Joseph LANDERS

Birth:
14 Feb 1688/89
Sandwich, Barnstable, Ma
Death:
5 Aug 1781
Sharon, Litchfield, Ct
Burial:
Boland District Cemetery, Sharon, Ct
Marriage:
7 Feb 1709/10
Rochester, Plymouth, Ma
Father:
Blocked
Mother:
Blocked
Notes:
                   Joseph3 Landers (Thomas2, Thomas1) was born 14 Feb. 1688/9; he died in Sharon, Conn., 5 Aug. 1781 in his 94th year (g.s. Boland District Cemetery; see Editorâ[euro][trademark]s note, The American Genealogist, 36:11,1, January 1960).
He married 7 Feb. 1710 Deborah3 Dotey before Mr. Timothy Ruggles, Minister of the Gospel, daughter of Joseph2 Dotey by his wife Deborah (Ellis), born in Rochester 31 March 1685; died in Sharon, Conn., 13 Jan. 1781 in her 97th year (g.s. Boland District Cemetery; Vital Records of Rochester). We believe her mother was an unrecorded daughter of Lt. John and Elizabeth (Freeman) Ellis (The American Genealogist, 36:11; The Register, 119:173, July 1965). If this identification of Deborah3 Doteyâ[euro][trademark]s mother is correct, as we believe it to be, then Joseph3 Landers and his wife were second cousins, both being grand-grandchildren of Edmond1 Freeman of Sandwich. Descendants of this couple have a line to Edward Dotey the Mayflower passenger, in any case.
Joseph3 Landers was about eleven years old when his family removed from Sandwich to Rochester. In the first record we find of him he is called Joseph Landers of Rochester... labourer. This is in a deed, dated 13 Dec. 1718, for land in Rochester which he bought from Isaac Bumpas* for £4 (Plymouth County Deeds, 17:62). There are many subsequent deeds in his name. One of these, dated 22 Oct. 1723, sets forth that Thomas Landers of Rochester, yeoman, for £20, and in consideration of the love and affection that I have for my well beloved son Joseph Landers of sd Town, husbandman [conveyed to him] a tract of land swamp and salt marsh, containing part of my homestead I now live upon in Rochester... twenty acres of upland... [and] five acres of meadow (ibid., 17:63). This land adjoined the property which, a week later, the father gave to the younger son, Benjamin3 Landers, as we have seen. In the same month Thomas Landers conveyed a portion of his estate to his youngest son, Ebenezer3 Landers.
In 1725-1726 Joseph Landers acquired several hundred additional acres of property in the Crawmessett Great Neck area of Rochester and along the eastern bank of the Wawwayentit River (ibid., 21:125; 22:129; 26:153). Having built himself a new mansion seat he proceeded to sell to his brother Ebenezer, by deed dated 15 July 1726, the property which had come to him from his father and the first lot which he had bought from Isaac Bumpas. It is interesting that Ebenezer later sold this farm to Silas Bourne of Sandwich, who sold it, in turn, to Melatiah Bourne, the latter then conveying it to Nathan3 Landers, thus bringing the old homestead in a full cycle back into the Landers family.
One wonders what the cousins who remained behind in old England would have said had they been aware that this curious game of musical chairs with real estate could be played by their New England kinsmen
Between 1732 and 1738 Joseph Landers continued to accumulate Rochester land (ibid., 28:189; 35:43, etc.). In 1739 he was among those who petitioned for permission from the General Court to establish a separate town, and from that year he is called of Wareham in all deeds.
Joseph, Deborah, and Joseph their son were admitted by the Rev. Roland Thatcher to the First Church of Wareham 13 Dec. 1741.
At this point we turn, for a moment, from local records as we believe we have here an example of one of the reasons why genealogy fascinates many people. This Landers family illustrates an American phenomenon which is, indeed, curious. They had worked hard to carve out for themselves a comfortable domain in the former Indian plantation of Scipican, later known as Rochester, yet they were not content with that. In 1831 Alexis de Tocqueville observed this characteristic of Americans and, we think, put it very well:
A native of the United States clings to this worldâ[euro][trademark]s goods as if he were never to die and he is so hasty in grasping at all within his reach, that one would suppose he was constantly afraid of not living long enough to enjoy them. He clutches everything, he holds nothing fast, but soon loosens his grasp to pursue fresh gratifications. In the United States a man builds a house in which to spend his old age, and he sells it before the roof is on; he plants a garden and lets it just as the trees are coming into bearingâ[euro]|. He brings a field into tillage and leaves other men to gather the crops; he embraces a profession and gives it up; he settles in a place which he soon leaves, to carry his changeable longings elsewhereâ[euro]| and if, at the end of a year of unremitting labour he finds he has a few daysâ[euro][trademark] vacation, his eager curiosity whirls him over the vast extent of the United States and he will travel fifteen hundred miles in a few days to shake off his happiness. Death at last overtakes him, but it is before he is weary of his bootless chase of that complete felicity which forever escapes him (Democracy in America, 1964 ed., p. 205/6).
Every New England family we have studied furnishes similar examples of this restlessness. In this instance we find a deed, acknowledged by Joseph Landers 5 March 1747 and by his wife Deborah 16 April 1748, whereby Joseph sold to Samuel Swift Jr., of Sandwich, a certain tract of upland, salt meadow and cedar swamp being at a place called Crawmeesett Great Neck, containing my homestead with my now dwelling house on the same with all other buildings... no less than 126 acres of upland, and one meadow lot [the 14th] and another lot [the 15th] which contains also part of the 16th lot; also salt meadow and ten acres which was part of William Dexterâ[euro][trademark]s share at first; also 57 acres which I bought of John Talor and 20 acres which I bought of Ebenezer Landers and... a certain cedar swamp containing what I bought of Benjamin Norris... and John Benson... Deborah Landers the wife of sd Joseph Landers hereby surrenders all her dower right (Plymouth County Deeds, 39:136).
Soon after this transaction, Joseph Landers and his wife; their son Joseph Landers, Jr., with his wife; their son-in-law Abel Wood, with his wife, were dismissed, 18 June 1749, by the Wareham Church to the Church of Christ in Sharon, Conn. Also in this party were Josephâ[euro][trademark]s brothers, Benjamin and Ebenezer Landers, and the latterâ[euro][trademark]s son Thomas Landers. With them went Deborahâ[euro][trademark]s brothers, Ellis, Joseph and John Dotey, with their wives and her sister, Mary (Dotey) with her husband, Samuel Waterman (Wareham Church Records; see also Mrs. Barclayâ[euro][trademark]s account of these Doteys in The American Genealogist, 36:11, January 1960; Donald Lines Jacobus, The Waterman Family, vol. 2, p. 6). Joseph Landers purchased lot #8 in Sharon, Conn., in 1748 (Charles F. Sedgwick, History of Sharon, Litchfield County, Conn. (1842), p. 95-96).
Benjamin3 Landers, in his will, dated 25 Sept. 1760, gives the residue of his estate to his brother, Joseph Landers. We have not found a probate or deed which would show how Josephâ[euro][trademark]s estate was distributed. [Lydia B. (Phinney) Brownson and Maclean W. McLean, Thomas1 Landers of Sandwich, Mass., NEHGR 124:57-59]
                  
Deborah DOTY
Birth:
31 Mar 1685
Rochester, Plymouth, Ma
Death:
13 Jan 1781
Sharon, Litchfield, Ct
Burial:
Boland District Cemetery, Sharon, Ct
Notes:
                   Also have birth as 30 Mar 1685 in Rochester, Plymouth, MA. [Descendants of William Kirby http://www.familytreemaker.com/users/g/r/a/Steven-G-Gray/index.html; Stephen Snyder Homepage http://www.igateway.com/dialups/sdsnyder/family/index.htm]
                  
Children
Marriage
1
LANDERS
Birth:
28 Sep 1711
Rochester, Plymouth, Ma
Death:
29 Sep 1711
Rochester, Plymouth, Ma
 
Marr:
 
2
Birth:
21 Jul 1713
Rochester, Plymouth, Ma
Death:
16 Dec 1760
Sharon, Litchfield, Ct
Marr:
25 Mar 1736
Rochester, Plymouth, Ma 
Notes:
                   Thankful4, b. 21 July 1713; mar. 25 March 1736 Abel Wood (int. he late of Plymouth, Vital Records of Rochester, vol. 1, p. 198).* They removed with her parents to Sharon, Conn., in 1748.
* This is one of the many instances where a misreading of the name Sanders for Landers has led researchers astray. A copy of the Wareham Church records shows that Thankful Landers now Lothrop was dismissed to the East Parish Church in Barnstable, 29 Sept. 1745. She was really Thankful Saunders, fourth of the seven children of Henry3 & Ann (Bates) Saunders [Sanders] of Sandwich and Wareham, b. ca. 1706, bapt. 20 June 1708 in the First Church of Sandwich, whose intentions to marry John Lothrop were published 15 Sept. 1744 (Vital Records of Barnstable - May. Des., 33:166); she was the second wife of John Lothrop - see E. B. Huntington, A Genealogical Memoir of the Lo-Lathrop Family (1884), p. 67.
[Lydia B. (Phinney) Brownson and Maclean W. McLean, Thomas1 Landers of Sandwich, Mass., NEHGR 124:60]
                  
3
Birth:
8 Aug 1723
Rochester, Plymouth, Ma
Death:
31 Aug 1801
Sharon, Litchfield, Ct
Marr:
4 Nov 1742
Wareham, Plymouth, Ma 
Notes:
                   Deac. Joseph4 Landers (Joseph3, Thomas2, Thomas1), born 8 Aug. 1723, died in Sharon, Conn., 31 Aug. 1801 ae 79 (g.s. Burying Ground, Sharon, Conn. (1903) by Lawrence Van Alstyne, p.72; also Connecticut Vital Records - 619 Cem. 4, p.84 in Connecticut State Library, Hartford).
He married 4 Nov 1742 Sarah Lovell (Wareham 1st Church Records). She was probably the daughter of Joshua4 Lovell (John3, John2, Robert1) and Sarah (Isham) Lovell, born in Barnstable 13 Oct. 1719 and baptized there 4 Aug. 1722. The Sharon cemetery records (op. cit.) state that she died 19 Jan. 1800 ae 80.
In 1748, Joseph Landers with his wife and children, parents and other relatives, moved to Sharon, Conn. (Charles F. Sedgwick, History of Sharon, Litchfield County, Conn. (1903)). The Wareham 1st Church records confirm this, stating that the family was dismissed to the Church of Christ in Sharon 16 June 1749. Sedgwick (op. cit.) says that this Joseph Landers, Jr. lived with his father on the 8th lot there.
The will of the uncle, Benjamin3 Landers of Sharon, dated 5 May 1760, designates cousin Joseph Landers his executor. But for some reason Joseph refused to serve, and administration of Benjaminâ[euro][trademark]s estate was turned over to another cousin, Thomas4 Landers. We note that a Joseph Landers appears briefly upon the Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, records about this time; it may be this Joseph. If so, he soon returned to Sharon.
Joseph Landers served in the Revolution, as we find an order of the Connecticut Assembly dated October 1777 by which the officers of a company of volunteers in the town of Sharon were appointed, among them as Ensign, Joseph Landers (Charles L. Hoadley, The Public Records of Connecticut (1894), p.431). Sedgwick (op. cit.) tells us that Joseph Landers was appointed Deacon of the Sharon Church in 1781, and that he served in that office until his death. He was the representative from Sharon in 1782 to the Connecticut General Assembly.
The will of Joseph Landers of Sharon dated 13 March 1798 was proved 21 Sept. 1801. He gives:
To my beloved wife Sarah, sufficient provision for her honourable support and maintenance during her life already been made for her... To my daughter Sarah, wife of David Hollister, I have already given her her full portion of my estate. To the heirs of my son Seth Landers, deceased, viz: Deborah, Zilpha, Remember and Sarah, I give one half of all my obligations due to me or shall be due to me at my decease, to be equally divided among them, together with all my indoor moveables, after my decease and the decease of my wife. To the heirs of my daughter Remember, the wife of John Orton, deceased, I give the other half of my obligations due to me... To my grand son John Hollister I give all my live stock that shall belong to me at my decease. All the remainder of my estate, if there shall be any, to the heirs of my sd son Seth and Remember to be equally divided among them. I constitute and appoint my trusty friend Samuel Smith of sd Sharon to be my sole executor... 13 Mar 1798. Witness: Temperance Smith, Sally Gale
A codicil, dated 6 Aug. 1799, gives To my grand son John Hollister my counting desk. I also appoint Barnabas Tobey of sd Sharon to be my executor with the already named Samuell Smith (Sharon, Litchfield Co. Probates, Docket 1997). An accounting shows property distributed To the heirs of Joseph Landers, deceased: To the heirs of John Orton: Joseph Orton; heirs of Luther Orton, Abigail, Hannah, Thankful and Matilda Orton, $50.80 each. To the heirs of Seth Landers, deceased: Deborah, Zilpha, Remember and Sally $102.79 each. To John Hollister $99.50. Distributed by Samuel Bucher, Daniel Deming, Paul Smith, Jr.* The inventory, dated 2 Oct. 1801, was taken by David Downe, Paul Smith and Daniel Deming.
* D.A.R. Lineage Book 28:295 alleges that this Seth5 Landers had, by wife Susan, a son John6 Landers. The above will and distribution indicates that Seth5 Landers left no other heirs other than those listed.
[Lydia B. (Phinney) Brownson and Maclean W. McLean, Thomas1 Landers of Sandwich, Mass., NEHGR 124:220-221]
Also have birth as 8 Jul 1723 in Rochester, Plymouth, MA. [Stephen Snyder Homepage http://www.igateway.com/dialups/sdsnyder/family/index.htm]
                  
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Joseph Landers - Deborah Doty

Joseph Landers was born at Sandwich, Barnstable, Ma 14 Feb 1688/89.

He married Deborah Doty 7 Feb 1709/10 at Rochester, Plymouth, Ma . Deborah Doty was born at Rochester, Plymouth, Ma 31 Mar 1685 daughter of Joseph Doty and Deborah Ellis .

They were the parents of 3 children:
Landers born 28 Sep 1711.
Thankful Landers born 21 Jul 1713.
Joseph Landers, Jr born 8 Aug 1723.

Joseph Landers died 5 Aug 1781 at Sharon, Litchfield, Ct .

Deborah Doty died 13 Jan 1781 at Sharon, Litchfield, Ct .