History of Little Nine Partners, of North East precinct, and Pine Plains, New York, Duchess [!] county . o CHAPTER XVIII. EPISCOPAL CHURCH. The germ of the Episcopal society or church in Pine Plains came withthe Ebenezer Dibblee family in 1784. His father, Ebenezer Dibblee, wasan Episcopal clergyman (see lineage) and was the founder of the old firstEpiscopal church in Sharon, Conn. His son Ebenezer settled in businessin Sharon, left there in 1781 or 2, moved to Salisbury, Conn., and fromthence to Pine Plains in 1784. He settled on the George Clarke property,and lived in the old log house known


History of Little Nine Partners, of North East precinct, and Pine Plains, New York, Duchess [!] county . o CHAPTER XVIII. EPISCOPAL CHURCH. The germ of the Episcopal society or church in Pine Plains came withthe Ebenezer Dibblee family in 1784. His father, Ebenezer Dibblee, wasan Episcopal clergyman (see lineage) and was the founder of the old firstEpiscopal church in Sharon, Conn. His son Ebenezer settled in businessin Sharon, left there in 1781 or 2, moved to Salisbury, Conn., and fromthence to Pine Plains in 1784. He settled on the George Clarke property,and lived in the old log house known in recent years as the Boothehouse, a short distance west of the present hotel corners. Here nine ofthe children were born, three having been born before he came to PinePlains—North East Precinct as it was then—making twelve childrenin all, and this family became the nucleus of the Episcopal society of PinePlains. From 1784 to 1816 is an interim of very little if any Episcopal servicein Pine Plains. The Dibblee family was identified with the parish in Shar-on, and for their church service they


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