Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Authors - Seward Anna

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Seward Anna:     more books (100)
  1. The Poetical Works Of Anna Seward V3: With Extracts From Her Literary Correspondence by Anna Seward, 2010-09-10
  2. Anna Seward: A Constructed Life by Teresa Barnard, 2009-09-01
  3. Miss Seward's Monody On Major Andre: And Elegy On Captain Cook: Also Mr. Pratt's Sympathy, A Poem (1817) by Anna Seward, 2009-08-27
  4. Poem to the memory of Lady Miller. By Miss Seward, ... by Anna Seward, 2010-05-28
  5. Louisa, a poetical novel, in four epistles. By Miss Seward. by Anna Seward, 2010-06-02
  6. Memoirs of the life of Dr. Darwin: chiefly during his residence at Lichfield : with anecdotes of his friends, and criticisms on his writings by Anna Seward, 2010-08-19
  7. Monumental inscriptions in Ashbourn Church, Derbyshire; by Brooke Boothby, Anna Seward, 2010-09-08
  8. Memoirs of the Life of Dr. [E.] Darwin, Chiefly During His Residence at Lichfield by Anna Seward, 2010-02-23
  9. Monody on Major Andre; and Elegy on Captain Cook. Also Mr. Pratt's Sympathy. A poem by Anna Seward, John André, 2010-08-14
  10. Memoirs Of The Life Of Dr. Darwin: Chiefly During His Residence At Lichfield; With Anecdotes Of His Friends And Criticisms On His Writings by Anna Seward, 2010-09-10
  11. Llangollen Vale, 1796 (Revolution and Romanticism, 1789-1834) by Anna Seward, 1994-08
  12. The Two Spies: Nathan Hale and John André by Anna Seward, Benson John Lossing, 2010-01-09
  13. Memoirs of the Life of Dr. Darwin: Chiefly During His Residence in Lichfield, with Anecdotes of His Friends, and Criticisms On His Writings by Anna Seward, 2010-03-04
  14. Poem To The Memory Of Lady Miller by Anna Seward, 2010-05-23

21. Special Collections | WPRP | Index
1774. WPRP 70. seward, anna. Llangollen Vale, and other poems. 1796. WPRP 91s.seward, anna. Poem to the memory of Lady Miller. By Miss. seward. 1782.
http://www-libraries.colorado.edu/ps/spc/collections/wprp/S.htm
WPRP: Index: S Please click on the WPRP call number to see full citation and table of contents. A B C D ... P Q R S T U V W X Y Z NAME TITLE YEAR CALL # Saffery, Maria Grace (1772-1858). Poems on sacred subjects. WPRP 69 Sargant, Jane Alice. Sonnets and other poems. WPRP 161 Savory, Martha see Mrs. Smith Sawyer, Anna. Poems on various subject. With notes, historical and explanatory. WPRP 146 Scott, Miss Mary (1751-1793). The female advocate; a poem. Occasioned by reading Mr. Duncombe's Feminead. WPRP 70 Seward, Anna. Llangollen Vale, and other poems WPRP 91-s Seward, Anna. Poem to the memory of Lady Miller. By Miss. Seward. WPRP 145
OVERSIZE
SEWARD, ANNA. Bound with and precedes HOLFORD, MARGARET, Gresford Vale and other poems. Full citation on Seward with the Holford Entry. Smith, Charlotte (nee Turner, 1749-1806). Beachy head : with other poems. WPRP 139 Smith, Charlotte. Celestina: a novel. WPRP 109 Smith, Charlotte. Desmond : a novel. 2d ed. WPRP 111 Smith, Charlotte. Elegiac sonnets, and other essays. WPRP 71 Smith, Charlotte.

22. Special Collections | WPRP 91
(17081790). Llangollen Vale, with other poems by anna seward. London printedfor G. Sael 1796 4, 48p. 4x. Notes. Bound with and following seward, anna.
http://www-libraries.colorado.edu/ps/spc/collections/wprp/items/091.htm
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS WOMEN POETS OF THE ROMANTIC PERIOD WPRP: Individual Item Contents A B C D ... P Q R S T U V W X Y Z WPRP 91 Author Holford, Margaret, Mrs. Allen. (nee Wrench, 1761-1834). Title Gresford Vale, and other poems Imprint London : Hookham and Carpenter, 1798. Physical description pp. 44 plates. Call number WPRP 91. Citation L, C, (BIK Gu SAN unverified) in ESTC; Jackson, Romantic Poetry by Women, p. 162; Todd, Dictionary of Women Writers, p. 164. Notes Bound with: Daughter of William Wrench of Chester and mother of Margaret Holford. She wrote novels and comedies. Citation: L, C, (BIK Gu SAN unverified) in ESTC; Jackson, Romantic Poetry by Women, p. 162; Todd, Dictionary of Women Writers, p. 164. Notes
Bound with and following: SEWARD, ANNA. Llangollen Vale, and other poems: by Anna Seward. WPRP 91 Includes Dedication.
Epigraph none Contents No Contents page. Includes: Gresford Vale Sonnet, to Spring Sonnet, to a Summer Evening Sonnet, to Autumn

23. Anna Seward

http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/~worp/seward/
Anna Seward Anna Seward lived from 1747-1809. She was criticical of marriage and well known for her elegies. You can also use an online forum to discuss Anna Seward References to Anna Seward in "The Unsex'd Females"
  • Line 193 "If SEWARD sting with rapture every vein,"
Works by Anna Seward

24. Anna Seward

http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/~worp/contexts/friends/seward.html
Anna Seward
Anna Seward Anna Seward was a popular literary figure of the Romantic Period. Although little is know n about her today, she was held in high esteem by many of the eighteenth century authors at the time. She was born at Eyam, in Derbyshire England in 1747. Thomas Seward, her father, who was a graduate of Oxford did much of her early schooling and contributed to her mastery of writing. Her talent was well known and she was a favorite of Dr. Samuel Johnson who like her, was a canon resident of Lichfield Cathedral. However, Johnson and Seward eventually had a falling out when he publicly printed and criticized her literary friend, Thomas Hayley. Seward had close ties to several different literary figures as well as political leaders. Her friendship with Major Andre, a serving soldier in America, lead to the publication of her: ³Monody On Major Andre,² which was dedicated to Sir Henry Clinton. This close correspondence also contributed to her work and their deep friendship continued up until his death in the war. Seward, who was perhaps , ³the central figure of Lichfield,² wrote harshly of Washington after Major Andre¹s death. However, she is said to have regretted her criticism of the general, after learning of the details of Andre¹s death. Supposedly, Washington was offended by her writings of him. Seward died in 1809, unmarried.
Biography dervived and portrait from: The Two Spies Nathan Hale and John Andre by Benson J. Lossing L.L.D, 1886. D. Appleton and Company, New York.

25. Isle Of Lesbos
Poet and a prolific correspondent of the late eighteenth century.
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/a_seward.htm
We're sorry; the page you've tried to reach is no longer on this site. The page may have been moved to another location, or it may be part of a section that was removed. You can use the navigation bar above to jump to a specific section of the Isle of Lesbos, or return to our home page Poetry Classical Art Vintage Images ... Alix North
This is an archive site sponsored by The Small Business Operative

26. Presentation Followup To Poems By Anna Seward
Presentation Followup to selected poems by anna seward. While researchingthe life and poetry of anna seward, I began to see important
http://omega.cc.umb.edu/~fayeng/leslie.html
Presentation Followup to selected poems by Anna Seward
After discussing the biographical information that I found on Sewardnamely, her father's suppression of her poetry, her significant experience with Honora Sneyd, and her loss of several family members-I began to apply that information to my interpretation of Seward's writing. When I asked the class why Seward's letter to George Harding is notably more expressive and rebellious than her sonnets, Eric remarked that it was a matter of different formal aspects of each genre. Because Seward does not need to work around the Cartesian model in her letter writing and she is not limited to a 14-line form, she can naturally be more expressive in her letters. Therefore, what I had originally viewed as a female writer's intimidation in a traditionally male arena, was perhaps largely due to the different formal natures of two genres. This led me to view the sonnets with greater sensitivity for moments of contained rebellion . For instance, as Rick pointed out, Sonnet IX is quite rebellious in terms of its idea of homoeroticism: "Narcissus pining on the watry shore," and Seward does make reference to Lesbia. With this in mind, I began to consider the possibility that Seward is aware of and drawing from a feminist poetic tradition, one beginning with Sappho... Perhaps her sonnets are less conservative than I originally saw them; after all, she does modify the Shakespeareanarrangement by writing two quatrains, followed by two, three-lined units, instead of the traditional three quatrains, followed by a rhyming couplet.

27. Anna Seward (1747-1809): Poems On Female Friends
anna seward (17471809) Poems on Female Friends. from Llangollen Vale inscribedto the Right Honourable Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby.
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/pwh/seward1.html
[Back to People With a Story
Anna Seward (1747-1809): Poems on Female Friends
from Llangollen Vale
inscribed to the Right Honourable Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Ponsonby
Seward's poem is about two famous lady friend's who lived in the Welsh town of Llangollen. The Valle Crucis referred to is a ruined medieval monastery in area.
lines 84-234
Now with a vestal lustre glows the Vale,
Thine, sacred Friendship, permanent as pure;
In vain the stern authorities assail,
In vain persuasion spreads her silken lure,
High-born, and high-endow'd, the peerless twain, Pant for coy Nature's charms 'mid silent dale, and plain. Thro' ELEANORA, and her ZARA s mind, Early tho' genius, taste, and fancy flow'd, Tho' all the graceful arts their powers combin'd, And her last polish brilliant life bestow'd, The lavish promiser, in youth's soft morn, Pride, pomp, and love, her friends, the sweet enthusiasts scorn. Then rose the fairy palace of the Vale, Then bloom'd around it the Arcadian bowers; Screen'd from the storms of Winter, cold and pale, Screen'd from the fervours of the sultry hours

28. Gentleman's Magazine
Benvoglio, seward, anna. Benvolio, seward, anna. Bexleyensis, Thorpe, John,the Younger ?. Child of Candour, A, seward, anna. Christianus, Butler, Rev.
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/browse-gm3?id=GM3Pseu1

29. Anna Seward (1747-1809)
anna seward. 17471809. Works. A collected edition of the poetry of anna seward,in three volumes, was edited by Sir Walter Scott and was published in 1810.
http://www3.shropshire-cc.gov.uk/seward.htm
[Content] www.literaryheritage.org.uk Home People Places Themes ... Site map
Anna Seward
Profile
Poet. Born at Eyam Rectory, Derbyshire, on 12 December 1747. Thomas Seward, her father, became a canon at Lichfield Cathedral in 1757 and the family moved to the city, where Anna was to live the rest of her life. She wrote poetry from a early age and began to have items published in periodicals as well as giving copies to her friends and acquaintances. Through this activity she became an active member of the literary fraternity in Lichfield, which included Erasmus Darwin , the grandfather of Charles Darwin , and was dubbed the "Swan of Lichfield". Others associated with the circle included the friends, Thomas Day and Richard Lovell Edgeworth (father of Maria Edgeworth). Her verse is of a romantic nature, either recalling her own experience of places and events or on more general themes of love, often emanating from her own romantic inclinations. She became very attached to various female friends during her life, particularly Honora Sneyd, who lived with the Sewards during her youth. Anna was apparently devastated when Honora married their mutual literary acquaintance Richard Edgeworth. Anna never married.
Works
A collected edition of the poetry of Anna Seward, in three volumes, was edited by Sir Walter Scott and was published in 1810. Her letters, in six volumes, appeared in 1811.

30. Review Of: Anna Seward, 1804, Biography Of Erasmus Darwin.
residence at Lichfield; with Anecdotes of his Friends, and Criticismson his Writings. By anna seward. London. 1804. 8vo. pp. 430.
http://darwin.baruch.cuny.edu/biography/erasmus_darwin/edinburgh_review.html
Southey and Cottle. April ART. XVIII. Memoirs of the Life of Dr Darwin, chiefly during his residence at Lichfield; with Anecdotes of his Friends, and Criticisms on his Writings. By Anna Seward. London. 1804. 8vo. pp. 430. I rewarded, Miss s Memoirs of Dr Darwin. Of the matter and arrangement of these Memoirs, the Preface gives us the following notice: On the birth, parentage, and education of her hero, Miss Seward has not deigned to bestow a single line. We are abruptly P 4 introduced Miss s Memoirs of Dr Darwin. April that consciousness of great native elevation above the general standard of intellect habits Miss s Memoirs of Dr Darwin. his rock on which his medicinal and philosophical reputation were placed, induced Such, we can assure our readers, is the amount of the information respecting the character and manners of Dr Darwin, for which we are indebted to his biographer. It may perhaps serve to moderate the expectations of those who may have unwarily looked only to the enviable opportunities of observation which she appears to have enjoyed. rus in urbe , of Darwinian creation, resorted, from its early rising, a knot of philosophic friends in frequent visitation. The Rev. Mr Mitchell, many years deceased. He was skilled in astronomic science, modest and wise. The ingenious Mr Kier of West Bromich, then Captain Kier. Mr Boulton, known and respected wherever mechanic philosophy is understood. Mr Watt, the celebrated improver of the steam

31. Poetry Llangollen Vale Anna Seward
Poetry Llangollen Vale anna seward. Subject Poetry Title LlangollenVale Author anna seward. Alec Bromcie Little Book of Fa
http://www.poemmarket.co.uk/Anna-Seward-Llangollen-Vale-185477171X.html
Poetry Llangollen Vale Anna Seward
Subject: Poetry
Title: Llangollen Vale
Author: Anna Seward
Alec Bromcie Little Book of Fa...
Jennifer Higgie Little Book of...

Maurice E Baren How it All Beg...

Jamie Charteris Santa and Co...
...
Rostock gestern. Kal-38901306...

32. Anna Seward, "Written In The Blank Page Of The Sorrows Of Werther"
anna seward, Written in the Blank Page of the Sorrows of Werther (1792). O thou, who turnest this impassioned leaf, Where Anguish
http://www.engl.virginia.edu/~enec981/dictionary/02sewardM1.html
Anna Seward, "Written in the Blank Page of the Sorrows of Werther" (1792)
O thou, who turnest this impassioned leaf,
Where Anguish claims the sympathetic grief,
If no relentless prejudice can bind
In stagnant frost the mercy of thy mind;
If thou shalt guess how hard to inflict the smart
Of icy absence on the glowing heart,
When all that charm'd the sense, th' affection won,
Dwells in that form, which prudence bids us shun;
That present, soothes each rankling woe to rest,
Departed, desolates the languid breast,
Then thou'lt lament, amidst thy virtuous blame, The wretched victim of a baneful flame, Where ill-starr'd Love its deadliest lightning shed On the pale Suicide's devoted head, And woes, that would no holier thought allow, Threw ghastly shadows on the bleeding brow. Still, as thou weep'st their unresisted powers, The virtues of the lost-one's happier hours Shall o'er his fatal errors gently rise, Live in thy heart, and consecrate thy sighs! And for the soft compassion thou hast shown For woes and frailties, to thy soul unknown

33. Source Bibliography
10 vols. Edinburgh W. Coke, 1774. seward, anna. The Poetical Worksof anna seward. London Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme, 1810.
http://www.engl.virginia.edu/~enec981/dictionary/s_biblio.html
Bibliography of Primary Sources
  • Addison, Joseph. "The Pleasures of the Imagination," in The Spectator . Excerpted in v. 1 of Eighteenth-Century Critical Essays . Ed. Scott Elledge. 2 vols. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1961.
  • Addison, Joseph. "Taste," in The Spectator . Excerpted in v. 1 of Eighteenth-Century Critical Essays . Ed. Scott Elledge. 2 vols. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1961.
  • Anonymous, Review of A Simple Story in The Analytical Review May 1791.
  • Blair, Hugh. A Critical Dissertation on the Poems of Ossian, the Son of Fingal . Excerpted in v. 2 of Eighteenth-Century Critical Essays . Ed. Scott Elledge. 2 vols. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1961.
  • Chalmers, A. and French, D. P. Minor English Poets 1660-1780 . Selected from 1810 edition. London: Benjamin Blom, 1967.
  • Chatterton, Thomas. The Poetical Works of Thomas Chatterton . Reprint of 1875 ed. New York: AMS Press, 1968.
  • Cheyne, George. An Essay on Health and Long Life . London: 1725.
  • Cowper, William. Poems . 2 vols. London: W. H. Reid, 1820.
  • De Laclos, Choderlos.

34. SETIS -- English Poetry Collection
1849). seward, anna, Miss seward's enigma 1855. seward, anna, ThePoetical Works (1810). seward, anna, A Rural Coronation (1776). Sewell
http://setis.library.usyd.edu.au/poetry/browse/s-epdtoc.html
Browse the English Poetry Database Search Browse Guide Setis Home Sabie, Francis Adams Complaint (1596) Sabie, Francis The Fissher-mans Tale (1595) Sabie, Francis Flora's Fortune (1595) Sabie, Francis Pans Pipe (1595) Sackville, Charles, Baron Buckhurst Poems (1979) Sackville, Thomas, 1st Earl of Dorset In commendation of the worke (1561) Sackville, Thomas, 1st Earl of Dorset Poem on Sir Philip and Sir Thomas Hobby (1849) Saint Margaret of Scotland St Margaret of Scotland (1530) Saint Mary Magdalene The Lamentation of Saint Mary Magdalene [1871] Saint Ursula y e Lyf of saynt Ursula [1509?] Saltmarsh, John Poemata sacra (1636) Saltwood, Robert A comparyson bytwene iiii. byrdes [1548?] Salusbury, Sir John Poems (1914) Samuel, William An Abridgement of All the Canonical Books of The Old Testament (1569) Samuel, William The Practice [1550?] Samuel, William A VVarning for the cittie of London [1550?] Sandys, George Christ's passion. A tragedie (1640) Sandys, George Mottets of two voyces (1657) Sandys, George Ovid's Metamorphosis (1632) Sandys, George A paraphrase vpon the divine poems (1638) Sandys, George

35. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Anna Seward
A brief biography of the poet, with the texts of several poems.Category Arts Literature Authors L Lowell, Amy......Amy Lowell 18741925. Amy Lowell (27k JPG image), American Imagist poet,was a woman of great accomplishment. She was born in Brookline
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/a_lowell.html
Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Amy Lowell
Amy Lowell
Amy Lowell ( 27k JPG image ), American Imagist poet, was a woman of great accomplishment. She was born in Brookline, Massachusetts, to a prominent family of high-achievers. Her environment was literary and sophisticated, and when she left private school at 17 to care for her elderly parents, she embarked on a program of self-education. Her poetic career began in 1902 when she saw Eleonora Duse, a famous actress, perform on stage. Overcome with Eleonora's beauty and talent, she wrote her first poem addressed to the actress. They met only a couple times and never developed a relationship, but Eleonora inspired many poems from Amy and triggered her career. Ada Russell, another actress, became the love of Amy's life. She met Ada in 1909 and they remained together until Amy's death in 1925. Amy wrote many, many poems about Ada. In the beginning, as with her previous poems about women, she wrote in such a way that only those who knew the inspiration for a poem would recognize its lesbian content. But as time went on, she censored her work less and less. By the time she wrote Pictures of the Floating World , her poems about Ada were much more blatantly erotic. The series "Planes of Personality: Two Speak Together" chronicles their relationship, including the intensely erotic poem

36. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Amy Lowell
anna seward 17471809. anna seward was a poet and a prolific correspondentof the late eighteenth century. She was the daughter of
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/a_seward.html
Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Anna Seward
Anna Seward
Anna Seward was a poet and a prolific correspondent of the late eighteenth century. She was the daughter of Thomas Seward, the canon of Lichfield, and Elizabeth Hunter. Elizabeth died and left Thomas a widoweran event that left Anna without a mother but with the freedom not to marry. As the eldest daughter, it was her responsibility to care for her father, and so she stayed at Lichfield and tended to him through senility. When he died, she was in her forties, and no longer under any social obligation to marry. As she was quite outspoken in her opinions of marriage (openly criticizing popular guidebooks for women that purported any marriage as preferable to none) the inability to marry young does not seem to have been a problem for her. Anna was well-educated, known for her lively, generous nature and her unconventional ideas. She was educated at home, and read French, Italian, and Latin. Lichfield was one of the major provincial literary centers of the 18th century, and hers was a literary household. She began writing poetry young, publishing in periodicals and circulating her poems among friends. Her style of verse was more conventional than her ideas, tending toward the enthusiastic and sentimental. She wrote many poems commemorating events and celebrating special places, and she is best known for these, as well as for her elegies. But another important topic to her was love, passionately expressed but always cast as friendship, and often directed toward Honora Sneyd.

37. Anna Seward "To Colebrooke Dale"
anna seward, To Colebrooke Dale . anna seward's poem Sonnet. ToColebrooke Dale illustrates a picture of a natural world that
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~cpercy/courses/442semsarahw3.htm
Anna Seward, "To Colebrooke Dale"

38. British Women Romantic Poets Project
British Women Romantic Poets Project. Llangollen Vale, with Other Poems.seward, anna, 17421809. Llangollen vale, with other poems. seward, anna.
http://www.lib.ucdavis.edu/English/BWRP/Works/SewaALlang.htm
British Women Romantic Poets Project
Llangollen Vale, with Other Poems.
Seward, Anna, 1742-1809
David Zhuang, creation of electronic text.
Electronic edition 69Kb
British Women Romantic Poets Project
Shields Library, University of California, Davis, California 95616
I.D. No. SewaALlang
This edition is the property of the editors. It may be copied freely by individuals for personal use, research, and teaching (including distribution to classes) as long as this statement of availability is included in the text. It may be linked to by internet editions of all kinds. Scholars interested in changing or adding to these texts by, for example, creating a new edition of the text (electronically or in print) with substantive editorial changes, may do so with the permission of the publisher. This is the case whether the new publication will be made available at a cost or free of charge. This text may not be not be reproduced as a commercial or non-profit product, in print or from an information server. Available at: http://www.lib.ucdavis.edu/English/BWRP/Works/SewaALlang.sgm

39. Anna Seward - Sonnet XII
anna seward. Emailfrazier_web@technologist.com Frazier Web Design State of theArt Web Design and Graphic Art Copyright © 1997 - 1998 Frazier Web Design.
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/LeftBank/2940/seward1.html
Sonnet XII
Chill'd by unkind HONORA's alter'd eye,
"Why droops my heart with pining woe forlorn,"
Thankless for much of good? What thousands, born
To ceaseless toll beneath this wintry sky,
Or to brave deathful oceans surging high,
Or fell Disease's fever'd rage to mourn,
How blest to them would seem my destiny!
How dear the comforts my rash sorrows scorn!
Affection is repaid by causeless hate!
A plighted love is changed to cold disdain! Yet suffer not thy wrongs to shroud thy fate, But turn, my soul, to blessings which remain; And let this truth the wise resolve create, The Heart estranged no anguish can regain. Anna Seward
Email:frazier_web@technologist.com

40. Seward/Dudley
Almanson 2 TIBBETTS ( ); Nathan 2 seward (1814- ); +Harriet 2 COLLINS( - ) Harriet C. 3 seward (1849- ); anna 3 seward (1850- );
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Woods/3951/Seward.html
SEWARD - DUDLEY MARRIAGES Timothy G. SEWARD , son of Nathan SEWARD and Martha GRIDLEY in 1809 married Elizabeth DUDLEY , the daughter of Isaac DUDLEY and Anna WOODHOUSE , of Whitestone, NY and Tallmadge, OH. Timothy's brother, Amos, married Elizabeth's sister, Asenath (see below) The following is a list of the descendants of Timothy and Elizabeth through four generations. The superscript number is the number of the generation to which the individual belongs; the numbers in parenthesis following the name are the birth and death years, if determined; the + sign designates the spouse of the person of the same generation immediately above. Although the spelling of many of the surnames may vary, only one spelling is used in this presentation.
  • Timothy SEWARD
  • +Elizabeth DUDLEY
    • Harriet Dudley SEWARD
    • +Benoni BUTLER
    • Martha Gridley SEWARD
    • +Almanson TIBBETTS
    • Nathan SEWARD
    • +Harriet COLLINS
      • Harriet C. SEWARD
      • Anna SEWARD
      • Lucy SEWARD
    • +Ada HOAG
    • Isaac Dudley SEWARD
    • +Lois CLARKE
      • Willie Laird SEWARD
      • Louis Dudley SEWARD
      • Mary Clarke SEWARD
    • Anna Elizabeth SEWARD
    • James Garrett SEWARD
    • Charles Carroll SEWARD
    [Return to top of page] Amos SEWARD , son of Nathan SEWARD and Martha GRIDLEY in 1808 married Asenath DUDLEY , the daughter of Isaac DUDLEY and Anna WOODHOUSE , of Whitestone, NY and Tallmadge, OH.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 2     21-40 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter