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Saturday 23 November 2024 04:32:13 GMT
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ema piliang 70831 :
Amin
2024-12-17 08:32:49
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Allohuma sholi ala sayyidina muhamad waala ali sayyidina muhamad
2024-11-23 14:50:37
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amiin
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The sandstone gravestone and gravesite of Captain Amos Williams.   Captain Amos Williams was born on March 17, 1670, in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America. His father, Amos Williams, was 25 and his mother, Elizabeth Rogers, was 21. He married Hannah Wheeler in 1700, in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 4 daughters.  A New Jersey and East Jersey militia captain from Essex County, Captain Williams had an extensive military service record. According to the First Presbyterian Church of Orange burial records, he served in King William’s War (also known as the Second Indian War, the North American theater of the Nine Years’ War (1688–1697), also known as the War of the Grand Alliance or the War of the League of Augsburg against the French and their Native American allies. Then in Queen Anne’s War, the North American theater of the European War of the Spanish Succession, when he was seriously wounded by French allied Native Americans in Upstate New York. He eventually recovered, and continued to served in the Essex County Militia until the day he died.  Williams held the rank of lieutenant then captain of militia for an unprecedented 58 years. Like most provincial militia officers of the time, he applied for a regular commission (in the British Army) but he could not afford the price (to gain a commission in the British army you needed to pay for the rank, regardless of social status.) These positions were usually filled with officers of noble birth however, and Williams was not.  Captain Amos Williams died on April 19, 1744, in Newark Mountains, Essex, New Jersey, British Colonial America, at the age of 74, and was buried in the Old Burying Ground in Orange, Essex, New Jersey, in the present-day United States.  Laying below on Amos’s stone is that of his son Abraham, who died at the age of “12 months and 16 days, September 3, 1740.” No info on the other stone, but likely belongs to a relative. All three stones have unfortunately fallen over and are on the ground. ℹ️ Ancestry.com, Essex County Historical Society,  First Presbyterian Church of Orange, NJ  📸 own work, February 23, 2025  #history #gravestone #gravestones #grave #headstone #colonialamerica #orangenj #newjerseyhistory #veteran #fyp
The sandstone gravestone and gravesite of Captain Amos Williams. Captain Amos Williams was born on March 17, 1670, in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America. His father, Amos Williams, was 25 and his mother, Elizabeth Rogers, was 21. He married Hannah Wheeler in 1700, in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 4 daughters. A New Jersey and East Jersey militia captain from Essex County, Captain Williams had an extensive military service record. According to the First Presbyterian Church of Orange burial records, he served in King William’s War (also known as the Second Indian War, the North American theater of the Nine Years’ War (1688–1697), also known as the War of the Grand Alliance or the War of the League of Augsburg against the French and their Native American allies. Then in Queen Anne’s War, the North American theater of the European War of the Spanish Succession, when he was seriously wounded by French allied Native Americans in Upstate New York. He eventually recovered, and continued to served in the Essex County Militia until the day he died. Williams held the rank of lieutenant then captain of militia for an unprecedented 58 years. Like most provincial militia officers of the time, he applied for a regular commission (in the British Army) but he could not afford the price (to gain a commission in the British army you needed to pay for the rank, regardless of social status.) These positions were usually filled with officers of noble birth however, and Williams was not. Captain Amos Williams died on April 19, 1744, in Newark Mountains, Essex, New Jersey, British Colonial America, at the age of 74, and was buried in the Old Burying Ground in Orange, Essex, New Jersey, in the present-day United States. Laying below on Amos’s stone is that of his son Abraham, who died at the age of “12 months and 16 days, September 3, 1740.” No info on the other stone, but likely belongs to a relative. All three stones have unfortunately fallen over and are on the ground. ℹ️ Ancestry.com, Essex County Historical Society, First Presbyterian Church of Orange, NJ 📸 own work, February 23, 2025 #history #gravestone #gravestones #grave #headstone #colonialamerica #orangenj #newjerseyhistory #veteran #fyp

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