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John Jenne

Single candidate:

  • John Jenne

       (1773 Dartmouth, MA -1850 Greenwich, OH)

       1800 and 1802 deeds, Newbedford, MA, housewright

       note: Tie the 1800 deed to GAWP5 referencing a

       John Jenne owner's mark on a N Taber plane

John Jenne

Single candidate

John Jenne(y)

 (b 7-12-1773 Dartmouth, MA - d 3-2-1850 Greenwich, OH)

       1800 and 1802 deeds, Newbedford, MA, housewright

       One molding plane by N Taber with John Jenne as an owner's mark ... ties to the 1800 deed shown below with

       pricipals being Nicholas Taber, housewright, and John Jenne, housewright. The 1802 deed includes the grantee

       Jethro Davis, Newbedford, cabinet maker. This Davis might have made planes marked I Davis or J Davis.

parents Benjamin Jenney and Beersheba Bassett

m Catherine Davis  12-22-1793

10 children: Obadiah, Sarah Davis, Beersheba, Mordicai Wetherall, Elizabeth, Sylvia C., Jane C., Benjamin, Mary Grant, and Abram D. All lived to adulthood.

bio courtesy jbancestors:

"John Jenne(y)

Birth: Jul. 12, 1773, Dartmouth, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA

Death: Mar. 2, 1852, Greenwich, Huron County, Ohio, USA

 

John Jenney was a ship's carpenter when he was near the water and a building carpenter when he was not. The third of four children born to Benjamin Jenney, a whaling captain, and his second wife, Beersheba Bassett, John was just four years old when his mother died.

 

Not much is known about John's early childhood, except that his father remarried to Louisa Hathaway two years after Beersheba's death. Then two years later, Benjamin was lost at sea near Hispaniola. Though he may have grown up in the household of his stepmother, it is more likely that John was boarded out after his father's death to a Jenney relative and perhaps learned his trade there.

 

On 22 December 1793, John married at New Bedford, Catharine Davis, born 25 May 1773. Catharine was the daughter of Nicholas Davis and Sarah Williams, a family that was very active in the Society of Friends. During the first 20 years of their marriage, the Jenneys lived near Fairhaven, where John earned a living as a ship's carpenter. Their union was blessed with 10 children: Obadiah, Sarah Davis, Beersheba, Mordicai Wetherall, Elizabeth, Sylvia C., Jane C., Benjamin, Mary Grant, and Abram D. All lived to adulthood.

 

By 1815, the entire Jenney family had relocated to Scipio in Cayuga County, New York where they were recorded in the 1820 census. About 1819, two of the older sons, Obadiah and Mordecai moved west along with Beersheba and her husband, Eleazer Salisbury. Finding less expensive land and better opportunities there, the sons encouraged the rest of the family to relocate to Ohio. So in 1823, the elder Jenneys and all but two of their children left New York for Ohio, where in 1827 John bought acreage in Greenwich Twp., Huron County. He built the homestead in the New England style, and that structure is still standing today.

 

At Greenwich, the Jenneys were involved in the establishment of the Society of Friends' meeting and building of their meeting house. Local histories also attest to John Jenney's continued skill as a ship's carpenter, stating that he built two Great Lakes ships in the 1830s for Townsend and Chapman at Sandusky.

 

John Jenney died on 2 March 1852 in the 79th year of his age. Of his passing, the Huron Reflector observed "An aged patriarch, surrounded by his descendants, he has made his bed in peace, full of years and full of honors."

 

John Jenney was laid to rest in the cemetery on his farm in Greenwich Township. Fifteen months later on 9 June 1853, Catharine Davis Jenney died. Though there is no longer evidence of a monument for her, it is likely that she was interred in the Jenney Farm Cemetery next to her husband."

John Jenne and Nicholas Taber housewrights, 1800 deed, Newbedford, MA

John Jenne, housewright and Jethro Davis, cabinetmaker, 1802 Newbedford deed.

John Jenne, ship carpenter, Greenwich, OH 1850  census.

John Jenne, Greenwich, OH, died 3-2-1852

(The presentation of visually based elements (scale imprints, scale drawings, etc.) is a challenge, especially when moving from the printed page to the realm of an electronic medium. For reference, the original GAWP 5, CAWP, BARS and SOJ publications had pages which were 8-1/2" in width.)

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