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Descendants of Ezra Furman and Laura Adkins
1 Ezra Furman 1788 - 1857
. +Laura Adkins 1791 - 1862 m: abt 1810
.... 2 Allen Furman 1811 - Unknown
........ +Jersuha Tichnor 1813 - m: 1831
........... 3 Foster Furman 1832 -
........... 3 Gzamrel Furman 1842 -
........... 3 Edgan Furman 1845 -
........... 3 Edwin Furman 1845 -
........... 3 Emiline Furman 1847 -
........... 3 Melissa Furman 1847 -
........... 3 Julia Furman 1849 -
........... 3 Horace Furman 1851 -
........... 3 Wilmot Furman 1855 -
.... 2 James Furman 1813 - Unknown
........ +Amanda 1818 - Unknown m: Unknown
........... 3 Corrilier Furman 1840 -
........... 3 Oscar Furman 1844 -
........... 3 James Furman 1847 -
........... 3 Adelia A Furman 1847 - 1874
............... +[1] John M Wells 1843 - 1925 m: Unknown f: 141st Co A PVI
.................. 4 John Herbert Wells 1873 - Unknown
...................... +Dollie Mills 1872 - 1898 m: Unknown
.................. *2nd Wife of John Herbert Wells:
...................... +Elizabeth Hoover Unknown - Unknown m: Unknown
........... 3 Harriet Furman 1851 -
.... 2 John W. Furman 1816 - 1893 f: 17th Reg PA Cavalry Hospital Steward
........ +Lydia Douglas Abt 1823 - 1899 m: Unknown
........... 3 Richard Furman 1845 - 1919 f: 109 NY Co K
............... +Julie Barnhart 1870 - Unknown m: Unknown
........... 3 Mary Furman 1847 - 1908
............... +[1] John M Wells 1843 - 1925 m: August 11, 1875 f: 141st Co A PVI
.................. 4 Annie Adelia Wells 1877 - Unknown
...................... +Burr Kinney Unknown - Unknown m: Unknown
.................. 4 Burton George Wells 1878 - 1950
...................... +Ada May Decker 1880 - 1968 m: September 17, 1901
.................. 4 Daniel F Wells 1880 - 1954
...................... +Sara Brown 1880 - 1951 m: Unknown
.................. 4 Jessy Wells 1884 - 1965
...................... +Thomas Edwin Messersmith 1882 - 1947 m: Unknown
........... 3 Sarah Furman 1860 - 1898
............... +Samuel Mercer Wells 1857 - 1944 m: 1879
.................. 4 Clinton Wells 1880 - 1918
...................... +Harriet V 1881 - 1958 m: Unknown
.................. 4 Jennie Wells 1882 - Unknown
.................. 4 Ida Wells 1884 - 1929
...................... +Donald Cameron Unknown - Unknown m: February 16, 1903
.................. 4 Grover Wells 1885 - Unknown
...................... +Ada S Hatch Unknown - Unknown m: February 07, 1911
.................. 4 Rodney Wells 1888 - 1983
.................. 4 Lena Wells 1889 - Unknown
.................. 4 Pearl Wells 1892 - Unknown
........... 3 Alonzo Furman Unknown - Unknown
............... +Kate Unknown - Unknown m: Unknown
........... 3 Date Furman Unknown - Unknown
............... +Theo Strickland Unknown - Unknown m: Unknown
........... 3 Emma Furman Unknown - Unknown
............... +Crate Fasset Unknown - Unknown m: Unknown
........... 3 George Furman Unknown - Unknown
............... +Elizabeth Thompson Unknown - Unknown m: Unknown
........... 3 Harriet Furman Unknown - Unknown
............... +Tom Bennett Unknown - Unknown m: Unknown
........... 3 Jessie Furman Unknown - Unknown
........... 3 Laura Furman Unknown - Unknown
............... +David Henry Unknown - Unknown m: Unknown
........... *2nd Husband of Laura Furman:
............... +[1] John M Wells 1843 - 1925 m: Unknown f: 141st Co A PVI
........... 3 Nellie Furman Unknown - Unknown
............... +Elthus Ely Unknown - Unknown m: Unknown
........... 3 William Furman Unknown - Unknown
............... +Erma Jones Unknown - Unknown m: Unknown
.... 2 William Furman 1821 - Unknown
........ +Helen 1832 - Unknown m: Unknown
.... 2 Zelia Furman 1821 - Unknown
........ +Sevisa 1825 - Unknown m: Unknown
.... 2 Harrison Furman 1824 - Unknown
........ +Marilla 1830 - Unknown m: Unknown
........... 3 Anna Furman 1855 -
........... 3 Mananda Furman 1857 -
.... 2 George Furman 1830 - Unknown
........ +Jane 1830 - Unknown m: Unknown
........... 3 Byran Furman 1855 - Unknown
........... 3 George R Furman 1858 - Unknown
........... 3 Ella Furman 1860 - Unknown
.... 2 Abigail Furman 1833 -
.... 2 Louisa Furman Unknown - Unknown
Dr John Furman married Lyndia Douglas and lived at Sugar Run PA. He volunteered as a hospital steward in the 17th PA Reg Cavalry. He was discharged April 10 1863 on surgeons certificate at Camp Coal Landings. John's son Richard served in the 109th NY Reg during the war and was discharged in June 1865.
Laura Adkins parents were Isaiah Adkins and Rhoda Collins. On April 6, 1777 when he was 16 years old Isaiah Adkins enlisted at New Haven to serve to the end of the war for independence. He first served under Lt. John Boll in Capt. Elijah Humphrey's company of the 6th Connecticut Regiment commanded by Colonel Douglas, next by Lt. Colonel Deming and then by Colonel Return Jonathan Meigs. In May 1777 a British party of soldiers and sailors invaded and occupied Sag Harbor, Long Island (near the Eastern end of the island between present day Noyack Bay and Gardners Bay). This British group included twelve vessels protected by an armed schooner carrying 40 men and 12 guns and a company of 70 men from Lt. Colonel Stephen De Lancy's Tory battalion. When Colonel Meigs heard of this he quickly embarked 170 men in whaleboats at Gilford, Ct. the night of May 23 and crossed Long Island Sound. Private Isaiah Adkins a veteran of 47 days at age 16 was one of Colonel Meig's soldiers. The sound was "full of British cruisers". Meig's group moved through them undetected and landed at Sag Harbor at two o'clock the next morning. The Americans surprised De Lancey's troops, killed six, captured all the vessels except the schooner, and obtained a large quantity of provisions and forage. Meig's group was back I Guilford by noon, 18 hours after they left Guilford. The distance covered was about 100 miles. Congress voted Colonel Meigs "an elegant sword".
After this engagement, Isaiah marched with others to Peekskill, NY., where he joined the Connecticut Line under Captain Parsons in General Putnam's Brigade Division. Thereafter he was in a variety of situations and places until December 1780. He was then placed in a detachment commanded by Colonel William Hull, marched to Morrisania, attacked the refugees, took a number of prisoners, burnt their huts and returned to his regiment at the Highlands, NY. At this time he was appointed a Corporal in Captain Humphrey's Company. Sometime after this Colonel Meigs resigned and Colonel Zebulon Butler took command of the regiment.
In 1781 he marched to White Plains, NY., where he was detached and placed into Colonel Alexander Hamilton's Battalion of Light Infantry. He marched with the battalion under the command of General Washington to Yorktown, Va. Isaiah states in one deposition that he "was at the storming of the Redoubt before Yorktown on the York River". Two British redoubts close to the river on the east side of twon prevented the carrying of the second parallel (dug-in artillery) to the river's edge. The redoubts had to be taken. The night of October 14 the task was given to two corps - the American light infantry (Isaiah) to attack the reboubt on the right of the river bank, the one on the left (a fourth of a mile from it) was assigned to the French chasseurs and grenadiers. The American force was made up of men drawn from Lt. Colonel de Gimat's battalion of Connecticut, Massachussetts and Rhode Island troops, Lt Colonel Alexander Hamilton's New York and Connecticut men and Lt. Colonel John Lauren's group from New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Connecticut. In all 400 men with an added corps of sappers and miners. Hamilton was in general command. The French group on the left and Hamilton's group on the right attacked at the same time. The French won their objective losing 15 killed and 70 wounded; the enemy 18 killed and 50 sound or wounded men taken prisoner. The American group totaled 70 men (including Isaiah) under Major Campbell. They advanced with unloaded muskets and fixed bayonets. Led by 20 men of the 4th Connecticut under Lt. John Mansfield, they crashed through the abaitis without waiting for the sappers to cut it away, crossed the ditch, and swarmed over the parapets in spite of the bayonets of the garrison. In ten minutes they overcame all resistance with a loss of 9 killed and 31 wounded, including de Gimat and several other officers. The Americans were able to extend the second parallel quickly. The next day Cornwallis wrote to Clinton: "My situation now becomes critical; we dare not show a gun to their old batteries, and I expect their new ones will open tomorrow morning --- The safety of the place is therefore so precarious that I cannot recommend that the fleet and army should run the great risque in endeavoring to save us." After Yorktown, Isaiah returned to the Highlands, NY., and rejoined his regiment.
In the fall of 1782 a new organization took place and Isaiah was placed in the 2nd Connecticut Regiment commanded by Colonel Herman Swift. On June 8, 1783 Isaiah was discharged from the Continental Army and honored with the badge of merit for 6 years of faithful service. He was discharged at the Highlands near West Point by General Washington. Later in life when Isaiah was making a deposition for a war pension he said he lost his discharge on board a vessel which was shipwrecked. [Isaiah story written by Robert E. Most.]
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