My Rockefeller Cousins - a lineage I reject, because
they're now all flaming assholes and insane cowards who would
never dare take on the Bigs, despite their ancestors having
fought in the American Revolutionary War:
http://books.google.com/books

Son William:

Son William:

Son Jeremias:

Daughter Charlean:
Well, well, well. "Nana" was right. They did
leave her family out of the Rockefeller family history. She had
written a letter to them explaining that they left her family out of the
geneology- which they blew off.
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=REG&db=gen1775&id=I44765
6 ii.Ida
May Barnes was born 23 OCT 1875 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT, and died
06 JAN 1964 in Stamford, Fairfield Co., CT. She married
? Vossler ABT 1896. He was born ABT 1871.
Um, no, I believe she died in a Milford, CT nursing home.
? = Ludwig
Vossler
Now a bunch of arrogant - but truly cowardly - insane, raving pukes.
Zebulon Husted:
http://books.google.com/books

Nicholas Knapp (son Caleb is an ancestor):
http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/k/n/a/Frederick-H-Knapp/PDFGENE5.pdf
http://genforum.genealogy.com/winthrop/messages/178.html
1630, THE WINTHROP FLEET:
Eleven vessels brought ' the Great Emigration' of this year,viz:
ARBELLA the flagship
AMBROSE
WILLIAM AND FRANCIS
TALBOT
HOPEWELL
JEWEL
WHALE
CHARLES
SUCCESS
MAYFLOWER
TRIAL
The first five ships sailed April 8 from Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, and
arrived at Salem June 13 and following days. The other half of the fleet
sailed in May and arrived in July at various dates. Altogether they
brought about seven hundred passengers of whom the following are
presumed to have been on these ships.
(Nicholas Knapp)
http://www.ourpast.org/genealogy/histories/winthrop.htm
Look at this one:
http://74.125.45.104/search?q=cache:vQ0yNrzwyEsJ:www.gutenberg.org/files/24159/24159.txt+%22Nicholas+Knapp%22+mayflower&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=54&gl=us
Negroes, and illiterate persons of all complexions, set up as doctors.
Old Joe Pye and Sabbatus were famous Indian healers. Indian squaws, such
as Molly Orcutt, sold many a decoction of leaves and barks to the
planters, and, like Hiawatha,
"Wandered eastward, wandered westward,
Teaching men the use of simples,
And the antidotes for poisons,
And the cure of all diseases."
A good old Connecticut doctor had a negro servant, Primus, who rode with
him and helped him in his surgery and shop. When the master died, Doctor
Primus started in to practise medicine himself, and proved
extraordinarily successful throughout the county; even his master's
patients did not disdain to employ the black successor, wishing no doubt
their wonted bolus and draught.
In spite of the fact that everyone and anyone seemed to be permitted,
and was considered fitted to prescribe medicine, the colonists were
sharp enough on the venders of quack medicines--or, perhaps I should
say, of powerless medicines--on "runnagate chyrurgeons and
physickemongers, saltimbancoes, quacksalvers, charlatans, and all
impostourous empiricks." As early as 1631, one Nicholas Knapp was fined
and whipped for pretending "to cure the scurvey by a water of noe worth
nor value which he sold att a very deare rate." The planters were
terribly prostrated by scurvy, and doubtless were specially indignant at
this heartless cheat.
LMAO
They even make up words like me and the psychiatrists, too!!!
I think I like "impostourous empiricks" the best because that reminds me
of psychiatrists.