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If you go by the Schwyhart surname, you can be pretty sure you are related to anyone else of the same name. Best currently available researched information suggests that the name was adopted by the young adults in two families formed when two brothers married two sisters. All of the children of these two families, in the early 1800s, appear to have lived out their lives as Schwyharts. This is their book, into the early to mid-1900s.Further, this book is the second of a series of books to be prepared on this extended family, down through the generations. If you have an interest in this family and/or the affiliated families, we urge you to check back regularly at Lulu.com (and Dr. Bill's Book Bazaar Blog) for additional detailed generations under both the Kinnick name and under the surnames of the affiliated families of the descendancies included here.
Jasper Kinnick was born circa 1693. He married Elizabeth Brightwell, daughter of Richard Brightwell and Katherine, circa 1715 in Maryland. They had two children. He died in 1733 in Charles County, Maryland. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Maryland, Indiana, Illionis and Iowa.
Eli Hesseltine, Sr. was born ca. 1791 in either Vermont or New Hampshire. His wife, Betsey Jewett Sischo, was born in 1792 in Rutland, Vermont. They were married in 1812 in Newbury, New Hampshire. They were the parents of eight children. In the first 13 years of their marriage, the family moved at least six times, crossing New Hampshire, Vermont and New York. The family moved from Champlain County in northeastern New York to Ohio in 1833. They settled first in Lorain County, then moved to Medina County in about 1837, finally settling in Marion County ca. 1839. Eli died there in 1847. After his death, all of the children migrated west. Five of them settled with their families in Iowa, Missouri and Kansas. The remaining three and their families set out on the Oregon Trail in 1863. Two families went south to California and one settled in Washington Territory. Betsey went with the son who settled in Washington Territory. She died there in 1875.
A history of the area that would become Walnut Station, then Walnut Grove from the earliest days to the present. It covers almost every aspect of community life in this small town in Minnesota.