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Marriage: Thomas Bissell
December 20, 1743
Notes: The Hunts and the Clarkes were neighbors on Elm Street in Northampton for five generations.
Hannah and Ebenezer lived on Bridge Street for over 25 years and "greatly prospered." All of
their 15 children were born there. In 1723 they moved to Lebanon, CT. His brother Thomas had
been there since its first settlement, and Hannah's father, Capt. William Clarke, had been one
of the first purchasers of land from the Indians. Ebenezer bought a 100-acre farm from his father-
in-law. There is a copy of the original deed in the old town records, beautifully written and as legible
as print, and bristling with legal phrases. The gist of it was that Ebenezer bought "one hundred
acres on the highway, with a mansion house, barns fences and fencing, an orchard and a garden."
It lay between the farm of John Davey and the Widow Parell's piece, and on the highway it extended
"from the ___nut bush to the white oak tree." His land was in that part of old Lebanon which is
now the town of Columbia. It would require a great deal of digging through in the old records to
determine where the farm was. Ebenezer paid a goodly sum for the land, which indicated that he
was a man of substance. His Will implied that he was a weaver by trade.
Hannah Clarke Hunt married second Thomas Bissell on December 20, 1743.
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