Sarah Knowlton (who died a child)

(6 March 1738/39 - 1742)
Sarah Knowlton (who died a child)|b. 6 Mar 1738/39\nd. 1742|p1069.htm|Abraham Knowlton|b. 30 Apr 1703\nd. 3 Nov 1768|p1064.htm|Martha Lamson|b. ca 1718\nd. Sep 1799|p1065.htm|Thomas Knowlton|b. 19 May 1662\nd. 4 Feb 1750/51|p1138.htm|Margery Goodhue|b. s 1670\nd. fol 1704/5|p1147.htm|Thomas Lamson|b. 3 Jan 1682/83\nd. Jul 1767|p1210.htm|Abigail Faulkner|b. 12 Aug 1683\nd. 26 Dec 1746|p1217.htm|

Five-greats-grandaunt of Darrell Allen Martin.
Sarah was born in Shrewsbury, Worcester County, Massachusetts, on 6 March 1738/39.1 She was the daughter of Abraham Knowlton and Martha Lamson. Sarah died in 1742.

Cited documentation

  1. [S128] Trustee, Systematic History Fund Franklin P. Rice., Vital Records of Shrewsbury, Massachusetts, to the end of the year 1849 (Worcester, MA: Systematic History Fund, 1904), pg. 66, birth, "KNOWLTON ... Sarah, d. Abraham and Martha, March 6, 1738-9."
Close
 
  • Analyzing humor is like dissecting a frog. Few people are interested and the frog dies of it.
    — E. B. White
  • No one is considered immortal until he is dead.
    — Rick Patton, in "The New Official Rules"
  • I have seen the future, and it's a lot like the present, but much longer.
    — KC Royals pitcher Dan Quisenberry, in "The New Official Rules"
  • Marriage is the only union that cannot be organized. Both sides think they are management.
    — William J. Abley, in "The New Official Rules"
  • If I'd known I was gonna live this long, I'd have taken better care of myself.
    — jazzman Eubie Blake at 100, in "The New Official Rules"
  • Nothing stimulates interest in foreign affairs like having a son of military age.
    — Martin Buxbaum, in "The New Official Rules"
  • Grandchildren grow quicker than children.
    — William P. Gannon, in "The New Official Rules"
  • Heredity determines the color of her eyes, but environment lights them up.
    — Pomeroy, Ohio, Sentinel in "The Humor Gazette"
  • Live a day at a time, but be sure it's today you are living.
    — Vista, California, Press in "The Humor Gazette"
  • Many a young buck browses innocently through a girlfriend's family album, but fails to heed its warning.
    — Moro, Oregon, Journal in "The Humor Gazette"
  • He may have a battered hat and his trousers may be shiny, but if his children have their noses flattened against the window waiting for him a half hour before he is due home, you can trust him with anything you have.
    — Washington, Iowa Journal in "The Humor Gazette"