[1950] WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Wash Ah'tafel) # 1115938990 = 58946990
[4702]
"Bloodline ...", p 409 Mark Anthony
http://library.monterey.edu/merrill/family/dorsett6/d0129/I11531.html d 30 BC
_Thomas BANGS _______
| (1500 - ....)
_Richard BANGS ______|
| (1536 - 1586) |
| |_____________________
|
_John BANGS __________|
| (1560 - 1630) m 1586 |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_Margaret ? --- _____|
| (1540 - 1592) |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Joshua BANGS
| (1597 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_Joan or Jane CHAVIS _|
(1563 - 1632) m 1586 |
| _____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|_____________________
_Hiram BINGHAM _______________+
| (1789 - 1869) m 1819
_Hiram BINGHAM _____________|
| (1831 - 1908) m 1856 |
| |_Sybil MOSELEY _______________+
| (1792 - 1848) m 1819
_Hiram BINGHAM ______|
| (1875 - 1956) m 1900|
| | _Jonathan BREWSTER ___________+
| | | (1793 - 1862) m 1833
| |_Minerva Clarissa BREWSTER _|
| (1834 - 1903) m 1856 |
| |_Clarissa ALLEN ______________+
| (1812 - 1895) m 1833
|
|--Alfred Mitchell BINGHAM
| (1905 - 1998)
| _Rev. Alfred MITCHELL ________+
| | (1790 - 1831) m 1815
| _Alfred MITCHELL ___________|
| | (1832 - 1911) m 1871 |
| | |_Lucretia Mumford WOODBRIDGE _+
| | (1792 - 1839) m 1815
|_Alfreda MITCHELL ___|
(1874 - 1967) m 1900|
| _Charles Lewis TIFFANY _______+
| | (1812 - 1902) m 1841
|_Annie Olivia TIFFANY ______|
(1844 - 1937) m 1871 |
|_Harriet Olivia Avery YOUNG __+
(1817 - 1897) m 1841
[296]
Obituary for Alfred Mitchel Bingham
Alfred Mitchell Bingham, an intellectual leader in the 1930's Farmer-Labor Movement and an author of many books ranging from left wing politics to family biography, died in his sleep early on November 2 in his home in Clinton, New York. He was 93.
Bingham was born in Cambridge, MA, February 20, 1905, the third of the seven sons of Hiram Bingham and Alfred Mitchell. His father achieved distinction as the discoverer of the lost Inca city of Machu Picchu and served as US Senator in the Coolidge and Hoover administrations. His mother was a granddaughter of Charles L. Tiffany, founder and long-time president of Tiffany & Co.
He attended Groton School, Yale College and Yale Law School, at all of which his scholastic record was distinguished. Two of his Law School professors, Felix Frankfurter, then a visiting professor from Harvard, and William O. Douglas, helped to awaken his social conscience and to undermine his inherited Republicanism.
Instead of practicing law after being admitted to the Connecticut bar, he set off on a two-year grand tour of Europe and Asia. Armed with credentials as a correspondent for several Connecticut newspapers, he interviewed a number of world figures including Mussolini, Gandhi and Chiang Kai-shek. He traveled widely in the Soviet Union, crossing Siberia and Turkestan. Bingham was profoundly influenced by the apparent impressive gains made by the Soviet Union in the first of its Five-year Plans for economic development. These contrasted sharply with the catastrophic depression afflicting the rest of the world.
Back in the United States, in 1932 he founded, with Selden Rodman, Common Sense, a monthly journal of left-wing opinion. Under the slogan "production for use and not for profit," the magazine proclaimed the end of the capitalist system and the need for a planned economy. Its pages were graced by articles by such writers as Upton Sinclair, John Dos Passos, Theodore Dreiser, Stuart Chase, James Agee, and James Rorty. A collection of articles by these and other writers appeared in book form in 1934 under the title "Challenge to the New Deal" edited by Bingham and Rodman.
A year later Bingham's "Insurgent America: Revolt of the Middle Classes" called for the emergence of a new political party pledged to economic planning but attuned to American traditions. He predicted that the Wisconsin Progressive movement and the Minnesota Farmer Labor Party would be the nucleus of such a new national party.
In 1934 as a member of the American Civil Liberties Union he was arrested and sentenced to jail for blocking traffic in a demonstration for the right of peaceful picketing. In 1938 he became a member of the National Board of the ACLU, serving for eight years.
Bingham's next book, "Man's Estate: Adventures in Economic Discovery," published in 1939, explored various proposals for achieving full employment and an "economy of abundance."
The approach of WW II in Europe and with it an end of the depression without radical economic changes, encouraged Bingham to believe that social and economic reform could be achieved within the two-party system. He joined the Democratic Party, supported Roosevelt in the 1940 campaign, and was elected to the Connecticut State Senate from the previously Republican and largely rural 20th District. As chairman of the state Senate Agriculture Committee, Bingham successfully steered to enactment a measure regulating the dairy industry. Two years later, when Roosevelt's coattails were no longer available, he was defeated for re-election.
Also in 1940, he gave up active editorship of Common Sense and moved his family from New York to Salem, Connecticut where they settled in an eighteenth century ancestral farmhouse. He had married Sylvia Knox of Stonington, Connecticut in 1934 and by this time had three children. A fourth was born in 1942.
Three more books, "The United States of Europe," "Techniques of Democracy" and "The Practice of Idealism," were published between 1942 and 1944. These discussed political and social issues raised by the war.
After a brief stint in the Office of Price Administration in 1942, Bingham entered the U.S. Army in 1943 as a Captain in the Civil Affairs Division. He spent the two following years in Europe, attaining the rank of Major. After the surrender of Germany, he served as the chief of the Manpower Division of the Wuerttemberg-Baden Region of Military Government. He encouraged the revival of the German labor movement, seeing it as important for the reestablishment of democratic institutions. On his return to this country in 1946 he was active in the American Association for a Democratic Germany, becoming its chairman in 1948.
For a while after the war he returned to journalism as a career, doing work for the Encyclopedia Britannica and helping to edit "World Government News," an organ of the world federalist movement. And for some months he handled publicity for the American Civil Liberties Union.
In 1949, almost twenty years after his admission to the bar, he opened an office in New London and began the practice of law. He also served in several positions under Governor Chester Bowles, culminating in 1950 with an appointment to the Workmen's Compensation Commission, on which he served for two years as Commissioner for the eastern district of Connecticut. When he returned to private practice he established his office in Norwich, in association with Eli Cramer, later a Superior Court Judge.
National politics was still an objective. In 1947 he helped organize and was a co-chairman of the Connecticut Branch of the Americans for Democratic Action.
In 1952 he served as alternate delegate to the National Democratic Convention, and later that year and again in 1970 actively but unsuccessfully sought nomination as Democratic candidate for Congress in the Second District.
As a practicing attorney in Norwich for over twenty years, Bingham was active in civic organizations in New London County. He established and directed a legal aid and lawyer referral service as a function of the New London County Bar Association. He served as chairman of the Norwich Red Cross. In that capacity he helped establish the county-wide United Fund of Southeastern Connecticut, serving on its board for a number of years, and as chairman of its Social Planning Council. He became a member of the board of the United Workers of Norwich, a community social agency. He was a founder and served as the first chairman of the Thames Valley council for Community Action, a unit in the national "War on Poverty." He helped establish the Southeastern Connecticut Regional Planning Agency in 1960 and served on its board for the next eight years. He also helped establish and served on the board of trustees of Mitchell College from 1938 to 1970.
In his home town of Salem, Bingham was active in many civic and governmental capacities, a few of which were Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Salem Library, Registrar of Voters, Prosecuting Grand Juror of Justice Court, Town Attorney and Judge of Probate. He was also a long-time member of the Grange and of the Democratic Town Committee, serving as chairman 1952-58.
A year after the death of his wife Sylvia in 1981, Bingham married Katharine Stryker Dunn. He retired from law practice and began to spend an increasing portion of each year at Katharine's home in Clinton, NY. He relinquished most of his Connecticut interests, though not his Salem home, and resumed his career as an author. His only book in the post-war period had been his 1970 "Violence and Democracy," a survey of the troubled 1960s, written in collaboration with his brother, New York Congressman Jonathan Bingham. He also wrote articles in legal and historical journals. In 1989 he published a biography of his father, "Portrait of an Explorer: Hiram Bingham, Discoverer of Machu Picchu." And in 1995 at the age of 90 he published a personal and family history, "The Tiffany Fortune and Other Chronicles of a Connecticut Family."
Bingham was a person of extraordinary vigor and sociability. He learned to use a computer in his late 70's; and in his mid and late 80's, he was still playing tennis and taking long walks. Although he lost his eyesight, he did not lose his interest in the world. Readers kept him abreast of current events, and the books near his chair were the latest works of fiction and non-fiction.
Bingham was a devoted family man. He was much beloved by his wife Katharine, four children from his first marriage, Alfreda Shapere and Christopher, Douglas and Stephen Bingham, five grandchildren, Alfred and Catherine Shapere, Donald Bingham, Devanand Janki and Sylvia Bingham, and three children of Katharine's, Paul Dunn, Judy Grant and Susan Connor.
There will be a memorial service Thanksgiving weekend in Hamilton College Chapel in Clinton, New York. Another memorial service is planned for early summer 1999 in Salem, Connecticut.
[5425]
from the book "The Family of Reverend Peter Bulkeley" by Jacobus pp.18-19.
Also spelled BUNTING
Internet source lists b ABT 1470, Berkampsted,Suffolk,Eng; d 29 Apr 1548
_Brusse ______________+
| (.... - 1031)
_Rognvald ___________|
| |
| |_Ostrida of Gothland _
|
_Robert de Brussi or DE BRUS _|
| (1030 - ....) |
| | ______________________
| | |
| |_Felcia of Normandy _|
| |
| |______________________
|
|
|--William DE BRAOSE
| (1049 - 1087)
| ______________________
| |
| _Alan _______________|
| | (1000 - 1046) |
| | |______________________
| |
|_Emma DE NORMANDY ____________|
(1034 - 1094) |
| ______________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|______________________
[1410]
WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Washington Ahnentafel) # 1090632
Al Myers' genealogy pages via http://www.ezonline.com/aem/ of Brouze, Normandy, France
_John GURDON ________+
| (.... - 1487)
_John GURDON ________|
| (.... - 1504) |
| |_Margaret --- _______
| (.... - 1472)
_John GURDON ________|
| (1485 - 1556) |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_Joan --- ___________|
| (.... - 1512) |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Robert GURDON
|
| _____________________
| |
| _John COLEMAN _______|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_Anne COLEMAN _______|
(.... - 1537) |
| _____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|_____________________
[4165] file:///C|/Data/Ancestor/P13.htm
_James MITCHELL __________
| (1705 - 1776) m 1740
_Hon. Stephen Mix MITCHELL _|
| (1743 - 1835) m 1769 |
| |_Rebecca MIX _____________+
| (1702 - 1747) m 1740
_Rev. Alfred MITCHELL ________|
| (1790 - 1831) m 1815 |
| | _Donald GRANT ____________
| | | (1708 - 1763) m 1740
| |_Hannah GRANT ______________|
| (1748 - 1830) m 1769 |
| |_Arminal TOUCEY __________+
| (1720 - 1814) m 1740
|
|--Mary Perkins MITCHELL
| (1829 - 1830)
| _Rev. Ephraim WOODBRIDGE _+
| | (1746 - 1776) m 1769
| _Nathaniel Shaw WOODBRIDGE _|
| | (1771 - 1797) m 1790 |
| | |_Mary "Polly" SHAW _______+
| | (1751 - 1775) m 1769
|_Lucretia Mumford WOODBRIDGE _|
(1792 - 1839) m 1815 |
| _John MUMFORD ____________+
| | (1740 - 1825) m 1770
|_Elizabeth MUMFORD _________|
(1771 - 1795) m 1790 |
|_Lucretia CHRISTOPHERS ___+
(1749 - 1825) m 1770
[599]
MERGE: RIN XXXX (d.d. 1 Apr 1830) merged with RIN (same parents, b.d)
birth date shown as 1828 on photocopy of handwritten Mitchell genealogy table; on back in A.M. Binghams hand dated 4 Apr 1976: 'This is from Reese Mitchell, original in possession of his brother Donald, Macon???, Ga'
"The Life of Donald G. Mitchell. Ik Marvel" by Waldo H. Dunn p.51 lists death as 1 Apr 1830
_Nicholas DE MARTON _+
| (1289 - ....)
_Roger DE MARTON ____|
| |
| |_Agnes --- __________
| (1289 - ....)
_Thomas MORTON ______|
| (1315 - ....) |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Robert MORTON
| (1335 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
| _____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|_____________________
[2785] SOUTHER.AHN ahnentafel # 17821696
_Abraham POST _______+
| (1566 - 1639) m 1595
_Stephen POST _______|
| (1604 - 1659) m 1625|
| |_Ann HUNTER _________
| (1568 - 1626) m 1595
_John POST __________|
| (1629 - 1711) m 1652|
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_Eleanore LANGLEY ___|
| (1605 - 1670) m 1625|
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Lydia POST
| (1674 - 1753)
| _William HYDE _______+
| | (1569 - 1637) m 1609
| _William HYDE _______|
| | (1600 - 1681) |
| | |_Ellen STUBBS _______
| | (1573 - ....) m 1609
|_Hester HYDE ________|
(1631 - 1703) m 1652|
| _____________________
| |
|_Joanna --- _________|
(1610 - 1632) |
|_____________________
__
|
__|
| |
| |__
|
_Roger VAUGHAN ________________|
| (1410 - ....) |
| | __
| | |
| |__|
| |
| |__
|
|
|--Roger VAUGHAN
| (1436 - ....)
| __
| |
| __|
| | |
| | |__
| |
|_Denis or Ap Thomas AP PHILIP _|
(1414 - ....) |
| __
| |
|__|
|
|__
[3856]
"Welsh Genealogies, AD 1400-1400" (Aberystwyth: National Library of Wales, 1983), vol III, p. 463
(Drymbenog 2(C3).
per e-mail from Mark Dixon
there were two Roger Vaughans and the one who married Eleanor Somerset was not the one who married Jane Whitney. Eleanor's parents (Henry Somerset 2nd, Earl of Worcester, and Elizabeth Browne) were married after 15 April 1526, when Henry's first wife died. Eleanor's alleged husband Roger died before 25 Sept., 1514. In other words, Roger died a dozen years before his wife's parents got married.