#52ancestors Week 3 of 2021: Namesake

I'm already behind!  It January26th and somehow I'm just getting around to this.  Next week, I am scheduled for my first dose of the coronavirus vaccine, but I don't know 1) which company's and 2) if it will even be available.  We shall see.

So, the topic for week 3 is "Namesake".  I ended up looking up the precise meaning, which turns out to not be very precise at all.  Basically, its someone whose name is the same for some reason of connection.  I was kind of stumped on what I would use as last year I talked about the plethora of Cecilias on my family tree and nothing else obvious sprang to mind.  But then one of those genealogical gifts opened up when I clicked on the 99+ hints leaf on my Ancestry account, and the first on the list was Moses Case.

Holy Moses.  I'd forgotten about these guys (oh yes, guys).  I happened to click on the middle of three and the only way I'm sure that they are really three different people is that they have three different wives.  Herewith, the Moseses:

Moses Case 1695-1741.  Wife Mary Haskins 1689-1739.  (As an aside, I have been surprised by how many of my male ancestors married women who were older than they were.  I'm sure there's a story here.)  This Moses's father was named Ebenezer for which I am devoutly grateful, though I'm not sure he would have been (he was married to Patience Draper who was 3 years older than he was.  Hmm).

Moses Case 1724-1797.   Wife Phebe Peters 1728-1773.  At least Phebe could not be accused of being a cougar, though they were married in 1744 which seems awfully young for both of them.  The marriage date seems solid so I'm guessing they were both in need of some stability or companionship.

Moses Case 1749-1776.  Wife Abaih Sturtevant 1748-1841.  I know a little bit more about this Moses as he was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, briefly.  His widow applied for a pension and produced a letter he had written her during his service, just before he marched off towards Montreal.  He died of disease, possibly smallpox, in August of 1776.

This was the last Moses Case.  I am descended from his son Cyrus, then Marcus, then Alonzo.  It's a little sad that they left the name behind, but as the current family genealogist, I am grateful to not have to untangle yet another Moses from the family line.


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