NORWALK. 149
Mary Hanford, born Nov. 11, i860; married April 15, 1885, Arthur G. Earle,
who died March 5, 1894.
Sarah Lucia, born June 29, 1866; married Nov. i, 1893, Frederick W. Hoyt.
Anna Burr; born Jan. 2, 1870.
Harriet Isabel, born March 17, 1872; married Apr. 30, 1890, Howard de Poorest
Earle, who died May 23, 1896.
Louise Brinckerhoff; born July 23, 1874.
George Lucius; born Oct. 7, 1878.
Mrs. Asa B. Woodward died June 24, 1882.
Arthur G. and Mary H. Earle had: Alice Louise, born Nov. 15, 1886.
Howard de F. and Harriet I. Earle had: Harry Woodward, born June 21, 1893.
Children of John T. and Mary E. Henderson : Harriet B.; Charles Hanford ; one
died young.
Charles and Rebecca Ostrom had one daughter.
Thomas Cook Hanford, Jr. left one son.
Henry B. Hanford married Alice Browning of Camden, N. J.
HO ME-L O T LN.
(See pages 3S7 to 3S9 and 398 to 402 and page 441.)
Richard Webb, Sr., of Home-lot ix, with Elizabeth, his wife, came with the pioneers
to Xorwalk, One of the same name embarked in July, 1635, on board the " Primrose", at
Gravesend, England, who, born in 1599, started from the Old World for Virginia. Rich¬
ard Webb of Norwalk was found in Hartford in 1639. He was a 1650 Ludlow "Agree¬
ment " Norwalk settler, and had assigned to him four acres in the near vicinity of what is
now the East Norwalk site of the Consolidated road's station for west bound trains, Mr.
Webb was one of the earliest of the pioneers to be removed by death. He left a second
wife, Elizabeth (Gregory) Webb. He seems to have had a namesake son, Richard ^^-j
(see pp. 387 and 388) who was early found in Stamford. In 1654 Norwalk mill. No. i (p. 35)
proved a failure, and Richard Webb was one of a committee of three to whom was intrusted
the re-arrangement of mill matters. Richard Webb^''-died March 15, 1675, some five
years before the senior Mrs. Richard Webb's death, January 24, 1680. Mrs. Elizabeth
(Gregory) Webb made no legacy mention of Richard of Stamford, nor of his wife Mar¬
gery nor children. She named Bartholomew Barnard, "by virtue of right of his wife, her
father, Birchard, having right to both deceased, Elizabeth Webb and her husband Richard ",
and named, in addition, Richard Holmes, by reason of his wife's right. She also remem¬
bered her pastor. Rev. Thomas Hanford. After Mr. and Mrs. Webb's decease the name
is an infrequent one in Norwalk, but from the Stamford Richard some of the most influen¬
tial of that tow-n's families have sprung. The Court appointed, March 16, 1681, Mrs. Webb's
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