BRANCH OF STEPHEN. 177
THEIR CHILDREN, BEING THE SIXTH GENERATION.

783. Samuel, born August 31st, 1761; married February 8th, 1786, Rosanna Clark.
        Lucy, born May 8th, 1764; died June 6th, 1764.
784. Sarah, born October 18th, 1766; died single, October 17th, 1843, aged 77 years.
785. Roswell, born August 22d, 1768; married         , Sylvia Barnes.
786. Timothy, born July 15th, 1770; married April 24th, 1794, Eunice Woodruff.
787. Lucy, 2d, born         ; married November 6th, 1794, Francis Hurlburt, of Kensington.

702.                       Southington, Conn.

JOHN HART, Southington, fourth son of Deacon Thomas Hart, of the same place, and his wife, Anna (Stanley), born December 9th, 1731, at Southington; baptized there December 12th, 1731, by Rev. Jeremiah Curtiss, then pastor of that church; married April 10th, 1755, Desire Palmer, daughter of Judah, and his wife, Mary (Farrington),* born September 2d, 1735, in Branford, Conn. He settled in Flanders District, on the east side, on what has been known as the Jude Hart Place, where, in 1869,          Lewis lived. This place, consisting of eighty-two acres of land, more or less, with dwellinghouse and barn, he sold to Jude Hart for $1,340, by deed, dated May 22d, 1799. He then removed to Bristol, Conn. He died very destitute, in Lenox, Vt., whither his ungrateful son had taken him, and then deserted him.

THEIR CHILDREN, BEING THE SIXTH GENERATION.

788. John, born         , 1756; baptized January 3d, 1757.
789. Levi, born         , 1759; married May 3d, 1780, Philatnea Allen.
790. Wells, born         , 1771; married August 4th, 1793, Polly Root, of Bristol.

703.       Southington, Burlington, Conn.

SIMEON HART, Southington, sixth son of Deacon Thomas Hart, of the same place, and his wife, Anna (Stanley), born December 29th, 1735, at Southington; baptized January 4th, 1736, by Rev. Jeremiah Curtiss; married September 14th, 1756, Sarah Sloper, daughter of Robert, and his wife, Experience (Johnson), born October 13th, 1737. Mr. Hart’s residence stood some sixty rods north of the almshouse, on the west side of the road, the house having long since been torn away, and the ground leveled. About three rods south stood another house, which was torn away a few years since, part of the chimney and celler still remaining. About ten feet north of the last-mentioned house was the well, now covered with boards, which served for both houses.


* Her mother, Mary (Farrington), was from Dedham, Mass., and was granddaughter of Micah Palmer, of Branford, and his wife, Damaris Whitehead.