Allen NIXON

Male 1814 - 1871  (57 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Allen NIXON was born on 29 Aug 1814 (son of William NIXON and Christina CLINE); died on 1 Nov 1871; was buried in Fifty Burying Ground.

    Allen married Elizabeth VANDUZEN on 8 Nov 1842. Elizabeth was born on 20 Apr 1816; died on 25 Oct 1853; was buried in Fifty Weslyan Methodist. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  William NIXON was born on 27 Nov 1787 in Grimsby ON (son of Lt. Allan NIXON, Jr. UEL and Mary MOORE); died on 10 Aug 1857; was buried in St. Andrew's Anglican Church, Grimsby ON.

    Notes:

    MS 638 Reel 61 (formerly RG22-6-1-A), arranged alpabetically by surname, provides Wm Nixon's will
    dated 15 Aug 1854. It mentions daughter Ester. 4 pages. I have a copy

    "First white child born in Twp of Grimsby" says the 1852C
    With the 46 families they crossed the Niagara River in July 1787

    Lincoln
    Wm's obit ("More Notices from Methodist Papers 1830 - 1857" by McKenzie) states that he had patented several valuable agricultural implements. He was a farmer but also a blacksmith and a carriage-maker.
    The old shop in which he manufactured various mechanical implements became the Stone Shop Museum.

    William married Christina CLINE on 26 Nov 1810. Christina was born on 16 Dec 1788 in Hagerstown MD; died on 26 Apr 1854. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Christina CLINE was born on 16 Dec 1788 in Hagerstown MD; died on 26 Apr 1854.
    Children:
    1. Catherine Ann NIXON was born on 3 Feb 1812; was christened on 7 Oct 1812; died on 5 Dec 1821; was buried on 8 Dec 1821.
    2. 1. Allen NIXON was born on 29 Aug 1814; died on 1 Nov 1871; was buried in Fifty Burying Ground.
    3. Capt. John NIXON was born on 13 Jul 1815; died on 30 Dec 1865.
    4. Mary Eliza NIXON was born on 18 Jul 1817; died on 16 Mar 1897.
    5. Sarah Ann NIXON was born on 13 Mar 1819; died on 15 Sep 1906.
    6. Robert Henry NIXON was born on 7 Mar 1820; and died.
    7. William Zenas NIXON was born on 4 Dec 1824; died on 5 Nov 1905.
    8. Ester Catherine NIXON was born on 2 Jun 1827; died on 21 Jan 1906 in Grimsby ON.
    9. George Cyring NIXON was born on 1 Sep 1831; died on 18 Jun 1913.
    10. Harriet Jane NIXON was born on 29 May 1835; and died.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Lt. Allan NIXON, Jr. UEL was born on 29 Nov 1757 in Hardwick Twp. NJ; died on 19 Mar 1813; was buried in St. Andrew's Anglican Church, Grimsby ON.

    Notes:

    MS 8415 (Estate Files) From this I have Allan Nixon's Will. He mentions William
    (formerly RG22-235) These microfillm reels go 8405 to 8421
    Will dated 1 May 1812
    Probated 1821

    Contrary to popular opinion (which has him born in County Down, Ireland)

    Allan married Mary MOORE on 19 Oct 1783. Mary (daughter of John MOORE, UEL and Dinah PETIT) was born on 27 Nov 1764; died on 15 Mar 1813. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary MOORE was born on 27 Nov 1764 (daughter of John MOORE, UEL and Dinah PETIT); died on 15 Mar 1813.

    Notes:

    PETTIT, Isaac of Hardwick. 443S - W. 12 Jan 1787; Filed 23 Jan 1787. Wife: Mary. Sons: John, and youngest son, Jonathan. Daughters: Rachil, Elizabeth and Deborah. NOTE: All children minors. Others: Brother, Jonathan PETTIT. Executors: Wife, Mary PETTIT and bro, Jonathan PETTIT. Witnesses: Abm. SHAVER, John MOOR and Mary M. NIXON. [b 1764]

    Mary was 4 1/2 months pregnant when she crossed at Niagara

    Notes:

    Married:
    They were married by Daniel Predmor.

    Children:
    1. John NIXON was born on 9 Jul 1785; died on 21 Mar 1861 in Dumfries Twp, Brant Co..
    2. 2. William NIXON was born on 27 Nov 1787 in Grimsby ON; died on 10 Aug 1857; was buried in St. Andrew's Anglican Church, Grimsby ON.
    3. Catherine NIXON was born on 29 Oct 1790; died on 2 Jun 1851.
    4. Robert NIXON was born on 26 Aug 1793; died on 6 Oct 1852.
    5. Dinah NIXON was born on 14 Oct 1796; died on 6 Jun 1871.
    6. Mary NIXON was born on 5 Jul 1800; died on 20 Apr 1867.
    7. Allen NIXON, III was born on 9 Feb 1803; died on 19 Aug 1877 in Rochester, Fulton IN; was buried in Hoover's Cemetery, Athens IN.
    8. Elizabeth NIXON was born on 8 Oct 1808; died on 8 Aug 1887.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  John MOORE, UEL was born on 15 Nov 1738 (son of Thomas MOORES and Rachel MOORE); died on 16 May 1803 in Grimsby ON; was buried in St. Andrew's Anglican Church.

    Notes:

    4/15 NOV 1738
    Lived at Hope, Warren, NJ

    When John was 14 his stepdad became Captain Thomas Alston, who died
    4 years later in 1756. He was a mariner, part owner of the sloop Success, sailing between Perth Amboy and Madeira and Jamaica


    Annals of the Forty states "At the beginning of the War of the Revolution John Moore promptly joined
    the Colonial Guards of New Jersey and was made a junior officer. When that Corps turned its coat later on John stuck to the red tunic of his King and fought on the side of the British until the end of the War."
    The basic facts are very likely true. An accidental misdirection, however, is author's choice of uniform colour (it would have been blue, not red).

    Conceived and created in 1673, the New Jersey Colonial Guards, or "Jersey Blues" as they came to be called in the Seven Years War, were the first such "provincial" Regiment to be formed anywhere in the British domain. Building from a troup of just 85 men, the third commander, Colonel Peter Parker of Perth Amboy, headed a force in 1744 of 500 recruits. In 1757 the Jersey Blues were remustered by Colonel Peter Schuyler, a wealthy Dutch farmer, and were assigned to New York's Fort William Henry where they comprised one third of its garrison.

    Following on the heels of the Seven Years (French and Indian) War, more Indian troubles led to their service in Pontiac's Rebellion of 1763. In the ensuing ten years, barracks at Elizabeth, Amboy, New Brunswick and Trenton were almost constantly occupied with their troops. Their headquarters was located at James Parker's "Parker Castle" in Perth Amboy.

    When the state turned against New Jersey's Royal Governor William Franklin (a staunch Loyalist) in January of 1776, resulting in his flight from Burlington NJ to Perth Amboy, the provisional Provincial Congress called upon Colonel Elias Dayton of Elizabeth, a Blues "reservist", to also lead a New Jersey Regiment of patriots. From the time that the NJ Colonial General Assembly was dissolved, the repatriated Blues saw action on the side of the rebel insurgents beginning with their unsuccessful defence of Long Island in Aug 1776. For obvious reasons they were not present in the previous year at the seiges of Concord and Bunker Hill MA at the outbreak of open rebellion. In the second half of the War they fought under Washington's General "Mad Willie" William Maxwell. 30 years later, led by General Zebulun Pike (who was killed in the action) on Apr 27 1813 this Regiment defeated and caused the destruction of the garrison at Toronto, Ontario in the War of 1812.

    From its political about-face near the beginning of the American Revolution until now this Battalion has sported several names: the New Jersey Continental Line, 3rd New Jersey Regiment, Jersey Brigade, and today, the New Jersey National Guards.

    [Richard MacMaster has been a published author and historian since the mid 70's. He and his wife, a Mennonite pastor, now live in Florida although they were brought up in Pennsylvania]
    http://archives-library.quaker.ca/en/friendsintheniagara.html
    From The Quaker Archives: Friends in the Niagara Peninsula, 1786-1802 By Richard MacMaster
    The Doan, Harret, Havens, Moore, Schooley, Webster, Willson families and some of the Dennis family were from Hardwick Monthly Meeting in Sussex County and Kingwood Monthly Meeting in Hunterdon County. In 1799 there was a Quaker list of "all those who have a right of membership" but some who came in 1787 had been compromised by wartime activities and no longer belonged to any meeting of Friends. John Moore, although of Quaker background, had been fined and imprisoned in Sussex County, New Jersey for helping recruits get to the British lines. Benjamin Willson had also helped recruit for the British in Sussex County as his former neighbour Nathaniel Pettit testified.

    Joseph Moore, one of the visitors from Pennsylvania in 1793, set out from Niagara-on-the-lake and went along the Lake Ontario shore as far as the Twelve Mile Creek in Grantham Township, where he met with Benjamin and Jesse Pauling. Both men served as officers in Butler's Rangers but they had Quaker relations in Philadelphia. The next day they "went three miles to our friend John Taylor's." John and Hannah Taylor lived in Township Number 3 (later called Grantham Township) in 1790


    Among the oldest interments at St Andrews are"In memory of John Moore, died May 16th, 1803, aged 64, and Dinah his wife, died Nov. 9th, 1804, aged 68." These, however, were removed from an earlier graveyard near the lake.


    John married Dinah PETIT in 1763 in Sussex NJ. Dinah was born on 9 Feb 1746 in Phillipsburg, Warren NJ; died on 9 Nov 1804. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  Dinah PETIT was born on 9 Feb 1746 in Phillipsburg, Warren NJ; died on 9 Nov 1804.

    Notes:

    Killed by a falling tree

    Children:
    1. 5. Mary MOORE was born on 27 Nov 1764; died on 15 Mar 1813.
    2. Deborah MOORE was born in 1767; and died.
    3. Elizabeth MOORE was born in 1768; died on 21 Mar 1813.
    4. Capt. Jonathan MOORE was born in 1770; died on 12 Mar 1813; was buried in St. Andrew's Anglican Church, Grimsby ON.
    5. Rachel MOORE was born on 6 Jul 1776; died on 10 Aug 1832.
    6. Margaret MOORE was born in 1778; and died.
    7. William MOORE was born in 1779; died on 18 Nov 1814.
    8. Pierce MOORE was born in 1781; died on 28 Jun 1831; was buried in St. Andrew's Anglican Church, Grimsby ON.
    9. Dinah MOORE was born about 1782; died after 1803.
    10. Charles MOORE was born in Jan 1784; died about 1855.