpenter. In War of 1812 and d. 17 Nov., 1865: Had—
Sarah Chandler, b. 20 Oct.. 1820. m. William Cromack: Timothy, b. 13 Mar., 1822. d.
19 May, 1822: William, b. 30 Apr.. 1823, m. SUSAN (Grey) TRUE, 2d Carrie Ham-
mond 30 Aug., 1857 and d. 11 Apr., 1895. Ship builder at Portsmouth, N. H., 5 chn.:
Eunice, b. 25 Mar., 1825, m. Lorenzo D. Witham 19 Mar., 1844: Ebenezar. b. 19 May,
1827, d. 15 May, 1851:
Gener.ation 159. CAPT. DANIEL FERNALD, b. 1789, m. PHEBE TREFETHEN. April.
1811.12. Ship Captain. Had descendants: Joseph, b. 1816, m. LUCY FERNALD, 24
.m r% Dec, 1834, d. 1850: Andrew, b. 2 May. 1818, m. Mary Rogers Manson 5 Dec. 1839
^\ and d. 4 Sept., 1889: had— George A.. Phebe Ann. Mary Lavina. Joseph H.. Frances
^\^ Jane. Ellen E., Lucy A.. Robert, b. 24 Sept., 1820, m. Gary Jane Donnell, pub. 5 Oct..
ftl^^ 1848, d. 9 May, 1895: Resided at Maiden, Mass.; had Frederick W., Daniel E., Charles
"^^ v., George P., Eunice, b. 15 Sept., 1822, m. Joseph Tuttle 5 Dec, 1841: Thomas, b. 7
Aug., 1825. m. Delia Elwell 8 Dec. 1849: Mariner: Henry, b. 6 Dec, 1827, m. Mar>-
Eastman 5 Nov., 1850, 2d Mrs. Mary A. Knights 18 Aug., 1877; had— Francena, Hariet,
Clifford. Lillian, Jeremiah, b. 10 Nov. 1879, m. Marcia B. Leach pub. 18 Oct., 1851, d.
21 Sept., 1877; had— James. Everit, Daniel L.. b. 8 Jun., 1833, m. Henrietta E. Bright.
13 Mar., 1869: Lucia Maria, h. 9 Oct. 1835, m. Daniel Parker of Saugus, Massachusetts.
* *
THEODORE FERNALD. S. DAVID, S. EUENEZER AND SARAH (PROB-
ABLY) ATKINSON, S. EBENEZER AND PATIENCE MENDUM, S. CAPT.
WILLIAM AND ELIZABETH LANGDON, S. DR. RENALD AND JOANNA
Warburton, s. Dr. John and Wife, Annictta de Coligny, s. Francis and Maria Commc-
nius, s- Dr. Jean Fcrnel and Magdalene Licullier, s. Charles VIII and Anne of Britainy,
Generation 158. their lawful wives, and the whole line as given back to our world's wortliy ances-
tors, Adam and Ava, Created by Our most Glorious God in His Image and His Wisdom,
m. 6 Jan. 1828, LYDIA, da. Samuel and Lydia (Coleman) ADAMS, and he d. at Sea.
18 Nov. 1836: Had descendants— Harriet Olivia, b. 9 Sept. 1829; m. Henry W. Tre-
fethen: Samuel, b. 19 Nov. 1831; d. July, 1862, in Civil War: Alonzo, b. 20 Mar. 1835;
m. Martha E. Berry, 2 Oct. 1859; 2nd, Annie Irene Philbrick. 27 Jun. 1880.
Generation 159. WILLIAM M. FERNALD, b. 7 Apr. 1796; m. ABIGAIL WOODS FER-
NALD, 3 Dec. 1820, da. of James and Hitty Barry, of Boston, was of Kittery, Me.
From News Paper — "Mr. William M. Fernald, May 6, 1875.. He was-in the War of
1812" In the book of life — God's Album — May his name be found with care — And may
all who have here loved him — Find a home there." A little of first was illegible, but
the writings in Holy Bible gave same facts. This Bible was presented to me by a descen-
dant. Children — Anna Abigail, b. 17 Jun. 1821, Sunday morning, 1-2 past 1 o'clock;
m. Tilton, and d. 18 Apr. 1849: William Henry was b. 9 Dec. 1822, on Monday morn-
ing, 1-2 past five o'clock: Lucy Pray, b. 16 Dec. 1826, Saturday morning, 4 o'clock:
William Frederick, b. 31 Jan. 1830, Sunday afternoon, 5 o'clock: Albert Henry, 21
Mar. 1835, Saturday morning, 9 o'clock: William Fred. Fernald, d. 29 Jun. 1883.
Mrs Abigail W. Fernald, d. 29 Jun. 1883, aged 80 yrs., 6 mos, 21 days. 8 stanzas of
poetry pasted in back of Bible, written by A. D. F. Date of Bible, 1818 printed.
FROM MARRIAGES PAGE.
Generation 159-160. From Family Record BIBLE of Dr. John Furnald copied in Bible of grand-
son William at Portsmouth, N. H., given writer by Aunt Sophronia (Chase) Fernald,
Cordis Street, "of the ages JOHN FURNALDS' Children. (The name of his wife
MARY SAVAGE was part erased and completed while writer was at Church) John W.
Fernald, born Saturday, October 24, quarter past ten, A. M., 1772. James Furnald, born
Thursday, June 24, at two o'clock, P. M., 1779. Polly Furnald, born Tuesday, Sept.
5th,, at ten o'clock, A. M., 1782. Abigail Coffin Fernald, born Thursday, April 2, at
10 o'clock, A. M. 1785. Mary and Betsey Furnald, born Wednesday, August 1st,
at nineo'clock, A. M., 1787. Sarah Furnald, born Friday, June 11th, at nine o'clock,
A. M., 1790. Deborah Sherburne Furnald, born February 27th, at daybreak, 1791.
Generations 160-161. From same above Holy Bible, Births page 2 now. as found — If recorded
WILLIAM FERNALD, born 1775. at Brookficld, incorporated as a town from Mid-
dleton, 30 Dec. 1794, after an attempt to form a new town from parts of Middleton and
Wolfborough which petition "To the Honorable the Council and House of Represent-
atives sitting at Exeter — " was signed by "Nicholas Austin, Benjamin Clay, Josiah Rob-
inson, Stephen Lyford, Jonathan Clay, Bartholomew Richards, Jcdidiah Drew, David
Durgin, Daniel Croxford, Eb'zer Bennet, Simon Dearborn; (my great grandfather)
JOHN FORNEL, (who in the spelling of his last name kept in second letter O, the
family and most ancient seal in the world, see same on history of Creation from Tablet
of Abdyus and on the oldest itgyptian Pyramid, also he kept the exact number of letters
of Dr. Jean Fernel name) and he and his wife Mary Savage were the parents of prcceed-
ing, Gen. 159, family;) Isaac Drew, Joseph Wille, Samuel Tibbetts, Josiah Wiggin,
Ezekiel Sanborn, Welliam Wile, Moses Perkins, Peter Stellings, John Palmer, who
were then of Middleton. Of Wolfborough — Robert Calder, William Cotton, Joseph
Leavitt, James Sheafe, Jonathan Lang and John Costelloe." A petition the same month
of June, 1785, more numerously signed, defeated it.
328
?i
^ * + + D.
SPECIALLY DESIGNATED IN AFORESAID BIBLE RECORD BESIDES THE
TWELVE CHILDREN OF MR. WILLIAM FIRNALD & WIFE MRS. ELIZA-
BETH (BETSEY JOHNSON, DA. PHINEAS, S. COL. SAMUEL JOHNSON; IS
the Family of William Fernald, Jr. & Cha.se Family, viz: —
Generation 161 WILLIA.M FERNALD. Jr.. b. Mon. May 1811 m. SOPHONIA CHASE, b.l814.
Had descendants: George W. Fernald. b. 28 Nov. IS.'^l. m. Had several descendants;
Tanner. Resided at Portsmouth. Charles Gustus, b. 2 Oct. 1838 d. y. 1838. Ann M.
Fernald, b. 6 Jan. 1841, m. Rev. Charles D. Young and had descendants:
Mrs. Sophronia (Cha.se) FernaJd's brothers and sisters were— Jo^luia W. Ciiase b. 17HI:
Ruth, b. 1789: John E., b. 1810: Sophronia, b. 1812: Mary, b. 1814:
William Fernald, d. 20 Apr. 1853 and his wife 30 Sept. 1867 Betsey or Elizabcth-at Wolf-
boro. and they are buried at Portsmouth. N. H. William Fernald Jr. d. 19 Apr. 1862
& hissi.ster Mrs. Elizabeth Darling d. 22 Feb. 1859 and brother Mr. Henry Hinckcs
Fernald. d. 6 Oct. 1855. See page Bible Record for further information.
Generation 158. AMOS FERNALD, b. 16 Apr. 1686 and son of Deacon John Fernald & Wife
Sarah Hinckes, s. of Dr. John P'ernald, & Wife Mary Spinney, s. Thomas Fernald &
Wife .Mrs. Temperance Washington married 4 Nov. 1714 MARY WOODMAN: Had
2 sons:— Humphrey, b. 1716 d. 3 Apr. 1766. m. Mrs. Dorothy Sims of Port.v
mouth, N. H. 6Jan. 1740: Had 5 chn.: John, b. 1718 m. Mary He was a
Mariner and his Father and brother were Coopers:
Generation 159. HUMPHREY FERNALD, s. Amos & Mary Woodman his wife as before set
^^^ forth de facto, s. John & Wife Sarah, da. Judge John Hinckes, m. Dorothy Sims, widow
^{^ °f S'rns 3nd da. of Samuel Fernald, b. 9 March 1676, who was s. of Samuel, s. Dr. Ren-
^ ^ aid Fernald and a cousin. Humphrey d. 3 Apr. 1766 and his wife d. 6 Sept. 1770: Had des-
^Ji^ cendants: John, b. Nov. 1740, d. Nov. 1792, m. Mary Bowles 19 Jan. 1771: His widow
m. Deacon Jno. Noble of Portsmo. and d. 1804:
Elizabeth, b. 1745 m. Capt. Thos. Darling in 1763 and after his death 2d Rev. Dr.
McClintook of Greenland in 1786. 2 chn. 1st m. Thomas, d. y. John R. Dalling or Dar-
ling who commanded one of Mr. Gray's Indiaman and d. in Salem 1807 leaving a large
property to his mother 2d m. Elizabeth d. Wm. and wife Betsey (Johnson) Firnald, b. 19
Sept. 1804 & d. 22 Feb. 1859 to 1 son Samuel. Mrs. Elizabeth McClintockd. in Portsmo.
July 1813 aet. 68: Humphrey Fernald Jr. b. Nov. 1749 m. Sarah Stickney of Newburyport
and d. 9 Aug. 1796. One son left John Fernald, widow m. Capt. Moses Little of Camp-
ton, N. H. In Yellow Fever epidemic, 1798, left Portsmo. for Campton, but only reached
Dover, N. H., when both Husband & Son had the fever and d. in three days after leaving
Portsmo. after Mr. Little's death his widow m. Capt. William Noyes of Newburyport, &
d. there 1812:
Mary Fernald b. m. 1st Capt. JohnHartof Portsmo. 1780, He d. m. 2nd Capt-
Wm. Parker who d. 1797; Mrs, Mary Parker, d. 1800: 2 sons by Capt. Parker, John, d.
y. Samuel m. Ruth Brewster of Portsmouth. He d. 1816. Mrs. Parker m. Capt. Samuel
Rice, living at Claremont, N. H. at time this record was written: 5th Samuel Fernald bro.
of four preceeding and son of Humphrey & Dorothy Fernald, b. Aug. 17th 1756, m. De-
borah Griffith 7 Nov. 1784 by Rev. Samuel Haven. D. D. Capt. Samuel Fernald d. 4 Jun.
1830 aet. 74 yrs. Mrs. Deborah (Griffith) Fernald d. 1839 aet. 79 yrs. He was formerly
Town Clerk of Portsmouth.
,^ ^ ^ L>
^ ^/•'■^'OANNIS MEKCKKI RKGII gUONDAM INACADEMI PAKISIENSI LITER-
*" *■ -^IaRUM HEBRAICARUM PROFF^SORIS ERUDITISSIMI; DILIGENTISSIMI
^IaND in PRIMIS VERAE RELIGIONIS CULTERIS IN GENE81N PRIMUM
VL/moS1S LIBRUM, SIC A GRAECIS Appclatum Commcntarius NUNC PRIMVM
IN LVCEM EDITVS Addita THEODORI BEZAE pracfationc," with plate bearing
our ancient seal; and hieroglyphic C found on Dighton Book, with a motto, "VIDE
BENIGNI TATEM AC SEVERITATEM DEI," with a tree in centre bearing round encircled
globes, and at right a majestic man, raised head bearing our seal and hand pointing to Heaven, with
in front a hand and arm passing an ax from the encircling clouds; three stumpts; all encircled with a
wreath ot leaves, etc,, etc Beneath, "EXTIPOGRAPRIA MATTRAEl BERJON:— M D
XCVIII," ARE FOUND OUR AUTHENTIC RECORDS THEREIN: "Charles and Anne of
Britainy, R. Viii, France, 5 chn. Charies VIIj fili Dr. Jean Fcrnel, born at Clermont, 26 April, 1497.
FINIS GENESEOS: Ob. 26 April. ISSS; m. Magdalene, da, Jean Lvilliuer; b. 3 June, 1506; m.
2 April, 1530; ob. 26 or 30 March, I5S«. At Fontainbleu (on margin) 4 Chn.: B. Francis, 3 March,
1533. At Cher Bouges: loannes Fines, b. 3 Feb., 1535; II, Magdalene, b. 1 Miy, 1544; ob..I638;
m. Gilles de Riant; III, 4 chn.: Maria Fernelius, b. 5 Sept., 1546; m. Philibert Barjot, 3 May, 1568;
IV, 5 chn. Francis, sonne Dr. Jean Fernel m- Maria Commenus, da. John Amos Commenius, son
of Phil. Comenius, 2 April 1555;" (this last name is either Comenin'sor as written; the records have
been wtt and difficult to read: all records are open to experts of state and governments that have stood
loyal and staunch in our social war ajgainst the downfall cause of nations from time primeval) (being
a microscopist, hence accustomed to search for hidden things, I have carefully, with magnifying
glasses, searched for truth all records that are not clearly distinct for this book). "Maria de Fernelcy,
ob. 29 March, 1571; 3rd, m. Rebecca, da. Emaneuil Tremelius and wife Rachel; 4, m. Elizabeth,
da. Marquise Bertrand Fernelon, 10 Dec, 1581; his oldest, John, b. 15Cal. Id. March, 1556; m. 4
Jan., 1571, Jo.sephine, da. Marguerine de Vigne; b. Maria, 11 June, 1572: m. S. S. T. Yrkolsky;
m. 2nd, Annietta, da. Admiral Gaspardc de Coligny, wickedly slaync at St. Bartholomew; b. 15 Sept.,
1550: m. 2 June. 1573, Had— William, b. 12 June, 1574, at Castle Heidelberg; bapt. 16 June in ye
Church of Holy Ghost, Baden, Germany. Dr. John, in Royal Navy, was stabbed to death by ye
Jesuit Clemens on ye vessel's deck at night, 25 Aug., 1575. Good Queen Bess favored W. him and
struck by Mynt ye COIN of 1575 (to commemorate John's death). His father, Francis; Chaplin,
Warrior, Dr., Lawyer, was poisoned by Vatican, Papa, 30 Nov., 1602. Capt. Sir William Fernelcy
m. ELIZABETH, da. Girard Amand and his wyfe, ELIZABETH WASHINGTON, da. Samuel
Washington and wyfe Anne da. Francis and wyfe Maria Commenius, and adopted da, of Mr. Hath-
away) sometymc writer playes as William Shakespcrc (sec his alias photo, signature). Capt .William
Fernel forte ye Spanish Armada, Knytcd by Essex; m. ELIZABETH Amand, naymed by Queen
Bess, 16 May, 1594; IX chn.: Renald Fcrnald, eldest, b. at Bristol, Eng., 6 July, 1595; m. loanna
Warburton (da. of George, d. 1 Jan., 1612; 2nd son of Sir Peter); b. 1603; m. 1619, Jan. ye First,
and (1. 15 May. 1660; hurried at Point of Graves Cemetery with Dr. Renald Fcrnald at Portsmoutii.
N. H.; ii Thomas, b. 13 Aug., 1597; iii Henry W., b. 5 Dec, 1599; d. s. p. poisoned at Old Castle
Hotel; iiii William, b. at Eastwick, 30 Dec, 1600; v Robert, b. 20 March, 1604; vi Jno., b, 9 April,
1607; vii Edward, b. 4 Oct., 1611; m. Mary, da. Thomas and Philadelphia Scroope, sister of Eman-
uel; viii Strangue, b. 16 Nov., 1614; m. Aellonc, da. Lenord D. Acres, 2nd son Wm., conspired vs.
Queen; attained, acct. property of 3 sisters; m. 3 sons Duke of Norfolk; ix Joseph G., b. at Feurs en
Fores. 5 Aug.. 1648; d. 10 Sept., 1730, at Paris; unable to recover Dr. Jean Fernel's descendants'
money; m. Joseph was born 1712. His father moved to Avignon. He was prof, anatomy in Royal
Gardens; celebrated author.
1
n=
LINE NORTH AMERICA, NEW ENGLAND NEW HAMPSHIRE
PORTSMOUTH
"I, Thomas and Wife Temperanc Washington ffernald write these Records from
my Earlier Capt. Reginald Renald F. and bro. Henry Fernald's Holy Bibles with my
own. leaving some places to be tilled by my descendants." "IN GENESIN (p.) 127 In Cap. V.
(Before .said Book)
My Honoured Father, Capi. Lieut. Dr. Renald Eurnel Chirurgeon. Sonne of Commander Sir Wil-
Vvun Furncll Son of Dr. John, Son of Rev. Francis, Son of Dr. Je;in Fernel ye Son of ye King Charles
VIII of France and wives^.'^nne of Britainy da. Francis (indistinct), Magdalene Luillier, da., [can
Coumseiller of Paris; Maria Commenius, da. Joliii Amos Commcniiis, Annictta, da. of .Admiral
Gaspanle ile Coligny, France; Joanna Warburton, da. George, Sone of Sir Peter Warburton, Knt.
and Wyfe .Mary. da. Sir John Holcroft, Knt., m. 2 July, 1619: Had— Thomas ffernald,
born 1 July, 1620, =m. Temperance Washington, da. Robert and wife Anna da. Sir
Robert Bruce Cotton, 16 Dec. 16.^9, at Chester, Old England, born 6 of June, 1622;
m. at Virginia: Elizabeth, born 4 March, 163()=Steven Eastwick iiii Jan. 1670, dyed in
birth of Henry, Jan. 1, 1674, burd. at Point of Graves: Mary, born 5 May, 1634; m.
John Partridge, 11 Dec. 1660; d. (other records give d. 16 Aug. 1722): Sarah, born 3
Apr. 1636; in. Allen Lyde, 3 Dec. 1661; d. : John Fernald, born 27 Sept. 1640; d..s. p. unm,,
16S7: Samuel, born 4 March, 1642; m. Hannah Spinney, 6 Oct. 1674; died 1 Dec. 169.S: The
Spynie Barony in Scotland that ought descend to her Fr. Thomas and wife Margery Manwaring, da.
George and Elizabeth is wythe held, (name after spelt) Mainwaring. William Fernald, born 5
March, I64H; m. Elizabeth Langdon, 16 Nov. 1671 born 13 September, 1656, da. Capt. Tobias and
Elizabeth Langdon. Dr. Renald Fernald died 6 Oct. 1656: Mrs. Joanna, d. 29 December, 1660.
Continuance of Mr. Thomas F"ernald's Records: — ".My Sons and Daughters Born are — John, born
0^^f 12 December, 1640; married Mary, da. Thomas and Margery Spinney, da. George and
/^ I Elizabeth .Manwaring, H Jan. 1671, b. 9 Feb. 1650: Anne, born 1 July, 1651 = Robert
I 1 Atkins, 9 Nov, 1686, d. : Thomas, born 2 July, 1653; m .Elizabeth, born 1655 or
^JrL 4, m. 1671 or 2, da. John Farnel, 2nd s. Henry Pranel and wife Frances, da. Thomas
^t^ Howard and wyfe 3rd Mabel; H. Pranel, Citizen of London, s. Francis, s. Francis, s.
Dr. Jean Fernel: Had Henry, Eizabeth, John, Thomas, Anne, da. bef. b., Anne; w.m.
E. Seymour and Lodovick, an Earl and Duke. Had — Elizabeth, m. Stephen Eastwick; John; .Mabel;
Frances and Margaret: Patience, born 3 May, 1655; m. Steven Eastwick, 1674; He was a Sea Cap-
tyne and dyed 23 Sept. 1691 : Mary, born 16 June, 1657; m. Samuel Pray; 2nd, Thomas Barker, born
15 May, 1658: Samuel, born 1 January, 1659; m. Mary, da. Sir William Seymour and 2nd wyfe
Frances had — Wm.,d.y.: Samuel: Mary: Joanna, b. 13 Feb. 1663; m. .Mr. Charles Kelley, 25 May,
1683; had — |ane, Margaret and John : Sarah, born 2 .March, 1668; m. .Mr. William Henderson, 16
of July, 1690, s. of John, s. : Hercules, b. 28 September, 1688; m. Mary, da. Rev. Peter Funal and
wyfe Sarah; s. Rev. Daniel and wyfe .Mary Moulin, s. Francis, s. Dr. Jean Fernel; m. 2nd Sarah
A Hick which John Fernald II copy by request of ;ny honored grandfather, .Mr. Thomas
ffernald who died on ye 15 of July, 1699 (last 9 is blotted probably by wetting of Book,
but more distinct of 9 than 7 and is one of the two figures) and my grandmother, Mrs'
Temperance WASHINGTON ffurnald departed this lyfe ye 20 of June, 1706. .My
honoured father, John Fernald, L Died 1 September, 1687, and my mother died 19
.^pril, 1697, and buried at Point of Graves syde by syde. From my foreparents Bibles
I copy ye Records. I John 2nd who was born 4 March, 1673, and married Sarah, ye da. of ye Judge
John Hinks and wyfe Elizabeth Fryer, May 10, 1773. My brother James was born 14 August, 1676,
and married Mary Hinks, da. Judge John and Elizabeth, da. Judge Nathaniel and Christian Freyer,
of Portsmouth, N. H. Elizabeth, born in Boston, 1 November, 1657. Thomas, 17 September, 1678.'
Mary, da. James and Susan Thompson: 3 daughters — I,ydia, born 13 May, 1680; married Benjamin
Miller; 2nd, .Moses Dennet: Margery, born 16 April, 1686; married John Marshal, 11 February,
1720: Amos, born 16 April, 1686; married Mary Woodman, 4 November, 1714; 2nd, Elizabeth
Chadbourne, 1 January, 1720.
^— a '^^ n g
■ ■ D ^ ^ ^ D
^\y^ DEACON JOHN FERNALD MARRIED MISS SARAH HINCKS 7 AUGUST,
|}-i 1796 WHO WAS BORN 22 JULY 1679. OUR CHILDREN WERE: JOHN. B.
I hi IS MARCH. 1698. M. ELIZABETH ROGERS. DA. REV. JOHN ROGERS AND
r^ wife Martha of Ipswich, Mass.. born 10 Feb.. 1705 ;m. 16 January. 1723. Mr. J no. Rogers
Sonne of John. President of H. C. : Mary, born 2 March, 1700 married Thomas Rogers
S July. 1728: 8Chn.: Samuel, b. 1 June, 1702. m. Mary Johnson. 26 Jan.. 1730: James, b. 4 Oct..
1704: married Hannah Rogers 30 October 1730; Joseph and James (twins) Inirn 4 October, 1704.
Joseph, married Anna More 1742. 21 June., da. Samuel & wife Mary Moore, s. John. s. William of
Piscataqua. s. Thomas gr. s. Sir Thomas More, (who was beheaded, s. Sir John, descendants of St.
Mauirs: from 1742 the writing is illegible or so indistinct that I cannot be pxasitivc of it to brackets.)"
Sarah, born 13 April, 1709. m. Richard Rogers 27 January, I73S, d. 6 August 1761 : 6chn., Benjamin
b. 1 April 1717 m. Susie L. Chadbournc 21 Nov.. 1744 was born 25 Oct.. 1724: descendcnt. da.
James Chadbourne & Sarah, s. James & Elizabeth, s. Humphrey & Lucy, came over with Dr. R. F.,
1631: William and Mary Pcrpoint, da. Evelyn Perpoint and wyfe Mary, da. William Fielding. Earl
Denbigh of Old England, related; Lydia J.. 9th child was born 26 March, 1719 and' married James
Johnson, son of Samuel, born 1678, s. Saml. b. 1658, s. John. b. 1639. s. Isaac and Arabella, s- Abra-
ham. My beloved sonne CAPTYNE JOHN FERNALD, YE HERO of Louisberg, His Bible
gyveth my Grand Children Born by the wyfe Elizabeth: Anne. b. 3rd Jan. 1725. d. 18 Mar. 1726:
Magdalen, b. 9 Feb. 1727. d. 21 Jan.. 1728: Maria, b. 5 Jan. 1729, d. 7 May. 1729: Annietta. b. 17
Sept.. 1730, d. 17 July, 1731: Elizabeth Washington, b. 29 Nov. 1733, d. 3 Oa 1737: Joanna, b. 16
Oct., 1735, d. 23 Jan., 1736: Temperance Washington, b. 29 Aug.. 1738, d. 17 Mar., 1738: Sarah,
b. 31 Dec. 1740. d. 27 Jin., 1741: JOHN, born 23 Nov., 1742 at 4 o'clock A. M., and Tobias,
(Twins) b. 23 Nov., 1742, at 6 o'clock A. M.: MERCY, b. 16 Feb., 1745 at Sun Rise
m. Nathaniel Dennet, 1 May, 1767 (had 4 sons and 3 daughters) of Portsmouth; d. 18 Sept., 1791:
Elizabeth Mary, b. 29 Oct., 1746, m. William Cotton of Portsmouth, s. of Wm. Cotton, Sr., Mary,
b. 2 May 1751, m. John W. Fernald 25 Nov. 1772 (8 chn.) Capt. JOHN FURNAL 3d s. Deacon
John 2d s. Dr. John 1st s. Thomas was in French & Indian wars living with two sons, under 16 years
of age. and two das. at Kittery 1790; despite the alleged forgery in his father's will during the dark
days in attempts to get the Spynie Barony, and Sherburne property, etc. ( Dea. John Fernald misspelt
Finley was in Kentucky with Daniel Boone.) Mrs. Elizabeth Fernald died at Kittery 21 September,
1752; 2nd wife, Deborah Sherburne, daughter of Jonathan, born 15 August, 1750, married 1
Aug. 1775, da Jonathan, s. Henry, b. 1709, Counsellor of N. H.: Speaker of House of Representa-
tives, s. William of Portsmo, 1644, s, Henry, b. a. 1612; came over with Dr. Renald Fernald 1631.
Representative of Portsmouth at Gen!. Court. Mass 1660: Had Jonathan, b. 3 July 1776 & Deborah,
b. 6 Mar. 1778 & d. from child birth He m. 3d Abigail Coffin, 30 Jan. 1779: da. Peter, s. Peter &
Wyfe Abigail Starbuck s. James & wyfe Mary Severance, (14 chn.), s. Tristram; Had-William b. 3
Dec. 1780, m. Abigail Coffin 28 Apr. 1800 and Had-WilUam Sherburne Fernald b. 29 Mar. 1S02
m. Sarah A. Hanscom 6 May 1827, d. 20 Oct. 1848: (3 Chn.): Abigail, b. 17 Sept. 1783, Married
1803" Captain John Furnald (after the death of his last wife moved to Middleton, N. H., from Kit-
tery & Portsmouth, Brookfield to Wolfborough and died very aged at Mr. Youngs, residing part of
the time with Mr. Nute after m. of his chn. declared tradition, notwithstanding, I found part of his
gravestone in Cemetery on Boston Common and Mr. Edward Fernald alleges he found from a
printed Boston Guide Book Record buried in Cemetery of Boston Common. I found he fought a
hard long battle in Boston Courts and won although he could not get a Boston Atty. to fight for him.
but finished it with his Uncle Samuel as his Atty. which he won. Understanding from finding
only two. out of 85 attys. in Boston, true, reported: for punishing the storage of firearms to use vs.
state & government: d. 1 Feb. 1788. I found part of his gravestone in said cemetery and inquired at
Police Headquarters if I had a right to take the same as part proof for my work and was informed not
to disturb it. He was in battle a lion, in peace much beloved for most noble traits. The true friend
of all honorable men and opponent of the ungodly workers of evil deeds.
AT NEXT PAGE IN A DIFFERENT COLORED INK I FIND THE FOLLOW-
ING INTERESTING RECORDS OF "MR. fOHN FURNALD YE SONNE OF
CAPTYNE JOHN AND ELIZABETH FURNEL, YE DAUGHTER OF REV.
Mr. (no and Marthar Rogers of Ipswich was borne one o'clock A. M. 23 November 1742
and married mary Savage horn 17 June 1752 daughter Thomas. Jon. in American Revolu-
tion, Sonne Thomas oh. 1694 sonne John, Earle of Rivers oh. 1651- sonne of Edward Constable sonne
Sir John Savage Knyte married 16 November 1771. Mr. John Furnald, was in ye American Revolu-
tion and dyed of Fever 23 November 1792 in Portsmouth. N. H. .^et. 50 years, Mary dyed 7 March
1S04.
AGES OF HIS CHILDREN
John Wentworth Furnald was horn quarter past ten A. M.Saturday 24 October 1772 and
naymed by Governor John Wentworth liys name for hys Private Secretarv and friend }i>n I'uriiald.
William Furnald was horn eight o'clock A. M. Friday 10 March 1775-
James Furnald was born two o'clock P. M. Thursday 24 June 1779.
Polly Furnald was born ten o'clock A. M. Tuesday 5 September 1782.
Abigail Coffin Furnald was born ten o'clock A. M. 2 April 1785-Thursday.
Mary and Betsey Furnald was born nine A. M. 1 August 1787- Wednesday.
Sarah Furnald was born nine o'clock Friday 11 June 1790.
Deborah Sherburne Furnald was born 27 of February at day break 1791."
"From my respected father was stolen ye ancient parmtree history sword, one of tlirce and \c
Doctor Renald Fernald Bible copy names ages there, by ye Roman Catholics. General George
Washington gave his sword to Captyn Tobias Furnald."
"My brother John Wentworth Furnald obit 3 November 1793. Not married." The writer
had a record of sd. sword as a gift of Washington to his "cousin Capt. Tobias Fernald."
Charter of Wolfborough granted 21 Aug. 1770 to Gov. John Wentworth and others. First
Minister Rev. Ebenezer Allen m. Betsey Furnald, Nov. 7, 1796: John Wentworth Fernald, m. Polly
Fernald 18 May 1795 Mr. Allen settled 1792, d. 1806, first pioneers Capt. John Smith, hunter, Mr.
Cooke &: settlers, Mr. James Thompson, Cooke, two others besides B. Blake J. Lucas, James Lary,
J. F'ullerton, and others. Middleton Charter 1771 to Sir William Mayne & others. First Minister
Rev. Nehemiah Ordway, 1778. Brookfield from Middleton formerly a part of it was incorporated
by Act Legislature 30 Dec. 1794 therefore as perceived Mr. John Furnald and wife were residents of
Middleton after his removal from Portsmouth to Wolfboro. with Gov. John Wentworth, to Mid-
dleton where his 1790 Census was taken and ret. and died 1792 at Portsmouth, bur. in N. Ceme-
tery. Continuance of the Holy Bible Records of the Long Line of Furnalds in 126 modes of
spelling their names during a few generations when there were a variety of Grammars.
"William Firnald, son of Mr. John Furnald (Fornel) 4th. and wife Mrs. Mary Savage Furnald
daughter of Mr. John Savage, and wife Mary, son of Thomas Savage, was born at Middleton, now
Brookfield N. H., 16 March 1775 Married Betsey Johnson, da. Phineas and wife Hannah Poor, son
of Col. Samuel Johnson (and both) In American Revolution, born at Andover, Mass. 22 June 1778
Married 1 Febuary 1797: Had: 12 descendants.
At 1 A. M. JONATHAN POOR FIRNALD born at Brookfield 1 December 1797.
" 3 " " Mary Firnald was born 11 April 1800: m- Samuel Holmes. No chn.
" 2 " " Samuel Firnald " " 22 August 1802 m. Hannah Home, son George m. Eunice
Knight, chn. (3 chn) Joan, m. Capt. Ichabord Frisbee & sister married GEORGE WASHINGTON
WILLIAMS in Civil War.
n ■ D
333
^ * * *
/^^ AT 4:00 A. M. ELIZABETH FIRNALD WAS BORN 19 SEPTEMBER.
iiyZ 1804. RECORD LOST.
Un ^'^ ^-^ A- ^- HANNAH FIRNALD WAS BORN 27 JANUARY. 1807.
7W" RECORD LOST.
AT 5.00 A. M. DEBORAH FIRNALD WAS BORN 20 JUNE. 1809; MAR-
ricd Phillip Towlc; chn. d. y.; m. 2nd, Jonathan Roberts; da. Anne. m. Henry Roberts, chn- and
d. 30 July. 1894. at Farmington. N. H.
At 7.00 A. M.. William Fernald. born 20 May. 1811; m. Sophronia Chase, had George W..
born 28 Nov. 1831; m.; chn.
At 8.00 A. M.. Parmelia Fernald was born 3 July. 1813; m. Mr. Denny, in Civil War; had chn.
At 10.00 A. M.. Meriah Fernald was born 26 Feb. 1816; m.
At 9.00 A. M.. Henry Hinckes Fernald. born 20 Jan. 1818; m. ; d. at Sea. Oct. 1864. ( ? )
At 11.00 A. M. John Firnald was born 2 April, 1820; m.
At Noon, Margaret A. Firnald was born 19 June, 1823; m. Thomas Jenkins, of Ponsmouth.
N. H.. and died at East Boston. Massachusetts (Webster Street) Godlike in nobly and unselfishingly
caring for others, proud, sensitive, wise, prudent, firm, unchangeably patriotic, an enemy to all foes
that threaten State and United States, and its honorable families, bitterly opposed to the church who
slew wickedly by assassinations her foreparents for their money, they fearless of a righteous retribution
deserved for their deeds and teachings of "do evil that good may come to Vatican and Pope, thus aiding,
causing national destruction." She was just and liberal. A noble, true, intellectual woman.
The Holy Bible Records of Jona. P. Firnald, Born Deer. 1st. 1797. Married To Mary Cotton
Pike. Sept. 13, 1821, da. Robert Pike and wife, Mary Cotton, da. Col. William Cotton and wife.
Mar}' Clark: son of General Zebulon Pike (bro. Jacob) son of Capt. John Peake, s. John Pike, s.
John Pike, s. Rev. John Pike of Dover, s. Major Robert PikcCommander-in-Chief,s.Attj'. John, m.
Sarah Washington (not Saunders). Mrs. Mary Cotton Pike Firnald, Born December 12th, 1800,
Middleton, N. H. Had — Maria Renald Firnald, born at Brookficld or Wolfboro, December
16th, 1822, moved to Wolfboro. Mary Elizabeth Firnald. Born December 12. 1824. Hannah
Firnald. Born 3 December. 1826; d. y. Hannah Firnald, Born November 29th, 1829. Nancy
Home Firnald, Born May 3rd, 1832. Joan More Firnald, Born August 30th, 1837. Brackett
Firnald, Born 24 December, 1834; d. 24 Oaober, 1838. James William Firnald, Born 24
July, 1839. Sophronia Chase Firnald, Born Octolier 11th, 1841. Jonathan Bracketi Firnald, Born
March 11th, 1844. Charles Augustus Firnald. Born December Sth. 1847. William Firnald, my
Father, Born March 10th, 1775. Betsey Firnald. my Mother, Born June 22nd, 1778. J. Brackett
Firnald, Died June 23rd, 1867. Nancy H. Dorr, Dau. J. P. Firnald, Died January 19th. 1868.
MARY C. FIRNALD, Died February 14th, 1887, Age. 86 years. 2 m., 2 days. Hannah Haines.
Died July 31st. 1890." Here ceases the Holy Bible Records of my honored and much beloved Chris-
tian Father that no pens or tongues of men can fully describe his to be emulated and rewarded deeds,
JONATHAN POOR FIRNALD, Died 23 of April, 1893, at Farmington, and buried by the side
of loved Mother at Wolfboro. Centre, New Hampshire, in 96 year of age. Sad. we view loved ones
gone before to our Heavenly PARENT GOD. See illustrations of this family, papal persecuted.
THE FERNALD WOLFBOROUGH MARRIAGES AT GRANITE STATE, N. H. V. S. A.,
18 May, 1795, John Wentwonh Fernald to Polly Fernald. both of Wolfborough. N. H.. U.S.A.
7 Nov., 1796, Betsey Fernald and Rev. Ebcnezer Allen, both of Wolfboro.
28 Jan., )8()(), Natlianicl Fernald of Br(M)kfield and Policy Coleman of Woin^oro.
22 Nov., 1800, Lois Fernald and Isaac Martin, both of Wolfboro.
29 Aug., 1801, James Fernald of Brookficld and Betsey Brackettof Wolfboro.
— Aug., 1803, Diadema Fernald and Joseph Frost, both of Wolfboro.
25 April, 1809, Sarah Fernal, b. 1790; m. Mr. Samuel Cottin of Wolfboro, wife of Brookfield,
Cotton Records.
■ 18 March, 1811, Susan Fernald of Wolfboro and Jacob Stanton of Brookfield.
20 March. 1820, Sarah Fernald and Samuel Tibbets, both of Wolfboro.
21 May, 1821, Jonathan P, Fernald of Wolfboro and Mary C. Pike of Middleton.
14 Nov., 1821. James Fernald of Wolfboro and Mary Hodges of Brookfield.
1 June, 1822, Elizabeth Fernald of Wolfboro and John IxKke of Wakefield.
334
D ^ 4^ 4^
^d )3 SEPTEMBEK, 1821, JONATHAN POOR FERNALD, OF WOLFBO-
^1 ROUGH. NEW HAMPSHIRE. AND MARY COTTON PIKE. OF MIDDLETON,
Jll 24 July. 1S24, Samuel Fernald and Hannah Hornc, both of Wolfborough, Brothers, sec
V^^ abo\e Record.
7 June. 1S29. Sophia VV. Fernald. of Durham, and Daniel Martin, of VVolfhorough.
2.? May. 1H3(). William Fernald, Jr. and Soplironia Chase, both of WolborouKh. He was bro-
tlier of above Jonathan P. and Willam Fernalii.
13 October, 1S.36, Mark Fernald. of WolfborouKh. and Mary C. Furblsli. of .South Her^^•ick.
4 June, IH3S, R.isella Fernald an:l Leiurd Shortridge, both of Wolfb trough.
1 July, 1S44. Mary Elizabeth Fernald and Joseph Lord Dixon, both of Wolflwrough.
26 August, 1S44, Maria Renald Fernald and Orin Dixon, brother of above, both of Wolfliorough.
17 Novcinlvr, ISq. Hannah IVrn;iId and Joshua M. Haines, both of W..in.nrongh.
9 March, ISS2 Nancy H. Fern.dd, of Wolfborough. and William T Dorr, of Ossipee. 4 sisters,
daughters or Mr. J. P. Fernald and Marv Cotton Fernald.
The above few Records, from THE HISIORY OF WOLFBOROUGH by BENJAMIN
FRANKLIN PARKER is an excellent book that ought to lie in the hands of Tourist, Historians
and Genealogists, who will profit by a vivid description. This Town has become deservingly cele-
brated as a summer resort and for its healthy invigorating climate. Situated on Lake Winnipiseogee,
S. E. am! S. W. border, wliile the lofty mountains of O.ssipee, and the rugged granite hills of Tufton-
borough tower up in the rear like impregnable walls of some gigantic fortress, its Lake Wentworth,
a mirror v\hose clear cry.stal surface reflects a scenery presented to the view at once picturesque and
sublime. The summer evening trips on the lakes are truly delightful. At sun.set, when the evening
shadows begin to fall upon the distant mountain tops, presenting their rugged outlines in bold relief,
and the moon and stars, gliding into the firmament, kindle their brilliant fires up in tlie depths of the
clear blue waters, the excursions seem like a delightful journey to the Elysian Fields. In autumn the
varigated leaves on the forest trees in all their marvelous beauty, which like moral old age, is most in-
structive and beautiful upon its departure in aid of the glorious spring, whose heralds are the musical
songs of birds, given to gladden, as the flowers soothe, in whose glory Solomon was not clad equal
unto these the least, surpassed only by the little ones made most perfect in the glorious likeness of
perfect-only God.
Mrs. Nancy H. (Fernald) Dorr (Door, Dore) Family Genealogy At East Wolfborough, ob-
tained W. T. Dorr Records. Jonatiian Door, or Dorr, as now spelled, of Rochester, N. H., m.
and had three sons before 1790 Census, probably moved to Alton, incorporated 15 January, 1796, for-
merly called Durham Gore. Had — Isaac Dore: Charles; James: John: Ezekiel: Mason, b. 12Sept.
1798; d. 12 April. 184<); m. Sarah M. Marston, 16 Mar. 1824. A da. m. Moses (?) Twombly, Alton,
N. H. Da. m. Col. Taylor. Da. m. Mr. Merrow. Edward Dorr, of Roxbury, had a son Edward
that d. 1683- Ten of them educated at Harvard College and four at N. E. College, and these two
were claimed as ancestors of the family.
Mason Dore, b. 1798; m. Sarah M. Marston. da. Simeon Marston and Wife, b. 1799; d. 14 Jul.
1864. His widow m. 2nd, Joseph Baker, Jr., b. 1802; d. 17 Apr. 1858. Their descendants were: —
Sarah A. Dorr, b. at Wakefield, N. H- 1825; m. Capt. John C. Rogers (of Militia) of Concord:
Abigail, b. 9 July. 1828; d. 9 Apr. 1843: Mary Jane, b. 1 Dec. 1836; d. 6 Dec. 1838: William Towlc
Dorr, b. 2 Oct. 1830; m. Nancy Home Fernald, da. Jonathan P. and Mary C. Firnald; In Heavy
Artillery, C. W. : Simeon L. b. 1832; m. ; in Civil War; d. : Lewis Mason Dorr, b.
1835; d. s. p. 1907: William T. Dorr, b. 1830; m. Miss Nancy H. Fernald, 12 Mar. 1852, who d.
19 Jan. 1868; Their descendants— Mar>- Ella Dorr. b. at Ossipee. N. H.. 12 Oct. 1854; m. Ellis
Lindskog: Inez E.stella. b. 22 Dec. 1856; m. James E., s. Mark and Betsey Avery (nee Nute) Mr.
W. T. Dorr, m. 2nd, Mrs. Jennie Oilman, da. of Alonzo Ramsdell and wife, Mary Elizabeth Tripp,
da. Samuel and wife, Sarah Tripp, nee Hubbard, da. of Sea Capt. John Hubbard and wife, Mrs- (Wise)
Hubbard, Kennebunkport, Me.; Chn.: Lula Dorr. b. 12 Apr. 1876; d. 31 Dec. 1907, s. p. bur.
Wolfboro Centre: Willie Mason Dorr. b. 4 July, 1877; d. 21 July, 1878.
d ^ n-
=n <4=» p4^ <4=» o
^l»rHE HISTORIC SWORD OF CAPT. JONATHAN OILMAN WAS GIVEN TOME
/-g BYHIS WIDOW AND WIFE OF W.T. DORR THAT WAS USED IN THE CO-
i I I LONIAL WARS, AMERICAN REVOLUTION, 1812, AND C. W. THAT HAD
^^^ one of Capt. j. Gilman' bruthers, a Capt. in Union Services and another a Col. in the
Southern Services. Brother pitted against brother from in the by body politic corrupt, that,
as in ancient Rome deluged God's earth with torrents of blood, terminating there in its destruction,
pure by shaking off the shackles of slavery, ever a blot, on the escutcheons of national services all pre-
ventable had the Africans been bought up and freed. Now with greater devastations may cause down-
fall of us, threaten from delay of enactment against the cause of downfall of states and nations, which
delay, but aids the well known destroyers to be defeated — it is predicted— by G. U. S. and F. A.
Mr. Ellis Lindskog, son Charles John Lindskog, A. M. Ph D. and wifs Anna Margaret Haiglethat d.
1884, aet62; d. 1906, Aet. 77 Married Mary Ella Dorr, da. Wm. T. and Nancy H. (Fernald) Dorr
Jan. 1886: Had Inez Anne Lindskog, b. 4 Oct. 1886: Louise Lmdskog, b. 12 Sept. 1891 : Carl Dorr
Lindskog, b. 18,Mar. 1894: Rachel Lindskog. b. 8 Oct. 1892, d. 12 Oct. 1892:
Mr. James E. Avery m. Inez Estella Dorr, da. William Towle Dorr & Mrs. Nancy H.
Dorr: Had descendants — Charles Edward Avery, b. Lena Estella Avery, b. 2 March 1884;
m. Harry David Wentworth b. 9 Sept. 1876, m. 1 Apr. 1905, son of Orin H. Wentworth and wife
Mary A. Leonard; had 2 chn. Everett O. Wentworth b. 13 Sept. 1906; Richard Fernald Wentworth
b. 24 Sept. 1908.
Mr. Benjamin Franklin Parker's History of Wolfborough, N. H. and Mr. John Farmer's
Gen. Register are replete in valuable inform uion concerning its families who have made the
greater U. S. also Collins Peerage give the name of John Hain, Esq. m. Jane Sandys, da. Col. Henry
Sandys, s. Sir Edwin Sandys and wife Elizabeth Sandys, s. Anthony, s. William, whose epitaph "Here
lie intom' d a happy Pare William Sandes and Margaret fair. His vertuous Wife, a Jewell rare" etc.
Vol. 6. p. 567. And Vol. 11, p. 416 the da. Anne and coheir of John Haynes, of Shropshire Esq: m.
Thomas Edwards, s. Sir Thomas Edwards, Knt. & Baronet, the first by King Charles \, m. Cecily
Brooks. Farmer gives the name as Haynes and the New Hampshire as Haines and the three had a
common ancestral progenitors. Governor John Haynes, Cambridge, came to N. E. 1633 from Cop-
ford Hall in Essex. Gov. 1835. Removed to Conn., Gov. 1639 and every 2d yr. till death 1654. By
2 wives he had 8 chn. Robert, Hezekiah, John, Roger, Mary, Joseph, Ruth and Mabel, 3 last by 2d
wife.
Samuel, Portsmouth, a deacon and founder of 1671 church, m. Mary Fifield 9 Jan. 1673: Had
Mathias, b. 7 Mar. 1677; William, b. 7 Jan. 1679, Samuel, b. July and 3 das. His numerous N. H.
descendants write the name Haines. Wolfborough was chosen by Joshua Haines in 1784 that came
from Greenland with his three sons — Jacob, Matthias and Joseph; they d. aet. 90, 89, 86, and wife
Ruth, 85 & sister Jane, 94 yrs. U. S. C. 1790 gives residence of Joshua Haynes as Washington Town,
Cheshire Co. 1 son & 1 da. under 16 yrs. of age. "Jos. Haynes, Brimfield Town, Mass., 9 sons over
16 and 4 das. and these all I find of Joshua, who was probably 1st named. The next generations as
they appear recorded are Joseph, chn. Polly, Eleanor, Hannah, Sally, Joseph 2nd m. had, George,
John L., Joshua B., and Joseph Rodney Haines who was elected four times Representative of N. H.,
Joshua W. Haines, in. Hannah, da. Jonathan P. and wife Mary C. F'Vrnald and left one son Fdwhi
Herbert Haines a Wolfboro. Merchant. Mr. John Haines, m. had 12 Chn. Lucy M.. William,
Joshua, John, Mary B., Mathias M., Hannah, Charles F., Martha J., Sarah A., Arvilla B. and Dan-
iel J., Communication from Mr. William Bellamy. "Eliza Bellamy was da. of Charles
Bellamy, eldest son of Charles Bellamy who came froin Boston to Exeter, N. H. He fought in
the war of the Revolution and died about 1811. I think his father's name was also Charles and I have
been told that his father was a brother of Joseph Bellamy the divine, I do not know any one ac-
quainted with my family history, and indeed take little interest in it" etc Eliza A. Bellamy, above,
m. John Acres and eldest da. m. the writer of this work to honor States, U. S. and Nations and
for honorable peace that is only to be obtained by equal and impartial justice with good laws.
3 BOSTON RECORDS PRINTED DURING THE CONTINUED ANNUAL IN-
CREASE OF INDEBTEDNESS OF CITY TILL WITH A CLAIM, NOT
YET SETTLED; IT AMOUNTS TO OVER ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-
four millions of dollars. Corrupt politicians educated at the Jesuit College on Harrison
Avenue, Boston. "It w.is observed of the Jesuit.s, that they constantly inculcated a tl^oro^l^ll
contempt of worldly things in their doctrines, but eagerly grasped at them in their lives- They
were wise in their generation, for they cried down worldly things, because they wanted to obtain
them, and cried up spiritual things, because they wanted to sell them. Lacon."
"Vol. 1. List of Inhabitants, Index, and p. 154 "Benjamen Funnell, John Funnell, Andrew
Funncll; John Fonnell" p. 162, 1691. List No. I. 1674 "Samll Burncll 2nd Part— Saniucll Uur-
nall, pp. 22, 28, S4 146 mentions his "neagro boy, from 1674 to 1695. Vol. 2., p. 68: William Bur-
ncll Admitted Townsman 26 Aug., 1640. Vol. 3. p. 77 Charlestown, John Funnell 1 Mar., 1657-K
Lott 19 of wood 0033 Mistick syde , common 0051-2 and Acres. Deed by Edward Johnson to John
fFownell 1660. Vol. 4. 1676, p. 212" probably forgery. "Jno Fennow" (Furneaux=Furnal) —
"libitie to git three or fower load Clobord out of the Cedar Swamps" Vol. 5. Faneuil. pp. -68, 69 &
70 interesting to Hon. Attys., one deed recorded 47 yrs. after it was said to be given. Andrew Fan-
euil, d. 1737, bought Stone House for i,800, in 1710, devising to Peter Faneuil— death 1742" (he d.
3 Mar. 1743), "the inventory appraised his Mansion House ji\2,27S." In 1772 it became the prop-
erty of John Vassall, who being an unfortunate "conspirator," the commonwealth pocketed jC2,MH)
by selling to Isaiah Doane. 1783 (I. 160, f. 125).' Wm. Phillips bought it 1701." etc. Vol.7.
John Foreland, 1700, Clerk of ye Market." Vol. 8, p. 29. Andrew FanucI: — build and maintainc
a Wharf, the width of the Street between mr. Faneuils and mr. Apthorps — Selectmen — Leaving the
end of Sd. Wharfe free for the Town, when they shall sec reason to plant Guns for the defence of
Said Town." Samll Furnell, p. 1, 45, 69, 74, 89, 170 & 196." "Vol. 9, 1679, Births & Baptisms
Samuel of Samuel & Anne Burnell, b. Oct. 10: John of John and Esther Barnell Aug. 13: pp. 16,
17. 19, 21, 140, 147. 168, 178: Furnel, Furnell, Fumill 15, 16. 21. 22. 24. 25, 28. 31. 35. 36. 38. 39.
41,45, 46, 56, 71, 141 & 251;"
"Strange" "Strong and EUenor Furnell, (City Document No. 130) Births and Baptisms"
Children: "Elizabeth, b. 7 Mar. 1643; bapt. 14 Mar.: Marie of Strong and Ellincr Ffurnell, b. May,
1645, bapt. Mary of Strong Furnell, aged about 8 days, 10 June, 1645: Joanna, b. 26 Dec. 1646; bapt.
28 Dec.: John, bapt. aet a. 5 ds. 20 Jun. 1648: 17 Samuel, bapt. 14 Feb. 1650: Mary, bapt. 1 April,
1651: Sarah of Strang's wife, bapt. 26 Aug. 1651: (Belknap wrote Strange) Susanna, b. 14 Sept. 1652:
Susan, d. 21 July, 1652: "(says Records) John. b. 28 Jan. 1653; bapt. 29 Nov.:" Susannah, of Strong
Furnill. bapt. First Church. 19 July. 1652: John, of Strong and EUine Furnell, b. 28 Jan. 1653; bapt.
29 Nov.: William and Ellinc Furnell. another Eleanor whose many ways spelt name is found, and
Michael Lambert, p. 71 is found m. widow Elinor Furnell" no month, date "1659." "William
Furnell" m. "Helen" and had: Joanna, b. 9 Dec. 1652: William, b. 29 July. 1654: Joseph, b. 19
Jan. 1656." In "1677, Olive, of John and Olive Furnell. b. 24 March, and m. John Smallpiece"
Boston: "by Mr. Miles. Apr. 7" no yr. given. Vol. 10. Andrew Fanneuil. p. 88: p. 110 John
funill gon to sea." "Vol. 11. p. 105 and 117. Faneuil." Vol. 12. p. 259. "Peter Faneuil Offer of
Market to Town." His signature could not be found. "Donates p. 183. j^lOO to build Work
House." p. 260. "Thanks of Town." p. 306, Offer to appoint a Clerk of Market. "Mr. Thomas
Jackson, Merchant of Boston: By Governt. and Councill Feb. 1st, 1691. List of persons of the ffrench
nation admitted into the Colony: Benjamin, John and Andrew ffunell; peter de Vaux, wife, da. and
Eng. maid; ffrancis Legare — two sons; James Montier, wife, and Eng. maid; Isaac Biscon and wife;
Dr. Bassett; Gabriel Bcrnon; William Barbut; l^uis Allare; Moses Sccq; Peter Urigne to give
Security next meeting. City Document 150 Vol. X. p. 62. Vol. 13 John Fantel, p. 232, care of
engine, p. 128, Liberty Granted to mr. Andrew faneuil to Erect a Toomb in the South Burying
Place near to the Toomb of Simion Stoddard, Elsq." That has been continually desecrated.
^o
337
/•^^ STEPHEN FERNALD, A FARMER. B. 17H4; S. |OEI, AND ELIZABETH.
it S. TOBIAS AND LUCY (ATKINSON). S. NATHANIEL AND MARGARET. S.
Hu CAPT. WILLIAM AND ELIZABETH, S. DR. RENALD AND JOANNA WAR-
^^/ burton; m. 27 Nov. 1806. Alice Carter, who d. 26 June. 186H; he d. 11 Feb., 1857; had
Clarissa, b. 13 April, 1807; m. Gideon Bray of Rockport, Mass.; d. 1861; Stephen, b. 14
. Sept.. 1808; m. Susan Tibbcts of Gt. Falls, N. H., 1837; d. 23 Jan.. 1891, at Peabody.
Generation 159. Mass., leather merchant; 1 son; Sarah, b, 15 Oct., 1813; m. Parker Maynard,
2d Alpheus Church of Winchester. Mass.; John. b. 4 March, 1815; m. 7 Sept., 1852,
Eliza T. Tomlinson of Alfrcton, Eng. ; d. 10 Nov.. 1859; safe and lock dealer; 3 chn.:
Mary Ann, b. twin of sd. John; m. Mr. Smith of Boston, 2d George Barnes of Concord,
N. H., 3d Mr. WardwcU of Maiden, Mass.; Cyrus, b. 14 Feb., 1817; m. Sally Ann
Quimby of York, pub. 1 Feb., 1838; 2nd, Olive F. Manson. 3 July, 1843; Asnath, b. 22
Jan., 1819; m. Mr. Nutter of Boston; 2nd, Charles Cook of Boston; d. June, 1881;
Luther, b. 9 July, 1820; m. Lucy M. (Norris) Kenny, 25 Nov., 1847; Tanner at Pea-
body, Mass.
Generation 159. PELATIAH FERNALD, b. 1771; m. Sarah, da. John and' Mary (Fernald)
Fernald, and d. 12 Dec. 1849; carpenter; Joanna, b. 10 Dec, 1798; d. 10 Nov., 1800;
John, b. 2 April, 1802; m. Mrs. Mary (Caswell) Fernald; 2nd, prob. 1st; m. Miss Clar-
issa Caswell, and d. 23 April, 1887. Had— George; George William was a son of Wil-
liam of Portsmo., N. H., s. Wm., s. Wm., s. John, s. John; Peletiah, b. 19 Aug., 1804;
m. Mary Caswell, 10 Mar.; d. 20 Sept., 1842; Mark, b. 19 Sept., 18o6; d. 1 Oct., 1806;
Samuel, b. 19 Sept., 1806 (twins); m. Caroline Hope, 2 Dec, 1829; 2nd, Ann Jane
Seavey, 7 Feb., 1832; d. 9 July. 1889, at Cliftendale. Mass.
Generation 160. WILLIAM WENTWORTH FERNALD, m. 10 Oct., 1789. Waitc Salisbury,
Mass.; b. 1760; d. 8 Sept., 1851. and wife d. 2 Sept., 1855; Farmer, prominent in Civil
matters. Had descendants— Wentworth, b. 12 Nov., 1790; m. Miriam Staples, 30 Nov.,
1820; d. 19 Jan., 1878, at Eliot. Nancy, b. Oct., 1794; m. Col. Gowen Wilson, 27 Nov.,
1816, and d. 6 May, 1887; Waite, b. 25 June, 1707; m. Oliver Staples, 16 April, 1818;
d. 24 Dec, 1876; 4 chn. : Alzira, b. 11 July, 1799; m. James Johnson, 15 Nov., 1821; 2
chn.: William Sah'sbury, b. 1802; m. Sarah Ann Hanscom, 6 May. 1827; d. Oct., 1848;
Hannah Salisbury, b. 10 Feb., 1805; d. 1 Feb.. 1806; Julia, b. 9 Feb.,. 1808; m. Rev.
Paschal P. Morrell, 27 April, 1831, and d. 17 March, 1901, at Hyde Park, Ma.ss. ; 2 chn. :
Sarah Ann, b. 11 June, 1810; m. Rev. James Gushing, 16 Aug.,. 1832; d. 2 June, 1845; 2
chn.
Generation 160. SAMUEL FERNALD, b. 1762; m. 11 April, 1825, Betsey Fernald. da. Dennis
and wife. Elizabeth (Stacey) Fernald, and d. 3 March, 1857. Had— Sarah A- E., b. 12
June, 1826; m. 5 Oct., 1845, Warrington Paul of Eliot; 12 chn.: Maria, b. 1 Sept., 1S27;
m. 12 March, 1848, Samuel Paul; d. 31 Oct., 1848.
Generation 159. MARK FERNALD, s. Capt. Mark and ; b. 1745; m. 6 March. 1807,
Margery P., da. Robert and Margery Pepperrill (Wentworth) Cutts; b. 14 Feb., 1784,
and died 1864. He was a Blacksmith, and d. 20 Jan., 1852. Had— William Cutts, b. 7
Sept., 1907; m. Jane Tibbcts of Sanford. 1 Oct., 1835, and d. 4 Oct.. I87S; (;roccr at
Rochester, N. H.; 6 chn. : James Madison, b. 23 April, 1809; d. S June. 1810; Hiram,
b. 16 Mav. 1811; m. An.dia Marin Childs, 18 Oct., 18.36; .1. 23 Dec. 1870; (iraff.n.
Mass.; 4 chn: Sanuicl, b. 25 April, 1813: m. Lcvina Wherrin, 26 May, 1835; d. 14 Oct.,
1886; Elizabeth Ann, b. 19 April, 1815; m. Elisha Hammond, 7 Oct., 1838; 2nd, John
B. Hanscom. 1853; Rot^crt Cutts, b. 4 |iinc, 1817; m. Caroline Newell, 13 Oct.. 1839;
2nd, m. Eunice Lord, 5 June, 1847; 3rd, Ann Pray; d. 20 Aug., 1894; Merchant at
Salmon Falls, N. B.; 6 chn.: Mark, b. 10 Aug., 1820; m. Julia A. Hanson, 13 June,
1842; d. 1868-9; Police Sergeant; 4 chn.: John Dennet, b. 7 Oct., 1S22; in. Mar\ A.
Paul 7 Oct., 1846; d. 11 Jan., 1892; Farmer of Eliot, Me.; 5 chn.: Marv, b. 18 Jan.,
1825; m. Moses Hammond, 1854; Margery C, b. 23 July, 1827: m. William A. Fern-
ald, 20 Oct., 1850: d. 26 Feb., 1892.
3
3fernal6 fllbarriage IRecorfee
Boston, in. S. a.
Data Etc
Names
BuTHPLACt.
1886 A. D.
59
Thomas F. Fernald,
Portland, Me..
Ian. 5
Julia H. Porter.
Hartford, Conn.,
3980
George H. Fernald.
Boston, Mass.,
Dec. J 5
Mabel Laughton.
"
1887
307:
Frank C. Fernald,
Portsmouth, N-H.,
Sept. 21
Lois H. Curtis,
Boston, Mass.,
3177
James H. McAdams,
..
Oct. 10
Ella F. Fernald.
1888
1267
Claudius B. Lasell.Jr.
Schoharie, N.Y.
May 8
Lizzie S. Fernald,
Boston, Mass.,
3078
Albert O. Waitt,
Maiden, "
Sept. 20
Lizzie B. Fernald,
Essex,
3786
George O. Lanphear,
Windham, Vt.,
Nov. 11
Eliza L. Fernald,
Parsonsfield, Me.,
1889
219
James Q. Fernald,
Tuftonboro.N. H.
Ian. 31
Carrie C. Bartlett,
Boston, Mass.,
1890
123
Charles P. Fernald,
Boston, Mass.,
Jan. 16
Florence T. Brigham,
4897
Frederick A. Edwards
W. Gardiner, Me.,
Dec. 13
Annie L. Fernald,
Cambridge, Mass.
1891
2619
William E. Fernald,
Boston, Mass.,
July 28
Augusta M. Heven,
2962
Burton Fernald,
Halifax, N. S.,
Aug. 27
M. Lizzie Smith,
Rumford, Me.,
4567
Edmond E. Fernald,
Farmington.N.H.
Nov. 18
Jeannette G. Foster,
Trenton, Me.,
1892
1084
ArchbouA. L. Hoyle
Webster, Mass.,
Apr. 6
Helen B. B. Fennald.
Milford,
2955
Walter F. Fernald,
Boston,
Aug. 13
Alice V. Jones,
Needham,
3262
Harry Fernald,
Cambridge. "
Aug. 17
Helen Thomas,
Vermont.
1893
5677
Charles H. Bense,
Boston, Mass.,
Dec. 31
Mary L Fernald,
"
43*
Jan. 21
Albert C. Fernald,
Cone Valley, Cal.,
Fidelia F. Trefrey,
Novia Scotia,
"Those marked *one, or both, out of City."
Edwin and Martha M.,
Henry C. and Sarah C,
John C. and Sarah A.,
James C. and Eliza J.,
Frank L. and Mary E.,
Thomas and Deborah M..
James and Sarah F..
Mark and Julia A..
Claudius B.and Elizabeth W.K.,
Thomas F. and Sarah L.,
Joseph H. and Elizabeth W.,
Isaac and Lizzie,
Henry and Experience,
James and Dorothy M.,
Joel and Mahala,
John and Caroline,
Joseph and Louise S.,
Edward and Josephine,
Albion K. P. and Sarah D.,
William. H. and Charlotte,
Daniel F. and Mary F.,
John F. and Mary J.,
Charles W. and Clara A.,
John and Lydia,
Lewis C. and Caroline V..
John P. and Tryphosia W.,
Andrew and Hannah,
Henry W. and E. L.,
Joseph L. and Louisa D.,
George E. and Hannah M.,
Joshua W. and Mary E.,
Franklin M. and Lydia,
George F. and Mary A.,
John and Jane,
Albert A. and Martha,
John and Emma,
(§
^ ^ ^ o
643*
Oct. 22
646
Oct. 19
1894
692
Jan. 31
934
Mar. 28
1435
Apr. 28
2198
Jun. 23
3483
Sept. 19
1895
42
Jan. 2
901
Mar. 6
2837
July 14
3806
Sept. 19
4784
Nov. 2
1896
2288
May 27
3893
Sept. 2
1897
2833
Jan. 4
4454
Oct. 11
1899
899
Feb. 26
1840
May 1 1
3188
Julv 9
6()(i*
Aug. 23
Charles W. Fernald. Portsmouth, N. H.
Etta Kelley, Boston, Mass.,
John J. McGurin, Boston, Mass.,
Caroline E. Fernald. Boston, Mass.,
William Day,
Annie M. Fernald,
Charles F. Fernald.
Eva J. D. Abbot.
Harry Richardson,
Gertrude E. Fernald,
Arthur Fernald.
Dora Ames,
George A. C. Berry.
Carrie S. Fernald,
Charles E. Watson,
Lilla E. Fernald,
Harry Fernald,
Jannett A. Birch,
George N. Crowell,
Annie I. Fernald,
Alfred R. Phillips, ■
Gertie E. Fernald,
Oscar Fisher,
Dora M. Fernald,
Joshua W. Fernald,
Mary E. Rice,
Charles A. Fernald,
Gertrude M. Davis,
England,
Boston, Mass.,
Scituate, Mass.,
Boston, Mass.,
Galveston, Texas,
Vineyard, Wis.,
Canaan, Me.,
Canaan, Me.,
Boston, Mass.,
Scituate, Mass..
Boston, Mass.,
Boston, Mass.,
Cambridge, Mass.
Beverly, Mass.,
Nansemond Co., ''
Kittery, Mc.,
Hamlinton, Ohio,
Whitewater, Wis.,
Nova Scotia,
Burlington, Me.,
Charles and Lucy C.
Charles P. and Lydia A.
William P. and Harriet F.
Robert A. and Margaret
Richard and Alice
George C. and Irene M.
Bryant W. and Henrietta C.
John K. and Isabella
Harrison R. and Martha
Charles and Maria
Josiah and Julia
Horace and Tryphena
David A. and Tryphena C.
John and Henrietta C.
George B. and Annie J.
Charles W. and Eliza L. F.
Joshua W. and Mary E.
Charles W. and Mary J.
, Horatio and Sarah
Jesse and Irene
Alfred A. and Emma C.
Charles H. and Martha
Mathew and Eliza
William and Mary
Portsmouth, N. H., Thomas and Margaret H.
Charlestown, Mass., Melvin and Mary 1.
Boston, Mass., George C. and Irene M.
Mass., Horace F. and Frances
Warren H. Blaisdell, Westford, Mass.,
Annie L. Fernald, Greene, Mc.,
John H. Jackson, New York. N. Y.
Annie L. Fernald, Boston, Mass.,
Dennis J. Swanson, England,
Ella M. Fernald,
Joseph Thompson,
Annie Fernald,
Luther T. Fernald,
Elizabeth A. Jack,
Fred A. Fernald,
Florence M. Baker,
Somerville, Mass
St. Johns, N. F.,
Boston, Mass.,
Somerville, Mass
New Brunswick,
Kittery, Me.,
Lebanon, N. H.,
Israel and Loui-a
Thomas and Jenette
William W. and Mary A.
Levi P. and Ellen A.
Alfred and Mary A.
Henry C. and Mary J.
Thomas and Ellen
Alonzo and Catherine
Luther E. and Mary K.
John M. and Hannah
Alonzo and Martha F.
Joel and Josephine J.
D
^ ^
1900
743
17 Oct.
1901
H27
13 Feb.
1760
29 Apr.
1902
3512
S Aug.
3S60
12 Auk.
4372
30 Sept.
1904
25 May
3333
7 July
5552
2 Nov.
6293
30 Nov.
798
26 Sept.
190>
630
16 Feb.
1906
3061
23 Jun.
5012
20 Sept.
5627
17 Oct.
611H
5 Nov.
6164
8 Nov.
6245
12 Nov.
1907
278(1
5 Jun.
5266
18 Sept.
6064
9 Oct.
6167
23 Oct.
(Dr. )AdelbertFernald, Jackson, N. H.,
Evelyn W. Nunri, Hackettstown, N.
William T. Fi.sh, Pittsfiekl, Me.,
Tallulah F'. Feniald, Fitchbiirg, Mass.,
Benjamin F.Chapman, Boston, Mass.,
Majorie E. Fernald, Dorset, Vt.,
Fred H. Pearson,
Sadie B. Fernald,
John Coughlin,
Caroline C. Fernald,
ChristopherT. Lenord,
Sarah H. Fernald,
Lee E. Fernald,
Mildred B. Fettingill,
Edwin I. Warshauer,
Carrie E. Fernald,
Joseph W. Noble,
Gertrude E. Fernald,
Semuel H. Dodge,
Margaret ]. Fernald,
Denis E. Kellcy,
Evie M. Fernald,
Ralph E. Fernald,
Julia Murphy,
Windham. N. H.
Boston, Mass.,
Eliot, Me.,
Amesbury, Mass.,
Milwaukee, Wis.,
Boston, Mass.,
Woodstock, N. B.
Peterboro, Can.,
Windsor, N. H.,
Boston, Mass.,
Northport, Me.,
Kittery, Me
Ireland,
John W. and Lucinda
Miller R. and Hulda
William T. and Man' B.
William G. and 'lallulah F.
Benjamin H. and Ellen A.
Luke B. and Clarissa A.
Hiram C. and Rli/abeth
Levi p. and Elena
Patrick and Margaret
Henry and Mary J.
Mathew and Mary
Robert A. and Margaret
George W. and Elizabeth
Granville W. and Fronia
Simon and Anna
Daniel F. and Mary F.
Theodore H. and NIatha L
William N. and Emily
John G. and Nellie M.
John M. and Mary J.
John and Catherine
Austin and Kate
Warren and Margaret
Edward and Margaret
Frank L. Fernald, England,
KatherineE. Doughtv, So. Manchester, Ct.,
Edward G. Storey, ' New York, N. Y.,
Grace H. Fernald, Boston, Mass.,
Ralph S. Fernald,
KatherineG.Littlefield, Cambridge, Mass.,
Anthony H. Dernald, Boston,
Laura K. Penny,
Harry V. Fernald,
Mary C. McAuliffe,
Leroy C. Pinkham,
Ella M. Fernald,
Albert H. Davis, Jr..
Helen A. Fernald,
Gordon H. Fernald,
Adeline M. Taft,
William E. Anderson,
Louise S. Fernald,
CJeorge H. Hartshorn,
Gertrude H. Fernald,
Natick,
Arlington, "
Lynn,
Etna, Me.,
Ellsworth Falls, Me.,
Bridgeport, Conn.,
Boston, Mass.,
Cambridge. Mass.,
Worcester, "
Halifax Co., N. S.,
Boston, Mass.,
Walpole, "
Portland, Me.,
John A. and Mary F.
John W. and Elizabeth A.
John M. and Caroline A.
Levi P. and Ellen A.
William F. and Mary
Charles and Adelaide
William H. and Maria L.
Thomas and Julia
Henry A. and Susan R.
William J. and Mary
Randall and Lizzie C.
George and Pricilla
Albert H. and Ella
George W. and Harriet S.
Robert P. and Jennie
Frank W. and Mary
William C. and Lalia
John and Mary J.
Warren and A n gel i tie
Samuel R. and Ellen L.
^^-a
341
<] ^ <4^ .^ L>
%
1908
282
16 Jan.
2969
23 Jun.
4451
9 Sept.
527*
16 Jun.
563*
24 Jun.
^.i^*
Arthur L. Fernald, Islesford, Cc,
Katherinc E. Griffin, Fitchburg, Mass.,
James Gallacher, Jr., Scotland,
Carrie E. Fernald, Everett, Mass.,
Albert Fernald, Winterport, Me.,
Edith H. Dyer, Gorham,
William G. Fernald, Houlton,
Cora E. Shaw, W. Buxton,
William T. Cummings, Boston, Mass.
Laura Fernald, Medford, "
Samuel S. & Phebc,
Patrick & Nora,
James & Jeanettc,
Charles B. and Elsie,
Alexander & Rumney G.
George W. & Martha,
John A. & Joanna,
Joseph & Emily,
George R. & Annie,
Frank & Mariette F.
1909
30 Sept. Paul Fernald, Chicago, 111.,
Mrs- Louise M-Scruton, Jamaica PL, Mas
James W. & Sarah
John O. & Mary Waters
D^
^
^ JSirtbs ^ I
Margaret |ane Fernald,
William Fernald,
Theodore Nixon Fernald,
Minnie Lucrctia F'ernald,
PARENTS- NAMES.
da. John and Mary J.
son, Andrew G. and Orilla,
i son Almcrin W. and Emma ).
da.
DATE OF BtKTH NO
Ponland, Me., and Boston, Mass., Jan. 9, 1886, 3S88
New Brunswick, N. B
Boston, Mass., and Albion,
Me
son Alonzo and Catherine,
son Walter R. and Kate M.
son John and Mary J.,
da. William H. and Maria L., l'cmliroke,Me.,and Newfoundland, Mar. 22. 188V,
da. Andrew G. and Orilla,
son Charles B. and Elsie B..
.son Henry H. and Ellen E..
Everett and Lizzie,
son William H. and Maria L
da.
Beatrice Ger.ildine Fernald. da. Walter C. and Emma K.
Alonza Fernald.
Waiter Fernald,
Frank Fernald,
Evelyn Ida Fernald,
Edith Clare Fernald.
Leroy Ailams Fernald.
Henry Francis F'ernald,
Da. Fernald,
Ronald Fernald,
Annie Fernald.
Mildred Estella Fernald,
Dorothy Fernald,
Gladys Myrtle Fernald,
Dorothea Fernald,
Fernald.
Constance Fernald,
Roy Lynde Fernald,
Fernald.
Clarence Fernald.
Ruth F. Fernald,
Virginia L- Fernald,
Winchester.
yuincy, Mass., and Ireland,
Kittery, Me., and Janesville, Wis.
Portland. Me., and Boston. Mass.
Sept. 11, 1886, 76SS
Aug. 24, 1886,
July 25, 1888.
Jan. 22, I88S,
Oct. 23. 1888.
NoV. 14, 1888.
May 26, 1889.
St. Johns. N.B..andSt.Johns,N.B., Apr. 23, 1889.
Kockport and Dorchester, Mass.,
York, Me., and New Brunswick,
Maine and Newfoundland,
Machias, Me., and Newfoundland
9491
3202
412S
4275
5I(H»
3310
3841
7977
10184
7977
la. William E. and Augusta M. Boston, Mass., and Boston. Mass.,
da. H. H. and Ellen E..
da. Charles and Susan,
da. Elbridgc S. and Alice J.,
son Elmer R. and Hattie I.,
da. Edward A. and Gertrude.
da. Charles W. and Hortense.
son Luther T. and Bessie H..
son Chas. A. and Gertrude M..
da. Frank L. and Kitty.
da. Charles W. and Etta T. K.,
York. Me., and at. St. Johns. N.B.
Boston and Arlington, Mass.,
Winterpon.Me., Milwaukee, Wis.
Kittery and Lisbon Falls, Me.,
Chelsea and Dedham, Mass.,
Winterport, Me., and s:mie,
Somerville and N. B.,
Boston and Roxbury, Mass.,
England and Manchester, Conn.,
Portsmouth, N. H., and Boston,
June 13, 1890,
Apr. 29, 1890.
Sept. 13, 1892, 2032
Dec. 18, 1892, S558
Sept. 16, 1892, 11863
June 18, 1892, 14677
Nov. 23, 1893, 9402
Mar. 19, 1895. 1642
Mar. 10, 1897, 1609
Nov. 22, 1897, 10054
Apr. 4, 1900, 4513
Dec. 9, 1901, 13626
Dec. 10, 1902, 13549
Aug. 13, 1904. 6666
Oct. 5, 1907, 8H09
Dec. 8, 1907, 12223
Here closes the Birth Records furnished to writer from Recorder's Othce, Old Court House, Boston, Monday,
8 February, 1909. The Death Records, also, after the boast to destroy F — name and Families "by those who destroy
every family, no matter, how good or high they stand if the crimes of criminals were not condoned" — which line was
not condoned — hut shown up to the world for proper protection of its noble, lawful, God chosen rulers and honorable
inhabitants, the beloved children of our Heavenly I'ather God who have seen two judgts and an attorney general re-
sign; subornation of perjury; death of President McKinley, and the good kings of Italy and Portugal; et als. See
Encyclia- sent to every Nation and every State Library in the United States. And copy of suorn statement .^ent to
former chief of state police, that should have been promptly acted upon for safety of every good citizen, even if those
in high position were brought to the bar of justice, as constitutions and all common laws direct and demand for the
safety of the public and all law conforming people which the Declaration of Rights of the Commonwealth of Massa-
chu.setts requires to preserve its Sacred Honor. Protect the Innocent! Punish the Guilty! ! ! I Gave You Prtof ! I ! I
343
Commonwealth of TT^lC Tl JT^iLCi ^'''y "' boston
Massachusetts and _ A/JCZ\SX IR^ Fernald Record
JosepliFcrnakl,9Apr., I SK7. at. H2v. 6m. Id.. Rittcrv, Me., son Simon and Miriam, Kitterv, Me., 2629.
Huldah A. Fernald, maiden name Friend, IS Nov., 1890, 80v. 6m. 9d., Stoddard. N. H.. da. Na-
thaniel (wife Woodlnirv, M.,) S942.
Sarah I'. Fernald, I Marshall.) 6 Sept.. 1S91. 79v.. Bradford. N. II. .da. Nathan R. and Abigail. Nil. 71 19.
Ellen I'. Fernald, ( Ahrams, ) 29 ,\l;iv, 1H92. 7,w.. 6m.. IHd., Monhc[,'an, Me., da. |ohn and I'hu he,
Boston-Portland, Me.. 4757.
Lenora VV. Fernald, U |un., 1S92, 26v. 11m. 4d., Fowell, Me., da. Benjamin VV. Lowell, Me.. 5146.
Bryant N. Fernald. 14 Jim.. IH92. 69v.. Im.. 7d.. yuincy, Mass., s. Lemuel and .Mary, Nottingham,
N. H., 5205.
Sarah E. Fernald, 1 Nov., IS92. 72v.. Lynn, Ma,ss.,da Ezra, Lynn, Mass., 935S.
Thomas F. Fernald, 21 Apr., 1H93, 62v., 10m., 5d.. Portland, Me., s. Edwin and Martha, Portland.
and Yarmouth, Me., 3699.
Orilla M. Fernald, 11 )un., 1893, 34v., St. )ohn, N. B.. da. Thomas C. and Mary A.. St. John.
N. B.. 5347.
Charles W. Fernald. 2 Oct., 1893. 63y. Sm. 28d.. Portsmouth, N. H., s. Joseph and Eliza, Ports-
mouth, N. H., 8857.
Marv ). Fernald, 25 Nov.. 1893, 28v., Somerville, Mass., da. Patrick, wife Henry, Ireland, 104S6.
Margaret Fernald, 30 Nov., 1893, 62y., Cambridge, Mass. da. John, wife of William, 10367.
Julia A. Fernald, 17 Sept., 1894, 75y. 9m. 31d., Somersworth, N. H., wife Mark, da. John &
Rebecca Roberts. 135*.
Chester N. F'ernald, 3 Feb., 1894. 22y, Im. 21d., Scituate, Mass., da. Bryant N. & Henrietta C,
Quincy, 1131.
Lizzie Fernald. 13 Mar.. 1894, 64v.. Somersworth. N. H., Daniel & Phebe. w. Chas. C, 2402.
Sarah E. Fernald. 28 .'Vpril, 1894, 78v., Boston, Mass., widow Eli, maiden name Goodwin. 3845.
George C. Fernald, 13 Feb., 1895,' 61v. 5m. 22d., Boston, Mass., s. Benjamin & Julia, Kitterv,
Me., 1426.
Minnie E. Fernald, 7 [une. 1895. 6y. 5m. I5d.. Boston, Ma.ss., da. Almerin \V. & Emma I., Boston
& Albion, Me., 4976.
Irene M. Fjrnil.l. II | ilv. 13h'. 56/. In. 26J.. VValdboro. Me., da. Charles cx Althea ( Brackett)
Me., 5828.
William H. Fernald, 11 December, 1895.
William H. Fernald, 25 May, 1896, 65y., York, Me., son of William cS: Elizabeth (Week.^ ) 4697.
Mary E. Fernald. 23 July, 1896. 42y, 6m., England, da. Thomas Coop & wife Ruth Bradshaw,
Eng., 6638.
Alice I. Fernald, 10 March, 1896. 27y. Sm. lOd., Milwaukee. Wis., da. M. E. Smith &: w. Emma
Grant. Can.. 2341.
Oliver G. Fernald. 8 May, 1899, SSy. 2m. 23d., Tuftonboro, N. H.,s. Joel & w. M. Caverly, Tufton-
boro, 4146.
loshua W. Fernald, 2 Feb. 1899, 74v., Portsmouth, N. H.. s. Thomas&w. Margaret (Marshall,) 1212.
Marv A. Fernald. maiden name Meservc, widow of Dr. |ohn S. Fernald, 18 May, 1899, 87y., Bar-
rington, N. H., da. Andrew & w. Patience Hall, N. H., 4414.
Lucien W. Fernald. wife John C, 9 Jan. 1900, Sly., Mexico, son of John & Joanna( Whitncct, )Ncw
Brunswick, 297.
Sarah A. Fernald, 14 Dec. 1901, 77y. 6m. 28d., Boston, Mass., da. Thomas Hunting & w. Sarah
Burrill, Petertown. N. H. and Salem, Ma.s.s., 10814.
Olander M. Fernald, 15 Apr., 1902, 61y. 7m. 14d., Candia, N. H., s. Samuel &: Hannah, New
Hampshire, 3314.
Ellen E. Fernald, 29 March, 1902, 49y., 81*.
John Fernald, 1 Jan., 1903, S8v. 8m. 23d., Portland, Me., s. Alfred B. & Anna O. (Curtis,) 11.
Sarah A. Fernald, IS Sept., 1903, S3y., St. [ohn, N. B., da. Wm. & Catherine Boyle, Ireland, w. of 7740.
Harriet S. Fernald, 25 Dec, 1903, 54y.'2m. Id., Concord, N. H., da. Albert Nichols & w. Nancy
Batchelder wife of George W., Amherst & London, N. H.
Eliza t'crnald, 28 Dec. 1903. 74y.. Boston, Mass., da. Benj. and Julia (Clark) Fernald, 10532.
John C. Fernald, 29 Feb., 1904. 84v. 10m. Ud., Otisfield, Me., s. Timothy & Betsey(Ray)Fernald, 47*.
Leona A. Fernald, 7 Aug., 1904, — y. Im. ISd., Somerville, Mass., da. Luther T. &: Bessie A. (Jack)
Fernald, Somerville & New B.,'6S81.
Laura ). Fernald, 22 Sept., 1904, 49y. 10m. 22d., Portsmouth N. H., da. Wm. H. & Frances H.
(Brooks.) Me., 7913.
Henrietta Fernald, widow Bryant N. Fernald, 20 Jan., 1905, 73y. 2m. 23d., Novia Scotia, da. Henry
& Selina Simpson (Baker,) 617.
E. L. Fernald, 8 April, 1905, w. Henry W., 65y., Hadley, da. Elbridge G. & Mary M. Boihwell
(Spencer) Haddan, Conn., 3143.
SOPHRONIA C. FERNALD, 28 July, 1906, 6Sy., Wolfboro Centre. N. H., da. Jonathan P. &
MaryC. (Pike) Brookfield& Middleton, N.H., 4th sister poisoned. See C.B. Records. House. 6530.
Mary F." Fernald, 4 Dec, 1906. 74y. 2m. 24d., Ossipee, N. H., wid. Danl. F., da. Wm. & Lucinda
Hazlett (Smith), Portsmouth, N. H., 491*.
Clara A. Fernald, 15 Mar., 1907, 73y. 2m., Boothbay, Me., widow of Charles W., and da. Simeon
Sawyer, 2560.
John S. Fernald. 23 Dec, 1908, S3y. 3m. 2d., Boston. Mass., s. John & Eliza (Thomlinson) Fernald.
Kittery, Maine and Alfreton, England, 11510.
344
IG
PLATE 1346 Col Toh
Chapter ^mn
"Copy.
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT DESPATCH AGENCY, 4TnifalgarSquare, VV.C, London.
His Excellency, IS January, 1896.
Hon. Thos. F. Bayard,
United States Amba,s.sador,
123 Victoria Street, S. W.,
Sir:
In compliance with my promise of the 11th instant, I now have the honour to enclose a copy of —
A Registry of the Commissions in the Army under the Command of the Honble. VVm. Pepper-
rell, Esq., for an Expedition against the French Settlements on Cape Breton.
This Register gives the names of the Officers of the Forces sent out by New Hampshire, Massa-
chusetts and Connecticut, in the Expedition that captured Luuisburg June 17, 1745." etc.
"The rolls asked for in Mr. CJiltiiore's letter to Mr. Gallingcr, and transmitted through the De-
partment of State to you, cannot be found in either the Colonial, the Admiralty, or the \Var Otfices;
and it is presumed that they do not exist in England; but a search is being made in the Audit Office,
on the chance of their having been used as vouchers, as suggested by Mr. Gilmore.
Mr. Douglas Brymer, the Canadian Archivist, Ottawa, sometime ago said that many documents
of the nature of the desired rolls, at about the period of 1745 and later, were transmitted to Halifax,
and these documents, or some of them, may still exist at Halifax." etc
=D
345
— =^a <=|k ^ ^ a=
7i
For making the present search and for copying the enclosed Register, I shall be
ing recipient of seven dollars, if Mr. Gilmorc is willing to make such a remittance.
I have the honour, etc.,
B. F. Stevens."
Copy
1878
General Officers.
William Fepperell, Esq., Lieutenant General and Commander-in-Chief of all Forces by Sea and
Land in said Expedition and dated 31 January 1745. From Govr. Shirley and Govr. Law and Govr.
Wentworth.
Roger Wolcott, Esqr., Major General from Govr. Shirley. Dated 7 March, 1745.
Samuel Waldo, Esqr., Brigadier General from Gov. Shirley. " 7 " 1745.
Joseph Dwight, Esqr., Brigadier General from Gov. Shirley. " 20 Feby. 1745.
Commissions in the first Regiment of the Massachusetts Troops Received from Govr. Shirley.
The Honble.Wm. Pepperell,Esq.,
John Bradshect, Esqr.,
Richd. Cutt, Esqr.,
Peter Staples,
Ephraim Baker,
Jno. Kinsclagh,
Jno. Harman,
Moses Butler,
Thos. Perkins,
Wm. Warner,
Moses Pearson,
John Butler,
John Fairfield,
Bray Deering,
Andrew Watkins,
Benj. Harman,
John Burbank,
Geo. Garrish,
George Knight,
Geo. Gowell,
Joel Whittemore,
John Greenough, Josiah Rice,
Nathl. Kimball,
Jos. Weeks,
Charles Cavenagh,
Thomas Adams,
Thomas Hardy,
Col. & Capt. of 1st Company.
2d Col. & Capt. 2d Company.
Major & Capt. 4th Company.
Capt. Lt. 1st Co.
31st January, 1744
5th Feb'y, "
Capt.
2d
Capt.
5th
Capt.
6th
Capt.
7th
Capt.
8th
Capt.
9th
Capt.
10th
Lieut.
2d
Lieut.
3d
Lieut.
4th
Lieut.
5th
Lieut.
6th
-Lieut.
7th
Lieut.
8th
Lieut.
9th
Lieut.
10th
2d Lieut
1st
Ensign
1st
Ensigns
2d
Ensign
3d
Ensign
4th
Ensign
5th
Ensign
6th
-Ensign
7th
Ensign
8th
346
(^
Jno. Bridge,
Ensign. 9th Co.,
Sth Feb., 17+4
James Sprigger,
Ensign, 10th Co.,
6th Feb..
Joseph Goldthwaite,
Adjt.
12th Mar., "
Jno. Gorman,
Armorer.
.1st Feb..
Commissions in the Second Massachusetts Regiment whereof Honble.
Samuel Waldo. Esqr., is Col.
Saml. Waldo. Esqr..
Col. and Capt.. 1st Co.
7th Feb.,
Arthur Noble, Esqr.,
Lt. Col. and Capt. 2nd,
Wm. Hunt, Esqr..
Majr.
I Sth Feb.. "
Saml. Moody,
Capt. 1st. Co.,
9th "
Jno. Watts,
Capt. 2nd "
Sth " ' "
Philip Duamresque,
Capt. 3rd '•
Sth "
Bcnj. Goldthwaite,
Capt. 4th "
9th "
Daniel Hale,
Capt. Sth "
lltb 1"
Jacob Stevens,
Capt. 6th "
9th ••
James Noble,
Capt. 7th "
Sth "
Richard Jaques,
Capt. Sth "
9th "
Daniel Fagg (Flagg?)
Capt. 9th "
13th "
Jeremiah Richardson,
Capt. 10th "
Sth "
Cahrlcs Procter (Charles?)
Lt. 1st "
9th "
James Noble,
Lt. 2nd "
Sth ■•
Josiah Crosby,
Lt. 3rd "
Sth "
Charles Harrison,
Lt 4th "
9th "
James Bayley,
Lt. Sth "
Uth "
Stephen Webster,
Lt 6th "
9th "
Solomon Bragdon,
Lt 7th "
Sth "
Wm. Allen.
Lt. Sth "
19th •'
Jonn Sibbee,
Lt 9th "
16th "
Clemt. Chamberlain,
Lt. 10th "
Sth "
John Murphey,
Ensign 1st "
9th "
John Cargill,
Ensign 2nd "
Sth '•
Thos. French,
Ensign 3rd "
ISth "
Jos. Newhall,
Ensign 4th "
Sth Mar.,
Abraham Edwards,
Ensign Sth "
llthFeb.,
Edmon Morse,
Ensign 6th "
9th '■
Danl. Mishervy,
Ensign 7th "
Sth "
Edward Clark,
Ensign Sth "
9th "
. ona. Lord,
Ensign 9th "
16th "
no. Russell,
Ensign 10th "
Sth "
. no. Shaw,
Second Lieut,
12th June, "
Commissions in the Third Massachusetts Regiment whereof the Honble. Jeremiah Moulton is Col.
Jeremiah Moulton, Esqr. Col. and Capt. 1st Co.,
Nathl. Donnell. Esqr.. (Fcrnel) Lt Col. and CapL 2nd Co.
Sth Feb., •'
I
Edward Ellis. Esqr..
Major and Capt 3rd Co..
2Sth "
=d
I
^n <4=* (4^ <4^ &
Christor. Marshall, Capt. 3d " ISth Feb. 1744
James Grant, Capt. 4th " 1st
Charles King, Capt. 5th " 1st
Peter Prescott, Capt. 6th " 9th
Ammi Ruhami Cutter,
Samuel Rhodes,
Bartho. Trow,
Estes Hatch,
Benjamin Stansbury,
Benjamin Pippins,
John Marston,
VVm. Larkin,
Jonathan Hartshorn,
Joseph Miller,
Ebenezar Newell,
Nathaniel Richardson,
Israel Porter,
Joseph Gerrish,
Jonathan Hoar,
Capt.
3d
Capt.
4th
Capt.
5th
Capt.
6th
Capt.
7th
Capt.
8th
Capt.
9th
Capt.
10th
Capt. Lieut
1st
Capt. Lieut
2d
Lieut.
3d
Lieut.
4th
Lieut.
5th
Lieut.
6th
Lieut.
7th
Lieut.
8th
Lieut.
9th
Lieut.
10th
2d Lieut.
1st
2d Lieut.
2d
Ensign
3d
Ensign
4th
Ensign
5th
Ensign
6th
Ensign
7th
Ensign
8th
Ensign
9th
Ensign
10th
Ensign
—
Lieut.
—
29th
Jan.
1744
ISth
Feb.
1744
4th
1st
Feb.
1744
1st
"
4th
9th
"
8th
Feb.
1744
15th
"
4th
"
"
15th
Feb.
1745
1st
"
"
14th
'•
9th
John Hearsey, Ensign 8th " 8th Feb. 174
Jos. Fairbanks, Ensign 9th " 8th
Ebenezar Sumner, Ensign 10th " 4th "
James Donnell, (Fernell) Ensign — " Sth " "
John Lane, Lieut. — " 5th "
Commissions in the Fourth Massachusetts Regiment whereof Saml. ^\ illiard, Esqr., is the Col.
Saml. Willlard, Esqr., Col. & Capt. 1st Co. 19th Feb. 174
Thos. Chandler, Esqr., Lt. Col. & Capt. 2d " 9th
Seth Pomroy, Major & Capt. 3d" 24th
Joshua Pierce, Capt. 1st " 18th
John Warren, Capt. 4th " 18th
David Melvin, Capt. 5th" 15th
Palmer Goulding, Capt. 6th " 15th
James Stevens, Capt. 7th " 13th
Ino. Huston, Capt. Sth " <■ 15th
jno. Miller, Capt. 9th " 16th
labez Homstead, Capt. 10th " 29th
Abijiah Williard, Lieut. 1st " 18th ||
[no. Payson, Lieut. 2d " 9th
Eb. Alexander, Lieut. 3d " 9th March
s
Jos. VVhitcomb,
Ebenezer Melvin,
Jno. Stearns,
TIMOTHY JOHNSON,
Reuben King,
SamI- Chandler,
James Fry,
John Trumball,
David King,
Wm. Lyman,
Wm. Hutchins,
Issac Barran,
Nathan Payson,
Lieut.
Lieut.
Lieut.
Lieut.
4th Co.,
5th "
6th "
7th "
Benjamin Shelden,
Jno. Maw,
Jona. Hubbard,
John Hamilton,
Robt. Hall, Esqr.,
Edward Evelith, Esqr
Moses Sitcomb, Esqr.,
Lieut. 8th
Lieut. 9th
Lieut. 10th
Ensign 1st
Ensign 2d
Ensign 3d
Ensign 4th
Ensign Sth
Ensign 6th
-Ensign 7th
Ensign 8th
Ensign 9tli
-Ensign 10th
Adjutant
Lieut.
Jona. Bagley,
Jerent. Foster,
Sml. Davis,
Thos. Staniford,
Charles Byles,
Benjn. Ives,
David Silton,
Saml. Greenough,
Caleb Sivan,
Danl. Giddins,
Isaac Annis,
Sam. Morgan,
Danl. Eveleigh,
Bembsley Glakiev,
Joseph Fry,
Col. :
Lt. Col. & Capi
Major & Capt.
-Capt.
Capt.
Capt.
Capt.
Capt.
Capt.
Capt.
-Capt- Lieut.
Lieut.
Lieut.
-Lieut.
Lieut.
Lieut.
Lieut.
-Lieut.
Lieut.
- Lieut.
-2d Lieut.
Ensign
Ensign
-Ensign
Ensign
. 2d Co,
3d
4th
5th
6th
7th
Sth
9th
10th
1st
2d
3d
4th
5th
6th
7th
Sth
9th
10th
1st
2d
3d
4th
5th
18th
Feb.
1744
15th
15th
ng's service at Loui.
burg.
15th
Feb.
1744
20th
13th
18th
9th
9th
March
18th
Feb.
15th
15th
"
21st
Feb.
1744
20th
18th
Feb.
1744
20th
f Robert Hall, Esqr.
, is Colonel.
7th
Feb.
1744
7th
7th
Feb.
1744
7th
7th
"
7th
"
12th
"
III
7th
Feb.
1744
7th
7th
Feb.
1744
7th
7th
12th
Feb.
1744
7th
Feb.
,7«
7th
Feb.
1744
=□ ^ JL (^^ □=
Jos. Goodhue,
Ensign
6th "
J no. Rowe,
Ensign
8th "
7th "
Jos. Stanwood,
Ensign
9th "
Benjamin White,
Adjutant
Commissions in the Sixth M
issachusetts Regiment wh
Syh ester Richmond, Jr.
Col. and Capt. 1st Co
I r Pnl
Robert Sevan,
Capt.
4th "
Ebenezer Eastman,
Capt.
Sth "
Cornelius Sole,
Capt.
6th "
Jona. Laurence,
Capt.
7th ••
Cant
8th "
Eben Nichols,
Capt.
9th "
Jer. Weston,
Capt.
10th "
Nath. Bosvvorth,
Capt. Lt.
1st ■'
Capt Lt
2nd "
Capt Lt
3rd "
Thos. Waldron,
Lieut.
4th "
Jona. Roberts,
•Lieut.
Sth "
lames Griffin,
Lieut.
6th ••
Thos. Mowray,
Lieut.
7th ••
Wm. Trefry,
Lieut.
8th "
Ed. Pratt,
Lieut.
9th "
Jos. Clark,
Lieut.
10th "
I ',a,,r IJA \
9j) "
2d Lieut
3d "
Edward Gray,
Lieut.
1st "
Seth }^athaway,
Lieut.
1st "
Jer. Prebble,
Ensign
4th "
Jno. Webster,
Ensign
Sth "
Jos. Brown,
Ensign
6th "
Math. Smith,
Ensign
7th '•
[no. 'i'inney,
Ensign
8th "
Grover Scolley,
Ensign
9th "
Ben. Esterbrook,
Ensign
10th "
Mad. Engs,
Adjutant
7th . Feby. 1744
Zth Feby.
16th Mar.
6th Feby. 1744
13th Feby. 1744
6th "
8th "
Sth "
6th
12th
6th
13th Feb'y,
6th "
8th "
7th "
7th ••
13th ••
20th "
1744
Comr
6th "
6th "
13th "
6th "
8th "
15th "
1 2th "
13th "
20th "
14th Marcii,
IS in Seventh Massachusetts Regiment whereof Shubal Gorham, Es-qr., is Colonel.
Shubsl Gorham, Esqr.,
Jno. Gorham, Esq.,
Jos. Thacher,
Col. and Capt. 1st Co.
Lt. Col. and Capt. 2d "
Capt. 3d
20th Feb'y, 1744
20th ••
10th "
n=
350
fi
* * *
Edward Dimmock,
Elisha Doan,
Sylvanus Cobb,
Israel Bayley,
Gersham Bradford,
Jona. Carey,
Saml. Lumbart,
Nathl. Fish,
Jos. Freeman,
Theophilus Paine,
Saml. Bartlett,
Jos. Lawrence,
Jona. Loring,
Nathl. Bourne,
Peter West,
Sylvanus Hall,
Joshua Bassett,
Wm. Clark,
Nathl. Bosworth,
Jona. Fames,
Caleb Coc kc,
Jona. Carver,
Jos. Manter,
Mathew Lombart,
Commissions in
Andrew Burr, Esq.,
Simon Lothrop, Esq.,
Eleazr. Goodrich,
David Worster,
Henry King,
William Whiting,
Danl. Chapman,
Robt. Dennison,
Andw. Ward,
James Church,
Stephen Lee,
Nathl. Beedle,
Sam. Torrey,
Wm. Throope,
Capt.,
Capt.,
-Capt.,
Capt.,
Capt.,
Capt.,
Capt..
Capt.,
-CAPT. Lt
Lieut.
Lieut.
Lieut.
-Lieut.
Lieut.
Lieut.
Lieut.
Lieut.
Lieut.
-2d Lt. 2d
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
-Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
En.sign
Ensign
Adjutant,
1st Co.,
4th "
Sth "
6th "
7th "
Sth '•
9th "
10th "
2d "
1st "
3d "
4tli "
Sth •*
6th "
7th ••
8th "
9th "
10th "
1st "
3rd "
4th "
Sth ••
6th '•
7th "
8th "
9th "
10th "
ISth
20th
Feby.
1774
13th
14th
20th
Feby.
1774
ISth
14th
20th
Feby.
13th
Sth
14th
20th
Feby.
1774
2d March 1774
14th Feby.
20th
13th
14th
20th
12th
Feby.
1774
the Connecticut Regiment whereof William Bu
Colonel,
Lieut. Col.,
Major,
Capt. of a Co.,
Capt.,
Capt..
Capt.,
Capt.,
Capt.,
Capt.,
Capt.,
Lieut.,
Lieut.,
Lieut.,
April "
rr, Esq., is Colonel.
16th March, 1744.
3rd June. 174S.
16 Mar., (Prob. same yr.)
3rd June, "
16th Mar., "
3rd June,
16 Mar.,
®
Noah Taylor,
David Seabury,
Wm. Smithson,
Saml. Pettibone,
Jona. Read,
Nathan Whiting,
Jno. Hodgkins,
Jos. Wait,
Jno. Huntington,
Jon. Darling,
Christr. Tracey,
Jon. Noble,
Thos. Leeds,
Lieut.
Lieut
Lieut.
Lieut.
Lieut.
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
16th March, ( Probably 1745)
14th June,
16th March,
12th April,
14th June,
16th March,
14th June,
3rd "
COMMISSIONS IN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE REGIMENT, WHEREOF
SAMUEL MOORE, ESQR., IS COLONEL
Saml. Moore, Esqr.,
Nathl. Mesharve,
Eliezr. Oilman, Esqr.,
Jno. Tufton Mason,
Wm. Sayward
Col. and Capt.
Lt. Col. Capt.
Major. Capt.
Capt. of a Co.
Capt.
2nd
3rd
Co.,
1st March, 1744
"Jno. Turnel"=Fernel=Fornel," Capt. (Pis. 1162 & 1246)
(The writer's ancestor, Capt. John Fernald, the Hero of Louisburg) (Cut off by Jealous PeppereJl)
(Plates 1120-1-2, 1339) (For son, see Plates 1346, 1128 & 1129) (Plate 1126) (Page 220)
Sam. Hall,
Jacob Tilton,
Edwd. Williams,
James Whidden, (Whittonf)
Thos. Westbrook Waldron,
Moses Wirgett,
Ezekiel Pickman,
Richard Mattoon,
Saml. Robie,
Jona. Flagg,
Elipht. Daniel, (Fannelf)
Jerh. Wheelwright,
Sam. Levitt,
Clement Ham,
Jno. Hart,
Robt. Perkins,
Edmund Brown,
Christr. Huntress,
Thos. Pickering,
Edwd. Brookes,
Jno. Eyre,
Thos. Sherbourne,
Trueworthy Dudley,
Sam Conner,
Danl. Wormaall,
Capt.
Capt.
Capt.
Capt. Lt. 1st Co.
Capt. Lt. 2nd "
Lt.
Lt.
Lt.
Lt.
Lt.
Lt.
Lt.
2nd Lieut. 1st Co.
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
Ensign
Adjutant
Capt. of a Co.
Capt. and Lieut.
2nd Lieut.
Ensign
1st March,"
6th June, 1744
1st March, "
^^D
N
Jno. Gilman,
Abraham Trefethen,
Lieut, of Marines,
Capt. Co. Marines,
IS April, 1744
IS "
COMMISSIONS OF THE TRAIN OF ARTILLERY SENT FROM THE
jos. Dwight, Elsqr.,
Richd. Gridlcy, Esqr.,
Abraham Weller,
Tlios. Campling,
Banho. Green,
jos. Chadwick,
Jos. Holhrook,
jno. Gorrman,
Charles Pincheon,
jos. Hawley,
[no. Henry Bastide, Esqr.,
Robert Glover. Elsqr.,
Wm. Mclntire, Esqr.,
Edwd. Ellis, Esqr.,
Joseph Pierce, Esqr.,
Robt. Keith,
John Kinsclagh,
Jno. German,
Thos. Waldo,
Andrew Lemereicer, Jr.,
Nathl. Walter,
Sam. Rhodes,
Sam. Waldo, Jr.
Wm. Winslow, Sam Waldo, Jr.
Melatiar Bourn, Geo. Carwin,
Jer. Miller, Jr.,
Andrew Le Mercier, Jr.,
Eduard Baine,
MASSACHUSETTS PROVINCE
Colonel, 20 Feb., "
Lt. Col. and Capt. of the Train and Com- 21 " & 20 Mar., 1744
missionsary,
2d Capt. and Chief Bombardier 16th Y 21st, 21 Feb., 1744
1st Lieut. 21
2d Lieut. 21
3d Lieut. 21
4th Lieut. 21
1st under Bombardier, 20
Adjutant, 20 March
Chaplain, 10
COMMISSIONS
Principal Engineer,
Adjutant General,
Quarter Master General,
Surgeon General of the Mass. Troops,
Surg. Genl. of N. H. Troops & Naval Force,
2d Surg. Genl. of the Massachusetts Troops,
Agent for the Transports,
Principal Armourer,
Muster Master,
Interpreter,
Aid de Camp.
Commissaries of the Provisions of Muster
Roll for the Connecticut Regiment.
General Clark,
COMMISSIONS
3 June, I74S
10 March, 1744
20 "
19 Feb.
1 March
20 "
10 ••
1 Feb.
7 March
7 "
22 "
1 May
2 Feb., 2 Feb., 20 Feb.
21 Feb., 14 March
10 June
18 March
19 March
" Agent transports Clark,
Master of the Baggage,
SURGEONS
Alexr. Bulman, Wm. Rand, Jos. Binney, Antho. Emery, Philip Gospers Ca.st, Gullam Taylor,
10 Feb., 20 Feb., 19 Feb.
Surgeon General's Mate, 10 March
I Under Surgeons, 19 Feb., 4 and 18 Mar.
Dr. to Surgeon General 19 March
Capt. House Carpenters, 16 "
James Pierpont, Andrew Brown, 2d Capt. and Lieut. 11
Edward Paine, Richard Abbot, ) Capt. of an Independent Co. of Granediers, 19 Feb., 19 Feb
Geo. Hanners, j 1st Lieut and 2d Lieut. 19 Feb,
4 Feb.. 1744, 9 March
Charles Pyncheon,
Jos. Lebarron, Jacob March,
Michael Lowell,
Jona. Prescott, James Oliver,
Mathew Barnard,
3S3
(§
=n ^ ^ p^
COMMISSIONS.
Moses Dennett, Capt. of a sloop in the pay of the Massatts. IHth March. 1744.
John Prentiss, Capt. of sloop Defence 4n pay of Connecticut. 19th
Ed. Brooks. 1st Lt. sloop Abigail in pay of N. H. 1st
Zechariah Forss, Lieut, of the sloop Abigail. "
BREVETS.
Benjamin Green. Capt. &c. 1 at March; Wm. Mclntire, Major, 22nd March; Jos. Goldthwait,
Capt.. 20th March; Robt. Glover. Capt.. 19th March; Saml. Waldo, Jr., Capt. 23rd March. Andrew
Lemercicr. Jr., Lieut., Sth Feb'y; Andrew Pepperell Frost, Lieut. 1st March; Benjamin Green,
Secretary of the Expedition,, March 1st; Charles Frost, 2nd Secretary, 1 March.
A true copy, Benj. Green, Segretary. '
Capt. JOHN FERN ALD, or Turnel, or Fernel, or Furnald was Convoy of the American Troops.
MEMORANDA OF THE: MILITARY SERVICES OF THE PATRIOTIC FERNALD
FAMILIES DURING THE CIVIL WAR.
Congressional HDebal of Monor to
Captain Hlbert E. jfernalb
Born 13 May. 1838, at Hampden. Me., s. Elbridge & Mary W. (Blake) Fernald. Enlisted 23 July
1862; m. Abbie H. Colburn, 1st June. 1865: Had— Elizabeth M.; Charles W.; and Roy L.. a Lieut,
in. 26th U. S. V. Inf.
Albert P.. b. IS Aug. I8I9. Enlisted IS Aug. 1862. Discharged for disability. 6 Aug. 1863. 1st
Sergeant. Co. H. 12th N. H. Inf.; m. 1st. Rosetta H. Hunt; 2nd. Mary H. Fernald: Had— Mary
G. E.. Frank. Carrie.
Alonzo. Kittery. b. a. 1835. Enlisted in Co. G, 27th Me. Inf., 30 Sept. 1862: m. Martha Berry,
and 2nd. Anna Irene Philbrick: Had — Frederick, Hattie, Charles and Frank.
Alonzo, enlisted in Co. H, 4th Mass. Inf., 16 Mar. 1861; b. 1843. Hon. discharged 22nd July,
1861 : Reenlisted 4 July, 1864, in C. 24th Mass. Inf. Promoted to Corporal, and discharged 20 July,
1865.
Benjamine, b. 17 May, 1812, s."John and Betsey (Manson)" Fernald: Enlisted, 2nd Sept. 1862,
Co. G, 27 Me. Inf. Mustered out with Regt., 17th July: m. Amy C. Lydsten, 28 May, 1840: Had
— Benjamine E.. Annie E.. Charles H.. Margaret E.. William K. and Julia, all born at Kitter)', Me.
His son —
Benjamine E., b. S Aug. 1841; Enlisted 2nd Sept. 1864. He was at battles of Fort Fisher, and
had a very long range of services till 1894, when he was placed on the Navy Retired List.
Benjamin H., b. a. 1842. Residence, Alfred, Me. Enlisted 2 July, 1864. Hon. discharged
30 Nov. 1864.
Benjamin W., b. a. 1833, of Abington. Mass. Enlisted in Co. H, 58 Mass. Inf., 27 Feb. 1864.
Died of wounds at Washington, D. C, 8th July, 1864.
Benjamin W., died 21 June, 1864, of 10th Indiana Battery. Buried at Marietta, Ga, Sec. G, No.
349. His name appears among the known dead published by U. S. Government.
Cassius M., b. a. 1844. s. Rev. James and Maria (Brackett) Fernald, of Saco, Me. Enlisted in
U. S. Engineers during the Civil War. His brother —
George P., enlisted as Private and promoted to Lieutenant.
Charles, Co. C, 2nd Iowa Inf. Died 14 Dec. 1864, and buried at Cave Hill, Louisville, Ky.
Sec. 3, Range 4, No. 63.
D- n
354
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^^-^ CHARLES A., b. Jun. 1838 at Burlington, N. II.. s. Isaacs Mary (Drew) Fernald,
JV-| Enlistedin Co. E. 13th N.H. Inf..7th Aug. 1862:Hon. Discharged 16 May,1864. His
l^m^ Brother Nehemiah C. was a Member of 30 M. 1st Heavy Arty., he m. Mary E. RandcFl
of Lee, N. H. and had Charles E., Daniel C, Clarence L.. and Florence M. Fernald.
Charles C, b. 19 Sept., 1S29, s. of Robert and Aphia (Coffin) Fernald. Enlisted 6 Sept., 1864
as Actng. 3d Assistant Engineer in the Navy. Hon. Discharged 21 Sept., 1865. Served on U. S. S.
Colorado and Trefoil. Lewis C. served in Co. D. Sth N. H. Inf.
Charles Freeman Fernald, b. 24 July, 1842. s. " .Mark and Ruth (Fogg) Fernald." Enlisted in
Co. H. 2d, N. H. Inf. 11 Aug., 1862. Killed at Chancellorsville, Va., 3d, May 1863.
Charles Frost Fernald, b. 25 Mar., 1836, s. Simeon and Olive (Keniston) Fernald. Commis-
sioned 2d Sept., 1862. Mustered out 2 July, 1863. Com. Capt. Co. M. 2d N. j. Calvery, 2nd Sept.,
1863. Musteredoutl Nov., 1865. Com. Major 24 Oct., 1865. His father served in War 1«12-15.
Gr. Fr. served in American Revolution: m. 10 Sept., 1863 to Sarah Kyte. His last known address at
Marshallton, Kansas, U.S.A. His brother, Frank S., of Co. B. 15th N. J. Inf., was killed at Spottsyl-
vania, 12 May, 1864.
Charles G., b. at Eliott. Enlisted 20 Sept., 1861, in Co. G. 23d Mass. Inf. Promoted to Cor.
Flag State Bearer of Regiment. Taken prisoner at Battle of Doweys Bluff, Va. and d. at Anderson-
ville, 29 Aug.. 1864. Bur. No. 1754.
Charles H.. b. 16 March, 1838, s. of Ebenezar and Sophronia (Wosgatt) Fernald. Appointed
Masters Mate on U. S. 8. Stetten. 28 April. 1863. Tran.sferred to the Cornation, 9th. July. 1864.
Promoted to Actng. Ensign. 6 Aug., 1864. Detached and ordered to Satapsco. 9 Sept., 1864, to the
G. W. Rogers. 2nd Jan.. 1865. Detached 16th June. 1865. Resigned 30 May, 1865. Accepted and
Revoked 30 May, 1865 and granted two mos. leave from 20 June, 1865. Hon. Dischared 20 Aug.,
1865 m.
Charles Hale, b. 3 July, I836,s. Nathaniel and Rebecca (Hale) Fernald. Com, Capt. in Co. D. 118
Penn. Inf. and Mustered in 25 Aug., 1862. Hon. Discharged 1 Feb., 1864. Com. Quarter Master
214 Penn. Inf. and Mustered in 20 Mar., 1865. Hon. Regiment with his mustered out 21 Mar., 1866
m. Margaret, da. Dr. Vandyke of Philadelphia and d. prior to 1878.
Charles O., b. 31 May, 1840, s. Simon and Caroline (Fenderson) Fernald. Enlisted in Co. B.
4th Me. Inf. 15 May. 1861. Arm lost in 1st Bull Run battle. 21 July, 1861. Tasted the horrors of
Libby prison four months. Mustered out 20 May, 1864, m. in 1872 Elvira F. Lampman. who d. 12
April, 1886: m. 2d Persis A. Mugridge. had one da. and Harry B.. and George A. Fernald.
Capt. Daniel, b. 19 Nov., 1767, s. George and Anna (Leach) Fernald. although not Enlisted,
took a hand in the Revolution and War of 1812-15. See previous written record.
Dalos, Corporal Co. H. 2nd Michigan Cavalry. Died 26 Dec, 1864: buried at Jeffersonville,
Ind. Grave Section 1st 122.
Daniel. Quarter Master on U. S. S. Nippon, off New Inlet J. V. C. 9 Nov. 1863, of Maiden,
Mass. Edmund Fernald in Capt. S. Buleins Co., Genl. Jno. Blakes Regt., 31 Aug. to 3 Sept., 1814.
Edward, Co. H. 2d Miss. Calvary. Enlisted 26 Aug.. 1861, at Climax, Mo. d. 21 July. 186Z, at
Memphis. Mo. of wounds reed, in battle.
Edward Ambrose, b. at Boston. Mass., s. Eli and Sarah (Goodwin) Fernald. Enlisted as Drum-
mer. Co. H. 47th Mass. Inf. 16 Oct. 1862. Hon. Discharged 1 Sept.. 1863, and d. 27 Sept., 1863.
Aet. 17 yrs. 7 mos. 17d.
u ^ ^ ^ a
/^> EDWARD S., b. 1840. Enlisted at Boston in U. S. Navy 26 April, 1862. Served on the
Mm Ohio, Dacotah, Brandywine. Discharged 21 March, 1865 (Edward H., in Navy on U. S.
T 1 S. Hinon, so Barker says.) These records abbreviated taken from Loan of Mr. Henry W.
^^J Fernald, Boston, P. O.
Edward S., if the record be true? s. of Saco. Me. drafted for one year. Sent James
Stevens, 29 Aug., 1864 in Me. Inf. " Some declared it an unholy war and unpatriotic, kept away."
Eli, b. 11 Sept., 1826, s. James and Nancy (Waterman) Fernald. Enlisted 29 Aug., 1864, Co.
L. 21 N. H. Regt. Hon. Discharged 15 June, 1865. His bro. William of Springfield, Mass-
Served in 2d Mass. H. Arty, during the war. Eli, m. Eliza Ann Welch, had chn. d. y. He J. at
Milton, N. H.. 27 Sept., 1869.
Eiisha, b. a. 1843, s. Thomas Chandler Fernald and wife Sarah. Enlisted, 8 Nov., 1861 in Capt.
James Fernald's Co. 72d Ohio, Vol. Inf. Discharged 11 Sept., 1865. They were brothers and their
father Thomas Chandler Fernald served as Private in his son's Company.
Frank B. Fernald. Enlisted in 60th Mass. Vol. Inf. 100 days men.
Frank Simon, b. 1 July, 1839, s. Simon and Olive (Kinston) Fernald. Enlisted 4 Aug., 1862 in
Co. B. 15th N. J. Vol. Inf. for the term of three years. Killed in action at Spottsylvania, Court House
12 May, 1864. Born at Eaton, N. H., a school teacher. Moved to Warren Co. N. J. Married
Emma Plotts Feb., 1861. He was brother Capt. Charles Frost Fernald of the 27 N. J. Inf. and
2d N. J. Calvary of Civil War.
Frank L., b. 11 Nov., 1835 at Eliot, Me., s. Wm. S. and Sarah A. (Hanscom) Fernald. Com-
missioned as Naval Constructor 12 March, 1875, a very long line of duties and Promotions from 1871
to repairing Vessels at Hong Kong, 27 March, 1901.
George Fernald, Kittery, Me. Enlisted as carpenter in the Navy during the Civil War.
George E. Fernald. Commissioned as 2d Lieut, in Sth Maine Vol. Inf. Residence, Portland,
Me.
George H. Fernald, b. 2 Feb., 1837, s. Henry Jonathan Fernald and wife. Enlisted 15 Sept.,
1864 Co. B. 29 Me. Vol Inf. Promoted and discharged 31 May, 1865. Resided at Trov and Canaan,
Me.
George L., b. 1827. Enlisted as Private and Mustered in 3 Sept. 1862. Mustered out 27 June,
1863, m. and resided at Westfield, Union Co., New Jersey. Co. H. 30th N. J. Vol. Inf. See Ad.
Jt. Gcnl. Records, N. J.
George P., 1839, s. Rev. James and Maria (Brackett) Fernald. Bro. Cassius M. Fernald, U. S.
Engineer C. Corps, Enlisted as Private in 10th Me. Vol. Inf. Served from 4th Oct., 1861 to close
of war. Promoted to Sergeant, and later to 2d Lieut.
George R., b. 25 June, 1825 at S. Levant, Me., s. Robert and Roxanna (Buswell) (Buzzell?)
Fernald. Commissioned as 2d Lt. 21 Aug., 1862 Co. C. 1st Me. H. Arty. Promoted to 1st Lt.
Capt. 7 Nov., 1864. Capt. George R. Fernald was State Senator and Member of Gov. Robies Coun-
cil in 1885-6, m. Jane Blake, m. 2d Eliza Woodbury.
George T., b. 1843, s. Mark and Julia A. (Hanson) Fernald. Enlisted in Co. I. 46 Mass. Inf.
29 Oct., 1862. Hon. Discharged 20 Aug., 1863, also, in Co. C. 42 Mass. Inf. from 14 July. 1864 to
1 Nov., 1864. 100 days men taken prisoner and paroled at Galveston. Texas, 1 June 1863, m. Sarah
F. Berry in 1868; had Emma and Mark living in Maiden.
George W., b. 1821. Enlisted 29 Dec, 1863 as Private in Co. G. 29th Me. Inf. Died of
Pleurisy at Alexandria, 8 May, 1864. Buried in Section 1, No. 19, m. Mary Kneel, had ; Chesley
H., Nancy J., Oliver N., George W., Julia E., Hersey E. and child that died young.
356
^ ^ ^
^^ GEORGE WALLACE FERNALD.b. 21 April, 1875. s. Thomas L. and Mary A.
J ml "^'"*' Fernald. Enlisted in the Minnesota Guard, July, 1895, also in 13 Min. Vol. Inf.
JT^^ 28 April, 1898. Service in Philipines and brother Thomas C was in same Co.
^^ ^ Granville, s. Otis Fernald. Commissioned Capt. in Co. B. 23 Me. Vol. Inf. 29
Sept., 1862. Resigned 13 April, 1863. Capt. reserved Veteran Corps Stationed at Wash-
ington, D. C. 30 April, 1864.
Henry A., b. 1839, s. Hiram and Abigail (Grant) Fernald. Enlisted in Co. B. 22 Mass. Vol.
Inf. 10 Sept., 1861. Promoted to Sargeant, 2d as 1st Lt. 1861, 3d as Capf. Commissioned. Ordi-
nance Officer. Resigned and reenlisted 1866. Major 1869, m. went into U. S. Signal Serv. Resides
in South.
Henry W., b. 21 Dec, 1840, s. Benjamin and Lavina L. Fernald. Enlisted in Co. H. 25 Mass.
Vol. Inf. August, 1861. Discharged at close of War 26 July, 1865. March 1867 he was appointed
as Clerk in the Money Division, Boston, Post Office, which position he still holds Jan., 1909. Is a
member of Edw. W. Kinsley Post and Department of Mass. G. A. R. and Past Snr. Vice Com-
mander of it. Past Vice President of the 25 Mass. Vetn. Vol. Association. Member King Arthur's
Lodge No. 1492, K. of H. and several other organizations, m. 20 Jan., 1870 Eleanor L. Bothwell, had
son died young.
Hercules S. Fernald. Enlisted in Co. D. 10 Me. Vol. Inf. and d. 22 Feb., 1862 of Typhoid
Fever at Relay House, Md.
Herrick J. Fernald, Co. F- 22d 111. Writer suggests further investigations.
HORATIO P. FERNALD, b. 1834, s. Hiram and Abigail (Grant) Fernald. Enlisted Co. F.
7th Me. Vol. Inf. 23 Jan., 1862. Trans, to 1st. Me. Vol, Inf. 4 Jan., 1864. Dentist. Resides in
Cheltenham, England.
Isaac, b. 1835. Enlisted 29 Aug., 1862 Co. E. 3rd Mass. Cavalry. Promoted to Sargeant. Hon.
Discharge 18 Oct., 1863. Occupation, Merchant and Real Estate, resides in Chelsea before Gt. Fire.
Jacob Fernald, b. Served in Sargent, Nath. Greely's Detachment at Plumb Island, Sept., 1814.
Jacob E. Fernald, b. 20 Dec, 1831. s. Josiah and Sophia (Eastman) Fernald. Served in Civil
War.
James Fernald, b. 1839, s. Thomas C. and Sarah P'ernald. Appointed as 2d Lt. 19 Oct., 1861 to
Recruit men for the 73 Ohio, Vol. Inf. Commissioned as 1st Lt. and Capt. 7 Jan., 1862. Mustered
out with Co. 11 Sept., 1865- His father, Thomas C. and bro. Elisha served in his Co. through the
War. In his Co. Captain James was distinguished for his bravery and good conduct and rcceixed
special mention from his Commanding Officers on several occasions.
James Brown Fernald, b. 11 July, 1787, s. Elisha and Hannah (Chandler) Fernald. Served dur-
ing the War of 1812 and 1815. He m. 30 Nov., 1809 Anna Card and had Thomas C. who with his
two sons served throughout the Civil War in Co. G. 72 Ohio, Vol. Inf.
James G. Fernald, b. a. 1843 at Canterbury, N. H. Resided at Manchester and 22 July, 1861
in Co. A. 3d N. H., Vol. Inf. Wounded at Fort Wagner, S. C, 8 July, 1863, again at Morris Island,
S. C, 31 Aug., 1863. Reenlisted and mustered in 12 Sept., 1864 and again wounded at Drury's
Bluff, Va., 13 May, 1864, again at Bermuda, H. Va., 4 June, 1864, again 31 Aug., 1864 at Petersburg,
Va. Being made of the same flesh and blood of his Roman Forefathers he had not enough of it till
the foe was conquered and reenlisted 12 days later and served with his Co. until the 7th April, 1865
when he was transferred to 168 Co. Vet. Reserve Corps 2d Battalion of Uncle Sams Family.
* *
D=
^^■r JAMES M. FERNALD, b. a. 1836. Enlisted 24 June, 1861, as Musician. Discharged
/'4\ hy Act CONGRESS 7 Aug.. 1861. Resided at Houlton, Me.
^ *^ James S., b. 31 May, 1834, s. Benjamin and Lavinnia L- Fernald. Enlisted as Scr-
^i^ geant in Co. B.. 7th Me. Vol. Inf., Sept., 1861. d. Baltimore, Md.. Dec, 1861. Buried
Concord, Mass. Name inscribed on Monument. Married Julia A. Sanborn, 1 Oct.,
1856, of East Boston, Mass. His son, Fred A. Fernald is proprietor of University Book
Store, N. \. City; and writer bought Plate of Dr. Jean Fernel on a page of Book at his Store.
John, b. a. 1832 of Kittery, Me. Enlisted in Co. A.. 32 Me. Vol. Inf., 3 Mar.. 1864, Wounded
12 May. 1864. Transferred to Co. A, 31st Regt. Me.
John, b. 1837, s. Parker and Lydia (Tuttle) Fernald. Enlisted in Co. B, 17th N. H. Vol. Inf.,
26 Sept., 1863. Transferred to Co. K, 2d N. H. Vol. Inf., 16 Apr., 1864, Served also in the Navy
several years after Civil War. Married 6 July. 1866, to Louisa Newell, residence Salisbury, Mass.
John Frank, b. 6 Dec, 1839, s. Benjamin A. and Caroline E. (Young) Fernald. Enlisted 13
Aug., 1861, in Co. B. 4th N. H. Vol. Inf. Hon. discharged 27 Sept., 1864.
John Kinsman, b. at Portland, Me.. 1830, s. Nathaniel and Rebecca (Hale) Fernald. Served in
Civil War.
John N., b. a. 1844. Enlisted in Co. C, 18th N. H. Vol. Inf., 9 Sept., 1864. Discharged 10
June 1864. Residence Ossipee, N. H.
John S., b. a. 1843. Enlisted 19 Nov. 1861 in Co. E, 24 Mass. Vol. Inf.. and d. 11 Sept.. 1862.
at Newbern, N. C. Residence Boston, Mass. Artist or Painter.
John S., b. a. 1845. Enlisted in Co. B, 42d Mass. 100 days Regt., 14 July, 1864. Discharged
1st Nov. 1864. Resided at Roxbury, Mass.
John S. P., b. 10 Apr. 1847 at Barrington, N. H. Enlisted in Co. K, 11th N. H. Vol. Inf., 8
Aug.. 1862. Honorable discharge 14 Jan.. 1863. at Washington. D. C, d. at Roxbury, Mass.. 18
Oct. 1874.
John y. A., b. a. 1839. Enlisted 29 Aug., 1862. in Co. E. 20th Me. Vol. Inf. Hon. discharged
for disability in 1863. Residence Waldoboro. Me.
Two by the name of Joseph Fernald served in Capt. H. Frost's Co.. Col. Pyersons Regt. Also
in Col. Paul Merritt's Regt., Capt. Pike's Co., 1814. Served at Newbury Fort and Plum Island.
And two by the names of Joseph Fernald, s. Joseph and wife Anna More, b. 4 Oct., 1704, s. Deacon
John F. and wife Sarah, da. Judge John Hinckes, s. of John F., m. Mary Spinney, s. Thomas and
Temperance Washington, s. Dr. Renald F. and wife Joanna Warburton, in Capt. Tobias Fernald's
Co., Col. James Scammon's Regt. 30th, Fort 1. A Bounty Coat, payable Lieut. Thomas Cutts, Nov.
28, 1775. And Joseph Weeks Fernald, Private, Enlisted May 13, 1775. Former served 8 months
and latter in Capt. Samuel Leighton'sCo-, same Col., served 3 months, 4 days. How long after that
they may have served to writer unknown.
Joseph B. Fernald, b. 22 Jan., 1843. Enlisted 11 Oct., 1862 in 26th Me. Vol. Inf., also in Co.
B., 29th Me Vol. Inf., 30 Dec, 1863. Residence Troy, Me., Transferred to Veteran Reserve Corps.
Joseph F., b. at Portsmouth, N. H. Appointed from Boston, Mass., 25 Aug., 1863, as Acting
2d Assistant Surgeon in U. S. Navy. Hon Discharge 5 July, 1865. Served on U. S. S. Britania and
sent to Boston as Engineer-in-Chief on prize ship "Storm King." Returned to Britiania till his
Honorable Discharge.
^ ^ ^ D=
,m'f^' JOSEPH FERNALD, b. 4 Sept., 1H30, s. William and Lydia (Clements) FcrnalH, s.
J L^ William and Mary (Molly Hammond) William was bapt. 24 July, 1757, s. Col. Tobias
^ I Fernald and wife Mary, (da. Jonathan Andrews,) s. Capt. John and Elizabeth (Rogers)
^^^ Fernald, s- Dea. John and Sarah Hinckes Fernald, s. Dr. John and Mary (Spynnie) s.
Thomas and Temperance (Washington) Fernald, s. Dr. Renald and Joanna (Warburton) Fernald,
m. at East Boston, Mass., 25 Dec, 1861, Louise Stoddard Crocker, b. Duxbury, Mass., da. Daniel S-
Crocker and wife Deborah Prior, 22 May, 1835 they had Mary Louise (named for Mary Spinney and
Louise de Coligny) Charles Pierce (named for Charles VIII and the fate of Dr. Renald P'ernald's
grandfather.) Walter Frank, George Porter, Albert Chapman, Flora Alice, and Josephine May. He
was an Engineer in Civil War and wore the Oak Leaf of |Fort Fisher and his brother William, b. S
March, 1823, was a Soldier in 2d N. H. Regt. Another brother Charles Pierce, h. 3 Aug., 1S32.
" was poisoned accidently by " ? "Water Hemlock." (Socrates poison) Joseph Fernald, d. from
fractured skull at Medford, Mass., 2 Dec, 1897. It was alleged to writer by — "by crime and not ac-
cidently falling into a trench excavated for water pipes." His widow Mrs. Louise S. Fernald, d. at
Medford, Mass., 6 Feb., 1898. Mr. Joseph Fernald was with me many times and many hours. In
form he was a remarkable resemblance to my father and his many noble traits of character displayed
under trying circumstances demonstrated a grand noble man. His Mansion Hall was constructed in
a grand Roman and French ancient and beautiful architectural style.
Laban Fernald, b. a 1844. Enlisted 11 Oct., 1862 in Co. A. 26 Mass. Vol. Inf.: also in Co. B.
29 Me. Vol. Inf. 30 Dec, 1863. He was promoted to Corporal and Sergeant. Resided at Troy,
Me. Recorded as Henry, s. Jona.
Lewis C, b. 4 Nov., 1840, s. Robert and Afshia (Coffin) Fernald. Enlisted in Co. D, 5th N.
H. Vol. Inf., 25 Sept., 1861. Wounded 3 June, 1864 at Cold Harbor, Va. Honorably discharged
29 Oct., 1864: m. 25 Dec, 1860 Caroline V. Wingate. His brother Charles C. was Engineer in the
Navy. Mark in Capt. J. Chamberlain's Co., 1812.
Mark, s. of James, s. Dea. John and Sarah (Hinckes) Fernald, s. Dr. John and Maty (Spinney)
s. Thomas and Temperance (Washington) Fernald was in Capt. Chase's Co., Col. Benj. Lincoln's
Regt., from 8 to 25 July, 1814.
Mark, b. 17 May, 1837, at Ossipee, s. Charles, s. Ebenezar. Enlisted in Co. A, 2d Me. Cavalry,
2d Sept., 1864. Resided in Newport, Me.
Nehemiah C, b. 18 Aug., 1828, at Milton or "Wilton," N. H. Enlisted from Haverhill,
Mass., 6 .May, 1862, m Co. M., 1st Mass. Heavy Artillery. Hon. discharged 12 Nov., 1865. His
brother Charles A. of Co. E, 13 N. H., Vol. Sons of Isaac and Mary (Drew) Fernald. Former m.
Abbie J. Heard of Haverhill, Mass.
Oscar M., b. a. 1842. Enlisted in U. S. Navy 31 Aug., 1864, for one year. Resided in China,
Me.
Owen, b. 24 Apr., 1821, s. Andrew and Mary A. (Lord) Fernald. Enlisted 14 Apr., 1S62 in
Co. E, 7th N. H. Vol. Inf. Honorably discharged 27 Jan., 1863 at Falmouth, Va. He m. Eliza
Temple, da. Uriah of Westmoreland, N. H.
Peletiah, b. 26 Oct., 1829, s. Nathaniel and Nancy Fernald. Enlisted 11 Oct., 1862, in Co. B,
26th Me. Vol. Inf. ; also in Co. F, 8th Me. Vol. Inf., 4 Jun. 1864. Killed in action near Petersburg,
Va. Married and his Residence was at Searsport, Me.
359
^ ^ ^ D=
m^/^ PHILEMON H. FERNALD, b. a. 1845. Residing at Livcrmorc. Me. Enlisted
Jl 28 Dec. 1863 in Co. G. 30 Me. Vol. Inf. and d. 2 Oct.. 1864.
1J_I Robert, b. a. 1842. Residence, Boston, Mass. Enlisted 26 June, 1861 in Co. B. 12
/^^W Mass. Vol. Inf. Killed at Antietam, Md. 17 Sept., 1862.
Roy L. Fernald, b. 21 Jan.. 1875 at Winterport, Me., s. Capt. Albert E. and Abbie
H. (Colburn) Fernald. Enlisted in the 7th U. S. Inf. for Spanish American War. Wounded at El
Caney. Commissioned as 2d Lt. of 26th U. S. Vol. Inf. 12 July, 1899. At the fight near Dunsan-
gas Island, 5 June, 1900. he was specially mentioned for distinguished bravery and proved worthy son
of a " Medal of Honor " soldier. He died a noble soldier's death while carrying out orders, official,
on the 1st of Sept., 1900. "When with a detail of men while fording the Jalam River being about
ten feet in advance of his men, his horse in the swollen river stepped beyond its depth and sank.
Lieutenant Fernald sprang from its back towards the shore, but the river being high and its current
swift and encumbered as he was, the task was Herculean and he sank when within a few feet of the
shore." Thus in the prime of noble manhood gave freely his life for the Country he loved so well to
be mustered into everlasting life, by the GREATEST COMMANDER GOD.
Samuel, b. a. 1838. Enlisted in Co. I. 2d Minn. Vol. 30 July, 1861 and d. Keokuk lo. 21 July,
1862, b. at Me. Enlisted at Red Wing, Minn. Buried at Oakland Cemetery.
Samuel H., b. 29 Apr., 1829. Enlisted in Co. K. 12 Me. Vol. Inf. 16 Nov. 1861. Wounded on
"Constitution." Hon. discharged 17 May, 1862. Left Fortress Monroe for home.
Samuel Fernald in Capt. Chase Co. Col. Clarke's Regt.
Simon, b. at Kittery, s. Ensign Joshua and Lucy (Wingate) Fernald served through 2d War
with England; his father served through the American Revolution and gr. fr. Capt. Lord's Blue
Troop of Horse, in the Frencii wars, and two of his sons, Charles F. and Frank S., in Civil War.
He lived at Eaton, N. H. Private in Capt. John Marsh Co.
Simon, b. at Kittery. Me., 1841. Enlisted in Co. G, 27 Me. Vol. inf., 30 Sept., 1862. Hon.
Discharged 17 July, 1H63, m. Mary Duncan, had Edward L. and Walter L. Fernald.
Simon M.. b. at Ossipee, 30 Jan., 1834, s. Joseph, enlisted in Co. G, 35 Mass. Vol. Inf., 4 Aug.,
1862. Hon. discharged 30 Oct., 1862 for disability. Resided at Haverhill, Mass.
Stephen, b. 11 Jun., 1826, s. Alpheus, s. Hercules. Resided at Newficld, Me. Enlisted in Co.
K, 27 Me. Vol. Inf., 15 Oct., 1862. Hon. discharged 17 July, 1863, d. at New Haven, Conn., 17
Feb., 1872, m. Matha Lewis, 17 Nov., 1836, at Newburyport.
Steven L., s. Edmund and Betsey Fernald. Enlisted in Co. K, 51st Mass. Vol. Inf., 4 Aug.,
1862. Hon. Discharged 27 July, 1863. In 22d Co., 4th Heavy Artillery, 1864 to 1865. Residence,
Mendon, Mass. His bro.. Sergeant Thomas was killed at Antietam, Md. His bro., Wm. H., was
Private in Co. A., 36 Mass. Vol. Inf., d. Feb., 1864, and buried at Camp Nelson. Jessamine Co.. Ky.
T. Fernald. m. Enlisted 7 Aug., 1863, in Co. C, 1st Me. H. Artillery. Hon. Discharged 11
Sept. 1865. Age 22, Residence, Belfast, Me.
Theodore, b. a. 1833. Residence, Boston, Mass. Enlisted in Co. C, 1st Mass. Vol. Inf., 27
May, 1861. Hon. Discharged 31 July, 1861, at Fort Albany, Arlington, Va.
^ ^ ^ L>
0^^ THEODORE, b. 31 Aug., 1797. s. David and Esther Tucker ( Leach) Fernald. Ap-
Jl pointed Acting Boatswain in the Navy IS March, 1836. Ordered to the Norfolk Navy
^ ' I Yard, did not report. Ordered to the Sloop, Boston 28 May, 1836. Resigned 6th Oct.,
^^W. and d. at Portsmouth, N. H., Nov., 1836, m. 6Jan., 1828 to Lydia Adams, b. at Newing-
ton IS Aug., 1799.
Theodore, s. Capt. Edward and Mary Fernald, was Lieutenant in the Revenue Maine Service
and stationed in Southern Waters in 1840. Left Service and went to South America. Who will con-
tinue these records?
Thomas, in Lt. Capins Co. Col. Nichols Regt. fiom Sept. to Oct. 1814. Service at Portland, Me.
Thomas, in Sergeant Charles Gardners Detachment from Lt. Col. Paul Merrill. Regt. of New-
buryport. These detachments to serve one week each at Plum Island, 26 July to 2d Aug., 1814.
This Thomas, s. of Thomas and Mirableh (Black) Fernald- His father a Rev. Soldier Thomas, in
Sergeant Masons detachment.
Thomas C, b. at Dixfield, Me., s, Edmund and Betsey Fernald. Enlisted in Co. K. ISth Mass.
Vol. Inf. 1 July, 1861. Kil. at Antietam, Md. 17 Sept., 1862. Resided at Blackstonc, Mass.
Thomas C, b. at Portsmouth, N. H., 28 Oct., 1810, s. James Brown Fernald and Anna (Clark)
Fernald. Enlisted 7th Jan., and mustered in 18th Feb,, 1862 in Co. G. 72 Ohio, Vol. Inf. Hon.
discharged 10 June, 1864. His father was in War of 1812-15. His nephew Thomas C. served in
the Civil War. Thomas C's. two sons, Thomas Charles and George W., served in the same Co. o
13th Minn. Vols, in the Philippines 1898.
Co. G. Ohio, Vol. Inf. Civil War was commanded by Capt. James Fernald, s. of 1st named,
Thomas C. (b. 1810) and in same Co. was bro. Elisha and Fr. Thomas C. This is the first instance
known to two writers where the father and son served as privates throughout the war with another son
and brother their commanding officer.
Thomas Charles, s. Thomas C. and Mary A. (Mills) Fernald. Enlisted March, 189S in Minn.
Natl. Guards, also in 13th Minn. Vol. Inf. 28, April, 1898. Promoted to Sergeant and mustered out
with the Regt. at San Francisco, Cal. 3rd Oct. 1899. Served in Philippines and bro. George
Wallace Fernald served in the same Co. and Regt.
Timothy E., b. at Northwood, N. H. 2S June, 1823, s. Timothy and Mary (Osgood) Fernald.
Enlisted in Co. C. ISth N. H. Vol. Inf. 13 Sept., 1862. Promoted to Sergeant and Hon. discharged
13 Aug., 1863. Residence Enfield, N. H.
Timothy, b. 24 Aug., 1831. Enlisted in Co. K. 17th Me. Vol. Inf. 7 Aug. 1863. also served in
1st and 3d Me. Vols, his ancestry given as Nathl., Nathl., Pelatiah, Nathnl., Nathl., Samuel and Dr.
Renald Fernald.
Tobias A., b. 30 April, 1840. Enlisted in Co. K. 22 Me. Vol. Inf. 10 Oct., 1862. Hon. Dis-
charged 8 Jan., 1863. Residence Newport, Me. Reported as having died in the Service is not
verified.
True O. Fernald, b. 2 May, 181S at Northwood, N. H..bro. Timothy E. Enlisted 24 July, 1862
in Co. C. 11th N. H. Vol. Inf. Wounded severely 12 May, 1864 at Spottsylvania, Va. and Hon.
discharged 12 May, 186S.
Warren Fernald, b. at Kittery, Me. a. 1838. Enlisted with bro. Simon in Co. G. 27 Me. Vol.
Inf. 30 Sept., 1862- Hon. discharged 4 Jan., 1863 (Malaria.) He m. Margaret Jenkins and had
Carrie, Cora, Marcia, Daisey, Flora, Ralph, Everett, and George.
D %^ D
361
=a f4, ^ ^ □=
^^d WILLIAM, b. 3 Dec. 1780, s. Mark and Martha Fernald. Enlisted as seaman in Navy.
^1 Captured and died in Dartmouth Prison, Eng. 10 June, 1S15. Resided at Kitter>': m.
liVl Abigail Stevens of Portsmouth 14 June, 1804. His widow Petitioned 2d Session, 15 C'on-
^"^ gress for a Naval Pension : at 1st 16th Congress: again Petitioned. Not granted, probably
from lack of proof. There is no question of his Service, Capture and Death. His father served in
the American Revolution, and was later Commissioned as Lt. in the Navy."
William Fernald, b. 27 July, 1796, s. William, b. 1757 and wife Molly (or Mary Colby.'
Hammond) Fernald, s. Col. Tobias, s. Deacon John and Sarah (Hinckes) Fernald, s. Dr. John and
Mary (Spinney;, s. Thomas and Temperance (Washington) P'ernald, s. Dr. Renald and Joanna
( WarburtonJ Fernald, s. Capt. Wm. and Elizabeth (Amand) Fernald, s. Dr. John and Annietta (de
Coligny) Fernald, s. Francis and Maria (Commenius) Fernald, s. Dr. Jean Fernald and wife Mag.
dalene Luillier, s. Charles VIII and Anne of Britiany: " It is said was a Soldier in the War of 1812-
15 but I have been unable to verify the statement," declared Mr. Henry W. Fernald. I have his
wooden Canteen with his name marked on it in initials W. F. in War 1812. Then written records
(of Wm. Fernald fought Invincible Spanish Armada, Aet. 15 or 13) written on paper attached to the
wooden Canteen by red sealing wax. A quaint article.
William, b. 7 April, 1796, s. Daniel and Hannah (Manson) Fernald, ser\ed as Pri\ate and was
stationed at Fort Constitution. (See plate) at Portsmouth Harbor, in 1812. He m. 3 Dec. Abigail
Barry, had William F., Lucy and Albert H. Fernald.
William, b. 4 Dec, 1821. Enlisted in Co. H. 2d Mass. H. Artillery, 17 Sept., 1864. Dis-
charged 26 July, 1865. He was s. of James and Nancy Fernald of Lebanon, .Me., and brother of
Eli of the 1st N. H. Vol. Inf., m. 1st Nancy Mason, 2d Sarah Fay. Died at Springfield, Mass. 28
Nov.. 1896.
William b. 1840 at Greenwich, Conn., 6 Aug., 1862. Enlisted at Stanford, Conn., in Co. B.
17 Conn. Regt. Captured 19 May, 1864, at Welakin, Florida. Parol. 14 March, 1865, and d. six
ds. later leaving widow and two children.
W. E. Farnell. Enlisted in Co. D. 15th Me. Vol. Inf. Died in service and buried at Beaufort,
S. C. Natl. Cemetery. Seaion 20, No. 151.
William A., b. at South Boston, Mass., s. Nathaniel and Margaret Ann (Foss) Fernald. En-
listed in 3d Mass. Battery 10 Sept, 1861. Hon. discharged 16 Sept., 1864: died in Melrose, Mass.,
July, 1891.
William G., b. 8 Dec, 1840 at Houlton, Me., s. John and Joanna ( Allein) Fernald. Enlisted in
Co. K. 1st Me. Vol. Inf. 1 Sept., 1862 as Hospital Steward. Promoted to Assistant Surgeon 30 Jan.,
1864. m. at Atlanta, Ga., 8th Jan, 1873- Had Tallalak, b. 20 June, 1874, and Frances. He was not
mustered in as Assistant Surgeon.
"William H. Enlisted in Co. A. 36 Mass. Vol. Inf. 3 Aug., 1862. Discharged 30 April, 1864
at Halls Gap, Ky., s. Edmund and Betsy Fernald and bro. of Stephen L., and was the W. H. Fernald
who d. Feb., 1864, and was buried at Camp Nelson, Jessamine Co., Ky."
William H., b. a. 1830, of Bakersville, Me. Enlisted in U. S. Navy, 30 July, 1863 for three
years as Substitute for Isaac Flint. Another Record declared enlisted II Nov., 1864. There was
another William H., who enlisted in the Navy, date unknown to me, residence St. Albans, Me.
□ D %^ n^
(^
■ =U t^ (^ 4^ D
WILLIAM (H) FERNALD, b. 8 March. 1823, s. William and Lydia (Clements)
Fernald, brother of aforesaid Joseph of Medford, Mass., that wore the Oak Leaf of Fort
Fisher, b. at Durham, N. H. Residence at Peterborough, N. H. Enlisted in Co. G.
2d N. H. Regt. 24 May, 1861. Discharged 21 June, 1864. He was named William and
his hro. who d. in infancy was called Wm. Henry, as 1 copied from Mr. Joseph Fernald's mammoth
Bible at 8 Hastings Lane, Medford, Ma.ss.
William H. H.. b. at Charlestown, Mass., a. 1833. Enlisted in Co. I. 12th N. H. Regt. 15
Aug., 1862. Appointed 1st Lieut. 8 Sept., 1862. Promoted to Capt. 4 May, 1863.
William H. H., b. a. 1841 at Harrington. N. H. Enlisted in Co. G., 8th N. H. Vol. Inf., 27
Dec, 1S61. Promoted to Corporal: wounded 14 June, 1863 at i'ort I hidsoii. La. Reinlisted 4 Jan.,
1864. Transferred to Co. B. Veteran Battalion 8th N. H. Vol. Inf., 1 Jan., 1865. Discharged 24
June, 1865. Died at Dover, N. H., 28 Oct., 1865.
William L., Enlisted from Me. in the U. S. Engineers, 4 Jan., 1864. Transferred to Veteran
Reserve Corps.
Lieut. A. K. Fernald, 30 Sepf., 1864 in Front of Petersburg, People's Farm. The Confederate
strong line of earthworks, well manned by infantry, and a Four-Gun Fort in a very formidable position
commanded the road and field, across which our Brigade charged in the face of grape and canister at
close range, firing their last volley into our faces, killing many and riddling our Hag. The terrific
Spartan charge drove all before except the Fourth Cannon captured by Lt. Fernald who in advance of
his command dashed through an opening in the Fort commanded the men to Haiti They hesitated
till presentation of a revolver aimed at Drivers head enforced it. Fire was opened on Lt. who held
the prize. A Mass. Officer was second on spot, and attempted to claim the honor for his Regt. un-
.successfuUy. Lt. A. E. Fernald held his own for '• LTncIe Sam."
CAPTAIN FERNALD, at Five Forks, during the supreme moment of the conflict, rushed in
and captured the rebel Flag. Previously Morrison, Gilmore, Hickey and the slight built young man
dashed on to capture the Flag, were surrounded by about 400 foes: they formed a square, fought,
pounded their way through reaching clear space and the enemy poured a volley into them. Morrison
jumped high in the air and fell dead, Gilmore sank on ground as if dead, Hickey reeled and staggered
the fourth reached and joined his Regt. Genl. Sheridan captured 5000. Morrison was shot through
the body, Gilmore two balls through the heart. Hickey slight injury. Two shallow graves beneath
a great Oak Tree rest their remains.
At Hatchers Run a Confederate Sergeant South Carolina Regt. after all his comrades had fled,
gathered up their rifles, took his stand behind a tree in angle of Fort. The stream was deep, and cross-
ing on fallen trunk of a tree. Seven Union soldiers sprang upon the log to cross and fell. The Sur-
geant was shot from tree top, buried in fort and his effects sent to friends in S. C. Graves marked
by heroic deed.
Dr. G. F. Walker, Med. Director of Dept. Mass. and Natl. Med. Direct, of L. S. U. V. U.
Vt. Vet. Association, 483 Beacon St., Boston, Mass., courteously supplied information relative to Lt.
A. E. F. and Captain Fernald with Mass. at large see " Gerrish — Reminiscences of the War."
D
363
Ti
^^-<]
The primitive
alphabet Banner is
Mono g ra m ic .
Sent to THE
HAGUE in 1907.
American Dele-
gates, opposed by
Pope and Vatican-
it is in the pow-
er of all men tu
pre serve tlieir
probity; no one is
powerful enough
to preserve reputa-
tion while there
are so many evil
tongues ready to
blast the fairest
character, and so
many open ears
ready to receive
their reports.
The opinions of
men are as many
and different as
their persons. The
greatest diligence.
and most prudent
conduct can never
please them all.
Cbapter ft)1Iin[
i ships 1
^^
PI. 1347.
Crest of Coat of
Arms Declares
GOD King of
Kings. Our Uni-
versal Command-
er-in-Chief.
A wise man is
provided for oc-
currence of any
kind; the good he
manages, the bad
he vanquishes; in
prosperiry he be-
trays no presump-
tion, in adversity
he feels no de-
spondency.
To be perfectly
just is an attribute
of divine nature;
to be so to the ut-
mo.st of our abili-
ties, is the glory of
mankind.
When Alexan-
der heard any one
accused he would
stop one ear with
his hand, thereby
reserving audience
for the defendant.
There is a he-
roic innocence,
as well as a heroic
courage.
No man is wise
or safe, but he that
is honest. Sir W. honor lo his coumry. a glory l
Raleigh. ''""' '° ":;i,;„'°"dr,°;,f ,„;
Those who sccretfy and cowardly
Comines said that good sense which nature affords us is preferable to most of the knowledge"that
we can acquire.
Fidelity and truth is tb.e foundation of all justice.
It is a Spanish maxim that he who loses wealth, loses much; he who loseth a friend, loseth more;
but he that loseth his spirits, loseth all.
The defending a bad cause is worse than the cause itself,
to have a right, and not to come at it, differ little.
To delay justice is injustice. Not
The greatest of all injustice is that which goes under the name of the law; and of all sorts of
tyranny the forcing the letter of the law against the equity, is the most insupportable. Sir R.
L' Estrange.
/•Record not
imj MADE LAWS
^1% LIKE SPIDER
^t^^ webs, that catch
the small Hies, but
let the great ones
break through. THE
GREAT CICERO com-
piaineci, that many worthy
ordinances were settled by
laws; but those, for the most
part, were corrupted and de-
praved by lawyers' inventions.
There are many laws made
by men, which swerve from
honesty, reason, and the dic-
tates of nature. By the law of arms,
he is degraded from all honor,
who puts up with an affront; and
by the civil law, he that takes ven-
geance for it incurs capital punishment.
He that seeks redress by the law for an
affront, is disgraced; and he that does
not seek redress in this way, is pun-
ished by law. This wrong only ex-
celled by Boston, Divorce laws of 1896
which justice was made injustice
by protection of the criminal for
saving a Bishop, one representa-
tive, three Drs., and 3 Attys., 37
killed with three attempts to in-
volve U. 8. in a war defeated, cit-
ies larcenv,
Let our
w- ate h word
be dispatch
and practice
what we
preach and
that for ex-
igencies of
the time.
Parmenio, a friend of Alexander, hearing the great offers Darius had made, said
I would accept them." "So would I,
cause they never learned to speak well.
splied Alexande
365
HAGUE! WITH YOU
IN MOST WISE, RIGHT-
EOUS ACTIONS IS OM-
NIPOTENT GOD, and all
tiie best of earth.
It was the wise saying of
a certain Prince that we must
dispense justice in small mat-
ters in order to keep it pure
justice in great ones. OUR
THREE GREAT LAWS
PREVENT THE EVIL
THAT HAS CAUSED
THE DOWNFALL OF
STATES AND NATIONS
FOR THEY ARE THE
COMMANDS OF DIETY OMNI-
SCIENT.
It will be observed that Peter Faneuil,
or Funal, or another way of spelling
Fernald has one less star on his coat-of-
arms than on his tomb. For like Ab-
raham of old he counted ancestors by
the stars, and they were : Rev. Peter,
Rev. Daniel, Rev. Francis, Dr. Jean
Fernel, Charles VIII and Louis
XI of France.
Is judgment the throne of pru-
dence and silence its sanctuary?
Itismuch
better to re-
prove than
to be angry
secretly.
When
Darius of-
fered Ale.x-
ander 10,-
000 talents,
to divide
Asia with
himcqually
he ans-
wered :
"The earth
cannot bear
ihc two suns,
nor Asia
two kings."
Were I Alexander.
were I Parmenio. Many speak ill. be-
-anting Adminidratiou widiin tha
I juft Sum of Tujuit^ fkaujuMFtMai/if
bw paid unco the faid ^afiah.
nil
" S rf"o fS '')' whole firmly by tbefe Prefencj. Sealed with our Seals. D;
J t-gO ^/^^-^'-^ D.y_of ni*-v*-'i-^^ /«..)» i.nuJ, 0« rt»<«/;n»»
U Q. I y finJriJ ui fin^ Goo •^ntijtt y!fj»/ /!fj(» l^cjruiU Aujtjjtj
0 H-S iciimo /tiiu . — ' '
a /Jirj^e ConWtron of tljw i&tefent £)bUsat<on (3 futli.
_ Si^ ThiJ if the above-bounden fJcJijojmn. ?u/uiuje oi^iuHU oiouA?
5 tif oii. t^uMui- Hi l^cviij, efilitiA lU^ktr P&idJj JL, _
within Hi» Majefty's Province of the MiptktftiiiBi) iaNem: Em-JnJ, ah
boldcn and ftand fiimly bound and obliged unto Jirtiuk U>^Ua.-Li'
Judge of the Probate of WiDs, and granting Adminiftration
Coi'nt£oCJuff»A _ in the fun and j " " ' ' ^"^
CurtantMoney of Mcb-Sm
Ic^iiu/d' or his Succedotj in the laid Office, or Alfigns .• To the tiue
Payment wheteof, we bind out fclve» and each of us, our,and each of our
Heirs, Executors and Admini(lrators,joyntlv and fevcrally for the whole and
"■ -■■• -■ Q„^ ,(^
people are doubly miserable in being afflicted by others'
and their own adversity. Some have a perfidious trick of
man by commendations; to praise for small things, that
disparage successfully for greater. Socrates, when informed
derogating speeches, used against him behind his back,
only this facetious reply, "Let him beat me too when I am
being asked, "How one should be revenged of his enc-
"By being a virtuous and an honest man. Censure is the
public for being eminent.
08 C^ 2 Plates 1362, 3, 4, 5 perpetuate the
""-a/^faas even when faces changed!
.4 «3 '^ I '^^" proposes, but it is GOD that
^ ^ q disposes and regulates coming events.
■§1 I He is perfect JUDGE, giver and rc-
^ ...g warder of all tho.se that diligently seek
ti^HIM.
^^ »
"^S K The
ind gather in funds, those
Goods, Chattels, Rights and Credits of the, faidDeceafed,
ny
or into the Hands and Pofle
And the fame fo made, do exhibit, c
Cbutt of Probate for the aforeCaid County of
Ucom«
her Perfon or Perfoiu for i**^ i
fe to be exhibited Into the Regirtry ofiho
ate for the aforeCaid County of /u/fcfU at or before the / ffll-.
•— ^ Day of _Juru-j. next Mfulngi tod -the fame Oooda, Chattels, Rights aijff
Credits, and all other the Goods, Chattels, Rights and Credits of the faid Occcafed,
It the time of ^ Death, which a: any time after IhaD come to the Hands and
Pofleflion of the faid OfV"^^ '}uj\u^M. or into the Hands and Pofrcffion of
any other Perfon or Perfons for d^ do well and truly Adminifler according to
Law: And funhet do make, or caufe ■ ibemadca iufl and true Accompt of «w<
faid Adminiflration upon Oaih, at or before the ix^Ui-^^COl Day of fliiuu/L
which win be in the Year of our Lord, Om TttufjnJ Snim FfuiJri J »ni pn^ "'fr
And all the rell and refldue of the faid Goods, Chattels, Rights and Credits whica
fliaO be found remaining upon the laid Adminiftrator's Accompt, (the fame being
firll examined and allowea of by the Judte.or Judges for the (jinc biang, of probate
of Wins and granting Adminidrations within the County of iumst^ aforcfaid)
and (haU deliver and pay unto fuch Perfoo ot Perfons refpeaively as the faid JuJge
orjudgesby hisor their Decree or Sentence purfuani loLawIhall Limit and appoint:
And if it fluD hereafter appear. That any laft Will and TeQament was made by the
laid deceafedr And the Executor or Eiecutoii therein named do exhibit the famA
into the Court of Probate for the faid County of Jujfaii makine requeft to have
it aDowei as<Uiiprovf<Uccofdingly / If th< fafd (IJiftuitiic.Tainmt , -, -
within boumlen being thereunto required, do tender atid deliver the faij Letter of
Adminiflration (Approbation of f^icti Tcflvncnt being fitfl had and made) into the
faid Court : Then the before Written Obligation to be void and of none EficA, or
life to abide and remain in full Force and Virtue.
ttdlid itj Jtlhtrii
M Pnftmi ff'tC
K The Salvation Army goeth out unto
§5 ^..the needy
..-^ S that have the likeness of our Creator,
"cj;^^ Universal of mankind. Emperors,
J "§ V, Kings, Presidents, Governors, church-
^ > ives, colleges and schools whose lack of
<5 -Cj uniformity has caused to be taken from
S fejQthem the Hebrew Bible and Roman
Jjg ^Catholic Bible with Protestant Bible
^^^that in the original Hebrew before its
f^ ^ . alleged lost language was with the an-
^Jl ;2cient ^flgyptian ONE to which has
"§^tjbeen added Forms, untrue translations
l^tSi .g displeasing to God and injury of man-
i S '5 kind. Is it time the.se evils with all
PI. 1365 ^ others mentioned herein are removed ?
■^ The virtue of prosperity, is temper-
Sance; the virtue of adversity, is forti-
'gtude; which in morals is the most
la heroic virtue.
?
c Prosperity is the blessings <?f the Old
, I Testament Adversity is the blessings
^5 of the new Testament, for wickedly
^ has been taken from and added to, till
^much is not the words of God, but the
S additions and subtractions of men for
►^- which God has punished mankind.
g Ancient i^igyptian is perfectly pure and
one RELIGION THE FIRST.
r^«_.
*^^ ^^^TTtA^nt^
Ji^L ^^ ^'- V'
Aohn..
M. ^w>c«w<.
P1>TE 1365.
,3/ ^tJt
^'<»-oMrssr
TSi^g-^
C-^'*^
PLATE 1366. Slfnert of Our Threa Uwj.
Let reason go before enterprise, and counsel before action.
Rest satisfied with doing well and leave others to talk about you as they please.
Always take part with, and defend the unfortunate.
In the morning think of what you have to do; at night what you have done.
368
EE NAMES WE HON-
OR, FOR THEIR
GOOD DEEDS, PER-
PETUATE!
There seems to be so near an affin-
ity betwixt wisdom, philosophy, and
good counsels, that it is a matter of
curiosity more than of profit to di-
vide them. Seneca.
Those who start for human glory,
like the mettled hounds of ActJeon,
must pursue the game not only
where there is a path but where
there is none.
There are two things which ought
to teach us to think slightly of human
glory; the very best have their cal-
uminators, the very worst their pane-
gyrists.
It is an insult to an honest man to
force on him a lond ringing ticket
punch to prevent self-respect by an-
nouncing he has not stolen thatticket.
Boston EI. Cars.
Think before you speak, and con-
sider before you promise. Take
time to deliberate and advise; but
lose no time in executing your re-
solutions
Never expect any assistance or con-
solation in your necessities from
drinking companions! !
OUR GOOD DEEDS Bless
Others and cast a halo of Dignity
and Grace around and U. S.
Good counsel is cast away by the
arrogant, the self conceited and the
stupid; who are either too proud to
take it, or too heavy to understand
it Sir R. L' Estrange.
The martyrs to vice far exceed the
martyrs to virtue, both in endurance
and in number. So blinded are we
by our passions that we suffer more
to be destroyed than saved.
It goes a great way towards mak-
ing a man faithful to Ictf him know
that you think him so: and he who
suspects that I will deceive him, gives
me a kind of right to cozen him.
Seneca.
t0^mro BUILD A PYRAMID IN EACH NATION OF THE WHOLE EARTH
/ -4 AND THEREON INSCRIBE THE NAMES OF THE RULERS OF EARTH
I I AND THE UNIVERSAL GENEALOGY WITH PASSAGE OF THE RE-
^^^^ forni laws as an altar built unto the one God Lord universal in his 170 names thus bless all
^■^ mankind his children: wisely increase the strength, health and happiness of nations honor-
ing their lawful rulcre, confer blessings on all mankind is this work compiled and printed.
Seneca said: "If we
could trace our descents
we should find that all
slaves come from Princes,
and all Princes from
slaves. We are all of us
composed of the same ele-
ments, all of us equal, if
we could but recover our
evidence. But when we
can carry it no farther, the
Herald provides us some
hero to supply the place
of an illustrious original;
and there is the rise of
arms and families: He
that in act, deed, thought,
wish or desire wrongs an-
other made in the likeness
of our Father God, most
of all wrongs himself, for
each will receive justice
from the perfect divine
Judge and rewards or
punishment in exactness
proportionate to merits or
demerits.
By purchases the United
States honorably acquired its
Property.
By impartial and uninter-
ested selfish interests is the in-
tent to give to the world its
true genealogy that can now
be properly sworn to as correct
in the lines as set forth in the
holy primitive Bibles of found
Hebrew and Egyptian, also,
if it can be obtained the earli-
est Greek who were all three
co-cxistant and descendant
from common ancestors.
As were these Indians who
retained the primitive hiero-
glyphics that in the primitive
language first honored GOD,
then their Ancestors is part
thus translated: "ik ( 1 ) (three
symbols) Created by Gt. Spirit
(God) line of the mound
builders to 1st mother Ava"
PLATE 1369. Sec previous plitei.
A wise man will desire
no more than he may get
justly, use soberly, dis-
tribute cheerfully and livr
contentedly. Ld. Bacon.
Where is that advantage
under the sun that any
but a gentleman or a lady
would be proud of?
Where is it that pride it-
self, that any mortal in
his right mind, wits,
sense, would be ashamed
of? Sir R. L'Esirange
from whom, hisancestors.
Strange Fernald was re-
ported by marriage to be-
descended from.
Of Ava & Adam the In-
dian is descended and from
their son St^ r\v =Scth line
shall be born of Mary and Jo-
seph, Christ the Messiah."
3d name monogramic — the
turtle's lines is his written
claim. 0+ God's line from
N. to S., E. toVy. is - I
Noah's, I —Ham line to In-
dian O n ingal h ion q" the
Great Chief.
Where no law
no transgression.
At Thebes were erected
statues of Judges, having no
hands, and the chief of them
had his eyes shui: thereby
signifying that among them
justice was not to be solicited
either with bribery or address.
AN APPEAL FOR CONSTITUTIONAL JUSTICE
IIATE 137
369
-§
so
oo
PLATE 1380,
lure cl my fa
ol foes to Suie and Nadons. Cod. Church.
Purity and Virtue. Faithfully I have kept
my Word and Vow.
Zechariah VI, 12-15. "Thus
speaketh the Lord of hosts, saying.
Behold the man whose name is the
BRA.NCH; and he shall grow up
out of his place, and he shall build
the Temple of the Lord. And thev
that are far ofT shall come and build
in the Temple of the Lord, and ye
shall know the Lord of hosts hath
sent me unto you. And this shall
come to pass, if ye will diligently
obey the voice of the Lord thy
God." One thousand and one have
subscribed their names for building
Universal International Genealogy
TEMPLES or MONUMENTS
representing 1,160,000,000 people,
and FOR ENACTMENT 1,411,-
171,381. See U. S. Congress Doc-
ument 190 read and act for Liberty
and Right, Honor and Charity.
5810 A. M., B. C. MAN. 4376,
LIGHT 5397, B. C.
TRUE DATES,
Thursday. 3 Dec, 6284.
UNTO LAWFUL RULERS;
Cordial Courteous Greetings:
On to the HAGUE and all
Legislative assemblies for Enactment
of our three Laws in one, Isaiah's,
God's Commands to hold in rever-
ence. Our honor maintain in the
solution of the problem of Nations,
most honoring you by conferring
the greatest blessings upon all others?
Thereby recipients of the greatest
one "it is more blessed to give than
to receive." WHEREOF UNTO
GOD GIVETH GRACE, POW-
ER; I affix name, dates and Seal by
VI my God given power and hand.
^^P Charles Augustus Fcrnald, M.
ID., Principal of God's United
[States and Foreign Alliance:^
for Righteousness, Purity.
371
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REAT WISDOM IS SHOWN BY ALL GOVERNMENTS THAT OUGHT TO
ASPIRE TO PRODUCE THE HIGHEST happiness by the least objectionable
means. To produce good without some admixture of ill, is the prerogative of the DEITY
alone. In a state of nature, each individual would strive to preserve the whole of his
liberty, but then he would also be liable to the encrouchments of others, who feci equally
determined to preserve the whole of theirs. In a state of civilization each individual voluntarily sac-
rifices a part of his liberty, to increase the general good stock. It may be said in respect to the goods
of this world, that Parsons are preaching tor them— Lawyers are pleading for them— Physicians arc
prescribing for them— Authors are writing for them— Soldiers are fighting for them— but, that true
Philosophers alone are enjoying them. NO destruction of NATIONS! Be our war cryor to pass our
3 LAWS.
FOR WRONG* DIPLOMACY** THE FREE UNIVERSAL CHOICE*** WISDOM
FOR RIGHT****
"Huguenot Emigrants to America, pr.
Cha.s. VV. Uaird, N. Y., 1885. Vol. 1, p. 28.
Faneuil fam. of La Rochelle per M. Louis
Marie Meschinet de Richmond archiviste, etc.
Benjamin Faneuil, b. 1593. d. 1677: m.
Susanne de L'Espine 1616: 2d Pierre, b. 1618,
d — m. Marie Cousseau 1640; 3d Benjamin, b.
d. 3d Pierre, b — d — m. Marie Depont. Faneuil
family arrives in Boston from London by Autumn
1688. Gabriel Berusa, arrived 5rh July, 1688,
where he settled with his connections Benjamin
and Andre Faneuil. 3d. Pierre 4th Jean, b. d.
in La Rochelle, 24 June, 1737. 4th Andre, b.
d. in Boston, 13 Feb., 1737. 4th Benjamin, b.
in N. Y. 31 March, 1719, Aet.
Annie Bureau, 28 July, 1699.
d. m. Abraham de La Croix.
d. m. Pierre Cossart. 4th
Sept., 1668; d.
50 years, 8mos.
4th Susanne, b.
4th Jeanne, b.
Benjamin-
"5th Peter, b. July, 1700: d. Thur., Mnr.
3, 1743." Noble form, beautiful features, per-
fea typical Roman, like King Pepin.
" Peter Faneuil — A fat corpulent brown
squat man, hips short and lame from childhood.
Notes on a copy of Dr. Wm. Douglass' Alma-
nack for 1743, by Saml. S. Abbott Green, M.D.
Notes 2, ditto, Peter Faneuil, Esq. between 2
and 3 o'clock in the afternoon died of a dropsical
complication (In my opinion a great loss to
this town Aged 42-8 m.) and I think by what I
have heard has done more charitable than any
man yet ever lived in this town for whom I am
very sorry.
For Right!!
Peter Faneuil's ancester Louis XL, King of
France, (but XII. counting a Louis not a king
found in one Record) had his body removed
from the grave and insulted by the Huguenots,
as he, an honorable man was not protected, but
made a persecuted dupe and tool of Roman
Catholic Church.
Charles VIII, quarrelled with Pope and
with Chn. except Jean, killed by poison, after
Dr. Jean and wife. Finally Peter Faneuil
poisoned by Antimony! No signature on the
alleged gift to City of Boston, of Faneuil Hall
and Market.
Latin Phanuel = 0-0A«- ='5N1J£='?X"JE
Faneuil, = "Peniel and Fenuel" in Genesis
Chap. XXXII. Verses 30 and 31 in Engfish and
31 and 32 in Hebrew Bibles. The points were
interpolated erroneously in the Hebrew changing
F. to P., therefore the Heb. is FNFAL which
is tlie same spelling in the ancient ;£gvptian.
PETER FANEUIL TRUE ANCES-
TORS FROM THE CYPHER. UN-
CHANGED WRITINGS ON HIS TOMB!!
& RECORDS!!! Louis XI. Fr. of Charles
VIII., Fr. of Dr. Jean Fernel, Fr. Francis
Junius Fcrnal, Chaplin, Atty Warrior, the Fr.
of Rev. DANIEL Jureau Fernel, m. .\Iarv de
Moulin, b. 22 March, 1583, m. 1 June 1600
Had descendants:
Rev. Peter Jureau Funal, b. 24 December, 1637
at Mer. Blois, where his fr- was minister of the
reformed religion — Taught in part by uncle
Peterde Moulin, who was in England, ordained:
Prof. Hebrew at Sedan called Protestant Goliah :
1681 retired to Holland, and divinity Prof, of
Rotterdam and minister of Walloon Church, as
gr. fr. was before him: persecuted and d. a
martyr 1713 at Rotterdam: m. chn.
Anthony Dodine de Haute Forre, Attv. b.
1602, d. 1682. Francisco Furini, b. 1604 ,
And 12 daughters, m. Lewis Charles John Fran-
cis Jureau Funel, b. 13 May, 1632, m. Joan He-
nault {thus keeping ance.'stral foreparcnts names)
Had: — Charles John Francis Henault, b. at
Paris 8 Feb., 1685, d. 24. Dec. 1771. He was
7th child and adopted as his own his sisters three
sons and 2 das. that were all well married.
Sixteen, Rev. Peter Jureau Funal, above, m.
Susanna Fernald da. John and Mary, 1657:
Had Twelve children: 1 Charles, 2 John, 3
Annie, 4 Francis, 5 Magdalene, 6 Anne, 7 Parker
Jureau Funel, m. Gen. Zebulon Pike. Eman-
euil, 8 Rachel, 9 Daniel, 10 Peter, b. 20 June,
1700. d. s. 3 March, 1743 at Boston, buried Old
Granery Cemetery. (Adopted Benjamin and
Andrew) 11, Mary, 12, Joanna Sarah, 13, Sus-
anna m. La Croix. THOSE THAT GOD
HONORETH MAY THEY ALL HONOR
THEMSELVES BY AGGRANDIZING.
372
^ ^ ^ ^ □.
0^^ INE OF JOHN THE SECOND SON OF DR. JEAN FERNEL THAT WAS
jl BORN THIRD OF FEBRUARY. 1535. married ELIZABETH, (da. Sir Richard
^%W I Berkley and wife Elizabeth, da. Sir William Read, of Gloucester: Sir Richard was son of
^^^ Sir John and Isabel da. Sir Wm. Dennis: Sir John, s. Sir Richard and Elizabeth, da. Sir
Humphrey Coningsby:) 1 Jan., 1552: 2d m- Marv (Washington) Arden: Had descendants — John
Ferncl. b. 31 Dec, 1552, m. Anne, b. 29 Nov. 1553, m. Magdalen, b. 5 April, 1556, m. George H.
U. Fagnel, b. at Antwerp 1545 d. 1600: (5 chn.), Edward, b. 17 June, 1559: Amand Tolan or Folan
b. 5 Oct., 1561 d. 17 July, 161(J, m. 4 chn. Francis Vanni, b. at Suena 19 May, 1563 and d. at Rome
1609, m. 7 chn. Amand Tolan or Folan b. 5 Oct., 1561 d. 17 July, 1610 m. Thomas, b. at
Antwerp 23 Oct., 1566, and his wife having died 3 Sept., 1566. He married Mary, eldest da. of
Edward and Mary Arden, da. Sir George Throgmorton; Edward Arden and his son-in-law Somer-
ville, a rash, thoughtless >oung man, was drawn into a supposed conspiracy against the Queen's life
with Hale a priest, tortures were inflicted on Arden and Hale without any evidence appearing except
a letter that Arden burnt of Somcrvijle who was strangled the night before his expected execution.
Arden expired 20 Dec-, 15H5 amidst the tears of pitying tliousands and their heads mangled placed on
London bridge. The dignity of these respectable families became restored by the prudence of the
two next heirs Fernels and the Fieldings, became nearly allied to the earls of Denbigh. From Col-
lins Baronetage, p. 32 and 33 Richard, son and heir of John Isham, before mentioned, was the hus-
band of Isabella, daughter to Drago Brudenel, or Drago Furnald Esq.: who had a rent charge of 10
marks given by her father (c) out of the manors of Chalfont St. Peter, and Burnham, in the county
of Bucks. William Isham, the eldest son of Robert, before mentioned, was one of those gentlemen
of Northamptonshire, to whom Richard III. sent a letter, requiring a loan of forty pounds (d) his
nainc likewise occurs upon other accounts on the lists (e) of the nobility and gentry of the county,
He married Elizabeth, daughter of (Rev. Peter Jureau or Fureau, as sometimes spelled), widow of
Thomas Braunspath (f), who 20 Sept., 18 Edward IV. and he died 13 June, 2 Hen, VIII. 1510,
leavmg Thomas isham, of Pichely, Esq: their son, who was about 54 years of age at his fathers death.
He married Elena, daughter of Richard Vere, of Addington, Esq: (by Isabella, his wife, daughter,
and at length heir to John Green, of Drayton, Esq.) and sister of Sir Henry Vere, ShcrifF of Noith-
amptonshire, 1 Hen. VII. who being the last heir male of that ancient and martial family, descended
from Sir Robert de Vere, second son of Aubrey de Vere, chief Justiciary of England, and brother to
Asbrey de Vere, first of the name. Earl of Oxford: his eldest daughter and co-heir, Elizabeth, became
the wife of John, the first Lord Mordaunt, ancestor to the present Earl of Peterborough.
By this match there accrued to the family a very considerable alliance, and a descent in blood
from those NOBLE AND GREAT HOUSES of FURNELL, de Bosco, Wake, Scagrave, Fitz-
warren, Zouch, of Harringworth, Drayton, Manduit, Basset, of Weldon, ARDEN, etc. The issue
that came of it were Eucsby, John and according to circumstances, Henry: Henry Isham was in that
unfortunate expedition of the Emperor Charles V. to Algiers, 1541 (a) with Sir Henry Knevit, Em-
bassador from Henry VIII. Thomas Chaloner and Henry Knolles (Knowlcs), and we look on him as
being the same person who was of Walmer Castle in Kent, and married Anne, relict of William Scot,
daughter and co-heir to Thomas Fogge, Serjeant Porter, of Calais, by whom he had Edward Isham,
whose daughter and heir Mary, was the wife of Sir George Parkins ( Perkins of America said to he
descendants) of Bunny in Nottinghamshire, Knt. Euseby Isham, eldest son of Thomas, married
Anne eldest da. of Gyles Pulton (Giles Fulton, from whom America's Fultons descend) of Des-
borough, Esq: and Catharine, his wife, daughter of Thomas Lovet, Sen. of Astwell, Esq: by her in
one and twenty years he had twenty children; the names of ten are transmitted down to us, viz.
Gyles, Robert, Gregory, John, ancestor of the Lamport line, and Henry, Catherine, wife to Richard
Pagitt, of Cranford, Student of the Law, from whom descended, by eldest son, James Pagitt, one of
the Barons of the Exchequer, temp. Charles I. and by Eu,<;eby. a Clergyman, old father Ephraim
Pagitt, above 40 years.
<: ^
0^d T was said and written. Rector of St. Edmond, Lombard Street, (upon breaking out of
J I the civil war, he was forced to quit merely for quietness' sake. ) Elena, first married to
ril Thomas Hoyse, 2d. Thomas Boseworth, of great Oakley: Ely, wife to Henry Bellamy,
kZ^ Citizen and Mercer, of London, afterwards of Hadley, near Barnet, in Middlesex, where
they lie buried: Edith to Richard Slatier of Braunston, and Isabella to Thomas Barker,
Merchant, whose sister was married to his wife's brother John Isham. They trace their descent at
the Norman Epoch, Azor, Azo, Hugh, Roger, Henry, Henry and Thomas, Henry, John, William, sd.
Thomas, Robert, sd. Henry, had Robert, Robert, William, eldest son and Richard and John, last
sd. Robt. heir to bro., and a da. named Dorothy.
The King grants, IS Edw. IV. to John Isham, of Broughton, m. Jane, da. Robert Kynnesman,
of Loddington. Richard, aforesaid first mentioned, etc.. Arms: Gules, a Fess, and in chief three
Piles, wavy. Argent. Crest: Upon a Torce of the colors, A Swans Neck and Breast, with Wings
displayed, Proper. Motto over Crest: Ostendo non Ostento. Motto to the Arms: On things transi-
tory resteth no glory. Seats: At Lamport, six miles from Northampton, and Shangton, in Leices-
tershire, four miles from Harboro.
In Aston, of Aston, Cheshire, temp. Hen. II. Thomas, son of Ernald (Fernald, probably the
ancestor of Petrus Darius Fernel, the adopting father of Dr. JeanFernel) in a clear out of ancient. The
children of John and Elizabeth all married and his wife having died he m. Mary Ardern or Arden 22
June, 1569 and had Anthony Fenley or Henley b. 9 Aug., 1572, an English, whig. Senator m. da.
Hon. Peregrine Bertie 169S and had chn. He was persecuted by tories, and d. 1711 universally
lamented. His second son became Lord Northington, and chancellor of England.
John Fernel, son of above John and wife Elizabeth Berkley, b. 1552 m. Anne Bacon, da.
1581 March, 10: Had Anne, b. 12 Sept., 1583, m. Gregory Horstius, an author
Dr. Prof., and called iEsculapius of Germany, he d. 1636 in Aug. at Ulm, Germany. By his first
wife m. 1615 he had four sons, three physicians, John, Daniel and Gregory, authors Medical Tracts,
etc., that were born after his two das. m. 2d. 13mos. before his death, as Anne d. 1634.
Bernard Frenicle, b. Oct. 11, 1585 and d. 1675: m. and had Charles du
Cange; du Fresne, b. at Amiens 1610 and d. 1688, leaving four children who, for policy, were hon-
orably pensioned by Lewis XIV. He was an advocate of the parliament of Paris: engaged in his
native town in pursuit of literature and philosophy, moved to Paris, where, in 1688 he was engaged in
making (engaged by Colbert?) a collection from all authors, secret and public, written on the history
of France. As his labors, however, did nof please the minister, as they contained too much of the
truth heretofore set forth in this work, which every effort has been put forth by powerful foes to pre-
vent, he resigned all engagements in the undertaking. He afterwards wrote a Greek Glossary of the
middle ages, 2 vols, folio, also the history of Constantinople under the French emperors, and pub-
lished besides, editions of Nicephoras, Cinnamus, Anna Comena, Zonarus, etc. Hisnephew, Charles
Alphonso du Fresnoy, .son of Dr. Ferneaux, b. 1611, educated him far a physician, being a chirur-
geon. The love of poetry was superior to paternal authority, and he became a student of Perrier
and Vouet, 1634 went to Rome. He wrote De Arte Graphica and d. 1665. After the poem with
notes appeared by de Piles, then its excellent precepts were made known to the English by the trans-
lations of Dryden; Graham and Mason Charles du Cange du
Fresne b. 1610, m. ; had four descendants that were pensioned "for
merits of father," and fifth the Eldest, Charles Rivere du Fresny or Ferny; Fernel, b. at Paris 1648
and died 1724. m. Bacon, da. Nathl., s. Nathaniel, s. Sir Nicholas and Jane Fernely
his first wife, who by 2d Anne Cook, left sons Anthony and Francis. A French poet, celebrated for
dramatic writings, musician, painter and sculptor, and had great knowledge of gardening and was ap-
pointed overseer of kings' gardens that he sold to prevent persecutions from being a descendant of Dr.
Jean Fernel. Courteous France can supply the 4 other children.
CI
IVEN to his first son PHANEUIL BACON FERN EL, who doubtless is the same
Phanuel Bacon that is recorded in the "Universal Biography" by J. LEMPRIERE,
printed at London, 1808, who was born , died at Baldon, Oxfordshire 2
January, 1783: m.
He graduated at Magdalen College, Oxford. Took his degree 1735 as D.D. Rector
of Baldon. Wrote five plays published in 1757; an elegant poem, "The Artificial Kite," printed
1719, and inserted in the Gentleman's Magazine, 1758; and he was admired for the ready flashes of
his wit and for his punning. His gt. gt. gr. fr., Sir Nicholas Bacon, keeper of the great seal under
Queen Elizabeth, succeeding Archbishop Heath of York; he was of Corpus Christi Col., Cambridge,
o which he became a munificent benefactor, and after traveling in France he studied law at Gray.
Inn. He was employed under Henry VIIL to whom he proposed a plan, which, however, was
never adopted in England (but has been in Boston by Jesuit Col.) for the erecting a College to
instruct young statesmen in all the branches of political knowledge; probably the wise foresight of
King Henry VIIL, saved England from suffering from the like political corruption which has stolen
about ;?125,000,000,000.00, when justice has been given by our courts for the righteous acknowledged
claim against the city in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts whose Sovereign state has witnessed the
great wrong that soon ceases or will be settled, by civil war — the curse of all nations from indifference
to its commonweal. Jane Fernel (ey and cy,)added to her namo, as I found), has properly enough
been claimed as as a descendant of Dr. Jean Fernel, whose three das,, names unknown to me, and
three sons, viz. Nicholas, Nathaniel, and Edward; also from his 2d wife Anne Cook, da. 2d of Sir
Anthony Cook (sd. to be ancestor of Cook who owned Farm at Wolfboro, Centre, N. H.) preceptor
to King Edward VI. worthily succeeded the incomparable lady Jane, for she too was eminent for her
learning, piety and virtue. She continued and completed the translation from the Italian into the
English Ochines sermons, and Jewel's apology for the Church of England from the Latin: and died
about the beginning of the reign of James I at Gorhambury near St. Albans. Lady Anne had An-
thony, and Francis named for Francis Junius Fernel the son of Dr. Jean Fernel. The worthy hus-
band of these perfect wives died the 20 Feb. 1579. He was buried at St. Pauls, and his monument
was destroyed by the great London Fire of 1666. As it has been frequently been asked when and
where was Dr. Renald or Reginald Fernald appointed a Lieut I may here repeat again — Item, Col-
lins' Peerage, Vol. II p. 177 "The Information of Lieut. R. F. taken as aforesaid (supposed to be at
Daventry. ) ' etc. "Deputy Lieut, of the county of Northampton" in the Official discharge of his
duty. Bible Records "Dr. Lt. Captn." King Charles I, England statement of his descent from
Charles VIII of France, "Captain of Militia" etc.
The children of Phaneul Bacon Fernel and wife as above named were as follows: — John Bacon
Fernel (last name said to have been omitted due to persecution) was born at South wark, 24 Nov.
1740 and he died, it was alleged, poisoned,) from inflamation of the bowels, 4th Aug. 1799. At 15
yrs. of age he was bound to a china manufacturer at Lambeth: and in this employment he so distin-
guished himself by his assiduity'and genius that in a little time his efforts gave excellent improvement.
From the various models that were presented to his view, he laid the foundation of future fame; and
in his executions displayed such taste and correctness, that he obtained nine premiums from the soci-
ety for the encouragement of arts. He formed and carried into perfection the designs of making
statue of artificial stone, and in 1763, he began first to use the instrument, since improved, by which
he transfcred the form of the model to the marble. He obtained in 1769, the gold medal of the royal
society, and was admitted an associate; and his manly figure of Mars increased, if possible, the high
reputation which he had already acquired. HIS ADMIR-
IE
1
2
?HRy.T ^m,7^H^HA'^\^^w^"'' ^''- ^^A'^'^HAM. TO PLACE IN
CHRIST CHURCH-HALL. OXFORD. PROCURED HIM THE ROYAL
J^™^A^E^ /MOTHER BUST WAS MADE FOR GOTT^NGEN LNL
VERSITY: and ^^^^^"^^^ons.dered the only artist whose g.nius could delineate the
groupof LOR^D CHATHAM'S MONUMENT IN GUILD HALL, and that of the
celehrated GUY. for his noble HOSPITAL.
THE other more remarkable productions of his chisel, are MRS. DRAPER'S MONU-
MENT IN BRISTOL CATHEDRAL, TWO GROUPS AT THE TOP OF
SOMERSET HOUSE. A STATUE OFJHENRY VI. FOR EATON COLLEGE
JUDGE BLACKSTONE'S STATUE FOR ALL-SOUL'S COLLEGE. GRATH-
AMS MONUMENT IN WESTMINISTER ABBEY. AND THE STATUES
OF JOHNSON AND OF HOWARD :iN ST. PAULS CATHEDRAL.
The article on sculpter in Ree's Encyclopedia, his elegant production. Will Mother Eng-
land give U. S. names of wife and children with their histories for gocd will to them
THE AFORESAID JOHN BACON & A FERNALD m. Their 8 Descendants Were:'
PLATE 1449. A
Plates A. B. C. D. F. THIS TEAPOT WAS
GIVEN BY HER SIG.
GOOD
QUEEN TO
ELIZA-
BETH AM-
AND A DA.
OF G I R-
ARD AND
WIFE ELI-
ZA BETH
WASHING- PLATE .450. B
TON UPON HER MARRIAGE TO CAPTN.
W. FERNALD. S. DR JOHN AND ANNI-
ETTA. DA. OF ADMIRAL. G.deCOLIGNY.
CNAME.
His sig.
B
Yci'^'ey-na(£^
The inscription over his grave declares, in his own
words, that whatever he might have been as an ar-
tist, his belief in Christ is the only important thing
now." For God is just. HONOR THOU THY-
SELVES AND ME! THAT ALL FUTURE
POSTERITY MAY ARISE. HONOR AND BERY BANK. THESE
BLESS Til KK I! There is one GOD and Father GIVEN TO DESCENDANTS,
WITH HER
COIN. 1575,
DATE. DEATH
I// OF THIRD DR.
;^ JOHN— . THAT
•WASBYDR.RE-.
NALD FERNA-
LD BROUGHT
TO STRAW-
RELICS WERE
OLDEST
ofall who is above all. and through all. and in von LINE FROM DR. JEAN. SON CHARLES
all. That ue henceforth be no more children, tossed VllI, WITH CYPHER RECORD MADE
to and fro, and earned about with every- word of doc- IN IT TO K.C.. By GR. DUKE. TUSCANY.
trine by the light of man. and cunning craftines_s.
wherrbv thev lie in wait to deceive us.
FRO.M THOS. 4 JOHNS. Wm., AUNT
376 DEBORAH. A..S.C. FERNALD, WRITER.
dbaptere IFlP^Jf
AMERICAS FERNALDS CHRONOLOGICAL REGAL INDEX FOR INTER-
NATIONAL UNIVERSAL GENEALOGY.
"m
* * * ■>
'INE IS A MOCKER, STRONG DRINK (Opium) IS RAGING: AND
WHOSOEVER IS DECEIVED THEREBY IS NOT WISE."
Cbapter IW
The Nine Great Commandments of. the Chinese translated into the Ancient itgyptian Language,
gives, SHI 0 B. C. creation of our world. Lights 5397, and date 4376 coming of promised Christ.
(Theae d»ta are from the semi-aide* »nd Bne» o( Hemupheie (Mundus^the World)
Generation F. Noah & Gen. F. Put, the founder & Gen. F. Confucius
of China
a--
Hf ABOR six <Uyi : Honor the Sicred Sabbath : Do NOT
*' EVIL: Partake NOT ol AlcohoBc*. VILE POISONS
and fall Irom OOD and Heavenly Manafona: B« HOLY.
PURE. Worahip COD only.
HU. COD'S daufhtera and lona from Fnr Ava and Fna
Adam marry chaatehr bn« be^ettlnf In uolaoa holy
Children on broad llnea of land and watera for peoplnf
Earth for Heaven COD the FATHER COD the HOLY
SPIRIT ONE IS complete Creator of Meaiah. Mn and
Josf to whom HIS SON CHRIST U (Iven lh< Brother and
Saviour of aU Mankind ONE with TRINPTY. An{ela, Woman
and Mankind Honor: ChlaeL Engrave, Write the COM-
MANDMENTS. LAWS o( TRINITY GOD on the Squara.
Rolla. Leavea. and Sheila of Oceana: PRAISE COD with
dignified ipeech. voice, mualc. Injtrumenla. acta, deeda In
jplrlt. truth, thoughu mind, heart, and In all thy membera
ploujiy preparlnr lor THE JUST Judgment with rewarda
proportionate to Menu: punlahmenl from exact JUSTICE
for the evil practices done by. In and from the earthly body
THAT COD ENDOWED wrTH FREE MORAL ACENCY
I^R CHOOSING AND REFUSING GOOD. TO THE
WAR FOR GOD, HEAVEN, Manalona. Paradise. TRUTH.
HOLINESS, RULER, COUNTRY, STATE, EARTHLY
PARENTS, LONG LINE OF BEAUTY, LIFE, LAWS.
ORDERS, COMMANDMENTS OF THY FATHER GOD
WHOSE SWORD WILL BE WITH THY SWORD to
TRIUMPH AGAINST THE VILE DESTROYERS OF
HAPPINESS, HOME, MERCY AND PURITY : FINALLY
when PURE to CO TO GOD and dwell In God lor you are
the Chlklren from Cod and part of Cod that destroya not
GOD.
2)° I
TThOU jhalt NOT KILL ANY MADE In Gods Ukenesa:
Vl' COD only CIVETH UFE and THE SEED OF LIFE
and COD alone haa THE RIGHT TO TAKE UFE. and
daatroy THE SEED of LIFE ETERNAL: UVINC bury thy
dead, MARK their gravea with Tableu: Returning their
Bodlea to Earth and the Watera. CO Soul and Spirit to COD
that CAVE rr PERFECT.
*ffNOLY IS TRINITY, all poaaeaalng Creator gave to the
•*J WomanWnd LIGHT : the Sun. Moon, Stars, Planets.
Inhabited Land. Watera. Earth Food, Animated Life, Power,
Dominion. and-Posaesaion*; DO NOT STEAL from any. Do.
not LIE. Do NOT DECEIVE : B» TRUTHFUL. PURE.
HOLY. CHASTE : ALL belonp to Cod of Heaven who
IS JUSTICE COD OMNIPOTENT.
IN A SQUARE thou art ONE WrTH TRINITY. LOVE
HONOR and OBEY thy FATHER IN Heaven:
HONOR, Love. Obey, Reapect Thy MOTHER AND
FATHER. OF GOD, on Earth and Land and the Watera
S^
IX.
(KOVt COmmanOmCntS, Honor, justice. Labor
^^ Laws; Love. Mercy. Obedience, Probity, Reaped.
Rlghteouanesa. Truth. Wisdom from unchangeable OMNI-
PRESENT COD: To do unto all others that which you
would have them do unto you, the children made by the
merciful Creator. Image of purity TRINITY COD.
IVSee PUtea No. 10. 52 and S3
:Fa which was the primitive name God the Benign Father of all Wo Man Kind on Eanh
THE PATRIARCHS.
AGES OF WO-MAN-KIND
<=6=> (^ f^ 13=
GOVERNORS AND
4376 Creation of Ava and Adam.
4349 Birth of Cain— Kanafatafaj-.
4316
130-200"
235-238"
325-350 "
395-431"
.460-459"
622-621 •
687-701 '
874-883 '
1056-1033 '
1536-1535'
1538-1530'
1530
1631-1635*
1 765- 1 750'
1793
1791
Abcl-Zana. '86.
Seth-Sana.
Enos-F. Saio.
Cainan-Nasata.
Mahaialeel-Lalar.
Jarad-Santa.
Enoch-Sara.
2311 I
2281
2247
2217
2185
2155
2126
1996
1232
B.C.
Jirth of Salah
Ebcr,
JUDGES OF ISRAELITES
INHABITATING THE WORLD 1434
AFTER ITS CREATION.
1491
1451
Pclcg. 1405
Reu. 1323
Scrug. 1305
Nahor.1285
Birth of Moses. 1210
Joshua. 1
" Othniel. 1282
" Ehud. 1175
Shamgar. 1166
" Deborah 1157
& Barak.
" Gideon. 1137
•■ Abiielech. 1116
I'ara, king
:Far;i
" Samson.
Samuel,
.f Egypt.
1896
1836
1745
1574
1571
Terah.1245
Abram,!236,
Sara da. Haran=
Tola. Jonathan.
*The History of the Judges differs with
Isaac. Chronologcrs. Accurate dates in part is to
Jacob, be found in this list as correctly has been
Joseph, discovered in the lost j^gyptian language
Aron. when this is translated into the modern Eng-
Moscs, lish
anguage.
the great Historian The World was Created 5H10. The
& Laws giver, con- dates are true to Salah b. 234 and all may
versant with ytgypt. be madetrue by changing 4004 to .4376.
THE KINGS OF THE JEWS.
Methuselah-Salah,
Lamech-F. Ladar.
Noah-F. Lamr.
Ham-F. Anr.
Shem-Rabakah.
Japeth-Falaimar.
Mizraim-I^za.
Anmimim=-
Anm^M'na=
F. Ynm=Mencs-Adr.
F. Tta m. Fnr. Lyra.
1095 (?) Saul 1055 David and Ishbosheth. 1048 David. 1015 Solomon
975 B.C. Division OF THE Kingdom of the Hebrews.
KINGS OF JUDAH TWO OF THE TRIBES.
975 Rehoboam. 958 Abijam. 955 ASA. 914 Jehosha-
885 Ahaziah. 884 Athaliah. 878 Jehosh.
810 Azanah. 758 Jotham. 742 Ahaz.
698 Manasseh. 643 Amon. 641 Josiah.
610 Jehoiakim. 600 Jehoiachin 598 Zcdckiah.
588.
889 Jehoram.
839 Amaziah.
727 Hezckiah.
610 Jchoahaz.
Nebuchadnezzar Destroys Jerusalem. 588. 'Old Chronology.
KINGS OF ISRAEL THE TEN TRIBES.
975 Jeroboam L 954 Nadab. 953 Baasha.
929 Zimri. 929 Omri. 917 Ahab.
896 Jehoram. 884 Jehu. 856 Jehoahaz.
773 Zachariah. 772 Shallum.
930 Ela.
897 Ahaziah.
841 Jehoash.
772 Menahem.
PLATE I4S3. Generation 13. FN A TTA.
ASSYRIA.
2245 Nimrod founded Babylon.
2245 Ashur founded Ninevah.
2124 Bslus reigned in Babylon.
2059 Ninus united Ninevah and 826 Jeroboam,
Babylon, forming the Assy- II.
RiAN Empire. Old His- 761 Pekahiah. 759 Pekah. 730 Hoshea. 721 Shalmane-
tory. zer, king of Assyria, takes Samaria. End of the Kingdom.
KINGS OF ASSYRIA BEFORE THE DIVISION KINGS OF ASSYRIA.
2059 Fna Ninus. 2017 Semiramis. ? 1937 Arabs. 747 Tiglath - pilser=Arbaces, Fna.
1446 Bclochus. 1433 F. Artossa. 1421 Belatores. 728 Shalmanezer. 717 Sennacherib,
1183 Tutaus. 1139 Thinaeus. 840 Sardanapalus. 712 Esarhaddon. 680 takes Babylon.
820 Burned. 790 Pul. After the burning of Sardanapalus in his Palace the ASSYRIAN EM-
PIRE ENDS. Divided into the Assyrian, Babylonian, and Median Kingdoms.
n Ihls ptge Is copied (rom the unture d«l« o( *X>4 B C. Insteld of ihe true one 076 with the d«lej. lni» lo StuI
KINGS OF BABYLON. KINGS OF MEDIA.
B. C. B. C.
747 Nabonassar. 734 Merodac Baladan 747 Arbaces. Governs 709 Dcjoces. (M
680 Esarhaddon. 667 Saosduchinus. 657 Phraortes. 634 Cyaxares I.
647 Chinaldon, or 626 Nabopolassar. 596 Scythians expelled. 595 Asiyagcs.
Saraciis. 559 Cyaxares II. or Darius. 536 Cyrus the Crfat, forms
605 Nebuchadnezzar. 561 Evil Mcrodach. Medo-Peksian Empire.
559 Neriglissar. 556 Laborosoarchod.
555 Belshazzar.
538 Cyrus takes Baby-
',h.
CYPHER TEMPERANCE WASHINGTON FER-
NALD lines! U.S. One of 5 readings of this gives
Cyrus, Darius, on long lines from edge of 1798 SILVER
DOLLAR also records Philip I.k. of France as ancestor
of Pikes family and his trouble with Pope Urban with
fact of his being a Free and Accepted Mason. It has
PLATE c. 1454 PLATE H 1455. "^^"^ '^'"''^ important Genealogical and Historical facts
TEMPERANCE WASHINGTON FER-and data therein and on, properly Recorded, to preserve
NALD, on U. S. Coin: C. I. Peters, t- u . u i • j u
Makers. Boston. ^'^'^' L'^^^^' J"^"^^ ^"'^ Happmess.
KINGS OF THE PERSIANS.
559 Cyrus the Great. 529 Cambyses or 522 Artaxerxes (Smcrdis.)
Ahasuerus.
521 Darius or Hysta- 486 Xerxes the 465 Artaxerxes Longimanus,
spes. Great.
425 Xerxes II. 425 Sogdianus. 424 Ochus or Darius Nothus.
404 Artaxerxes 361 Artaxerxes 338 Arses.
Mnemon. Ochus.
336 Darius Codoma- 330 Alexander the Great conquers Darius. End ok Persian Empire.
hus.
THE PHARAOHS=FARAOS KINGS OF TEGYPT PRECEED THIS.
GREECE.
3030 "a. Fna Grsecus. 2089 Fna Chus Egia- 2042 Uranus, ar. in Greece 1856 Fna^Chus founds Ar
founds Greece lus founds Sic- /t- l .n
1764 Deluge Ogyges. 1711 Argus built city 1710 Oinotrus emigrates
Argos. to Italy.
1582 ArundleMarblesl556 Cecrops founds 1552 Triopas k. Argos.
Chronology. Athens.
1516 Lelcx founded 15U7 Athens Areopa- 1506 Crotopas k. Argos.
Sparta. gus.
1493 Cadmus, Thebesl490 Laceda'mon 4 k. 1474 Danaus, k. Argos.
Sparta.
1438 Pandion k. Ath-1397 Sisyphus k Cor- 1383 Ceres in Attica.
ens. inth.
1266 CEdipus k. The-1263 Argonautic exp. 1263 Adrastus k. Argos.
bes.
i:04 Helen R. Paris. 1182 ^neas sails, Italy.1176 Teucer, f. Salamis.
gos (Eusebius. )
1641 Criasus.
1520 Corinth built.
1503 Deucalion (Eusebius)
1457 Perseus buildsMycene.
1283 iEgaeus, Attica.
1213 Helen R— . Theseus.
1170 NeoptoIemusk.Epirus
1104 Eurysthenes, 104 END OF THE KINGDOM OF MYCENE. END OFTHE KING
Procles ks. La- DOM OF SICYON, 1088.
cedaemon.
1068 Codrus K. Ath- 935 Bacchus k. of 884 Laws of Lycurgus.
ens. Corinth.
659 Cypselus k. of 594 Solon Archon, 568 Mycene in ruins.
Corinth. Athens.
510 Democracy.Ath- 491 Leonidas k. 409 Abolition of 400.
ens. Sparta.
362 Theban Suprem- 336 Alexander con- 335 Thrace to Macedon.
acyendsin quers all
Greece. Greece.
268 AntigonusGona- 191 Sparta joins 147 League defeated.
tus 12 yrs. mas- League.
814 Macedonia founded.
560 Pisistratus Sov. Mas-
ter, Athens.
404 Sparta rules Greece.
284 Achaean League.
146 Corinth demolished.
tcr Athe
814 Caranus or Far
nus.
678 Argreus.
547 Amyntas I.
399 Amyntas II.
390 Amvntas II.
GREECE BECAME A ROMAN PROVINCE UNDER THE
NAME OF ACHAIA.
KINGS OF MACEDON.
786 FctnusorCcenus. 774 Furimas or Thur-
imas.
640 Philip 1. 602 .^ropas.
497 Alexander I.
398 Pausanias.
371 Alexander II.
454 Perdiccas II.
397 Amyntas II.
370 Ptolemy Alorites.
379
729 Perdiccas I.
576 ."Mectas.
413 Archelaus.
390 Argaeus.
366 Perdiccas.
J60 Philip II.
298 Alexander Antipater.
KINGS OF MACEDON (Continued). B.C.
336 Alexander III. the 323 Philip Aridsus. 317 Cassande
Great.
294 Demetrius Polior- 287 Pvrrhus.
cetes.
278 Sosthcnes.
280 Ptolemy Ceraunus.
Meleager 2 months.
232 Antigonus Doson. 220 Philip
286 Lysimachus.
277 Antigonus Gonatus. 242 Demetrius.
179 Perseus. 168 End of THE
KINGDOM OF MACEDON. 148 MACEDON BECOMES A ROMAN PROVINCE.
OUR LAWS PREVENT DOWNFALL.
KINGS OF SYRIA.
312 Seleucus I. Nicator. 281 Antiochus I. Sotor.
(Saviour line Christ.)
242 Ssleucus II. Callinicus Thun-226 Seleucus III. Ceraunus.
derer.
187 Ssleucus IV. Philopater.
162 Demetrius I. Sotor.
144 Antiochus VI. Tneus.
130 D"m:trius II. Nicator.
123 Antiochus VIII. Grypus,
92 Antiochus IX. Grypus.
85 Antiochus D/onvsius.
261 Antiochus II. Theus: God-
like Traits & Record Christ,
h. Nh. Hm. Sm. &Japeth.
223 Antiochus III. the Great.
175 Antiochus IV. Epi-Fanes.
150 Alexander I. Balas.
143 Diodotusor Try-Fon.
126 Alexander II. Zehina.
97 Seleucus VI. Nicator.
91 Philip.
83 Tigranes.
85 SYRIA NOW BECOMES A ROM'VN PROVINCE WHOSE WEALTH AND PROS-
PROSPERITY FOREWARN ITS DOWNFALL.
PRINCES OF )UDEA,
CALLED THE MACCABEES, Or ASMONEAN PRINCES.
166 Judas Miccaheus, great-gt. grandson of 161 JONATHAN. 143 Simon. 135 John Hyr-
164 Antiochus V. Eupator.
145 Demetrius II. Nicator.
139 Antiochus VII. Sidetes.
124 Seleucus V.
93 Aniiochus Eusebes.
90 Demetrius Euchares.
69 Antiochus Asiaticus.
Asmoneus.
107 Aristobolus.
63 Hyrcanus Re-
canus.
KINGS OF JUDEA.
106 Alexander Fan- 79 Alexandra. 70 Hyrcanus. 70 Aristobulus.
neus.
40 Antigonus. 1,7 Herod the 3 Archelaus. a.d. 8 ROMAN PRO-
Great. VINCE. JUDEA WEEPS TO
AGAIN REJOICE.
KINGS OF ROME.
FNR ANONR of OMO Land of Serpent Mound Declareth
B.C.
1700 FNA FNE founded Rome, m.
EGYPTIANS.
753 Romulus, t3>'J^O a.0 0 translated: — " Pare Ava God over the waters made at OMO where the
Sun of God miketh first shone on pure Ava whose man line sinned: God punished: right."
716 Interregnum of one 715 Numa Pompilias. 672 Tullius Hostilius. 640 Ancus Martius.
year.
616 Tarquinias Priscus. 578 Servius Tullius. 534 Tarquinius Super- 509 The Tarquins.
bus.
expelled from ROMA. CONSULAR GOVERNMENT BEGINS, and continues inde-
pendent 461 years till the battle of Pharsalia.
B. C. EMPERORS OF ROMA.
45 Julius Caesar. 44 J. C. Slain in Senate House. 27 Augustus Caesar & Marcus
Anarchy. .Aggrippa Lucius Furnius
A.D.
14 Tiberius. 37 Caligula. 41 Claudius. 54 Nero. 68 Galba. 69 Otho. 69 Vitellius.
70 Vespatian. 79 Titus. 81 Domitan. 96 Nerva. 98 Trajan. 117 Adrian. 138 Anton P.
161 Marcus. Aurelius
Antonius
193 Pertinax
161 Lucius. Ver
218 Heliogabalus.
236 His Son.
249 Decius.
170 Marcus .'\urelius 180 Commodus. Declir
alone- of Roman Empire.
193 SeptimiusSeve-211 Caracalla and 217 Macrinus.
rus. Geta.
222 Alexander Severus. 235 Maximus. 236 Gordon, Sr.
193 Julian.
260 Gallicnus.
275 Florianus.
286 Diocltffian
236 Pupienus.
251 Gallus.
268 Claudius. II.
276 Probus.
286 Maximian.
238 Gordian, Jr.,
=Gordc
236 Balbinus.
253 Emilianus, 3
months.
270 Quintilius, 17
days.
282 Cams.
304 Constantius
& Galerius.
337 Constantine II., Constantius II., and Constans.
at whose death. 364, THE EMPIRE IS DIVIDED
380
244 Philip.
254 Valerian & his
son Gallienus.
270 Aurelian.
283 Carinus-Numc- 275 Tacitus.
rianus.
306 Constantine 284 Diocletian.
the Great
361 Julian. 363 Jovian,
ROMAN EMPERORS OF THE EAST.
A. D.
364 Valens.
4<)8 Theodosius II.
474 Zeno=Fna Fna.
565 Justin II.
610 Hcraclius
685 Justinian II.
71 1 Philip Bardanes.
741 Constantine V.
802 Nicephorus I.
821 Michael II.
886 Leo VI. Philos-
opher
945 Constantine V[I.
378 Interregnum 5 mos.
450 Marcianus.
491 Anastatius I.
578 Tiberius II.
641 Constantino III.
695 Leontius.
713 Anastatius II.
775 Leo IV.
811 Stauracius.
829 Theophilus.
911 Alexander: Constan-
tine VII, Porphyrogenitus
959 Romanus II.
1025 Constantine alone.
975 Basil II. Constan-
tine IX.
1041 Michael V.
1056 Michael VI. Strati-
oricus.
1067 Diogenes, Romanus
III.
1081 Alexius Comenus I.
1180 Alexius Comenus II
1203 Isaac Angelus, s.
Alexius.
1217 Peter de Courtenay, French descent
1237 Baldwin.
1341 John Cantacuzene
1448 Constantine XIII.
042 Zoe and Theodora.
057 Isaac, Comnenus I.
1071 Michael VII, Para-
pinaces, Andronicus I.
1183 Andronicus.
1204 Alexius Mourzoufle
A. D.
395 Arcadius.
475 Leo II.
527 Justinian I.
602 Phocas.
668 Constantine IV.
705 Justinian II.
718 Leo III. Is'r'n.
379 Theodosius the Great.
457 Leo the Great.
518 Justin I.
582 Maurice.
641 Constans II.
698 Tiberius III.
716 Theodosius III.
780 Constantine VI, Irene. 797 Irene, alone.
811 Michael I. 813 Leo V.
842 Michael III. 867 Basil I, Macedonian.
919 Romanus I. Lecapenus, Chistopher, Stephen
and Constantine VIII.
963 Nicephorus, Focas 969 John Zimisces.
II.
1028 Romanus III, Argyrus.1034 Michael IV.
1042 Constantine X, Mono. 1054 Theodora restored.
1059 Constantine XI, Ducas. 1067 Euodocia
1071 Constantine XII.
1118 John Commenius I.
1185 Isaac Angelus.
12(H Baldwin I.
1078 Nicephorus Botaniates.
1143 Manuel Comnenus.
1195 Alexius Angelus.
1206 Henry.
1220 Robert de Courtenay. 1228 John, W. Baldwin II.
1261 Michael Palaeologus. 1283 Andronicus II. 1328 Andronicus III.
1355 John Pala-ologus. 1391 Manuel. 1425 John Palaeologus II.
IN 1453 CONSTANTINOPLE TAKEN BY MAHOMET II END OF THE
EASTERN EMPIRE.
A. D. ROMAN EMPERORS OF THE WEST. A. D.
364 Valentinian. 367 Valentinian & Gratian. 375 Valentinian II & 383 Valentinian-
Gratian.
392 Eugenius. 394 Theodosius master of the whole Roman Empire, 395 Sons heirs
d. Jan. 17.
395 Honorius. 423 Valentinian III. 454 Petronius Maximus. 454 Avitus.
455 Interregnum. 456 Majorian. 461 Severus. 467 Anthemius.
472 Olybius. 473 Glycerius. 474 Julius Nepos. 476 Augustulus.
476 Rome taken by Odoacer, and the Western Empire ends with the beginning Kinc.dom of Italy.
A. D.
476 Odoacer.
493 Theodoric.
540 Interregnum. 541 Totila.
End of the Gothic kingdom in Italy.
A. D.
503 Fcrg.
KINGS OF ITALY.
526 Amalasontha and 534 Theodotus.
Athalaric.
552 Interregnum.
A. D.
536 Vitiges.
553 Tejas.
843 Kenneth
Mac Alpine.
970 Kenneth II. 987 Constantine III. 995 Kenneth.
III.
1057 Malcolm 1093 Donald III.
III.
1127 David I. 1153 Malcolm IV.
KINGS OF SCOTLAND.
943 Malcolm I. 953 Indulf.
1002 Malcolm 11
1094 Duncan II. 1098 Edgar.
1286 Margaret. 1292 John Baliol.
1390 Robert III. 1406 James I.
1513 James V. 1542 Mary.
1165 William.
1306 Robert I.
1437 James II.
1214 Alexander
II.
1329 David II.
1460 James III.
959 Duff.
.1033 Duncan I.
1107 Alexander
1249 Alexander
1371 Robert 11.
James IV.
A. D.
963 Cuicn.
039 Macbeth
III.
1567 James VII. 1603 James I of England.
381
IkHIFKBS ®jf EHIGXHBE).
4 Cymbeline king of Britain. 43 Claudius Ca'sar in Britian.
ENGLAND UNDER THE ROMANS FROM 55 B.C. TO 449 A.D. THIS BY
OLD CRONOLOCERS.
B.C. A.D.
55 Julius Cns,sar invades
Britain.
A. D
49 London founded. 51 Caractacus taken to Rome. 61 Boadicea defeated.
61. Suetonius Paulinus. 85 Julius Agricola. 179 St. Lucius.
209 Severus. 306 Constantius dies at York. 449 Vortigern, king.
ENGLAND UNDER THE SAXONS FROM 449 TO 827
AND SAXON HEPTARCHY 457 A. D.
457 Hengist founded Kent. 490 Ella founded Sussex. 508 Prince Arthur.
519 Cerdic founded Wessex. 527 Ercenwin founded Essex. 547 Ida founded Northumbria.
575 UFF;. founder Ea.st Anglia. 586 Cridda founded Mercia. 678 Cadwallader.
688 INA=FNAkingof Wessex.827 Saxon Heptarchy 7 king- 827 to 1013 Encjland under
860
901
Ethelhert.
Edward the Elder.
946 Ed red.
975 Edward II., the Martyr.
Anci.o-Saxons.
854 Ethclhald.
872 Alfred.
940 Edmund I.
959 Edgar.
1016 Edmund II.
doms united
«27 Egbert. 838 Ethelwolf.
" ■ ■■ 866 Ethelred I.
925 Athelstan.
955 Edwv.
978 Ethelred II.
UNDER THE DANES FROM 1013 TO 1041.
1013 Sweyn. 1016 Canute. 1035 Harold I. Harefoot.
1039 Hardicanute.
UNDER THE SAXONS FROM 1041 TO 1066.
1041 Edward III., Confessor. 1066 Harold IL
THE NORMAN MONARCHS.
1066 William I., Conqueror, 1087 William 11. Ruhis. 1100 1 lenry I., the Scholai
1135 Stephen, House of Blois. 1141 Matilda, or Maud, 4inos. 1141 Stephen restored.
HOUSE OF PLANTAGENET OR ANJOU.
1154 Henry II. Plantagenet. 1189 Richard I. Lion-Hearted. 1199 John Lackland.
1216 Henry III. 1272 Edward I. 1307 Edward II.
1327 Edward III. 1377 Richard 11.
HOUSE OF LANCASTER, CALLED THE RED ROSE.
1399 Henry IV. D.of Lancaster. 1413 Henry V. 1422 Henry VI.
• HOUSE OF YORK, CALLED THE WHITE ROSE.
1461 Edward IV.
1485 Union of the tv
1483 Edward V.
1483 Richard III.
Roses.
1485 Henry VIL Tudor.
1553 Marvl., The Bloody.
1603 James I. Stuart.
1653 Oliver Cromwell, Pro-
tector.
1660 Charles II.
1547 Edward VI. the Pius.
1558 Elizabeth.
THE HOUSE OF TUDOR.
1509 Henry VIII.
1554 Philip and Mary.
HOUSE OF STUART.
1625 Charles I. 1649 Commonwealth.
1658 Richard Cromwell, Pro- 1659 Restitution of Monarchy
tector.
1685 lames II.
HOUSE OF ORANGE AND NASSAU.
1689 William III. and Mary II. 1694 William alone.
HOUSE OF STUART.
1702 Anne.
HOUSE OF BRUNSWICK, OR THE HANOVERIAN DYNASTY.
1714 George I. 1727 George II. 1760 George III.
1820 George IV. 1830 William IV. 1837 Victoria. The
GREATEST AND BEST QUEEN OF ENGLAND: EDWARD VII. SUCCEEDED
Jan., 1901.
A. D. KINGS OF FRANCE BEFORE RECORDED. PRESIDENTS.
18>2 Napoleon 111. Last Emperor of France that Becomes a Republic 1871. Thiers, 1872.
1874 MacMahon. 1876-7 & 1882 1891 Grevy 1891 Carnot and 1893 1893 Faure, 1898.
1898 and 1902 Loubet.
A CHURCH THAT INVOLVES ITS NATION IN WAR IS NOT A CHURCH OF
GOD IT IS A FOE TO MANKIND, ITSELF AND ALL GODLIKE WORK. AID
ENRICH THY COUNTRY IN PURITY, SHUN ALL EVIL. LABOR FOR RIGHT-
EOUSNESS' SAKE. KEEP THE TRUE COMMANDMENTS.
382
HAGUE FOR PEACE.
A. D.
875
887
936
1024
1080
1152
1212
1298
Charlemagne or
Charles the Great.
Charles II. the Bald.
Arnould.
Otho I.
Conrad I.
Henry IV. Reinstated.
Frederic I. Barbarossa.
Frederic II.
Albert of Austria.
1347 Charles IV.
1438 Albert II. Austria.
1556 Ferdinand I.
1619 Ferdinand II.
1711 Charles VI.
1790 Leopold II.
814
877
899
973
1039
1106
1190
1250
1308
1378
'.440
1564
1637
1742
1792
EMPERORS OF GERMANY.
Louis the Gentle. 840 Lothaire 1.
A. D.
855 Louis II.
Interregnum.
Louis IV.
Otho II.
Henry III.
Henry V.
Henry VI.
Conrad IV.
Henry VII., Luxem-
burg.
VVencesIaus.
Frederic III.
Maximilian II.
Ferdinand III.
Charles VII.
Francis IF, to 1806.
878 Louis III. 879 Charles III.
912 Conrad I. 919 Henry I.
983 Otho III. 1002 Henry II.
1055 Henry IV., deposed. 1077 Rodojphus.
1125 Lothaire II. 1138 Conrad III.
1198 Philip. 1208 Otho IV.
1273 Rudolph of Hapsburg. 1291 Adolphus of Nast
1314 Louis V.
1400 Robert, Ct. Palatine. 1410 Sigismund.
1493 Maximilian I. 1519 Charles V.
1576 Rudolph II. 1612 Matthias.
1658 Leopold I. 1705 Joseph I.
1745 Francis I., D.Lorraine. 1765 Joseph il.
1806 Confederation of the Rhine. Francis II.
takes the tittle of Emperor of Aistria.
1815 Germanic Confederation.
1835 Ferdinand I.of Austria. 1848 Francis Joseph.
A. D.
1888 William II.
KINGS OF SPAIN.
406 Alaric. king
452 Theodoric II.
548 Theodisele.
587 Recared I.
612 Recared II.
of the Goths.
468 Euric.
549 Agila.
601 Liuva II.
621 Swintila.
41 1 Athalsus.
484 Alaric II.
554 Athanagildl
642 Chindaswind. 649 Receswind.
697 Vitizza.
I'll Froila I.
710 Rodcric.
768 Aurelius.
791 Alphonsus II. 824 Ramiro I.
914 Ordogno 11. 923 Froila II.
955 Ordogno IV. 956 Sancho I.
1028 Veremund III. 1035 Ferdinand
1109 Alphonsus VII. 1122 Alphonsus
1214 Henry I. 1236 Ferdinand
1295 Ferdinand IV. 1312 Alphonsus
1379 John I. 1390 Henry III.
1504 Philip I. 1506 Joan.
1621 Philip IV. 1665 Charles II.
1745 Ferdinand VI. 1759 Charles III
1833 Isabella II. 1868 Isabella II.
the great.
VIII.
III.
XI.
415 VVallia.
507 Gesalric.
603 Witteric.
631 Sisenand.
672 Wamba.
718 Pelagius.
774 Silo.
860 Ordogno I.
924 Alphonsui
IV.
967 Ramiro III.
1065 Sancho II.
1157 Sancho 111.
1252 Alphonsus X.
1350 Peter.
420 Theodoric 1. 450 Torrismund.
511 Amalaric. 531 Theodat.
567 Liuva I.
610 Gundemar.
636 Chintilla.
680 Ervigor-
737 Favila.
783 Mauregat.
570 Leovigild.
612 Sisebcit.
640 Tulga.
687 E gi ca or
Egiza.
738 Alphonsus I.
789 Veremond
or Fercmond.
910 Garcias.
1406 John II.
1516 Charles I.
1700 Philip V.
862 Alphonsus
III.
931 Ramiro II. 950 Ordogno III
982 Veremundll. 999 Alphonsus V.
1072 Alphonsus VI.
1158 Alphonsus IX.
1284 Sancho IV.
1368 Henry II.
dep.
1454 Henry IV.
1555 Philip II.
1724 Lewis.
1788 Charles IV.
1886 Alphonse XIII.
1474 Ferdinand V.
Isabella:
1598 Philip III.
1724 Philip V.
1808 Ferninand VII.
KINGS OF PORTUGAL.
1093 King of Lorraine
Count of Portugal.
1224 Sancho II.
1357 Peter.
1438 Alphonsus V.
1557 Sebastian.
1139 Alphonsus I.
1247 Alphonsus III.
1367 Ferdinand I.
1481 John II.
1578 Henry.
1185 Sancho I.
1279 Dennis.
1385 John I.
1495 Emanuel.
1580 Anthony.
1212 Alphonsus II.
1325 Alphonsus IV.
1433 Edward.
1521 John III.
1640 John IV.
383
KINGS OF PORTUGAL (Continued).
1656 Alphonsus VI. 1668 Peter II. 1707 John V. 1750 Joseph. 1777 Mary Frances
Isabella.
1799 John VI. 1826 Don Pedro. 1826 Maria de Glo- 1828 Don Miguel. 1908 Manuel II.
ria.
1834 Maria II. 1853 Peter V.( Don 1853 King-consort 1861 Louis Philip.
Pedro) king. Regnt.
KINGS OF SWEDEN.
825 Regnard Lobrock.
*** Reigns uncertain.
966 Eric the Victor.
994 Olaf.
1026 Edmund Jacobson.
1035 Amand III. or E(
mund.
1064 Halstan.
i-1041 Haquin.
1056 Stenkell.
1060 Tugo I.
1080 Philip.
1100 lugoll.
1130 Ragwald.
1133 Magnus I.
1144 Suercher II.
1150 Eric X.
1162 Charles VII.
1168 Canute.
1192 Suercher III.
1211 Eric XI.
1220 John I.
1223 Eric XII.
1250 Waldemar.
1276 Magnus II.
1290 Virger 11.
1318 Magnus III.
1365 Albert.
1397 Margaret.
1411 Eric XIII.
1441 Christopher.
1448 ChaHes VIII.
1458 Christian I.
1497 John II.
1520 Christian II.
1528 Gustavusl. Vasa.
1556 Eric XIV.
1569 John III.
1592 Sigismund I.
1606 Charies IX.
1611 Gustavus Adolphus
II.
1697 Charies XII.
1632 Christina.
1654 Charles X.
1660 Charies XI.
1718 Ulrica Eleanora.
1720 Frederic.
1751 Adolphus Frederic 1771 Gustavus Adolphus
1792 GustavusAdolphusiv.1809 Charles XIII.
1818 Charles John XIV
. 1844 Oscar Frederic.
1859 Charles XV.
1851 Princess Louise
born.
;. 1907 Gustaf V.
KINGS OF-
DENMARK.
714 Gormo I.
750 Ragnor Lodbrog.
7/0 Sigefrid.
801 Godefrid.
«09 Olaus I.
811 Hemming.
812 Siward & Ringon
814 Harold & Regner.
849 Siward II.
856 Eric.
858 Eric II.
863 Gormo the Old.
873 Canute I.
915 Frothon.
920 Gormo II.
925 Harold.
928 Hardicanuts.
930 Gormo III.
935 Harold III.
980 Suenon.
1014 Canute II.
1036 Hardicanute.
1041 Magnus 1.
1048 Suenon II.
1079 Harold IV.
1080 Canute III.
1086 Olaus II.
1097 Eric III.
1106 Nicholas.
1135 Eric IV.
1138 EricV.
1147 Suenon III.
1157 Waldemar.
1182 Canute V.
1202 Waldemar II.
1240 Eric VI.
1250 Abel I.
1252 Christopher I.
1259 Eric VIL
1286 Eric VIII.
1319 Christopher II.
1340 Waldemar III.
1375 Olaus III.
1375 Margaret I. Queen
Denmark and
Norway.
1481 John.
1411 EricIX.
1439 Christopher III.
1448 Christian I.
1513 Christian H.
1523 Frederic I.
1534 Christian III.
1559 Frederic II.
1588 Christian IV.
1648 Frederic HI.
1670 Christian V.
1699 Frederic IV.
1730 Christian VI.
1756 Frederic V.
1766 Christian VII.
1863 Christian IX;
1808 Frederic VI.
1839 Christian VIII.
1849 Frederic VII.
1906 Frederic VIII.
SOVEREIGNS OF RUSSIA. GRAND DUKES.
862 Rurick.
955 Olga.
988 Woladimcr.
1156 June, or George I.
1157 Andrew.
1395 Tartar Invasion.
1462 Ivan or John III.
CZARS OR KINGS.
1534 Ivan IV.
HOUSE OF ROMANOFF.
1613 Michael Theodore
Romanoff.
1645 Alexis.
1676 Theodore.
1682 Ivan V.
1689 Peter I. the Great.
1725 Catharine I.
1727 Peter II.
1730 Anne.
1740 Ivan VI.
1741 Elizabeth.
FAMILY OF HOLSTEIN.
1762 Peter III.
1762 Catharine II.
1796 Paul.
1801 Alexander.
1825 Nicholas.
1855 Alexander 11.
1843 Nicholas, born.
1894 Nicholas II.
384
A.D.
1299 Ossman or
Othoman I.
1403 Solyman.
1481 Cortacus.
1566 Selim II.
1617 Osman I.
1687 Solyman III.
1754 Osman II.
1808 Mahmoud
II.
TURKISH OR OTTO .MAN EMPIRE.
1325 Orcham. 1359 Amurath I. 1388 Bajazet I.
1410 iMusa.
1481 Xcmin.
1574 Amurath III.
1622 Mustapha I.
Restored.
1691 Achmet II.
1757 Mustaphalll.
1839 Abdul-Mejid.
1413 Mahomet 1.
1481 Bajazet.
1595 Mahomet III.
1623 Amurath IV.
1695 Mustapha II.
1774 Abelhamet or
Achmet IV.
1861 Abdul-Azis.
1421 Amurath 11.
1512 Selim I.
1604 Achmet.
1640 Ibrahim.
1703 Achmet III.
1789 Sehm III.
1876 Abdul Hamid
II.
A.D.
1397 Isa BeUs. '
1451 Mahomet II.
1520 Solyman.
1617 Mustapha I.
1655 Mahomet IV.
1730 Mahomet V.
1807 Mustapha IV.
MARGRAVES AND ELECTORS OF BRANDENBURG, AND KINGS OF FRL'SSIA.
927 Sifroi. *** Geron of Lusatia.
1440 Frederick II. 1470 Albert I.
1571 John George. 1598 Joachim Frcder
ick.
1640 Frederick WilHam the Great.
1416 Frederick IV.
1476 John.
1608 John Sigismund.
1417 Made Elector of Bradcnburg
1499 Joachim I. 1535 Jo.ichim.Il
1619 George William.
1701 Frederick I.
1786 Frederick William II.
1840 Frederick William IV.
997 Stephen.
1047 Andrew.
1095 Coloman.
1173 Bela III.
1275 Stephen IV.
1309 Charles Robert
1437 Albert.
1516 Louis II.
1688 Frederick made king of Prussia 1701.
KINGS OF PRUSSIA.
713 Frederick William 1.
797 Frederick William III.
861 William I. 18H8 William II
KINGS OF HUNGARY.
1740 Frederick II. the Great.
1038 Peter I, deposed. 1041 Otto.
1059 Bela. 1063 Solomon.
1044 Peter, restored.
1073 Geiga I.
1141 Geiga II.
1201 Andrew II.
1301 Wenceslaus.
1076 St. Ladislaus.
1161 Stephen III.
1235 Bela IV.
1304 Otho.
1114 Stephen II. 1131 Bela II. ,
1191 Emeric. 1200 Ladislaus II.
1278 Ladislaus III. 1291 Andrew III.
1342 Louis I the Gt. 1383 Mar>'.
1440 Ladislaus IV. 1444 Ladislaus V.
1526 John Sepusius, 1527 Ferdinand k. of 1534 John Sepusius,
deposed. Bohemia. again.
1539 John II. 1561 Maximilian. 1573 Rodolphus. 1609 Matthias II.
1618 Ferdinand II. 1625 Ferdinand III. 1647 Ferdinand IV. 1656 Leopold.
1711 Charles VI. 1740 Maria Teresa. 1780 Joseph, her son.
THE PRESIDENTS AND VICE-PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES, OF AMERICA
OMO LAND.
1389 Mary and Sigismund.
1458 Matthias I. 1490 Ladislaus VI.
1687 Joseph.
1789 George Washington, Virginia, President
John Adams, Massachusetts, Vice-President.
1801 Thomas Jefferson, Virginia, President.
Aaron Burr, New York, Vice-President.
1805 George Clinton, New York, Vice-President.
1817 James Monroe, Virginia, President.
Daniel D.Tompkins, New York, Vice-Pres.
1829 Andrew Jackson, Tennessee, President.
John C. Calhoun, S. Carolina, Vice-Pres.
1833 Martin \'an Buren, New York, Vice-Pres.
1841 William H. Harrison, Ohio, President.
John Tyler, Virginia, V., became President. •
1849 Zachary Taylor, Louisiana, President.
1850 Millard Fillmore, N. Y., V. Pres., became Pres.
797 John Adams of Massachusetts, President.
Thomas JcfTerson, Virginia, Vice-President.
James Madison, Virginia, President.
George Clinton, New York, Vice-President.
Elbridge Gerry, Massachusetts, Vice-President.
John Q. Adams, Massachusetts, President.
John C. Calhoun, S. Carolina, Vice-President.
Nlartin Van Buren, New York, President.
Richard M. Johnson, Kentucky, Vice-President.
1845 James K. Polk, Tennesee, President.
George M. Dallas, Pennsylvania, Vice-President.
1853 Franklin Pierce, New Hampshire, President.
William R. King, Alabama, V. Pres. (d. Ap. 18.)
1809
1813
1825
1837
385
PRESIDENTS OF UNITED STATES (Continued).
1857 James Buchanan. Pennsylvania. President. 1861 Abraham Lincoln.IlI., Pres..assasinatcd 1865-
JohnC.Brcckenridge. Kentucky. Vice-Pres. Hannibal Hamlin, Maine, Vicc-Pres.
186S Andrew Johnson, Tenn., Vicc-Pres., became
Pres.
1869 Ulysses S. Grant, Ohio. President. 1872 Ulysses S. Grant. III., b. Ohio. President.
Schuyler Colfax, New York, Vice-Prcs. Henry Wilson, Massachusetts. Vicc-Pres.
1876 Rutherford B. Hayes. Ohio. President. 1880 James A. Garfield. Ohio. Pres.. assassinated.
Wniiam A. Wheeler. New York. Vice- Pres. Chester A. Arthur. New York. Vice-Pres.
became Pres.
1884 Grover Cleveland. New York. President. 1888 Grover Cleveland, New York. President.
T. A. Hendricks. Indiana. Vicc-Pres. Levi P. Morton. New York, Vicc-Pres.
1892 Grover Cleveland, New York. President. 1896 William McKinlcy. Ohio. President. •
Adiaj E. Stevenson III:. Vicc-Pres. Garret A. Hobart. New Jersey. Vice-Pres.
1900 A'llham McKinley.Ohio. Pres.. killed Sept. 1904 Theodore Roosevelt. New York. President.
•+. '901. Charles W. Fairbanks. Indiana. Vicc-Pres.
Theodore Roosevelt. New York. Vice-Pres.
1908 William S. Taft. Ohio. President of the GREATER UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
James S. Sherman. New York. Vice-Pres.
THE EMPIRE OF CHINA HWA HSIA ASIA. THE FLOWERY ASIA.
FUT the founder of China =fl I I -A that was named for his son Ching-Hong=€ I I - I O-
thus keeping in the last sign symbol letter of Ching the picture of anatomical generation designated in
China by A=A. or the initial letter of Adam and Ava. his first forcparcnts. In his second name Hong
is retained a picture of upright man= I . and 0= I Fa=the name of Deity, God. See preceding
pages for more particulars and 2nd edition.
THE EMPIRE OF JAPAN. A CORRUPTION OF MARCO POLO'S ZIPANGU. A
corruptive of the Chinese pronunciation of the native name Nihon ^— I I O-^ in the primitive
language translated into English. "Noah upright man of God line of earth and waters: the NIPPON
^ I OOO — . translated: — "Land of the Rising Sun of the picture name of God the Father and God
the Holy One of Ham =D = I -^Hm: I D line of the earth and waters.
It is pleasing to know that the most ancient Japanese had the primitive religion and the "Sun
God" is a survival of the knowledge that families of Noah, Ham, Shem and Japcth retained the
spelling in its earliest form, which was not the worship of the SUN, but God, that emblem gloriously
spelt in brightness.
It is to be found in the history of Creation written by Fnr Lamr. also on the Map and Historical
Chart of Hm and Nh with such clear picture illustrations that no person of intelligence of any lan-
guages can fail to understand it when once possessing the key, that is in the Primitive Language shown
with such repetition for fixing facts and dau that conduce to the general welfare of each herein.
In Charles MacFarlane's book "JAPAN — on its Courts, Laws and Police with Punishment,
as "a principal. Death for all offences."
" It docs not, however, appear to have been adopted either from caprice, or through wanton
disregard of human life, but may be traced rather to an erroneous conception of the means of doing
equal justice. It is maintained that justice wouW fee violated, unless all persons, whatevertheJf rank,
quality of similar offences, were punished in an equal manner; and it is conceived that death is the
only penalty that affects alike prince and peasant. 'J"sti«' »y« William Adams, 'is very severe, hav-
ing no respect to persons." "
=° ♦ * * a
PIKES.
GENERATION I.
PHILIP I. KING OF FRANCE, m. Bertha, da. of Count Florcntius: Had: Lewis VI.;
Henry, d. y.; Charles: Constantine, m. Count Hugh of Troyes: 2d Prince Boremond of Antioch.
"Father Anselm makes no mention of "— Eustache, m. Count John d'Etampcs: Count Philip of
Mante: Florus or Fleury: Cecilia, m. Tancorcd; 2d Pontus Tolofanus: Philip 1. b. 998 d. at Mclun
29 July 1108: bur. St. Benedict. Use the Bible correct dates: French incorrect.
GENERATION II.
LEWIS VI. m. Adelaid, da. Count Humbert, 1115 (French dates): Had: Philip: Lewis the
Young: Henry; Canon: Bishop of Bovais and Litchfield: Hugh, d. y. : Robert whose name is on U.
S. Coin in Cypher, founder of the house of Dreux, whose grand son Peter, surnamed Mauclerc, was
Count of Britany, in right of Alice his wife, heiress of that Co., from whom descended Anne of Brit-
any. Robert had also a gr. da. Alice, m. Rainard III., Lord of Choiseul: Philip, Archdeacon of the
church of Paris, having l>een chosen Bishop of that city, resigned the dignity, through modesty, to
Peter Lombard, surnamed Master of the Sentences: Peter, m. Isabella, d«. and heiress of Renaud,
Lord of Courtenay, 1183: Constantia, m. Eustace of Blois, Crowned King of England, 1152, during
the life of his father Stephen, no chn. 2d Count Raymond of Toulouse, who was living 1176. Lewis
VI. d. (F. R.) *I Aug. 1137: Adelaid m. 2d to Constable Mathew of Montmorency, d. 1154.
GENERATION III.
ROBERT, s. Lewis VI. k. France, m. He was consecrated Bishop of Litch-
field, 1127: Bcauvaiy and Rheims: Church history ought give many interesting facts and data. Had
Richard:
GENERATION IV.
RICHARD, 1162, consecrated Bishop of Coventry, s. of Robert above and his wife, m. Had:
Hamon: Peter: Alice: Heirs of crowns are not strengthened by records of their foes.^ >-
GENERATION V.
HAMON, 1216, appears on the pages of history spelt Peche and above in Greek Peic with on
the ancient Roman coin (pi. ) as KAISA PEAC, m. Had: Gilbert: Hamon: Hugh: Rob-
ert: Thomas and William: whose Father Hamon d. 25 Henry III., 1241. From Banks, Baronia
Angelica Concentrata, "Robert Peche, in the 14 Edw. II., had summons to a parliment to be holden
at Westminister, but of this Robert, Sir William Dugdale does not take any notice in his Baronage,
though he includes the name in his List of Summons. Who he was is thus left unexplained.
Hamon Peche who died 25 Hen. III., is stated to have had "as above chn." Gilbert, the eldest, had
summons to parliament the 45 Hen. III., and died circ. 19 Edw. I. But Robert, his third brother,
could scarcely be the person here meant, for he must have been at least eighty years of age in the 14
Edw. II., a period of life not very likely for him to be first summoned to parliament. He most
probably was a younger son of the aforesaid Gilbert." From Debrett's Peerage p. 602, verbatim: —
Barony "Created 1299 Peche of Brune b. Peche. Gilbert 1st baron d. circ. 1323. leaving
=a f4=» <4=. <4=» D=
Two sons of whom nothing further is recorded. Pcchc, 1321, of Wormleighton b. Pcche Joan
Pechc, granddaughter and eventually heir of John Pcche, grandson and heir of the 1st baron, m. sir
William Montfort, and among her descendants this barony is in abeyance. Unless it has reverted to
the Crown.
GENERATION VI.
GILBERT, the 1st, s. Hamon and his wife, m. Had: Gilbert: Hamon: Hugh;
Robert: Thomas: William and died 1261. (Eng. Records). The names Peache, — Peake, — Pike
are of same family. See U. S. Census, 1790.
GENERATION VII.
GILBERT PECHEof Brune 1st baron, s. of Gilbert married and died 1323: Had: Robert:
GENERATION VIII.
ROBERT, s. Gilbert (1261) and wife, m. Had: Alexander: Joan: may have had
others.
GENERATION VII.
ALEXANDER, s. Robert and his wife. m. AVICE. Had: Nicholas: John: Jo-
anne or Joan,,gr. da., h. of John, gr. s. 1st baron m. Sir. William Contfort, among whose heirs in the
14 century it was held in abeyance, notwithstanding the many Pikes. The will of Alexander, dated
A. D. 25 Nov., 1329 Court of Hustings, London, England, leaves to Avice, his wife, capital tenement
in the Parish St. Dunstans, or Dustin and remainder to Nicholas and John, his sons. Katherine,
widow of William Furnivall mentions Avice and Alice her sisters in will 30 Sept., 1340.
GENERATION VIII.
NICHOLAS PYKE, 1332, s. of Alexander and Avice, m. Beatrice: Had: Joanna and John.
Nicholas is mentioned in the will of Richard Gaunt, March, 1340. "To Nicholas — a tenement in
Ismaygeres Lane, so that the said Nicholas pay his executors forty-two marks to discharge his debts
and fulfil his last will, otherwise the same to be sold and Beatrix, his wife, to have a moiety of the
aforesaid forty-two marks, Joanna the daughter of the aforesaid Nicholas to have twenty shillings.
The residue," etc. I have written by Pike, Hebrew Grammar, Arithmetic and Spelling Book.
GENERATION IX.
JOHN PIKE, s. Nicholas and Beatrice, m. and 1385, went to Spain with the Duke
of Lancaster and died lS86. Weever in his work on Heraldy p. 822, mentions Joannes Pike, who
may, or not have m. a cousin of Worthy (Washington) Pike that m. Beatrix St. Maur whose ances-
ter was also the ancestor of Sir John and Sir Thomas More. (See Fernald Chart of his Genealogy)
Much would be printed of this generation but in a manner unknown to me veiy many of my Pike
Records have disappeared as also the plate of my ancestors, General Zebulon Pike, which repeated
and prolonged search at great cost have failed thus far to obtain, even the copy of his features in the
books that were said to contain it, as also is the same of the plate of the plaster cast of King Francis
of France that in his features was an exact resemblance of my honored father as I saw his deposit in
the last earthly resting place at Wolfboro Centre, N. H., where fanatics did not hesitate to break his
grave stone, which was history repeating itself. This insult ceased by sending a sword to mend
grave tablet.
In 1380 Archbishop Richard Pique crowned Charles VI. the Good Friend, king of France,
from whom descended Lauren e Washington Firnel, the line of Charles VIII. and his lawful wife,
Anne of Britainy, da. Duke Francis II, and Margaret de Foix, the lawful wife of said Francis, of
Britian. Church history may give his parentage as son of Worthy Washington Pike and wife,
Beatrix St. Maur, with the relationship to the kings of France, which can militate against the stolen
records of the eminent Lawyer John Pike and his wife Sarah, da. Charles Washington, the father of
Robert who was the ancestor of General George Washington, whose legitimate children were the
Thirteen States of United States of America.
=^-a
+ * t °
GENERATION X.
REV. GEORGE PIKE, s. John and his wife, (preceeding) m. and had Thomas Pike. Will
the church history give his "Memoranda? " With the names of his .sons and daughters.
GENERATION XI.
THOMAS PIKE, s. Rev. George, m. Had: John, Baron. Was Sheriff London,
Old England, 1410.
GENERATION XII.
JOHN PIKE, s. Thomas Pike and wife m. Had: John Pike the author whose
father was a Baron of England, date 1462. Some of the dates may refer to matters unknown to
writer.
GENERATION XIII.
JOHN PIKE, s. Raron John Pike and wife, m. gr. da. Sir Thomas More, Chancellor of Eng-
land. Had Rev. William Pike that with another Rev. William Pike was blessed by the cA'own of
Martyrdom 1558 and 1591. Churches should keep, not break commandments.
GENERATION XIV.
REV. WILLIAM PIKE, s. John and wife, m. Aimar. the da. of Sir William VV.— this Sir
William whose name I have in beautiful metal was of great renown, world wide respected- This
godly minister was received into eternal bliss 1591, Dorchester, England descendant: John:
GENERATION XV.
-•-•"What shall we do that we may work the work ,of God. '"•-♦■
ATTORNEY JOHN PIKE, s. Rev. William and Aimar, married Sarah, da. Charles Wash-
ington, s. of George, father of Robert Washington arrived in Va. 1630, and the Ancestor of General
George Washington, the immortal father of the greater United States. See proceeding illustrations.
Their descendents were:
1 Robert, b. 15 Mayor 16 Mar. 1615: d. in Salisbury 12 Dec. 1706: m. Sarah Sanders, da. John.
2 John, b. 1653: m. Mary, da Mr. Joshua Moody.
3 Dorothy, m. Daniel Hendrick.
4 Ann, m. Henry True of Salisbury.
5 Sarah d. Nov. 1659
Mr. John Pike, lawyer and husbandman, made his will 24 May 1654, d. 26 May 1654, proved
in Court, Hampton 8 March, 1856, inventory of estate gave /'230 6s. lOd. A tenant Samuel More
named in will. In the Cradle of American Independance, Ipswich, Mr. Pike first settled 1635. re-
moved to Newbury, and after 1639 removed to Salisbury, Massachusetts where he d. He came from
Langford, England, sailed from Southampton, April 8, 1635, in the Ship James, Capt. Cooper, with
his wife Sarah, two sons, three daughters: arrived at Boston, Mon. 17 Aug., 1635.
GENERATION XVI.
-•-•"Entonce Jesus Diio. Dei Ala Para Ei Dia De Mi Sepulturala Guardado Esto."»->-
♦MAJOR ROBERT PIKE, COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF, s. of Atty. John and Sarah (Wash-
in gton) Pike, m. (1) Sarah, da. John Sanders, 3 Apr. 1641, from whom all his chn. were b., (2)
Martha, widow George Goldwire. Their descendants were: —
1 Sarah, b. 1642. m. (See Plate 1165 for)
2 Mary, b. 1843. " Mr. Robert Pike moved from Newbury to Salisbury which he represented
3 Dorothy, b. 1645. " in 1648 and 7 years afterwards. Lieutenant 1647. Captain 1663. Major
4 Mary, 2d. b. 1647. " 1688. Commander-in-Chief, appointed 30 May, 1690 by Governor
5 John, b. 1653. " Simeon Bradstreet. Member of first Council 1692.^"-^-^-^-
6 Robert, b. 1655. " Mr. Robert Pike, d. 12 Dec. 1706; Act. 90 yrs. 8 mos. 26 days.
-* — «Mrs. Sarah Pike, d. 1 Nov. 1679. Mrs. Martha Pike, d. 26 Feb. 1713.
His six children are counted on points of one of the stars on P(ike) Fu(r)nal(d) tomb, made by Mr.
tohn Furnald that was the private secretary of Governor John Wentworth, adding one more stars to
is, Peter Faneuil's coat of arms. See illustrations of both — a study. Also the large silver Silver
Spoon, 1706.
•THE SILVER SrOON PLATE 1257 HAS ENGRAVED THE YEAR OF 1706 OF DEATH OF TEMPERANCE WASHINGTON
FERNALD AND HER WASHINGTON KINDRED MAJOR ROBERT PIKE AS DESCENDED fROM CHARLES VIII WITH FER-
NALD LINE EROM HER HUSBAND MR. THOMAS FERNALD.
<j p^ f4=> <4^ D=
GENERATION XVII.
--■"Et Generatio Rectoriam Benedictum."— '
MR. JOHN PIKE, b. IS Miy 1653. a minister and historian, s. Major Robert Pike and wife. m. 2d
Sarah, da. .Mr. Joshua Moody, a clergyman, 5 May 1631. This was a second m. and the first child
vv.ivjohn. S.;e records of Pike Family Association Historical Addrcs,s, delivered at U. S. Hotel, bos-
ton, iyJ2. p. 17, als'j, anoth:T at American Hause, 191)4-, p. 77, later some of best parts omitted of
great value, by writer of the Mss. From the form:r, reprint: "nor have I the lost record, except
by will at Bjiton's nsw court house from which it appears his son was John and appointed as execu-
tor: the Mass. Hist. Society-containing Rev. John Pike," Dover, N. H., "Journal-I, quote" — My
fr. son was born Mar. 30, 1682. Had: Istm. in 1670 Mary Sophronia Furncaux *who d. 1671 at birth
of John. Jan. 17, mariner, m., d. John was ancestor of Geni.Zebulon Pike.
1 Anonymous (said) b. 30 Mar. 1682: on old record "anonymous"
2 Nathaniel, mariner, b. 3 June 1683: 7 Joshua, b. 14 June 1693: The record referred to in my
3 Robert. b. 6 Feb. 1685: 8 Samuel, b. 1 April 1695: Historical Address mysteri-
4 Abigail. b. 3 April 1688: 9 Abigail, b. 22 Dec. 1697: ously disappeared and as the
5 Hannah, & 10 Margaret,b.31 Jan. 1698: one recorded here was found
6 Mary(Twins) b.18 May 1691: 11 Solomon. b.23 May 1700: it was thus entered.
Reverend John Pike of Dover, N. H., the fr. of above children wa.' b. in Salisbury; educated
at Harvard Col. by his fr. graduated 1675: ordained in Dover, 31 Aug. 1681; d. 10 March, 1709,
10, Aet. 57. Mrs. Sarah (Moody) Pike died 24 January 1703. She was da. of Rev. Joshua Moody
of Portsmouth, N. H.
--GENERATION XVIII.--
"Omnis Via Viri Rectasitividetui; Appenda Auten Corda Dominus-Facerf. Misericordiam
Et Judicum, Majis Placet Domino Quam Victimas."
JOHN PIKE, s. Rev. John and Sarah Pike was born 17 Jan. 1671 and m. Mary Hooke,31
Oct., 1728, went to Almatunk, New Jersey and was among the first settlers, named afterwards, Lam
Their descendants were 8 children:
5 Elias, b. 25 Sept. 1737: John Pike, mariner midshipman (as
6 Israel, b. 15 Aug. 1743: may when a boy have been, his father)
7 James, b. 27 Aug. 1745: that records were found as different
8 Elizabeth, 2 Oct. 1748: persons, perhaps from an errata.
— GENERATION XIX.--
"Thou Breaketh the Ships of Tarshish. With an East Wind."
JOHN PIKE of Almatunk. s. of John Pike and Mary, m. Sarah of New Jersey 16 March 1750:
Had descendants:
1 Zebulon b. 1 Jan. 1751: d. 27 July, 1834: m. Anna Parker Jureau Funel, da. Rev. Peter: (Had
Robert, ) et als.
2 Mary, b. 26 [uly 1754: d. m. 5 William b. 29 July 1761.
3 Henry, and 6 Martha b. 19 April 1763.
4 Caleb(Twins)b. 15, Aug. 1755: 7 Sarah b. 11 Feb. 15^65.
d. 14 Aug. 1825: Mr. Henry Pike's widow Mrs. Dorothy Pike d. 23 Nov. 1841 ages 67 yrs.
He d. 78 yrs. 7 mos. bur. at Middleton, N. H. Captain John Pike had a fiistoric reputation
of being a gallant soldier in the French and Indian wars. He was living 1790 at Mount Desert Town
with wife, 4 sons and da. at Maine, name spelled Peache in the U. S. Census of 1790.
HENRY, of Middleton, N. H., wife, s. da. and Jacob, w. 2 s. 2 das in U. 8. Census of 1790.
^^-•GENERATION XX.-*>
"And He Increased His People Greatly and made them Stronger than their Enemies."
ZEBULON PIKE, s. Captain J: hn, b. 1 Jan. 1751: m. ANNA PARKER JUREAU FUNEL
Peter, b. 20 May 1752, married 18 F"eb. 1769 and their descendants were as follows: —
1 Robert, b. 5 Aug. 1772: m. Mary, da. Col. William and wife Mary (Clark) Cotton May 1797.
Mr. Robert Pike, d. 19 June 1843; Act 70 yrs. 10 mos. 11 days: Mrs. Mary (Cotton) Pike, d. 23
Sept. 1832.
2 Sarah, b. 8 Sept. 1773:
3 Anna b. June 1775:
4 Henry b. 15 Oct. 1777.
5 Zebulon Montgomery Pike was b. 5 Jan. 1779 at Lamberton, south of Trenton, N. J. No records
kept in N. J. prior to 1848- There may have been other chn. 'da. Amhony Fumace 2 s. 4 dis. ot Marbieheid.
^ — D %m D
1 Jacob, b.
29 Dec.
1729
2 John, b.
4 Aug.
1731
3 Marv, b.
16 Aug.
1733
4 Caleb, b.
3 Aug.
1735
391
" ' =4-i 4k <4i=. 4i=^ D- .■- ^ r^'- --
Major Zebulon Pike who served in the Revolutionary Wars, again entered the army of the
United States as a Captain of Infantry, in 1792, having, as the Records of the Executive Journal state
— "served with reputation in the levies" during the preceding year, promoted to rank of Major, 1800.
Although called General in the Pike Records and silver engraving I do not find Government promo-
tion. The family had resided in New Jersey several years, but like all families, moved, to better their
condition. Sons marrying, buying homesteads; daughters marrying and following their husbands to
their homesteads; repeated in generations.
HENRY of Middleton, N. H.,wife, s, da. reed, was s. Zebulon or fr. John's Henry U. S. Cen-
sus, 1790. Robert Pike, husbandman or Farmer, sometimes Lawyer, moved to Middleton, N. H.,
after 1790 was at Senter's location, Grafton Co., N. H., Sarah, Anne, Mary or Martha at Portsmouth,
Town and William Pike at Stoddard Town, 2 sons and 2 das. It will be seen they loved to travel.
Cousin Zebulon Montgomery Pike, travrler up Pikes' Peak, a Government Observatory, was
born in Lamberton, N. J., now south part of Trenton where;
"In Trenton and in Monmouth ground.
The grass grows green, the harvest bright, above each Soldier's mound.
The Bugle's wild and war-like blast, shall muster them no more.
An Army now might thunder past, and they not heed its roar."
GENERATION XXI.
"HethatAnswereth A Matter Before HeHeareth It, it is Folly and aShame Unto Him."
ROBERT PIKE, s. Genl- Zebulon and Anna, was b. 1772: m. MARY COTTON, b. Oct. 3,
1779: da. of Col. William Corton and wife Mary (Clark) Cotton: s. Josiah of Plymouth, married
May
1797.
Ten children.
b. 19 Feb., 1799:
1. Jacob G.
2. MARY C, b. 12 Dec, IS
Henry,
Joanna M.,
Robert,
William,
Dudley,
Hannah S.,
George C,
b. 27 Mar. 1803: d. Wolfboro.Cen.
b. 14 Apr., 1805: d. 4 Mar., U
b. 23 July, 1807:
b. 29 Sept., 1809:
b. 25 March, 1812:
b. 23 Sept., 1814:
b. 15 Apr., 1817:
Their descendants were:-
d. 14 July, 1867: m. Hannah Burnham, b. 9 Mar., 1799:
d. 3 Mar., 1876.
d. 14 Feb., 1887: m. JONATHAN P. FIRNALD,
b. 1797: d. 21 Apr., 1893.
m. Maria Downing, bur. at Wolfboro.
Centre, N. H.
m. Calvin Tibbetts: had several descend-
ants, m.
d. m. Elizabeth Piper.
d. m. Went away. Not
heard from-
d. m. Sarah Pinkham.
d. m. David Chamberlain, b.d. 14 Feb., 1881.
d. 28 Oct., 1889: m. Maria 8. Cook; descendant of Navi-
gator ancestor of Dr. Cook, that was the first to discover the North Pole, persecuted for noble
traits.
10. Thomas C, b. 20 Oct., 1820.
; GENERATION XXI.
"^ Wonderful and Horrible Thing is Committed In the Land."
BRIGADIER-GENERAL ZEBULON MONTGOMERY PIKE, s...Genl. Zebulon and
Anna, m. Clara, da. Captain John Brown of Cincinnati, Ohio, of Revolutionary fame and had sev-
eral daughters, all but two tradition declared "died young." The daughter Clarissa Harlowe Pike
married John Cleves Symmes Harrison, son of the HERO of TIPPECANOE, ninth President of
the United States. Do not know in what year. Information from Mrs. Berttie Harrison Eaton of
El Paso, Texas, July 2, 1894. Tradition is strengthened. Ex-President Benj. Harrison wTote my
Uncle Symmes Harrison, m. Mar., 1801, the daughter of General Pike and had several children.
Cannot give the names. Son. One daughter married General More-au of France. American gen-
ealogists this is your opportunity for facts and data. He was commissioned as Ensign, 3 March, 1799,
having previously entered his father's Co. as Cadet: Promoted to Lieut. Apr. 24, 1800, 1st Regt. Inf.
1802. Ascends the Missouri. Sent to New Mexico. Commended by the Secretary of War, pro-
moted to Captain: Promoted to Major 1809: Lieut. Col. of Infantry, 1810: July, 1812, raised to
Col. Appointed by President a Brigadier General Feb.
392
c] <=^ f=^ «4=» o
1813. Did not have time to go before the Senate in time to be contirmed before General Pike was
killed in battle at York Upper Canada, now Toronto, April 27th, 1813 while leading on his troops to
victory. His mottoes were: I. "PRESERVE YOUR HONOR FREE FROM BLEMISH."
II. "BE ALWAYS READY TO DIE FOR YOUR COUNTRY." One of our Pike Coat of
Arms. He beareth Argent a Chevron between Three Crescents VERT. Crest. Three pikes proper:
One Erect, the two Satire, by the name of Pike. Motto: L' AMOUR LA VERTU & LA PAIX.
This Pike name was omitted in a historical atlas. Notwithstanding his blood washed out the foul
disgrace of Commander Hull who saw his troops cut to pieces. And was properly cashiered for
cowardice.
GENERATION XXII.
"A Little Oneshall become a Thousand, and a Small One a Strong Nation : I The Lord will
Hasten It In His Time."
Mr. JONATHAN POOR FIRNALD, s. William and wife, Betsey (Elizabeth ) Johnson,
b. 1497; m. Miss MARY COTTON PIKE, da. Robert Pike and his wife Mary (Clark) Cotton:
11 Chn. See previous pages.
GENERATION XXII.
"David Loved Jonathan!"
Mr. DAVID CHAMBERLAIN, b. 27 Jan. 1837; married Miss HANNAH S. PIKE, d a.
Robert and Mary Pike, b. 23d September, 1814; had descendants three (4) children; son George of
Rochester, N. H., m. Miss Christiana A. Williard, March 8th, 1870; (John, m. at Wolfboro, N.H.)
Two daughters remained single.
GENERATION XXII.
"There is None Like Unto the God of Creation who Rideth upon the Heaven in Thy
Help, and in His Excellency on the Sky."
GEORGE C. PIKE, s. Robert and Mary Pike, b. 15 April, 1817; m. MARIA S. COOK,
b. 1st November, 1827; after died of Mrs. Abigail Pike, 6 May, 1851; They lived at Union Village,
N. H.; had eight descendants:
1 George Harrison Pike, b. 1 Nov., 1847, by first wife Abigail Pike; named for relationship.
2 Robert Seth Pike, b. 5 Oct., 1851. by 2dm. ft. jr. dt. Joseph Cook. U.SCensui I790:son of C»pl. Jamea, 1728
3 Nancy Jane Pike, b. 21 Dec. , 1852. m.d». of Cipl. Furne«ui. >. Mlddlecolt. pad. H. CoL. i. EUsha, ». Richard,
4 Mary Abby Pike, b. 12 Feb., 1853. Rtp. Dovm, N. H., s. Franclj of Plymouth, 1630. jon of Roben.Educaled a,
5 Emma F. Pike, b. 19 July, 1 857. Oiford. son of sir Anthony, Baronet who died 1S76. "Dr. Frederick a. Cook,
6 Nancy M. Pike, b. 4 June, 1892. discoverer of Wonh Pole, a descendant.- 2 Baronies In abeyance, unless
7 David Chamberlain Pike, b. 16 Aug., 1885. forfeited to sovemment.
8 Minnie H. Pike. b. 28 Aug., 1871 ; d. 29 Aug. 1873.
It is to be regretted that Cook records, as also, of these last two families have been, with many
others, very valuable, stolen, protected by those in the city who have had ample proof from me to
prevent bankruptcy of Boston; protect its best citizens who have only to be uncorruptible to be per-
secuted, unless they become Papists. Is this just or a shame? You have the remedy to cure the
disease.
Courteously acknowledging aid and Pikes Records from Mr. Robert H. Pike, Union, .N H.,
Hotel Proprietor. The following part I have of his records:
Mr. ROBERT H. PIKE, b. 19 Mar. 1831; m. ELIZABETH GILLMAN, b. 15 Feb
1831; m. 24 Nov. 1,851. Descendants: 1. Charles Herman Pike, b. 19 Nov., 1859; d. 28 Aug., 1882.
Andrew Gillman, m. Dolley Pike, da. Joseph Pike, son of Robert Pike.
GENERATION XXII.
"To Me Belongeth Vengeance and Recompence."
Mr. CALVIN TIBBETTS, who d. 4 March, 1881, m. Miss JOANNA MORE PIKE da
Robert and Mary, b. 1805.
Taken with above were these Records. Another gives part. They had several descendants:
GENERATION XXII.
"Their Foot Shall Slide in Due Time; the Day of Their Calamity is at Hand."
Mr. HENRY PIKE, s. Robert and Mary, b. 27 Mar., 1903; m. Miss MARIA DOWNING.
Had four descendants: 1. Hannah Pike, m. Benneit, chn. 2. Kimball Pike; 3. Lydia Jane (?), m.
Mr. Gillman. Mr. Henry Pike and wife were buried at Wolfboro Centre, N. H. The record of
fourth child taken, with others. Pleasant, was our love. The Roman Coin of Kaisar Pike stolen.
393
^ 4^ ^ o
NATHANIEL G. PIKE, b. 13 Jan. 1783 d. 9 May 1858: m; BETSEY WALLINGFORD 9
Oct. 1778: d. 5 Jan. 1879. Their descendants were:-
First Generation. Second Generation
1 Martha, b. 1 Jan. 1816 JOHN G. PIKE, m. MARY A. CRESSEY of Gorham, Maine.
Their descendants: —
2 John G. b. 17 Aug. 1817 m. 1 Francis: d. Dr. John Pike, an excellent and hospitable gentleman
3 Amos W. b. 15 Dec. 1819 m. 2 Fanny A. d. Bowdoin Cell. 2 yrs. Graduated in Medical Col. and
4 Phoebe b. 7 April 1824 3 Nathaniel H. Pike, m. A. D. Collins. Practiced at Durham.
Salmon Falls, Boston and Dover, where he now resides.
After the death of his wife Mary; he m. Alice Home of Dover where he now lives and extended to
writer of this many most courteous tokens of good will from a noble, soldiery gentleman: afflicted
with blindness: having dined with him and accepted the night's repose.
He took me to Rollingsford and showed me the room the Divine Whitfield slept in and birth
place of Dr. John G. Pike bro. of Amos W., b. at Rollingsford, N. H. Taught 115 Schools in 36
yrs. and the Author of several hundred poems of merit. Showed to me the locality of the Massacre
by the Indians — the stone, flat, that covered their last earthly remains. His Nephew Judge Robert
G. Pike, then practicing law at Dover, kindly sent or loaned to me many valuable Records, which I
copied for printing, that our light fingered Boston politicians may be able to tell their whereabouts.
Never have I passed a day more replete with pleasure, memory of which will last with life. While
under the Drs. roof he showed some nld Pikes Family Record* cntrancingly beautiful in design and
finish. Lon; miy these excellent families flourish, a happiness to themselves, and a blessing to all.
AMOS W. PIKE, s. of Nathaniel and Betsey, m. Eliz. M. Chadbourne of South Berwick,
Miine, 20 Miy 1844. He teaches school all the time, but lives on the farm they had. Their de-
scendants were: — John F. b. 3 Aug. 1847: Dart. Coll. grad. class 1870, Boston University Law and
School Class Robert S. b. 28 July 1851: Practiced law in Boston. Died 17 Dec.
1875. LiUa J. b. 15 Oct. 1866: Judge Robert G. Pike, I have not the Records of his studies. Mrs.
Elizabeth M. Pike died 8 April 1850.
Reprint, AN OLD PIKE DOGGERELL READ AT UNITED STATES HOTEL, U. S.
Flag Floating.
"In ye battyle front before break o daye lyte knelte Simeon Pyke
With Phineas Johnson, ye Moses Poor and Foster wythe braves all alyke,,,,.
On ye B. Hill with eyes glittering hearts and strong hands to fj'te,
Ye Brytisher, Romayne and Saxeon Red coates marched up ye heights.
Shute not tylle ye whyte of ye eyes ye see and ye commands I give.
Then ayme as youre fathers at Red Skyne Devyles befoure ye did.
Galyently up and up, nearer and nearer marched ye foe in brighte arraye.
Fire! With Bills, sluggs, shotts, peese, sworde byronettes, they were swept away.
Balls, sluggs, shotte, peese, and powder spente on ye seventeenth B. Hill daye.
Retreat! The command, slowlye, obstinately did the brave yeomen obey.
Ran one, ran all, except those who desired to staye, preferring in death as laye
Moses Poore, Symeon Peake, carnage dredful and this for liberty against ye taye.
Last to run was Phineas Johnson, and Pluckeye Foster ye last theye saye.
We see P. Johnson stop and his cote laye o'er his fr. Moses Poor by S. Pyke;
Foster's cote tales may bebynde Phineas a bit straye yet so nere alyke
No man knoweth to this daye. Great wail ye mother of Moses Poor bye Sara
Poor Appleton. Greater the sorrow of his beloved wyfe Hanna More and da.
Hannah Poor, blessed ye wyfe of Phineas Johnson, who mayde a better coate
Longer tale than the one so sacredlye layed o'er Moses Poor, ye hero
Wythe Symeone Pyke ye brave sonne of ye Captyne John, Indfans foe,"
. An Anecdote. Sand Piper Courtesy: Love. In 1858 while engaged on the borders of beautiful
Lake Wentworth at mouth of Fernald' called Willey brook, removing the tuft of centuries to better
other land by J, P. Fernald, a shy Piper came and with many peaceful bows invited adoption, kindly
treated, he became confident and lost all fear, watching every tuft turned for its food, ate relishingly to
repletion, remained a long time after gratefully performing its toilet and with many graceful bows,
musical notes, peep>, slowly depirted: continued the repitition till labor was completed.
394
Plate 1434. TEM-
PERANCE WASHING-
TON FERNALD
MEDAL whose features
were taken from her Me-
dalion for the U. S. A.
Silver Dollar of 1798 that
on its circumference was a
line of ancient language as
may be seen surrounding
medal which was carefully
copied by my Swedish Art-
ist. The original was prob-
ably kept by the Philadel-
phia Mint or returned to
Dr. John Fernal, gr. son
of Dr. Renald Fernald;
under it added by Deacon
John Fernald that m. Miss
Sarah Hincks the da. of
Hon. Justice John Hincks.
On a large silver spoon is
the Vessel of War on which
in 1575 was slain the gr. fr.
of Dr. Renald Fernald that
in its broad side, and oval
of spoon is the date of the
death of Mrs. Temperance,
wife of Mr. Thomas Fer-
nald and da. of Robert
Washington of Va. At top
of medal is pyramid point
with oak leaf below and the
name primitive of God be-
tween two oak leaves over
the acorn that in turn is
over our and Samuel Wash-
ington's coat of arms by
marriage to Anne, da. of
Rev. FrancisJJ. Fernel and
wife Marie Coinmcnius.
Under this in the third in-
verted Crescent is the prim-
itive alphabet with the let-
ter R=which indicates wo-
man, etc. The oak leaves
above her face count 20 the
family of Rev. F. J. Fernel
y f ft
i! V If 1
as is ill the K's over Saiiil.
Washington's grave where
he at Avon, Eng., was
known as Wm. Shakcspere.
It is found to contain 13
stars and 13 acorns sur-
rounded by Oak Ratan, 10
Palm branches and 14 oak
leaves below the Ship.
Plate 1435. Pontificial
Anatomical Capitals of
Geoffrey Tory, A. D. 1529,
Egyptian: Dr. Jean Fer-
nel, aet. 32.
Plater436. The
American Roman Wash-
ington Fernald Historic
Alphabet that was written
Recording past, present,
and foretelling future
events.
2 First letters are the
initialsof Annie of Britiany,
3, of Charles VIII Rex=
King. R has four marks
for sons in upright part, re-
move the curves, of R
which marks count all his
children, 6, and find in
former I F the initials of
Jean Fernel also the F of
Francis J. F., whose da.
Anne married Samuel
Washington that w a .<t
known as William Shake-
speare. Eighteen black
lines on the A (18 white on
B) is a correct count of the
family of Francis Junius
Fernel, whose son-in-law
beareth fur Arms the Spear
which spear is to be ob-
served in plate of Rev.
Francis J. Fernel. The &
has our most ancient war
Seal with its body darkened
with three white, TRIN-
ITY, lines.
ABCDEFGHIJKLMN
PLATE 143*
395
PLATE 1438. Casper Ne(. German Type, M9
A B C D E
F G h I K
L/V\/N 0 P
QRSTU
VWX YZ
ABODE
FGHIJK
PLATE 1437. The American Types. PropheHc Microscop-
ically examining a large glass of apparently Boston pure water, by the
unaided eyes unseen, a large Microbe was found. Inserting a clean
glass rod three (Imes with sugar upon II the Microbe rushed eagerly to
and fed from it- Inserting It twice without the sugar, he went to II.
third lime he ignored it. I( we show less reason than he, what Is our
■cnd> Support Irue: lawsmakers. the ]usl. conslltultons. and religions.
PLATE 1439. From English Bells. Early I6lh Cen
i m
^v
PLATE 1440.
Gothic Capitals from Tomb Rlcha
land. A D.. 1400. Two C's.
SIVXT'^
PLATE 1442. Fifth Century. Rustic Capitals
396
d ^ ^ ^ [>
PLATE 1443. German CaplUlj. Colhio ind Monogramic Types.
etdc
c
PLATE 1444. The Wise Cermanal Versal Typei.
|IBC()«11IKK
im\
PLATE 1445. German Lombadlo Capitali.
D %^ D
397
PLATE 1446. SHELLS AT DAMARIS COVE
RIVER. LINCOLN COUNTY, MAINE U. S. A..
Oyster Bed. An inlet of* the Sea off Monhegan Island.
The Indians called, "Ped-auk-go-whack, (in deed to
Walter Philips), place of Thunder." Dr. Jackson in
1838 Geological Measure, found it 180 rods long by 80
to 100 rods wide, 25 or 26 feet deep, containing 44,906,
000 cubic feet.
Relics
Human animal and fish bones. Charcoal, chisels,
stone hatchets, tools of Art and Chase. Ornamenta
Pottery. Deep-sea sinkers, bone stilettos, together with
what may have been a potters wheel. "These heaps
were begun by prehistoric man." Now historic
Plate 1447 of Rock Chise-
lings on Monhegan and Da-
maris Gove Islands are a most U I
valuable continuation of the '
inscriptions on Dighton
Rock, Taunton River, Mass.
Translations P'irst of Five.
"On the waters from Roma
came Fna Marcus Agrippa
Lucius Furnius 29 B. C. to
Omo Land of lake pyramid
and commenced Tower at
Anona, finished by Chiaand
Bahman, eleventh genera-
tion after with the name of
God above it and Christ his
Son. Agrippa named the
country Augusti for Em-
peror Augustus. Foes of
6th tribe of Indians came
down on them and they
fought, son, daughter of
wife of Agrippa line a Chief
Otar's went to and m. F.
Animin 2nd at Mina, now
called Maine, where they
formed and grew a large
family. The largest part
of one of the two ships
went N. East and a branch
to the S. The former m.
into line of Ann who went
to the Easts. E. and formed
a mighty Nation, from
which descended four Na-
tions and these five inter-
married with Agrippa' s
lines and peopled the terri-
tory in many directions as
is clearly shown by the line
Language inscriptions' on
Monhegan Rock Island
and their faces to this time.
Damaris Cove Island Rock WrlllngJ Translated : = 'Theos Christ
Roll. Squares of Ava writing and engraving given by Father Cod and I Christus wr
Roma. I Theos the Christ." etc. "1 Christ honor my Parents Mary and Joseph
Ihe long line of Ava and Adam's descendants nourished by our (Mothers Breasts."
and from, and there the feet simply going forth.
398
. sailed XV to Oma the Lake Pyramid Land to teach the Sacred
on this Rock and Return 10 plus X plus /^.^.^.=23A. D. to
Fna Christ One with Trinity and Brother of Thecia my sister of
iee Hlate 31 for similar Inverted V. that here shows going to
PLATE 1344 FERNALD RELICS. AT RIGHT THE ROLL OF 8.000 HON
CONSULATE WITH ALL OUR BEST CITIZENS SEEN NAMES OVER PIKE'S
COAT OF ARMS. PRESENTED BY HON. SENATE OF COMMONWEALTH OF
MASSACHUSETTS TO AUTHOR 1908. PETITIONERS FOR ENACTMENT OF
OUR THREE LAWS.!, REMOVING CAUSE OF THE DOWNFALL OF NATIONS
^ ^ 4" ■>-
Chapter f f IT.
FERNALD LAW
in
PHILOLOGY
From straight — ^curved line
all lines
M
O. no trom translating the ancient Hebrew letters into their corre-
/ \ V C_^ spending ^Egyptian symbols was found the primitive letters Sym-
pi 1384. PL 1385. PI. 1386. PI. 1387. bols hicroglyphics that The Supreme GOD gave unto Ava,
woman and man, Adam and and descendants. They were as
seen by above— F, A, M and R, and from the first two are evolved all lines, known as curved and
straight Knes and most rcspfendant for they are the name of God, kept by the Chinese and Japanese
even unto this day.
From this Alphabet descends all Alphabets that ever was or ever will be.
The first O, letter is the name of one God only. It represents power, glory, brightness (as
heaven, planets, sun, moon, stars, light by day and night, pupil of the eye, etc.,) and was the seal that
God gave to our first parents, which was used by Noah and his family as may be seen by the history
of Creation written by Fnr Lamar and inscribed on the first pyramid that was an altar built unto the
Lord in the land of /Egypt. (See pi. p. 25, 60, 65, 70.) When mankind unwisely departed from
keeping the commandments and God's Laws, it was still kept as the letter O, which it is called to-day
and found on most ancient map.
The second letter. A, represents Trinity; form of pyramid of JEgypt and our A, by moving the
base line upwards. By Greeks it is retained and called Delta.
399
V
a f4^ (4^ p^ a
IT is our triangle and in anatomy the name is used as Scarper's triangle. By mverting it
and attaching the removed base line to its apex of the V, is=y and is called by the Hebrews
Ayin or the "eye." In Schrift der Tinne-Indianer, V, s, and A=A in other alphabets.
as Welsches Barden. In Angelsachsische Runen the F is 1st letter of the alphabet; also in
Nordische and Markomannische Runen, with Gothische.
The third letter symboj is kept by the Canadian Indians in 4th line of the Lord's prayer, first
in third line 2d in fifth line. (Sec p. 69 plate). In this interesting letter symbol, monogramic, we
have the whole names of trinity and the promise of Christ the Messiah to be born of Mary and Joseph.
The origin of the numerals 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 100 & 1000. It is the letter M which by
removing the two short Hnes and invert is the Greek letter Omega, hence the meaning literally of
Christ when he said, "I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending" for the Alpha in
i^gyptian from Greek that were co-exislent spelling i = I A=Fa=Godf^=OOC, the initials of God
the father and God the Holy One and C the Christ.
<^^^ THIS fourth letter appears to be parts of the first and third and employed to show that God
gave the rolls to woman with the commands and laws. Anatomically the third and fourth
indicate the nose and eyebrows outline and fourth the mouth, etc. Third is in shape much like the
nipple on the infant's nursing bottles, also to be found on the seal ring of Samuel Washington, whose
nom de plume was William Shakespeare.
God said, " These letters, signs, symbols I give unto thee Ava and Adam and thy descendants,
my Holy Name, Commands, Laws, to write, read, for speech, music, to communicate, practice,
preach, record and transmit unto all my children of earth that I have created perfect in my likeness."
Again God said: "The date of thy creation shalt thou bear upon thy features, thy ears shall
counted be two to hear, thy eyes art two to see and thy eyebrows and nose is M which shall be called
1000, therefore it is 4000. Thy nose hath two openings to smell and breathe through, and thy mouth
hath one opening for breath and speech and these openings shall bejcalled three hundred and marked
with C therefore 4300; thou shalt count all of these again and it shall be seven O, therefore 4370;
count again the ears that hear, the eyes that see, the nostrils that I breathed the breath into and thou
hast six and the whole shall be 4376 and thy mouth, tongue shalt tell it. Four thousand three hun-
dred and seventy-six years before my son Christ the Messiah is to be born I created thee woman and
man Sunday, December 7th. Sundayjwas found to be on Friday as now it is called. The origin of
numerals and letters, symbols, hieroglyphics, as it readily can be seen is from the first primitive
lz%%stitVi° Michn. Much ■ft1-rl-i=-^c;>«^n^s:<l3>^f^^F^^^f;
\Z% ^ U<i'\-89 \0 honor is due «sj3bOT3ji>Nj=.c— j<— gc-oo.acr^.g*'
123 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 the Arabs for ^^^^ _^ p.o. B.n.laM, Xn,.. «a,ch. Incen.a, co,o.„..yha:.b„n
PTATE 1388. keepmg it so used by Fnr Lyra II Fna Tla.
near the perfect Primitive that was engraved on the two Golden Squares of Ccirirandmcnis and Laws
that Hound in the Bible " shall not be destroyed," for God wrote them and " I, God will save them
even when Christ my son, women & men with the Earth passcth away." ^OD'i'O*. Ezra; Chap. I.,
V. 1:6. Decree of Cyrus, 6th line, 2 to 8th symbol by reading from right to left (See |>|ate 403).
The figures from the beginning, exhibit a neatness of shape, nicety of method, not to be sufpassed by
any nation, for brevity, quickness and effect. Five changes arc noted from very early to present date
in PL. 1388. 1st JEgytizn.
^a <4^ <4^ <4^ D=
^tiyrTNAvnEAC^^jHy-iH-
ibgdhT.hhthiklmn.
PLATE 1390 Anled».MPL 1389. Sethi Alphibel.
And the former in its last hieroglyphic declares it to be Noas=^N()ah's Alphabet in the last sym-
bol of each in the primitive language. The former is badly arranged and latter very much better and
arc much more than equivalent to the letters that are erroneously given to them, part of which I
correct, but not fully, for they read from right to left and left to right, top to bottom and bottom to
top with a general read-
ing ds the /Egyptian.
They are sacred letters
having the name of
God in each. The
letters record the (Jod
written Roll and God
Engraved Golden two
Squares in latter.
The ancient He-
brews, Greeks, JEgyp-
tians and Phsnicians
with ^Egyptians were
co-existant and derived
their symbols and lan-
guages from the same
source that every twen-
ty years changes.
A careful study of
this plate 1391 will
demonstrate the variety
of alterations.
"Before the vic-
tories of Alexander the
Great the Greek lan-
guage was principally
confined to Turkey in
Europe, Sicily, Dal-
matia, Anatolai and the
Islands of the Archa-
pelago. His Generals
and successors extend-
ed it over many parts
of Asia and i^gypt:
hence from the time of
Alexander to Pompey
•UMW
nwnieuii
urn <wnx
T
C«lll<.
i^
X^>J^
\ x/^A
A A
A
^^-.
n
^
A ^
B
B
<i
:)
A^
A^/^C
r
G
1
n
AA
^Avp
A
D
A
r\
^
\i^/^^^
E e
E
1
1
A A=Th=
4=?=-p=
F
TA
)
z
^ z j:
Z
?1
n
0
S ^
P
B
b
^
0®.©^Q
0
P
s
^v
I I X
1
%r
^.
^3
^^
i >) K
K
K
H
b
<p
As/J/
A
L
LU
12
^
-^V/^AN
M
M
y
;]
>9
^HAA
N
N
ty
D
^•v
$ f
^
X
V
O-H
0 o 0 n^F
O
O
ovo
P
1
H r
n
B
n
>
V
o
k
?
n
^i1
4q?/'/^p
p
R
^1
u;
J^'+fv^V
M^l^>
ze
S
Wa>
n
^rh
T t
T
T
+ X
•^
YX
3.
f^
PLATE 1391. Compirlson of Alphabets, Symbob.
it was considered the
most general language
of the world and it is
truly astonishing that
it con ti n ues to be
spoken.
It is a pleasing il-
lustration of the use of
the curved and straight
lines, also, the many
portions of the 360 al-
phabets on earth that
here are designated as
SSAS. First letter in
latter records name of
Trinity. Eighth sym-
bol Trinity and all
mankind line descend-
ants. Thus as in the
primitive it has a relig-
ious meaning.
In such a pure
manner that it would
have been intelligible
to the ancient inhabit-
ants of Greece. Only
a few languages have
continued living and
intelligible over 500
years, while this has
survived for 3,500.
Two of the three prim-
itive symbols still exist
herein and three more,
besides the copy of the
two Golden Squares, of
the time of Seth arc to
be seen in this table. The lone Square with a dot in the centre is typical of the Hebrew terminal M
and Map gi.en by God to Noah and Ham. Which Square the Chinese have in their coins at the
present tirr-..
401
The most ancient Ara-
bic le'ters are the Kufic, so
named from the city of
Kufa', on the Euphrates,
but they do not appear to
be UTied at this time. They
are as follows:
The Kufic letters de-
signated by a, d, v and m
= the primitive M : 1, r,
and z the priinitive A: k,
h, V, m and ph of English
F the primitive O named
Fa or F,A,M=O.A
1 „ I ^^^ . ^ ^^^ ** of adoption for a national
work. One page is here
inserted and card, see plate.
ch
^<aMML^^ a ^JL i£^
ph ill)
m la
gc tliz dz dh
V
The disputes among
the learned concerning
tiquity of the HEBREW
alphabet is at last happily
laid at rest and fast is disap-
pearing: the animosity
among the most wise and
best of the churches that
truly worship God and not';^
mammon, power and self:
thus ushering into the pure
minds of the godly, a peace
that passeth all understand-
ing. -=N, -=M
The writings of Moses,
who was conversant with
-ibe ..Egyptian,
and the Book
of Job have a
collection of
letters, symbols
t^c primitive
religion for all.
Mr. Na-
thanl. Dear-
born Text
Book of L c t -
ters, a very rare
book, b e a u t i -
fully artistic,
shows much
a;.
aw-lof.
vb
bailh.
S-
gce-m"l.
e.
daw-leth.
Ii.
hay.
V.
vawv;
z.
zi-yin.
iili.
hhaith.
y-
yoadh.
k
k.if.
1.
law-mcdh.
in.
m.iim.
II.
noon.
s.
satt-mckh,
.1
a-yin.
fp
pay.
«.
iviw-dhey.
ka.
qoaf.
r.
raish.
^Sx
sheen.
li. 1.
t.vvv.
ch th
Hebrtie CotmUtttrt.
3 ^ 3
i A ^
n <?>B
O 0
pp
WCAD
,(;,*,
n X
PLATE 1392. Conlalns Primitive Alphabet
tc
N
bh
D
b.
3
Si.
J
R-
J
dh.
-\
d
-\
h.
n
y.
1
z.
r
hli
t.
n
0
y-
'
kii
3-)
s
1
k
0
ni.
0
D
n.
J
».
0
a.
v
M.
D
q
i>
3
■«.
V
r
k«.
P
r.
1
s.
w'
,,„
/.
w'
h.
n
••
n
The Hebrew Coin
"rV ^ ^ i& i^ /^Symbols in the first letter
gives its name, F, called by
some writers Oolef, and is
equivalent to ayin O O and
called a^to first. The
3d symbol A=A is found
the 1st, 3d, 6th, 9th.
The third of the primitive
alphabet is found at 6th
letter of Coin and called
h. h. or hhaith, ^, but is
inverted, taking the form
of the Greek Omega with
an o oblique line engraved
through it. Students have
from fancied resemblance
given the following names
Aleph=ox, Beth^house,
gimmel=:camel, Daleth^
door, Vav=:hook, Zayin^
armour, Heth=traveling
script, Tet^serpent, Kaph
=hollow hand, Lamedh=
ox-goad, Mem=water,
Samekh=prop, Ayin=eyc,
Pe^mouth,
T s a d e =
screech locust,
yiioph=car,
resh = head,
sh in = to ot h ,
Tav == (which
is evidence of
the religion of
written A. C.)
cross. The in-
polation, or to
coin a word, in-
terlopation of
points was to al-
Of interesting cy- "-"■ '— -e, uearoorn ,«menc;u, .ex. «,ok. .«.. tcr the wholc lan-
guage for removing ancient true history by ungodly priest-craft. Which great wrong was and is cop-
ied by the good and even astute scholars, as are untrue Records, innocently. For during the dark
ages almost all true knowledge was lost. ^^ ^*
The Hebrew letters are all monogramic: A^N in English, ^gyptian=:0=o whose religious
meaning is God the Father, line of God the Holy One. The B=Trinity. G=One God and His
chn. women and^men. D=Line of Heaven for earth came down. H=:Fa and as preceding. V=
F arxl Fohi, Fo, and of God. h. h.^I — I^Fnf. t=:the hand of God wrote the Tablet of Commands
and Laws. y^da. son child. k=C etc. I^God's fnar Hne, etc. m=:Trinity, Mary and Joseph
and God wrote the Golden Squares as seen at terminal. D=m. s=:Christ to come and go, also inter-
changeable with m. n^God's Noah. a==m, y, eyes. f=f and not p, V:=z^s=m V and FFan.
k=Hand and serpent. r=line of woman. S=ship on sea, etc. t^Fnh, etc. n='i'. etc.
402 r
Teil Book, 1842.
The Arabian Chiefs
arc represented as being
brave, liberal, hospitable,
ingenious-penetrating, fond
of learning of every species,
and carrying to the most
singular excess their admir-
ation of poetry and elo-
quence. The study of the
Arabic may be said to be
attended with difficulty,
from its admixture with va-
rious dialects and retention
of much of the primitive
language. It is diffused,
with the Mahommedan re-
ligion, that practices what
it preaches, through Persia,
India, Turkey, and the
East, where it forms a prin-
cipal branch in the educa-
tion of their great men. A
native Arabian considers
barbarous the pronunciation
of his language which cus-
tom has [rendered elegant
ABO
PHSNICIAN. ' ''
MD 8YRIAC. K" ^ \^
t< 3 i
I.
1
v^
V
u-
Kj
^
^
t
^
t
Tj
b
t
Ov
0
0^
6
1
)
1
j
O^
CA
(A
O
^
1 1^
t e
J
-^
J-
-<
J-
^^
^
=±; ;:^i=» i
e>
0
(J
j
5
)
-J
j
A»A-
x^ ^i
/^-=:. .A^
,^^ >\<3
J-
-jC
J^
_i:
-K
j
u.
■y
X^
^^
AT
^
k
J
i
)
V'O-'
<?
A
J
^-J.||
^^\^^\\
X
J 1
alif-
ma,
Kha,
dnl;
d/unl,
" b.
J-
h.
Rh.
d, or t.
e and dz.
at Constantinople, Delhi or
"7^ Ispahan. 1=A:- = M,N.
' The great empires of
yy the Mogul of Persia whose
t^ ancient name was PARS,
and of the Turks of Mo-
o^ rocco, besides many other
^ powerful kingdoms, have
■^ been founded on the ruins
'"_^ of the wide extended do
. minionsoftheKalifs, which
: at one time, comprehended
•'. Arabia, Chaldea, Assyria,
'•■_ Media, Persia— the' Khor-
. . assan, Samarkand, Bok-
haria, Cabul, Candahar,
Zableistan, and the greatest
'b' part of India; many dis-
^'■. tricts along the Oxus, or
Ghihon — the Caspian Sea,.
.i^c Circassia, Georgia, Ar-
^' mcnia, Mcsipotamia, . Sy-
:<^ria, Palestine, Cyprus; part
> -K of Asia Minor; ^gypt; the
"^ Mediterranean coasts of Af-
rica, Morocco, Fez, Spain,
S D 3 D B X -)
T T
n "
%*,
3 J
^^ d
Hebrew Letters not used in tta Pehlvi j— 13 Teth -^; y Ayin - .^ ; p Koph .
PLATE 1395. Is a very Inleresling Sludy by CArelul Comp«risoi
; X Tsade, and t Sin.
Sicily, Naples; part of France, etc.; in all of which countries it is, the Arabic cultivated to this
day as the language of their religion and law. It is imperfectly known in America and Europe. It
has 28 Letters written from right to left and differently shaped according to their po.sttion in the word.
It is called the NISHKI. These modern letters by Vizier Molach, 933. They retain parts of the
primitive alphabet.
403
That the Chaldeans
and PhtL-niciansor F"cLni-
cians had never lost all of
the primitive alphabet is
self-evident from the
study of their hierogly-
phics. Foenicia furnished
probably more letters to
a greater number of lan-
guages than the former.
I'here is reason to
believe that the Samari-
tan continued a li\ing
language for many cen-
turies.
If in ancient Rome,
as Cicero informs us, the
boys were obliged to learn
the twelve tables by heart,
as a carmen necessarium,
or indispensable lesson, to
imprint on their tender
minds an early knowl-
edge of the laws and the
constitutions of thjeir
country, NocturnaJ ver-
sate manu, versate di-
urna. Is it not equally
required that they arid
we should be system-
atically taught the sci-
ence of letters, primi-
tive religion, a personal
gift from Diety, the
only perfect Laus
Maker and first giver of
the primitive alphabet
from whose straight
and curved lines all re-
ligions, laws, constitutions,
lines, letters emanate.
To possess knowledge,
support the constitutions,
keep inviolate the laws of
Nations and his Country
first by his talents, best ser-
vices, life if required is the
firm, irrevocable duty of
e\ery patriot-
This generally received
THE SAMARII AN ALPHAHE'l'.
Th« firrt alphabet of Ihe Samaritanj if callfd, by
Furnier, Idumean; and he aya that it wa» used by many nalionj
in A«ia. The lecond ii a character u remarkable aj the former,
and laid to h;ive been delineated after the courie and movement.
of nature, and contains a queer looking animal. The IhirJ,
given, u follows, is alw said, by Theseus Ambrosiuj, to have
been formed from the same as Ihe preceding.
'. 'li. I. V. hh, h, d, g, b, a,
q, Is, p, aa, ., n, m, ' 1, k,
I, ich, r.
" It was pproved and received in use at Borne, and called
ancient Creek." The fourth is a skeleton alphabet, exhibiting
the small circles as before given ; and taken from the Samaritan
eoini, by Walton. The fifth is one found in the French
Encyclopedia, pi. I, and is as follows —
I, k, i, th, hh, z, V, e, d, g, b, a,
There is another kind, differing from this somewhat, copied
by Dr. Morton, from a manuscript in the Cottonian library, in
the British museum.
PLATE 1396. From page 142Sclence of Ullers.
HHl
A
IplL.
.lopb
B
E
e(*^i-)
U
F
•oC)
TOO
ulo
H
kbolb
ibctb
rod U„.b
^\
boll
UDt
door
"°*"
book
looc
pollog
8
Ttj?
TE^}
tJw.
mo
n'i
.Isoa
1 o
pi
?
kopp.
rho
I
UO
■""sr.T' (
l^.d
=..
ooo
.^«
.1.
p.1.
,opb
rab
oUll
UO
T^"' [
T
1,1,
prop
1
„..
M
beul
m
800
Duplicalc pan Plale 1396,
^ .Q '3 'p '.> -A 'z 'm 'm '! '1 'I
a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, k, I, m, n.
'. p. q. r. s, t, u, X, y, 7, Jic,
PLATE 1398. The Norlhmans Alphabel-
ithout bigotry in the public school and by sectarian and non-sectarian
Normans characters,
whose language is spoken
in many nations of Eur-
ope, Asia and America.
It was deemed essen-
tial in the earlier days of
British liberty, long after
(see pi. 1130A, p. 22?)
Livrus60-1 taught Christ
should be born 1 A. D.,
and a.sceiul 41V to the
Lord of Heaven. OA=^
Fa Universally Heaven
and Earth's one God of
freedom to men and wo-
men Christ connecting
them to God, transmitted
to the better days of that
country and that "fRag-
na darta" should be au-
thoritatively promulgated
and read to the people
which, if conjoined to a
properly kept primitive
religion for all, from with
American Constitutions
their, best parts were de-
rived, history never
would have recorded
the downfall of States
and Nations, nor the
hideous spectacle of
2SU,0()(),()()0 martyrs
reducedto 150,000,000.
Every intelligent
person should by his
own will anfl iiuthoritij
aided by the wisdom
and liberality of Gov-
ernments and Nations
own a copy of their Declar-
ation of Rights, Constitu-
tions, Laws, and all the
IViiiiitivc Religion, which
still survives in inscriptions,
letters, alphabets, picture
symbols, religions, sciences
and arts. Even ON THE
GOLDEN SQUARES
ENGRAVED BY THE
HAND OF FA OR
GOD. ALL this should
be taught for universal good,
fairly without any compulsion. Copies of Magna Carta was sent to all Cathedral Churches and read
twice a year. "Lex est mens sine otficitus et quasi Deus. Plato and Aristotle." ''God approved
and ratified constitutions" "Cane§ Grotius. and Demosthenes declared them gift of Heaven." They,
PI. 1 39-i, emigrated from Denmirk, Sweden and Norway. It is well illustrated with parts of the primi-
tive language, being evidence of the antiquity of its national use.
404 ■
GERMAN ALPHABKT.
The German lanKuage is original 9^ b fT '7' //"• ''
and was said to be the basis of Swedish,
Danish and English; but corroborative
evidence I cannot find.
Very many of our most choice or fin-
est works have been translated from the
German. Two books I do highly prize.
viz: — Carl Faulmann Buch Der Schrift
and Grimm's Laws. The twenty-six
radical letters are replete with the exten-
sive wisdom of their constructor. Every
word of their language has a meaning.
For the long continuance of eyesight it is
to be regretted that all languages are not
in a very clear, distinct, easily to be read
type.
The Emperor of Germany is a de-
scendant of Charlemagne which great
Emperor restored learning to Italy,
France and Germany, encouraging the
formation of good letters in his domin-
ions, those in use having degenerated into
bad imitations of the shape of the Lom-
bard, Saxon and Franco-
Gallic. Three bear his
name, which appeared in
no'tdiTting'u7sh"«pitalsfrom ^VAIL^Z GjL^i^^
P 1 f » t u I y I J.C.
2(
»
ba.
6
s
•^ay.
2)
da.
d
?
cf.
«
gh.y.
•&
hah.
3
e.
3
y>-
S.
kah.
8
el.
3R
«
en.
£)
oh.
V
payh.
fi
L«
koo.
«
cr.
©
a
lay.
u
00.
35
fou.
©
h*
xrayh.
I
Ics
ips.
S)
y ipsiloni.!
3
tset.
sv// h'.ithrr Cnil.
ACCE.VTtD I
iv^; u«c; do>ae.
DOl'BLE LCTTEllS.
*, cf. ft, n, (T, f,
^. fi. iT. u.
PLATE 1399.
izjJbi^coHii{niiii6*mr
small letters. From primi-
tive language reading it
foretold events fc) the pre.s-
ent and to. come with
names born this and suc-
ceeding generations. It
is very valuable for proof
of heretofore written long
line true of the only gen-
aelogy that can be sworn
to as correct reaching
back to creation and
riii'; GFOR(;iAN alphabet isprop-
crly sjid to have been formed from the
Greek by Postcllus, who sa>s that the
Georgians use that language in their
prayers, but on other occasions they em-
ploy the Tanarian and Armenian letters.
Further it can be said some of theirs are
used in the English alphabet of to-tlay
uith different names and O the s;mu-.
S=i, sc and hho when turned from left
to right:=our B^f and twocurvesof it t),
b=q and d=thc omega of the Greeks by
turning it upside down and as it is a part
of the third letter M of the primitive al-
phabet, the v=two Gk. P's by separation,
sz=b and h=f which is an important bit
of evidence in our I=J,^n, th=Eng.
D; f^when cut apart in perpendicular
line q & P, etc. Their capitals arc
termed sacred, used for Holy Books.
Of these letters, five are vowels thus
expressed: a=awe, c=a, o=oh, oo=U.
Their pronunciation is in
most cases the same, which
recommends the German
language for richness and
native fluency. Theircon-
sonants are pronounced just
as the English, except g, v,
and w. The g hard, as in
give; V is pronounced f;
and w, is a sound be-
tween 00 and f ; the h is
1, b, gh, d, e, T, D, h, ih, i, ch, 1, ro, n,
SOljl^^J^LIIOlT^A^ff sometimes pronounced
i, 0, p, ig, r, •, t, V, f, k,ghh, cq, »c, very soft, as in roo h en,
c, „, I, „, cc, chh, hh, g, hha, hho. "S« •» ■« «■'«"' '" ^^^
PLATE 1401 Ceor^nn Alphabet. middle of a word, Bahn;
is pronounced bawn, (a
path.) There arc compound letters in the German, that are to be learned only by some little practice
such as ch, ph, sch, sp, st, qu, kk, ss, ts, sh, etc., with many important and nice distinctions. This
langua c is extended extensively over the United States and northern and western Europe.
405
^ L>
"General Valency, in his essay on
the antiquity of the Irish language is de-
cidedly of the opinion-that it is through
theFoenior Cathagenians, derived from
the Fcenicians or Phonecian: that, on a
collation of this language with the Celtic,
Punic FcEnician and Hebrew, the strong-
est affinity, —in fact, a perfect identity of
words exists. It may, therefore, be
deemed a Punic-Celtic compound."
These letters in this plate was given
to Mr. Antrim by the gentleman who
taught them in Ireland by consent of
Queen Victoria.
Oban in Welsh is augury, divination,
etc. The third kind has a systematical
arrangement of straight lines derived from
the second letter of primitive alphabet.
4th kind is the Marcomannic Runes:
Sth is Bethluisnion na Ogma, or the
magical and mysterious, and 6th Bethlu-
isnion, etc.
»
u
/K
b
T>
h
c
C
C
d
P
b
e
e
e
f
r
T
K
s
5
1
1
,
X
1
m
w
D)
Q
r^
7)
0
o
o
p
V
V
^
^
■
&
r
t
^
-5
u
ii
Vi^
PLATE 1402 Irish
The original mode of
writing among the ancient
Britons was by cutting letters
with knife on sticks, either
squared to keep in mind the
Commandments of God (see
Log of Fnr Chia), or Trian-
gular in remembrance of the
three P
God ga
>!^(^^X7JMe)dN
h. d, .g.
q, ti, p, aa, i, d, m, 1, k,
t, •ch, r.
PLATE \403 SAMARITAN.
rimitive letters that Ab<I><I^OHIKMNO>k
a, b, c,
, f, g, b, i, 1, m,
PLATE 1404
lagiis, the sea. Altough no writings, ex-
cept isolated letters have descended we
have sufficient authority to give (six al-
phabets from inscription in Malta is
given) the number and form of their
letters which it will be seen is richly en-
dowed by the Primitive Alphabet. The
first letter O^F, the a=:the second, and
V and c^M which invert and of vv we
have W that the scholars have above er-
roneously designated as sand vv=AAthe
two pyramids of itgypt and the Alters
that were built unto the Lord God before
Christ came in the Land-of itgypt.
This alphabet does imperfect or only
part justice to the many, and most an-
cient "Bobcloth" from its two first letters,
the second is more remarkable, was de-
rived from the Roman notes and the
third are called the Irish Ogums, from
Oga-Ogum, the old Celtic words that
imply letters written in cypher. My
Gaelic or Irish Bible, that I have given
many lectures from, is re-
markably filled with evidence
of the admixture of the many
languages during the gradual
changes of tongues that were
not confounded at the build-
ing of the Tower of Babel,
which has erroneously been
taught for nearly 2000 years.
It is written in these alpha-
bets, but contains a large
number of Hebrew letters
of Resh. lAm unable to
discover any positive proof,
although there is a possibil-
ity that the lost Tribe of
P, r.
The Phoenician or
Ftt'nician language was de-
rived from their ancestors
the /Egyptian, and "said
was used in Tyre, Sidon and
Carthage; and from it Cad-
mus "constructed" the
GREEK ALPHABET.
The ancient Greeks called the
Fcenicians, Pelasgi quasi Pe-
lagii, or wanderers, from Pe-
Monks alphabet was called Coelbren y Mynaic. It will be seen they adopted the second letter
of the primitive alphabet and kept in the name all three letters, viz:— O, A, M=F, A. M=0, A, "i".
^ -4 N ^ ^ V S ^\n c*/' HJ y ^*''^^' "^^y ^''^ '^^ ancient
abed e, V, ch, i, c, I, m, n, Furni have been settled here,
' />. At -r-« c\ %A/ x^ a cause of Furni choosing and
O VWP H W X a branch colonizing there,
°' ^' '''''''' '■ hence the geographical
"~ LPHABET. names. Furni, Ferney, etc.
sin UrgtstclllMln
PLATE 1405
Gaelic Is taught In B(
FCENICIAN
United States.
* -t^ * ^
Many nations, both in
language and in the United
grants that during the Ex-
America have chosen this
condition. The language
parts of Europe, except
lachia; but these nations
This one is the generally rc-
and b may be observed po-
c the V united to I, and d an ancient A, and f the letter n
^"^n^ 1111$ ^
•- "^ *> «^ t, g, h, i,
'• "^ °» 0. p. q, r, i,
t. o, I, 1, t, he, pi, ri.
PLATE 1406. SCLAVONIAN ALPHABET
Europe and Asia, speak this
State, we have many emi-
odus of desirable citizens to
country to make better their
is used in all the Eastern
Greece, Hungary and Wal-
have a variety of characters,
ceivcd Sclavonion. In a
tionsof the primitive M, in
two horizontal and two curved lines.
which in the primitive religion language means "Christ to come from heaven to earth and return
from earth to heaven, h=picture symbol of Serpent, mounds, and I; the i is the prinritive letter A
with three additions keeping the names of Deity — Fa and Fo with the letter C the initial of Christ:
1 and m evolved from primitive M ; n portion of Gk. P; o=our T and was anciently used to desig-
nate Theos or the Gk. name of God; p means in itgyptian Christ the son of God came from God
of heaven; q is a double FF and c; the he shows union of I and E with changed position and is the ©
T, X reversed pi retains the third letter of the primitive alphabet with the drawing from second and
one of the lines placed above forming the trident. It also forms two white squares — the Command-
ments of God a^nd white two openings to them indicate — God sees— the black line below — mankind
acts. Z=the t as was read remotely from right two left monogram of Cain, Abel and Zana.
FROM THE STRAIGHT AND :^r"iSwJ CURVED LINE, ALL LINES
♦♦♦«♦* • •*♦♦«
MULTIPLY, FILL, REPLENISH THE EARTH WITH GOOD; THY FORM, TALENTS, IMPROVE, INCREASE, HONOR-
ING GOD THAT HAS HONORED, INSTRUCTED, THY FOREPARENTS, PERFECTLY, AND IS THE RIGHTEOUS JUDGE.
GOD made all the great and small and gave to them blessed labors, recreations, symbols, mental ca-
pacity that he taught to it pure religion in its perfection that has sacrilegiously been changed info about
three hundred and sixty, containing parts of pure that HE ordered taught unto all his children the
human race, that rebellious changed the first that was hid but can never die: the good reward, and
the evil — that we may know good — punish. It is the wisdom of God to conceal a thing, and the
honor of kings, all men, to discover. Every Symbol engraved on Golden Squares glorified God and
honored men.
A is the first letter of our alphabet, and the corre.iponding symbol also stands first in many
other alphabets. It was changed from second place to the Tirst by priest craft and those
in authority, the point is like unto the point of Furni sword, the Foenicians, appear to be
the first to change it after their exodus from itgypt in rraking the picture of the same as
the Altar, viz: the pyramid that was built unto the Lord in the land of if^gypt, that in
the symbol they threw down and raised the base line to represent our A when righted, which we
clipped the projecting ends of base line showing forth the point of the sword, that with fire, cross,
halter, torture has laid low over 150,000,000 martyrs. In the Ethiopic it occupies the thirteenth place,
lost in Runic by an inverted Y or the Ayin of Hebrews; the numerous alphabets of India and the
Trans-Gangetic peninsula, which have been rearranged on phonological principals.
The form of the letter has undergone curious transmutations in the various alphabets into which
it has passed since its change from the primitive and sacred A that God gave to Ava and Adam and all
their descendants. In itgyptian D and Hebrew terminal d a is each point, A pyramid.
n-^
A alplij tluit 111 the /ttivptian means Fa^Uod and Al=^A-i=<^"'l the (pure) Virgin.
ICYPIIW
PHimcix.
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llief..llo«iiifr:-0.=
Ka. 0= Ko. = F,
uut of v\liicli ie
evolvHil ^=T and
tlifTh of the Greeks,
iiiul sviiibolic of the
rising sail lievmid
the aateiH and
iaoanlaiii»; A=A,
vihoHe three lines
will, u|.eN to each
8|>ell I'h I'a Fii or
more distinct FA
I'O F.\='riiiiitv, as
OA ('■■") Q '(l-'o)
OA. (Fa) 'i' = M.
» hich forms are .sub-
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»,
est histories, bat
H t i 1 1 conforms in
partK to the |)riini-
tive wliicli (iod said
Khali never be .le-
stroveil. Oar capi-
tal .V is simply the
primitii-e with the
b.i.se line raised and
cutoff from tlieFoe-
niciaa found in an
inscription theniiith
reiitnry M. C, and
the two projecting
lines below tlie A '»
I I and reinotelv the
I or I was an 1.' a J,
ui II, and an F; the
n iN found below
the primitive letter
M.wliichinonrinod-
em hieroglyphic has
I ted
Alphabets Ihalwe
God, Christ and in the black letter Heaven a. We usethree forms and fourth with blacV letter of different date
408
servmjrnot only the
Foenician but the
ancient .Kfryptian
or primitive and the
square Hebrew re-
tains the three
strokes but in a dif-
ferent position;
while ill the ;\rabic
and Syric letter alif
only ot1e siroke has
been preserved. Tlie
IJoman cursive lias
lost only the cross
bar. in the (ir e
and Latin uncia 1
became a, which the
parent form o\ (uir
own Italic and
script-like (i r ee k
minuscule (used
chiefly in books), in
order to avoid con-
fusion with d the
head of letter was
bent round ^rivinp
the form a and to
keep the name of
In the Irish the loop of a was opened outgiving the form of u, developed into GERMAN III.
The sound of this letter has varied as much as the languages and its form. It is absurd to pretend
to give the ancient as languages change every twenty years wiih a trend towards the primitive. It was
said in the Foenician, Arabic, and other Semitic alphabets, to be not a vowel "but a faint guttural
breath, such as heard after No! Bad! pronounced abruptly or in a'orta." It is the purest vowel
sound and 2d of two in primitive speech. In religious nomenclature is called the name of "God the
Holy Ghost," which to blastpheme is serious and henious offence. Historically it has been shown
that by two channels a passes into e^T or e, and e into u, that in ^gypt it anatomically represents
feminine and masculine genders: 3d a passes into o and o into u. In fact every letter of every alpha-
bet has its counterpart in the anatomical system of mankind, thus God honored his creation. Its
predominance in the oldest languages is prima facia evidence of its primitive origin. It is the vowel
which ii child learns first and most easily pronounced, as is shown in the nursery words of ma, tia, ta,
da da, na, pa, etc. In anglo-Saxon it has the long sound in father and short in man. In modern
English it has six sounds distinct, long, short as in man, hat, wag, land, dagger. The nanie sound ae
is the Italian e is usually denoted by a post script c, as in the words make, pane, fate, tale, etc. In
fare and ware the same notation expresses the dipthong, which is denoted by ai and ea in fair and
swear. The dipthongal sound aw is sometimes denoted by a reduplication of the following consonant,
as in the words all, tall. Like all the other vowels, a, occasionally drops into the neutral or funda-
mental vowel, the sound which slips most easily out of the mouth with the least conscious effort, and
thus at la.st reverts to its original sound of ahom, the ^gle sound of the ^^gyptian hieroglyphic that
started it about 40 centariss ago, through which it has been traced. A, major and A, minor is on the
Musical Scale. Aa, the name of European Rivers; the word being akin to the Old High German
aha, water /Egyptian "God of heaven is God." There are three streams— called ,\a in Westphalia,
^^jj^one in Switzerland, and one in North France. /^~^i^=God Commands <a «• a C@a="l'
I^H^'?^ IS the .second letter of our alphabet and the first of Genesis in the word Brasft and its
evolution is free frj n th; three letters of the primitive alphabet: its religious meaning is Trinity,
astronomical from sun and mian rising over the waters or mountains; a corresponding and related
symbol occupies the sam: place in the Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, and other alphabets, the parts of O &
c in Fctnician. From the doms of a Temple or Cipital called a house=beth, its Greek name, and
bet of alphabet. In the Armenian alphabet the loop of the Foenician form gradually opened out, and
disappeared, given the square Hebrew and Arabic forms. In the Greek alphabet the tail was bent,
forming a second complete loop, as in our capital B, out of which the Gk. minuscule B easily arose as
a cursive form. Our minuscule b comes from the cursive Latin, this form being found as early as
A. D. scribbled on Pompeian walls. From the Roman cursive it was adopted into the Irish semi-
uncial, whence it pissed in the 7th century into England, and in the 9th century into the French or
Caroline minuscule, thus becoming the source of the Roman b. of our printed books. It arose through
the upper loop of B being incomplete, as is shown by the intermediate form. In our b the loop dis-
appeared and from the primitive alphabet it is the removal of upper half circle with a small part of
horizontal end of Unc aad then place it in position, while in the Indian form this loop is all that re-
mains. In the alphabet of ancient Corinth we find a form of S, which approached very closely to
that of the i'Egyptian Hieratic prototype. Phonetically, B may be defined as the soft labial mute b is
interchangeable with m. p. v. and F, B, 10 music, is the 7th degree of diatonic scale of C^^=T=B.
D
409
* * *
y^^^THE third letter of our alphabet is V the right and left upper potion of the sacred letter
/| I M of God's gift alphabet to Ava and Adam and is the Initial of CHRIST the son of GOD,
W I Mary and Joseph; a glance above shows it the arch of heaven, a view of the moon before
^^^^its full that for 7105 years this C has given its mild golden light to all the inhabitants of earth
women and men and their daughters and sons: the Crescent of Turkey, who practice all they
preach and teach that Allah (Turkish langurge for the name of God) is one God: remotely it had
the sound of g and then the C took the sound of k, and finally in some languages has the sound of S.
which when separated in centre gives two letters of c, one reading to the right and the other to the
left. In the hieratic character it bore some resemblance to the kneeling camel, hence, the Fcenicians
called it gimel the camel, whence the Greek gamma ■" was derived, representing the head and neck
of the camel. After the Greek letter had passed over into Italy the form was rounded, and became
C. In the oldest inscriptions in Italy this letter still retains its original value of g, but as the Etruscans
had no^soft mutes it hardened into the sound of the letter k, which, being superfluous fell into disuse.
The Romans had both sounds, but had lost the letter k, hence in the earliest Roman inscriptions C is
used^to denote the sound of G as well as of k; the words legiones and Gaius, for instance, being
written Leciones & Caius. In the 3d century B. C, the form G was evolved by differentiation out
of C to denote the soft sound, and placed 7th in alphabet taking the vacant place of z that had fallen
into disuse. After G was invented, C took the sound of k in classical Latin. From this fact Cicero
written in Gk. Jikcro and Germany in the time of the empire borrowed the words Kaiser and Keller
from Csesar and cellarium.
How the letter acquired the sound of s is now to be explained: and it is instructive to note the
process by which same letter comes in English to have sounds so different as those heard in call and
civil. The beginning of the transition may be traced to the effect produced on cenain consonants
when they stand before i, followed by another vowel. Thus, there is a tendency to shorten the word
nation by pronouncing it as two syllables instead of three, and it is easy to see how the sound tion
would slide into the easier sound shon.
The same in the case with the k sound. The change began in Gaul about the 7th century A.D.
such names as Marcius being pronounced Martius and Marshius, instead of Markius. In Italy the
change did not go so far; Lucia, pronounced as Lutshia, instead of Lushia or Lusia.
Combinations like ceo and cea differ so little from cio and cia that they followed the same course,
and ultimately the s sound of c was extended to cas as where ce or ci was not followed by a vowel. In
Anglo Saxon as in Latin, the letter c was originally sounded as k, a letter which we do not find in
Anglo-Saxon, as it was not required- The soft sound oi c began to come in use about the 8th century
in words borrowed from Gaul, and afterward the easier sound was extended to English words, the
letter retaining its old sound before the vowels a, o, u, but passing through ch to s before e, i, and y.
When in Anglo-Saxon e followed s it tended to beccire h, the common suffix isc having changed to
ish. When the k sound was retained before e, i or y, the letter k was ultimately substituted for c to
avoid confusion and thus the Anglo-Saxon cyning and cene are now written king and keen. The
Anglo-Saxon alphabet was also without q, for which cw was used, quick being spelt cwic. Latin C
has become ch in many English words owing to their having passed through the French: thus the
Latin carminus and carmen have become chimney and charm in English. In German the Latin c is
k. An Indo-European primitive c sometimes becomes h, s, or g. Thus, Latin culmus by Eng.
haulm. Sometimes c disappears before 1 or r, which explains how Clovis has become Louis. C, in
Music is a note of the gamut and the sound on which the system of music is founded.
-a ^ ^ ^
M^ IS the 4th letter in our alphabet, as well in the Focnician, Hebrew, "Greek and Latin from
J [-1 which last it was immediately derived." Its origin was from the primitive 0=0=Fa and V=
W li '^='^='^^=**=M and &=D, from the ^ and e^=T of the i^gyptians, which from those
^J^Jlsacred symbols it was taken to spell the name of God in other languages, as Dieus, Dieu, Dia,
Divinity, etc. In astronomy that "God taught to Ava & Adam," it is seen in the form of T
by the rising and setting sun and moon over the water and beyond the mountains, while the part con-
cealed by waters and land is the typical yEgyptian D, which we use by changing the horizontal line
to a perpendicular the former signify land and waters, and later Deity line of heaven and earth, re-
moving from half circle, the remaining C (read from right to left,) is the initial of Christ that is cut
into Dighton Rock. How modern scholars have confounded it with the picture of the hand I do
not understand, unless they took the last letter D, and n for waters, a, for Fa as shown in upright line
which is I, J, H, F, and the point cut off an a=D=Fa. The Foenicians call it daleth=door:
Hebrew " : Gk. A=delta-showing the straight lines of 2d letter of primitive alphabet is substituted
for the carve. In cursive Gk. d. From B= <a 2 in Hebrew not clear, but in the ^Egyptian in-
scriptions it only require*, change of position for our letter, as before herein shown in plate and stated
— it is the first word of Gencsis=Brasft= H JT1WU
The sound of D is a soft dental mute. It has an affinity for m. It is intrusive in some words
and disappears in others, also it is often replaced by 1, r, or b. It is often assimilated to the following
consonant. By Grimm's Law a primitive d becomes t in Englist and z in German. A primitive dh
becomes 6 in Gk. th in German, f in Latin, and d in English: as the words ther, their, fcra, and deer.
Di followed by a vowel sometimes becomes j, as in journal from diurnal.
D, the Roman numeral for 500, arose out of l3, the half of CiQ, which was the old way of writ-
ing, 9 the direct descendant of the primitive sign O found on most ancient map of the wodd indicat-
ing 1000 (sec plate- Map) page 278 which was afterwards written M=G.
D was added to Dr. Jean Fernel's descendants name as a memoranda of the deaths by religious
fanatic assassins of Charles VIII, and several of his chn. and Dr. Jean Femel &*wifc, his son Francis
& gr. son Dr. John Fernel, and Admiral Gasparde de Coligny, Henry son of Captain William Fern-
aid continuing through the nations by same organization. D, in Music, is the second note in the
natural scale.
/^i^^IS the fifth letter of our own and cognate alphabets. The original ^Egyptian symbols were
J f^ <* with T;=6 'a=E, and not □ as usually described. The Foenicians kept it in e, y and m
^t 1^^ with additions that do not destroy its constituents. Charlemagne or Charles Augustus kept
K0^^\i intact anatomically (as is every letter a likeness to the human form made perfect in God's
image), but thrown down, as is seen in the Greek or Roman small omega, it was called epsi-
lon by the Greeks, nr bare e, to distinguish it from eta. In Latin it has two sounds which are heard
in the French ete. In English or Anglaisc it has four sounds. The normal sound is heard in get,
bed, met. The name ee is usually expressed by the double letter, as in see, feet, heel, but it ex-
pressed by a single e in evil the component part of devil. In some monesyllabic words, such as he,
me, we, be. It has the sound of i in England, and of u in the last syllable of eleven and better, and
also when followed by r, as in fero, pert. When followed by y, as in grey, prey, it has the sound of
Italian e, which \s our a in fate. Custom will not allow any English word to end in v, and hence a
mute e has been appended as in give, live. The fashionable use of subscript e is now generally used
to elongate the vowel etc.
E, in Music is the third mte or sound of th; natural diatonic scale, and is a third above the tonic C.
(From preponderance of evidence in Authors possession Dr. F. A. Cook and lady wife victims
Martyrs. Beautiful plate of N. H. State House and Cook genealogical records stolen from author. )
* *
^^»^^IS the sixth letter in the English and Latin alphabets. The original symbol is in ea( h letter
^■^ of the primitive alphabet and from arrangements of their component monogramic, sacred,
P ^ physiological, anatomical parts, reveal the primitive names of deity, and his children and
^^^3 I dcscendents, Fnl Ava and Fna Adam, who, after their union from commands of God were
designated as Fnr^Mrs Ava and Fna:=Mr. Adam in our English nomenclature of today.
The Miss=Fnl=0-i=r without the sur as first created but with it after the fall of Adam. These
hieroglyphics literally meant God's earth and waters line created pure, or virgins before the sin of
Adam and not Eve or Ava (the serpent story is a myth and the facts pictured out demonstrates it in
the plate of Adam and (Eve) Noah copied it, which illustration true removes the subtle attempt by
Darwinian theories to take from the universe Creator and the Messiah Christ. As heretofore
stated there are five or more true translations of each Egyptian symbol. The Fnl above should be
without the star when applied to Ava and with it when applied to their descendents to whom was
transmitted the predisposition of Adam that is applied the above to as he was after his sirt a fallen star,
and no more should it be applied to man, but reserved for single pure women as today is used the
word Miss, and to man is proper to give of every age Mr.^ O— A=Fna and married women O - T
=Fnr and our Mrs. The F n r of today=in our most modern hieroglyphic in purity O — ♦ which
in impartial justice gives her the great honor — that is due the noble woman and mother, who 10 Oct.
4376, from lawful wedlock with Joseph, became the parents of Christ the Messiah our redeemer.
In the ./Egyptian "hieroglyphs was the picture of a cerastes or horned asp; the horns (was this
by Ava's traducers?) being represented by the two horizontal bars in our F, and the body by the
vcrticle stroke. When the sign was adopted by the Foenicians it received the name of Vau from the
resemblance to a nail or peg. From them it passed into the Greek as a semi-vowel, but at sometime
previous to the earliest Gk. inscriptions it was differentiated into two characters, F had the sound of w,
and the other Y called upsilon, became a vowel.
As early as the 7th century B. C. the character F became obsolete as a letter in the Eastern Greek
alphabet, being retained only as a numeral 6." (amusing contradiction). "It must, however, as
Bently proved, have been in use when the earlier potions of the Hcmeric poems were written. In
the Western alphabet, which was chiefly in the Peloponnesus, F was retained as a letter till the 5th
century B. C. From the Chalcidian alphabet it was transmitted to Italy, retaining its position as the
sixth letter, but acquifing the Latin sound of f instead of v and w.
This sound of f is called a labio-dcntal fricative, and is foimed by bringing the Icwer lip into con-
tact with the upper teeth. Hence it is one of the easiest of the consonants to pronounce, and may
take the place, under ceruin circumstances, of any of the mutes. Thus, a primitive bh, gh, dh,
which become b, g, and d, in Enghsh, may be represented by f in Latin, (which in picof is great
along the line works of primitive alphabet. ) For instance, the San-skirt bhar corresponds to the Eng-
lish bear and the Latin Fero; while the Sanskirt bhratar is[ the English brother and Latin frater.
The Sanskirt dhuma corresponds to the Greek thumos and Latin fumus; the Sanskirt dvara to the
Greek thura, the Latin forces, and the English door: the Gk. ther to Lat. fera & Eng. deer. The
gk. chole is Eng. gall and Lat. fel. Other correspondences arc exhibited in the Latin fremo, which
ans. the Gk. bremo; and in frango, where the f ans. to the aspirate in the GK. rhegnumi. An f
easily lapses into an h, as it seen in the Italic equivalences faba and haba, fircus and hircus. So the
Spanish hembra represents the Latin fcmina. A English f usually represents a primitive p, as is seen
by comparing father with pater, fish with piscis, or foot with f)cs. In four and five the English f
corresponds to a guttural.
* * * ^
(I;
^^»0*<IN the Latin quator and quinque. The words enough, cough, and laugh, in which gh is
M M\ pronounced as f, exemplifies the tendency of gutturals to lapse into the easier sound. The
T in Russians regularly change the difficult sound of th into f, the name of Theodore, for in-
^^^ I stance, becoming Fcodor. In a like manner children say free and fun for three and thumb.
The Anglo-Saxon f is sometimes lost in modern English. Thus, hlford, hafoc, wis-man,
and hus-wifc become lord, hawk, woman, and hussy. Or f may become v, as in vixen, which is
merely the feminine of fox. It is found that Fernel=Furneux=Furnace, etc.
, The Greek ♦=*=q and p should be pronounced as fuh, or fu and nearly silent h: a primitive
bh becomes ♦ in Greek and f in Latin and English. Adolphus=the Teutonic Adolph and is written
Adolphe by the French. The Hebrew terminal M=n, is in if;gyptian. F. I. C, G, h. A, J. and V,
= F; I, r, r, h, a, a, j,V, v. F, in Music, is the fourth note of the natural diatonic scale of C.
See Music, Scale, Key.
IS the seventh letter in the Roman alphabet, and the modern alphabets derived from it.
For the history of its character and its differentiation out of F and C. B, and primitive Al-
jphabet with its descendants. The earliest picture symbol of it is the planet we call the
Moon that was with the sun picture spelling of the name of God, when that knowledge was
lost possibly, but exceedingly doubtful, may have been worshiped more probable that tliey
were used, as we do letters and pictures to honor God the Trinity. It is true that the different
churches called Idolotry much that they did not know or understand, and some of them condemned
to purgatory, hades, hell, many more worthy of heaven than themselves, and preach damnation to
the vast majority of mankind that God did not, but will reward and punish in exact impartial justice.
In different nations the Mani=Moon is feminine and Sol:=the Sun is masculine. In Germany the
gendciTS are reversed, as also with the Anglo-Saxons, although the English has followed the classic
mythology. Grimm (Deutsche Mythologie, p. 666) quotes an old invocation to the "New Moon,
gracious lord" (Neur Mon, Holder Herr), for increase of wealth; and down to recent times the
German people appeared fond of speaking of "Frau Sonne and Herr Mond(lady sun and lord moon),
which appears to me as simply a trace of the nearly forgotten significant pictures of the alphabet God
gave to our first foreparents, which throws light on past history as brilliant as the lights of day and
night, gave blessings to the mind, and organs of vision. The same inversion or traces appeared
among the Lithuanians, Arabians and Mexicans anciently called the moon Meztle also of masculine
gender, that shows an intent to honor Ava who did not sin, by comparing her to the sun, and Adam
who did sin to the moon: thus complimenting them as receivers of the sacred ALPHABET GIFT
OF GOD, which sweeps away much of the nonsensical dust of the ages for perceiving true history
that degenerates would make so lo* as to deprive man of God, lower than the baboon place human
race progenitors, that all authority from authentic history dcclareth were made in the likeness of the
Universal Creator.
Amongthe Slavs, according to Grimm, the moon is masculine, a star feminine, and the sun neu-
ter. Tlius showing some remembrance concerning the count of men and descendants from the
planets, similar to that of the very ancient if;gyptians, as was found.
In ^he epitaph of .Scipio Barbatus about 234 B. C. was supposed the earlics G and in the
school of Spurius Carvilius was supposed the substitution of G for Z, which occupied the 7th place in
the Old Italic alphabet, at close of 3d century B.C. In our miniscule g from Car do not belong to
majascule G, except little crook at top of g. In initial English and Latin the sound of gis hard, when
soft in Eng. it is due to French influence. The Normans substi —
m
° * * * ^
TUTED for our sound of w, gu. Hence we have such doubtlets as guardian and warden
guarantee, and warranty. Conversely a French g sometimes become w in English.
^Thus the old French gaufFrc has given us our word wafer. G is often softened to y, e, i, or
Thus Old English genoh is now enough, gelic is alike, git is yet, geong is young, hand-
gcweorc is handiwork, socling is silly. A final or medial g often becomes w or ow; thus
the Old Eng. fugol is fowl, maga is maw, sorg is sorrow, lagu is law, elnboga is elbow. Sometimes g
disappears altogether, as in the Old English gif, which is now if; is-gicel, which is icicle: or mag-
isteh which is master and mister. Before n we have often an intrusive g, as in the words foreign,
feign, sovereign, and impregnable. An Old English h sometimes becomes gh and then lapses to f, as
in enough and draught. In the case of many words, such as gate, again, we owe to Caxton, under
Mercian influences, the restoration of the Old English g, which for three hundred years had in
Wessex been gradually lapsing into y.
/^fy^ THE eight letter in our alphabet is derived from the primitive M at the lower potion and is
^li^also F, I, J, and Foenician letter cheth. The Semetic or Hametic name which means the
Tlrl Golden Sqrs. fence or palisade is explained by the form m = B of tiie letter. The sound
^/^M probably was of a strongly marked continuous gutteral, produced at the back of the palate,
I which docs not exist in English, but is heard in the Scotch loch and the German lachen. In
Greek it became eta. As early as the 7th century B. C. this sign had two values among the Greeks,
e and used for the simple aspirate h. In the alphabet of Italy it was used for h: but later in Greece
the two sounds came to be represented by a differentiation of the symbol, the form H being used for
the vowel, and the so called mutilated F, L, forms d or the aspirate. Hence we see how the symbol
H stands for h in the Latin and for e in the Greek alphabets.
In Old English h was gutural, or throat sound, but it gradually softened down to a spirant, and
now has become almost a vowel. No letter is more misused, and this missuse is of ancient date,
probably due to its anatomical counterpart. In Latin MSS. and inscriptions it is sometimes improp-
erly inserted, as in the words harcna, harundo, hauctoritas, or improperiy omitted, as in omini, abitat,
onustus-spellings, which prove the uncertainty of its usage. In English as early as the 12th century
we find ard written as hard, and hold as old. Americans as a rule rarely misuse it, and in England an
untaught peasant is usually more correct than a self made man. It has long disappeared from the
Italian, and is now rapidly vanishing from the French. The Spaniards subsiiiute h for a Latin f, the
Spanish hijo representing the Latiii filius, just as the Latin hordeum represented the Sabine fordeum.
Not only f, but c and s are frequently represented by h. Thus, hundred and century, heartiness and
cordiality, hall and eel/ are true doubtlets, while the Latin canis, centuc and cafut correspond to the
English hound, hundred and head, and the first syllables of hexagon and hcptarcy, which are derived
from the Greek, correspond to the English numerals six and seven. We get hemi-sphcrc from the
Greeks, and scmi-circlc from the Latin, hyper-critical from Gk. and super-ficial from Latin. The
Irish have retained s, which in the Welsh has faded down to h, the Welsh hen=^ld, being the Irish
sen and Latin sencx. In English h has been lost in the words it, loaf, neck, ring, tear, fee, which
were formerly written hit, hlaf, hnecca, bring, taher, and feoh, while in droht and genoh, now
written draft & enough, it has become f, and in the words huge, wharf whelk, and whelm it is intru-
sive. In hwit. hweol, and in many other words, the decay of the aspirate caused them to be written
white and wheel, and except in the North of England the h in these words is hardly heard. In the
West and South of Eng. which arc Saxon the aspirate as a rule is fainter, and more liable to be lost
than in East Anglia, Yorkshire, and Scotland where we have the descendants of Angles and Dines.
-a ^ ^ ^
: correct pronunciation of this difficult letter is one of the most delicate tests of good
ing. The quality of the sound depends partly on that of the following vowel, and its
intensity to some extent on the accentuation. The aspiration is stronger in humble than
lumility, in human than in humane, in history than in historical, in hostile than in
hostility, but it is the same in happy and happiness, since the accent rests on the same syllable. It is
stronger in "who" than in "when," in "hole" than in "whole". In "honor" it is very faint, in
"honorable" and "honesty" it is almost inaudible. It is stronger in "host" than in "hospital,
while in "hostler" it has so completely disappeared that the spelling "ostler" has become usual. It
is retained in "harbour" but lost in "arbour." It is retained in "hair" and "hare," but is evanescent
in "heir" and "hour," though retained in "heredity" and "horologe." No general rule can be laid
down for the pronunciation it depends on the usage of good society, which changes from generation
to generation. In good French society the aspirate is disappearing; in England and America the re-
verse is probably the case. The reasons why persons who omit "h" where it should be inserted and
commonly insert it where it should be omitted are obscure, or lapsis mentalis. Mr. Douse in his book
on Grimm's Law to what he designates as the Principal of Cross Compensation.
In German musical notation the letter "H" is used to denote B natural, the letter "B" being ap-
plied to our B flat. This anomalous distinction is derived from the ancient noution by letters, before
the invention of the stave, in which B natural was written in the square form (B quadratum). like a
small black letter "b", while B f^at was written as a Roman "b," (B rotundum). The awkwardness
of having two "B's" led to the introduction of the "H," which in small black letter (h) resembles
(G) closely. In French and Italian system the same note is denoted by the syllable "Si."
J is the ninth letter in our alphabet and was prominent in the second and third of the primitive
alphabet, in second it was the three lines of the pyramid A, and third is the two upright
lines of the M; also, it is the 9th in Western Europe alphabets and called by the Greeks iota
from its Semitic name of yod\ From being the smallest in Hebrew, we get the name ' jot
a tittle (St. Matt, v: 18), and jottings or small notes. It was j, f, h. and the iEgyptian yod "a hand"
the form in the character in the hieratic from which the Foenidan was taken. On the oldest Map of
earth it is taken as the hand and after an "O." which=10 in the date thereon of Creation of
the World 5810 B. C, also there on the date of Creation of woman 4376 B. C. =
OOOOO***^^** ** 10 &**"***C******* plus three hands and three heads. See pi. 1337 p. 278
In early Greek inscriptions the form of the letter was angular, similar to our Z, then came to re-
semble S and this about the 7th century B. C, was straightened out to resemble our I. On Dighton
Rock it is in form Kke the pupil of the eye. From the vertical it has varied less in form than any
other letter. The dot in our minuscule "i" first came into use in the 11th century and was uken
from the pupil of the eye. It was supposed to have come from the accented "i" incorrectly and em-
ployed to distinguish "ii" from "u." It became universal after the invention of printing when it
was found convenient to use two forms of type. In the 14th century a dot was substituted for the ac-
cent, but at time of Christ the picture symbol dot of eye was used, hence it was supposed from the dot
the age of MSS. could be estimated. In Italian, and in most European languages, the sound of the
letter is that of the Latin long "i." the name sound of our "e." which we have in the English words
"machine" and "marine." The long "i" in Utin was always thus pronounced, and never like "i"
in "fine." The normal sound of "I" in English is that heard in "bit. dip. sit or short Utin."
Sound is represented in cymbal by "y. u" in "busy," "o" in "women." "ei" in "forfeit." "ie" in
'breeches." "ia" in "carriage." Washington did not dot i of Mss.
^ Q= =—
415
'sieve," "ui" in "guilt," "ee
=a
* * * ^
3 IS the tenth letter of our alphabet which strangely chough is marked M =J in the prim-
itive alphabet given to Ava and Adam by the ancient numeral. In ' the Arabic Nishki
it is alif, ra,and za comprising three letters corresponding to 3d scciion of primitive and in
most ancient Arabic it is a, and i , in Abyssinian I, and on sepulchral of king Bazen is
found 1st and 3d parts of primitive letter M and 6th the I or J, 6th in "Chaldee," also the I and
perfect J, i of Coptic, and Cherokee, and French 1 , s of Georgian by changing its position, also i of Goth-
ic, iota of Gk. yod of Hebrew, I of Irish, I of Monks, alif, ra, za, fa, las, nun, vau of the Persian, I of
Roman and Runic.aof "Saracen, I of Saxon, awc,zand rof Syriac,are thcsamej or component parts
of it and I in the old English. In the middle of the 17th century it became universal in English books.
In 161 1, King James's Bible had lesus for Jesus, iudge for judge. The dot over the i and j is curious
continuance of the part made o in the primitive M. In English the symbol j is used to denote the
sound dzh, as in journal; in French of zh, as in jour; in Spanish it represents the hard ch, heard in
the Scotch loch, as in Jerez; in German it retains the original y sound of the Latin consonantal i, as
in Jahr. Thus, while German geographers write Jenissei and Jakut, English maps have Yenissci and
Yakut. The consonantal sound of the English j is frequently expressed by g, as in gem or by ge
as in knowledge. The sound i did not exist in early Eng., but was introduced from France after the
Norman conquest. Hence in the middle English, before the symbol came into use, we find the
sound represented by other devices. Thus, we have Giwes for Jews, geste for jest, chaw for jaw, and
cham for jam. Chaucer has gailer for jailor as in the Bible. The use of J is still extending, and wc
find jibe, jail, and Jeffrey for gibe, goal, and Geoffrey. We have unfortunately introduced our
acquired French sound of j into Latin words which had the consonantal i, which the Romans pro-
nounced y; and Hebrews Ayin, the eye, and wc say jam, jugum, juvenis, jupiter, juncus, jacio, hu-
jus, and mayor. In some inscriptions in the early imperial age the consonantal sound of i is denoted
either by doubleing the letter or writing it as a capital: huiius, or hulus representing the older huius
In inscriptions of the later empire we find Giove for Jove, a usage adopted in modern Italian, in which
wc have Gesu, Giovanni, Giuseppe, and maggiore, from Jesus, Johannes, Josephus, and major, the
use of the new letter j being evaded in the same manner as the Middle English.j;.
^^g ^IS the II letter in our alphabet and is derived from the primitive A=A which in the line
4mi the ancient sacred alphabet denoted Trinity and after the fall of Adam and sin had entered
AI^ into the acts of men, and even .^gypt the most and best religious country in the world gave
l^^licensc with political trust to the wicked that embraced evil, the primitive A was changed to
represent a falling pyramid, the ahar pyramid that was built unto the Lord in the land of
TEgypt— the base line "I was placed across the apex of pyramid turned on its side," thus evolved K,
and the perpindicular live pointing to heaven and earth, also part of third , lower part; and it is found
in Coptic, Cherokee, French, Gothic, Greek, Hebrew by changing position of part of [qoaf. Runic
h, and y, Russian, Saracen l=k: part of si in Sclavonian that is a compound letter of Ipart of R or B
forming P on right of K: K is also 10th in Saxon; in Thibetian Kha is constructed of I A , thus
* , and K= * * , both retaining the pyramidal letter 2d primitive; when read by primitive
language it declares fall of JEgypt from their sin, but promised the rise of the greater country Anglia
and Amari.ca the latter of which is mentioned in Genesis, as Amarica. * * * See alphabet.
* * * ^
^fciv A^WHEN taken over by the Foenicians it was called kaph=hand, the two slanting strokes re-
^1/ presenting the thumb and forefinger: as written in Chambers Encyclopcida, here copied.
^^^ in the primitive langragc is Fa line, etc. With little change of form it was transmitted to
^J^^Grcece as kappa, and with the other Greek letters passed into the early alphabet of Italy,
where it was retained by the Umbrians and Oscans, but ultimately discarded by the Etrus-
cans and Romans. It occurs in three of the caliest Latin inscriptions, and by its retention in certain
conventional archaic abbreviations, as KAL. for calendae. It was not used in the classical Latin, since
after the invention of G it was superfluous, the letter C having acquired precisely the same sound,
that of the soft gutural mute, which is formed by raising the tongue to the back of the palate.
Hence this sound came to be denoted by C in the Latin alphabet and all the alphabets derived directly
from it, such as the Italian, French, and Spanish with Portugues: while the symbol k was retained
by Greek, Coptic, Russian, Wallacian, Servian, Runic, Gothic, and German. Thus in French the
letter k is only used in modem loan-words, such as kepi, or kilometre; while in German is confined-
for this most part, to words derived from the Latin or French, such as criminal, civil, consul, and
canal. In England, where the two influences met and encountered each other, the usage is conflict-
ing. In the Southern or Saxon shires, into which the alphabet was introduced by Roman monks, c
was at first universal, k being unknown before the 12th century. In the Northern <jr Anglian shires,
which possessed the runes, a script ultimately of Greek origin, k is found in very early MSS., such as
the Rushworth Gospels. To the Northumbrian missionaries, to whom the conversion of Germany
is chiefly due, maybe attributed the use of k instead ofc in the German alphabet. After the Norman
Conquest of England the phonetic power of c became uncertain, owing to the introduction of its
French value of s in such words as city, and in the 12th and 13tH ccHturics the use of k began to be
spread from the northern counties to the cast midlands, and then to East Anglia, being employed in
the first instance before the vowels e and i, where the value of c was most ambiguous. Hence in
Middle English we find k in the words Kent, keen, kith, kin, king, keep, and key. and also before
n in the words knave, knee, knead, know, knot, and knight, in all of which c had formerly been em-
ployed. It is also used in the words of Scandinavian, Dutch, or northern origin, such as ken, keg,
kid, kill, kilt, kindle, kirk, kippered, kink, and in such modern loan-words as Koran, kangaroo, and
kaleidoscope, but on the whole the usage in English accords more with the Latin and French than
with Greek, German, and Russian.
^^^^THE 12th letter of our alphabet is descended from the sacred primitive, 3d letter, ii»^M=
du m=;(It=A A, and formed by removal of the two base lines and lower the right hand one
#B I I to a horizontal positiou, and later by retaining the upright and horizontal one of the Hebrews
^J^^terminal square m. It is commonly described as descended from the Foenician lamcd=«x
'' ^ goads: a glance at the, described at last, Foenician alphabet, it is found to be an exact resem-
blance to a potion of b, m, n, by severing the parts and raising upright the horizontal potion, the
lamed, scepter, whip, or engraver if correctly described would require reconstruction by lowering one
oblique part and raising another; while the scientific trend of philology is toward the easiest course,
yet for honoring the many students who desire to aid all men, we give the following: — "The letter
lamed was probably a degraded form of the Hieroglyphic picture of a recumbant lioness, from which
the hind quarters have disappeared. leaving two straight lines, one of which represents the outstretched
fore-paws and the other the chest.
417
* * * ^
gd ^ The early Greek \ form passed over into Italy, where it became L. From the former
^1 J through the intermediete stage h the Greek* got the form /, transmitted to the Runes, and
FJ^J this finally became A' in the Greek capitals (corresponding to the primitive A), and X in the
minuscules, which is an inverted Ayin V of the Hebrews, ♦=! of if^gyptians, i.=eye=^=l
interchangeable with r. Our own minuscule form 1, was derived from the old Roman cursive. The
Roman numeral for SO was L. but this is not the letter of the same form, but was obuined from the
Western form of the Greek letter chi, the successive sugcs being X. Y, -l. ±. L.
The letter I is usually designated as a liquid, but is more correctly designated as a frontal palatal.
It has great affinity with r, the positions of the vocal organs for forming 1 and r being nearly the same.
In sounding r the breath escapes over the tip of the tongue, while for I the tip of the tongue touches
the front palate or base of the gums, the breath escaping from the two sides of the tongue, and the
vibrations of the soft lateral edges producing slight oscillations in the force of the breath, whereas in
the case of r a stronger trill is caused by the vibrations of the tip of the tongue. In the Spanish II, the
Italian gli, and in the English word glory, the conuct with the palate is made by the middle of the
tongue instead of by the tip.
Owing to the affinity between I and r they are frequently interchanged. In some languages the
same sign was used for both sounds, and the most ancient /Egyptian the two ♦ ♦ I and r were heard
alike, but in the history of Creation written by Fnr Lamr, the wife of Noah, the Tablet of Abydus
gives the °. and in other languages the 1 or r is wanting: in old Pali the signs were interchanged:
the Japanese sign for r was bDrrowcd from a character which represented I in the Chinese: while the
Polynciians substitute I for rin foreign words as plum, (prunus), turtle, (turtur), purple, (purpura),
marble, (marmor), and pilgrim (peregrinus). We have the converse change in chapter from capit-
ulum, and lavender from lavendula, while colonel is now pronounced curnel.
The letters d and n have also an affinity with I. We have the change of d to I in lacruma for
dacruma, lingua fordingua, lapillus from lapidulus, sella from scdula, alloquor from adloquor. In the
numerals 11 and 12 the 1 is also believed to represent a primitive d. We find the change of n to 1 in
asellus dor asinulus, collegium for conlegium, and Bologna from Bononia. In the spelling of several
English Words the letter 1 has fallen out, as in such and each, from the Old English swile and aelc.
Though prescr\'ed in the spelling, it is not heard in the words alms, palm, calm, yolk, half, would
and should. A final 1 is often mute in the Scotch dialect, as in a for all, fa for fall, fu for full. In
modern French it sometimes fades to u, as in aux for a Ics, du for dc le, chevaux for chevals: the
French changed al to Eaux. In Italian it may become i, as in piano from planus. On the other
hand the I is intrusive in windless from O. E. windass, and in myrtle for myrtus, participle from par-
ticipium. From a false anilogy with would and should, where the I, derived from will and shall, is
radical, it his crspt into the spelling, though not into the pronunciation, of could, which is the past
tense of can. The M. E. form coude has no 1, while the Dutch konde and the German konnte have
preserved the n which belongs to the root.
The Furnal=Firnald=Furnel is found in Rome during the 4th & 3d century B. C, as Furnius
(two are specially mentioned as C Furnii, father and son, orators and historians, ) another, (a martyr of
the Roman Senate, was falsely accused and executed for crime of senate to prevent establishment of
reform,) u, changed into a, i, e,-a s into 1, and d.
418
m
——a ^ ^ ^ o
the thirteenth letter of our alphabet was directly derived from the primitive ^ m the 3d
letter symbol which of the three contains one curved and two straight lines although it is
described as taken from the hieroglyphic picture of the owl, which was typical of the
erudition and proclivities of its dcscribei^ whose owlish ears equaled the bird's charac-
teristics. "In the capital letter M the two peaks are the lineal descendants of the two
cars of the bird, retaining between them a not in apt representation of the beak, the first of the verticle
strokes corresponding to the beast."
It is in fact the 2d letter A without the base line and the two lines of 3d letter m brought to a
point, thus, aA= two pyramids, which, when inverted is our letter W., for Washington to day from
i^gyptian, and again, I prophecy, to be the altar built unto the Lord in the land of the Nations: from
the Pharaohs scepters the two such constitute M : from the Hebrew terminal square m=D it )s but
the points cut off and placed into position, also the said m is the top of the step pyramid of /Egypt
whose lines thereto of steps give M on one side and W on the other as the outline is traced; the alpha
ancient of the Greeks were \fi thus dclcniated which indicated that the language remotely read both
ways, as did the i^gyptian, Chinese, Htbrew and others, the two alpha banner tops put in position is
with the base lines removed the typical M and W of this epoch, the upright lime is an F and the flag
part an a, which- gives Fa the names of God as in it« primitive name is kept by the Chinese and Japa-
nese now. When taken over by the Fceniciansin the form of mm it was supposed by modern writers
to reftmble ripples, hence the name mcm=^thc waters, in Gk. mu, and nu— which indicated waters
applied to nile and mare, the ocean.— | and | — is the letter symbols in the line language of spelling
the names of Noah and Hana with the two Hebrew symbols that are in each nJ=Nh, and ort=Hm,
which in the line language is simply one of the two names read forward gives the father and the other
the son by reading from right to left — 1. And continuing our minuscule may be traced through the
Irish semi-uncial and the Caroline minuscule from the old Roman cursive, and other alphabet (that
more properly should be read alphabets). The line of B =^=3, is an m and n, interchangeable,
also F. I, J, H.
The sound of m is defined as a labial of the nasal class: that is, if the vocal organs are placed in
the position to pronounce the labial b, and the breath is allowed to pass into the nose, the sound pro-
duced is that of m. Hence m had great attraction for b, as in limb, nimble, from A. S. lim and
nimol, or in number, from Latin numerus. Sometimes m becomes b, as in marble from marmor.
So also we find the two nasals, m and n. interchanging according to the nature of the contiguous con-
sonants. Thus n changes to m before a labial, as in inpcrator for impcrator, while m changes to n
before gutturals and dentals, as in conjux and concordia, ih in ant from O. E. aemete, ransom from
redcmptionem, and count from computare.
Nthe fourteenth letter in onr alphabet language made up of all languages on earth, is derived
from the primitive O in its first change to B=a=B, from A primitive and M=V from
which is waters, as mA from sin and shin of Arabs, and older s an s c : from Abyssin-
ian, Chaldean, Chariemagne r, m, k, i, Chinese radical 47, Hebrew Olef, m, a, f and s,
Irish m, Hlyrian z, x, m, s, and f, Japanese oop-pah=a basin and tsoon=common. Monks
N. Norman B, Foenician C, Persian sin, shin, Russian ze-mlia, Samaritan a. h, hh, s, t, tch, r the
tidal wave Swedish hh, s, and f, Tamulic na by comparison with those symbols that most resemble
water and N. The sound of N is a nasal dental and produced when the organs are in position to
pronounce d. and breath passed into nose. Hence n attracts d, as in expound from expono, sound
from sonus. thunder from thunor. hind from O. E. hine, M and N arc interchanged according to
] "^ %^ □
<2
^ ^ L>
OP
the nature of the following consonant. If it is a labial n it changes to tn, as in hemp from Old Eng-
lish hancp, or comfort from comfortare: but if it is a dental m changes to n, as in ant from O. E.
amctc, or count from computarc. We also find an intrusive n before gutturals and dentals, as in
nightingale from Old English nihtegale, messenger from mcssager, passenger from passagcr, or lan-
.tern from laterna.
is the first letter symbol GOD gave to Ava and Adam in the garden of Eden and is ver)-
prominent on the iEgyptian tombs and other inscriptions its divine meaning is ONE GOD
for all sons and dauglitcrs of mankind; its count is 1000 as a numeral— it is the end of the
Roll of laws and Commandments written by Deity's own hand; its name is F and pro-
nounced Fa=ra in the Chinese language and is FA=)' in Japanese script. The heavens
by day display its picture that we call Sun and at night it is seen in the planets of the Moon and Stars.
It is the first letter of Omnipresent, Omniscient and Omnipotent GOD.
God's Prayer for mankind and creation has inside of it the numeral II which, when counted
with the circle denotes Trinity.
It is called Ayin the eye in Scmetic language and is anatomically the pupil of the eye an old form
°^r^l that was called incorrectly the oldest is a picture of the eye of cats, and designates sex; mouth,
and was used for the name of the Lord in the history of creation. The Foenicians who transmitted
it to the Greeks that used the symbol for o and ou, and o, which they required. In the earliest Greek
that were co-existant with the pyramid builders as were the Hebrews, and probably conversant with
the primitive alphabet, used O to represent all three sounds. About 550 B. C, "the symbol was dif-
ferentiated the closed form o called omicron, or little o, being appropriate for the short o, while it
was opened out at the bottom for long o or Omega," is not correct but they copied the three small
o's in a part of the primitive M=V and retained the upper portion which they turned Upside.;^wn-
forming the Omega=Q, or great O. In the lulic alphabets said to have been obtained frorn Greece
before the invention of the omega, only the first of these symbols appears, whereas in the. Runes,
which were obtained at a somewhat later date, the vowel o is expressed by a symbol derived from
omega. In our English alphabet, returning to primitive, this letter has been more stable than in any
other, except the primitive. Its form is the same as found on the Moabite stone whose nation was
conversant with the primitive alphabet, commands and laws, and its value agrees with the same in
Greek and Latin, while it is the only English vowel which normally possesses the same sound which
it has in French, German, and other modern continental tongues or languages.. The sound is in-
termediate between a and u, and may arise out of either — i. e. it may represent an Anglo-Saxon a or u
as well as an Anglo-Saxon o. In English it has three values: the name-«ound heard in note, which
is described without knowledge as the original sound, the shorter sound heard in not, and the neutral
sound heard in son, which is not strictly correct as the sound was from Fa Fo Fa. In English the
name sound may be represented in ten ways, as in the words pile, goat, the-, yeoman, sow, sew,
hautboy, beau, owe, and through. The ^Egyptian numeral 10, its literal meaning is ONE CJOD.
Se« p. 381. This book In every home t test by whioh to lepartle the whe«l (rotti Ihe ch»i(, tua ud cocUo. • cnidble by which lo separate the
(Old from the dross and base metal, or the cupal by which to try the current course ol politics, and a school Text Book by which lo )udje o( Ihe ortho-
doxy 01 poUtlcal disquisitions, orthodoxy o( Church teachlnp that usurp attributes ol t>elty.
I. Sir Anthony Cook, Preceptor to Edward VI. m. Had: Mildred, m. Buricigh: Anne, m.
Sir Nicholas Bacon: Elizabeth, m. Sir John Russell: Catherine, m. Sir Henry Killcgrew: II. Robert,
educated at Oxford, as able Divine, m. Elizabeth, da. Wm. & Jane (Haynes) Samwell: d. 1614:
Had: III. Francis of Plymouth 1620, m. Had: IV. Richard (Aaron) Rep. Dover, m. Had:V. Elisha,
(Elkanah) m. Had: VI. Meddlecott, Grad. 1723, Har. Coll., m. Had: VII, Captn. James, b. Nov.
1728, the Navigator, m. da. Captn. Furnace^Furneaux=Fernel of Marble Head, Had chn. He
was given a Medal of Honor. Pensioned by the king, /200: chn. /25 each: VIII. Joseph Coock,
of Middlcton Town, U. S. A., C. m. Had chn. IX. Robert Joseph m. da. Samuel Jones, Had: X.
Louis, m. Had: XI. Maria, m. Uncle George C. Pike. Part of facts in stolen, MSS. Records show-
ing relationship of thehon. F. A. Cook, discoverer of North Pole to line, recovered too late to print
on page 392. 44 by name Grad. in N. E. Coll. 11 were ministers.
.a ^ ^ ^ D.
Pis the sixteenth letter in our alphabet. The symbol was derived from the hieroglyphic pic-
ture of Trinity in the 3d letter of the Primitive Alphabet by removing the left upper portions
of the arch and the straight line below and then placing them in position, as "i" = '; from
the Arabic he and lam, but not in old Arabic: Chaldean q: 2. Radical of Chinese; Old
English P, English, French P, Georgian b and zz, German p and Rho of the Greek: quof
of Hebrew; P of Irish, right part of v, andy, in Illyrian; Japanese 14 symbol ka, or, me, may, can,
a mosciieto also by addition of two more lines or crowns=ga, a goose; Monks P; Norman c, n, r,
FcEnician k, Persian dal, and zal, Roman p, Saracen m, Sclavonic part of a, m, s, and si; Saxon P.
It is the base line and half circle of the B in Genesis of first word Brasft. The sound of p is the sharp
labial mute. Hence it is interchangeable with other labials, especially with the flat labial mute.
Most languages gives a preference to one of these two sounds. Thus the Etru.'icans preferred p and
have no b in their alphabet, whereas the teutonic dislike p, especially as a n initial. Only six -primi-
tive Teutonic words, probably loan words, begin with p, and in Beowulf and Csedmon, taken together,
only three such words arc found. In Moes<vGothic the Greek p was used by Ulphilas, but only for
foreign words, such as Paul, Pontius Pilate, prophet and presbyter. Most of our English words begin
with p, suci as plough, parish, people or princes arc loan words from Greek, Latin or Celtic. A
"primitive Aryan p corresponds to a Teutonic f, and it is only a primitive b, a very rare letter, which ^
can correspond to a Teutonic p. A Welsh p corresponds to a Gaelic c and an English F. Thus, the
Gaelic mac^son, is the Welsh map or ap. TTie Gaelic cethair is the Welsh pedwar, and the English
four; and the Gaelic coic is the Welsh pump and English five. Owing to French influence the Eng-
lish prejudice against p begins to disapf)ear in the 13th century, and we get gossip instead of older
god sib, apricot for abricot, and purse for borsc, though even here the b is retained in disburse. A p
also intrudes between m and t, as in empty for O. E. oemtig, and tempt from the Old French tenter.
In Latin p intrudes also between m and 1, as in the words exemplsc and templuc. In like cases, as in
humble for humilis, b is usually the intrusive letter in English words.
/.^^^ is the seventeenth letter of our alphabet. The symbol was derived from the Primitive
■ I ri ^^^^^^ 0=F and only changed by adding in the capital a reversed letter s which is formed
W p Vy by union of two c's; it was taken over by the Fcenicians (supposed) as the letter quoph,
^^j^ which became koppa among the Greeks. It was disused among the Ionian Gks. tefcre
the middle of the Sth century B. C, keeping its place only as a numeral. It was retained for a whW
in the Dorian alphabet, lingering longest on the coins of Corinth. On the coins of Syracuse it was
replaced by k about 480 B. C. In the Italian alphabet that was obtained ftom the Greeks or Greece
before the letter was disused, the symbol was appropriated Latin sound of the velar gutural kw. The
letter q is absent from the Anglo-Saxon alphabet, in which the sound was expressed by the cw as in
cwen for queen, and cwic for quick. It makes its appearance about 1160, and at first was only used
for Latin or French words, such as quarter or quarrel. Before the close of the 13th century it was
adopted in genuine English words, such as qualm, quell, quick and queen. In Scotland it replaced
the hw, as in quhat for hwat (what). It is also derived as heretofore stated from the Greek old ph
which by separating gives the modern q and p. In English it is always followed by u.
0^^\ is the eighteenth letter of our alphabet and is a descendant of sections of the first primitive
dm/ O, also of 3d primitive M after which I find it in the Bible of
VX
421
D ^ 4, ^ D-
the three primitive letters in form of an egg or oval. It is employed to represent Lxjrd God: mouth,
eye, etc. In ancient Egyptian the distinction was a dot in the centre, causing it to more perfectly
resemble the eye, and on the history of creation it has three upright lines that read double, viz: Lord
God Trinity, and Fo instructions to Noah to build the Ark three stories high. Both sounds of 1 and
r are liquid trills, the breath escaping over the vibrating edges of the tongue-tip and sides. Conse-
quently the hieroglyphic picture of the lioness from which our letter 1 was derived, or stated to be,
was used interchangeable with rYl=», which we moderns have here differentiated. In the early
Greek as in the Foenician the forms of b, d and r differed but little, and confusion arose. Hence the
sign was differentiated in various ways. In the early Greek which found its way into Italy, the tail of
the P was curved towards it, giving form of B, while for d the tail was shortened and finally disaf>-
p>cared, giving D. For ra short tail was added, giving P abbreviated, which ultimately became R,
while the form P was retained to represent r in the Eastern alphabets and in the Western to represent
p. The tail of R began to make its appearance in the Greek alphabet before ii was transmitted to
Italy, but subsequently disappeared, other ways of avoiding the confusion having been invented. For
the lapidary and capital forms the old R has been retained, but in minuscle writing we use r and r,
the first of which is an uncial form derived from R; the second, called the r rotunda, coming from
the old Roman cursive, in which the vertical stroke of P has nearly disappeared, being represented by
the small tag at the top of r. (Author is not responsible for typographical errors in this book.)
The sound of r is a true consonant in the north of England, where it is exaggerated in the
Northumberland burr. In Sanskrit it is vocalic; in the South of England it isoften reduced to a semi-
vowel or even to a vowel; while in the Midlands, in Scotland and in France it preserves the prof>cr
sound of a trilled liquid which it had in Latin and Anglo-Saxon. After a guttural vowel it is hardly
heard, father being almost indistinguishable from farther. The Irish r is a survival of the old English
sound, the pronunciation harum for harm, arum for arm, and boren for born reproducing, it is be-
lieved, mediaeval English sound, which is now resonant less than formerly. The sounds of r and 1
are often interchanged. In the Indian alphabet the Semitic or Hamitic symbol for r represents 1.
The Japanese sign for r was obtained from the Chinese 1, and some Polynesian and South Afncan
people replace r for the easier sound of 1, as is also done by English children, who, however, often
prefer w, saying vewy for very. The sound of r is usually the last which children learn to pronounce.
In English 1 frequently replaces r and occasionally r replaces 1, as in turban from tolibant. Sometimes
r disappears as in speak from O. E. spraecan, pin from preon, palsy from paralysie, and cockade from
O. Fr. cocart. It is intrusive in shrill from O. E. schill, in hoarse from hos, in partridge from Lat.
pcdrix, in cartridge from Fr. cartouche, in corporal from Fr. caporal, and in culprit from Lat. Culpa.
It is also intrusive in Iron and in Bridegroom. There is modern tendency to insert a final r, as in
taters for poUtoes and Victoriar for Victoria. In the words our, your, their, her, the r is transposed, as
in horse from hross. In Latin r supplants s between two vowels and sometimes at the end of words,
as arena for asena, dari for dasi, plurima for plusima, honor for honos, arbor for arbos.
"Salus populi est lex suprcma." Judge Blackstone says: "Every man, when he enters into so-
ciety, gives up a part of his natural liberty; as a price of so valuable purchase; and in consideration of
receiving the advantages of mutual commerce obliges himself to conform to those laws which the
community has thought proper fo establish." D Proof of U four-LINES GENEALOGY corresponds.
mi ^ ^ ^ D-
the nineteenth letter in our own and most western alphabet is descended from the right
side of the 3d primitive letter V and found continued in the Greek sigma from shin, the
twenty-first Semitic letter. The Foenician symbol w supposed to have arisen out of the
hieratic form of the hieroglyphic piaure of planu in an inundated garden. It came down
from the steps pyramid of itgypt and Roman cursive into our long S, the tick on the left of f being a
surviving vestige of the lower curve of* which when separated in the center horizontally gives two letters
C, and G, which are the initials of Creator God and son Christ. The sound of S is the hard open sibi-
lant— a hiss formed by bringing the blade of the tongue near the front of the palate— the sound of z
being the corresponding soft open sibilant. In Latin the sound of z does not exist, consequently the
letter disappeared, and in its place io the alphabet was taken by the new letter g. In the time of
Cicero it was reintroduced for the transliteration of Greek words. Anglo-Saxon, also, had no z, the
letter being introduced for the representation of Greek and French words, such as zone, zest, or zeal.
But, although wc now possess the letter we arc chary of its use, and its sound is constantly rcpretented
by (, as in reason, rose, rise. We use s both in hiss and his, in hearse and hers, in curse and curs, in
loose and lose, though in one case the sound is that of s and the other of z. Few English genuine
words have z, though in some cases, such as freeze and dizzy, owing to Norman influence, a z has re-
placed an old English s. Sometimes, as in sugar and sure, s has the sound of sh or zh, a sound that
usually arises from the softening of the Anglo-Saxon sc, as in shall from sceal, shame from scamu,
fish from fisc, shade from scadu. or sheep from sceap. This change is characteristic of southern dia-
lects, the northern Skipton (sheeptun) answering to the southern Shipton. So skipper and Shipper
are doublets, obtained from the northern and southern forms of the same word. Occasionally the
Anglo-Saxon form is preserved, as in scar and score, or is replaced by sk, as in skin. Owing to French
influence c acquires a sibilant sound before e and i, and hence in a few words an Anglo-Saxon s has
been replaced by c, as in mice, from A. S. mys, or once from ones. A final s sometimes disappears
owing to its having been mistaken for the sign of the plural, as in pea from the O. F. peis (Latin
pisum), peas or pease being regarded as a plural, of which pea was erroneously supposed to be the
singular. In the same way the French cerise and relais have given us cherry and relay, the final s in
cherries and relays being regarded as the plural sign. Occasionally s is intrusive as in island, frcm
A. S. ea-land, an error due to the false analogy of isle which comes from insula; or in aisle from the
French aile, or in splash for plash, where the s seems to be an intensitivc. In Greek and Welsh s
weakens to h, as is seen by comparing the Greek hepta with the Latin septem, or the Welsh hen with
the Irish sen. A German s may represent an English t, as in wasser for water, or heiss for hot. In
Latin an s changed a preceding b to f and m to n, as in scripsi from scribo, and consul from ccmsul;
and it assimilated a preceding t or d, as in cessum for cedsum, and mons for monts. Before m, n, d,
1, r a medial s disappears, as in judex for jusdex, or idem for isdem. A final s sometimes disappears,
as in ipse for ipsus; and between two vowels it becomes r, as in aurum forausum, or aurora for ausosa
SS, Color of, a collar composed of a series of the letter S in gold, either linked together or set in close
order. Such collars have been worn much in England by persons holding great offices in the State-
Ancestor Sir Thomas More! (Sec plate 1234, p. 240) Genealogy line in Chart. pi-US x & vat. re-
fused to sign with rcpresntativesof 1,160,000.000 for MONUMENTS, & 1,41 1,171,381 for PURITY.
a %^ B -= =
423
==a ^ ^ ^ Q=
^^H|^ is thc_ twentieth letter in our'alphabet which is derived from the second, also the third
/ "m I primitive Sacred Symbols of A and M by placing the horizontal line at the top of A, alto
AIL by raising one of the upright lines to a horizontal position thus, A. T. which the Greeks
^^^ give the name tau. It is found on the Moabitc Stone of Genealogy, the Baal Lebanon
Inscription, and those from Thera with the form T, in Arabic ta and da, and old Arabic
in a, Chaldean d, z, q. Charlemagne 1, 3 letters in Cherokee, French T, Georgian hha, German tay.
Gothic g, t, w, Hebrew Coin v, h, hh, Irish minuscule F, i, r, 1, and a line writing. Illyrian s, i, s. f,
Japanese I meaning the gall. Monks t, Norman z, Saracen v. r, Sclavonian o. z, he, pi, Saxon t,
Syriac tamulic ta, Thibctian k, are all samples of like descendant formation.
The sound of T is that of a hard dental mute, and is produced by the tip of the tongue being
brought into contact with the base of the upper teeth, or, as in trance, with the front of the hard pal-
ate. The difference between d and t is that the first is voiced soft, and the second voiceless or hard.
By Grimm Law a primitive t becomer th in Low German which is proved by 3d primitive alphabet
Symbol T^^=S T=Th, fromV=-» i^dll, and d in Old High German. Thus the Latin tu and
tres, becomes thou and three in Eng., and du, and drei in German A primitive d becomes t in Low
Ger., and tin Old High German.
Thus the Latin duo, decern and dens become two ten and tooth in Eng., and qwci, zehn and
zahn in German. A primitive th (dh) becomes d in Low German, and t in Old High G. Thus
the Gk. thugater is daughter in English, and tochtcr in German. The primitive T is in the JEgyp-
tian is our D with the arch above, and a D with the arch pointing down.
A final, n, s or r often attracts an intrusive t, as in the words tyrant, parchment, cormorant, an-
cient, pheasant, against, amongst, acidst, behest or thuart. A final t sometimes disappears, as in anvil
or petty. A t followed by i or y may lapse into the sound of sh, as in nation; or if followed by u,
sounded as iu, it may become tsh, as in nature. A final c may also become tch, as in thatch or watch.
A t may become d, as has happened with the words proud, bud diamond and card; or d may become
t, as in clot, abbot and partridge. In Latin a t is assimilated before s, as in missi, from mitto, and at
the end of a word only one s is retained, thus giving virtus for virtut-s, sors for sorts, or compos for
compots. English, Welsh, Spanish and Greek are the only languages that possess the difficult aspir-
ated sound of th. In French loan-words, as the and theologic, the th is pronounced as t, and the
same is now the case in German, as in the words thai, their and thun (now often spelt tal, tier, tun.)
^m !■ '^ '^^ twenty-first letter in our own alphabet that was derived from the Sacred Primitive
J rj Alphabet, 3d letter Symbol, which only consists of cutting off the top and bottom parts,
iri Also from the 2d by removing base line and inverting it which forms the historic vau whose
^^ direct ancestor and descendant is F, which will continue to retain its place as the sixth
Jetter of our own alphabet. The vau was affixed to "the ^Egyptian hieroglyphic picture of the
Cerastes or horned asp which the writers give the value of f that was applied to the Fabi family. The
two bars equal to the authors are the homes and the upright line the body of the snake," which trash
with the absurdities of mythological history it is about time to be expunged by properly educated per-
sons, i. In Y we have the degraded part of 3d symbol of primitive alphabet, as one in the line and the
portions representing God and Christ is removed, to be followed in this century
^m r^ ^^ removal of Hebrew, Roman Catholic and Protestant Bibles from our Schools in harmony
J U with the hypocrites that profess to worship God live in contention with better christians than
MAM. '^^^ ^"^^ themselves, which I leave to be settled by God. From the Foenician symbol, whose
,^(k^ form was intermediate between F and y, the Greeks evolved two characters,— one was the
Diagamma which had a consonantal sound, and was carried to Italy before it fell out of al-
phabetical use in Greece, and survives as our F; the other was a sign called upsilon, which at first re-
sembled our y, but soon lost its tail, and took the form of v, which had the value of V, and VV, also U.
The form v was carried to Italy, where it represented the sound u and our w. From the form V, the
lapidary and capital, the cursive and uncial forms U and u were developed. In the 10th century the
capital V began to be preferred for initials, and the uncial form for medials, and the consonant being
more common at the beginning of Latin words, and the vowel in the middle, the initial form V grad-
ually appropriated as the symbol for the consonant, and the medial form u asthc symbol for the vowel.
But the old usage long survived. Thus as late as 161 1 v and u were still used in King James's Bible
merely as initials and medials, as is shown by such spelling as vnto and haue. In modern English the
letter has three sounds, the long u, short u, and the neutral vowel. The long u, heard in the word
rude, has the sound of the A. S. u, which is southern English has usually become a diphthong,
represented by ou, as in the words thou, house, mouse, written thu, hus, mus in A. S., or by ow, as
in the words how, now, cow, prow, town, written, hu, nu, cu, bru and tun in A. S. In northern
English the old sound is frequently retained cow, house, town, as coo, hoose and toon. The short
A. S. u has in a few cases retained its sound, as in full, bollock, but, like the long u, it has frequently
lapsed into the neutral vowel, as in sun and hunger (A. S. sunnc and hungor). This sound is more
commonly represented by o, as in son and some, A. S. sunu, and sum. Here again the old sound is
occasionally retained in the northern English, as in come, A. S. cuman, pronounced coom. In
French (as in du) and in Welsh u has a narrow sound unknown in English (though common among
the lower classes in some parts of Scotland), which is nearly the same as that in the German u of
Mullcr. The peculiar sound of u in duke is due to the fact it is a loan-word from the French due.
The German and Italian u is the long u in brute.
^%L^' the twenty-second letter of our alphabet was derived from the 2d of Sacred Primitive Alpha-
Iri ^'^'' '^^ ^ inverted without the cross line. The English sounds of f and v are closely re-
1 1 I lated : they are both labio-dcntals, formed by bringing the lower lip into contact with the
'^ upper teeth, v being the soft or voiced sound, and f the hard or unvoiced sound. This close
relation of the sounds explains the derivation of one form from the other, and accounts for
the fact that in the Anglo-Saxon alphabet there was no separate sound for v, the symbol of f represent-
ing both sounds as indicated by the fact that io A. S. the Latin words Virgilius and levisticum were
transliterated Firgilius and lufestice. It is believed that a medial f was pronounced as v, and an addi-
tional f as f. Thus in A. S. the words over, heaven and five are writen ofer, hefon and fif. The sym-
bol use of v is to denote the voiced labio-dcntal, is believed to be due to French influence, as it came
soon after the Norman Conquest. Thus in the Peterborough Ms. of the Saxon Chronicle which was
written before 1131, we find silver and luve (love) replacing the seofor and lufe of the earlier copies.
In Latin the consonantal sound of v was that of our w, as is shown among other proofs by the name
of the letter which is vc. If the sound had been that of our v, which is a continuant, the name
would have been ev, following the analogy of ef, es, and the
-a 4^ ^ ^ o
other continuants. But the name ve, originally pronounced we, follows the analogy of be, pe, and
the other explosives, and hence the sound must have been that of w, an explosive. The change from
the explosive to the continuant sound must have taken place in France before the Prankish conquest,
and from France it came to us. In Germany the symbol v normally retains the old value f, our v
sound being represented by w, (310 hours taken to correct a small error in Mss. by Author.)
^^ ^ ^ the twenty-third letter of our alphabet is derived from the primitive sacred alphabet A
J -1 -• that God made a counterpart of in Pyramid Lake, Oregon "In the land of Omo=An-
T -■ ■■ nona=America" U. S. A., which is the same picture symbolic, picture united with a
<^l^ ^ pyramid of iEgypt, indicative of the fall of the country of the antediluvians and jtgypt
by the same being turned upside down forming two V'scompleting our own sign of this
country's capitol Washingtons' initials, the father of the people after God, who has placed in the
minds and desires of all his children to labor and aid with and for purity and universal good in impar-
tial justice for all the descendants of ever, pure Ava; and Adam.
The V serpent story is a lineal descendant of the Serpent Mound earthly records at Adams county
Ohio and Pyramid Lake memoranda and its pure deep waters without visible outlet. We may trace
the w as kept by the primitive 2d and 3d letters of the alphabets of the world and its hidden histories
made in prime essentials clear. W is like ae, a ligature-rather than a simple letter as is implied by the
name w, or double u^^oublc vv=uu, and minuscule omega of Greeks. In the very early West
Saxon MSS. the sound is represented by uu, a digraph for which the Northumbrian rune P, called
wen is a primitive representation of the Lake waters 2nd symbolic mounds of antediluvians; the sound
under certain conditions is represented by the Ocean, whose mysterious voices, fill the mind with
ideas of the grandure of our Creator, Omnipotent,-scient, — present GOD; the wen was used till the
13th century, except in Anglo-Norman MSS. such as Domesday Book, where the French scribes use
uu for medials, and for initials the capital form VV, which, when ligatured, became our W. The
sound, which is nearly that of the Greek digamma and of the Roman consonantal V, is produced by
rounding the lips as in uttering u, and at the same time contracting the aperture and" drawing in the
cheeks, so that the breath cannot escape without friction.
When the sound is voiced we have w, as in the words we or wen, the corresponding unvoiced
sound being wh, as in when, which, or what. The A. S. hw has now become wh, the aspiration
being almost lost in the southern English, but in the north the old sound has been preserved, and we
still hear hwich and hwat instead of which and what. In the old combination wr the symbol w has
been preserved, but the sound has been lost, as in the words wright, wrench, wrong, wrist. The
combination cw has become qu, as in quoth from cwaeth, queen forcwen. and quench from cwencan
The w is occasionally intrusive, as in whole from hal, "and whore from hore." The intrusive w is
probably due from anology, and is useful as distinguishing the words from the homophones hole and
hoar. A final w is vocalic, as in few and new, where the spellings arc survivals from the A.S., feawa,
and niwe, in which the w was a consonant. Here the consonantal sound has been lost, owing to the
loss of the final colliding vowel. The Hps were rounded to pronounce u, and then contracted to pro-
nounce the following vowel, and when this disappeared only the sound of u was left. So in the
French oui the sound of w is produced by rounding the lips to pronounce ou (our u) and by then
narrowing them for the i. We find w in a few modern, French loan-words, such as whist and whis-
key, but the sound is usually represented by ou, as in Edouard. In the old French loan-words an
initial w was represented by gu, as Guillaumc for William. In modern (history vs. superstitions)
Welsh a vocalic w, when short, has the sound of coin good: when long, oo in boon.
Xis the twenty-fourth letter in our alphabet and derived from the primitive A of the Sacred
Alphabet symbol and V indicative of the fall of Adam, who opposed the Commands of
God, also, it indicates the pyramid of Lake Oregon, and /Egypt: the point of the sword
of evil opposed to the point of the sword of God: Affinity, etc.
In its descent we find more or less distinct forms in the following alphabets: — In the
Arabic Nishlci 24th called he and in the older 20th gc: Armenian 30th view and 35 pure=Gk. ph. :
Ssth alphabet a and ph; perfect q: Charlemagne less perfect y, in Chinese Radicals 1 1th, 24, 41, 52,
54, 56; Coptic ch; Cherokee X, and next letter is A the picture symbol of Oregon L. pyramid;
Dalmatian i perfect with base lines: X of Abbe Barthalemi, called i^Bgyptian; Old English- perfect:
French X: Gothic ch, perfect: Greek Chi; Hebrew coin tawv X; (when perfect or nearly so it is
indicated by the letter) Japane.se, noo, or noog=embroidery: Norman h: Foeniciant; Persian min
and ha; Runic, a part of h, and y; Russian khier X; Samaritan v; Saracen y=X; Saxon X. In the
Greek the sound is ch. In the original Italic the letter existed, disused, and readopted, it was xi and in
15th place Quintilian proved the preceeding facts; it is found in an inscription written 186 B. C, and
in an undated inscription that was supposed to have been 30 years earlier. In modern English it, x,
has the value of ks, which it had in the Anglo Saxon; except at the beginning of a word, where it is
pronounced like z. In Italian x has been replaced by ss, parts of 3d primitive M, as in massimo for
maximus. In French ss sometimes replaces x, as in cuisse, and laisser, from coxa, and laxare, while
as may become ux, as in yeux, eux, deux, and epoux. In Spanish x had the power of the German
ch, but the Spanish Academy has decreed its replacement byj; Mexico, Xalapa, and Don Quixote
being now spelt Mcjico, Jalapa, and Don Quijote. As a numeral X stands for 10. X is an abbrevia-
tion taken from the PIKES* name, one date on a Lamp, 200 years B. C, that is erroneously used to
represent Christ — hence Xian, Xmas: x in Algebra is the first of the unknown quantities: and the
use of X, XX, and XXX on barrels of alcoholics is a well-known way of indicating its quality. All of
which has toxicological constituents, degrading men, destroying nations
fig the twenty-fifth letter of our alphabet and derived from the 3d symbol of the Primitive
Sacred Alphabet, and the 2d, with the base of the pyramid attached to its apex lines. The
Greek letter upsilon two, form of V, and Y; "the first was taken over into Italy with origi-
nal value of u in rude, which it still retains, the U which resembles a bason, being analo-
gous to Pyramid Lake without visable outlet. In the classical age the Greek upsilon
had acquired a thinner sound, nearly that of the French ii, or the German U in iiber, the diagraph
ou being employed by the Greeks to represent the older sound, wh which had been preser\-ed in
Latin. In the time of Cicero the symbol Y was borrowed by the Romans from Grecian order to
transliterate the upsilon in Greek loan-words, if their knowledge of the primitive alphabet had been
lost, which is exceedingly doubtful, as on Dighton Rock was photographed by me characters that
Marcus Aggrippa Lucius Furnius was conversant with as is found in his chiseled inscription containing
primitive language that Christ used when he conversed in "tongues." The Greek ou and o being
transliterated by U, as in the word Lycurgus. The following alphabets contain some, and many all,
of the Y parts or forms: — Arabic in dal and dhsal: Old Arabic in g, and ch by raising them into posi-
tion: Armenian in tzah by placing it in Y position: Abyssinian, a part of 3d primitive M:
•See Plates 1216. page 234: ••59 p. 26. To convince a stupid, bigoted man agaliut his will leaves him of the same mind stiU.
^
C] ^ <4. f4^ D"
fin "Chaldian" o and Scth's n: Charltmagnc in part of z: Chinese 9 & 11th RadicaFs:
Babylonish a as arranged in Plate of Chinese Seals: in Cherokee; Dalmatian in n; French
Y : Gothic in W : Greek v : Hebrew a, and q : Japanese, a part in 1 is, iro, a paint, 2 is iro,
=various 3 is irodor, to paint, 4 idom=to excite, 5ii=to boil, 6 is lo-i=a read, 7 hatsi-a
bee; Monks Y; Persian dal, and zal Runic E, and k: Russian Y: Saxon Y;
That Y was introduced into Italy before O is shown by the relative position of the two letters in
the alphabet. Our English use ofy is unique. Save in a few exceptional cases where it is used, as in
Latin, to trance literate Greek words, such as hypcertola, hydrostatics, tyrant, or hypocrite, it is not
descended from the upsilon, but from the Greek garrma; g in middle English assuming a form
which became so nearly identical with that of y that ultitraielj it replaced it, just as the resemblance
of y to the mnc thorn has led to our writing ye instead of the. The history of the change is curious.
With the other Latin letters y was properly introduced into the Anglo-Saxon alphabet, retaining its
Latin value, an i pronounced with the lips somewhat rounded; a sound which has passed intoi or the
neutral vowel, as in the words birth, wright, hill, king, evil, her, or worm, which were originally
spelt with y. Hence as a matter of fact the Anglo-Saxon y has left no lineal descendants in any
modern English word. Meanwhile another letter resembling the form of y, but representing a diff-
erent sound, was being evolved out of the Anglo-Saxcn g, which weakened before or after front
vowels; and having thus acquired two values, its Anglo-Saxon form 3 was conveniently used to de-
note the weak sound, the Caroline form, g, being reserved for the stopped g. In Middle English this
decayed sound was represented 3, and in the ISth century the written form of 3 and y approximated
so closely as to be almost indistinguishable. Hence early in the 16th century, after the introduaion
of printing, the form y came to be generally used instead of 3, the Anglo-Saxon vocalic y being ulti-
mately replaced by i, or some other vowel. Thus we obtained the double value of y in modern Eng-
lish. In such words as ye, yes, yea, yet, year, which represents the Anglo-Saxon gc, gcsc, gea, git,
gear, the sign y is not really! a y. but stands for the Middle English 3, which is the Anglo-Saxon form,
of g. Ay appears before back vowels in young and yard owing to the loss of the front vowel in the
Anglo-Saxon geong geard. It has also been introduced by analogy into the words yon and yew, from
the Anglo-Saxon cow and cow, but not into the homophone ewe, from the Anglo-Saxon ccw;u. In
some modern loan-words.^such as yacht, yawl, and Yakut, it has been introduced to transliterate the
continental j. The common English final y, also reprcfentf an Anglc-Saxcn g, as in the words lady,
army, many, busy, empty, body, day, key, may, say, gray, eye. By analogy it has crept into words
of a different origin.^such as Jolly (O. F. jolif) tardy (Fr. tardif) crockery, jetty, nunnery, and
mummy. In by and my, and perhaps in sky, it has been introduced from analogy with such words
as dry, fly, shy, where the y is really Middle English 3. In the 14th century a fashion set in of sub-
stituting the vocalic y for i.
This fasion disappeared in the 16th Century, leaving a trace in the y of rhyme, a misspelling for
rime, which has been retained owing to the erroneous notion that it was a loan-word from the Greek
rythmos, and not the Anglo-Saxon rim. Also by analogy y represents the final vowel in such Greek
loan-words as academy or irony. Our peculiar consonantal sound of y, due as we have seen to the
weakening of the Anglo-Saxon g, is unknown on the Continent, where its place has been taken by
the evolution of a consonantal j, as in jule and jahr.'our yule and year. Our j is due to French in-
fluence as in the words Journey, jest, jewel, Jane. Italy replaced y by i. In other contincntial lang-
uages, few exceptions, it is normally used, as in Latin, for transliterating upsilon in Greek loan-words.
^o
^^^ the twenty-sixth letter of our own alphabet was derived from the Universal Primitive Sacred
gJ^ Alphabct=AL— FA — B — ET Second A=A Symbol and consists of an equal division of the
0 Noah and family inscription Pyramid and the God built Pyramid of Oregon Lake, United
^i^^ States of North America and the letter hieroglyphic is the initial of Zana da. twin Cain and
Ca na fa ta far born daughter that united or married godly Abel, whose daughter Sana mar-
ried nr=ST=as we have the name SETH.
Component parts of this letter exist in every alphabet of the world that hath a straight or oblique
line, and their blood flows in every human being upon the earth: that we call by the name Globe,
which is in form like unto the symbol of the name of God in the first letter of the first alphabet whose
^Egyptian meaning in our English is — "God the Pure God, the Trinity Created Woman and Man
to Beget Christ the Son of God."
Now as the faithful and erudite Philologist has given us a harvest of excellent facts and data to
honor him is our pleasure that all may be conversant with the many good and great things he has
gleaned in the study of his fore parents graneries of wisdom and knowledge that the haivett might
benefit and gladden his worthy descendants.
Therefore! But though in form and station zeta corresponds to zayin, yet through some con-
fusion san acquired the name of zayin (ds), and zeta that of tsadc (ts). In the old Italic "abccedaria"
the letter Z occupies, like zeta, the seventh place, and the letter survived in Oscan, Umbrian, and
Etruscan: but, as the sound did not exist in Latin, the letter was discarded, not later than the 3d
century B. C, when its alphabetic station was usurped by the new letter G. In the first century B.C.
it was reintroduced from Greece in the uncial form Z, in order to transliterate Greek words. To-
gether with the symbol, the name zed was borrowed from the Greek zeta, whereas if the letter had
been continuously retained in the Latin alphabet the name, following the analogy of the other Latin
letters, would have been ez. It is curious that zed, the only Semetic letter came that we retain,
should have belonged originally to the Fcenician letter which has disappeared in every Europeen
alphabet. It can hardly be said that z was an Anglo-Saxon letter, as it is only used in Biblical names,
such as Zaccheus: even now it appears in very few native English words, the sound, when we have
it, being usually represented by s, as in the words Wednesday, thousand, tongs, weeds, tease, cheese,
knees, these, his, and is. We use it for words of Greek, Hebrew, and Arabic origin, such as zoology,
zephyl", zeal, zany, Zedekiah, Zebulon, azure, zenith, magazine, gauze, zero, zodiac, or gazelle.
Owing to French influence it has taken the place of s in a few English words, such as dizzy, frozen,
hazel, squeeze, and sneeze: and it represents a French s in hazard, lizard, and buzzard. It is intru-
sive in citizen, from the French citoyen. The sound of our z is a voiced sibilant, either a voiced s as
in zeal, or a voiced sh as in azure, French sounds which we borrowed. The value in Latin and
Greek is doubtful: probably it was either dz or zd. By Grimm's law a German z answers to an Eng-
lish t and a Latin d, as in the words zw ei, two, duo: or zahn, tooth, dens. The cedilla ( ^ ) is a
little zed, as is implied by the Italian name zediglia, from zcticula.
History is the preserver of the records of sciences, the latter often repaying the boon by verif}'ing
the annals of the former; and how beautiful do the examples we have given illustrate the truth, that
all fragments of varied knowledge are but
•' parts of one stiipendous vhole.
Whoso body Nature Is. and God the soul "
(H
OURTEOUSLY WE EARNFSTLYCIVF THKTHREEGREAT PETITIONS LAWS'
ALL OF To
T I ONS
CARE
CONSID
8 O LU
THE Honorable > Senators and REPaEBENTATiVES in
CkjMMONWEALTH . OF MaS8ACHUBBTT8.
Gentlemen: —
I. We, who have affijced our signatures, do most respectfully
(§
THE NA-
TO AS
FU L LY
KR THIS
I 1 O N
EST PROBLEM
AND IN THEIR
POWER TO EN-
THE HAGUE BY
PERFECT LAWS
u
Is
-1-2 5-
OF THE GREAT petition and pray for the framing and £nactment of a law to con-
OF THE WORLD Btitutionally protect the majoritj- of citizens and residents in and
WISDOM AND on our respectable streeU against the evils of alcoholic beverages,
ACT THEM AT stimulants, depressants and poisons that are derogatory to health.
CONSTITUTIONS morality and happiness, that are productive of lawlessness and
crime and contrary to the Sixth conmiandment.
Double price charged, sworn to as pure alcohobcs. United States ^ i*
Dispensatory standard, on Stamp and naipes with value. S '^ « t
That unconstitutional license be revoked and tax with inspec- _ 5 " |
tion be substituted.
All liquor saloons and places where alcoholic beverages are pold o " - • •
or dispensed shall be closed, sale and dispensation stopped by
a petition of the majprity of the persons engaged in a legitin^tfi
business within 250. -yards of place of sale or dispensation and no
sale within 100 yards of depot of Railroad Corporation: the peti-
tioners for and Against to be of eighteen years of age or more, and
residents or doing business on the respectable street. That the law
promptly go into effect upon its passage bv revoking all the licenses
and suh«tituting a permit to seU until the expiration of time for
said license, the petition Act to at once go into effect. All previous
acts, declared and to be, null and void.
2. We, the people, do further petition and pray that a portion j; 5 g = = -
of the city may be set off for inmates of houses of ill fame, and all '^. = ^^ _f
other persons of like character, and that^ each shall be inspected .S S "o ^~ .•
and treated, when found diseased, in a suitable place i8olat«a from ° » s ^ r i'li
the other occupants, by a reputable physician, who may thiis have 3,5 ui z-^Bt''^
the power to protect the health of innocent people, without condoned o|.c JJIcJ?! .
or hcensed prostitution, as now exists. These persons who were "f £ §
all "bom free and equal," shall pay a suitable tax for rental, clothes 2 ^ .2
and maintenance. The real estate used for these persons taxed g t g |s ; :|||l
shall pay double, of its assessed valye. All taxes payable to the * ao. o"^ \ °'g|S
state monthly. A religious church shall be formed m the reforma-. | "^ -<J ^-^- I 5°-|"'
tory. Each occupant of said house rfhall wear an. insignia (not -g * ^ =
concealed) indicative of vocation. Upon reformation . thp person ^ ^ J
shall be located one year before being allowed to appear m, public § o | . .. _ - ^ -
without the emblem or insignia, This act shall go mto effect upon ^ 5 "J SSglg =5?
its passage. tj * S ks'ss's s"| *
3. We, the people loyal and true to the Country and State, S -g ^ " """
left in sacied' trust to us by WASHINGTON and LAFAYETTE, - = f" ■
do most respectfully petition and pray that an act or law inay be —.eg ^
" c 2 £
5-S S c
g :^ 2: *
» E p J3
J= . titi (8
£ I 5 J
111.
*3 " D.Z
r o. * ^
BS ^ a.
w, g « o
m
A SS A-
H O N-
SEN A-
GRACE-
G A VE
framed for the protection of the innocent and helpless and for the
dispensation of EQUAL AND IMPARTIAL JUSTICE, in accord-
ance with the Sixth COMMANDMENT AND OUR CONSTITU-
TIONS.
That any person or persons aiding or abetting by requesting,
advertising, giving or advising drugs, instruments, douches, apply-
ing for surgical examinations per vagina or in utero, giving the
jiddress of any person or place, or in anv manner whatsoever assist-
mg the destruction of the foetus or infant in any of the stages of
uterine fecundation and ovum impregnation with criminal intent,
shall be subjected to and sentenced as the principal in a fatal case
of malpractice.
Absolutely necessary surgical operations for saving the life of the
mother, unavoidable accidents, are to confer exemption from the
penalty.
All applicants for the crime shall be promptly reported in writing
by the person receiving the application and promptly prosecuted.
The infants may be wards of the State till twenty-one years
old, unless the parent or parents do give satisfactory security for
proper moral education and maintenance, and pay all expenses.
Adoption may be permitted by the State any time ; no claim by either
parent for infant, imlMS by full and free consent by the adopting
parent : all shall give satisfactory security to the State for the infant's
proper moral education and support. The indigent married parent
and the one wronged may be received and allowed to depart with
confidence kept inviolate. A RELIGIOUS CHURCH AND HOS-
PITAL SHML BE FORMED OF ALL DENOMINATIONS.
This act shall go properly into effect upon its passage.
430
.1
isissii
.2.2
■? M B.
CHUSETTS
O R A B L E
TORS
FULLY
UNTO ME
?i
A
MD f4^ ^ fA^ Qz
TX
tibe (Bieat Seal of
\^ ONE WE ^y^
Q
h
Z
D
^
>
■ z
a
XI
Of
Eutbor In
be Commonwea
flDassacbusetts
Ibonortum l£t (l
tb
to
l^emodum !
<3 "^^ □-
431
(§
($
* * * ^
w
.PER NELIf^
P'or jHoQorable p(^a(;e O9 EartI; arjd Coodu;ill Jou/ard f\\\ /r\ai>Kii?d.
Hbbenba Et Corrigenba
•-^Any errata within this book arc the works of the quadruple Rum, Social, Evil and Mai
practice Vile Ring in their unholy works to destroy the Nations, finally themselves.-* -^
Esto Iperpetua
^PATRIOTS, ONE AND ALL, READ, PONDER, REFLECT ON MATTERS IN
THIS BOOK, THEN RESPLENDENT STAND BRAVELY, NOBLY FORTH: TRUE TO
GOD, COUNTRY, STATE AND FAMILY, THUS WISELY REAP THE REWARD.--
(H
jfinfs
TLbc jfirst EMtion
^m^
01
432
HECKMAN
BINDERY INC.
NOV 87