. History of Wayne, Pike and Monroe counties, Pennsylvania . s of old Canaan township. Theother children of Luther and Sophia Hoadleywere Ann (was the wife of Baldwin Lee, ofCanaan township), James B. (a farmer in thesame place) and Harriet (was the wife of Dun- WAYNE COUNTY. 575 can Cameron, of Carboudale). The two sisters,Ann and Harriet, are both dead. John and wife have no children. PERRY A. CLARK. His paternal grandfather, Clark, (after whomlie was named) resided near Jewett City, NewLondon County, Conn., and was a a short time he resided in DutchessCounty, X. Y., but
. History of Wayne, Pike and Monroe counties, Pennsylvania . s of old Canaan township. Theother children of Luther and Sophia Hoadleywere Ann (was the wife of Baldwin Lee, ofCanaan township), James B. (a farmer in thesame place) and Harriet (was the wife of Dun- WAYNE COUNTY. 575 can Cameron, of Carboudale). The two sisters,Ann and Harriet, are both dead. John and wife have no children. PERRY A. CLARK. His paternal grandfather, Clark, (after whomlie was named) resided near Jewett City, NewLondon County, Conn., and was a a short time he resided in DutchessCounty, X. Y., but returned to his old home- Thomas J. Lindsey, died in Honesdale, andtwo sons served in the war of 1812. Anotherson—Eben Harris Clark, (1810—1879) a na-tive of Dutchess County, N. Y., while a youngman came to Greenfield, Pa., in 1832, and thesame year married Maria E. Williams (1810—1862) who was born near Jewett City, had come to Dundaft, Pa., to live with hersister Mrs. Thomas J. Read. Her father wasCaptain Williams who followed the sea and. ^w^S^yc stead where he died about 1825 at the age ofseventy-five years. He served in the Revolutionary war, andwas in the Colonial army when the British tookNew London. His old gun or musket usedwhen he was a soldier, fighting for the inde-pendence of the Colonies, is a relic of the past,and is owned by the subject of this sketch—hisgrandson. One daughter, Mrs. Reuben Brown,died in Cherry Ridge township ; another, Mrs. commanded a ship. He died on the after his marriage he sold his farm andremoved to Carboudale where he remaineduntil September, 1842, when he settled inCherry Ridge township, at what is now ClarksCoiners. Here he rented the hotel for a fewyears and then purchased the property togetherwith thirty acres of land. At this time thishotel, or inn as they were called in the earlydays, was a regular stopping place on the old WAYNE, PIKE AND MONROE COUNTIES, PENNSYLVANIA stage turnpike from Milford, Pa.,
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