_Ebenezer DAGGETT ___+
| (1693 - 1762) m 1722
_Thomas DAGGETT _____|
| (1725 - 1758) m 1747|
| |_Hannah SIBLEY ______
| (.... - 1731) m 1722
|
|--David DAGGETT
| (1752 - 1777)
| _David STOCKWELL ____+
| | (.... - 1743)
|_Martha STOCKWELL ___|
m 1747 |
|_Mercy EMMONS _______
(1700 - 1776)
David Daggett marched in response to the alarm on 19 Apr 1775, service 12 days. He was mustered into service 1 Aug 1775, to participate in the seige of Boston at the Roxbury Camp, during which time he wrote a letter to his wife, Azubah, that still survives (Nov 2005). This letter was found amongst the possessions of an apparently unrelated individual. He died in service 14 May 1777, per "The Wheelock Family of Calais, VT", Marcus Waite.
_Royal WHEELOCK _____+
| (1766 - 1856) m 1790
_Harry WHEELOCK _____|
| (1792 - 1873) m 1819|
| |_Lydia TAFT _________
| (.... - 1847) m 1790
|
|--Albert WHEELOCK
| (1823 - 1833)
| _____________________
| |
|_Judith GILLETT _____|
(1797 - 1867) m 1819|
|_____________________
_Ralph WHEELOCK _____
| (1600 - 1683) m 1630
_Benjamin WHEELOCK __|
| (1639 - 1720) m 1692|
| |_Rebecca CLARKE _____+
| (1610 - 1680) m 1630
|
|--Ruth WHEELOCK
| (1695 - 1734)
| _____________________
| |
|_Elizabeth FRENCH ___|
(1655 - 1703) m 1692|
|_____________________
After the death of Ruth Wheelock, her husband married Tamar Leysure, with whom he had nine children recorded in Mendon.
_Simeon WHEELOCK ____+
| (1741 - 1787) m 1763
_Jerry WHEELOCK _____|
| (1784 - 1861) m 1811|
| |_Deborah THAYER _____
| (1741 - 1815) m 1763
|
|--Silas Mandeville WHEELOCK
| (1818 - 1901)
| _Daniel DAY _________
| | (.... - 1848) m 1787
|_Sukey DAY __________|
(.... - 1875) m 1811|
|_Sylvia WHEELOCK ____+
(1764 - 1842) m 1787
Silas M. Wheelock began work at the age of 9, earning 14 cents daily. From that age until his retirement sixty years later, he was almost constantly engaged in some form of work connected with the manufacture of woolens. When his father retired in 1846, he formed the firm C.A. & S.M. Wheelock, with his brother Charles, and his father. The firm manufactured satinets, plaid linseys, and tweeds. The business prospered. In 1870, Silas M. Wheelock bought the plant of the Harris Woolen Company at Putnam, CT, of which he became treasurer and manager. In 1883 he bought the Central Mill in Uxbridge, MA, and formed the Calumet Woolen Company to operate that extensive plant. In 1886 that company bought the Uxbridge Woolen factory (later called the Hecla Mill), which was operated in connection with the Calumet Mill until 1905. From 1846 until 1891, Mr. Wheelock was owner of Waucantuck Mills, as the plant of the C.A. & S.M. Wheelock Company was called. For forty three years (1858-1901) he was a director of the Blackstone National Bank. He represented the Second Worcester Senatorial District in the Massachusetts Legislature, 1888 and 1889. He was a delegate to the 1900 Republican National Convention, nominating WIlliam McKinley for the Presidency; and served Uxbridge as a selectman for three years.
(Source "History of Worcester County, Massachusetts", editted by Ellery Bicknell Crane, Lewis Historical Publishing Company, NY and Chicago, 1924.)
_Obadiah WHEELOCK ___+
| (1712 - 1761) m 1733
_Elias WHEELOCK _____|
| (1743 - 1821) m 1766|
| |_Martha SUMNER ______
| (1710 - ....) m 1733
|
|--Sumner WHEELOCK
| (1784 - 1845)
| _____________________
| |
|_Sarah RICE _________|
(1741 - ....) m 1766|
|_____________________
Buried with Sumner Wheelock and Mary Willet is Harriet Ann Wheelock, 9 Feb 1816 to 18 Mar 1831. This is probably their daughter. (Source: Annapolis County GenWeb Project, 1999)