Stephen BARTLETT
SOURCES: 1. This Family Group Sheet was compiled by Marion Grace Jewell Nicholls, of Gilbert, Arizona. 2. Book #RG929.2Bartlett By Nellie A. Bartlett p. 88-Richard Bartlett of Newbury, MA 3. Newbury, MA Vital Records 4. Book #929.20973AME (Leesburg, FL Pub Lib) Vol I p. 5 5. Book 929.273(B284j) Bartlett (Fam Hist Lib/Salt Lake City, pp. 17, 28 6. Bartlett-Computer Collection By Norma L. Jones Her source: Laura Armetta 7. 1997 Ordinance Index 8. 1998 Ancestral File (nil) TITLE: Deacon Stephen Bartlett NOTES: Husb of Canterbury, MA; Moved to Amesburg, 1716; cordwainer Child #7 signed Declaration of Independence. Child #7's wife was also his cousin.
SOURCES: 1. This Family Group Sheet was compiled by Marion Grace Jewell Nicholls, of Gilbert, Arizona. 2. DAR Lineage Book-Vol 23 p. 86 Book RG929.2 Bartlett p. 88 3. Book "Aaron of Brookfield" by Nellie A. Bartlett p. 63 4. Book-"The Bartletts" by Thomas Edward Bartlett p. 91 5. Book #929.20973AME American Ancestry Vol I p. 5 Leesburg Florida Public Library TITLE: Josiah Bartlett, M.D. NOTES: Husb was member of Continental Congress; Began politics in 1765; 1st Governor of Kingston, NH; Associate Justice-Supreme Court. Sr. Nicholls has a good picture of husb. FURTHER NOTES: From "Aaron of Brookfield": Dr. Josiah Bartlett-First Governor of New Hampshire, Signer of Declaration of Independence. "He studied medicine, practiced in Kingston, NH. Was Colonel of 7th Regiment, delegate to Continental Congress-first to vote for independence, second to sign the Declaration, John Hancock, President of Congress being the first. He became Chief Justice of Supreme Court, a member of Convention to devise a plan for government of the United States and voted for the adoption of the Constitution. Governor of NH 1790-1794. He married his cousin Mary Bartlett, daughter of Deacon Joseph Bartlett. Had 9 children-3 sons and 6 daughters. His 3 sons were all physicians of extensive practice". (p. 88) From same book: (p. 63) "Aftere an imperfect medical education he began the practice of medicine in Kingston, NH, and soon became eminent. In 1765, and annually until the Revolution, he was chosen to the Legislature. He was a delegate to Congress in 1775 and 1776, he first to give his vote for the Declaration of Independence and its first signer after the President. He was appointed Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas in 1779, a Justice of the Superior Court in 1784 & Chief Justice in 1788. He was an active member of the convention called to adopt the Federal Constitution. He was 3 yrs President of the State, and under the new Constitution, Governor. He was also President of the New Hampshire Medical Society, which he was chiefly instrumental in founding. He received an honorary degree of M.D. from Dartmouth College. He was also a patron. He was also a patron of learning, and a friend to the learned man. He married Mary, dau of Deacon Joseph Bartlett. He died 11 May 1795. His son Josiah was a physician of extensive practice." From DAR Magazine-Feb 1970 (p. 143) "While Benjamin Rush was the most renowned among the physician signers of the Declaration of Independence, a more typical example of the group is Josiah Bartlett of New Hampshire. A native of Amesbury, MA, but a resident of Kingston, NH, at the time of signing, Bartlett well exemplifies the type of doctor in whom 18th Century Americans had such confidence. Although not a lawyer, Bartlett served at various times as justice of the peace, associate justice and chief justice of the NH Supreme Court, and governor of that state. He received further evidence of public confidence when he was named to the NH Committee of Correspondence in 1774, and was elect3ed to both Continental Congresses. Bartlett is also more representative of his medical contemporaries in the sort of training he brought to his profession. He had studied at no medical schools but had gained his basic training entirely from a five-year apprenticeship to Dr. Ordway of Amesbury. Yet it would seem that Dr. Bartlett's medical talents were appreciable." (p. 144) It would seem that Dr. Bartlett's medical talents were appreciable. He gained a formidable local reputation for his successful treatment of a throat disorder, perhaps diphtheria, with cinchona bark extracts. Another notable medical triumph of Dr. bartlett's was his cure of a fever by drinking cold cider. While the quinine in cinchona bark is known to have some value as an antiseptic, and might possibly help in treating diphtheria, the success of the cider treatment is more difficult to understand. At any rate, however curious Bartlett's system of therapy, it was highly esteemed in his own times, and Dartmouth College awarded him an honorary MD in 1790. Perhaps the most convincing evidence of Josiah Bartlett's dedication to his profession, however, is the fact that three of his sons and seven of his grandsons followed him as physicians."
He married Hannah Webster 18 Dec 1712 at Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts . Hannah Webster was born at of Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts 5 Oct 1692 .
They were the parents of 7
children:
Hannah Bartlett
born 23 May 1715.
Stephen Bartlett
born 31 Aug 1716.
Mary Bartlett
born 1724.
Simeon Bartlett
born 18 Jun 1727.
Levi Bartlett
born 1728.
Jonah Bartlett
born 1728.
Josiah Bartlett
born 21 Nov 1729.
Stephen Bartlett died 10 Apr 1773 at Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts .
Hannah Webster died 15 Jun 1768 at Amesbury, Essex, Massachusetts .