Cooking and Drinking
Cooking and Drinking
​Utilizing the monkey see monkey do approach
Cooking and Drinking
Cooking and Drinking
Cooking and Drinking
Cooking and Drinking


1778
Dated:
August 1778

Revolutionary War.
April 19th 1775 - Sept. 3rd 1783


SOR
My direct bloodline to Revolutionary War relatives
​Both Gersham and John were in the Civil War Connecticut
​
Gershom Fay III
Born March 30th 1729 DOD Jan. 1804 (74) married Dinah Newton (Married May 28. 1751)​
John Fay
Born Dec. 26 1755 DOD ???? married Meithable Brigham 1756 - 1844
​

9th Connecticut Regiment
The 9th Connecticut Regiment was first called Webb's Additional Continental Regiment (after its colonel, Samuel Blachley Webb) before being added to the Connecticut Line in 1780. It saw action at Setauket in 1777, Rhode Island in 1778, and Springfield, New Jersey, in 1780, and was generally active in the defense of Connecticut, southern New York, and northern New Jersey.
The regiment first saw action at the Battle of Setauket in August 1777 under Brigadier General Samuel Holden Parsons. It was then sent to the Hudson River Valley, where it served under General George Clinton in the aftermath of the October Battle of Forts Clinton and Montgomery.
In December 1777 the regiment was involved in a failed expedition to Long Island (a more elaborate attempt on Setauket than that of the previous August) in which Colonel Webb was captured. The regiment spent the winter of 1777-78 at West Point, where it assisted in the construction of fortifications (including the Webb redoubt, probably named for the colonel).
In 1778 the regiment was attached to the brigade of General James Varnum. As part of a combined Franco-American attempt to retake British-occupied Newport, Rhode Island, the brigade marched to Rhode Island, where it was involved in the August 29 Battle of Rhode Island. The battle was tactically indecisive, but the regiment was noted for its performance. The regiment wintered in Rhode Island.
The regiment spent most of 1779 in Rhode Island, but was sent to winter quarters at Morristown, New Jersey.
In the spring of 1780, the remnants of Sherburne's Additional Continental Regiment were merged into the unit, and it was formally added to the Connecticut Line as the 9th Connecticut Regiment. That June, the regiment was involved in the Battle of Springfield, in which a British attempt to penetrated from New York City to the Continental Army camp at Morristown was repulsed. Its winter quarters for 1780-81 were in the Hudson valley.
The regiment was merged into the 2nd Connecticut Regiment on January 1, 1781, at West Point, New York, which was disbanded at the end of the war on November 15, 1783. Colonel Webb, who was exchanged in 1781, was then given command of the reorganized 3rd Connecticut Regiment.
Significant Campaigns and Battles
The regiment would see action during the New York and New Jersey Campaign (1776-77), Northern Theater (1778–1782).
It took part in the following major battles:

Note
​
Gershom Fay III
Born March 30th 1729 DOD Jan. 1804 (74) married Dinah Newton (Married May 28. 1751)​
born in Westboro, March30th 1729.
died Winchendon. ????
He married May 20? 1751
Married Dinah Newton Born 1741 DOD Jan. 1804
​
He lived in Westboro and Northboro, Mass and Winchester, Conn.
He had 8 children
​
​​​​​​
John Fay
Born Dec. 26 1755 DOD ???? married Meithable Brigham 1756 - 1844
Lived in Otterke Onterio Creek, vt
rem. to Salen River, NY. It is east of Lake Ontario.
​
List only info relavent to SOR

Note
​Both Gersham and John were in the Civil War Connecticut
1) John Fay Born 1648 year old (His father David and maybe older were hear already)
2) Gershom Born Oct. 19th 1681 DOD Nov. 24th 1720 married 1) Mary Brigham in 1702
……… 2nd wife Susanne (Shattuck) ​
In Aug. 18th 1707 Gershom’s wife and 2 children were out in the field picking herbs. (probably his first wife, that was in the meadow with the lame woman Mary Goodnow that nearly escaped being killed by Indians. Mary Goodnow was killed.
3) Gershom Fay II Born Sept. 17th 1703 DOD April 7th 1784 (80) married Hannah Oakes​
4) Gershom Fay III Born March 30th 1729 DOD Jan. 1804 (74) married Dinah Newton (Married May 28. 1751)​
5) John Fay Sr. Born Dec. 26 1755 DOD June 9th 1837 married ?????? Hannah ???????
6) John Fay Jr. Born 1784 DOD May 29th 1813 married Lucy Lilley
7) Joel M. Fay Sr. Born 1806 Married Rebecca Main​​
8) Joel M. Fay Jr. Born 1866 married Minnie May Babcock/ Fay
9) Claude W. Fay Born 1895 married Evelyn Schrader/ Fay
10) Shirley P. Fay Born 1929 Padded July 10th 2025 married Frank P. Kelsey
11) David A. Kelsey Born 1959 married 1) Jacqueline R. Kuhaneck
12) Melissa R. Kelsey Born 1983 married Ralph J. Bean
12) Christopher A. Kelsey Born 1985
13) Eli R. Bean Born 2011
13) Juniper Mae Bean​​​​​ Born 2013
2) Louisa F. Marrazzo Born 1960
12) Joshua I. Kelsey Born 1998

1720
Gersham Fay Born 1703- Death Nov. 24th 1720



1720
Gersham Fay Born 1703- Death Nov. 24th 1720

This is written at the bottom of this page.



1778
​Revolutionary army Connecticut payroll August 1778




Gersham Fay B 1729
William Fay
Timothy Fay
John Fay B 1755

1813
This is probably where John Fay was killed be an Indian and scalped. Family history says that Indian was killed and John and his scalp were buried back in Pennsylvania
The British sent out three large canoes full of Native American warriors and a gunboat carrying a detachment of the Glengarry Light Infantry to intercept them. The British force caught up with the convoy off Stoney Point on Henderson Bay. The British opened fire, the Americans, who were mostly raw recruits, landed their bateaux at Stoney Point and fled into the woods. The Natives pursued them through the trees and hunted them down. After about half an hour, during which they lost 35 men killed, the surviving United States troops regained their vessels and raised a white flag. The senior officer rowed out to Yeo’s fleet and surrendered his remaining force of 115 officers and men. Only seven of the American troops escaped and reached Sackett’s Harbor. This delay nevertheless gave the Americans time to reinforce their defences. There were 400 regulars stationed at Sackett’s Harbor, mainly the small detachments manning Fort Volunteer and Fort Tompkins at the harbour entrance, and various parties of reinforcements and invalids. The senior regular officer was Lieutenant Colonel Electus Backus of the regiment of Dragoons. There were 250 volunteers from the New York militia, and an additional 500 militia were hastily called up from the surrounding area. Under arrangements made by Henry Dearborn before he departed for York, Brigadier General Jacob Brown of the New York state militia took command of all troops at Sackett’s Harbor. In addition to Fort Volunteer and Fort Tompkins, the Americans had built several strong blockhouses south of the town, and partially completed a line of earthworks and abatis (defence works made from felled trees and branches) surround

1778
John (1648) and Susanna (Shattuck) Fay
Gershom and Hannah Oaks
Gershom and
​
​


Births
A list of many of Gershom and Dinah’s children including John Fay of 1755.
Three of them I often see listed in the war of independence/American Revolution, The, father Gersham and the three sons, William, Timothy and John


1778
Dated
sept. 1778


Gershom Fay B 1729 age now 49
William Fay B 1752 age now 26
Timothy Fay B 1754 age now 24
John Fay Sr. B 1755 age now 23

1779
Looks like it says Feb. and March 1779

Gersham Fay
William Fay
Timothy Fay
John Fay - Note John’s appoint date is April 12th 1777 and that he is “On Duty"


1779
Payroll Dated
March 1779

Gersham Fay
William Fay
Timothy Fay
John Fay


1779
Dated
April 1779

Gersham Fay appoint date of May 1st 1778
William Fay Jan. 19th 1777
Timothy Fay March 2nd 1777
John Fay April 12th 1777 Born 1755 = 22


1779

Dated
Oct. 1779

Gersham Fay
William Fay
Timothy Fay
John Fay


1780
​As of now, these particular Fay's have been in the revolutionary war for three years. And I have not finished the researching yet.
DateJan 28th 1780
Date on this form was at the bottom of the pege




Note
Dated
sept. 1778


Lineage
John Fay 8 year old (His father David and maybe older
Gershom Born Oct. 19th 1681
Wife Mary Brigham. It's possible that Grim was the child of John phase 2nd wife who was Susanne (Shattuck)
​
Gershom Fay II Born Sept. 17th 1703
Wife Hannah Oakes
​
Gershom Fay III Born March 30th 1729
Wife Dinah Newton (Married May 28. 1751)
​
John Fay Born Dec. 26 1755
Wife Meithable Brigham 1756 - 1844
** He moved to Otter Creek VT then to Salmon River, NY
​
John Fay Born 1784?? Died 1813
Wife Lucy Lillie
* Lucy is living with Joel M. Fay Sr. in the 1850 Census.
​​
​
Joel M. Fay Sr. Born 1806
​
​
Joel M. Fay Jr. Born 1866
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​
​


Otter Creek, VT
​
John Fay DOB 1755 moved here

A Fay married Eli Whitney
Dr. Charles Fay dies 1868. Son of John and Mahitable Fay


John Fay in a 1790 Census
Free White male - 16 and over = 1
Free White males - under 16 = 3
Free White Females = 4
​
John Fay of 1755 if so 1790 makes him 35, Makes since. If so, John is still in Massachusetts in 1790. Was he older when he moved to Vermont?
​​​
Name
Mehitable Brigham
Home in 1790 (City, County, State)
Westborough, Worcester, Massachusetts​


1751



1775
John Fay and Meithable Brigham married May 11th 1775
John Fay marriage May 1775

1776

John Fay marriage REMARRIED?? on Jan. 11th 1776


Gershom Fay private revolutionary war. Connecticut first battalion state regiment



Gershom Fay
​
​
John Fay





​This was at the bottom of somebody else's sons of the revolution paperwork just thought it was fun seeing his name again as a positive link to the revolutionary war





Gershom Fay
Took the oath 1779

Notes
This looks self-explanatory:
John Fay DOB 1755 - DOD 1813. Married Lucy Lilly 1782 - 1770 and had a son Joel M Fay Sr. 1806.
​
Was John Fay of 1755 married to other women probaby




1850


Note
John Fay born of Gershom Fay and Dinah Fay December 26, 1755


son of Gershom- John Fay born 26 Dec 1755
​
in the book, lived in Otter Creek, Vt. Then Salmon River, east of lake Ontario.

Sacket Harber
Salmom River in NY




1777
​On this day in history
While the battle of Bennington, one of the first clashes with British troops in the revolutionary war, the Fay family was preparing for the worst scenario. Click the link to see very rare footage of our ancestors, preparing for the siege of Bennington.
​
Thanks to The tireless work of researcher and archivist Thomas John Kelsey (1962)
​
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/A8Npz4U3Ycw
​





