Living[xUpline] (private).

Spouse: Living.


Sarah J. Bucklin190,191 was born on 4 April 1841.190,191 She died on 3 September 1861 at the age of 20.190,191 She has reference number Buck1607. Parents: William Bucklin-Buck1512 and Margaret D. Copeland-Buck1513.

Spouse: William O. Counce-Buck1617. Sarah J. Bucklin and William O. Counce were married on 1 May 1860.190


Sarah J. Bucklin190,191 was born on 10 June 1869 in South Warren, Maine.190,191 She died UNKNOWN. She has reference number Buck1517. Parents: George W. Bucklin-Buck1514 and Emelia Robinson-Buck1515.


Sarah L. Bucklin116 died in 1915.116 She was born UNKNOWN. She was buried in St. Patrick's Cemetery, Cumberland, Rhode Island.30,116 Sarah has reference number Buck1052.


Living[xUpline] (private). Parents: Living and Elsie May Barker-Buck2950.

Spouse: Living.


Sarah R. Bucklin116 was born in 1789.116 She died in 1864 at the age of 75.116 She was buried in Newman Cemetery, East Providence, Rhode Island.30,116 Sarah has reference number Buck1053.


Sarah Thomas Bucklin was born after 1822 in Rhode Island.919 She died UNKNOWN. She has reference number Buck1211. Parents: Vergil Bennet Bucklin-Buck557 and Ruth Thomas-Buck1039.

Spouse: Augustine Alvin Mann-Buck2860. Children were: Arthur Bucklin Mann-Buck2859.


Sarepta Ellen Bucklin was born on 18 November 1845 in Grafton, Grafton County, New Hampshire.301 She died on 30 September 1903 at the age of 57 in Enfield, Grafton County, New Hampshire.301 She was buried in Montcalm Cemetery, Enfield, Grafton County, New Hampshire.301 Sarepta has reference number Buck3650. Parents: Moses Bucklin-Buck3459 and Delight Kilton-Buck3460.

Spouse: Living. Children were: Adelaide (Addie) Moore-Buck3812.


Living[xUpline] (private). Parents: Living and Living.


Seba Bucklin was born before 1875. In 1890 he was in Franklin, Maine.1276 He died UNKNOWN. Seba has reference number Buck2103.


Living[xUpline] (private).


Living[xUpline] (private).


Living[xUpline] (private). Parents: Living and Living.


Silas Bucklin6,7,109 was born on 5 July 1828 in Danby, Rutland County, Vermont.7 He died on 28 April 1873 at the age of 44.6,7 He has reference number Buck1830. [RIK10111W.FTW]

[RIK10111a.GED]

7 May?[RIK10111b.GED]

7 May?[RIK10111c.GED]

7 May? Parents: Albert Bucklin-Buck1358 and Sarah Fish-Buck1874.


Silas Bucklin346 was born before 1852.346 He died after 1862 at the age of 10.346 He has reference number Buck2227. Silas served in the military PA, Co G, 3rd Heavy Artillery Unit.346,1277,1278


Silas H. Bucklin6,7,109 was born on 16 January 1817 in Wallingford, Rutland County, Vermont.7 He died on 28 May 1818 at the age of 1 in Wallingford, Rutland County, Vermont.6,7 He has reference number Buck1824. Parents: Rufus Bucklin , Jr.-Buck1909 and Harriet Barrows-Buck1357.


[NEED TO DEFINE SENTENCE:Guardianship]1169 Simon Bucklin1169 was born UNKNOWN. He died UNKNOWN. He has reference number Buck859. Parents: Nathaniel Bucklin-Buck799.


Simon Smith Bucklin116 was born in 1813.116 He died in 1903 at the age of 90.116 He was buried in Swan Point Cemetery, Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island.30,116 Simon has reference number Buck1054.


Solomon Bucklin was born on 15 May 1669. He died UNKNOWN. He has reference number Buck324. Parents: Benjamin Bucklin-Buck88 and Rachel Wheatley Allen-Buck110.


Sophronia E. Bucklin was born on 24 June 1810.610 She died after 1865 at the age of 55. She lived in Auburn, New York. Sophronia has reference number Buck1117. Sophronia worked as a nurse during the Civil War. She wrote a book about her experiences. She was an advocate of rights for women. Among other things, she thought that women should be paid for acting as nurses, an idea which the society of her time rejected. Parents: Otis Bucklin-Buck1109 and Hannah Lunt-Buck1121.


Squire Bucklin was born on 18 February 1731 in Attleboro, Bristol County, Massachusetts.431 He appeared in the census in 1790 in Foster, Providence County, Rhode Island.1279 He signed a will on 6 May 1816 in Foster, Providence County, Rhode Island.1280 Squire was buried in 1818 in Buckin-Taft-Colwell Lot, Maple Rock Road, Foster, Rhode Island.1281,1282 He died on 24 July 1818 at the age of 87 in Foster, Providence County, Rhode Island.389 He was a blacksmith. Squire lived in Foster, Providence County, Rhode Island.1283 He has reference number Buck314. He was also known as Esquire Bucklyn. Parents: Benjamin Bucklin-Buck260 and Rebeckah Bowen-Buck313.

Spouse: Hopestill Ballou-Buck1987. Children were: Benjamin Bucklin Rev.-Buck1875, Squire Bucklin , Jr.-Buck1361, Stephen Bucklin-Buck1199, Anna Bucklin-Buck946, Isaac Bucklin-Buck1065, Hopestill Bucklin-Buck843, Rebecca Bucklin-Buck1275, William Bucklin-Buck71.


Squire Bucklin , Jr. was born on 3 October 1756 in Hopkins Mill, Foster, Rhode Island.427 He served in the military Pvt., Capt Kimball's Co, Col Hitchcock' Regt. in 1775.1284 He died on 21 November 1814 at the age of 58 in Foster, Providence County, Rhode Island.193 Squire has reference number Buck1361. Parents: Squire Bucklin-Buck314 and Hopestill Ballou-Buck1987.

Spouse: Amy Pray-Buck1362. Amy Pray and Squire Bucklin , Jr. were married UNKNOWN in Hopkins Mill, Foster, Rhode Island.1285 Children were: Johnathan Bucklin-Buck814, Nancy Bucklin-Buck985, Jeremiah Pray (Jeremiah P. Bucklyn) Bucklin-Buck984.


Stanley Bucklin190,191 was born in 1896.190,191 He died in 1908 at the age of 12.190,191 He has reference number Buck1614. Parents: Levi R. Bucklin-Buck1516 and Annie Grafton-Buck1612.


[NEED TO DEFINE SENTENCE:Guardianship]1169 Stephen Bucklin1169 was born UNKNOWN. He died UNKNOWN. He has reference number Buck860. Parents: Nathaniel Bucklin-Buck799.


Stephen Bucklin was born on 5 July 1759.389,427 He died on 2 October 1764 at the age of 5 in Foster, Providence County, Rhode Island.389 He has reference number Buck1199. Parents: Squire Bucklin-Buck314 and Hopestill Ballou-Buck1987.


Stephen Bucklin116 was born in 1774.116 He died in 1829 at the age of 55.116 He was buried in Mineral Springs Cemetery, Pawtucket, Rhode Island.30,116 Stephen has reference number Buck1056.


Stephen Bucklin was born in 1782. He died UNKNOWN. He has reference number Buck1197. Parents: Oliver Bucklin-Buck338 and Sarah Newman-Buck720.


Col. Stephen Randall Bucklin483 was born on 10 April 1816 in Pawtucket, North Providence, Rhode Island.116,1286 He served in the military RI, Co E, 1st Inf, Capt; RI, 3rd Hvy Artillery, Lt Col. on 17 April 1861.483,1287,1288,1289,1290,1291 279 He died of nephritis (Bright's disease) on 19 July 1899 at the age of 83 in Pawtucket, North Providence, Rhode Island.116,1286 Stephen was buried on 19 July 1899 in Mineral Springs Cemetery, Pawtucket, Rhode Island.30,116,279,1286 Buried in Bucklin Lot 27/28, Avenue E. He was a Blacksmith in Pawtucket, North Providence, Rhode Island.1292 He has reference number Buck1057.

Spouse: Amy Cudworth Lawton-Buck3416. Children were: George A. Bucklin-Buck3319, Charles R Bucklin-Buck3322.


Stephen Randall Bucklin was born on 9 March 1860. He has reference number Buck3654.

Spouse: Julia Maria Phillips-Buck3844. Julia Maria Phillips and Stephen Randall Bucklin were married on 16 December 1885. Children were: Living, Living.


Living[xUpline] (private). Parents: Stephen Randall Bucklin-Buck3654 and Julia Maria Phillips-Buck3844.


Steven Bucklin was born after 1739. He died UNKNOWN. He was buried in Mineral Springs Cemetery, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Steven has reference number Buck2987. Parents: Barak Bucklin , Jr.-2-Buck119 and Hannah Read-Buck121.


Steven Bucklin1293 was born about 1774 in Smithfield, Rhode Island.1294 He died on 31 December 1829 at the age of 55 in Smithfield, Rhode Island.30 He was buried in Mineral Springs Cemetery, Pawtucket, Rhode Island.1295,1296 Steven has reference number Buck2951.

Spouse: Olive Unknown-Buck1036. Children were: Lydia Scott Bucklin-Buck2931.


Living[xUpline] (private). Parents: Living and Living.

Spouse: Living. Children were: Living, Living, Living.


Susan Bucklin48,166 was born about 1841 in New York.166 She was born about 1841 in Barnes Corners, Lewis County, New York.48,49 She has reference number Buck2174. [Anderson0208.FTW]

Anderson notes: Family History AFN: 1SOP-VGX ~7/00. Parents: John Marquis Volney Bucklin-Buck2172 and Almanza Jeanette Eaton-Buck2173.


Susan Bucklin6,7,109,1297 was born on 22 October 1842 in Danby, Rutland County, Vermont.6,7 She died on 20 September 1914 at the age of 71.6,7 She has reference number Buck1289. Parents: Albert Bucklin-Buck1358 and Sarah Fish-Buck1874.


Living[xUpline] (private). Parents: William Durward Bucklin-Buck2835 and Living.


Susan Elizabeth Bucklin was born in 1832. She died UNKNOWN. She has reference number Buck1591. Parents: John Bucklin Maj-Buck3041 and Sabra Ann Smith-Buck3131.

Spouse: Henry C. Bowen-Buck3176. Susan Elizabeth Bucklin and Henry C. Bowen were married in 1855.176,177 Children were: Eugene Bucklin Bowen-Buck1051.


Susanna Bucklin36,37,1298,1299 was born on 1 June 1752 in Pomfret, Windham County, Connecticut.1300 She lived in Clarendon, Rutland County, Vermont in 1775.1301 She lived in Clarendon, Rutland County, Vermont in 1791.1302 There is a court record regarding him in 1799 Petition to General Assembly of Vermont.1303 Susanna died after 1836 at the age of 84 in Ontario, CANADA.37 She has reference number Buck241. She was also known as Susan. The following article was written by Sharon Starkey, the 4th great-granddaughter of Susanna Bucklin. Sharon has written the sort of article that everyone should write about their grandparents. 100 years after any of us have passed from the scene, our descendents want to know the details of lives that were lived in times and places unknown to us.

Here is the story of a Revolutionary War victim, the result of loyalties that tore families apart. Here is a story that tells of the way it was for a woman who left comfort to be with her husband and then had the problems of a young widow with a family of young children and only wilderness farm lands to support them,
THIS STORY, WITH THE SOURCES AND REFERENCES, IS MAINTAINED AT THE JOSEPH BUCKLIN WEBSITE, AT www.bucklinsociety.net. See it for references and sources to the facts set forth below.

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Wheh Susana Bucklin was growing up in the comfortable security of her family's Rhode Island home she could not have imagined the path that she would walk during her adult years. Her parents, David Bucklin and Abigail Waldo, were affluent landowners, according to real estate conveyances. After their marriage in 1749 they resided in Pomfret, Windham County, Connecticut, where Susanna and three of her siblings were born. By August of 1760 the family had moved to Coventry, Kent County, Rhode Island. David's ancestors were Rhode Island settlers, from as early as 1630. In 1732 his father, Joseph Bucklin Jr., purchased land on a river near Coventry, where he built a gristmill and machine shop as well as a textile mill for the manufacture of linen and wool(1) .

Named for her paternal grandmother, Susanna Annie Jencks, Susanna Bucklin was a descendant of the predominant industrialist family in Rhode Island history. Her great grandfather, Judge William Jencks, had been a member of the Rhode Island legislature. One of his ancestors, Joseph Jencks, Jr., was the first permanent settler in Pawtucket Falls, Rhode IslandI(2), who started the Jencks' empire with first water powered machinery to manufacture cloth and later the forge and water powered machinery to manufacture tools.

It is possible that David Bucklin was a business associate of Benjamin Johns and through their acquaintance his daughter, Susanna, met the gallant young Solomon Johns. After their wedding in 1775 the newlywed couple traveled to Solomon's property near the Green Mountains in Clarendon Township, Rutland County, Vermont. At that time this area was known as the New Hampshire frontier. Here the young bride found herself adjusting to an entirely new lifestyle. Their home would likely have been of a more rustic style than that of her parents. Visitors would be few; neighbors far away. And, although Solomon's father and stepmother lived in the area, there would not likely have been the large family gatherings similar to those held at the Bucklin home in Rhode Island.

Susanna now had the job of being mistress of her husband's household. However, as Solomon probably had helpers to assist him to work his farm, it is possible that there was a house servant to help Susanna. Many of the Vermont settlers were New Englanders who kept slaves. It is most likely that their first son, David Bucklin Johns, was born in this remote location about 1776.

In 1777 Solomon Johns joined the Loyalist cause in the Revolutionary War and was a member of the Provincial Corps attached to the British army. One wonders if this choice caused some difficulty for Susanna. It was a well kept Bucklin family secret that her cousin, Joseph Bucklin, was the person who was the subject of an English Parliament's offer of 1000 English pounds for information leading to his identification. Joseph had shot and wounded a British officer aboard the Gaspee, a British revenue cutter that had gone aground on the Pawtucket River near Providence, Rhode Island in 1772. The English did not know the identity of the person and had called his shot an act of treason. What a temptation to someone loyal to the crown that reward would have been!

[Ed. note: See the family loyalties to the Revolution within Susanna' family.]

Susanna and her infant son would almost certainly have left Clarendon with Solomon when he first joined the King's troops, but later on she might have stayed at the home of his brother Daniel in Manchester, Vermont. Sometime during the next few years Susanna and her son traveled to Canada, like many other wives and families of the Loyalists. There are written accounts of the grave difficulties of this journey which tell a story of hunger, extreme physical endurance on the long walk to Lake Champlain, plus the danger of discovery by the rebels while they waited for water transport to one of the British outposts. Many did not survive the difficult trek north, while others were extremely ill when they finally arrived in Quebec(3). We do not know how or when Susanna made this lengthy journey, only that at the end of the revolution she was at the refugee camp at Machiche with Solomon and their children. She may have remained there while Solomon returned to Vermont in 1784 to settle his affairs.

Life for the exiled Loyalists did not become any easier in the aftermath of the war. However, the mood of the settlers was generally one of optimism as they set forth to establish their farms in the townships west of Montreal. For Solomon and Susanna, the work of establishing their new home at Elizabethtown Township, on the St. Lawrence River, was coupled with a shortage of proper food and the hard labor necessary for mere subsistence. Their struggle for survival during those early days was in vivid contrast to Susanna's carefree youth in Rhode Island, and the lifestyle she and her husband would have enjoyed in their early years in Vermont.

After Solomon's unfortunate death in the spring of 1786 his widow and children were destitute. Until then their only means of support was the bounty of their farm and Solomon's half-pay pension as a disbanded officer of the provincial corps. Thanks to the incredibly rich soil in the "wilds" of Ontario Solomon had already done wonders with his farm(4). However, it required both a man and his wife to work the land, and to attend to the animals and domestic chores, in order to provide for themselves and their family. For a woman alone these tasks would have been impossible. Although there was a general feeling of sympathy toward Susanna's plight the other families had enough work to provide for themselves, and they would not likely have been able to help her.

Susanna appealed to Lord Dorchester (formerly Sir Guy Carleton), who was Governor of Canada from 1786-1790, and she was eventually given a compassionate grant of 400 acres of land. She should have received a widow's pension as well - one-half an officer's half-pay. After Solomon's death his brother Daniel came from Vermont to help the fatherless family, later becoming guardian of his nephews, David and Solomon Jr(5).

Susanna's third son, Daniel, appears to have died as an infant. It is possible that he was born about the time of Solomon's untimely death, in 1786, and Susanna may have named the infant Daniel after her brother-in-law, as a gesture of gratitude for his help. It is also conceivable that the child died during the historical "hungry year" in 1788 when there was a grave shortage of food due to poor crops. Many did not survive, and small children were particularly susceptible to the lack of nutrition.

There were no formal records of births, marriages and deaths during the revolutionary war, or in the early years of the settlements in Upper Canada. We have had to rely on other documents such as land petitions, ration lists, early census, and military muster rolls to estimate the birth dates of the known three male children of Solomon and Susanna. There is some evidence that they may have had two daughters as well as their three sons. The ration list drawn up sometime between September 1783 and May or June of 1784, at the end of the war, lists the family of Solomon Johns as including "2 female children under 6". We have not been able to find the identity of these two daughters, and it is possible that one of them had died as an infant.

After experiencing many deprivations as a refugee during the revolutionary war, as well as coping with the hard work of settling in the Royal Townships, Susanna Johns then mourned the tragic deaths of her husband and her infant son. It would be understandable if this resulted in a period of depression. She returned to Vermont for a few years in order to settle her husband's estate. We assume that she left Ontario after she filed a petition in 1790 regarding the grants of crown land due to her husband for his service. In that year Susanna is recorded as a witness at a wedding in Fredericksburgh Township(6). Daniel Johns had the guardianship of his nephews David and Solomon Jr. by 1791 and they stayed with him when their mother went to Vermont. The brothers are listed as living with Daniel in the 1797 census of Elizabethtown Township. Daniel's four daughters had all moved there, either with their husbands or before marriage, so probably he had some female help with the care of the two boys. David was about 13 when his mother left Ontario. It would seem likely that she would take her daughter, or daughters, if they indeed existed, with her.

Where Susanna stayed in Vermont is not known. It is possible that as a widow of a Loyalist she would not be welcomed in the home of her parents because, even in families, feelings were very strong on the opposing sides both during and after the revolution. David Bucklin fought on the Patriot side in the Revolutionary Army(7). Susanna's uncle, Capt. Joseph Bucklin, was credited with firing the first shot of the revolution and the King had placed a bounty on his head(8). Her mother's family were active Patriots as well - Albigence Waldo, Abigail's brother, was the personal physician of George Washington, and the surgeon for his troops engaged at the Battle of Valley Forge. Susanna eventually came back to Ontario, unsuccessful in her petitions in Vermont regarding her husband's confiscated estates. [Ed. note: see article on Lt. Solomon Johns.]

According to a land petition in 1820 Susanna was residing at that time in Ernestown Township on the Bay of Quinte, Lake Ontario (near Kingston) and possibly living with her son, Solomon Jr. On the census of Murray Township, from 1820 to 1822, the family of David Johns shows an additional female. Susanna may have been living with David's family from then on, as Solomon Jr. returned to the U.S. about that time. Her last documented land transaction is recorded in 1836; her residence stated as Murray, also on the Bay of Quinte and now the city of Trenton, Northumberland County, Ontario. She would have been 84 that year.

About 1835 the entire family of David Johns moved to Marmora Township, Hastings County, Ontario, north of Trenton. It is unknown whether Susanna later moved to live with them, or stayed with family members in Trenton. We have no record of the death or burial of Susanna (Bucklin) Johns.
Parents: David Bucklin-Buck3012 and Abagail Waldo-Buck3013.

Spouse: Solomon Johns Lt.-Buck2944. Susanna Bucklin and Solomon Johns Lt. were married on 8 October 1775 in Coventry, Kent County, Rhode Island.37,1298,1304,1305,1306 Children were: Solomon Johns , Jr.-Buck2952, Daniel Johns-Buck2953, David Johns-Buck75, David Bucklin Johns-Buck2977.


Living[xUpline] (private). Parents: Nehemiah Bucklin-Buck405 and Nancy Bowers-Buck251.


Susannah Bucklin116 was born in 1700.116 She died in 1736 at the age of 36.116 She was buried in Stone-Hammett Lot, Coventry, Rhode Island.30,116 Susannah has reference number Buck1058.


Susannah Bucklin was born on 18 August 1754. She died UNKNOWN. She has reference number Buck577. Parents: James Bucklin , 2nd-Buck115 and Mary Peck-Buck401.


Sylvanus Bucklin was born in 1740.114 There is a record of him, Witness to will of Peter Ballou in Smithfield, Massachusetts on 18 November 1770.1307 He served in the military Militia of Smithfield, RI, Lieutenant in 1775.1308,1309 He died on 13 March 1816 at the age of 76.1310 Sylvanus was buried in Cumberland, Providence, Rhode Island. He has reference number Buck793. Parents: Living.

Spouse: Abigail Brown-Buck792. Abigail Brown and Sylvanus Bucklin were married on 27 February 1763.204


Sylvanus Bucklin was born in 1783.527 He died UNKNOWN. He has reference number Buck1235. Parents: Isaac Bucklin-Buck1233 and Rhoda Leland-Buck1379.

Spouse: Jane Miller-Buck1236. Jane Miller and Sylvanus Bucklin were married UNKNOWN.527 Children were: Daniel D Bucklin Dr.-Buck1237.


Sylvanus Wesley Bucklin was born on 25 November 1825 in Northumberland, New York.1311 He died after five years of sickness and a long portion of that period suffering most intense pain on 15 August 1893 at the age of 67 in Augusta Wisconsin.1311 He was buried after 15 August 1893 in East Lawn Cemetery, Augusta, Eau Claire County, Wisconsin.1311 His obituary was published in in Augusta, Wisconsin on 19 August 1893.1311 Sylvanus was an as a druggist in his early life, but changed to a mechanic-builder, carpenter, cabinet maker, etc.1311 He was a Free Mason 1311 He has reference number Buck4013.

Spouse: Catharine Louisa Cole-Buck4018. Catharine Louisa Cole and Sylvanus Wesley Bucklin were married on 3 January 1840 in West Troy, New York.1312 Children were: Isabell Bucklin-Buck3999, Durward Belmont Bucklin-Buck2821, Living, Hortense Antinete Bucklin-Buck3003.


Sylvester Bucklin166 was born about 1832.166,348 He served in the military MI, Co I, 1st Engineers & Mechanics Unit on 9 October 1861.166,1313,1314,1315 He died after 1862 at the age of 30.166 Sylvester has reference number Buck2212.


Sylvester Bucklin66 was born before 1852.66 He died after 1862 at the age of 10.66 He served in the military Co G, 138th IL Infantry and Co A, 156th IL Infantry between 1863 and 1865.66,349,1316,1317 Sylvester has reference number Buck2272.


Sylvester Bucklin was born before 1887. He died after 1888 at the age of 1. He lived in Marlborough, Massachusetts between 1887 and 1888.1318 Sylvester has reference number Buck2630. The city directory for 1887-1888 of Marlborough, MA, lists Sylvester as living at 'house-church" but htis is a date that seems improbable for the Sylvester Fuller Bucklin, and not in the right state for other known Sylvesters as of the date of Jan 2001.


Sylvester Fuller Bucklin Rev. was born on 2 July 1784 in Seekonk, Massachusetts. He was ordained in 1808 in Pastor First Congregational Church, Marlborough, Massachusetts.1319 He was Congregational minister in 1808.1320 Sylvester died on 25 May 1860 at the age of 75 in Marlboro, Massachusetts.1321 He has reference number Buck552. Parents: Jemima Peck-Buck3008.


Sylvia Bucklin276 was born on 11 March 1931 in Elton, Louisiana.276 She died UNKNOWN. She has reference number Buck487. Parents: Fred Daniel Bucklin-Buck456 and Myrtle Phenice-Buck485.

Spouse: Ronald Pilcher-Buck511. Sylvia Bucklin and Ronald Pilcher were married UNKNOWN. Children were: Living, Living, Living.


Syvanus Bucklin116 was born in 1740.116 He died in 1816 at the age of 76.116 He was buried in Brown-Bartlett Cemetery, Cumberland, Rhode Island.30,116 Syvanus has reference number Buck2722.