Our Family
 Genealogy Pages

Susan M. CRESSEY

Female 1820 - 1902  (81 years)


Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Susan M. CRESSEY was born 29 Nov 1820, Buxton, York County, Maine (daughter of James CRESSEY and Hannah HASTY); died 24 Nov 1902, Umatilla County, Oregon; was buried , Mountain View Cemetery, Walla Walla, Walla Walla County, Washington.

    Susan married William Paine STURGIS 17 Jan 1843. William (son of David STURGIS and Betsey PAINE) was born 04 Sep 1818, Gorham, Cumberland County, Maine; died 21 Nov 1902, Walla Walla, Walla Walla County, Washington; was buried , Mountain View Cemetery, Walla Walla, Walla Walla County, Washington. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Samuel Paine STURGIS was born 23 Mar 1856, Gorham, Cumberland County, Maine; died 04 Feb 1896, Pendleton, Umatilla County, Oregon; was buried , Mountain View Cemetery, Walla Walla, Walla Walla County, Washington.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  James CRESSEY was born 27 Nov 1790, Buxton, York County, Maine (son of John Wadleigh CRESSEY and Susanna MCDONALD); died 18 Jun 1877, Portland, Cumberland County, Maine; was buried , Evergreen Cemetery, Portland, Cumberland County, Maine.

    Notes:

    James Cressey was born in 1790 in Buxton, Maine, married in 1820 Hannah, daughter, Robert Hasty, Gorham. He was engaged in cooperage, grocery and farming in Buxton and West Gorham. His wife was a member North Congregational Church at Groveville. He was baptized by immersion when over 80 years old as an Adventist. They moved to Portland in 1869 and lived with their son, Cyrus. She died 1870 in 75th year. He died 1877 in 87th year, buried in Evergreen Cemetery.
    (http://lrcressy.com/family/fam-tree/0287.html)

    James married Hannah HASTY 1820. Hannah (daughter of Robert HASTY) was born 11 Aug 1796, Searsboro, Maine; died 1870. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Hannah HASTY was born 11 Aug 1796, Searsboro, Maine (daughter of Robert HASTY); died 1870.
    Children:
    1. 1. Susan M. CRESSEY was born 29 Nov 1820, Buxton, York County, Maine; died 24 Nov 1902, Umatilla County, Oregon; was buried , Mountain View Cemetery, Walla Walla, Walla Walla County, Washington.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John Wadleigh CRESSEY was born 22 Feb 1749, Gorham, Cumberland County, Maine (son of John CRESSEY and Deborah WADLEIGH); died 23 Dec 1842, Buxton, York County, Maine; was buried , Highland Cemetery, Buxton, York County, Maine.

    Notes:

    John Wadleigh Cressey was b. in Gorham, Maine, February 22, 1749, m. December 1, 1770 Susanna McDonald of Gorham, b. in 1751. He was probably b. in the Fort on Fort Hill on account of the Indians. He bought a farm on Codman's Hill, where his father first settled. After a time he sold this piece and was paid in Continental money, which proved to be worthless. About 1776 he moved to the adjoining town of Buxton, bought a farm of 60 acres called the ``Right'' of Cornelius Davis of Newbury and Rowley on range of lots known by the letter G, No. 5. Mr. Davis was a soldier in the Narragansett War in 1675. Buxton was a land grant by the General Court of Mass. to the soldiers of that war, being No. 1 of the 7 ``Narragansett Plantations.'' About 1786 Mr. Cressey built a large two-story which stood until 1934, 150 years, having been occupied by five generations. Records give but 13 two-story houses in Buxton in 1798. He kept a good stock of cattle, sheep, swine and poultry. He and his wife raised and made nearly everything needed for the family in food and clothing by using the flaxwheel, spinning wheel, and the hand loom. He served as collector of taxes in Buxton in 1795. His wife d. in 1834 at 83, a member of Rev. Paul Coffin's Church. He d. in 1842 in 94th year, an early settler and ``truly a worthy, honest man.'' They were buried in Groveville Cemetery, Buxton, Maine. He left a good property and many descendants.

    "John Cressey, the eldest son of John, married, Dec. 1, 1770, Susanna McDonald, who was probably the sister of Charles McDonald. Soon after his marriage Mr. Cressey purchased a farm in Buxton, near what was formerly called Spruce Swamp, now Groveville, where by industry and prudence he brought up a family, and left a good farm, which is still owned by his descendants. Two of his children, Daniel and Betsey, were born in Gorham; Daniel married Elizabeth Harding of Baldwin, and Betsey married Edmund Watson. Another of his sons, Benjamin, was captured in a privateer during the War of 1812, and for some time held a prisoner in Dartmoor Prison. Mr. Cressey died Dec. 23, 1842, in Buxton."

    Buried:
    ftp://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/me/york/buxton/cemetery/highlandcem.txt

    Died:
    NEHGS Register article says 1841, but Highland Cemetery gravestone, and History of Gorham, Maine, indicate that death date was 23 Dec 1842.

    John married Susanna MCDONALD 01 Dec 1770. Susanna (daughter of Charles MCDONALD) was born Abt 1751; died 1796. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Susanna MCDONALD was born Abt 1751 (daughter of Charles MCDONALD); died 1796.

    Notes:

    Birth:
    According to gravestone in Highland Cemetery, Buxton, Maine.

    Died:
    7 Apr 1834 - is date of death according to gravestone in Highland Cemetery, Buxton, Maine.

    Children:
    1. 2. James CRESSEY was born 27 Nov 1790, Buxton, York County, Maine; died 18 Jun 1877, Portland, Cumberland County, Maine; was buried , Evergreen Cemetery, Portland, Cumberland County, Maine.

  3. 6.  Robert HASTY (son of Daniel HASTY).
    Children:
    1. 3. Hannah HASTY was born 11 Aug 1796, Searsboro, Maine; died 1870.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John CRESSEY was born 31 Jul 1721, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts (son of Daniel CRESSEY and Sarah INGERSOLL); died 1785.

    Notes:

    "John Cressey was b. in Beverly, Mass., July 31, 1721, m. about 1745 Deborah, dau. of Captain Amos Wadleigh of Boston. He and his wife moved to Narragansett No. 7, a grant to the soldiers who fought in King Philip's war in 1675. This grant is now the town of Gorham, Maine, incorporated in 1764. They settled west of ``Little River'' in 1747, cleared some of the forest land and built a log cabin for their home. Later he exchanged places for a 30-acre lot, No. 53, not far from ``Fort Hill,'' where he made a permanent home. This was in the time of the French and Indian war. It was not safe for anyone to remain outside the fort at night. They lived in constant fear of the war whoop, the tomahawk, and the scalping knife. His wife would often act as spy while her husband was at work in the clearing with gun at hand to protect him from the wily savage. The fort was built in 1745 on the most elevated land in Gorham. A tablet on a boulder now marks the spot on ``Fort Hill.'' The early settlers did not feel secure until General Wolfe and his army won the victory at Quebec in 1759. During the dangerous times public worship was held in the fort. He was a tanner and shoemaker for the early settlers. In 1772 he cut 20 tons of hay. The farm is still in the Cressey name. He and his wife were members of the early First Parish Congregational Church. He d. in 1785 at 64. She d. in 1796 at 75."

    "He moved to Connecticut with his father. He m. Deborah Wadley. They moved to Gorham, Maine about 1747."

    "John, the eldest son, who settled in Gorham, was born July 31, 1721, and was about twenty-five or twenty-six years old when, about 1747, he married Deborah, daughter of Capt. Amos Wadley of Boston. He came to Gorham when his son John was an infant, and settled first on the hundred acre lot, 69, or 70, west of Little river, near where David Warren lately lived. From thence having exchanged farms with Chas. McDonald he moved to the thirty acre lot, 53, where he lived a part of the time during the Indian war.
    Mr. Cressey built his first house on the above-named thirty acre lot, near where Charles Cressey's cider house now stands. At the time of his coming to Gorham, 1749, Or 1750, the Indians in consequence of their many defeats had become less troublesome, though they were often seen, singly or in small parties, but committed but little depredation, as the settlers had become better armed and more wary. Nevertheless, many of the settlers who were near enough made the fort their home during the night. Such was the case with Mr. Cressey. Although his name does not appear with those who made the fort their home during the Indian war, the fact is that he did so most of the time with his wife and children, always going to the fort to spend the nights. He had a road across lots direct to the fort, which was a short half mile from his clearing. The first land he cleared was in front of his log house, on the thirty acre lot, 53. Here he would work, while his wife and her son John would sit on a stump with the gun by her side in order to give the alarm, should the Indians appear. At one time, while husband and wife were thus situated, an Indian came upon them. Discovering Mr. Cressey at work, and not seeing his wife, he crept stealthily toward Mr. Cressey, with his tomahawk raised and knife ready, not being armed with a gun. Mrs. Cressey sat with her gun in her hand, with fear and trembling. When the enemy got quite near to her husband she could bear it no longer, his danger overcame her fear. She rose up and called out to him, at the same time pointing her gun toward the Indian, who thought it prudent to beat a hasty retreat, for the savages had had several lessons that had taught them that the "white squaws " were not bad shots. Here the couple lived and toiled. Mrs. Cressey, although reared in the city of Boston, and never having known what hard work was, took hold resolutely with her husband, taking care of the house and aiding in the field, helping him in the toilsome work of cutting and piling up the partially burned logs in order to clear the land for crops, often not knowing from whence the next meal of victuals was to come. Sometimes there was not a particle of food in their house, nor did they know where they could obtain any. Such was the case one day when they were at work on their land. The season was advancing; their crops must be in; if they were to raise anything they had no time to spare, they must work, and then hunt for food. While thus at work, nearly dead for want of food, Mrs. Cressey found a partridge nest, with thirteen eggs in it., This was good fortune, and when their day's work was done they had a good square supper of partridge eggs on which to go to rest. Bread was hard to be got. When they first came into town they could occasionally procure game when their work would allow them time for hunting and when they thought the Indians were not prowling around.

    Mr. Cressey died in 1785, and his wife Deborah, in 1796."

    John married Deborah WADLEIGH Abt 1745. Deborah (daughter of Amos WADLEIGH) died 1796. [Group Sheet]


  2. 9.  Deborah WADLEIGH (daughter of Amos WADLEIGH); died 1796.

    Notes:

    Surname could be "Wadland" or "Wadling".

    Amos Wadling and Jemima Fenno Wadling had daughters Jemima (20 May 1727) and Mahitabel (31 Jan 1730) in Milton.

    Children:
    1. 4. John Wadleigh CRESSEY was born 22 Feb 1749, Gorham, Cumberland County, Maine; died 23 Dec 1842, Buxton, York County, Maine; was buried , Highland Cemetery, Buxton, York County, Maine.

  3. 10.  Charles MCDONALD
    Children:
    1. 5. Susanna MCDONALD was born Abt 1751; died 1796.

  4. 12.  Daniel HASTY
    Children:
    1. 6. Robert HASTY