American Independence – Truly Honoring Those Who Sacrificed

Americans celebrate July 4th with fireworks, parades, barbecues, and gatherings with family and friends.  Let us all take a moment to honor all those men and women who sacrificed their livelihoods and lives to gain independence from England's control and unfair taxation.My Wood family heeded the call to action the day after the British fired on the Concord Massachusetts Militia on April 18, 1775.  Direct descendant Daniel Wood, aged 18, and older brother Ezekiel, aged 21, lived near Springfield, Massachusetts, and joined thousands of other Massachusetts men racing by horse or foot to protect Boston from invasion.  On July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress in Philadelphia, comprised of representatives of the 13 American colonies, adopted the Declaration of Independence of Independence.  http://www.ushistory.org/declaration/document     The Declaration summarized the American colonists' motivations for seeking independence and declared themselves an independent nation, thus separating from England's rule.With war against the British a near certainty, Stephen and Daniel Wood previously enlisted March 17, 1775, as  Minuteman in Colonel Tupper's Regiment…

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PROVIDENCE ON LONG ISLAND

8 November 2017 Do you believe in providence, fate, destiny, karma?  A serendipitous moment occurred yesterday while researching my Wood ancestors who, with other English colonists, founded Hempstead and Huntington, Long Island in the mid-1640s and early 1650s. My sister and I traveled from Michigan to Long Island to research Edmund Wood and his children—Martha, Jonas 'Oram', Susannah, Jeremiah, and our direct ancestor, Timothy.  We are visiting historical societies, archives, churches, cemeteries, and touring the island. The Wood family immigrated to the New World from Yorkshire, England in 1635.  They were the founders of Springfield, Massachusetts in 1636; Wethersfield, Connecticut in 1635; and then moved across the Long Island Sound in 1644 to settle in Hempstead, Long Island, New York.  On the near western end the island, the Dutch settled, leaving the vast eastern side inhabited by a few Indian families.   Why move to Long Island?  Simply, the economic advantages proved limitless.  The Stamford settlers learned the island had a grassy plain…

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