
Ancestry of
Lyman Hall
Signer of the Declaration of Independence
-
- Grandmother of Lyman Hall — 3rd Generation
- Ahnentafel No:
- 7
- Father:
- John Glover
- Mother:
- Joanna Daniel
- Birth Date:
- 10 Oct 1672
- Birth Location:
- New Haven, New Haven Co., Connecticut
- Christening Date:
- Christening Location:
- Death Date:
- 8 Jul 1715
- Death Location:
- Wallingford, New Haven, Connecticut
- Burial Date:
- Burial Location:
- Spouse Name:
- Samuel Street Jr.
- Marriage Date:
- 14 Jul 1690
- Marriage Location:
- Wallingford, New Haven, Connecticut
- Children:
Nathaniel Street
Mary Street (Ahnentafel No:3 )
- Notes:
Some sources confuse this Hannah Glover with the Hannah Glover who was born in 1690, daughter of John Glover and Mary Guppy.
Hannah Glover
View famous kin of Hannah Glover
Scroll down to see sources.
Sources for Hannah Glover
- 1 Commemorative Biographical Record of Fairfield County: Connecticut, Containing Biographical Sketches of . . ., Chicago: J. H. Beers and Co. (1899), 306.
- 2 Connecticut: Vital Records (The Barbour Collection), 1630-1870, Wallingford, p. 302, Death record for Hannah Street.
- 3 NEHGS NEXUS: New England Across the United States, 1995, Vol. 12, p. 66.
- 4 New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 1890, Vol. 44, p. 184.
- 5 New Haven, CT: Families of Ancient New Haven, Vol. 7, pp. 1709-1710.
- 6 New Haven, CT: Families of Ancient New Haven, Vol. 3, p. 701.
- 7 New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, 1913, Vol. 44, p. 244.
- 8 Barthelmas, Della Gray, The Signers of the Declaration of Independence: A Biographical and Genealogical Reference, Jefferson, N.C. and London: McFarland and Company, Inc., Publishers (1997), 91.
- 9 Mason, Puella Follett (Hull), A Record of the Descendants of Richard Hull of New Haven, Conn., Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Swain and Tate Co., Printers (1894), 52.
- 10 Roberts, Gary Boyd, Notable Kin, Volume 1, Santa Clarita, California: Carl Boyer, 3rd (1998), 222.
- 11 Street, Henry A. and Mrs. Mary A. Street, The Street Genealogy, Exeter, New Hampshire: The News-Letter Press (1895), 9-10.