Where this family lived, worked, fought, and died.
101 places, from Czaraholand in lower Bavaria to a B-24 airfield in Norfolk.
Birthplace of Edmund Rice (c. 1594) and his first wife Thomasine Frost (10 August 1600, at St James, Stanstead). Their first four children (Mary 1619, Henry 1620/1, Edward 1622, Thomas Sr. 1625/6) were also born here.
Birthplace of Barbara Frances Rice, c. 1912, per the William John Hindman birth certificate. How an American Rice family member came to be born in London is an open thread, worth pursuing.
Birthplace of Capt. Roger Clapp (1609). On the South Devon coast near Sidmouth. The Mary and John departed Plymouth, Devon (40 miles west) in March 1630.
Origin city of Robert Williams of Roxbury MA, who sailed on the ship Rose 20 June 1637 (NOT Mayflower).
Placeholder for ancestors whose English origin is recorded by family tradition but not documented. Used for John Dean of Dedham (1650-1727) per Saunderson 1876 and Cooper 1957.
Birthplace of Capt. Robert Sears (1740), DAR Patriot A101104, who emigrated to colonial Virginia and is Brant's 5th-great-grandfather via Sarah Sears Hardin.
Medieval Bolling family seat first mentioned in Domesday Book 1086 as Bollinc. By 1316 owned by William Bolling. Bollings held the estate until 1497 when Rosamund Bolling married Richard Tempest, passing the hall to the Tempest family. Junior branches of the Bollings remained nearby including Robert Bolling (1586-1639) of London. Now a Bradford museum.
Birthplace and ancestral seat of the Bolling family back to at least 1316 (William Bolling). Junior branches remained in the area after Bolling Hall passed to the Tempests in 1497.
Birthplace of Jane Magdalene Greene who married Edward Bolling of Bradford; mother of Robert Bolling the London saddler.
Ancient parish church next to the Tower of London. Birthplace of Col. Robert Bolling the Virginia immigrant (26 Dec 1646). Death place of his grandfather Robert Bolling the saddler (before 7 Sep 1639).
Birthplace of Major John Stith the Virginia immigrant (~1625-31), son of Robert Stith and Mary Townsend. The Stith family of Virginia traces to this Lancashire parish.
Village in the Wolds of North Yorkshire. Ancestral home of George Dunnington and Elizabeth (Key) Dunnington, the parents of Francis Dunnington Sr. (b. 1665) who emigrated to Charles County Maryland. This is one of three Yorkshire origins in Brant's tree, alongside Bolling Hall in Bradford (West Riding) and the broader Bolling/Stith English roots.
Death place of Edmund Rice (3 May 1663). Edmund received a 50-acre house lot here and was a town leader. Benjamin Rice was also assigned a 24-acre lot at Marlborough in 1660.
Initial American settlement for Edmund Rice and Thomasine Frost.
Settlement destination of Edmond Rice in 1638; site of his death May 3, 1663. Sudbury was incorporated 1639 as one of the early Massachusetts Bay Colony inland towns. Rich town and church records survive.
Birthplace of Joseph Rice (1745-02-02) and his twin Benjamin Rice. Marriage place of Ebenezer Rice Jr. and Anna Rice (1743-03-23). Marriage place of Joseph Rice and Mary Green (1772-06-18). Several earlier generations also baptized here.
Birthplace of Mary Brown (18 May 1643) and Bethiah Williams (26 April 1676), the wives of Benjamin Rice and Ebenezer Rice Sr. respectively.
Marriage place of Ebenezer Rice Sr. and Bethiah Williams (17 May 1698).
Joseph Rice moved his family from Westborough to Conway after the death of his first wife Mary Green, and was married to Huldah Wilcox here on 1 Feb 1789. Joseph died here 20 Feb 1826.
Birthplace of Sarah Dean Hubbard (8 October 1814) and her father Henry Hubbard (3 May 1784), 18th Governor of New Hampshire. Henry also died here on 5 June 1857. Original township name was 'Number Four' (a fortified frontier post on the Connecticut River during the French and Indian Wars). The family tree's 'Charleston, NH' is a phonetic misspelling.
Berkshire County. Birthplace of Robert Addison Rice (1850) and Charles Leslie Rice (1879). Death place of Corinthia Dunham (1920). Multiple Rice descendants tied to Pittsfield through the late 1800s and early 1900s.
Cook County suburb west of Chicago. Death place of Robert Addison Rice, 1926.
Birthplace of Boyden William Hindman (1908) and his father Boyden Erwin Hindman (17 August 1878). The LaSalle Illinois Hindman branch traces back to William Murphy Hindman (b. 1844) and Adaline Mellisa Wilcoxon (b. 1846). LaSalle County, on the Illinois River.
Death place of Boyden Erwin Hindman, 25 July 1954.
Home of the Barnes family — Brant Hindman's maternal grandparents Bud Barnes and Hope Barnes, their three daughters Judy, Janice (Brant's mother), and Jill. Janice married Bill Hindman, bringing the Barnes and Hindman lines together. Decatur is the maternal geographic anchor of Brant's lineage.
Final residence and death place of William John 'Bill' Hindman (2025), Brant's father. Bill was married to Kathy Hindman at the time of his death; per Brant, Kathy did not arrange an obituary or a funeral.
Birthplace of William Murphy Hindman (July 1844). Also the death place of Samuel Hindman (1797-1860), Brant's 3rd-great-grandfather. Schuyler County was carved from Pike County in 1825; the Hindman family was part of the 1820s-30s Pennsylvania-to-Illinois migration into this frontier region.
Birthplace of Samuel Hindman (1797), Brant's 3rd-great-grandfather. The Hindman family's earliest documented New World residence.
Residence of Boyden William Hindman and Barbara F Rice in 1940 (US Census). Between their 1936 Chicago marriage and the 1945 Syracuse NY birth of their son Bill, the family lived in Connecticut. Possibly tied to Boyden William's engineering work; further research could identify the firm.
Birthplace of William Wallace Hardin (18 November 1859), Brant's great-great-grandfather on the Hindman maternal side.
Catch-all place for ancestors with a state-level but no city-level birth record on FamilySearch. Use sparingly.
Birthplace of Hannah Knott (1735). Marriage place of Rev. John Hindman and Hannah Knott c. 1755. A Scots-Irish Presbyterian community in southeastern Pennsylvania.
Birthplace of Presley Hardin (Sept 1777), Sarah Sears (~1780), and Robert Wesley Hardin (14 Jan 1807). Marriage place of Presley Hardin and Sarah Sears (1803) and of Joseph Hardin and Elizabeth Pressley (1772). Death place of Joseph Hardin (1805 Leesburg). The Hardin family's Virginia anchor.
Birthplace of Joseph Hardin (~1750), Brant Hindman's 6th-great-grandfather and Revolutionary War militiaman.
Death place of Joseph Hardin (1805).
Birthplace of Philadelphia Baird (1 September 1812).
Birthplace of Samuel Davis Baird Sr (12 April 1780).
Marriage place of Samuel Davis Baird Sr and Susannah Ratliff (10 July 1806). Death place of Samuel Davis Baird Sr (10 June 1850).
Birthplace and death place of Archibald Baird (1755-1809).
Birthplace of Susannah Bolling (5 December 1764), Alexander Bolling (12 March 1721), and Stith Bolling (28 March 1686). The ancestral seat of the Virginia Bolling family.
Marriage place of Stith Bolling and Elizabeth Ann Rogers (1716). Death place of Alexander Bolling (1766) and Stith Bolling (1727). Alexander served as Burgess for Prince George County 1756-1768.
Birthplace of Otho Wilcoxon (1808).
Birthplace of Captain John 'Indian John' Ewing (27 December 1747).
Death place of Captain John 'Indian John' Ewing (1824). Buried at Holcomb Cemetery, Vinton, OH.
Birthplace of Andrew Ewing (1787), son of Captain Indian John Ewing. Frontier area of colonial Virginia with active Shawnee and Cherokee presence in the 1700s.
Death place of Andrew Ewing (1868) and his wife Virginia Glen Ewing (1849). The Ewing family settled here after Captain John Ewing's death in 1824.
Birthplace of Virginia Janet 'Jennie' Glen (1794). Marriage region of Captain John 'Indian John' Ewing and Ann Smith (1774, recorded as 'Augusta, Pocahontas, Virginia').
Marriage place of Andrew Ewing and Virginia Janet Glen (1809) and death place of Virginia Glen (1849).
Death place of John Wilcoxen (1834).
Death place of Ruth Wilcoxon (1828). Buried Washington Township, Scioto, OH.
Death place of Andesire Williams Earley (1870). Also burial area for Ruth Wilcoxon.
Birthplace of Michael Earley (1791). Marriage place of Michael Earley and Andesire Williams (1811).
Birthplace of Joseph Combs (1725), Brant Hindman's 7th-great-grandfather and source of the Combs surname before the Combs-to-Hardin switch.
Death place of Joseph Combs (1808).
Death place of John Ewing (1745), Brant Hindman's 7th-great-grandfather. He lived to 97. Buried Winchester, the county seat.
Death place of Jennet McElvaney Ewing.
Death place of Sarah Mayes Ewing (27 December 1818, age 90). Shenandoah Valley, settled originally by German immigrants and later by Scots-Irish.
Birthplace of Susannah Ratliff (1788) and marriage place of Joseph Combs and Sarah Ashby (1745).
Birthplace of Lettice Mc Clenahan (1771). The Scots-Irish settlement belt of southeastern Pennsylvania.
Birthplace of Alvin Hardin (22 August 1836), Brant's 3rd-great-grandfather on the Hindman maternal side. The Hardin family migrated from Bath County KY to Menard County IL between 1850 and 1860.
Death place of Minerva Mildred Gaines Hardin (16 December 1917).
Birthplace of William John Hindman, December 12, 1945.
Birthplace of Rev. John Hindman (1720). The specific Ulster county of origin for Brant Hindman's paternal Hindman line. Heartland of Scots-Irish Presbyterianism; the Ulster Plantation of the early 1600s gave rise to the trans-Atlantic Presbyterian migration that brought Rev. John and his family to colonial Pennsylvania.
Birthplace of Hugh O'Neil (1605) and his daughter Bridgit O'Neil Dennan (1630), Brant Hindman's 9th- and 8th-great-grandparents on the Ewing maternal line. The most consequential location in Brant's Irish ancestry — the potential bridge to documented Gaelic Irish royal descent.
Birthplace of James Ewing (14 February 1721), Brant Hindman's 6th-great-grandfather and Revolutionary War militia. The same County Londonderry as Brant's Hindman immigrant ancestor Rev. John Hindman.
Birthplace of Alexander Baird (1680). Central Scottish Lowlands, halfway between Edinburgh and Glasgow. The Scottish origin of Brant Hindman's Baird line.
Birthplace of multiple deep Brant Hindman ancestors: James Ewing (1499), William Ewing (1535), Catherine C. Alexander (1545), and the Earl of Sterling line William Alexander (1520). The deepest documented geographic anchor in Brant's tree.
Birthplace of William Load (1567) and his daughter Janet Load (1585). Western Lowlands Scotland.
Birthplace of Margaret Patrick Mathie (1555), born during the early reign of Mary Queen of Scots.
Hampshire County seat. Home of Amasa Clapp and Doritha Lyman. Mary Clapp (b. 14 Oct 1774) was born here before her marriage to Alvan Rice and removal to Chesterfield.
Capital of Massachusetts Bay Colony. Death place of Capt. Roger Clapp (1691) who was Captain of Castle Island (Boston Harbor) for 21 years.
Founded ~1636 about ten miles southwest of Boston. Home of the John Dean family from 1672 through five generations. Aaron Dean was born here 15 May 1765 before settling in Charlestown NH. The carpenter and husbandman John Dean of Dedham, ancestor of Brant's Aaron Dean, is the trunk of the Cooper 1957 genealogy.
Settled as Number 4 (Fort at No. 4) by Massachusetts proprietors c. 1740 in what is now Sullivan County NH. Frontier outpost in the French and Indian Wars. Seth Walker arrived from Groton/Billerica MA by 1750. His son Col. Abel Walker (b. 1734) led the Charlestown militia company at the Battle of Bennington 16 Aug 1777 under Gen. Stark. Aaron Dean of Dedham settled here ~1787 and became the leading merchant for 40 years. Sally Walker Dean was born here 6 July 1795. Henry Hubbard (NH Governor 1842-3) lived here. Brant's third-great-grandmother Sally Walker Dean is buried here.
Frontier town settled 1655 about 35 miles NW of Boston, home of the Parker, Walker, and Chandler families. Seth Walker was born here c. 1692; his son Col. Abel Walker was born here 20 April 1734; Elizabeth Parker (later Walker) was born here 3 Feb 1744. The Groton families later migrated up the Connecticut River corridor to Charlestown NH.
Home of Joseph Walker (b. Reading 1645, d. Billerica July 1729) and Sarah Wyman. Seth Walker was born here 12 Oct 1691 before settling Charlestown NH.
Birthplace of Joseph Walker 10 October 1645.
Likely death place of Capt. Robert Sears post-1812 per DAR Patriot record A101104.
Centre of the Scotch-Irish Presbyterian community in southern Chester County PA. Faggs Manor Presbyterian Church is the social hub. Both John Hindman Sr. (1675-1741) the haberdasher and Rev. John Hindman (1720-1789) of our direct trunk settled here. The London Grove + Faggs Manor connection is the strongest indicator that the two Hindman lines are kin.
Death place of Major John Stith Sr. (will proved 3 April 1694 in what was then the larger Brunswick / Charles City area).
Tidewater Maryland county on the lower Potomac. Home of the Dunnington family from the 1660s and the Ratliff family in the 1700s. Birthplace of Zephaniah Ratliff (1753), who later migrated to Virginia and then Kentucky.
Birthplace of Charles Leslie Rice (1879) and burial place at Pittsfield Cemetery. The Rice family's late-19th-century home; Robert Addison Rice was a Conway-to-Pittsfield migrant.
Death place of Charles Leslie Rice (15 May 1950) at age 70. Oak Park was the family's late-life home; Boyden William Hindman + Barbara Rice were married in Chicago in 1936.
Death place of William Wallace Hardin 21 June 1944 age 84.
Tidewater Virginia county on the south side of the James River. Death place of Elizabeth Ann Rogers Bolling (16 August 1727). Surry Co Wills and Deeds register documents Bolling family relationships.
Death place of Dona Sprouse Hardin (6 January 1924), Brant's 2x-great-grandmother. Burial at Riverside Memorial Park.