John Washington Shaw

(say 1803 - 17 January 1806)
John Washington Shaw|b. s 1803\nd. 17 Jan 1806|p2639.htm|John Shaw|b. ca 26 Feb 1768\nd. 28 Feb 1806|p2514.htm|Sarah Clark?|b. s 1777|p1592.htm|||||||||||||
The families and connections between and among Edmund Tarbell and John Shaw, and Sarah/Sally who married each of them in turn, are currently under construction and should be reviewed in that light. Unqualified assertions concerning them, here, may be mere speculation.

John was born in Mount Holly, Rutland County, Vermont, say 1803.1 He was the son of John Shaw and Sarah Clark? John died on 17 January 1806 in Mt. Holly.

Cited documentation

  1. [S212] Shaw, John, 1800 US Census, Mt. Holly, Rutland County, Vermont; NARA M32 Roll 52, sheet 128 pg. 61, the free white males age under 10 are accounted for.
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"