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Joseph Barton Woolverton
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Birth Abt 1777 Gender Male Buried 1843 Anglican Church Cemetary, Woodstock, New Brunswick, Canada
Died 26 Apr 1843 Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada
Person ID I0227 The Larlee Family Tree Last Modified 26 Sep 2005 00:00:00 Father Thomas Wolverton, b. 1743 Mother Catharine Barton Family ID F094 Group Sheet Family Jane Larlee, b. 1781, Burton, Sunbury County, New Brunswick, Canada
Married 17 Nov 1798 Northampton Parish, York County, New Brunswick, Canada
[1] Children > 1. Elizabeth Margaret Woolverton, b. 28 Aug 1799, Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada 
> 2. Thomas Thatcher Woolverton, b. 1801, Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada 
> 3. Jane Philips Woolverton, b. 4 May 1804, Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada 
4. Mary Bell Woolverton, b. 1805, Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada 
> 5. Mary Woolverton, b. 10 Jan 1809, Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada 
> 6. Joseph B. Woolverton, b. 6 Jun 1811, Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada 
7. Catherine Woolverton, b. 26 Jun 1813, Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada 
8. Sophia Woolverton, b. 25 Aug 1815, Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada 
9. Charles Henry Woolverton, b. 2 Nov 1818, Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada 
> 10. John Woolverton, b. 6 Apr 1819, Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada 
11. Harriet Woolverton, b. 22 Dec 1822, Northampton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada 
Family ID F087 Group Sheet -
Headstones 
Status: Located. -
Notes - From "Descendents and Direct Ancestors of Leonard O. Wolverton" found at http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/w/o/l/Car-Wolverton/GNE1-004.html
"Joseph Barton Woolverton was 6 years old when his Empire Loyalist father immigrated from the US to Maugerville, NB in 1783. Joseph's mother (Catharine Barton) and his half sister (Elizabeth Ann) were the only other family mmbers that came with them. Two half brothers (Thomas and Joseph), went to live with their uncle (John Woolverton) in Washington County, PA and never moved to NB. A younger brother (James Barton) was born in Maugerville, NB in 1785 but immigrated to the United States following an altercation (based on family stories) with his father and Joseph and never returned to Canada.
"The Woolverton farm in Maugerville was a short distance from the land granted to Dr. John Larlee in 1787. Dr. Larlee emigrated from France and was the first white doctor on the Saint John River. Joseph married John Larlee's daughter, Jane, in 1798 and moved further up the St. John River to his father's farm in Northampton, which had been obtained as a land grant in 1796. Their first child (1 of 11) was born in Northampton in 1799. Additional Northampton land grants were made to Joseph, his father Thomas, John Larlee Sr., and John Larlee, Jr. in 1818. Six additional land grants totalling 650 acres were obtained by Joseph Barton Woolverton and his male descendents durint the eitheen hundreds. Joseph's firstborn son (Thomas Thatcher Woolverton) continued the family trend of settling further up the St. John River by purchasing a farm in River de Chute, Wicklow Parish, in 1832."
- From "Descendents and Direct Ancestors of Leonard O. Wolverton" found at http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/w/o/l/Car-Wolverton/GNE1-004.html
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Sources - [S1638] Woodstock Anglican Church Records, Anglican Church of Woodstock.
- [S1638] Woodstock Anglican Church Records, Anglican Church of Woodstock.