Signed David Warner. The will was taken from the Franklin, Vermont probate records 028,197 p. 83-84 LDS Family History Library Number
David was deceased by July of that same year. St. Alban's has no record of his death; vitals were not kept very well at the time. Rebeckah's later death was not recorded either.
The oldest daughter, Rebeckah Warner, married Abijah Winch in Clarendon in 1789. There was some type of legal trouble between Abijah and David where Abijah sued his father-in-law. There was property sold to take care of the problem, and it was probably in this transaction that Rebeckah Winch received her inheritance. She also would not have received a portion of the rest of the estate as she was living in Massachusetts at the time, and her father's family did not know when she would return. That would be why David said that she was to be given ten shillings "when called for".
The daughter, Rosanna, also did not receive land because she and Lemuel had already received their portion. Lemuel probably lived with his inlaws or lived on their property when he first got to Saint Alban's. In 1794, he purchased land of David Warner for 35 pounds, which was probably a very low amount for the land, and in this transaction, Rosanna received her inheritance.
There is no question as to the parents for Lemuel Marsh and Rosanna Warner as both family farms were very close in Clarendon as well as the farm of Rueben Tuller, who was named above. Evidently, they all picked up from Clarendon and moved to St. Alban's, which many people from Clarendon did. Rueben Tuller may have also been a relative as David's mother married (2nd) a John Fuller (or Tuller) and died in Pittsfield, which is not far north from Clarendon. Many of the Tuller family came from Simsbury, Conn., where David's mother lived for a time.
The estate of David Warner owed money which Lemuel Marsh paid for by purchasing some of the land owned by David Warner. Lemuel also paid taxes on the property and gave a life lease to Rebeckah Warner.
I do not know where the book, "Descendants of Andrew Warner" got David's marriage to Rebeckah Smith. I have not been able to find it as part of the Barbour Collection of Connecticut, in the Middletown records, in the Simsbury, Mass. records, or in the collected records of Berkshire, Mass.
David and Rebeckah's children were -
In the 1790 census of Clarendon, David Warner had 1 male in his household over sixteen, which would have been himself, and four females,
which one would have been his wife Rebeckah, and the other three would have been his unmarried three youngest at the time. The 1790 census
was actually done in Vermont in 1791 after it became a state, so Rosanna was not married to Lemuel at this time.
In November of 1777, David Warner bought two properties in Clarendon, one of John Bowman and the other of Abraham Salisbury. He sold land in Sep 1789; this deed was witnessed by Daniel Marsh, and in Feb 1792, he sold his land which was bounded on the west by Tullar's property, and the Amos Marsh property was only one or two farms north of these. 1792 is also when David went to St. Alban's. Clarendon land records 028088 (Bk.1) contains some of these on pages 328 and 329, and film 028089 (Bk.4) show pp. 34, 185, 189, 228, 229, and 230. One of David's deeds was witnessed by his daughter, Rosanna Warner.
The book "The Descendants of Andrew Warner", by Lucien Warner and Josephine Nichols, has this to say about David, "born in 1748; d. in Vermont, aged about 45." (They did not know that David moved on to St. Alban's and actually lived about 7 years beyond the age of 45). "Aug. 6,1763, he chose Ezekial Kellog of Wethersfield as his guardian. He moved to Vermont and was a farmer there. He was a Sergeant in the Green Mountain Boys. 'Vermont Revolutionary Soldiers' gives the following service under David Warner: Oct. 17-21, 1777, in Capt. Abraham Salisbury's Company, on Otter Creek, raised in Clarendon; sergeant in same company, 12 days service, 1781; in Capt. Ichabod Robinson's Militia Co., Clarendon, 1781, 2 days;in list of Capt. Salisbury's Scouts, Oct. 17-21, 1777, at Pittsford. He married Rebecca Smith and had a large family. The boys all died in infancy, and the four girls married and went west."
The Captain Robinson named above was probably Amos Robinson who also lived in Clarendon and was a guardian to Lemuel Marsh after Amos Marshes' death.
David had a brother, Jonathan, who lived in Pittsford, which is not far north of Clarendon. Jonathan was at least in Sandisfield, Berkshire, Massachusetts with his brother David for a time before going to Pittsfield as Jonathan's first deed into Clarendon said he was of Sandisfield. David's mother also remarried, and she died in Pittsford, as already mentioned.
David's deeds in Middletown name his parents, John Warner and Rachel Burlison, more than once when he was selling property that originally belonged to his father. Several of the deeds also say that he was of Sandisfield.
David's name and signature were found on early petitions from Clarendon that were obtained by writing to the Vermont Secretary of State,
Manuscript Division.