BRANCH OF STEPHEN. 199
HAMBLIN.
773.   White Oak, in Farmington, Conn.

MARY HART, Southington, third daughter of Amos Hart, and his second wife, Mary (Dunham), born March 5th, 1769; married July 31st, 1792, Lemuel Hamblin, of White Oak, Farmington, son of Lieutenant John Hamblin, from Suffield, and his first wife, Abi (Phinney), born June 21st, 1770. He was a farmer, and lived on the mountain, next north of Ichabod Bradley. They had seven sons born to them. He died August 15th, 1829, aged 59 years. She died September 16th, 1830, aged 61 years. They had Willys, Chester, Ava, Amos, Noah, Erastus, and Henry.

PARDEE.
775.                       Southington, Conn.

CLARISSA HART, youngest child of Amos Hart, of Southington, and his second wife, Mary (Dunham), born April 28th, 1773, at Southington; married June 12th, 1799, Jesse Pardee, of Southington. He died in 1801. His widow, Clarissa, died at Southington, August 28th, 1854, aged 81 years.

776.                              Bristol, Conn.

ELIJAH HART, Bristol, eldest son of Thomas Hart, of Southington, and his first wife, Sarah (Thomas), of Cheshire, Conn., born November 16th, 1752; baptized November 19th, 1752, at Southington. He went to Bristol with his parents, and married.

777.                              Bristol, Conn.

THOMAS HART, Bristol, Conn., second son of Thomas Hart, of Southington, and his first wife, Sarah (Thomas), born January 4th, 1755, at Southington; baptized February 16th, 1755, by Rev. Jeremiah Curtiss. He went to Bristol with his parents, entered the army of the revolution, and died in the service, September, 1777, of starvation, in the prison of the British in New York, in his 23d year. A tomb-stone has been erected to his memory in the North Cemetery, Bristol, Conn.

778.                              Bristol, Conn.

JASON HART, Bristol, third son of Thomas Hart, of Southington, and his first wife, Sarah (Thomas), born May 13th, 1757, at Southington; baptized June 12th, 1757, by Rev. Benjamin Chapman, then pastor of the church in Southington. He went with his parents to Bristol, Conn. He entered the army of the revolution, and died in the service,