\v^im_ ^ &*.**' ^"A 4/ct^L^ 'ley. Courtesy of Mrs. James E. Greenleuf. FIFTH GENERATION DANIEL GREENLEAF, son of Stephen Greenleaf and Eliza- beth Gerrish, was born February 10, 1679-80, in Newbury, Mass., and baptized there on the 22nd of the month of his birth. He graduated from Harvard College in 1699. For several years he practiced medicine in Cambridge, marrying there November 18, 1701, ELIZABETH GQOKING, daughter of Samuel and Mary Gooking, who was born November 11, 1681. It appears that at some time previous to May 12, 1701, he had been at Portsmouth, N. H., with a view to a settlement there as schoolmaster, for on that date it was voted to engage him for a year at forty pounds. He left there before 1703. He seems then to have begun to preach to the inhabitants of the Isle of Shoals, who petitioned in 1705 for help to support him in the ministry. In 1708 he was ordained pastor of the church in Yarmouth, Mass. Here he remained for twenty years, but in 1727, on account of difficulties in the parish he re- moved to Boston. His wife with their twelve children had pre- ceded him thither, and with some knowledge of medicine derived from her father, had opened an apothecary and grocer's shop, in- tending thus to support her family. This was located on what is now Washington street, between Court and Cornhill. Here the family lived, the father soon joining them there. In consequence of an injury received by falling from a horse, Rev. Daniel Green- leaf was for many years a helpless invalid. He died August 26, 1763, and was buried in Kings Chapel burying ground. A por- trait of him by Copley has survived, and is reproduced, in connec- tion with a sketch of his life, in the Greenleaf Genealogy. His wife became totally blind and died November 11, 1762. CHILDREN OF DANIEL AND ELIZABETH GREENLEAF. I. DANIEL, b. Nov. 7, 1702, father of David Greenleaf, grand- father of David Greenleaf, Jr., great-grandfather of Charles Greenr leaf, and great-great-grandfather of Jane Maria Greenleaf. 70 GREENLEAF ANCESTRY. II. STEPHEN, b. Oct. 4, 1704, in Newbury, Mass. ; m. Aug. 5, 1731, Mary Gould, b. Aug. 20, 1706, and d. Jan. 26, 1795. in Bos- ton, where he resided and attained some distinction, being sheriff of Suffolk Co. in 1757. They had seven children. III. MARY, b. Aug. 29, 1706, in Cambridge; m. 1st, Mch. 16, 1725, James Blinn; 2nd, Aug. 7, 1735, Josiah Thatcher. She d. Apr. 2, 1774. She had sixteen children. IV. ELIZABETH, b. Aug. 24, 1708, in Yarmouth; m. 1st, June 24, 1729, David Bacon; 2nd, Joseph Scott; 3rd, Kev. Joseph Par- sons of Bradford, Mass.; 4th, Eev. Jedediah Jewett of Bowley, Mass. She d. May 15, 1778. She had six children. V. SARAH, b. Apr. 16, 1710, in Yarmouth; d. Mch. 28, 1776, unm. VI. SAMUEL, b. May 9, 1712; d. 1748, unm. VII. JANE, b. May 24, 1714, in Yarmouth; m. Mch. 1, 1732-3, Hezekiah Usher of Medford, Mass., and Newport, E. I. She d. Dec. 10, 1764. They had twelve children. He m. 2nd, Abigail, dau. of Aaron Cleveland, b. May 10, 1706, in Medford. VIII. HANNAH, b. Oct. 3, 1716, in Yarmouth; m. John Eich- ards; and d. Jan. 3, 1799. IX. JOHN, b. Nov. 8, 1717, in Yarmouth; m. 1st, Dec. 8, 1743, Priscilla Brown; 2nd, May 1, 1759, Euth Walker; 3rd, July 15, 1764, Ann Wroe, who d. May 27, 1786. He d. Aug. 27, 1778, in Boston, where he was a druggist. X. MERCY, b. Nov. 29, 1719, in Yarmouth; m. Mch. 10, 1735, John Scollay, and d. Oct. 7, 1793. They had thirteen children. XI. GOOKING, b. Sept. 18, 1721; d. Dec. 13, 1721. XII. SUSANNA, b. Nov. 12, 1722, in Yarmouth; m. John Co- burn, and d. Feb. 26, 1782. XIII. WILLIAM, b. Jan. 10, 1725; m. June 3, 1747, Mary, dau. of Hon. Eobert Brown of Plymouth, Mass., b. Mch. 15, 1728, FIFTH GENERATION. d. Dec. 1, 1807. He d. July 21, 1803, in New Bedford, Mass. They had fifteen children. [See on the family of Daniel and Elizabeth Greenleaf, and their descendants, Greenleafs Oreenleaf Oeneal- GOOKING ANCESTRY I. SAMUEL GOOKING, son of Daniel Gooking and Mary Dolling, was born April 21 or 22, 1652, in Cambridge, Mass., where he died September 16, 1730. He is said to have been an apothecary or physician, but his military ardor and other interests overshadowed all else, and this patriotism he inherited by good right from his father. As early as 1692 he was called " Captain," and in 1711 was ardently engaged in connection with the expedi- tion to Canada. He was sheriff of Middlesex County by the ap- pointment of the patriots in 1689 and Savage says "rather more energetic than discreet in magnifying his office/' In 1691 he was Marshal General. He was also sheriff of Suffolk county and down to July 27, 1729, was largely engaged in matters pertaining to that office. The maiden name of the wife of Samuel Gboking is unknown; her first name was M AKY. Their children were : (1) Mary, b. Aug. 26, 1679, who m. 1st, Dr. Samuel Gedney; 2nd, July 16, 1711, Eev. Theophilus Cotton; 3rd, a Newmarch. (2) ELIZABETH, b. Nov. 11, 1681. (3) Samuel, b. Aug. 14, 1683. (4) Nathaniel, b. Feb. 16, 1685-6, d. young. (5) Dtoiiel. II. DANIEL GOOKING was an honored and distinguished man in early New England history. The details of his life as a young man are not so full as desirable. He was doubtless the son of Daniel Gooking, Gent., who in 1621 emigrated with his family and fifty men, provided for at his own expense, from England to Virginia, arriving there on the 22nd of November. He settled at Newport News where he became a planter, holding his own even during the troublesome times when the Indians attacked those settlements. "On Dec. 29, 1637, a grant of 2500 acres in the FIFTH GENERATION. 73 upper country of Norfolk was made to Daniel Gooking, Esq.; and in 1642 he was made Commander of the Military Commission of Upper Norfolk at about the time when a grant of 1400 acres was made to his son Daniel, the Captain of the trained band." Accord- ing to the age of the son Daniel given in his marriage license, and his age at death, he was only a youth nine years of age when he came to Virginia. He saw, therefore, in his youth and early man- hood, adventurous and stirring scenes which amply prepared him for his subsequent career. When twenty-seven years of age he re- turned to England and November 11, 1639, was granted by the Bishop of London a license to marry MAEY DOLLING, an or- phan maiden of St. Dunstan in the West, aged twenty-one. On his return to Virginia with his wife he engaged in the life of a colo- nial planter until 1643. It is said that he was then converted by missionaries who had been sent from New England to Virginia, and Cotton Mather names especially Rev. William Thompson. He bought a ship and with his wife and daughter Mary and others, sailed for New England, arriving in Boston, May 10, 1644. Here he became a member of the First Church on the 16th of the month of his arrival and a freeman the same year. At first he settled in Roxbury, but removed to Cambridge in 1648. He was a mem- ber of the Artillery Company in 1645 and soon rose to be a highly esteemed commander in Middlesex County. In 1649 he was deputy from Cambridge to the General Court, and in 1651 the Speaker of the House. The next year he became a magistrate and so con- tinued to 1686. His military honors multiplied, until he became May 11, 1681, Major-General of the forces of the colony. He was conspicuous during the Indian wars of that time, and was deeply interested with John Eliot in his peaceful labors among the In- dians. He was the author of a work entitled, " Historical Collec- tions of the Indians of New England." In 1655 he went to Eng- land, probably on private business, but was assigned by Cromwell to the useless task of trying to persuade the New England fathers to colonize Jamaica. The regicides Whalley and Goffe, with whom he returned on a second visit in 1660, were sheltered by him in New England. Many other labors and experiences filled his life, 6 74 GREENLEAF ANCESTRY. which was probably one of the most varied and eventful of any of those times. He died in Cambridge, March 19, 1687, aged 75. His wife died after October 4, 1681. He married 2nd, Hannah Tyng, widow of Habijah Savage, who was born March 7, 1640, and died October 28, 1689. The children of Daniel Gooking were: (1) Mary, who m. June 8, 1670, Edmund Baxter. (2) Elizabeth, b. Mch. 14, 1645, who m. May 23, 1666, Eev. John Eliot, Jr., and d. Nov. 30, 1700. (3) Hannah, bap. in Roxbury, May 9, 1647, and d. July 31, 1647. (4) Daniel, b. Apr. 8, 1649; d. Sept. 3, 1649. (5) Daniel, b. July 12, 1650, Harvard College, 1669, and d. Jan. 8, 1718. (6) SAMUEL, father of Elizabeth who married Eev. Daniel Greenleaf. (7) Solomon, b. June 20, 1654; d. July 16, 1654. (8) Nathaniel, b. Oct. 22, 1656, Harvard College, 1675, m. Hannah Savage, and d. Aug. 7, 1692. The line of ancestry of Daniel Gooking is given as follows : (1) DANIEL GOOKING of England and Virginia, was the son of JOHN GOOKING of Eipple Court, Kent County, Eng., and KATHAEINE DENNE, daughter of G. DENNE (a de- scendant in the eleventh generation from Sir ALLUEED DENNE, KT.), and AGNES TUFTON, daughter of NICHOLAS TUF- TON. (2) JOHN GOOKING was the son and heir of Thomas Gook- ing of Brakesbourne, Kent County, England, and ELIZABETH DUEANT. (3) THOMAS GOOKING was the son of AENOLDUS GOOKING of Kent County, England. GREENLEAF ANCESTRY SIXTH GENERATION GERISH ANCESTRY CAPT. STEPHEN GHEENLEAF. 10521743. From Portrait made in 1722. Courft-sy of Mrc. James E. Gretnleaj. SIXTH GENERATION STEPHEN GREENLEAF, son of Stephen Greenleaf and Elizabeth Coffin, was born August 15, 1652, in Newbury, Mass., and died there October 13, 1743, " at a great age " and surely such for one who saw so much service. His fame long survived in that ancient town as the " great Indian fighter," and he was universally known as " Captain " Stephen Greenleaf. A portrait of this re- doubtable warrior taken in 1722 is reproduced in the Greenleaf Genealogy. His military record as there given is as follows: "Served in King Philip's War on the Connecticut River; Aug. 25, 1675, was wounded in the battle of Hatfield; 'June 4, 1685, Ensign Greenleaf appointed Lef tenant'; Aug. 2, 1689, in the In- dian War; sent to treat with Indians at Pennacook; Oct. 24, 1689, Lieutenant; Capt. Greenleaf was much distinguished in the Indian Wars, and is mentioned in Mather's Magnalia as commanding a company in the celebrated battle with the French and Indians at Wells, Me., in 1690, and in the King Philip's War on the Connec- ticut River above Hatfield." On March 5, 1696, he petitioned the Massachusetts General Court for remuneration in consequence of a wound received in the rescue of a family attacked by the Indians October 7, 1695. He was paid the sum of forty pounds. There are doubtless many other unrecorded incidents of the same nature in his life. In the affairs of the town also he was a conspicuous character, serving as townsman and on many important commit- tees. His reputation was honorable, and his character was en- dowed with many virtues. The first wife of Captain Stephen Greenleaf was ELIZABETH GERRISH, daughter of William Gerrish and Joanna Goodale Oliver, who was born in Newbury September 10, 1654, and died August 5, 1712. They were married Oct. 23, 1676. After her death Captain Greenleaf married 2nd, in 1713, Mrs. Hannah Jor- dan of Kittery, Me., who died September 30, 1743, in Newbury. 78 GREENLEAF ANCESTRY. CHILDREN OF STEPHEN AND ELIZABETH GREENLEAF. I. ELIZABETH, b. Jan. 12, 1678-9; m. Nov. 7, 1695, Henry Clarke, son of Nathaniel Clarke and Elizabeth Somerby, who m. 2nd, Jan. 24, 1714, Mary Pierce. They had twelve children. II. DANIEL, b. Feb. 10, 1679-80, the great-great-grea^grand- father of Jane Maria Greenleaf . III. STEPHEN, b. Aug. 31, 1682; d. Oct. 15, 1688. IV. WILLIAM, b. Apr. 1, 1684 ; d. Apr. 15, 1684. V. JOSEPH, b. Apr. 12, 1686; m. Nov. 18, 1707, Thomasine Mayo, b. June 10, 1689. He lived in Newbury and had seven children. VI. SARAH, b. July 19, 1688, m. Mch. 30, 1710, Richard Kent. Ees. Newbury. VII. STEPHEN, b. Oct. 21, 1690; m. Oct. 7, 1712, Mary Mack- res, b. 1691, d. 1771 in Woolwich. He d. 1771. They had eight children. VIII. JOHN, b. Aug. 29, 1693 ; m. 1713 Abigail Moody, who, after her husband's death about 1725, m. Benjamin Hills. IX. BENJAMIN, b. Dec. 14, 1695. X. MOSES, b. Feb. 24, 1697-8. [Greenleafs Greenleaf Genealogy, pp. 201, 205, 327, 328, 336, 337.] GERRISH ANCESTRY WILLIAM GEERISH was the emigrant ancestor of this fam- ily. He came, says Savage, from Bristol, England, where he was born August 20, 1617. His arrival in New England as a young man was about 1640, and he settled in Newbury, Mass. Here he was the first captain of the train band and was thereafter known as " Captain " William Gerrish. In 1650 he was appointed com- missioner of the town to settle small causes, and was then Lieu- tenant William Gerrish, being made captain the year following. He was the deputy from that town to the General Court, 1650 to 1653, was empowered to drill soldiers, both cavalry and infantry, and in 1657 was made a special commissioner. Later he resided in Hampton and was representative from that town in 1663 and 1664. In 1678 he moved to Boston. His death occurred at Salem, August 9, 1687, aged 70. The first wife of William Gerrish was JOANNA GOOD ALE, who had married John Oliver before 1644. and upon his death married April 17, 1645, William Gerrish. She died June 14, 1677. He married 2nd in Boston, Ann, whom Sav- age supposes to have been the widow of John Manning and daugh- ter of Richard Parker. Captain William and Joanna Gerrish had a large family of whom ELIZABETH, born September 10, 1654, was the sixth. Joanna Goodale was the daughter of MRS. ELIZABETH GOODALE, who is presumed by Savage to have been the mother of Richard Goodale of Newbury and Salisbury, came from Yar- mouth, England, in 1637, and died in Newbury April 8, 1647. If so there were three children, another daughter, Susanna, marrying Abraham Toppan. The husband of Elizabeth Goodale was JOHN GOODALE who died in England, his will being dated in 1625. GREENLEAF ANCESTRY SEVENTH GENERATION COFFIN ANCESTRY SEVENTH GENERATION STEPHEN GREENLEAF, son of Edmund Greenleaf and Sarah Dole, was born in England, being baptized in the church of St. Mary's la Tour in Ipswich, Suffolk County, England, August 10, 1628. He came to New England as a child with his father and lived in Newbury, Mass., being admitted a freeman of that town May 23, 1677. His military record as given in the Green- leaf Genealogy is as follows: "Ensign, appointed May 31, 1670; Lieutenant, 1685; Captain, 1686; as Captain of Militia he went with the disastrous expedition against Port Royal, Oct. 13, 1690, to Cape Breton, and was there wrecked in a vessel and drowned, in company with nine others, Dec. 1, 1690." Captain Greenleaf was a man of distinction in Newbury, and their deputy to the General Court from 1676 to 1686. In 1689 he was a member of the Council of Safety. He was a member of the Newbury Church, being admitted December 6, 1674. The first wife of Stephen Greenleaf was ELIZABETH COF- FIN, daughter of Tristram Coffin and Dionis Stevens, born in England about 1634, whom he married in Newbury November 13, 1651. They had ten children, and she died November 19, 1678. He was married by Commissioner Dalton, March 31, 1678-9, to Esther Weare, daughter of Nathaniel Weare, and was at the time the widow of Benjamin Swett, of Hampton, N. H. She died Jan- uary 16, 1718, aged 89. CHILDREN OF STEPHEN AND ELIZABETH GREENLEAF. I. STEPHEN, b. Aug. 15, 1652, who was the ancestor of Jane Maria Greenleaf. II. SARAH, b. Oct. 29, 1655; m. June 7, 1677, Richard Dole, b. Sept. 6, 1650; d. Aug. 1, 1723. She d. Sept. 1, 1718. III. DANIEL, b. Feb. 17, 1657-8; d. Dec. 5, 1659. 84 GREENLEAF ANCESTRY. IV. ELIZABETH, b. Apr. 5, 1660; m. Sept. 24, 1677, Col. Thomas, son of Rev. James Noyes, as his 2nd wife. He d. in 1730. V. JOHN, b. June 21, 1662; m. 1st, Oct. 12, 1685, Elizabeth, dan. of Joseph Hills, who d. Aug. 5, 1712; 2nd, May 13, 1716, Lydia, wid. of Benjamin Pierce and dau. of Maj. Charles Frost of Kittery, Me. She d. May 15, 1752, and he d. May or June 24, 1734. VI. SAMUEL, b. Oct. 30, 1665; m. Mch. 1, 1686, Sarah, dau. of John Kent, Jr., and d. Aug. 6, 1694. VII. TRISTRAM, b. Feb. 11, 1667-8; m. Nov. 12, 1689, Mar- garet, dau. of Nlathaniel Piper of Ipswich, and d. Sept. 13, 1740. VIII. EDMUND, b. May 10, 1670; m. July 2, 1691, Abigail, dau. of Abiel Somerby, and d. abt. 1740. IX. MARY, b. Dec. 6, 1671; m. 1696, Joshua, son of Caleb Moody. X. JUDITH, b. Oct. 23, 1673; d. Nov. 19, 1678. COFFIN ANCESTRY TRISTRAM COFFIN was the emigrant ancestor of this fam- ily. He was born in Brixham (Brixton) parish, Plymouth, Eng- land, in 1609, baptized March 11, 1610, being the son of PETER and JOANNA COFFIN. His father died about 1640 it is sup- posed; and the son taking his mother, sisters Eunice and Mary, his wife Dionis and children, Peter, Tristram, Elizabeth, James, and John, came to New England in 1642. His mother died in May, 1661, aged 77. After a brief stay at Salisbury and Haverhill, he settled in Newbury about 1648. In 1654 he returned to Salis- bury, remaining there until 1660, when he removed to Nantucket. He was an enterprising and intelligent man. It is said that he was the first to use a plow at Haverhill. In Salisbury he was com- missioner to try small causes and otherwise honored. In 1659 he united with others in forming a company to purchase and settle the island of Nantucket. They paid for it 30 and two beaver hats. Here he spent the remainder of his life, dying December 2, 1681, aged 72. He became one of the leaders of the company and was commissioned, June 22, 1671, by Francis Lovelace, Chief Magis- trate of the Island. This commission testified to the "fittness and capacity" of Mr. Coffin. In several instances and probably always he spelled his name " Coffyn." The wife of Tristram Coffin was DIONIS STEVENS, daugh- ter of Robert Stevens of Brixton, England, where she was bap- tized March 4, 1610. They were married about 1629 in England. The children of Tristram and Dionis Coffin were: (1) Peter, bap. July 18,. 1630; m. Abigail, dau. of Edward Starbuck ; lived at Dover, N. H., where he was a judge of the Sup. Ct of N. H., and d. at Exeter, Mch. 21, 1715. (2) Tristram, b. 1632 ; m. Mch. 2, 1653, Judith, dau. of Capt. Edmund Greenleaf, and wid. of Henry Somerby. He d. Feb. 4, 1704, aged 72. She d. Dec. 15, 1705. gg GREENLEAF ANCESTRY. (3) ELIZABETH, who married Stephen Greenleaf. (4) James, bap. Sept. 11, 1639; m. Dec. 3, 1663, Mary, dau. of John Severance of Salisbury, and d. July 28, 1720. (5) John, d. 1643. (6) Mary, b. Feb. 20, 1645, in Haverhill; m. Nathaniel Star- buck of Nlantucket. (7) John, b. Oct. 13, 1647; m. Deborah Austin, and d. 1711. (8) Stephen, b. May 10, 1652, in Newbury; m. Mary Bunker, and d. in 1735. [See Life of Tristram Coffin by Allen Coffin, LL.B. ; The Coffin Family by Mr. S. J. Macy; Hough's Nantucket Papers; Boston Transcript, June 30, and July 2, 1902.] GREENLEAF ANCESTRY EIGHTH GENERATION GREENLEAF COAT OF ARMS. EIGHTH GENERATION EDMUND GREENLEAF, the emigrant ancestor, was the eon of JOHN and MAEGAEET GREENLEAF, and was bap- tized January 2, 1574, in the Church of St. Mary's la Tour, Ips- wich, Suffolk County, England. The author of the Greenleaf Genealogy, to whose investigation the early data of this family are largely due, claims that the family were originally Huguenots by the name of " Feuillevert," which was translated " Greenleaf " Edmund Greenleaf was a silk-dyer, which may give some counte- nance to the claim of Huguenot ancestry. The family of Green- leaf was at all events established in Ipswich, in the sixteenth cen- tury. Edmund there married about 1612, SARAH DOLE, who it is thought may have been a sister of Richard Dole of Newbury, Mass., who came from Ringworthy, near Bristol, and was the son of William Dole of Thornbury, Eng. Nine children are recorded to them as baptized in St. Mary's Church, Ipswich. Edmund Greenleaf came early to New England, probably in 1635, and settled in Newbury, Mass., where he was granted 122 acres in the first distribution of land. His home was "near the old town bridge, where for some years he kept a tavern." On March 13, 1639, he was made a freeman. He served in various capacities in his town, but was especially distinguished in his military career. This is given in the Oreenleaf Genealogy as follows: "In 1637, commanded a company which marched against the Indians; Nov. 5, 1639, ordered to be Ensign for the Company at Newbury, Mass. ; 1642, Lieut Mass. Provincial Forces; 1644, 'An ancient and ex- perienced Lieut under Capt. William Gerrish;' 1648, Lieut; May 14, 1645, Lieut; 1645, Capt.; 1644, was head of the Militia under Gerrish; 1647, at his own request was discharged from mili- tary service." About the year 1650, Captain Greenleaf removed to Boston, where he spent the remainder of his life, dying March 24, 1671. 8 90 GREENLEAF ANCESTRY. His will is dated December 25, 1668, and is in print in the Green- leaf Genealogy, pages 72 and 73. The inventory of his estate amounted to 131 5s. 9d. The first wife of Edmund Greenleaf died in Boston, January 18, 1663, and he married 2nd, Mrs. Sarah Hill of Exeter, England, who had married 1st, a Wilson and was then the widow of William Hill of Fairfield, Conn. She died in 1671. CHILDREN OP EDMUND AND SARAH GREENLEAF. I. ENOCH, b. abt. 1613, bap. Dec. 1, 1613, at St. Mary's and d. 1617, bur. at St. Margaret's Sept. 2, 1617. II. SAMUEL, b. abt. 1615; d. 1627, bur. at St. Margaret's Mch. 5, 1627. III. ENOCH, b. abt. 1617; m. Mary, and was living in 1683. IV. SARAH, bap. Mch. 26, 1620, at St. Mary's; m. William Hilton of Newbury, Mass., who came from London in 1621, to Plymouth, thence to Dover in 1623, and died in Charlestown, Sept. 7, 1675. She died 1655. V. ELIZABETH, bap. Jan. 16, 1622, at St. Mary's; m. 1st, 1642, Giles Badger of Newbury, who d. July 10, 1647; and 2nd, Feb. 16, 1648-49, Richard Browne of Newbury, who d. Apr. 26, 1661. VI. NATHANIEL, bap. June 27, 1624, at St. Mary's; d. 1634, bur. July 24, 1634. VII. JUDITH, b. Sept. 2, 1625 ; m. 1st, Henry Somerby of New- bury, who d. Oct. 2, 1652; 2nd, Mch. 2, 1653, Tristram Coffin, Jr., who d. Feb. 4, 1704, at Nantucket. She died Dec. 15, 1705. VIII. STEPHEN, bap. Aug. 10, 1628, at St. Mary's, and the an- cestor of Jane Maria Greenleaf. IX. DANIEL, bap. Aug. 14, 1631, at St. Mary's; d. Dec. 5, 1654. X. JOHN, b. abt. 1632; m. July 26, 1665, Hannah, daughter of William Veazie of Braintree, and d. Dec. 16, 1712. XL MARY, probably, who m. March 5, 1669, John Wells of Newbury. TOOCKER ANCESTRY FIRST GENERATION ELECTA TOOCKER GREENLEAF. 1791 18